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New life for former Women lose to George Wilmington barber, Washington, 71-78, Bl B8

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\'olumr 12X. Issue 39 www.reriew.udel.edu Friday. !\larch 15. 2002 Underage drinkers arrested Jogger BY COURTNEY CALABRESE on the students' permanent records and the the admittance of minors into his Staff Reporter amount of their fines will be determined establishment. He was issued a warning and Five university students were arrested next week after they appear in court. put on notice by the ATE. attacked~ and charged with underage drinking Friday All five students admitted to ATE agents Hameli declined to comment further on at the Main Street Tavern & Grill during a that they were under the age of 21 and used the matter. routine inspection conducted by the false identification to enter the bar. " If changes are not made, the location Delaware Alcohol & Tobacco Enforcement. Downs said it is important for students to will inevitably suffer the consequences," Agent Michael Downs, northern district understand the serious risk of using fake Downs said. "This kind of activity will not on Park enforcement supervisor, said four IDs and lying about their age. be tolerated." undercover ATE agents entered the bar at "A fake ID is considered criminal Hameli said Newark police officers will approximately 11:30 p.m. impersonation," Downs said. "If the ID is be outside the bar Friday night scanning • Following information received from the from the DMV, it is also considered forgery IDs in order to discourage underage Place Newark Police Department regarding and fraud. admittance. possible underage admittance into the "Being charged with those counts can Newark Police Chief Gerald T. Conway BY SUSAN KIRKWOOD establishment, Downs said, the ATE took ruin your entire future." confirmed these . plans and said the Senior News Editor action to verify the claims. One of the students, who asked to remain ·department will be strictly enforcing A woman was assaulted After ATE agents identified themselves anonymous, said she was truthful with the alcohol regulations throughout Newark. Wednesday at 10:15 p.m. while she and requested identification from customers agents. The ATE, formerly known as the was jogging on East Park Place, inside the bar, they discovered that five "It was only because I was honest about Alcohol Beverage Control, has the primary Newark Police Officer Scott students had used fake IDs to be admitted my real age that the officer lessened the responsibility of regulating, conducting and Horsman said. into the bar. charges," she said. · licensing the sale of alcohol and tobacco. The woman, who is a university Each of the students was arrested, Danielle Criscitiello, 21, said she no The future of the Main Street Tavern & student, was near South Chapel Street fingerprinted and charged with "underage THE REVIEW/Rob Meletti when an unknown man wearing dark longer frequents the bar because she does Grill depends on its willingness to abide by The Alcohol and Tobacco Enforcement and/or consumption of alcohol," Downs not "feel like hanging out with freshmen." ATE rules, agents said. clothing and a black ski mask said. Although Ray Hameli, general manager "Either you correct the problem yourself requested identification from customers at grabbed her from behind, Horsman Agents said the charges have been placed of the bar, claimed he had no knowledge of or we will do it for yo\J," Downs said. the M8i.n Street GriD and Tavern Friday. said. ; The man then pulled the woman's hair and struck her in the stomach while attempting to pull her backwards, he said. Unknown men sighted in residence halls The woman broke free after a two~ to-three-minute struggle with the BY KIM BROWN occurred when an unknown man the alarm clock go off and saw the feel safe. trail" during her freshman year. .:nan, then ran to her residence hall Staff Reporter was seen wandering the halls of girls open their eyes he turned " I try not to think about the Flatley said the path meets where she called police, Horsman Two unknown men were seen in Dickinson Hall C Tuesday around ran out of the room and possibility of rape," Kinney said. standard lighting guidelines for the said. the bedrooms and hallways of afternoon. slammed the door, she said. "Obviously with a man in your university. The woman was taken to the Dickinson Residence Hall Saturday "The description given of "We were confused at-first," room anything can happen, but it's Frank Newton, assistant director Student Health Center and then to morning and Tuesday afternoon, Tuesday's suspect was specific and K.inn~y said. "We didn't know ..yhat too scary to think about." of Residence Life, said in response Christiana Hospital, where she was continuing a trend of suspicious I can't say if the two incidents are was going on, but after a few Kinney said she thinks that more to the recent residence hall treated for redness and soreness that activity in student housing, officials related," Flatley said. s~¢':>n~ \Ye realize a 'what Happened people on duty and guards at night disturbances that he would provide resulted from the attack. said. Freshmen roommates Elizabeth - aottJ..Qtscared." "' · would help imlfrove safety. She geoerlf!· safe-ty information to It is unknown if this case is related Capt. James Flatley, senior Kinney and Joanna Balzer, who ~ey ·~aid Public Safety· needs also expressed concerns about the residents. to an attack that occurred Sunday at assistant director of Public Safety, live in Dickinson Hall D, awoke at the ct>operation of residents. He safety of the path leading between As of early Monday morning, School Lane Garden Apartments on said an unknown man entering the 9 :45 a.m. Saturday, and saw a said aU stidents should lock their Rodney and Dickinson complexes. Newton said he would inform Wyoming Road, Horsman said. unlocked bedroom of two sleeping unfamiliar middle-aged man do~r;s ·and not let strangers into Sophomore, Stephanie Charles, a students via e-mail and signs about The race and age of the unknown female freshmen in Dickinson Hall standing between their beds resf~ence halls. former Rodney Hall resident, said personal safety and building man were unable to be determined. as D Saturday morning. watching them sleep, Kinney said. Even with locked doors, residents referred to the ~ath from security. he was wearing a mask. Horsman He said the second incident When the unknown man heard how6ver, Kinney said she does not Rodney to Dickinson as ~ 'the rape said the man is 6 feet tall with a see POLICE page A9 muscular build. ' McCain raises Terrorism should ~ funds for Castle not be part oflifel BY JULIA DILAURA AND likely nearing the end of a key battle BY TOM MONAGHAN AND ALIZA ISRAEL in Afghanistan. KAREN HURWITCH National/Sillte News Editors "We have succeeded again- not Administrative News Editor WILMINGTON - On the six­ without casualties - but the victory "There should be no living with month anniversary of the Sept. 11 that has apparently been achieved is terrorism," said Martin Kramer, terrorist attacks, Sen. John McCain, an important one and may be the last editor of the Middle East Quarterly, R-Ariz., said he is confidant very significant al-Qaida stronghold during a speech VVednesday in America will prove victorious in the in Afghanistan," McCain said. Clayton Hall. War on Terrorism with the help of The complex political and ethnic Kramer, the third speaker in the its allies. conflict, coupled with the likelihood THE REVIEW/Julia DiLaura Global Agenda series and former Speaking at Delaware Republican that surrounding nations such as Iran Everett Moore (left) chairman of the Delaware Republican State director of the Dayan Institute in Tel Party headquarters in Wilmington and Russia will try to influence Aviv, Israel, focused on the before a fundraiser for Rep. Michael Committee, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Rep. Michael N. Afghanistan will require a continued Castle, R-Del., answer questions at a fundraiser to raise $80,000. experience of Israeli people amidst N. Castle, R-Del., McCain said U.S. presence, he said. the violence that has persisted in that support for the country remains "We are going to be in initiate an attack on Iraq in the near region. strong in the face of the probable Afghanistan for a very long time," future. "While we are destined to live longevity of an American presence he said. "I believe that the president - with the Palestinians, we are not in Afghanistan. His remarks came during a week sometime in the near future - will destined to live with terrorism," he "America has never been of intensified rhetoric from the Bush be talking again to the people of the said. greater," he said. administration against Iraq and United States and more clearly Israel and the United States are Basil Battaglia, Castle' s leader Saddam Hussein. delineating our policy and our future not fighting the same war because the THE REVIEW/Rob Meletti campaign coordinator, said he "Iraq continues to represent a course of actions as much as issues are different, Kramer said, but Martin Kramer said Israel expected to raise $80,000 for clear and present danger to the possible," he said. their struggles are similar. and the United States are Castle's 2002 congressional United States," McCain said. "I Leaks of nuclear contingency Kramer said that one of the fighting similar types of war. campaign at the sold-out event at don't have a doubt that the Congress plans from the Pentagon last week reasons for the terrorist attacks of The United States and Israel are Hotel du Pont following McCain's of the United States will support the have raised controversy regarding Sept. 11 was the United States' unique, he said, and neither country speech at the headquarters. president in trying to implement a U.S. plans to utilize nuclear irresoluteness in the region. fits the idea of the traditional nation­ McCain presented a cautious but change of regime in Iraq." weapons to battle terrorism. "In the Jewish forces there is a state, an ideal that is held in high positive outlook regarding the war Despite this, McCain said he McCain said he believes using ruling - if someone is coming to kill regard in the Arab world. on terrorism. doubted the United States would you, rise early and kill them first," he "The United States and Israel are He said the U.S . military is most see TERRORISM page A6 said. anomalies, and they are resented for He cited numerous times that U.S. that," Kramer said. citizens or U.S. interests in the region Because both countries are were attacked with no decisive "hyper-democracies," Kramer said, Wilmington priests admit sexual abuse retaliation. many people in the Arab world tend "Those who believe you are weak to view the differences in policies as BY SUSAN KIRKWOOD Krebs said. devastation of their own experiences procedures in place," he said. "This will test your defenses," Kramer said. irreconcilable. Senior News Editor "There are questions being raised still again. issue has gotten a lot of attention Israel has shown the same The Catholic Diocese of Popular opinion in the Middle in the public due to the extensive "My heart goes out to them, and I both nationally and locally, and weakness over the past two decades, East is that the United States, Wilmington issued a statement media coverage in Boston and continue to pray for them." people are talking about it." he said, and that is largely the reason because it is only concerned with the identifying 15 "substantiated Philadelphia," he said. Saltarelli also said the diocese Krebs said he now notices people they have been under siege by wants of its population, tends to allegations" of child sexual abuse by The Rev. Michael A. Saltarelli, has maintained a policy for handling being more critical of the church. suicide bombers for the past 17 develop selfish policies, while Israel priests in the past 50 years, Diocese bishop for the Wilmington Diocese, allegations since 1985 so that "I think there is a heightened months. is only concerned with furthering the spokesman Robert G. Krebs said. expressed both condolences and "responses to these situations could sense of awareness right now. but Kramer cited the Oslo Agreements goals of its Jewish constituents, he "All of these cases are very old," apologies in a statement released become more effective and reflect no panic," he said. "Hopefully, the as the most visible sign of this said. he said. "There are no current March 7. the best current understanding of Bishop's statement will lay to rest weakness, and said many Arabs see Junior Jeff May said he thought priests with substantiated "We can only imagine the pain these issues." people's fears." the agreements as an admittance of many of Kramer's ideas were allegations." and suffering that victims of child Krebs said informing the public Krebs said 126 di ocesan and abject weakness. controversial, but were also valid Krebs said the most recent abuse endure, even years after the of the Diocese policies was another priests from the Diocese of "While terrorism directed against points. incident happened 10 years ago. horror of an assault," he said. "Now. main reason the Diocese wanted to Wilmington are currently the United States and Israel has "A lot of his ideas were very pro­ The public acknowledgement of the steady coverage of this issue in release the statement. ministering to Catholics in different fuel, it has the same Israel," he said. "Some people in the past sexual abuse falls in light of newspapers and on television "We wanted to ensure the public Delaware and the Eastern Shore of catalyst," Kramer said. "The fuel is crowd were not reacting favorably to recent attention being given to inevitably recalls for them the that we have policies and Maryland. hatred, but the catalyst is contempt." what he was saying:" similar cases across ,the country,

- ' A2 • THE REVIEW • March 15, 2002 Bill gives corporations Delaware tax breaks In the BYRYANDECH economy was already recovering from the Staff Reporter recession when the bill was passed last week. ·esws The economic stimulus bill signed by "Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan N1 President George W. Bush Saturday will cost declared in the Senate Banking Committee that Delaware $35 million in tax revenues, officials economic recovery is well under way," he said. said. Carper approved pre_vious stimulus bills, The bill provides benefits for workers left Selander said, because they placed a greater JURY REJECTS INSANITY CLAIM, CONVICTS MOTHER OF unemployed after Sept. II and offers tax emphasis on helping the unemployed, and MURDER incentives to corporations as part of an effort to contained fewer tax breaks for large HOUSTON - A jury took less than four hours Tuesday to find bring the economy out of a recession. corporations. Andrea Yates guilty of capital murder for drowning her children in a Greg Patterson, communications director for Margaret Aitken, press secretary for Sen. bathtub last summer. Gov. Ruth Ann Minner, said during the next Joseph R. Biden, D-Del., said Biden voted for The 37-year-old mother, who said she was insane at the time, could three years, $35 million in taxes to the state will the bill because it will ensure health care be executed for systematically drowning her five children. be left to corporations for investment in new benefits to those who are laid off, despite the THE REVIEW/File photo After a stunningly fast review of weeks of complex psychiatric technology and equipment. fact that he believed the economy was already Sen. Thomas R. Carper, D-Del., did not testimony, the panel of four men and eight women rejected Yates' "The intent of the bill is to help stimulate the recovering from the recession. sign Bush's economic stimulus bill because claims of insanity. economy, but most of the benefits go to "The part that Biden thought was crucial it takes money away from Social Security. The jury spent Tuesday morning listening to angry prosecutors corporations - tax breaks for new equipment could not be separated from the entire bill," arguing that Yates must be punished. She plotted the deaths and new supplies," he said. "The problem is that Aitken said. "Sometimes you have to take the He said the state has made budget cuts in meticulously, carried them out mercilessly and showed clear signs of a lot of those equipment purchases take a couple good versus the perfect." almost every agency, but has not cut from actual understanding what she had done, they said. of years and by the time that happens we may Patterson said Delaware is experiencing a services. "The children had become a hindrance, and she wanted them no longer be in a recession." recession, but not to the same degree as other "There are positions, supplies and travel that gone," prosecutor Kaylynn Williford said. Brian Selander, spokesman for Sen. Thomas states. aren' t being funded," Patterson said. "We'd like Yates needed to convince the jury she could not tell right from R. Carper, D-Del., said Carper voted against the The money being taken from state tax to do a pay raise for state employees which we wrong when she killed the children - even though she told detectives bill in the Senate because it takes money away revenues to pay for the stimulus will, however, can' t do." on the day of the murders that she understood what she had done and from Social Security and Medicare and includes hurt Delaware's economy, he said. The status of Delaware's economy will deserved to be punished. tax breaks for large corporations. "Just like companies put money out into the determine which programs get money in the "The problem with the Texas definition of insanity," said Gerald "That was strike one, strike two and strike economy, state government does as well," future, he said. Treece, associate dean of South Texas College of Law, "is a person three for the bill," be said. Patterson said. "If we have to cut money or not "If the economy comes back, and we can see can be totally psychotic and still in that world where they know right Selander said Carper also believes the do things, that affects the economy." that we' ll have more money, we wouldn't need from wrong." to cut," Patterson said. Yates can only be sent to death row if the jury votes unanimously in favor of execution.

BUSH IS 'STUNNED' BY INS VISA GAFFE ~~ Infanticide risk greatest in first week WASHINGTON -President George W. Bush delivered a stinging rebuke to the Immigration and Naturalization Service Wednesday BY ALIZA ISRAEL infants during the first week of life situation. infanticides are babies born outside following the disclosure that the agency confmned student visas for NatiatwVState News Editor are female and are usually the "These mothers become of hospitals, due to less supervision two of the Sept. 11 hijackers - six months after they destroyed the An infant is at greatest risk to be mother, he said. emotionally like infants and surveillance outside such World Trade Center. murdered by his or her mother Dr. Robert R. Butterworth, a Los themselves," he said. facilities. The revelation was not only an embarrassment for the INS but also during the first day of life, a recent Angeles trauma psychologist, said Decreased judgment, high Margaret Spinelli, Columbia underscored the error-prone agency' s central role in the nation's war study found. the high percentage of m!Jfders on degrees of impulsiveness and little University professor of clinical on terrorism and made clear that its long-standing problems would finally have to be addressed. Len Paulozzi, medical the first day of life ------control over actions psychology, said warning signs for epidemiologist for the Centers for is understandable cause these mothers these women typically include poor At a press conference Bush said be "could barely get my coffee Disease Control's Center for Injury because infants are to deny the reality performance in school, a lack of down" as he read about the incident in Wednesday's morning and Prevention Control, said not yet recogmze· d "Thes-e women o f t heir pregnancy, attention directed to studies, denial newspaper. homicide rates are greater during as people. he said. of pregnancy and feelings of "I was stunned and not happy," Bush said during the news the first year of life than any other " [Mothers] need "Consequently, disconnectedness. conference. "This is an interesting wake-up call for those who run the period from birth to age 17. haven't built a bond the fetus becomes Spinelli said she has not noticed INS. It needs to be modernized so we know who's coming and who's The day of birth, followed by the with them," he said. treatmen~, not separated from them an increase in infanticide within the going out and why they're here." first week of life, are considered the "These aren't · emotionally and United States in recent years, but Attorney General John Ashcroft said Wednesday that an most at-risk periods for infant mothers who wanted· prosecution.'' physically, a foreign has noticed more media attention. immediate investigation of the INS, which is part of his Justice homicide. their children by any object to oust as America is one of the only Department, would take place. A CDC study released Friday means, and when _Margaret Spinelli, quickly as countries that put women guilty of The INS debacle began Monday, six months to the day since the found that 9 percent of all the birth comes out p o s s i b I e , " infanticide in jail, she said. Other hijackings, when a flight school in Venice, Aa., received notification infanticides occur during the first they just chuck it." Columbia University profesor Butterworth said. countries, such as the United that the INS had approved student visas for two of its alumni: week of life, Paulozzi said, 83 Previous studies ofclinical psychology There is also a Kingdom, offer counseling. Mohammed Atta and Marwan Al-Sbehhi, who are believed to have percent of which occur on the day suggest teen-age greater amount of "These women need treatment, piloted the jetliners that brought down the World Trade Center's twin of birth. mothers are the homicides during not prosecution," she said. "They towers. "The homicide rate for that day most likely group to kill their babies the eighth week of life, Butterworth leave jail with the same As news spread, the INS hastily released a statement pointing out [is] 10 times higher than the rate during the first week of life, he said. said. psychopathology that they went in that the flight school had received a "secondary" notification. Atta's during any other time of an Butterworth said some experts "There is a peak in crying at six with." application had been approved July 17, 2001, and Al-Shehhi's Aug. 9. American's life," he said. "Seven describe infanhtide situations as to eight weeks of life," he said. Paulozzi said the data collected "It is important to emphasize that the decisions regar~ing the percent of all homicides of the year states of intense pressure, in which "Maybe caretakers' or parents ' from the CDC study is based request to change status were made in the summer of 2001, prior to happen on that day." unwanted pregnaMJy -forces ,teenr rea~tions to the length of crying entirely on analysis of official and the tragic events of Sept. 11," the INS said in the statement, which A previous study found that 89 age mothers into deep shock and leads them to violence." 1 anonymous death certificates on also noted that the beleaguered agency "bad no information indicating percent of those who murdered they lose the reality of their Paulozzi said 95 percent of computer file. that Atta or Al-Sbehhi had ties to terrorist organizations." INS Commissioner James W. Ziglar has testified that the agency "is currently on schedule" to introduce a modem system for tracking foreign students by Jan. I, 2003. The system is intended to replace the Proposal gives judges sentencing discretion slow and circuitous approach still in use, in which INS examiners mail information to a processing center, where a private contractor BY JANE TAYLOR proposal. Sentencing Project, a non-profit organization that enters data and ultimately sends paperwork back to a school on the Staff Reporter He said a measure imposing a sentence of promotes decreased reliance on incarceration, status of an applicant. Delaware Attorney General M. Jane Brady borne confinement rather than time in prison as said some states like California are ln the case of Atta and Al-Shehhi, the final mailing was sent by a revealed a sentencing reform proposal Thursday an alternative for those convicted of certain drug experimenting with alternatives to the traditional processing center in London, Ky., which is run by a private containing provisions to give judges more. charges is a welcome component of the proposed sentencing policy. contractor, to the flight school on Florida' s Gulf Coast. discretion regarding mandatory sentencing for reform. Although alternative programs have not been some drug-related crimes. in place long enough to yield conclusive results, BUSH INCLUDES NUKES IN O PTIONS AGAINST BIO OR Lori Sitler, public information officer for the the methods show a positive outcome so far, be CHEMWAR mREATS attorney general's office, said the ultimate goal of -said. W ASHlNGTON - President Bush declared Wednesday that "all the reforms is to create more room in prisons for ''There appears to be a significant number of options are on the table" - including nuclear weapons - to confront violent criminals. ''There is no such people being diverted [from prison]," he said. states that threaten to use weapons of mass destruction, as he issued "Public safety is the first objective," Sitler "Maybe it's freeing up space, but there are no full his strongest warning to date that his administration plans to take on said. "[If that is not done] then we fail the people thing as a universal results yet." Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. we serve." Mauer said most states' current sentencing "He is a problem, and we're going to deal with him," Bush said of Jack O'Connell, director of the Delaware sentence. It should be procydures are not effective because they drain the Iraqi leader. Statistical Analysis Center, said since 1996 public funds, do little for crime control and do The president used his first full-scale news conference in five convictions of violent crimes have gone down up to the judges on a not address each charge individually. months to make clear that America's deterrence strategy would extend slightly, but convictions of drug crimes have "States a~e experiencing fiscal difficulty," be to states such as Iraq, Iran, and North Korea to deter them from using risen. case-by-case b_asis" said. "Running and expanding prisons is very chemical or biological weapons against the United States or its allies. "In 1999, 52 percent [of the Delaware prison expensive."- Bush coupled the war on terrorism with longstanding American population] were there for violent crimes," he - sophomore James Borden, Betb Welch, media relations representative for grievances against Iraq and other hostile powers pursuing weapons of said. mass destruction. communications director for Students for the Delaware Department of Correction, said the Approximately 19 percent of prison inmates proposals need further study to determine "We've got all our options on the table because we want to make it Sensible Drug Policy were convicted of a drug-related offense. In the whether they will actually create more space in very clear to nations that you will not threaten the United States or year 2000, drug-related offenses rose 12.4 prison facilities. use weapons of mass destruction against us or our allies or ," percent, he said. Sophomore James Borden, communications he said. Sitler said the attorney general's proposal director for Students for Sensible Drug Policy, Bush said his administration was committed to consulting with contains provisions to give judges more Alternative sentences could include treatment, said be supports returning sentencing power to allies. But he suggested that he may have to lead reluctant friends into flexibility regarding the severity of the education or public service, Eichler said. the judges. military action. sentencing for some crimes. Traditional sentences are often excessive and "There is no s uch thing as a universal "It's going to require a resolve and firmness from the United States "Judges will be able to impose [the sentence] counterproductive, he said, and the alternative is sentence," he said. " It should be up to the judges of America," he said. as they see fit," she said. a step in the right direction. on a case-by-case basis. This is what they' re Tom Eichler, executive coordinator for Stand "It's gratifying to see our chief law trained to do." -compiled by Aliza Israel from L.A. Times and Washington Post wire Up for What's Right and Just, a Delaware enforcement officer mindful of the capacity of reports organization dedicated to criminal justice reform, the prisons," Eichler said. See editorial, AlO said he is pleased with certain aspects of the Mark Mauer, assistant director of the

MAN THREATENS, DISPLAYS The boy had previously been GUN AT GAS STATION arrested for shoplifting and had An unknown man threatened been ordered to stay out of the victii:ns and displayed a black store, he said. handgun at the Sunoco Gas Station Warrants are now pending for on Elkton Road Thursday at 4:00 both shoplifting and criminal a.m., Newark Police Officer Scott trespassing. Horsman stated in a press release. The man approached two men at CAR STOLEN FROM IN the station and then produced the FRONT OF HOUSE gun. The two men fled and report An unknown person s tole a bearing g unshots. No one was s ilver Acura Integra from injured, Horsman said. Stamford Drive Wednesday night, The unknown man was seen in a Horsman said. white late mode l 4 -door Chevy The vehicle was parked in front Celebrity, he said. of the victim' s residence, he said. FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY The vehicle was locked and the BOY CAUGHT SHOPLIFTING victim still has the keys. Partly cloudy, A juvenile entered the K-mart The value of the car is Partly sunny, Rain, Sunny, store in College Square Shopping approximately $8,000. highs in the upper 60s highs in the mid 60s highs in the upper 40s highs in the lower 50s Center Monday at 12:20 p.m. and attempted to remove four DVDs - COf!lpiled by Susan Kirkwood - courtesy ofth e Natiouo/ Weatht·r Sen·ice totaling $75, Horsman said. March 15, 2002 • THE REVIEW . A3 Parent warning of mental, judicial problems debated BY ANNA CHRISTOPHER with several advocacy groups, take a violation in 1997. with alcohol and drugs," he said. 'The whether or not to comply with this opportunity to take control of their Staff R~poru r different stance on the issue of Bishop said information received school knew this, and they had done amendment. own li ves. Parents of a Massachusetts Institute parental notification. during student counseling is kept nothing." He said he does not agree with Lukianoff said FIRE i also of Technology student who John Bishop, associate vice confidential unless the student gives a Clery said he and his parents used notification because it directly violates worried parental notification prevents committed suicide in April 2000 by president and director of the Center written request for disclosure or the settlement they won in a criminal their right to privacy. students from seeking counseling and setting herself on fire filed a $27 for Counseling and Student faculty feel the student may be in trial brought against Lehigh to start "Under the right circumstances, we medical help for fear of retribution million lawsuit against MIT last Development, said keeping parents danger. Security on Campus as a way of believe [parental notification] can be and from taking fuH responsibility for month. involved is a means of improving Howard Clery III, executive advocating safety and increasing helpful to both students and parents," their actions. The parents are arguing that the student behavior rather than violating director of the non-profit organization parental notification. Lukianoff said. "Still, we are troubled "Part of the goal of college is for institution had a responsibility to privacy. Security on Campus, said he agrees "Schools had adopted the excuse because parental notification policies students to develop their own sense of inform them of their daughter's 'The university's decision to have with the university's decision to keep that the students were the ones are just one part of an increasing responsibility and coping skills:· he worsening mental health. a parental notification policy is an parents informed of alcohol and drug drinking, they were the ones breaking tendency in higher education to treat said. Charles M. Vest, president of MIT, attempt to proactively protect the violations. the laws, they were the ones that had students as if they were children, not Lukianoff said although FLRE has responded to the lawsuit in a Feb. 4, health and safety of students," Bishop "Notification's important so that to deal with it," he said. the adults they are supposed to be." no official position on the lawsuit 2002, e-mail sent to the campus and said. students can make important decisions Clery and Bishop both said parental Lukianoff said across-the-board being brought against MIT, he is community. "Its purpose is not simply to invade about their safety and schools can notification was legalized by the Drug parental notification policies also concerned about the consequences In the letter, he addressed parental their private lives." learn where their problems are," he and Alcohol Possession Disclosure - disrespect a student's autonomy and that may result from such accusations. notification by saying staff members Bishop said the university decided said. "It tells the student that it's not a 1998 amendment to the Higher are largely based on stereotypical "While we think there is no excuse face a "quandary [in] balancing to inform parents of "matters that all right to go out there and drink as Education Act of 1965 allowing notions of the parent/student for a university to be reckless with a students' legal and medical privacy relate to the health and safety of their much as you want to." colleges and universities to tell parents relationship. student's safety.'' he said. "we hope rights with the obvious interests of dependents" in the fall of 1997. Clery said he became an advocate or guardians about illegal substance Many students support themselves that courts will continue to recognize parents in knowing how their sons and The Higher Education Center for of parental notification after his sister, violations. through college, be said. that college students are adults and daughters are doing. We strongly Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention Jeane, was raped and murdered in Greg Lukianoff, director of legal Students are stable, mature and should be afforded the same rights, encourage our students to involve reported that the university sent 1,414 1987 while a student at Lehigh and public advocacy at the Foundation independent enough to face the and treated with the same dignity." their parents in their lives." letters to the parents of students who University. for Individual Rights in Education, challenges of college on their own, he The University of Delaware, along had received an alcohol and/or drug "My sister's attacker had problems said universities have the choice of said, and should not be denied the See editorial, AlO Weekend 1\vo schools, repairs proposed BY ERIN FOGG comes in response to population growth in StaffReporrer New Castle County. Fischer said there are transport to · Residents of the Christina School District 3700 new housing projects in the area. area will soon be voting on a $64 million ''With the state's estimate of a half a child construction project for new schools in the for every home, that makes 1,850 new surrounding area and upgrading of existing students in grades kindergarten through 12," Wilmington facilities. he said. At the Newark City Council meeting "And real growth always outweighs Monday night, a spokesman from the school estimated growth." district outlined the components of the The segment of the proposal calling for now offered project referendum to be voted on in April funding for modular classrooms during BY TARA NEUMEISTER by residents of Newark, Wilmington, Bear construction of the nine elementary schools Staff Reporter and Glasgow. caused concern among council members. A new shuttle bus operation from the Nicholas Fischer, superintendent of the Fischer said the modular classrooms are a Wilmington bus and train station to the Christina School District, directed the large part of the cost and the state has denied university every Sunday will go into effect presentation to the council and audience funding for this aspect of the proposal. March 17. members.. The local community would have to Charlene Benson, director of The referendum consists of upgrades to supply nearly $3.5 million on its own, he nine elementary schools, a provision of lO said. Transportation Services, said the idea was THE REVIEW/Celia Deitz first introduced several years ago but was modular classrooms during construction, City of Newark Councilman John H. The new shuttle operation will allow installation of air conditioning in seven Farrell IV, 1st District, said he supports the unsuccessful. THE REVIEW/Sara Kuebbing students to travel between Newark schools and an upgrade to the swimming school board's recommendation of including The idea resurfaced this yein in and Wilmington Sunday afternoon. The Christina School District wiU conversation with the Transportatio_n facility in Glasgow. the modular classrooms spend $64 million to construct new Management Association about the lack of A successful program will give the Another major part of ------in the cost. facilities and renovate existing ones. public transportation from Wilmington to university valuable information to share with the referendum is the He said the- health of Newark. DART First State, she said. construction of one new the children in the The first item is voting for or against the Shearee Moore, service supervisor, said a "There has been talk that if DART officials elementary and one new "The average age schools should be the project. university bus would make two pick-ups in see people are interested, they might be middle school along of fac.·l··t.·es to be main concern in the final The second item w ill involve voting Wilmington at 5:15p.m. and 6:15p.m. encouraged to set up a permanent program on Route 40. decision. either with the local education board's Sundays and stop at designated locations Sundays," Benson said. Fischer said this is the Upgraded J•S Farrell said modular proposal of a $64 million bond, or the state's throughout Newark. She said the idea of the program will begin third and final phase of a classrooms would Department of Education recommendation Moore said the cost will be $5 and will be on a trial basis to gauge campus interest. project that began in approximately 44 prevent children from of $56 million. available to students, faculty and staff. Despite minimal results in the past, Benson 1990. exposure to harmful Fischer said the state' s recommendation Riders may be asked to present university said, the program will run through the end of He said renovations to yearS Old." material produced by f~r the project, in addition to rejecting identification. Spring Semester before it is reevaluated. older schools were construction. funding for modular classrooms, also left no· No transportation service currently runs "I think it will be a viable option and needed due to the City.,11 :S\f 11 , .Newar~ ..money for construction specialists and les between the cities Sundays, she said. certainly hope it will be popular with buildings' increasing age. - Nicholas Fischer, Councilman· Frank money for equipme nt for the two new . "Th e idea ,is to have affordable students," she said. "The average age of superintendent of Christina School Osbo~. 5th District, schools. J ' transportation from the Wilmington [bus and Senior Kristin Wilson said the lack of the facilities to be District said -he agreed with He said voting with rt he state's train] station to campus available to transportation makes traveling inconvenient upgraded is Farrell's comment. recommendation would limit the money put students," she said. "As it is, students who and expensive. approximately 44 years "The modular toward computers, classroom furniture, want to use public transportation have to "It's really annoying," she said. "I'm from old," he said. classrooms are much playground equipment, landscaping and either make arrangements with friends or take New York and I already pay a lot of money The renovations, costing more than $26 more efficient than working around the contingency funds. a cab which could cost over $35." just to get from there to Delaware. million in local funds, would· bring the last students," Osborne said. ''We are hoping people will look upon the Transportation Services frequently receive "I shouldn' t have to hope that I can find a of the district's 29 current schools up to date, The community will have two sections to referendum favorably and vote with our calls from students requesting some type of ride from Wilmington or get stuck paying Fischer said. vote on April 18 in a ballot that Fischer calls recommendation," Fischer said. service, Benson said. more money for a cab." The construction of the two new schools ''unique." Nursing shortage affects state, with 500 positions open BY MELISSA BRACHFELD will require strategies that travel multiple staff overtime and use temporary agency field and increased opportunities for career fair was held [in February], and well Staff R~porrer paths." nurses, resulting in a loss of quality care women in other fields. over 100 agencies were present, trying to A continuing nursing shortage in A DHCC committee has been organized and, in long- term care, a break in the The average age of nurses in Delaware is recruit graduating students." Delaware and across the nation has resulted to address four categories - public policy, continuity of care. 45. Ben Shaw, senior vice president of in a lack of quality care, canceled medical recruitment, retention and education, Paulanka said an additional factor Human Resources at Christiana Care Health - procedures and overworked nursing staffs, Chaconas said. contributing to the shortage might be job System, said it employs approximately the Delaware Health Care Commission For example, she said, scholarships and "Nurses don't get dissatisfaction. 2,000 nurses and has 100 vacancies. reported last week. loan repayments, media campaig ns and "[Nurses] don't have the time to give the "It's taking us longer to hire experienced Judith A. Chaconas, director of Planning targeted recruitment programs will be the proper respect quality care needed and they aren't paid nurses," Shaw said. and Policy for the Delaware Health Care implemented to draw more people into the competitively," she said. ''The wages have Christiana Care Health System over ees Commission, said the statewide nursing nursing field. that they deserve leveled off in the past six years and haven' t four facilities - W ilmingto n Hospital. shortage is part of a trend that has been . Yrene Waldron, a nursing home kept up with inflation. Christiana Hospital, Riverside Extended developing for some time administrator and executive director of and relationships "Nurses don't get the proper respect that Care and Christiana Home Health a nd "I think it's very serious in Delaware, Delaware H ealth Care Facilities they deserve and relationships with doctors Community Services, he said. the rest of the country, as well as Association, said she attributes the shortage ·with doctors are not are not as good as they should be." "Our patient admissions at our two worldwide," she said. " In Delaware, there to a combination of factors, including an Despite these factors, she said, hospitals have increased by lO percent from are 500 vacant positions for reg istered overall aging workforce, alternative career as good as they enrollment in the College of Health and this time last year," Shaw said. "There's nurses and 150 vacant licensed practical choices and more competitive wages in Nursing Science has increased 1.5 percent greater work volume that needs additional nurse positions, just in private hospitals. other professions. should be." for the past two years, but five to six years staffing and we are competing in a " In addition, there are hospices, home Waldron said there is also a shortage of ago enrollment was down by 6 percent. • marketplace that has limited supplies of health and other facilities. Also, there are radiologists, X-ray technicians, pharmacists - Betty Paulanka, "I think enrollments are up now because experienced professional nurses." shortages of certified nursing assistants. and other positions, but the most visible dean of the College of Health and there are more opportunities opening up," Shaw said Christiana Care H ealth Chaconas said nursing is not a profession absence is in nursing. Nursing Science Paulanka said. System is trying to compensate for the that functions in isolation, but is one In long-term care, there is a 15.4 percent She said hospitals and health care shortage in many ways, including segment of the overall health sys tem. vacancy rate for licensed practical nurses facilities have been involved with the improving a nd maintaining pay and T herefore, the impact is felt across the and a 13.8 percent vacancy rate for certified Betty Paulanka, dean of the College of university in an effort to recruit new nurses benefits, offering internship programs for entire health care spectrum. nursing assistants, she said. Health and Nursing S c ience, said s he from the college program. recent graduates and providing cholarships " Because of·the complexity [of this In efforts to remedy the shortage, she attributes the nursing shortage to an aging "We work with all the hospitals in the and exte rn/co-op programs for c urrent situation], the re wi II not be a n easy or said, hospitals and other facilities work workforce, as well as the demands of the surrounding states," Paulanka said. " A college students. simple solution, Correcting the shortage Minorities' language barriers impede quality ofhealth care BY T ARRA A VIS and their experiences through the health N.Y. laws that are b e ing violated b y the "Because hospitals are not providing Enurtainment Editor care system," Doty said. The case, whic h was fil ed in hospitals, she said, including Title Six of interpretation services for their non­ American minor"ities encounter more· "The study points to the problems that c onjunc tion with the New York State the Civil Rights Act of 1964. English speaking patients. those patients . communication proble ms with doctors still re main." Attorney Gene ral' s office, is not ye t a "This law says that a ny e ntity tha t are not getting the same services as those and h ealth car e providers than white Hispanic, Asian and African-American lawsuit, but is a complaint at this point, receives federal funds are mandated by who do speak English."' she said. Ame ricans, according to a study participants expressed proble m s with she said. the fe d eral and state g ove rnme nt to Ste phe n Boh le n . a spokesman for conducted by the Commonwealth Fund. understanding their doctors, she said, and Since both hospitals are lo cate d in provide interpretation services," Cuison­ Woodhull Hospital, said he could not Spokeswoman Michelle Doty said the fe lt their doc tor did not listen or f ully diverse communities with many bilingual Villazor said. discuss the details of the case. private research foundation conduc ted a answer questions. residents, C uison-Villazor said, doctor­ " [Viol ating the law] con s t i tutes "1 cannot comment on the case. since it random te le phone s urvey tha t L a n gu age b a rriers exi s t for man y patient communication is an issue. national origins of discrimination." is potentiall y a matter of litigation,'' he documented health care quality a mong minorities, Doty said, preventing non­ "Once they' ve done the investigating, The NYLPI has al so cited violations of said. " However, I will state that we feel adults. E nglish-speaking patie nts fro m s tating we are very positive they will find that the New York City Human Rights Law in very confide nt that our institution will The su rvey polled 6 , 722 adults a nd s y mptoms and asking questions about o u r · La tino c lie nts h a ve b een its complaint, she said. survive any scrutiny upon this particular included questions concerning confidence illnesses. discriminate d against b ecause of " This [law] says tha t any place of issue." a nd satisfaction with health care, Doty " Hispanics we re more than twice as language," she said. p ublic accommodation, like public The hospital offers a phone system that said. l ike ly tha n whites to ex pe rie nce "We have the option of filing the suit, hospitals, cannot conduct themse lves in a can automati call y translate conversation~ Participants were asked how they were difficulties communicating." she said. but at this point we haven' t done it yet," manne r that would have a diffe re ntia l be tween patient a nd doctor in 130 treated duri ng office visits a nd how much Rose C uison-Yillazor. an attorney for C ui son-Villazor said. effect based on color or national origin," languages. Bohle n said. of the doctor' s inform a tion the y Ne w York Lawyers for the Public "We're still waiting for the New York she said. T hree f ull - time translators arc understood, she said. Interest, Inc., said her firm has file d a State Attorney Ge neral's office to see Hospitals are specificall y required to curre ntly being hired. he said. and 85 " What is unique about this surve y is complaint against Woodhull Hospital and what they do." provide trans lation services b y la w , pe rcent of Woodhull Hospital's doctor' that it captures the perspective of patients Wyckoff Heig hts Hospital in Brooklyn, NYLPl has c i~d a number of different Cuison-Vallazor said. are bilingual or trilingual. A4. THE REVIEW . March 15,2002 Number ofstudents in debt up more than 20 percent BY LINDSAY MATHERS finam:ial aid at the university. said Students are eligible for loan repay your loans," she said. He said the Consumer Credit Staff Rt'fJOrter approximately 64 percent of consolidation immediately after Jones aid she advises students Counseling Services deal mostly College tude nts are finding it univers ity students receive graduation. Jones said. to continue taking federal student with students who have credit card harder to face increasing Federal assistance in paying for college. Consolidation of Federal Loans loans rather than private loans. debt. H owever, when their Student Loan debt after' graduation. This also includes schola rs hip extends time to repay loans, fixes There are more choices for customers do have debt from officials said. money. interest rates and creates a single refinancing due to consolidation student loans, they refer them to the Tracey King. spoke woman for He said he does not see debt loan, she said. options with federal loans, she said. Dep artment of Education who the State Public Lntere t Research from aid as becoming a major The time that students normally Linus Campbell, director of educates graduates about the status Group , said the average student in problem for university students. have to repay loans is 10 years. education for Consumer Credit of their loans. the 1999-2000 school year owed "Our default rate is low, two to With loan consolidation, students Counseling Services for Maryland " It is a reality check. They have $ 16,928 in federal student loan three percent. which shows us that will have 15 to 30 years. This could and Delaware, said individua l to face the real world, real biUs and debt. most students are able to meet their cut monthly payments in half. but finance is a big issue facing on top of this have to repay loans," These statistics were found in a loan obligations [after the stude nt would pay more student . he said. s urvey conducted by the graduation]," Burton said. interest, Jones said. Department of Education d uring Theresa Jones, chief operating Interest rates vary from year to the L999-2000 school year, which officer for Higher Ed Loans, said year depending on Congres,which polled 50,000 undergraduate her company assists thousands of and every July has the power to Happv Garden Chinese Restaurant students, she aid. graduates each year with loan change the interest rates, she said. The number of people in debt consolidation. One of the more widely used has grown drastically during the Higher Ed Loans has individual loans, the Stafford Loan, dropped past eight years. jumping from 42 THE REVIEW/Celia Deitz loan specialists who work with by 2.2 percen last July, which is the percent of students in 1992-1993 to Federal student loans are less graduates on an individual basis. lowest it has ever been, Jones said. 64 percent in 1999-2000, King costly and more manageable They help graduates weigh the " It is an excellent year to said. than loans from private banks. advantages and disadvantages of consolidate lfederal student loans] She said 64 percent of college " Pell gr a nts, which are the loan consolidation depending on because you can retain that interest Tlllllll•e: •2-m-2211 students take out student loans, cornerstone to financial aid. cannot the student' s situation, she said. rate during the time you have to 111 I Elat11K thus making debt a major concern keep up with the rising costs of IIR'liE11m across college campuses. • Willi PtrCblllllf $1Uitr .... Pic- 1111 tuition," she said. King aid one of the factors that help to explain the increase in Another cause of debt increase is parents borrowing more money financial aid debt are the Pell from loans rather than using money grants, which assist low-income from savings accounts, King said. students. J ohnie B urton, director of

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The order The University Bookstore is Contracts allow for guaranteed was incomplete and 1 had to go currently soliciting new contract book buy-backs, competitive prices downstairs and physically gather the proposals from textbook suppliers, and better availability of textbooks, books, the exact process I was trying aid Barbara Kreppel. a sociate vice she said. to avoid." pre ident of administrative ervice . Communication Professor Robin Shari Lofland, director of the Kreppel aid the university may Vagenas said her biggest concern at bookstore, said the contract' main renew it contract with Follett Higher the university is textbook focus is academics, but these Education Group, but Barnes & availability. companies are also offering Noble College Book tores. Inc. is "We need to increase the number technological advancements. also offering a competitive contract. of book orders, especially for large "All larger lease operations are These two firms are being con idered classes," Vagenas said. "When now following in the roads of based on their compatibility with the additional books are required, we technology' in an effort to keep up university's needs. need them delivered more rapidly." with the times,'' she said. The Bookstore· s management Kreppel said since there is a small A committee composed of agreement with Follett Higher margin between textbook prices students, faculty and staff will review TilE REVIEW/Celia Deitz Education Group expites this year among competing companies. the presentations from prospective The University Courtyard's most popular types of apartments after a ix-year contract. The THE REVlEW/Celia Deitz university is looking to sign a companies, visit client accounts at were filled by the end of the first leasing appointment day. university had a contract with Follett The University Bookstore contract with a company that can other schools and make Higher Education Group for three may change distributors from offer new concepts to the university. recommendations to Kreppel. T h e years beginning in 1996, then FoUett to Barnes & Noble. such as on-line text reserve. reports will be taken into renewed the contract for an a general book selection, a school Kreppel said Follett Higher consideration when Kreppel meets • additional three year . she said. Education Group first offered online with the senior administration to Half of Courtyard supply area and a retail area. Other • "We need vendors that have the options. including a cafe, are also text reserve to the university during make a fmal decision, she said. ; size and scope to accommodate the available. Fall Semester 1998. Kreppel said the university would : univer ity," she said. 'There i Little "We emphasize service and work Sophomore Kate Elliott began finalize its contract by 'the end of margin between textbook prices very closely with the faculty," he ordering her textbooks online April. applicants denied , [among the competing companie ]." said. through efollett.com during Fall Frank said Barnes & Noble ! Stan Frank. marketing director for Semester 2000 and said she College Bookstores, Inc. operates BY KARA GlANNECCHINI the type they were looking for was In terms of policy decision, Sraff RefJOTU!r ' Barnes & Noble College Bookstores, Kreppel said hours of operation and experienced several problems. approxirnately 400 bookstores across still available, said Masha Sapper, : Inc., said. under the contract, Approximately 400 of the 800 the selection of items offered at the "I have difficulty purchasing new the nation, at locations such as property manager of University : companies such as his completely students, who applied to live at the bookstore, are decided by the books at the Bookstore because Hofstra University, George Mason Courtyard, which are located on • take over bookstore operations. University Courtyard Apartments university. they' re never in stock," Elliott said. University and the College of South College Avenue-ud Delaware The company supplies textbooks, for "the next school year have been "The university considers these "I began ordering books online. but William and Mary. Avenue. denied t he apartments of their "We were very clear about what choice. officials said. we meant by a leasing M..-. S & 19 --Atlantic City ...... 5 18 ...... 26 --NYC Sea-Space Museum & Shopping ...... , ...' 45 Last month, all students who appointment," Sapper said. "The -DELAWARE applied to the apartment complex ...... 13, Mar. 19 NYC Metropolitan tluseum of Art & Shopping ...... $45 EXPRESS ...... 30 --Cherry Blossom Festival, DC ...... ' 27 notice was straightforward. We ...... 20 New York Gty, Ellis Island, Ground Zero, Shopping ...... $40 May 18 --NYC Shopping ...... ' 30 were sent a leasing invitation, which didn't make any promises to anyone TOURS .Jwe19 --Oklahoma on Broadway ...... ' 115 ...... 10 Philadelphia Flower Show...... '32 told them the date of their leasing ~~e--r Sep 18 --Uan King ...... ' 139 that they were ,guaranteed an M..-. 18 Taj Mahal ...... •..5 99 ... '------,-~l-1 Sep 27-29--Williamsburg/UD Football ...... TBA appointment. The notices stated that apartment." Ski Blue Mountain • every Wednesday & Sunday 302-454-7100 • 800·648-5466 Nov. 13 --The Producers on Broadway ...... ' 129 the applicants could pick out their Ia... 4ppl <$>) S30.00pp - Wednesday 4ppl @ S40.00pp - Sunday WWW.D£l£XPRESS.COM " AIITripo. ,.,, f".-- Mco-.w' l'~tm• However, the notice was unclear apartment at that time, provided that to some people. Sophomore Katit.-8chiavi, who applied for an apartment in early October, said the wording of the leasing invitation confused her. "When I got the notice, I just assumed it was a confirmation of our acceptance into the apartments," Schiavi said. "If the landlords had a pretty good idea of how many people they were going to be able to accommodate, I think they should have said so on the notice, so those people who were much further down on the list could have made other arrangements at that time." Aside from the fact that they were not expecting such a large number of new applicants, Courtyard staff said they were also nOt expecting the overwhelming number of past renters to stay in the apartments for the upcoming school year. "It's fantastic to know so many of our renters are satisfied and want to stay with us for another year," Sapper said. "Last year, we were still renting completely open apartments in July." Some students, ho_wever, were annoyed that the Courtyard staff waited so long to find out which tenants were staying in their apartments and which ones were not. "I really don't understand why they had to wait until February to find out who was sta)'i~g and who wasn't," Schiavi sa~d. "It would have made the decision to go out and look for other places a lot easier." ·, The most popular types of apartments applicadtS wanted to rent were the four-bedioom four-bath and four-bedroom two-bath models, which were completely filled after only the first night of leasing appointments, Sapper. said. Sophomore Krittin Verrastro, who was looking to live with three of her friends in the four-bedroom two-bathroom model, said she was shut out. "When I originally applied for the apartment in September, I was told I had an excellent chance of getting exactly what my friends and I wanted," she said. ''We thought we were pretty much guaranteed our choice." There are still some spaces available in several of the different types of apartments, Sapper said but there are no longer any completely open apartments available. "We were given the option of living with one or more random roommates," Schiavi said. "But when you're counting on living with your friends, it's disappointing to think of splitting up." Schiavi said she was able to find housing for next year, "but it's been hell." Sapper said although the Courtyard staff feels badly that they could not accommodate everyone, they do not feel that they were at Apply for a summer internship working on an episode of Music In High Places, starring Unwritten Law. You could receive fl.. :. j~i;, 1n interested in living at the University , "'!"" ~-- : ·,...... ~e~ ~ {. (J ~ P.'v'. Courtyard in the future can still keep their names on the waiting list. Any students wbQ reccatly went to their leasing appointment and were told that there were absolutely no spaces available can apply for a -~:t.k.~:Utblt--r C,, l.---~... ~· 1 c .JJ :p:')6 refund of their $20 application fee, "' N'" '}]1 t 1:'v Cl (;6t!. l she said. A6 • THE REVlEW • March 15,2002 Students start chapter of national children's group BY ELISSA SERRAO Allison said. such as severe profound autism, he overwhelming student interest in the children, Allison·s enthusiasm on the Epilepsy Foundation of Delaware, said StaffRep oner Though he will be a highly active said, involve students who cut or Student CEC, the new group will be topic made her want learn more and he would like to pair up with the The university's Student Council and participating faculty adviser, inflict other types of harm upon able to have a big impact on the help. foundation in the future to hold an on Exceptional Children will hold its Allison said he is leaving it up to themselves. children. "I guess you could say I just fell in event close to campus. first meeting 2 p.m. March 22 at a student members to decide how to Many students who wish to become For Paula French, a freshman love with these kids," French said. "No matter what we do, lStudent location to be announced. utilize the grant money. members of the Student CEC have elementary education major, this will She said she hopes to actively CEC] gives students membership to a Faculty adviser Gary Allison, "This is an entirely student- already had experience with students be the ftrst time she will be involved advocate for exceptional children and professional organization," he said. professor of education, said students established and student-run like those with whom Allison works. with special needs children. · visit childre n in their schools and "You can't put a price on belonging to from all majors are encouraged to organization," he said. Junior Katie Bejarano said she has She said although she never had an homes. an organization like this that helps attend. Allison said the Delaware CEC has been working with children with interest in working with disabled Allison, who is on the board of the kids." Student CEC advocates successful also guaranteed to pay half of special needs for more than six years. education for students with physical university students' one-time When she was 14 years old, she and/or mental disabilities, he said, and membership fee, dropping the cost to said, her mother put her on a bus and focuses on what can be done to give about $17. told her she was going to volunteer at them access to a mainstream Camp ANCHOR, an organization curriculum. devoted to special needs children and 'The key word here is access," he "When some adults. . said. "We' re not dumbing down the "I had no idea what I was getting Ull ,, curriculum for these kids." people think of into," she said, "but by the end of the 0 Allison said access is given to first day, I knew I wanted to spend the CONJB a. students through individualized disabled rest of my life working in special programs; tailored specifically to the education." needs of one child, computer-based children they Bejarano, an elementary and special WITH.:;._--- instruction or simply the gift of time. education major, said she intends to Unless it is absolutely necessary, see a short run for president at the group' s first Allison said he does not think disabled meeting. children should be forced to attend a school bus with She said some of her ideas for the special school. Student CEC include having . "When some people think of seat belts." professionals come to campus to speak disabled children they see a short about misconceptions of children with school bus with seat belts," he said. - Gary Allison, special needs, as well as starting a "It's just not the case." faculty adviser and education camp where children can feel at home The CEC exists in all states and professor and accepted. also on a national level, he said. Both "I have a million ideas and, levels are composed of a network of honestly, this program has little professional educators trained in Dawn Roland, treasurer of the boundaries," Bejarano said. " It is special education. Delaware CEC, said the children that possible we will get these and many The National CEC in Washington, benefit from the organization are ages other goals accomplished," Bejarano D.C. is among the largest non-profit 6 through 21 and have conditions said. organizations dedicated to the ranging from minor disabilities, such Sophomore Shannon White heard improvement of education for students as Attention Deficit Disorder, to about the program from her with disabilities. Allison is a member severe conditions of mental Introduction to Exceptional Children of both the Delaware and National retardation. class, taught by Allison. FOR MORE INFORMATION STOP BY THE CEC. Allison said he has more than 31 Although her major is health and The Delaware chapter has played a years of experience specializing in exercise science, she said she hopes to major role in .jump-starting the treating students with life threatening, incorporate her minor in Disabilities BACK UP YOUR BIRTH CONTROL university's new program by severe or profound behavior disorders. Studies into her future job. providing them with a $300 grant, Life-threatening behavior disorders White said that with the KIOSK IN TRABANT ON FRIDAY, MARCH 22

BE PREPARED Protect yourself in case: Using Emergency Terrorism war can be won Contraception (EC) · • The condom breaks within 72 hours of continued from Al that needs to be exercised," he said. is very possible the Senate will • you forgot to take your pill " I would be confident that this debate this week the campaign unprotected sex can nuclear power against stateless al­ administration would use every finance reform bill passed by the Qaida forces would be impractical. • You had sex when you didn't want or plan to possible option rather than resort to House in February. prevent pregnancy. "I'm not sure how you identify the nuclear one. "We are guardedly optimistic," he the enemy," he said. "I would be astonished if there said. "The opponents have McCain also said the dangers was a scenario that we would be threatened another filibuster but I surrounding deployment of such For EC, call Planned Parenthood at 1·800·230-PLAN using those except in the most believe we have the 60 votes to weaponry should make the United extreme situation." overcome that filibuster." States cautious regarding their use. McCain also turned his attentions "Nothing is certain in life and in "I believe the accuracy and to domestic issues. politics, but I am confident that after IFil Planned Parenthoode increased lethality of modern An adamant supporter of all these years we are about to reach weapons makes the- use of nuclear of Delaware campaign finance reform, he said it a conclusion." II=" weapons less and less of an option

Can't Boil Water? MARCH OF DIMES Sick of Mac & Cheese? Bored with Rice A Roni? WALK AMERICA The March of Dimes annual Walk America will be held on the Newark campus again this year, beginning at 10:00 a.m. on Sunday, April28, 2002, near Delaware Field House. Registration begins at 9:00 a.m.

The mission of the March of Dimes is to prevent birth defects and infant mortality. This is accomplished through education, research, community programs and advocacy. Over its 32-year history, WalkAmerica has raised more than $1 billion, and your participation makes a difference!

Learn How To Really Cook! This year we are expecting a crowd of over 2,000 walkers. The event will (Without burning your house down.) feature a six-mile walk, snacks along the walk, entertainment, lunch, and University of Delaware student organizations providing activities for chil­ dren at the end of the walk. Join YoUDee and Baby Blue, the University of Delaware cheerleaders, WSTW and many others to support March of Klondike Kate's All New Series Dimes in its efforts to help babies live healthy lives.

The University of Delaware is proud of its many-year tradition of having "Dinners for Dummies" a large team of walkers. The first 50 members of the University commu­ We will show you how to prepare simple gourmet meals nity who register with $25 in pledges will receive a free University of Delaware Walk t-shirt. Brochures with registration information will be you never thought possible. available at the Trabant and Perkins Student Centers, Carpenter Sports Building, Employee Wellness Center, Dining Halls and other locations The first of our series is around campus. .----PASTAS & saUCES _ __, Be a hero for the tiniest babies. For more information, contact UD Team co-captains Suzanne Desh~ng (831-8964, [email protected]) or Margot Saturday March 23rd @ 2:00pm Hsu Carroll (831-2200, [email protected]). $5.00 Per Person. Must Register In Advance. Walk America Dates/Locations: Limited Space Available. Saturday, May 4, 2002 Sussex County Walk @ Call 737-6100 for More Info. Delaware Technical College

You Will Be Shown Step By Step How To Prepare Saturday, April27, 2002 Kent County Walk @ And Serve A Fabulous Gourmet Dinner. Legislative Mall

~ Sunday, April 28, 2002 New Castle County Walk @ UD Field House We Will Also Be Tasting Fantastic Wines And Show You How To Pair Wine With Food. **All Walks start at lOAM, with registration beginning at 9AM** 'March 15,2002 • THE REVIEW • A 7

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© 2002 Pharmacia Corporation UX0019947.01 2/02 AS • THE REV lEW • Marc h 15. :wo~ Forum addresses Bill to up state court funds. BY ASHLEY OLSEN allotted to the state's three largest The j udiciary syste m is o ften Staff Reporru police departments and $1 80 taken for granted, he said. abortion rights A proposal was enacted million to the prisons in 2003. "Courts involve a lot more than Monday that aims to gain Steve Taylor, state court the judges," Henderson said. BY KATHRYN HOLL "Fifty-three percent of women approximately $1.5 million for administrator, said $64 million is He said the amount of money StafJTI.eponer don't identify with one specific side," Delaware state court funding. set aside for the courts. a va il a ble to various s tates ' Representatives from the Pro- Riley said. "These women are known E. Norman Veasey, Delaware judic iary systems varies widely, Choice Public Education Project as the 'mushy middle' and Chief Supreme Court, said the according to the overall s tate spoke at an open forum discussion on cons idering the fact that women judiciary system was underfunded. budget. young women's reproductive rights become more conservative as they State courts need to increase T aylor said the courts plan to and specifically addressed.issues of age, we need to reach out to the appropriations in order to serve use the e x tra mo ney to fini s h awareness Monday to approximately young women now. the public efficiently, he said. "Courts involve con s tr uction on the s tate court 13 women. "We found that 57 percent of the A hearing regarding the request house, buy ne w equi pment a nd Sarah Joy Albrecht and Sirena women polled, described themselves was held by the Joint Finance a lot more than f urniture a nd insta ll a new Riley said that based on statistics, as pro-cho ice, but 53 percent THE REVIEW /Sara Kuebbing Committee in Dover Monday. computer system, which will aid there is an increasing lack of described themselves as pro-choice A forum held Monday helped Dennis Jones, state court the judges." in case and financial management knowledge among young -women versus pro-life." students unsure of whether to administrator, said courts hope to of the court system. who tend to take their rights for The forum discussed the classify themselves as pro-choice. earn money to increase the - Thomas Henderson, With the co mputer system granted and do not realize· the perceptions of the threat to women's efficiency of their failing system spokesman for the National costing approximately $ 13 million dangerous implications they may rights being restricted. Presenters if the proposal is passed. media messages their organization Center for State Courts alone, court officials pla n to face if their rights are threatened. also spoke of ways PEP and student formulates and the most effective A $1 0 fee, suggested to Veasey receive only $300,000 in this area, Coordinated by Suzanne Cohen of organizations can incnJase abortion ways to address young women. by Delaware Supreme Court he said. Planned Parenthood Wilmington, the rights sentiment. PEP volunteers distributed a Justice Myron Steele, was In the meant ime, he said, state forum served as a place for Albrecht said the main problem comprehensive folder that included proposed at the hearing to be · c ourts ar e scheduled to open a discussion and education. today is that women are not aware of advertisements used to encourage collected from individuals pro-se center, at which defendants Albrecht said PEP any threat to their pro-choice support. convicted of crimes in Delaware, An allottment of $62 million will be able to access legal is the only national ------rig hts a nd need to "These ads are created to inspire he said. This includes charges from state funding was receive d documents and material useful to organization that develop a sustained. action among a savvy generation," ranging from felony to minor by the Delaware judiciary system their defense. targets young women "Fifty-three m e a n i n g f u I Riley said. traffic offenses like speeding. in 2002, he said, resulting in only J o nes said projected aged 16 to 25. Its communication with Ca plan said she would take A $20 increase in ci vii filing a $2 million increase. amendments of the proposal are goal is to educate percent of them to create an different approaches to cultivating fees for the Justice of the Peace Thomas Henderson, a scheduled to be heard in May. them about opportunity for abortion rights activists. Court was also proposed, he said, spokesman for the National Center The final decisions will be reproductive freedom women don't growth. "I wonder what the success rate raising the fee from $30 to $50. for State Co,urts, said these made by the General Assembly and choice, by " There has to be ~ould be if men were invited to take Jones said increasingly large problems are typicaL June 30, be said. energizing a new identify with ways women can a more active role," Caplan said. "I sums of money are poured into the generation of pro- support choice think to be more successful, we need state's police and prison system, choice activists. one specific amidst their busy to be more inclusive." · which sends more people in front "At PEP, we lives - it is our job Kathy Turkel, assistant professor of judges. concentrate on side. These to. help them," of women's studies, said she finds it Veasey said hearings in two research, message Albrecht said. hard to support PEP' s 2002 media recent cases were postponed due development and women are Also in attendance campaign, because abortion is a to lack of available judges. g r a s s r o o t s were Sharon Caplan, difficult issue. "More money [a1lotted to the • dissemination known as the president of Planned Some examples of the campaign judiciary system] would have been mE through interactive Parenthood included colored fliers with helpful," Jones said. action briefings to 'mushy · Wilmington, senior potentially offensive material printed While these two particular Deer Park Tavern reach and cultivate Elizabeth Schultz, an on them. cases have been worked out with F.STABUSHED 1851 NEWARK, DE pro-choice activists," middle.'" intern at Planned One such flier read, "SCHOOL the help of tempoary funds being she said. Parenthood POLICY - In cases of date rape, released by the budget office, 'There is no other -Sirena Riley, ~il.mington and whereby a female student is believed Veasey said, the long term Deer Park Tavern pro-choice representative from the Pro:' JUniOr An~ela to be promiscuous or intoxicated, the problem still exists. · organization that Orfgfnall~ t&e St. Patrfck' s lnn Ch . p bl' E-' . Caswell, co-president female shaH automatica11y be Steve Taylor, state court makes women [aged ozce u zc uucatzon of Students Acting deemed at fault." administrator, said more court 16-25] their focus Project for Gender Equality. Other advertisements that dealt cases than resources exist to aid in Celebrates St Patrick's Va9 .1111 Weekend long I and we wanted to fill "I am very directly with abortion issues included the judiciary process. . that niche." interested in young disturbing pictures of bathrooms and However, Veasey said funding Gulnness. Harp and Bass pints $2.50 According to a poll conducted by women's rights for reproductive cars with signs such as, "operating increases in Delaware courts are PEP in October 2001, definition of choice," Schultz said. "I think it is room" and "abortion clinic." necessary to match the increased corned Beef and cabbage terms, language use and how the good for students to be exposed to "We should concentrate on letting demand generated by the other Friday March 15th - OJ Rick Daring abortion rights message is framed organizations such as PEP." young women know that an abortion pieces of the criminal justice greatly impacts how the message is Albrecht and Riley concluded the can be a responsible choice," Turkel system. saturday March 16th - Larry TUcker Band received. discussion by addressing the kinds of said. Jones said $159 million will be sunday March 17th- Bag Papers Mar,h ENTERTAINMENT CALENDAR FINANCIAL AID APPLICANTS SHOULD SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY FILE NOW _FOR THE 2002-03 1 2 OJ Montana ACADEMIC Ysa!! Rick Oar1ng Wild AXe Open I 4 5 6 7 8 9 Mike Night Dynamite OJ Tom wtoerek OJ'S K_Floor Rick Oar1ng Larson HUbban:t Of No Cover ChOI'durov The Free Application for Federal Student Aid open 1 12 11 14 15 11 Mike Night Dynamite Buddy OJ Larry (FAFSA) be filed by w/Oerek OJ'S Jackson Rick Dar1ng 1\lcker should Hubbard Of No Cover Chordurov &ag p,,Jl 18 19 20 21 22 21 March 31, 2082 Dynamite Red OJ or. Harmonlo OJ'S Alert Rick oaring & Rocket 88 ~e" .41 No Cover Night. Remember to use the school code 001431. Open 2 25 26 27 28 29 10 Mike Night Dynamite Roger OJ w/Derek OJ'S Glrke Rick Dar1ng SNAP Hubbard Of No Cover You can pick up a EAFSA at tlie Student Services Chordurov Open 51 Building or 224 Hul~ihen Hall or file Mike Night Th~ · ,~wly l>~~r Pari< ~~5 w/Oerek n5tontl the onliQe version at Hubbard Of Chordurov ,~/~brat/,9 /t5 /50th ,+,,,~v~r56ry! http:/ /www.fafsa.ed.gov 108 w. Main street, Newark, DE • Ph: 302-369-9414 Parking available at u of DE parking authority directly across the street I·I~ •I•W:.. ...~ ... L~ .-:I Contraceptive rnJection Birth COr"\-trol ~ou-thir'\k ae.out jus-t a+xa~r.

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DEPO-PROVERA• ContraceptM! Injection • 1f you have had cancer of the breast 6.0rher RJsks • 1f you have had a stroke Women who use hormone-based contraceptives may have an 1ncreased nsk of blood clots or (medroxyprogesterone acetate inJectable suspension. USP) • 1f you have or have had blood clots (phlebrtrs) m your legs stroke. Also. if a contraceptive method fails. there is a possibility that the fertilized egg will begtn • 1f you have problems wrth your liver or liver disease to develop outside of the uterus (ectopic pregnancy). While these events are rare. you should Thle product Ia Intended to prevent pregMncy. It doea not protect against HIV • If you are allergic to DEPO-PROVERA (medroxyprogesterone acetate or any of its other tell your health-<:are provider if you have any of the problems listed 1n the next section. lrnctlon (AIDS) and ou..r Mxually transmitted di-s. Ingredients). What aymptoms may signal problema while using DEPO-PROVERA What other things should I conalder before ualng DEPO-PROVERA Contrac:eptlft Injection? 11 What le DEPO-PROVERA Contraceptive InJection? Contraceptive Injection? ~b~~~~vEAA provider immediate ly if any of these problems occur follawtng an 1njectJon DEPO-PROVERA Contraceptive lnjecbon is a form of birth control that 1s given as an You will have a physical exam1natJon befo,-., your doctor prescnbes DEPO-PROVERA. ~ is Just look intramuscular injection (a shot) in the buttock or upper arm once every 3 months ( 13 weeks). To important to tell your health-care provider if you have any of the following: • sharp chest pain. coughing up of blood, or sudden shortness of bteath (tndicatrng a posSible clot continue your contraceptive protection. yc>u must n!tum for your next inJection promptly at the • a fam1ly history of breast cancer in the lung) he h .. d' . , . . bl with . end of 3 months ( I 3 weeks). DEPO-PROVERA contains medroxyprogesterone acetate. a • an abnormal mammogram (breast x-ray). fibrocystic bn!ast disease. bn!ast nodules or lumps, or • sudden severe adac e or \'Omltln&o IZZines> or .amtmg. pro ems your eyeSight or ohemical sim1lar to (but not the same as) the natural hormone progesterone. wh'C)'I riH kiJJ ..._ injectJon. Your health-care provtder Wlll help you compare DEPO-PROVERA With other for women who stop us'"""' i2·: ·lr~ i>.'ll. unpred,ctabfe bleed1ng or spotting. an 1ncrease or decrease '" menstrual bleed•ng. or no bleed 1ng I M1ssed Penods Lowest at all. Unusually heavy or conunuous bleedJ·~"'. DEPO-PROVERA your menstrual penod wtll usually. tn ~me. retum to Its norma cycle. Cytadren (am•noglutethim1de) is an anticancer drug that may stgmficantly .d ecrease the Progestogen only 05 &....t....t 1 j,'t')r!;l. lUll"(· ~f\ 2 Bone M1nerol Changes effectrveness of DEP04 PROvtRA tf the two drugs are given dunng the same tsme i)- IUD Use of DEPO-PROilERA may be assoCiated With a decrease 1n the amount of m1neral stored in lliiimrt"""' ~· Progestosert 20 your bones. Th•s could 1ncrease your nsk of develop1ng bone fr"actures. The rate of bone m1neral .:;:~n~ ~~\!.Q~PROVERA can be passed to the nurson 1nfant tn the breast m1lk. no hannful Co""'"'T 380A 08 loss IS greatest tn the early years of DEPO-PROVERA use, but after that. rt begins to resemble the effects ~ave been found in these chtldren. DEPO- PROVE~ does not prevent the breasts from child reach norrnaf rate of age-related bone mmeral loss. produc•ng m•lk. so rt can be used by nursmg mothers.. However: to m•n•m•ze the amount of Condom (wMout >P<'""ICtde) 12 3CarlCer DEPO-PROVERA that is passed to the 1nfant in the first weeks after btrth. you should wart untrl .. --.: 6 Ts - 6 weeks after chtldbtrth before you start umg DEPO-PROVERA for contracepMn -- Stud es of women vvho have used dsfferent forms of contraception found that women who used How often do 1 get my shot of DEPO-PROVERA Contraceptive Injection? ----~~~~~c~~------T---- _6 _ ---~ ~ DEPO-PROVERA for contracep~on had no tncreased overall nsk of develop1ng cancer of the 4 breast ovary. uterus. cerv~x. or hver: However: v.10men under 35 years of age 'Whose first exposure The recommended dose of DEPO-PROVERA IS ISO mg every 3 months ( 13 weeks) gder No,:~"" cl>ldb

• f rom ~ paduoge msert..- contraceptton. see your health4 care prov•der as soon as posStb&e. Who should not use DEPO-PROVERA Contraceptive Injection? 5 A11ers·c R&Klions Not all women should use DEPO-PROVERA You should not use DEPO PROVERA ,r you h.tve Some v.omen us1ng DEPO·PROVERA Contracept rve lnJect

University of Delaware AXQ Learn more Wednesday March 27, 12:2D-1:10 p.m. Adrienne Aboyoun ,Stacey McGroarty about Gore Hall, Room 208 Lindsay Baldassano Marissa McKinney For furthe"r information, contact: Noelle Bittner Margaux Murray semester Allan Fanjoy, Administrator, Special Programs Lisa Buro Ashley Olsen (302) 831-2853 and [email protected] Marissa Caccipio Kim Pace Nicole Campoli Nicole Pandozzi summer www .columbia.edu/biosphere/ca Jamie Catanese Diana Pavlov Justine Chasanoff Jessica Quittman programs at Ling Chow Lauren Raus Pam Cousounis Jaqueline Rendeiro Biosphere 2. Jackie D' Alessio Nicole Riemma Daniella DeMartino Adriana Rokoszewski Kristi Eason Carissa Romano Leyna Ettleman Rachel Rosado Andrea Ferrara Danielle Schiener Tara Flynn Jaynie Schroth Merisa Herzog Sarah Snyder Mallory Jaffe Tara Swansen Erin Kane lillian Tepper Alexis Lehman Sam Tilton /1 AlO March 15, 2002

Delaware Attorney General M. to house and feed a prisoner - Jane Brady announced tills week money that all comes from tax she will work to assure sentences dollars. allotted to violent criminals are Perhaps if crimes were dealt longer and more severe. with on a case-by-case basis, Because so problems in the m a ny repeat prison system offenders are would ease. returned to Prisoners would prison within be evaluated for months of their the crime they releas e, a committed, not the longer sentence category it falls will protect in. potential Furthermore, victims. prisoners could However, receive more this decision personal attention misses the real devoted to their point of prison rehabilitation. Inmates will rehabilitation. all return to If the prison society one day. system were Inevitably, their completing its time will be up task effectively, and, in the eyes of prisoners would the courts, they not make trip will have served after trip back their debt to to jail. society. And, when repeat offenders It must be remembered that a return to the corrections system, person's performance once they the cost of incarceration are placed back into society is continues to pile up. It costs tens reliant upon the rehabilitation of thousands of dollars each year they receive while incarcerated.

~i':' :· ,, > '>i"'' ·' , __ > •• • ; ' •• : '. .,

~.!_:;. ~~ ~ ~~~-;\4-:,..,:S~ . ~ «,\,-~~ ~ ,,/'" ,' ' \, '' ":.' " .. ,. .. {~~,~~3~_:<:·,.....,"~~ .. :_... ~~~;. A recent court case stemming from with the family is a gray area. the Massachusetts Institute of Also, one must consider whether Technology has spwred debated over schools should share any information how much a parent should be pertaining to behavior at all. If the informed of their child's performance schools do not share mental health in college. information, why, Parents of an for example, MIT student are should letters be Professors accusations unjustly he denigrated my profession. While I am aware of took a back seat visibly so immediate problems could suing the school sent home states where the typical public defender puts in two be taken care of. But at this point, this highly claiming that had reporting on attack AAUP leadership to three years of work and then moves into private politicized criticism is creeping back to the forefront the school notified violations of school practice, that is not the case in Delaware. Our lead The stalling of an economic stimulus package, Steve Rubenstein's March 12 article ''Professors them, they argue, code? attorneys typically have 20 or more years of criminal unjustified criticism from the Democratic leadership question AAUP leaders' pay raises" attacks they may have T h e defense experience. There are other jurisdictions over the progress of the war, and the stalling over American Association of University Professors been able to help confidentiality of where the Courts appoint attorneys (some without judicial appointees are only some examples of the president Gerry Turkel and chief negotiator David their daughter any patient should any prior criminal experience) to handle indigent campaign to undermine the Bush adrninstration's Colton. The article did a disservice to the cause of before she feel in any health cases; public defenders in Delaware are full-time efforts. equity in collective bargaining for professionals. I comniirted suicide. care practitioner is (and often then some) practitioners of of criminal The assertion that the American people "are in have some insight into this area as, in addition to A psychiatrist or of utmost law. Private attorneys regularly seek our advice in denial" and that Bush's approval ratings defy logic is holding degrees from the university, I am a retired .{J psychologist is at ildVOrtance. Such regard to criminal matters, and we are well­ insulting in more ways than one. One of the positive autoworker who has negotiated collective bargaining liberty to share information should represented on court committees and in the Inns of outcomes of the atrocities of Sept. 11 is that agreements for the United Automobile Workers their client's be kept private, Court (a national organization of Judges, attorneys Americans found where their priorities should be, Union. I also know Turkel and Colton. mental health between the doctor and others dedicated to the improvement of the legal and should have been long before that fateful day. While conflict in the ranks of the AAUP is information with and their patient system). National security is and should be a high priority. It is indeed newsworthy, one has to wonder about the others. It is However, It would have been more professional of one of the primary duties of the federal government, timing of an article published a few days before a permissible to schools are correct Neufeld to qualify his remarks by specifically and it should never be underfunded That is one of contract vote concerning events three months old. report the patient to in reporting pointing out those jurisdictions where the public the reasons why we need a missile defense, so The issue of AAUP bargainers' eligibility for the police should they say in session violations of school code. Many defender systems are in such a poor state. His failure America and its allies can be protected against salary enhancements and salary confidentiality they are contemplating a crime. people are in need of the guidance of to do so in his remarks here is a great disservice to devastating attack. The American people understand enjoyed by all they represent is a red herring. If the Suicide is a crime in many states and, their parents when first arriving at our office whose constituents he was speaking to, as the importance of a strong national defense. AAUP's critics are opposed to salary enhancements, therefore, a doctor is required by law college. The two subjects are very well as to other dedicated members of the profession It is the Left, not the American people, that are they should say so, not insinuate that bargainers have to report their patient' s potential different and should have no bearing who don't fit his description. As a former reporter for in denial. Their hypocricy and their contempt for the a conflict of interest. The Review should have looked actions. However, sharing information on each other. · this newspaper, I am also a little disappointed that we issues that are actually important to most Americans deeper into the context of these attacks. Turkel and were not given a chance to defend ourselves within have been exposed. They cannot comprehend why a Colton strove to shore up relations with the trade the article. large part of their agenda has been rejected by the union movement, had successfully protected the majority of Americans. The proper title for Di benefits of non-faculty workers against an T. Andrew Rosen, Esq. Laura's article should have been ''Since Bush isn't a administrative assault and have maintained a Class of1982 , Public Defender liberal, he isn't a good president." principled stand regarding benefits for domestic [email protected] partners, something now commonplace in industry. Matthew Bakm I am amazed history professor Steven Senior Sidebotham's accusations should evince such shabby Column represents opinion of Chaimwn, Young Americans for Freedom scholarship, using anonymous citations when he mlbalan@udeLedu says, according to The Review, "[r]eports by some liberals [which?] faculty members with direct information [oh, those] indicate that a significant number Julia DiLaura's editorial ''Tragedy doesn' t make · 'Ihle music fans respect the [statistically significant?]- of pay raises may be in Bush a good president," in the March 12 issue of The tastes of others violation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement." Review, displays the typical left-wing elitist Fortunately, only 6.7 percent ofthe full time faculty contempt of the average American, and it also shows I totally agree with Eric Schrag's Letter to the associated themselves with this calumny and a very narrow understanding of a complex situation. Editor in last Friday' s issue of The Review that requested an investigation, which they got, although Before Sept. 11, Americans rated national questions Tom Monaghan' s column printed on Feb. the meticulous professor Sidebotham was not security a lot lower than it is now. But their attention 26. Real music fans have respect for the musical satisfied. also wasn't on Bush's so-called "alienation" of our tastes of others, no matter how different they may be. The facts that should have had the most allies. Before the Kyoto Protocol issue and the recent All I hear is people complaining about how rock prominence in Rubenstein's article lie in that the imposition of tariffs, the Europeans weren't rushing music of today sucks when compared they compare attacks had no merit, since special salary adjustments to action to implement pro-environment and free it to tunes of decades past. were granted well in advance of collective trade policies. In the last decade, the rest of the world Who really cares? Students listen to different bargaining, and that Turkel and Colton have had the practically drag the European Union kicking types of music beccluse they like to, not because of negotiated an agreement that provides excellent base and screaming over their high subsidiation of their some column written in the paper. I find it even more salary and incentive e~ancements for all full time agricultural sector, and they continue to implement amusing for someone to write in bashing Limp Bizkit faculty members and greater equity in benefits. higher levels of regulation within their jurisdiction. and Linkin Park while claiming that Bush - a Also, while the rhetoric of many European Nirvana copy-band - and Oasis - a Beatles rip-off Phillip Baruwwsky leaders and citizens is highly critical of American - are any better. I don' t care for any of the Class of 1988, Class of1990 actions and policies, the reality is that they are quietly aforementioned bands (excluding Nirvana), but I [email protected] supporting the effort against global terrorism, by would never write a column in the paper slagging providing military support, money, and other forms anyone else's musical tastes. There are a ton of good Delaware public defenders not of aid. They have lived in a reality that has been underground/indie bands like the Alkaline Trio that, struck more frequently by violence and terrorism, sadly, people have never even heard of. typical of other areas and they know the continuing threat all too well. On the domestic front, it is true that there has Wke Jennings As a public defender in the state of Delaware, I been ongoing criticism of the Bush administration Senior take exception to Peter Neufeld's remarks in the since he took office, some of which is warranted. pawz@udeLedu March 5 article ''Project acquits innocent." I believe Immediately after the attacks, this criticism rightly Send letters to: [email protected]

I A I 0 March I 5. 2002

Violent Criminals

Delaware Attorney General M. to house and feed a priso ner - Jane Brady announced this week money that all comes from tax she will work to assure sentences dollars. allotted tu violent crimina ls are Perhaps if c rimes were dealt longer and more severe. with on a case-b y-case basis. Because so problems in the many repeat prison system offender s a re would ease. returned lo Prisoners would prison within be evaluated for months of their the c rime they re lease, a committed. not the longer sentence Review 'Ibis: category it falls will protect in. potentia l Violent criminals Furthermore. victims. should ·be the prisoners could H oweve r. rece ive m o r e thi ~ decis io n subjects of better . personal attention misses the real rehabilitation rather devoted to their point of prison rehabilitation. than longer Inma tes will rehabilitation. 8entences. _· · a ll return to If the prison society one d ay . sy tern were Inevitably, their completing its time will be up task effecti vely, and, in the eyes of prisoners would the courts. they no t make trip L..__ ..:.______;_;__ _ _.J will have served afte r trip back their debt to to jail. society. And. when repeat offenders It must be remembered that a return to the corrections system. person· s performance once they the cost o f incarceration a re placed back into society is continues to pile up. It costs tens reliant upon the rehabilitatio n of thousands of doll ars each year they receive while incarcerated.

A recent court case stermning from with the fanlily is a gray area. the Mas achusetts Institute of Also, one must consider whether Technology has spurred debated over schools should share any irtforrnation how much a parent should be pertaining to behavior at all. If the informed of their child's perforn1ance schools do not share mental health in college. information. why. Parents of an for example. MIT student are should letters be Professors accusations unjustly he denigrated my profession. While I am aware of took a back seat visibly so irrunediate problems could suing the school sent home states where the typical public defender puts in two be taken care of. But at this point, this highly n , . . '. This ..,. attack AAUP leadership to three years of work and then moves into private politicized criticism is creeping back to the forefront. claiming that had ~~~{ : 1" reporting on the school notified violations of school practice. that is not the case in Delaware. Our lead The stalling of an economic stimulus package, Steve Rubenstein's March 12 article "Professors them. they argue, SChOols shOuld.lie · code? attorneys typically have 20 or more years of criminal unjustified criticism from the Democratic leadership ques tion AAUP leaders' pay raises .. attacks they may have T h e defen e experience. There are other j urisdictions over the progress of the war. and the stalling over o6ligited to 'repotf American Association of University Professors been able to help confidentiality of where the Courts appoint attorneys (some without judicial appointees are only some examples of the president Gerry Turkel and chief negotiator David their daughter violations of school · any patient should any prior criminal experience) to handle indigent campaign to undermine the Bush adminstration·s Colton. The article did a disservice to the cause of be fore she feel in any health cases: publjc defenders in Delaware are full-time efforts. code- butissues of equity in collective bargaining for professionals. I committed suicide. care practitioner i~ (and often then ome) practitioners of of criminal The assertion that the American people "are in have some insight into this area a~. in aut!ition to A psychiatrist or ·mental health should of utmost Ia\'<. Pri ate attorneys regularly ~t:ek our advice Ill denial .. and that Bu~b·s approval ratings defy logic is holding degrees from the university, l am a retired psychologist is at importance. Such regard to cr iminal matters. and we are well­ insulting in more way than one. One of the positive beJeft between .. autoworker who has negotiated collective bargaining liberty to share irtforrnation should represented on court commjnees and in the lnns of outcomes of the atrocities of Sept. II is that ,' d tors 800. the ' agreements for the United Automobile Workers their client' s ()(; ~ • ~ ;..><_ be kept private. Court (a national organization of Judges, attorneys Americans found where their priorities should be, Union. I also know Turkel and Colton. mental health student. {< between the doctor and others dedicated to the improvement of the legal and should have been long before that fateful day. While conflict in the ranks of the AAUP is information with and their patient. system). National security is and should be a high priority. It is indeed newsworthy, one has to wonder about the others. It is H owever , It would have been mo re professional of one of the primary duties of the federal government, timing of an article published a fe w days before a permissible to schools are correct Neufeld to qualify his remarks by specifically and it should never be underfunded. That is one of contract vote concerning events three months old. report the patient to in reporting pointing out those jurisdictions where the public the reasons why we need a missile defense, so The issue of AAUP bargainers· eligibility for the police should they say in session violations of school code. Many defender systems are in such a poor state. His failure America and its allies can be protected against salary enhancements and salary confidentiality they are contemplating a crime. people are in need of the guidance of to do so in his remarks here is a great disservice to devastating attack. The American people understand enjoyed by all they represent is a red herring. If the Suicide is a crime in many states and, their parents when first arriving at our office whose constituents he was speaking to. as the importance of a strong national defense. AAUP's critics are opposed to salary enhancements. therefore, a doctor is required by law college. The two subjects are very well as to other dedicated members of the profession It is the Left. not the American people, that are they should say so, not insinuate that bargainers have to report their patient's potential different and should have no bearing who don' t fit his description. As a former reporter for in denial. Their hypocricy and their contempt for the a conflict of interest. The Review should have looked actions. However. sharing irtfo1111ation on each oth.er. this newspaper, I am also a little disappointed that we issues that are actually important to most Americans deeper into the context of these attacks. Turkel and were not given a chance to defend ourselves within have been exposed. They cannot comprehend why a Colton strove to shore up relations with the trade the article. large part of their agenda has been rejected by the union movement, had successfully protected the majority of Americans. The proper title for Di benefits of non-faculty workers agains t a n T. Andrew Rosen. Esq. Laura's article should have been ·'Since Bush isn't a administrative assault and have maintained a Class of 1982, Public Defender bberal. he isn' t a good president." principled stand regarding benefits for domestic rrosen @srare.de .us partners, something now commonplace in industry. Matrhew Balan I am a mazed history professor Steven Senior Sidebotham's accusations should evince such shabby Column represents opinion of Clurimwn, Young Americans for Freedom scholarship, using anonymous citations when he mlba/[email protected] says. according to The Review. "lr]eports by some liberals l which?] faculty members with direct inforrnation [oh, those] indicate that a significant numbe r Julia DiLaura's editorial''Tragedy doesn't make True music fans respect the [statistically significant')] of pay raises may be in Bush a good president," in the March 12 issue of The tastes of others violation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement." Review. displays the typical left-wing elitis t Fortunately, only 6.7 percent of the full time faculty contempt of the average American, and it also shows I totally agree with Eric Schrag· s Letter to the associated themselves with this calumny and a very narrow understanding of a complex situation. Editor in last Friday· issue of The Review that requested an investigation, which they got, although Before Sept. II , Americans rated national questions Tom Monaghan·s column printed on Feb. the metic ulo us professor Sidebotham was not security a lot lower than it is now. But their attention 26. Real music fans have respect for the musical satisfied. also wasn·t on Bush's so-called ..alienation·· of our tastes of others, no matter how different they may be. The facts that s hould have had the most allies. Before the Kyoto Protocol issue and the recent All I hear is people complaining about how rock promjnence in Rubenstein's article lie in that the imposition of tariffs, the Europeans weren' t rushing music of today sucks when compared they compare attacks had no merit, since special salary adjustments to action to implement pro-environment and free it to rune of decades past. were granted well in advance o f collective trade policies. In the last decade. the rest of the world Who really cares? Students listen to different bargaining, and that Turkel and Colton have had the practically drag the European Union kicking types of music because they like to, not because ot negotiated an agreement that provides excellent base and screaming over their high subsidiation of their some colunm written in the paper. I find it even more salary and incentive enhancements for all full time agricultural sector, and they continue to implement an1Using for someone to write in bashing Limp Bizkit faculty members and greater equity in benefits. higher levels of regul ation within their jurisdiction. and Linkin Park while claiming that Bush - a Also. while the rhetoric of many European Nirvana copy-band - and Oasis - a Beatles rip-off Phillip Bamwwsky leaders and citizens is highly critical of American -are any better. I don't care for a ny of the Advertisin& Policy for Classified and Class of 1988. Class of 1990 actions and policies. the reality is that they are quietly aforementioned bands (excluding Nirvana). but I [email protected] supporting the effort against global terrorism, by would never write a column in the paper stagging Delay Ads: providing military support. money. and other fonllS anyone else·s musical tastes. There are a ton of good Delaware public defenders not of aid. They have li ved in a reality that has been underoround/indie bands like the Alkaline Trio that. The Review reserves the rightto.refuse any ads that are of struck more frequently by violence and terrorism. sad l y.~eople have never even heard of. and they know the continuing threat all too well. an improper or inappropriate time, place and maimer. Th~ typical of other areas On the domestic front. it is true that there has Luke Jennings ideas and opinions of advertisements appearing in this been ongoing criticism of the Bush admjnistration publication are not necessarily those of the ReView staff or As a public defender in the state of Delaware, I Senior take exception to Peter Neufeld·s remarks in the since he took office. some of which is warranted. [email protected] the university. Questions, ~omments or inpuvmay be , March 5 article ..Project acquits innocent.·· I believe Lmmediately after the attacks, this criticism rightly directed to the advertising department at The Review. . · Send letters to: dtortore@ udel. edu

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I March 15, 2002 All Drilling not justified by possibility of oil total of 19 million acres in the refuge, of his energy package. Sarah and Congress set aside 1.5 million To appease D emocrats and Q • CorseDo acres along the northern Arctic coast environmentalists, Congressman John • • for yoss~ble , an~ I. emphasize Sununu, R-N.H., amended the energy poss1ble, oil exploratton m 1980. bill to allow only 2,000 acres of the • CorseDo's Oil companies along with 1.5 million, of the coastal plain for oil • Comments Alaska's congressional delegation exploration. Republicans muscled 36 ba.v~ been anxious ever since to begin Democrats into voting for the drilling, For more than 10 years, drilling. claiming that it would create over republican politicians in Alaska have Oil companies believe, but have 700,000 jobs. This outrageous pushed Congress to open the Alaskan no real proof, that there could be number comes from an 11-year-old National Wildlife Refuge for oil between five and 16 billion barrels of study commissioned by the American exploration. oil in ANWR. This oil they "believe" Petroleum Institute. They have dubbed this action is there will not be easy to extract. Lets put this into perspective. A "exploration" because they hope to The coastal plain does not have just land mass that is no bigger than the find oil that could be sold one reservoir of oil. It is scattered Philadelphia International Airport that domestically. throughout the area in small is supposedly scattered with small Instead, they should face what accumulations. accumulations of oil that would This would mean miles of roads, provide more jobs than there are men they' re really doing ... ripping apart a 1 coastal plain in hopes of finding a even helicopter pads, that would need and women in the state of Delaware Tl4fi

attention. L ') I t., f r- was wrong. t.ccprd!ng".to Texas <,. t~agedy - . " 1 agree it is a sad law, if jurors believed Yates knew circumst~when people suffer right from wrong at the time of And, the verdict is- guilty. from mental illness and that she is her crimes, they had to disregard Well, it's about time. in desperate need of the defense of her being legally Andrea Yates was convicted hospitalization. It is obvious she in.sane by postpartum psychosis. on two counts of capital murder has been in need of psychiatric Prosecutors also stated other for the drowning of her children treatment for some time now. reasons may have been behind Tuesday. However, what's done is Yates' actions. They suggested After bearing word last done. she committed murder as a form summer that this woman drowned If her mental illness was so of revenge against her husband, The six-month anniversary of her five children in a bathtub, my severe, I believe it was the Russell Yates. Sept. 11 has come and gone, and, not stomach tossed and turned. My responsibility of her family to see Ironically enough, after this surprisingly, the media took full heart dropped. The entire country that s he had been hospitalized man wept with devastation giving advantage of the opportunity to once was appalled that a mother could long before her innocent children eulogies for each of his children , ~ain exploit a tragic situation. While it heartless ly take the life of a ny w.ere brutally murdered. back in June, he wept again as his , was certainly important to remember child, let alone five. Allred said, "I just think this wife was proven guilty. one of the most horrific events of Testimonials were given for is so sad, this result, so horrific Perhaps he should• ve heeded America's history, the media acted as if more tha n t hree weeks by the doctors' advice pertaining to his the attacks took place all over again. prosecution as well as the defense, wife's mental status, rather than Without even waiting until it was which triggered the jury to fight continuing to impregnate his wife. officially March 11, Sunday evening's their consciences for an entire Maybe he should h ave thought ,1, news broadcasts were already setting three hours and 40 minutes before Her past history, twice about the seriousness of her ,, the tone for what was to come. decreeing her guilt. condition - however, that's Immediately following the two- The decision is justified in my diagnoses and another story. 11. hour, respectful documentary ''9/1 l'' on eyes. reputation leave Thursday a hearing was held CBS, it became clear that the media It is absolutely beyond my to begin the sentencing process. television was right back where it bad think these images are not already frenzy surrounding Sept. 11 would be imagination how such a horrific lt been six months before. embedded in our minds? That after six me with one is hard to say whether or back in full swing. Dramatic opening murder could occur and even not anyone deserves the death One cable news channel even did a months we need to again be horrified? music was used in place of what further beyond me bow Yates question: If this penalty. minute-by minute account of Sept. 11, Of all the· lessons we have nonnally opens the evening news, and believed she could ever be found It's not that certain criminals so anyone who might have missed the supposedly learned from Sept. 11 , the almost 75 percent of the half-hour not guilty. woman were so don' t deserve it, but I feel as 51 media bombardment the first time could media seemed to ignore them all. 1:: broadcast was spent talking about the Though many agree with my though living with what you did experience it now. This station didn't Victims and their families bad to endure obviously attacks. The only reprieve from this was viewpoint, critics of the outcome while stuck in a prison cell for the even bother to re-report the same the media invasion once again, and the ~ the weather report. s uch as attorney Gloria Allred, rest of your life can be a more information. lt just took their newscasts public, still trying to recover, bad to afflicted, why on "Team coverage" focused on Deborah Bell of the National severe punishment. 5 from that day and replayed them. take a few giant steps back. .k every poss\ble aspect of Sept. 11, from Association for Women a nd earth would she Prosecutor Kaylynn Williford exclusive interviews with families who While I do not question that there Psychologists are predicting a :)1 Yates' defense attorney, George said, "It was wrong in the eyes of · was a need and a duty to remember second wave of emotional distress and lost relatives to exclusive interviews Parnam, differ in mindset. be left alone with God and it was wrong in the eyes Sept. 11 on the six-month anniversary, I post-traumatic stress disorder now that with families who watched the Insanity, mental illness, of the law." JG d do not think the way to do this was by the shock of Sept. ll is starting to wear her children? !r ocumentary to exclusive interviews psychosis, postpartum depression, This woman deserves to once again saturating the American off, replaced by pain and fear. The ~ with firefighters in Philadelphia There postpartum psychosis - all these public with the same footage and the media most likely added to this by suffer as the children did. Imagine Ti· may as well have been an exclusive words were used by Yates' the fear of her children. Envision interview with someone in Idaho who same images that disturbed it so greatly choosing to bombard the public with .r; defenders at trial. the shock of a baby child looking the first time. the most dramatic and shocking footage ·~ once visited New York. Sadly enough, A number of medical experts and so nauseating. This woman in into the eyes of his or her mother .. Throughout the past six months, available. .., . this was still Sunday night. c laim Yates to be o ne of the my mind, was clearly psychotic at in complete bewilderment, numerous studies were conducted that None pf the video was new, and Monday, the. actual six-month sickest patients they have ever the time that s he killed her wondering why the woman who concluded that the more hours a person therefore none of it was news. There ., anniversary of9/ll, was even worse for seen. They diagnosed her with children." they look to for nurturing and care spent watching television in the days was no need to show it for anything ~ anyone who dared turn on the schizophre nia, d epression and Can be be serious? would be doing this to them, as after Sept. 11, the more likely they were other than ratings. Perhaps the most television. Of course the news other medical conditions, The only thing nauseating is they all watch each of their to suffer post-traumatic stress. There disturbing thing of all, though, is that broadcasts were once again using their according to defense attorney statements like this one. siblings lie in water lifeless. sad music and conducting "exclusive" was a positive correlation found this was only the six-month between te levision viewing and anniversary. Wendell Odom. I reabze her act resulted from It is disgusting. ,. interviews, but it did not end there. Just Furthermore, Yates' psychotic tendencies, but I can't Anyone who takes the life of decreased mental health, yet the media What should we expect to see six .,, bke six months before, it seemed b ackground includes two believe that it is an excuse for this a helpless, innocent, defenseless seemed to ignore such findings. months from now, on September 11, \1. impossible to find a channel not talking attempted suicides a nd several dreadful deed. child, especially when she is the Two dedications took place to 2002? Americans need to move on, about the devastation. Victims' pictures hospitalizations prior to the I understand our judicial c h ild-bearer must suffer the honor those lost in the attacks. These recover and rebuild, and this just isn't were flashed across the screen and the drowning of her children. system bases innocence on mental consequences. were new stories relevant to the day, the way to do it. footage of the planes hitting the World Her past history, diagnoses ill ness, w hich for certain cases March II. Trade Center and the towers then and reputation leave me with one s tands as reason en ou g h . lillian Maxwell is a staff reporter But did we really need to see the Jessica Eule is a newsfeatures editor for crumbling were shown over and over question: If this woman were so However, 1 feel as though too for The Review. Send comments to Towers being struck over and over, The Review. Send comments to again. obviously afflicted, why on earth many use this defense option for [email protected]. From CNN to Oprah to MTV, falling again and again? Does the media [email protected].

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' March 15, 2002 All IDrilling not justified by possibility of oil I Sarah total of 19 million acres in the refuge. of his energy package. ; and Congress set aside 1.5 million To appease Democrats and Q • acres along the northern Arctic coast environmentalists, Congressman John • • 1 CorseDo : for _ p o s s ~bl e. an~ I_ emphasize Sununu, R-N.H., amended the energy 1 Corsello's posstble, ml exploratiOn m 1980. bill to allow only 2,000 acres of the l Oil companies along with 1.5 million, of the coastal plain for oil • Comments Alaska's congressional delegation exploration. Republicans muscled 36 ha_ve been anxious ever since to begin Democrats into voting for the drilling, For more than I 0 years, drillmg. claiming that it would create over republican politicians in Alaska have Oil companies believe, but have 700,000 jobs. This outrageous pushed Congress to open the Alaskan no real proof, that there could be number comes from an 11 -year-old National Wildlife Refuge for oil between five and 16 billion barrels of study commissioned by the American exploration. oil in ANWR. This oil they "believe" Petroleum Institute. They have dubbed this action is there will not be easy to extract. Lets put this into perspective. A "exploration·· because they hope to The coastal plain does not have just land mass that is no bigger than the find oil that could be sold one reservoir of oil lt is scattered Philadelphia international Airport that domestically. throughout the area in small is supposedly scattered with small Instead, they should face what accumulations. accumulations of oil that would they' re really doing ... ripping apart a This would mean miles of roads, provide more jobs than there are men coastal plain in hopes of finding a even helicopter pads, that would need and women in the state of Delaware T\-iERE' 5 precious drop of oil. to be built. and Wisconsin? To top it off, Sen. Frank Murkowski, R­ This construction alone would Republicans imply that it will lower Alaska, has made va rious strong massively scar the land. There is the the nation's unemployment rate by 50 ~0 0\ L- arguments as to why oil exploration is possibility of garbage accumulation percent. vital to the U.S. economy. and oil runoff to be concerned about. Here is the catch; the 2,000 acres As Americans, we import I 0.5 of Who knew Alaska housed such do not have to be adjoining and only the 19.3 million barrels we consume money hungry corporate climbers. the equipment that touches the ground HERE in one day. They seem to show no remorse for is counted. Americans have become so their land, as they eagerly await This means that just 10 acres of reliant on the Middle East for oil, the revenue that would come from oil the ground is used for each drilling government sent troops to Iraq to drilling. platform and all the pipes are above ElTHEfZ~ Environmentalists and ground so only the stanchions touch. 1 secure oil reserves from Saddam ' Hussein. Democrats have actively fought to lf you have tuned into the radio : If the chance that there is oil in keep oil companies far from ANWR. recently you will have heard the THE REVIEW I Erika I Alaska exists - up to 16 billion It is the home to more than 120,000 pathetic pleas of Robert Redford enough electricity and blackouts occur days, that is true, but it has also seen Americans into believing that in order barrels according to Murkowski - Porcupine Caribou during their asking Americans to call their as they walk in crosswalks home from much worse. If there is one thing to be safe, we need to be oil should we take a chance drilling and calving season, along with polar senators and push for ANWR drilling. school. This is about what happens Americans can count on from independent. To do this would need hope that this find wiU leave us oil bears, wolverines, grizzlies and snow Robert Redford isn' t the only when we don't have enough fuel to historical facts, it is that the economy to rip apart the largest of our national independent? geese. person Republican senators are using run our frre trucks and police cars." is cyclical. We will bounce back, wildlife refuges. l Drilling has been going on in There is one factor that makes to influence Americans in the debate. This statement seems to assume that there is no immediate threat to our oil, Bush needs to focus on other ·~ Prudhoe Bay Alaska for more than 30 ANWR look so appetizing to Murkowsk:i, in a final preview of every American is stupid enough to and we already fought and won that aspects of his energy package that years and records do show that there America's oil manufacturers and that the energy rally, greatly exaggerates believe that in the near future we will battle. offer less damaging consequences. r: has been no harm to the environment is America's oil production being at what future repercussions will come if not have enough oil to live, and our Sept. ll has made many people ~ thus far. an aU time low of fifty percent. we choose not to begin drilling in country will be completely paralyzed. question our relations with Middle Sarah Corsello is a copy editor for "• In August 2002, the House George Bush, who hails from the American soil. So, what could the solution be? Eastern countries, and senators have The Review. Send comments to ::: approved oil drilling in Alaska' s free-flowing oil state of Texas, has He states; "this is about what happens For now, the economy has seen better used these fear tactics to scare scorse/[email protected]. National Wildlife refuge. There are a included oil drilling in ANWR as part to our children when we don't have :.• ·~, Media !i Yates deserved guilty verdict would she be left alone with her its full capabilities and, because of lillian children? this, too many get away with their ~ exploited Bell argues that if proven crimes . . Maxwell innocent, Yates would have been Prosecutors agree, alleging hospitalized with specific that she knew killing her children attention. was wrong. According· to Texas tragedy l agree it is a sad law, if jurors believed Yates knew circum s t a~when people suffer right from wrong at the time of And, the verdict is - guilty. from mental illness and that she is her crimes, they had to disregard Well, it's about time. in des perate need of the defense of her being legally Andrea Yates was convicted hospitalization. It is obvious she in.sane by postpartum psychosis. on two counts of c apital murder has been in need of psychiatric Prosecutors also stated other My'J.Urn for the drowning o f her children treatment for some time now. reasons may have been behind Tuesday. Howeve r , what' s done is Yates' actions. They suggested Afte r hearing word las t done. she committed murder as a form summer that this wo man drowned If her mental illness was so of revenge against her husband, The six-month anniversary of her five children in a bathtub, my s evere, I believe it was the Russell Yates. Sept. II has come and gone, and, not stomac h tossed a nd turne d . M y responsibility of her family to see Ironically enough, after this surprisingly, the media took full heart dropped. The entire c ountry that s he had been hospitalized man wept with devastation giving advantage of the opportunity to once was appalled that a mother could long before her innocent children eulogies for each of his children 11gain exploit a tragic situation. While it heartlessly take the life of a ny were brutally murdered. back in June, he wept again as his • was certainly important to remember child, let alone five. Allred said, " I just think this wife was proven guilty. one of the most horrific events of T estimonials were given for is so sad, this result, so horrific Perhaps he should' ve heeded America's history, the media acted as if more tha n three w eek s b y the doctors' advice pertaining to his the attacks took place aU over again. prosecution as well as the defense, wife' s mental status, rather than Without even waiting until it was which triggered the jury to fi ght continuing to impregnate his wife. officiaUy March II, Sunday evening's their con scie nces for a n e ntire Maybe he should have thought ,1, news broadcasts were already setting three hours and 40 minutes before Her past history, twice about the seriousness of her .,, the tone for what was to come. NEXf UP! ~- ll, A. ~IDf ~tf£18) . decreeing her guilt. condition - however, that' s -· .. ./ lmmediately following the two- The decision is justified in my diagnoses and another story. ,,. hour, respectful documentary "9/11" on eyes. reputation leave Thursday a hearing was held CBS, it became clear that the media It television was right back where it had think these images are not already is a bsolute ly beyo nd m y to begin the sentencing process. frenzy surrounding Sept. II would be imag ination how such a horrific It is hard to say whether or been six months before. embedded in our minds? That after six me with one back in full swing. Dramatic opening murde r could occur and eve n not anyone deserves the death One cable news channel even did a months we need to again be horrified? music was used in place of what furthe r beyo nd me ho w Ya t es question: If this. penalty. minute-by minute account of Sept. 11 , Of all the lessons we have normally opens the evening news, and believed she could ever be found It's not that certain criminals so anyone who might have missed the supposedly learned from Sept. II, the almost 75 percent of the half-hour not guilty. woman were so don't deserve it, but I feel as !il media bombardment the first time could media seemed to ignore them all. l!: broadcast was spent talking about the Though many agree w ith my though living with what you did experience it now. This station didn't Victims and their families had to endure obviously attacks. The only reprieve from this was viewpoint, critics of the outcome while stuck in a prison cell for the even bother to re-report the same the media invasion once again, and the ;ri the weather report. suc h as attorne y Gloria Allre d, rest of your life can be a more .1> information. It just took their newscasts public, still trying to recover, had to afflicted, why on -: "Tea m cove rage" focused on D e bo ra h Be ll of the N a tio na l severe punishment. from that day and replayed them. take a few giant steps back. )· every possible aspect of Sept. II, from Associa tio n fo r W o m e n a nd earth would she Prosecutor Kaylynn Williford While I do not question that there Psychologists are predicting a J, exclusive interviews with families who Yates' d efense attorney, George said, "It was wrong in the eyes of · was a need and a duty to remember second wave of emotional distress and lost relatives to exclusive interviews Parnam, differ in mindset. be left alone with God and it was wrong in the eyes Sept. II on the six-month anniversary, l post-traumatic stress disorder now that with families who watched the Insanity . me nta l illness. of the law." Jr do not think the way to do this was by the shock of Sept. II is starting to wear her children? documentary to exclusive interviews psychosis, postpartum depression, This woma n deserves to ~( once again saturating the American off, replaced by pain and fear. The with firefighters in Philadelphia. There postpartum psychosis - all these suffer as the children did. Imagine 71 public with the same footage and the media most likely added to this by rj· ~ay ~s well have been an exclusive wo rds we re u sed b y Yat es' the fear of her children. Envision same images that disturbed it so greatly choosing to bombard the public with ., mtervtew wtth someone in Idaho who defenders at trial. the shock of a baby child looking the first time. the most dramatic and shocking footage " once visited New York. Sadly enough, A number of medical experts and so nauseating. This woman in into the eyes of his or her mother .. Throughout the past six months, available. "~ this was still Sunday night. cla im Y a tes t o b e o ne of the my mind, was clearly psychotic at in c omplete be wilderme nt, numerous studies were conducted that None pf the video was new, and Monday, the actua l six-month sic kest pa tients they hav e ever the time that she killed her wondering why the woman who concluded that the more hours a person therefore none of it was news. There ; anniversary of9111. was even worse for seen. T h ey diagnosed he r w ith children." they look to for nurturing and care , a nyone who dared turn on the spent watching television in the days was no need to show it for anything 1 schizophre nia, de pressio n a nd Can he be serious? would be doing this to them, as after Sept. II, the more likely they were other than ratings. Perhaps the most television. Of course the news o ther me di cal conditio ns , T he only thing nauseating is they all watch e ach of their to suffer post-traumatic stress. There disturbing thing of all, though, is that broadcasts were once again using their according to d efense a tto rney statements like this one. siblings lie in water lifeless. was a positive correlation found this was only the six-month sad music and conducting "exclusive" Wende ll Odom. I reali ze her act resulted from It is disgusting. between television viewing and anniversary. .,, interviews. but it did not end there. Just F urthe rmo re . Ya tes' psychotic te ndencies, but I can' t Anyone who takes the life of decreased mental health. yet the media What should we expect to see six ·,, like six mo nths before. it seemed b ac!

Adftrdsla& Dinctor: Sports E4llers: Erin McDonald Craig Shennan Mll\1 DaSilva Copy Edltars: Valerie Biafore Jaime ChcruodOio Sanb C01110llo s.ilw~~ Ad~ AlliiWd .Dindors: ~ I'..C.S E8or: Jell BtetJner Slacey Carb1J1t Susan Kiltwood Mm!ditb Scbweok Lauren Sosnowski Kate Campagnini Jessica 1oDes So5ane Sullivan s.ter Mcillk' ~ Oniifte EditOr: Claslllled Adftl1isemeldl: Asststaat Elltet1ef eat Editor: Oarke Spe~ber Adrian Baoolo Ryan Gillespie ElanaPogrow Kin Parker

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i Movie Lurking j '• . ,., reviews: ,., Within: "Showtime" Overachievers "All About the • I stretch their Benjamins" and __ , t. _} limits, B3 "Jce Age," B2 ENTERTAINMENT THE ARTS PEOPLE FEATURES Friday, March 15, 2002 Eight seconds changed

BY JAYSON RODRIGUEZ Staff Reporter n a shivery March evening just after 8 p.m., Ali Batts' departure from his Route 40 barbershop 0 is as serene as the night. · Batts, 28, often remains in the barbershop after 8 p.m., but the owner of Suite 302 rarely cuts hair at this hour; he just watches television or cleans up. His nights at Suite 302 in Newark sharply contrast with the Friday evening of March 9, 2001. One year ago, Batts was working at Made 4 Men, a barbershop on West •Fourth Street in Wilmington. With the March wind whip­ ping wildly through the alleyways, the night was just beginning in the city. At approximately 8:40p.m., as Batts was cutting hair, a masked man burst into the bar­ bershop shooting the glass door into pieces. One. The seconds seemed to move in slow motion, and Batts could not get down to the ground fast enough. The gunman, clothed in black from head to toe, turned to his right and raised his hand­ gun toward his target Darnell Evans, whom he had a dis'pute with earlier. Two. Evans's to get up and run was thwarted by the bullets seeping into his chest and denying his escape. The man was fired upon again and again. Three. Four. The impact of the bullets twist­ ed his body toward a boy playfully spinning his body around in a barbershop chair. The child, oblivious to the mayhem taking place around him, continued to spin around and around as bullets zipped through the air striking the walls and raining drywall inside the barbershop. Five. Six. The gunman continued to pour out shots from his pistol into Evans' chest. The gunman ran out of the shop and escaped down Fourth Street, successful in his attempt to murder Evans. Seven. Eight. With the gunman's departure, normal speed resumed as Batts finally hit the ground. · Eight seconds is all it took to complete the crime: no time for conversation or last words. Batts immediately rose to his feet and dusted the drywall off his body. He looked fran­ tically around the shop to see if a bullet had hit anyone else. The boy who had been spinning around in a chair rose to his feet and was looking around for his father. The child was raising his arms, calling for his dad, and blood began to spill out of his throat. A stray bullet had hit the boy under his chin. His father began to THE REVIEW/Leslie Lloyd• Just over a year ago, Ali Batts, 28, witnessed the horrific murder of 5-year-old Damon Gist Jr., a client at Wilmington's ! see MURDER page B4 Made 4 Men barber shop. Since the tragedy, Batts has left Made 4 Men to start his own shop, Suite 302 in Newark. Of ·leprechauns and lushes: I BY CONNIE WHERRITY For others, it means heading out to the nearest Irish pub clad in green readyl Fea rures Edicor for shots of a good Irish whiskey. o one wants to be an intoxicated man with a small instrument However St. Patrick's Day is spent, it is traditionally a day of cheer and in the bedroom. But, on St. Patrick's Day, everyone in the bar toasting to good health and good friends. claims Irish roots. But, since the once religious holiday has been reduced to a day of drunk­ March I is the one day of the year when everyone wants to be en oblivion, here are a few drink ideas to accompany the festivities: N Iris, or just have an excuse to get drunk. To get the day off to a good start, begin with an Irish Magic. Combine! Whatever the reason, the celebration has become one all eth­ one shot of whiskey, a splash of white creme de cacao and mix with orange nicities and religions anticipate each spring, but do most revellers really juice, over ice. , I • know what they are celebrating? As the day moves on, stronger drinks are called for, like the Irish Originally a religious holiday honoring Ireland's patron Horseman. Combine one shot of Irish whiskey, a splash of triple sec and saint, St. Patrick's Day has turned into a mainly three parts sweet and sour mix. Shake, pour over ice and top with a splash secular celebration. Parades, green beer, of raspberry liqueur. shamrocks and cinnamon-covered Irish Another alternative drink is the Irish Prince. Mix two shots of Iris potatoes now symbolize the feast day. whiskey with three parts tonic water, pour over ice and garnish with a Many university students seem oblivi­ lemon. ous to the real meaning of St. Patty' s Day If that doesn't get you moving, terrorize your brain cell s with an Irish and compare the day's activities to a regu­ Car Bomb. This involves taking an almost full pint of Guinness and drop -~ lar Friday or Saturday night. ping a shot glass full of Amaretto into the pint. Proceed to chug. Freshman Chris Baker says he usually By this point, if you are not bombed, you are obviously a true Irishman. spends the holiday with his famil~ celebrat­ End your night with an Irish Kiss if the girl or guy across the bar isn' ing his Irish ancestry, but he sees St. Patrick's promising you any. Take one shot of Irish whiskey, a splash of peach Day as "an excuse to get stumblingly drunk schnapps, three parts of ginger ale and two parts of orange juice. Mix, pour; and fall over with your friends," he says. over ice and garnish with a lime. 1 This year, Baker says he will probably go out Following this drink regimen is a surefire way to get more than a wee bi~ with hi s cousin. buzzed. After a while you will be speaking blarney to the leprechaun sittingJ "We usually sing songs and pass out," he says. next to you. "[My family], we're happy drunks. The angry Wait, that isn't a leprechaun. ones are in the basement, beating the crud out of each other." Freshman Kari Cook says the first thing that comes to her mind when thinking of St. Patty's Day is drinking. "I feel bad because I am Irish and my whole family is Irish," she says, "and it's sad because it is supposed to be a religious holiday. "I would hope it would be about a. celebration for St. Patrick and what he did for Ireland and England, but unfortunately it's just about getting drunk." Junior Meghan O'Shaughnessy and her family celebrate St. Patrick's Day for two reasons. She is Irish, and her parents were married on St. Patrick's Day. Yet, when asked if she knew the purpose of the celebration, her response suggested ignorance of her heritage. "Isn't it based on a guy that set people free or something over in Ireland?" she asks. Freshman Letoya Chisholm says she thinks of parades, four-leaf clovers and leprechauns. She didn't really know how to attribute true meaning to St. Patty's Day. "Oh, wait. there used to be potato fa mines and tuff," she says. "so maybe they' re celebrating something like that." ot exactly. St. Patrick was born in Wales in 385 A.D. and was sold into slavery 16 years later. During his six years as a slave. it is said St. Patrick found hi s calling to convert pagan Ireland to Christianity. Patrick was soon appointed second bishop of Ireland and spent 30 years travelin g through Ireland trying to win converts. On March 17, A .D. 461, Patrick died and the day is now commemorated as St. Patrick' s Day. It is probably afe to say the majority of the population doesn' t even con­ sider the meaning of St. Patrick's Day. To most, it is a day to devour the traditional corned beef and cabbage dinner. chased with a nice stout beer. B2. THE REVIEW. March 15 ,2002 7imeJ for this movie to get a plot

"Showtime" FOX) blackmail hard-boiled detective Mitch Preston (De Warner Bros. Niro) into appearing on a reality show. Chase Renzi Rating: i.'c'Cc 1/2 (Rene Russo) finds something electrifying about Preston when he shoots a cameraman li ve on the air. so she threatens to sue his precinct for $10 million unless he helps her make ratings gold. Trey Sellars (, paying homage to hi s "Beverly Hills Cop" and "48 Hrs." roles), a bad aspiring actor and even worse cop, gets picked from a slew of candidates partly becau,se he can help draw in that elu­ '' ' sive-but-all-important minority demographic and partly because Preston loathes him instantly. ------Although the show - deemed "Showtime" because of BY CLARKE SPEICHER a line Sellars says to pump himself up- is just supposed Senior Mosaic Ediror to capture the lives of two average cops, Preston and will eventually act again. Hopefully. Sellars have to receive acting lessons on how to behave Once a raging method actor, De Niro now appears as a real cop from William "T.J. Hooker" Shatner. "This resigned to waste the rest of his career mocking his on­ guy is the worst actor I've ever seen!" Shatner assesses. screen tough guy persona, with a few mediocre "serious" (Wink-wink, nudge-nudge, Shatner said that about De films thrown in to remind viewers of what he's parody­ Niro! Hilarious.) ing. Preston watches with amusement as T.J. instructs him "Showtime" continues De Niro's mockfest, this time and Sellars on the proper way to slide across a car hood, lampooning the numerous police officers the actor has break into a room and identify cocaine by taste. " It could portrayed along with the entire buddy-cop genre and be cyanide," Preston says. "There's a reason real cops reality TV. don't taste the drugs." If it sounds like "Showtime's" plate is a full, that's Before long, the show is a success, but it's unclear because it is, and the movie suffers for it. The filmmak­ why. From what can be discerned, the show's mainly ers would have been wise to stick to one premise. composed of Preston sitting in a confessional booth a Ia Considering De Niro just satirized reality TV in last "Real World" reading the newspaper in disdain. year's "15 Minutes" (in which he played a cop), the What starts as amiable fun quickly descends into the buddy movie would have been the way to go. realms of vapid nonsense and the vast plot holes grow to Television executives from an immoral network (think the size of craters. Two-thirds into the movie, it's clear "Showtime" has no point other than ubiquitous self-ref­ erential gags and stale one-liners about America's fasci­ The Gist oflt nation with celebrity. Viewers are just supposed to laugh at the funny si tuations De Niro' s expression mirrors that of his most ardent ~~~~~ HBO Somewhere mixed into this media satire is something that vaguely resembles a plot. Over-coifed drug dealers the two cops find themselves in . fans, the ones who miss the sterling actor who would've ~~~~ Cinemax with suped-up guns set to "miss" rampage through down­ Fortunately, there are a lot of comic moments to turned down something as innocuous as "Showtirhe." ~~~ Showtime town L.A., and only Preston and Sellars can ·stop them. behold. Murphy demonstrates for the first time in years he can incite laughter without the help of flatulence while ~~ The Movie Channel Who these drug dealers are or the reason for their De Niro, permanently displaying a scowl of contempt, Clarke Speicher is a senior Mosaic editor for The ~ Starz! weapons of mass destruction is never made clear. Review. His past reviews include· "The Time Machine" Apparently, the story is none of the audiences' business. steals most of the scenes by simply appearing annoyed by the whole thing. (~i.'c 112) and "We Were Soldiers" (i.'c 112).

"All About the Benjamins" "Ice Age" New Line 20th Century Fox Rating: ~i.'c Rating: i.l'Cc* 112 Although not as memorable as other great buddy-action On the dawn of an Ice Age 20,000 years ago, Manfred like "48 Hrs." and ''," the newest the Mammoth () just wants to be left alone, flick of the genre, "All About the Benjarnins," has enough content to die in frozen solitude. Manfred's plans are amusing moments to provid~ a fun-filled movie experience. interrupted when he saves Sid the Sloth (John Meet Bucllin Jackson (Ice Cube), a bounty hunter who Leguizamo) from two angry rhinoceroses and ends up has grown weary of working for his boss, but doesn't have sidled with the abandoned mammal. the funds to start his own private eye business. After catch­ Manfred finds himself further encumbered by a ing his latest criminal, he gets assigned to catch another human baby after a pack of sabertooth tigers attack his petty thief, Reggie Wright (Mike Epps), whom Bucum says clan. Against his better judgment, Manfred agrees to has "been to jail more times than Robert Downey Jr." return the child to his family with the help of Diego partnership, humorously portrayed by Cube and Epps. The Meet Reggie, a motor-mouth crook who uses old ladies (Denis Leary) a sabretooth who knows the way to the I two feed off each other nicely as evident by their past suc­ to help him shoplift. When Reggie and Bucum cross paths, camp and has his own designs for the baby. deals with such heady issues as tolerance! racism and the cess iri "Next Friday." With a few more roles like this, Epps a chase leads the two directly to a homicide/diamond heist. "Ice Age" ends up as an amalgamation of past com­ environment. Romano' s patented dry1 humor makes can easily become the next Chris Tucker. Cube has man­ Bucum gets shot at while Reggie hides in a van, which, puter-animated films. namely the reluctant hero with the Manfred a self-deprecating loner, while Leguizamo's aged to surpass his fellow rappers-turned-actors. coincidentally, happens to be the diamond robbers' getaway annoying sidekick ("Shrek") returning a human child to exuberant persona fills the slothful Sid Jith comic ener­ The movie, written by Cube and Ronald Lang, features vehicle. The crooks eventually discover the diamonds they its family ("Monsters, Inc."). It even cribs a little from gy. the directorial debut of Kevin Bray. Cube and Lang treat robbed were frauds, and with dumbfound luck, Reggie "Prince of Egypt's" animated" hieroglyphics to explain Both find themselves· upstaged by Scrat, the film's viewers to a change of pace from the "Rush Hour" type escapes after eavesdropping on them. He drops his wallet, Manny' s loneliness. funniest joke and the rare running gag that actually movie. however, which contains his girlfriend's lottery ticket. The animation and the humor can't compare to its works. A combination of a squrriel and rat obsessed with In a way, the film contradicts its title. In an age during It doesn't take a psychic to foresee Reggie arriving hqme peers either. After "Shrek's" wit and "Monsters, Inc.'s" burying an acorn, Scrat could be the prehistoric ancestor to discover the ticket he lost contains the winning numbers which action- films are censored to appeal to groundbreaking animation. "Ice Age," filled with stale to Wile E. Coyote. yoqnger audiences and make the big bucks, "Benjarnins" to the $60-million jackpot. Reggie begins looking for the slapstick and not-so-spectacular images, seems oddly "Ice Age" may not be the most original movie, but it's . refuses to conform, with its raw-cut approach to violence crooks who have his wallet; they are looking for him as old-fashioned. a cool alternative until the next Pixar film comes around. and profanity. Those other movies are all . about the ben­ well. The film redeems itself with marvelous characteriza­ - Clarke Speicher jamins, but his one is all about entertainment. The rest of the movie focuses on Reggie and Bucum' s tions, great voice work and the subtlety with which it -JeffMan

REGAL P EOPLES PLAZA 4:.JO. 5:20. 7: 10 .7:50.9:40, 10:10 FRIDAY SATURDAY 0 (834-8510) We Were Soldiers 12:00.3:00.7:00, 10:00 THEATER OF THE LIVING ARTS- (215) 922-1011 Trabant University Center Theater: Trabant University Celller Theater: 40 Days and 40 Nights 12:35, 2:55. 5:10. "Monsters Inc.,'' 7:30 p.m., $3 "Behind Enemy Lines," 7:30 p.m.,$3 Black 47, March 17,8 p.m., $10 8:05. 10:25 G ENERAL C I NEMA-CHRISTIANA MALL Solas, March 20, 8 p.m., $16.50 A Beautiful Mind II :55. 3:55.6:55, 9:55 (368-9600) All About the Benjamins 12: 10.2:40, 5:05. Ice Age 1:15.3:20.5:25.7:30.9:40 Trabant University Center Theater: Traba111 Universirv Center Theater: Brothers Past, March 22, 9 p.m., $12 7:40, 10:05 DragonOy 1:20.4: 15.7:15.9:50 "Behind Enemy Lines," 10 p.m., $3 "Monsters Inc.," IO p.m., $3 Big Fat Liar 12:25, 2:35, 4:55. 7:05 Crossroads I :30. 4:20. 9:45 Fri. 7:20 THE ELECTRIC FACTORY- (215) 627-1332 Crossroads II :40.2:05.4:30. 6:45. 9:25 Gosford Park I :00 . .J:OO. 7:00. 10:00 Main Street Tavern and Grill: DJ Perkins Student Center (Bacchus Dragonfly 6:50. 9:30 A Beautiful lind 1:10.4:10 .7: 10. 10:10 Theatre): Merrily We RoU Along, 8 Jagermeister Music Tour featuring Drowning Pool, March 15 , The Rookie Sat. 7:20 Dance Party, 9 p.m ., no cover lee Age 11 :30, 12:05, 1:40.2:30. 3:50.5:00. p.m., $3-$5 7:30p.m., $20 6:00, 7:30.8:10. 9:35. 10:20 Puddle of Mudd, March 21 , 8 p.m., $16.50 John Q II :25. 2: 10. 4:50. 7:35. I 0:25 NEWARK CINH!A !737-3720) The Deer Park Tavern: DJ Rick Queen of the Damned 7:55, 10:35 We Were Soldiers Fri. 3:-15 . 6:45. 9:30 Sar. Daring, 9 p.m., no cover Main Street Tm·ern and Grill: DJ Ryan Adams, March 22, 8:30p.m., $22.50 Resident Evil 12:30. 3:05. 5:25. 8:00. I 0:30 I :05. 3:-15. 6:-15 . 9:30 Swt. I :05. 3:-15. 7: 15 Dance Party, 9 p.m .. $3 cover Return to Neverla nd II :20 . I :25. 3:30 .5:30 Showtime Fri. :1:30.5:30 . 7:30.9::10 Sm. East End Cafe: Diatribe, 9 p.m., $3- TOWER THEATRE - Showtime 11 :45. 12: 15. 2:15. 2:45. 4:45. 1:30.3:30.5:30.7:30 .9::10 S ill/ . 1:30.3:30. The Deer Park Ta1·em : Larry Tucker, (215) 568-3222 5:30.7:30 $5 cover 5:15.7:15.7:45, 9:45. 10:15 9:30p.m.. 3 cover Tom Joyner Classic Soul Concert Tour, March 16, 8 p.m., $47- Snow Dogs II :35 . 2:00.4:35 Icc Age Fri. 3:00.5:00.7:00.9:00 Sat. $57 Super Troopers 9:50 I :00. 3:00.5:00.7:00. 9:00 Su 11 . I :00. 3:00. The Stone Balloon: DJ Dance Party Enrique Iglesias, March 17, 8 p.m. , $30-$60 The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of 5:00 .7:00 with DJ Eze-E, 9 p.m., $3-$5 cover Eost End Cafe: Mega City Six, 9 p.m., the Ring II :25, 3:35. 7:20 Rocky Horror Picture Show Sat. II :59 $3- 5 cover Dream Theater, March 23, 8 p.m., $28.50-$35.50 The Time Machine II :50. 12:20. 2:20. 2:50. p.m. 82 . TI-lE REVIEW . ilan.:h 15 .2002 7imeJ for this movie to get a plot

"Showtime'' FOX) blackmail hard-boiled detet:tivc Mitch Preston (De Warner Bros. Niro) into appearing on a reality show. Chase Rent.i Rating: :.'c:,'c 112 (Rene Russo) finds something electrifying about Preston when he shoots a cameraman li ve on the air. so she threatens to sue hi s precinct for $ 10 million unkss he helps her make ratings gold. Trey Sellars (Eddie Murphy. paying homagl! to hi s .. Beverl y Hills Cop.. and .. 48 Hrs:· rol e~). a bad aspiring actor and even worse cop. gets picked from a slew or candidates partly because he can help draw in that elu­ ~- ' r J ~ ' ' ' ~ sive-but-all-important minorit y demographic and partly ...,...... ,. "" ... --..~ ... •• .. cliP~ ~.. because Preston loathes him instantly . ------Although the show - deemed .. Showtime .. because of BY CLARKE SPEICHER a line Sellars says to pump himself up - is j ust supposed Sl~nior Mosait· EdiUII' to capture the lives of two average cops. Preston and Robert De Niro will eventually act again. Hopefully. Sellars have to receive acting lessons on how to behave Once a raging method actor. De Niro now appears as a real cop from William ··T.J. Hooker.. Shatner. ·This resigned to waste the rest of his career mocking hi s on­ guy is the worst actor r ve ever seen! .. Shatncr assesses. screen tough guy persona, with a fe w mediocre ·'serious·· (Wink-wink. nudge-nudge. Shatner said that about De films thrown in to remind viewers of what he's parody­ Niro! Hilarious.) ing. Preston watches with amusement as T.J. instructs him "Showtime·· continues De Niro·s mockfest, this time and Sellars on the proper way to slide across a car hood. lampooning the numerous police officers the actor has break into a room and identify cocaine by taste. "It could portrayed along with the entire buddy-cop genre and be cyanide:· Preston says ...There·s a reason real cops reality TV. don "t taste the drugs."' If it sounds like "Showtime·s.. plate is a full, that"s Before long. the show is a success, but it" s unclear because it is. and the movie suffers for it. The filmmak­ why. From what can be discerned. the show·s mainly ers would have been wise to stick to one premise. composed of Preston silting in a confessional booth a Ia Considering De Niro just satirized reality TV in last "Real World" reading the newspaper in disdain. year's " 15 Minutes·· (in which he played a cop). the What starts as amiable fun quickly descends into the buddy movie would have been the way to go. realms of vapid nonsense and the vast plot hole. grow to Television executives from an immoral network (think the size of craters. Two-thirds into the movie. it" s clear "Showtime" has no point other than ubiquitous self-ref­ erential gags and stale one-liners about America's fasci­ The Gist oflt nation with celebrity. Viewers are ju 1 supposed to laugh at the funny situations De Niro·s expression mirrors that of his most ardent ·CcCnZc~~ HBO Somewhere mixed into this media satire is something that vaguely resembles a plot. Over-coifed drug dealers the two cops find themselves in . fans. the ones who miss the sterlim.! actor who would' ve ~~~

"AU About the Benjamins" "Ice Age" New Line 20th Century Fox Rating: ~hh'l Rating: ~'f :.'c;.'l 112 Although not as memorable as other great buddy-action On the dawn of an Ice Age 20.000 years ago. Manfred comedies like "48 Hrs.'. and "Midnight Run," the newest the Mammoth (Ray Romano) j ust wants to be left alone. flick of the genre, "All About the Benjamins;' has enough content to die in frozen so.litude. Manfred·s plans are amusing moments to provide a fun-filled movie experience. interrupted when he saves Sid the Sloth (John Meet Bucum Jackson (Ice Cube), a bounty hunter who Leguizamo) from two angry rhinoceroses and ends up has grown weary of working for his boss, but doesn' t have sid.led with the abandoned mammal. the funds to start his own private eye business. After catch­ Manfred finds himself further encumbered by a ing his latest criminal, he gets assigned to catch another human baby after a pack of sabatooth tigers attack his petty thief. Reggie Wright (Mike Epps), whom Bucum says clan. Against his better j udgment. Manfred agrees to has "been to jail more times than Robert Downey Jr." return the child to hi s fa mily with the he lp of Diego partnership. humorously portrayed by Cube and Epps. The Meet Reggie, a motor-mouth crook who uses old ladies (Denis Leary). a sabrctooth who knows the way to the two feed off each other nicely as evident by their past suc­ to help him shoplift. When Reggie and Bucum cross paths, camp and has his own designs for the baby. deals with such heady issues as tolerance. rac ism and the cess in "Next Friday." With a few more roles like this. Epps a chase leads the two directly to a homicide/diamond heist. .. lee Age.. ends up as an amalgamation of past com­ environment. Romano· s patented dry humor makes can easily become the next Chris Tucker. Cube has man­ Bucum gets shot at while Reggie hides in a van, which, puter-animated films. namely the reluctant hero with the Manfred a _elf-deprecating loner. while Leguizamo·s aged to surpass his fellow rappers-turned-actors. coincidentally, happens to be the diamond robbers' getaway annoying sidekick ("Shrek.. ) returning a human child to exuberant persona fills the slothful Sid with comic ener­ The movie, written by Cube and Ronald Lang. features vehicle. The crooks eventually discover the diamonds they its family ("" Monsters. Inc."'). It even cribs a little from gy. the directorial debut of Kevin Bray. Cube and Lang treat robbed were frauds, and with dumbfound luck, Reggie ·'Prince of Egypt's .. animated hieroglyphics to explain Both find themselves upstaged by Scrat. the film's viewers to a change of pace from the "Rush Hour.. type escapes after eavesdropping on them. He drops his wallet, Manny" s loneline s. funniest joke and the rare running gag that actually movie. however, which contains his girlfriend"s lottery ticket. The animation and the humor can·t compare to its works. A combinati on of a squrriel and rat obsessed with It doesn' t take a psychic to foresee Reggie arriving home ln a way, the film contradicts its title. In an age during peers e ither. After .. Shrek·, ·· wit and .. Mon ters. Inc."s .. burying an acorn. Scrat could be the prehistoric ancestor which action-comed_ fil ms are cen~orcd to appeal to to discover the ticket he lost contains the winning numbers ~ ro 11 Jbrc: ... J.. in !.! anJm,ni,HI. .. kc: , \~ ..: ... Jl lk J 11 ith , wk to Wile E. Cm·otc. younger audiences and make the big buck ... Benjamins.. to the $60-million jackpot. Reggie begins looking for the ~ l apst ic k and ~n o t- so-spectac ul ar in1 ages. seems oddly '·Jce Age.. n1ay not be the most original movie, but it's refuses to conform, with its raw-cut approach to violence crooks who have his wallet; they are looking for him as old-fashioned. a cool alternative until the next Pixar film comes around. and profanity. Those other movies are all · about the ben­ well. The film redeem itself with marvelous characteriza­ - Clarke Speicher jamins. but his one is all about entertainment. The rest of the movie focuses on Reggie and Bucum's tions. great 1·oice work and the subtlety with which it -JeffMan

''I'm gomza be daring and take shots of some -u:inc coolers." - }1111ior .fon,ah,m Po~dn

.J :.JO. 5:20. 7: 10.7:50. 9 :-10 . 10: 10 fRD>AY SATI-RI).\ \' \\'e W<•n• Suldiu' 12.011 ..• :oo. 7:00. 10:00 habant Unil·ersitr Center Themer: halwnt Unil·enit1· Cemcr 111catn : THEATER OF THE LIVING ARTS- (215) 922-1011 .tO Days :ond .tO Nights 12:35. 2:55. 5: 10. "Monsters lnc.,'; 7 : ~0 p.m .. $3 .. Behind Encm_y l~ int-s,'' 7:30 p.m .. $3 Black 47. March 17,8 p.m., $ 10 8:05. 10:25 (;1."' 1111 Ci'J-:\1\-C IIIIIS II\:\ \ \111.1. Solas, March 20 , 8 p.m .. $ 16.50 A Beautirul i\lind 11 :55.3:55. 6:55. 9 :55 iJM!-9ti0tlJ All About the Benja mins 12: 10. 2: -10 . 5:05. l<'l' Al!c I: I 'i. 3·20 . 5.25. ':10 . 9:-10 Trabant Unil·ersitr Cemer 7ll('ater: 1/'llllllllt Unil·cr.lit\· Center Theater: Brothers Past, March 22, 9 p.m., $ 12 7:-10 . 10:05 l> ru guntl~ 1·211 . -1 : 15 . 7: 15.9:511 "Behind Enem~· -Lines,'' 10 p.m .. $3 "l\1onsters Inc.. " i 0 p.m .. $3 Big Fat Li:or 12:25. 2:35.-1:55. 7:05 Crussruad' 1:111 .-1:20 . 9 . .J5 1- n 7:211 THE ELECTRIC FACTORY- (215) 627-1332 C rossroads II :.JO. 2:05 . .J :\0. 11:-15.9:25 (;usl'urd l'ark I :Oil . .J ·illl. 7:00. 10 Oil Main Street 1£t, ·em and Grill: l)j Perkins Student Ccllln (Bacchus Dragonfly 6:50 . 9:30 A lleautif'ul \lind 1: 111.-l. IO . 7: 11l . )(1: 10 Dance Party, 9 p.m .. no co1·er 7/u•tureJ: :\lcrril~· Wt• Roll Along. S Jagermeister Music Tour featuring Drowning Pool, March 15, Ice Age I I :30. 12:05 . I :.JO . 2:30. 3:50. 5:00. Th., Kuuki<· Sat. 7 211 p.m .. S.>-S:'i 7:30 p.m .. $20 6:00.7:30 . ~ : 10.9:35. 10:20 111(• Deer Park 1(1\'em : I).J Rick Puddle of Mudd. March 2 1, 8 p.m., $ 16.50 John Q II :25. 2: Ill. -1 :50. 7: .15 . 10:25 " ~-'" \ II h. Ct'\1· "' t7.17-,17!11 i Queen of the l):ornned 7:55 . 10:35 \\'t• \\ en• Suldier' Itt .>:.J'. fl·.J5. '1 30 'iot. Daring, 9 p.m .. no cm·cr J\lain Srrt't'l / {m .,-n 111111 Grill: DJ Ryan Adams. March 22 , 8:30 p.m., $22.50 Resident E\·il 12:.\fl . 3:05. 5:25. X tlO. I O. lO I ·IJ). _; · J 5. 6 .J 'i. 0 Shcmtinll' I ti 'l· >o. 5:30 ." >n . lJ 30 \at Ea.\t F.ntl Cafe: [)iatrihc. 9 p.m .. S3- Showtimc I I :-15 . 12: 15. 2: 15 . 2:-15 . .J :-1 5. 1 .-~o __, _ ~ o . .:; _ ~0 . 7 . ~ 11 . 9 - ~0 .\uu . 1:-;o_1 : ~n . 7lw 01'n l 'arJ.. l itn ·m : Larr~ Tucker. TOWER THEATRE - (215) 568-3222 5 'lO. 7:.lil $5 cover 5: 15 . 7: 15 . 7:-15 . 9:-15. 10: 15 9:.>0 p.m .. '.3 con:r Tom Joyner Classic Soul Concert Tour. March 16. 8 p.m .. $47- Sno" Oo~~ II :35.1:00 . -1 :35 In · Al!e I n ; !Ill.'\ I HI. 7:011 . 9 IHI .'lot $57 Super Tn"'l"'rs 9:50 I.Oil ..1 Oil .'\ IKI. " IKI. 'IlK\ \ u•t I II! I, 1 llll. 'f1u• Stont• Ha /11J1111 : I>J Dancl.' Pm-ty ) .fill. 7:011 /-_ll.\/ l:'nd (·uti·: l\ lq.:a Cit~ · Sh.l) p.m .. En rique Iglesias. March 17. 8 p.m., $30-S60 Tlw Lord uf the Kings : The Fcllcl\\ ~h i p uf with DJ Ezc-E. 9 p.m .. $.\-S5 co\·er th<· Kinl! I I :25. _1 :35. 7:20 Huct.,- llurrnr l'i<·ture Shu\\ \ot. 11 5 '1 SV55 ~·owr Dream Theater. March 23, 8 p.m .. $28.50-$35.50 The Time \lachine I I :50 . 12:20 .2:20 .2:511 . 11.111 March 15 ,2002 . THE REVIEW. BJ

As if classes aren't enough work...

BY JAMIE ABZUG challenging, especially during those weeks when it seems as though Senior Staff Reporter there is a test in every class. But he tries not to let his workload inter­ It's 9 p.m. on a Wednesday and junior Kristin Cahill arrives at the fere with his social life. Main Street Tavern and Grill. She walks up to the bar, orders a "I go out every weekend, and I try to make it out some weekday Redbull and proceeds to her workstation behind the OJ booth. nights," he says. "Workload permitting, of cour e." It's time for Cahill to begin work. But it isn' t tunes she is mixing; Junior Brad Wasser faces the task of balancing a heavy academic it's paint. Cahill is working on the finishing touches of a mural load with a part time job, fraternity life and a long-distance relation­ depicting the establishment's bartenders that she is painting with ship. another student. " I have a pretty hard major, international relations, with a concen­ Cahill spends a few hours working on her mural, then heads to tration in U.S. foreign policy and a specialization in the Middle the art studio in Recitation Hall where she has a long night of projects East,'. he says. "It's tough, but I chose it my elf." ahead of her. Wasser spends about I I hours each week working at Unique / .. As a visual communication major, Cahill is not able to do her Impressions on North College A venue and attends weekly meetings assignments at home. for his fraternity, Sigma Alpha Mu, as well as interning for the uni­ "A lot of our work is brainstorming," she says. "Sometimes I can versity's JewisQ.tHeritage Program. . spend all afternoon just thinking - I can't even do the actual work " I start my d~s around 8," he says." I don't get much sleep, but yet. I like to be involved in a lot of things. I can find the time to do stuff "I usually get about two to three hours of sleep a night. You get if I enjoy it." used to it after a while." Between balancing 16 credits and extra activities, it's hard for Cahill is one of the many students on campus who think that every Wasser to find time to just hang out. hour of the day should be jam packed with activities. In addition to "I always make it out on the weekends at least," Wasser says. the 15 credits she is taking this semester, she " Either here or in Maryland where my girl­ works 22 hours per week at Lettuce Feed ======~ friend goes to school, so I actually tend to go You on Main Street. Cahill is on the club away many weekends." field hockey team and must fit practices into So many commitments might tire and stress her schedule. out most students, but Wasser uses time man­ "I usually get up at 7 every morning and agement to his advantage. go to bed around 4 or 5 [a.m.]. I crash one "The key is to not let yourself feel stressed day every weekend,'' she says. "It's hard, but or overworked, even if you are. Learn how to I do it because I like to challenge myself." "The more t do, the manage your stress and your time, and you Cahill says that she is able to keep her can take on so much,'' he says. GPA at a steady 3.8 and has won scholarship more I know I can do Junior Brooke Caruso works for the Jewish money for an upcoming Summer Session in Heritage Program along with Wasser. London. · it's very self reas­ Her role involves the organization of events With a demanding major, a job, a position and meetings. on a sports team and a few freelance pro­ suring." "It keeps me pretty busy," she says. "I like it, jects, it is hard to imagine how Cahill finds though. It is just sometimes hard to schedule time to cut loose. -junior Kristin Cahill my life." "Of course I go out," she says. "I always Caruso balances her position as the president go out Friday and Saturday nights, and usu- of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority with being a ally Tuesday and Thursday, if I have time." Blue Hen Ambassador and having a double She says in order to do so many things, major in communication and psychology. sleep is most often sacrificed. This lack of She says she usually gets approximately six rest causes her to become sick and rundown hours of sleep per night. sometimes. ·"There are so many things at this school to "I always feel overwhelmed," Cahill says. "I like it that way do," she says. " Having school pride and spirit makes it hard to limit though. I like to see how much I can do - it makes me feel proud. If the activities that seem interesting. my head gets too jumbled, I run. "It was actually just this year that I realized how overworked I am. "The more I do, the more I know I can do - it's very self reas­ I don't even think I want to go away for Spring Break anymore. I just suring." want to go home and relax." At 8 o 'clock every morning, senior Hank Weaver's alarm lets out Caruso.manages to balance her workload with socializing. a blaring beep. It has only been six hours since he rested his head on "I go out Thursdays and Fridays," she says. "Saturdays, I usually his pillow. have to stay in to do work. "I don't get too much sleep,'' he says. "Oh well." "My teachers don't know I am so involved and overworked. I Weaver, who says he spends most of his time in the library these don't want them to know - I do not want special privileges," she days, double majors in finance and marketing and double minors in says. " It was my choice to do all this stuff; I manage it all." economics and management information systems. Deb Cohen, a psychologist at. the university's Center for In addition, he works 16 hours each week at MNBA. Counseling and Student Development, says the center frequently "I'm busy, but its my fault," he says. "No one told me to take all treats students for stress-related issues. this on - I do it by choice." "Many students try to do too much," she ays. "We often see the However, Weaver says he still gets overwhelmed and feels over­ consequences ofthi - anxiousness, trouble sleeping, headache and l1fE REVIEW/Noel Dietrich worked at times. appetit~l(Jec rease are common:· , Junior Brooke Caruso, a double major in communication and psychology, "My teachers have surprised me this year," he says. "They have Marf}''students are able to handle lots of different activities, she works for the university's Jewish Heritage Program, along with serving as been really understanding as to my course load." , says. Prioritizing their lives helps those who are having trouble. president of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and a Blue Hen Ambassador. Weaver says balancing a job with homework and classes can be Ileal sate real estate BY DICCON HYAIT conditions an expensive proposition. ordinary. city. Francisco says he has recieved a flood of Feantres Ediror Even if one manages to repair a silo, the water Another advantage of a home in the command Francisco laughs when questioned about the offers for his extremely secure location since Evil ge:liuses, take note of the following real and land in the area must be tested to ensure it is bunker of a missile site is security. Atlas-F site's ability to survive a direct hit from a nucle­ Sept. II. estate for sale. This place is a homeowner's free of radiation or other contamination. bunkers were designed to withstand 25 pounds ar warhead. "One day, in the world we are living in, it dream. The two-level house boasts a fireplace, But the sheer novelty of living in some of the per square inch of overpressure - the force of a "I'IJ let you come ask me after the bomb goes could become priceless," he says. three bedrooms, two and a half bathrooms with Cold War's most fortified locations has proved blast created by a small nuclear warhead explod­ off," he says. Prudential Fox & Roach real estate agents marble tubs, a Jacuzzi and more than 20,000 attractive enough to lure more than a dozen peo­ ing two kilometers away. However, he assures prospective buyers the offer several conventional homes in the square feet of space. It sits on I 05 acres of prop­ ple into purchasing silo sites from Twentieth A nuclear attack would definitely sweep away location is no longer targeted by Russian nuclear Hockessin area in the $1.9-million price range. erty with road access and even a small private Century Castles. the site's aboveground structures, including a missiles. However, real estate agent Carol Wilson admits airstrip. The military built most of the nuclear silos in small house and an airplane hangar. The com­ The Atlas missile, of course, has been none of their properties, though more convenient­ Asking price: $12 million. Former occupants: remote areas of Kansas, Texas, California and mand bunker with the main living quarters, how­ removed, and the command bunker converted ly located than rnost silos, can survive a direct hit United States Air Force personnel and one Atlas­ New York in order to minimize civilian casualties ever, is buried 36 inches under ground and pro­ into the living area, but the cavernous silo remains from a nuclear missile. F intercoltinental ballistic missile. in the event of a nuclear war. tected by 3-foot thick epoxy resin concrete rein­ empty and ready to convert to whatever needs the "I didn't think anything could withstand a This home, located in the Adirondack National Owners of silos include a Texas scuba-diving forced with steel mesh. The Air Force designed new owner sees fit. nuclear attack," she says. Park in New York, for sale by the Kansas real Jesson company, military memorabilia buffs and the structure .to remain operational after a Soviet "The possibilities are endless" states the "We've never tested it." estate company Twentieth Century Castles, is one people looking for houses that are a bit out of the nuclear attack to retaliate and obliterate a Russian Twentieth Century Castles Web site. of several privately owned Cold War-era missile silos that have been converted into luxury homes. Twentieth Century Castles owner Edward Peden lives in his own Atlas-F silo near Topeka, Kan., where he has operated the business with his wife Dianna since 1996. "We absolutely love ir.," he says. 1be company offers several sites for sale, but the Adirondack silo is one of the ftrst to be put on the market not as a "fixer-upper," but as a fully completed home. Peden will not reveal the address of the site because the current owners do not want curious snoopers visiting the unusual property. ' He explains the benefits of living in a Cold War atomic fortress. ''These are some of the strongest structures on the planet," Peden says. He says the subterranean nature of the- house has climate-control advantages. "Heating and cooling is very simple. It doesn't take much to cool it down in the summer." If the cost of the silo home seems extravagant, consider the difficulties involved with converting a former military nuclear missile silo into habit­ able living quarters. Bruce Francisco and cousin Gregory Gibbons restored the Adirondack site over five years start­ ing in 1995. Francisco says it took three years just to clean out the site, which had laid abandoned for decades and was filled with water,rust and debris. Built at great expense by the U.S. military dur­ ing 1961, the Atlas-series of silos contained ftrst­ generation intercontinental ballistic missiles. The missiles were inaccurate and primitive and were obsolete by 1965 when the Air Force replaced them with a new generation of missiles and bunkers. The government then sold most of the old silos to private interests. Many have sat aban­ doned ever since. And with good reason. Usually isolated from utilities, transportation and civilization. the silo are generally not located on prime real estate. Many of them are partially destroyed as part or arms-reduction treaties with the Soviet Union, THE REVIEWIIntcnlCI pl101o and some are flooded with water. The Kansas real estate company 20th Century Castles is selling several Atlas-series silos as homes, built originally as missile bases during the Cold War. All thi makes converting them into livable (: ~ B4 . THE REVIEW . March 15.2002 4 • • Ill Ill

After about an hour or two of sit­ telling Big Brother my darkest ting on the sidewalk looking pathetic, secrets, like where I stashed the jars chances are I will have accrued of my urine and how Velcro will enough money to buy a bottle of Mad eventually lead to the end of the Dog or Crystal Palace. Either is more world as we know it. How many than enough to ensure that my mem­ lawyers get to live lives that interest­ ory of the end of the evening is as .mg ?. If I could do it all over again . I muddled a the in sane arguments I Ah, yes. hobos have it made. I would become a hobo. hold with myself on a daily basis. often think of how much easier my That would be so great! All I If I were a hobo, instead of being life would be if I didn't have to find would have to worry about is whether stuck with my current. horrendously a "proper'' facility every time I want my hobo fri ends will bu t a shi v in boring name, I could take on a new to relieve myself. What is wrong with I me and steal my shoes. Man, that moniker, something with a little your pants? A hobo doesn't have to would be the life . more flavor, like Toothless Joe or worry about the horrible smell that owadays, I spend so much time Crazy Drunken Dave. I bet that inevitably comes from self-defeca­ I trying to fi gure out how I am going to would make the chicks go nuts for tion; he already stinks. You see, I get food to ustain my useless life . If me . hobos have it all figured out. I were a hobo, I wouldn "t have to I could bring them back to my As it is now, whenever I want to look any farther than one of the many shanty and play all kinds of cool go out somewhere I have a whole I dumpsters located behind ewark's games. like "name that odor" and host of crap that I have to bring finer restaurants. "guess which foot is infected." Man , along. I can either carry it in my Wh y go through the hassle of actu­ that would be sweet. hands or put it all in a book bag, in I I I ally going out to dinner when, with a "If you think the ladies go wild for which case look like every other little patience. you can get a quality a guy with a car, just imagine how tool on this campus. But if I were a meal for free? As long as you don' t they would r:.t#lct to someone who has hobo, all my worldly possessions I mind a little mold or the overpower­ a whole tram to himself. We could would fit easily into my bindle. I travel around Newark in style, riding The bindle is the perfect carrying I ing tench of rotting meat. you can I get a first-class meal without it cost­ the rails and dodging train security. case. Not only will it hold all your I. ing you a penny. If human contact is not your thing, stuff, it is also useful when you have ... Free food is just one of the many it's no problem if you are a hobo. to chase rats away from that last I perks of being a bum. If you pl ay Just drink a can or two of varnish and piece of pizza crust in the dumpster . I I your cards right, you can get loaded before you know it you can discuss Practic;al and stylish - it has it all. every night without actually doing the finer points of biological deter­ As soon as I can, I am going to I anything. minism with the little troll that lives become a hobo. Why waste my time I lt"s easy. Fir t, I would rummage inside your ear and tells you to burn on a dead-end college education I through the trash for a piece of card­ things. Trust me, it's the way to go. when I can enter into. the fast-paced board. Next, I would scrape some of Instead of constantly being forced and ever-growing transient industry? the dirt off my face and u e it to write to occupy my waking hours with Take my advice - drop out of up a sign proclaiming that I am " responsibilities" and " productive school, stop bathing, start talking to somehow handicapped and need activities," as a hobo I could spend yourself, and all of your problems I money for food. Whenever I was at a all day consumed in my paranoid fan­ will be solved. loss for an idea. I would always tasies. Just don' t come rummaging I blame the government for my dis­ I would run around from morning through my dumpster, unless you ability. People will fall for that every to night covering my body in tinfoil want a sharpened KFC spork in the 11. time. to prevent the chip in my brain from ribs. I l I LI __ ~-· Murder at shop affects ~ ~ . ~,. barberS outlook on life

age linking Stewart and drugs to the offense and continued from B 1 the episode of "America's Mar;t Wanted" that scream as he begged for someone to call 911. aired a week after the crime shcwcasing the bar­ In the hit on Evans, 5-year-old Damon Gist Jr., bershop murders. Stewart has nol been indicted on ,, affectionately known as D.J., was innocently mur­ any counts relating to the barbershop murders. dered, and things would never be the same again Chauncy S. Starling, a native of Wilmington, for his barber. was arrested and charged with the murders of * * * Evans and Gist, Wilmington Police Officer John Batts had always thought about opening his own Snyder said, in a press release issued just over a '"IL barbershop and salon, but never fully pursued it. month after the murders. " I never actually went out and started pricing Although Batts never returned to his job at ,,. locations and doing demographics and all that, the Made 4 Men, he insists he has go~en closer to his kind of research that I needed to do," he says. "I former co-workers. was collecting chairs and stations, but I never put Bill Bond, 30, a former co-\\Orker of Batts, my foot forward. shares his sentiments. "I was procrastinating and procrastinating." "Mentally and spiritually, I think we all grew A few days after the murders, Batts, a father of closer to each other," he says. "The .ncident made three, sat in the hospital while his newborn daugh­ me respect family more and when j see Ali, the .J.' ·.· ll ter, Alia, was suffering some complications. first thing I want to do is hug him." Sitting in the waiting room gave him time to Batts also continues friendships w;th Lawrence reflect on the chaotic happenings of the previous Moore, Cliff Henry and Rob Cottrnaa - the rest days. of the barbers who worked with him at Made 4 " I was just thinking it was time to do my own Men. thing for me and my family," he says. "That's Suite 302 is located in the White Clav Center on when I decided to try and come up with a name Route 40, nestled within the Eyeglass 'outlet and ''· and everything - a million ideas were out on the Pat's Pizzeria. The lounge is complete with a big table, and I had to put some kind of organization to screen television with all the latest comtxments - them. I knew it was time. I just didn't know for DVD player with an abun- what and how." il; ~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! dance of moYies, a •". Batts sits sprawled PlayStation 2 and a stereo. out on his living room There are plants in the cor­ sofa at his Newark ners of the room,- a large home, wearing a gray magazine rack with a vari­ hooded sweat jacket "I touched him, and it ety of titles, two leather No news unzipped, revealing a sofas and a very approach­ fresh white T -shirt able front desk. ~ '1. ... f: ~ .~· ~ ~\ 0 .);. ;·:- . ·~ underneath, covering was still him, but no Sitting on the sofa are two BY JEFF OSTER · " -" ~' ": ,"In ttte; ''iost ,collegf'.nts ~w~ti~ itbtpb his wiry thin body kids, aged 6 and 7. a broth­ • Stqff RqHJTter " ~ . . Vietnam 411\t tne·~ivil right$ era ... he 8ays.. ~ j with a pair of dark­ r·: life - it was like er and sister, waiting for Students at the university are not as in tooch with hard . •· . ~e 'cl<*Sf tbibg [stud_entsl ~t · m Fntt times; is colored baggy cargo their father to finish getting news as they probably should be. · 9/U." _ ~ . "· P • ; •. :_ · ...· " · , ,, pants and matching touching an ice cube." his haircut. At the moment, Try going through th~ Trabant University ~er and ;' • ~unications P(at>eti:; ll He recalls a conver- ignoring the children. judicial case, the Bush administration's nuclear weapons OUt~ of .approxiplately 370 sstudents. 'only ~0,-t or sation he had with - barber Ali Batts, "Y'all talk too inuch," the policy review or the latest developments Qn the war in raised their hJndS,. _'""~ ' · f:r:01 Damon Gist, D.J.'s on giving Damon Gist Jr. his final haircut girl says to no one in partic­ Afghanistan. , )?! \ :'fbis js a grea~ co~ to met she says~ ,"~hope . father, regarding his ular, and her brother adds While 1hey still have puzzled lookS on their f.-:e~ asi are,n:1 now getting t:hW;. 11~ws ~ rr9p,· !~ Howat'! Stem feelings toward return- in, "All y'all do is talk." them who won the Delaware basketball game last mgw~ $how-~- · ~ . r · . -~ ;, , · "' _-· ing to Made 4 Men Clearly in Suite 302, Batts what Jennifer Lopez was wearing on "The tonight Show" , J()Qi Silv~. rice presideQl Of p;. lill",lj,'ta . ·' him to give D.J. his last haircut in preparation for grandmother. director, says she thinks students are • - communications PJofeiSOT his funeral , he never second-guessed it. Batts admits that since the murders his whole too busy in their everyday lives to care · Juliet Dee "He told me that he wanted me to do that for life has been changed, a point noticed by his girl­ about the news. him, so I told him, ' When you want me to do it, friend , Vanessa Thompson. "If (students] have time to listen to iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;o;;;;;;;;;;i;;· iOiiiijjjliiiiiiliiOiiliiiliiiiiili;;;;;;;~i~ijji; just say it, and I will drop everything and do it,' "Now that he manages his own shop, he likes to the news for a few minutes, it's prdbably for the weather and that's what happened." . manage everything else, which is not a problem," report or the traffic," sbe says. "The national and regional: Batts wearily recalls cutting D.J.'s hair in she says. "I think that i just his way of trying to news updates just aren't a high priority." preparation for the funeral and the memory of his take control of things.'' When it comes to the lack of student interest in news, cold, motionless body. One year ago, Batts was living a nightmare. He Chuck Tarver, WVUD station manager, says he does not "That was the most difficult experience of my was watching his place of employment being feel it is the ignorance of students at fault, but society life," he says. "When you cut someone's hair they broadcasted on the nightly news and on itself. always move, and he didn't move at all. When I "America's Mo t Wanted .'" He wa dealing with a '·News used to be combined with eQtertainment, such as used to cut his hair, he would say ' Oww.' Now, I hand forced upon him. at the movies." he says. "Now. we have the news compet­ was shaping him up, and he didn't move at all. In Now Batts is in charge, living comfortably in ing with entertainment. The news tradition has been lost." my mind for me to fini sh, I had to make sure I hi s own home, operating hi own bu iness and Tarver says one bf the problems is that entertainment thought he was alive. I couldn' t focus on the fact watching his daughters grow up. companies own most news companies. For example, AOL he was dead. "Whenever it rains, it pours, and whenever it's Time/Warner owns the Cable News Network, and Disney " If I did , I probably would have broke down and sunny, it"s going to be bright. In between, you got owns the American Broadcasting Company. · cried . I touched him, and it was still him, but no to weather the storms." he says. "There have been Allan Loudell, program director at WILM Newsradio, life - it was like touching an ice cube ." so many climate change , o I am just grateful for says students pay attention to events that directly affect Batts grows melancholy as he describes the everything till being together, everything is still their lifestyle. aftermath of the barbershop murders . He refers to growing and prospering and no major setback,s." the police hunt for James Stewart, the news cover- ..;'- :~... B-' • THE RE\'IE\\' • i\'Ltrdt 15. 2002 :r­ r .:~.·

.. .• . After about an hour or two of sit ­ te lling Big Broth..:r my dark<.: ~ t .4- : Admi11istrative News ting on the :-.idcwalk looking pathetic. secrets. lik..: wh..:re I sta:-. hcd the jars •t . EdiJor chances arc I wil l have accrued of my urine and how Velcro wi ll .. enough mnncy to buy a holllc of Mad evcntLtally lead to the end of th..: • [email protected]/u Dtl!! or Crvstal Palace. Either is more world as we know it. How many •t..:.. tha~ enough to ensure that my mem­ lawyers get to live li ves that interest­ ory or the end of the evenin g is as ing'/ If I n>u ld do it all o ver again. muddled as the insane arguments I -Ah. ye~. hobos ha ve it made. I \\ mild h.:come a hnbn. hold with myself on a dai ly basis. often think or how much easier my That \\lltild h.: ~o !!r<.:at! All I If I w..:re a hobo. instead of be in g life would be if I didn"t have to find . J I ~~j --r. \\ (>Uid han~ to \VOlT\ abo~1 1 i:-. whether stuck with rny current. horrendously a "proper" facility every time I want my twho friend:-. ";ill bu:-.t a shi v in borin!! namc. I could take on a new to relieve mv~elf. What is wrong wi th 111..: and ~ teal Ill\ 'hoes. Man. that moniker. somethin!! with a little your pants·/ A hobo doesn·t hive to I \ ! would b..: the life ·. more fl avor. like Toothless Joe or worry about the horrible sme ll that l . 1owaday,. I :-.p..:nd 'o much tim..: Crazy Drunken Dave. I bet that inevi tably comes from sclf-def..:ca­ --r--1 tn in!! to figur..: out how I am !!oin!!. to would make the chicks go nuts for ti on: he already st inks. You see. !!ct f~od to':-.u,tain my usclc:,.s lif;. If me. hobos ha ve it all figured out. I were a hobo. I wouldn't ha,·c to I nnlld bring them back to my As it is now. whenever I want to look any farthcr than one or th.: many shant y and play all kinds of cool go out somewhere I have a whole ~U dumpsters located behind 1 ..:wark · s !!ames. like "name that odor" and host of crap that I have to bri ng finer re>.tauranb. ::!!uess which foot is infected ... Man, along. I can either carry it in my Why go through the has,le of actu ­ tl;at would be sweet. hands or put it all in a book bag. in al I\· !!Oin!! out to di nner when . with a ·tf you think the ladies go wil d for which case I look like every other little- pati'Cnce. you can get a quality a guy with a car. just imagine how tool on this ca mpus. But if I were a meal for frce'1 As long as you don "t they wou ld t:~ct to so m e~)l1e who has hobo, all my worldly possessions mind a little mold or the overpower­ a whole tran\ to htmself . We could wou ld fi t eas il y into my bindle. in!! stench of rotting meat. vou can travel around ewark in style. ridi ng The bindle is the perfect carrying get a first-class meal withoui it cost­ the rails and dodging trai n security. case. Not onl y will it hold all your ing you a penny. If human contact is not your thing. stuff, it is also useful when you have Free food i' just one of the many it's no problem if you are a hobo. to chase rats away from that last perks of being a bum. If you play Just drink a can or two of varnish and piece of pizza crust in the dumpster. your cards right. you can get loaded befo.-e you know it you can discuss Practical and stylish - it has it all. ..: ,·ery night without actually doing the finer points of biological deter­ As soon as I can. I am going to anything. minism with the little troll that li ves become a hobo. Why waste 'iny ~me It's easy. First. I would ru mmage inside your ear and tell s you to burn on a dead-end college education through the trash for a piece of card ­ things. Trust me . it "s the way to go. when I can enter into the fast-paced board . ext. I would scrape some of Instead of constantly being forced and ever-growing transient industry? the dirt off mv face and u. e it to write to occupy my waking hours with Take my advice - drop out of up a sign proclaiming that I am "responsibilities·· and "productive school. stop bathing. start talking to somehow handicapped and need activi ties:· as a hobo I could spend yourself. and all of your problems money for food. Wheneve r I was at a all day consumed in my paranoid fan­ will be solved. loss for an idea. I would always tasies. Just don't come rummaging I would run around from mornin g through my dumpster. unless you I blame the government for my dis­ I ability. People will fall for that every to night covering my body in tinfoU want a sharpened KFC spork in the I ~ I .. time . to prevent the chip in my brain from ribs.

I I I ' 'I; ,-: ~ Murder at shop affects ~ . ~ ~. ~-..:t:

.\ \\ barberS outlook on life \ age linking Stewart and drugs tc the offense and continued from B 1 the episode of " America's MOit Wanted" that scream as he begged for someone to call 91 I . aired a week after the crime shcwcasing the bar­ " I In the hit on Evans. 5-year-old Damon Gist Jr., bershop murders. Stewart has not been indicted on affectionately known as D.J .. was innocently mur­ any counts relating to the barbenhop murders. dered. and things would never be the same again Chauncy S. Starling, a native of Wilmington, for his barber. was arrested and charged with the murders of * * * Evans and Gist, Wilmington Police Officer John Batts had always thought about opening his own Snyder said, in a press release issued just over a barbershop and salon. but never fully pursued it. month after the murders . .. , never actLtally went out and started pricing Although Batis ne ver returnfd to hi s job at locations and doing demographic and all that. the Made 4 Men, he insists he has go~ten closer to his kind of research that I needed to do." he says. ··1 former co-workers. was collecting chairs and stations. but I never put Bill Bond, 30, a former co-\.\Qrker of Batts, my foot forward. shares his sentiments. '·J was procrastinating and procrastinating.'· "'Mentally and spiritually, I think we all grew A few days after the murders, Batts, a father of closer to each other,'· he says. ''The ncident made three, sat in the hospital while hi s newborn daugh­ me respect family more and when i see Ali, the .J. ter. Alia. was suffering some complications. first thing I want to do is htig him." Sitting in the waiting room gave him time to Batts also continues friendships wth Lawrence .' ' reflect on the chaotic happenings of the previous Moore, Cliff Henry and Rob Cottma• - the rest -· ... , days. of the barbers who worked with him at Made 4 ·'I was just thinking it was time to do my own Men. ., thing for me and my family;' he says. "That's Suite 302 is located in the White Cia·, Center on when I decided to try and come up with a name I • Route 40, nestled within the Eyeglass.Outlet and and everything - a million ideas were out on the Pat's Pizzeria. The lounge is complete .vith a big table, and I had to put some kind of organization to screen television with all the latest comtxments - them. I knew it was time. I just didn't know for DVD player with an abun­ what and how." dance of mo·,ies, a Batts sits sprawled PlayStation 2 and a stereo. out on his living room There are plants in the cor­ sofa at his Newark ners of the room, a large home, wearing a gray magazine rack with a vari­ hooded sweat jacket "I touched him, and it ety of titles, two leather No news is bad news unzipped. revealing a sofas and a very approach­ fresh white T -shirt able front desk. underneath, covering was still him, but no Sitting on the sofa are two BY JEFF OSTER t'lo the<'7 0s; college students grew· up in the ~ge of his wiry thin body kids, aged 6 and 7. a broth­ Staf!Reporzer " Vietnam and the civil rights era," he says. . . ' with a pair of dark­ life - it was like er and sister , waiting for Students at the university are not as in touch with bard . . ..Th.e closest thing [students] bad; in recent tim~s. 'is · colored baggy cargo their father to fi nish getting news as they probably should be. · · ' · 91 It!' ' ·~ pa nts and matching touching an ice cube." hi s haircut. At the moment, Try going through the Trabant Unive~;sity Cente~ and Communications Professor Juliet Dee recently conduct- gray sneakers. the adults in the room are a king random people about the Enron/Artbur Anderson e:: · : ~ · ing to Made 4 Men Clearly in Suite 302, Batts what Jennifer Lopez was wearing on "The Tonight ~bow•r ""'' Jopi S11ve(m.ilJ, vice pres:ident , 'of;..rtuu:ketdev~lop nt and the murder scene is the star - he is the hub or if they have seen the new Nas video. at The Wilmington News. Journal ~ contradic: • .;,• . of his son. of all conversations, with "Me and Damon. such topics as the hip-hop in ~~~;~~s t:~e;~~~ ~~~i~~~~~n=~s~:r~ woul~ ~o~e~ ~:~ng 'fue :~i:~ ..b ~ s~~~-.66 ·~~ni· af: a~ul~)'(1

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All payments must be Interested in Display date.We advise you to directed to the only (please follow up your accompanied by your Advertisina:? place your ads accord­ advertising department faxes with a phone call Ad Request form for ingly and rerun them at The Review. -No credit cards to ensure placement) placement. Call (302) 831 - 1398 as necessary. accepted Announcements Community Bulletin Community Bulletin I.. _F_o_r_R _en_t_ ..I ..I_ F.... o ~r.... R..... en... t _ ..l ..I_ H_e_lp_ w_a_n_t_ed..... l I I Board Board Cleve. . Ave. 3,4 pers, houses 369-1288 AVAILABLE NOW, 18dr/1BA. Interviewing On Campus, March 19. Anyone interested in helping plan the best The University of Delaware Library will Townhouse-loft. Walking distance to UD. Beautiful Jewish coed summer camp locat- !Need a babysitter? College student with Homecoming at Delaware EVER:? Then hold tours of "Personal Visions: Artists' Free parking! Don' t share a bdr., rent 630/mo. WID included. Call Chris@ ed in Pocono Mountains is seeking general jown transportation and years of experi­ come to our meeting on Friday, March Books at the Millennium" the new exhibi­ these Madison Dr. townhouses. 4bd/2bth, 456-1297 or 598-2360. counselors and lacrosse specialists. 6/23- lence! Flexible hours and references. Call 22nd at 4 p.m. in Trabant, room 205 to dis­ tion in the Special Collections gallery. The WID, W/W carpet, dw, central air, ample 8/15 Good Salary, travel allowance and a jcaitlin @ 302-837-6012. cuss the pros and cons of Homecoming tours led by lris Snyder, Associate parking, all units have decks. 12 mo. House for rent, one block off Main, 3 per­ great summer! Join our staff of over 150. 200 I and brainstorm ideas for an awesome Librarian, Special Collections Department, lease starting June & July, $IIOO+util., son, WID, $930/month +uti!. 731-5734. For an interview call 1-800-270-7375. Visit theme! Please send an email to will be held on: Thursday, March 28th, call Earle Anderson 368-7072 before PerlmanCamp.org to fill out an application [email protected] if you would like to 2002 at 12 noon, Wednesday, April 24th, JOpm. BEST VALUE, Townhouse for 4, excel. attend the meeting. lf you are unable to 2002 at I pm, and Thursday, May 23rd, cond ., avail 611, 4 Bdrm, 2 Bathrm, WID, Child Care for 9 year old girl/ 7 year old come, but would like to participate in plan­ 2002 at 12 noon. Each tour will last about S. Chap, Cleve Ave, Prospect Ave, 2, 3, 4, ample parking, 737-1771. boy summer 2002. Need own car. Care Travel ning, please call or e-mail Sandy Jenkins 30-45 minutes. For further information 5 bedroom houses 369-1288. needed early June through end of August. Hargrove at the address above or call 831- contact Susan Brynteson, The May Morris Nice House/Rooms nr UD & I95. Free North Wilmington. Call Chris @ 302-764- I I 1403. We look forward to seeing you! Director of Libraries, at 302-831 -2231 . Houses Prospect Av, 4tenants, 454-1360. parking, $275-$ 1100 + Util., call (302) 1553 for more details. #I Spring Break Vacations! Cancun, 983-0124. Jamaica, Bahamas, & R orida. Best Parties, Direct from the Republic of China, The Come shop at the State's Largest Indoor 2, 3. 4 Bdr Houses w/d, parking, walk to Mgrs. Ice cream shop$ 10,000 this summer Best Hotels, Best Prices! Group Discounts, National Acrobats of Taiwan will perform Garage Sale! Merchants' Attic 0 and campus no pets 731-7000. 34 North St., 4 people, 611 , porch, pricing, Part-time, alt wkends off, call (302) 832- Group organizers travel free! Space is limit­ mystical feats at the Grand Opera House, General Public Garage Sale will be held on yard, $1380. Call (302)-834-3026. 8737. ed! Hurry up & Book ow! 1-800-234- located on 818 . Market St. in Saturday, March 30, 2002 in Rehobeth oom for rent, 204 E. Park Place, near 7007 www .endlesssummcnours.com. Wilmington. on Wednesday. March 20, Beach, DE. The hours are 9 a.m. to 2 p.p. - gton, avail. Spring semester or & Madison DR, 4 BR T.H. Washer Dryer. ummer Jobs Live in Ocan City, MD 2002 at 8 ~· Tickets are $25, $23, and and admission price is one peony. Tile pen­ all '02, Call Danny @ 420-6398. Avail 6/1 $900 per mo. Call 994-3304. elescope Pictures/Northend Studio is $20; discounts are available for seniors, stu­ nies will be donated to Bear Hugs for ow hiring for the Summer of 2002. Live dents, and groups. To purchase tickets or Babies, Inc. Furnished 2 bdr apt. available March !House for rent, 4 people 49 North Chapel. t the beach, work with other highly for more information, call The Grand Box 2002. Call Main St. Court (368-4748) for !Also 2 bdrm Main Street apartment. A vail otivated people, earn up to $10,000 Office at (302) 652-5577 or toll free at LAUGHTER IS THE BEST MEDICINE! details. Ifill (215)-345-6448. aving an incredible time. No experience (800) 37- GRAND. Wimess chair balanc­ Four of the nation' s hottest stand-up ecessary. Just fun, outgoing students ing, nag dancing, and bicycle riding made comics, wi ll all be gathered for one hilari­ 4 Bdr Townhouse, WID, College Park, House for rent - great locations Call Matt at heck out our website for more info and into breathtaking art by these amazing per- ous night of entertainment at The Grand $925/mo., call Bill @ 494-4096 737-8882 or email at [email protected] pply directly on line at www.northend· formers! · Opera House, located on 818 N. Market St. dio.com voice mail us at 1·800·260- in Wilmington, on Sunday, Mari:h 24th at 7 West Knoll Apts Available NOW! I and Madison Dr. Townhouse 4 person, 3 bdrm 184 No beach bouse, No worries.. .. Come and join the tradition. The 39th run­ p.m. The Laughter Arts Festival will feature 2 Bedrooms. For Details Please Call 368- wlbonus rm in finished basement, central ousing available. ning of the Citizens Bank Caesar Rodney Bobcat Goldwait, star of the "Police 7912 or stop in. A/C , W1D , one of the nicest on Madison half-marathon will take place Sunday, Academy" films and "Blow". Also in atten­ $875/mo 't util Avail 611 378-1963. Graduating English Majors March 17th. Registration for the race dance will be , whose one­ vailable for rental • Madison Drive 3BR Educational publisher is looking for begins at 7:30a.m. in Rodney Square and liners crowned her Best Female Stand-Up ownhouses. Call376-0181. I Bdrm.Apt. fr sublet. Avail May 1st to English majors to fill customer service the half-marathon begins at 9 a.m. The Comic at the American Comedy Awards. July 31st 2002. Address: Colonial positions. Great benefits, and publishing proceeds from the event will benefit the Kevin Meaney and Bobby Collins, are two MADISON DRIVE Townhouse 4, available Gardens, 334 East Main Street, Newark, career paths. On campus interviews wiiJ LAST MINUTE SPECIALS!! American Lung Association 'Of Delaware. other fabulous comics on the bill. Come 6/1 , exc condition, WID, ample parking. DE. REnt $571 per month. If interested be conducted beginning April. Email SAVE UP TO S100 PER PERSON! Post race party for the runners is compli­ for one uproarious evening! Tick.ets are CaU 737~ 1771 , leave message. · contact (302) 266-9185 or 695-6825. resume in the body of your email to ments of Pine Mountain Spring Water, $35, $32, and $29; discounts are available [email protected] or fax Super G, Little Caesars Pizza, and the for seniors, students and groups. To pur· Why share a bedroom? I have many reno­ ~_ouses For Rent • a 4 Bdrm Twnhse on resume and cover letter to (302) 734- Famous Bagel Boys. chase tickets or fore more information, call vated 4 BR townhouses on Madison Drive Madison Dr. Deck, new hardwood floors 0549. The Grand Box Office at (302) 652-5577 or WID, D/W, A/C. Excellent condition. ~kitchen, 4 person rental permit WID, CONTACT Delaware is recruiting volun­ toll free at (800) 37-GRAND. Orders can Available 6-1-02 $1080 plus uti! John pff street parking, bus service to campus ~~------.. teers for Spring Volunteer Training. Let also be placed via secured server at Bauscher 454-8698. 1 year lease, $1100/mo + $1100 sec. CaD I your spirits soar as you reach out to others www.grandopera.org. Don' t Miss It! ~bbyat368-4424Mon-Fri9amto5pm For Sale in your community. Our training program Houses on N. Chapel, W. Clay Dr., Kells & 1 offers personal enrichment through listen­ 2002 BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS Madison. John Bauscher 454-8698. ing skills you will have for a lifetime. BOWL FOR KIDS" SAKE Come on April 13th to Bowlerarna, Pike •M•oto•r•Ho•m•e2•2• f, 6•Sk•$•89•5•ss•f'l.•'vo•i s•ti.ck.. Spring Training begins on March 20, 2002 eat, clean, exceptional housng avail. 3 Help Wanted I for the 24 hr Crisis Helpline (24-hr tele­ Creek Bowling Center, or Pleasant Hills houses and townhouses zoned for 4 • $795 (401 ) 620-3217 Elkton phone crisis intervention, counseling , and Bowling Lanes in New Castle County to ith AC, WID, DW, Priv. Parking, & I enjoy free bowling and food, contests, referral services), Rape Crisis Services rass Cut. Incl. Also, Triplex apartmen THINK SPRING - 93 Red Miata, 84k (supportive services to victims of sexual prizes and lots of fun! Form a team of 5 to vail that can be combined to accommo­ oating & Fishing Superstore now hiring miles, $5,700 obo, call Jon 302-731 -4799 assaul t), or Reassurance Contact (daily tele­ 6 people and call for team captain and reg· ate larger groups of 5 -9. All on UD bus nal IT & PT sales associates. Day, phone call to the elderly/homebound). Call istration information. The event requires • Yr. leases start 6/1. Email to greatlo­ vening, and weekend shifts avail 1993 Geo Prizm 4 dr, 5 speed, AC, sunroof, TODAY for more info.@ (302) 761-9800 each bowler to secure sponsors prior to the [email protected] or call 737-0868. 7 50/hr start. Apply @ Eastern Marine, I 13k, very dependable, $2,500, call event. Call (302) 998-3577 for additional evenings @ (302) 376-9262 t. 72 Newark 453-7327. The American Diabetes Association's Tour information. Clean Houses, Great Locations, WID, de Cure will be on Thursday, March 28, AIC, DW, Parking & Grass Cut Incl. FACULTY HOUSE FOR SALE. ashiers needed for evening & weekend CAUTION! 2002 from 5:30 to 7:30p.m. The event, Avail6/l, 235-4791 or [email protected] hifts. $7/hr. Apply@ Eastern Marine, 1 HUNTER'S RUN DRIVE. presented by the Delaware River and Bay t. 72, Newark 453-7327. LANDENBERG, PA. authority, helps benefit a chronic disease Hms/Apts Jan. Jun, Sep wlk UD 369-1 288 $269,900. Many Spring Break companies that affects nearly 16 million Americans. are created to defraud students Come and help kick off the event with Hurry! Townhouses still available for complimentary food and beverages. June 2002 move in call - Main Street out of their money. These Court @ 368-4748 for details. companies exist only long Join expert gardener J P. Malocsay at the enough to receive advance pay­ Delaware Center for Horticulture on For the nicest houses on Madison at the Saturday, March 16 from 10 a.m. to 12 lowest rates. call 239-I 367. Needing energetic, faith-filled person to ments and then dissolve before noon for a workshop on Gardening Basics: work with church youth program. Pruning in Springtime, What to Do, What Blair Ct townhouse. 4 persons. one of the del ivering "the goods". Other Progressive Christian congregation seeks unscrupulous travel companies Not to Do. Malocsay will lead you through nicest on the block. AC, WID, carpets, someone to work Wednesday and Sunday the techniques for proper pruning of trees garbage di p, new stove, full basement, A l awn mower. Power evenings as well as occassional additional promise lavish accomodations and shrubs, and cover the best resources on parking. Lease begins 6/ 1, $ 1 I00 . programs as needed. Contract runs the subject in .the Center's library. He'll tools. Reco r ded music [email protected] or 540-9387. and deliver far less. The through end of December. al so show you the tools needed for various through h eadphon es. Approximately $5,000 stipend. Contact Review does not have the pruning tasks and how and when to prune Graham Van Keuren, c/o Presbyterian means to differentiate between different types of plants. Fee for !he work­ Live musi c w itho ut Campus Ministry @UD, at 454-7801 or Unique post & beam contempo­ honest, reputable companies shop: $5 DCH members, $8 for non-mem­ h eadphones. Repeat ed at [email protected] to inquire. bers. Advanced registration is recommend­ rary with new two story addition and "fly-by-night" advertisers. ed. Call (302) 658-6262 for more informa­ e x posure to ~h ese noise $250 A DAY POTENTIAL on approx. 1.5 acres. Located 15 Please research all Spring tion. l e v els ( 85 decibel s ) con BARTENDING. Training Provided. mins from campus, close to Break offers carefully, and con­ cause g radua l or sudden 1-800-293-3985 ext. 204 White Clay Creek State Park and SAVE THIS DATE! Kids Count in tact University Travel at 831 - Delaware Conference hearing loss - o condition cycle path to University! A venue for Action: Advancing Advocacy Fraternities-Sororities 4321 (Trabant University t h at offecls one i n t en Clubs-Student Groups Incredible views. E-mail Center) for a flyer which lists Wed., March 20, 2002 at Delaware Earn $1,000-$2,000 this semester with the [email protected], campus tel. Technical and Community College in Americans. For on easy Campusfundraiser.co m three hour safe and legitimate tours. The Dover Join us for our second annual one· evol uollon of the n o i se x8199. day conference featuring nationally known • fundraising event. Does not involve credit Review wishes our read~rs a Victoria Mews card applications. Fundraising dates are speakers, practical workshops and our l evel s I n your work or filling quickly, so call today! Contact safe and fun Spring Break. KIDS COUNT Awards luncheon. For more h ome envi ronment. and f o r (302) 368-2357 Campusfundraiser.com at 888-923-3238, information call 302-831 -4966 a comple te assessm e nt or visit Campusfundraiser .com Pri'Ulte Entra rce Newark Department of you r h earing health. call are currently taking registration for its On U of D Shuttle Bus Route ~amp Counselors wanted for Tennis, Announceme~~ a certifi ed I I ONLY·l 5 Adult Pottery I class. This class will be !Ropes Course, Gymnasties, Nature and Garages Available !More! Gain valuable experience at held on March 26th, April 9th, 23rd, May a u d iologi s t . For Pregnant? Late and worried? Pregnancy 7th, and May 21 st from 6:30-8:30pm at the Laundry Facilities on Site ~ward-winning camps while having the more Infor mation. ~ummer of a lifetime. Apply on-line at testing, options counseling and contracep­ DAY·S George Wilson Community Center. pineforestcamp.com tion available through the Stude nt Heahh Registration fees are $40 for residents and contact t he A m erica n Service GYN Clinic. For information or an Foxcroft $45 for non-residents. Call 366-7069 for Speech-Lo n guoge- Haorlng (302) 456-9267 l1f You Like The Outdoors We Have The appointment, call 83 1-'8035 Mon- Fri 8:30- more information or register now at 220 ~ob For You. Flex Scheel. 2 Miles From 12:00pm and l:00-4:00pm. Confidential UNTIL Elkton Rd , ewark. DE. Assoclollon ol l -800-638- Two blocks to Campus fCampus. $11.75/Hr. Call Sam 454-8955. Se~ ices. TALK or v is it www.osha.org. ewark United Methodist Church located Pri'Ulte Entra rce Childcare. PT (possible FT in summer), for Student Health Services Telephone SPRING at 69 E. Main Street will be holding Washer/[)yer 3 boys. ages 4, 7 and 8 in my home near Comment Line- Call the "Comment" line Palm/Passion Sunday Services on March Longwood Gardens in PA. Nonsmoker and with questions, comment , and or sugges­ 24. 2002 at 8:00. 9: 30, and II . FREE Parking own transp. required. Flexible schedule . tions about our services. 83 I -4898. BREAK! Two-Story Apts 1 BR's w/Loft Call 610-925-0690. Child Devel. Major a plus but not required .

I ~ March 15. 2002 .TilE KEVIEW. 85

The Review 831-2771

Classified Ad Rates Premiums The Review is not If you arc sending Business Hours Advertising Policy Bold: one time charge reponsible for ads payment via mail University Rates: of $2.00 faxed without pl ease address your Monday .... ! 0 am - 5pm Th e Review reserves (students. faculty. staft) follow- up. envelopes: Tuesday .. .. ! 0 am - 3pm the right to refuse any Boxing: One time *Email your ad to The Review Wednesday.! 0 am - 5pm ads that are of an $ 1.00 per line charge of $5.00 reviewclassy@ ATTN: C l a~si fieds Thursday .. I 0 am - 5pm tmproper or yahoo.com to receive 250 Perkins Stu. Cen. Friday ...... ! 0 am - 3pm inappropriate time, Local Rates: Placin~: Your Ad an electronic Ad Uni versity of Delaware place or manner. The There are four ways Request. Newark. DE 19716 ideas and opinions of $2.00 per line to place an ad at The Deadlines Our Policy advertisements Review: * Walk-ins appearing in this -U D rates are for For Tuesday"s issue: We are g lad to have publication are not personal use only ::< Call and request a All ads must be prepaid Friday at 3 p.m. you advertise with The necessari Iy those of form by the corresponding Review. Refunds will The Review's staff or -A II rates are pe r deadlines before place­ For Friday's issue: not be given for ads the University. insertion * Fax a copy of the ad ment can occur. Tuesday at 3 p.m. that are cancelled Questions, Comments, to (302) 83 I -1396 to before the last run or input may be -Cash or Check receive form by fax . All payments must be Interested in Display date.We advise you to directed to the only (please follow up your accompanied by your Advertising? place your ads accord­ advertising department faxes with a phone call Ad Request form for ingly and rerun them at The Review. -No credit cards to ensure placement) placement. Call (302) 83 1 - 1398 as necessary. accepted

. f j, Community Bulletin Community Bulletin For Rent For Rent Help Wanted Announcements 1 Board Board 14 ;;-;...;:;;;:;;gg... :t;¥O•;;o~;;;: t'Z· ¥ 1.. ~o.:t:;-:1:;:;~ .. g;p i

A\'r\II.ABLE NOW. I Bdr/ IBA. lmen i.:\\'ing On Campu,. \larch 19. . \n ~ lHl e mlcrc ' l~d in helping plan lhe be;.l The Uni\'(~rsity of Delaware Librarv will TownhouSt!-loft . Walking distance to liD. hold lour<. of " Per~ona l Visions: Anists · Beauliful Je\\'is h coed ;.ummer camp l<'cal­ :'l:ccd a bah~ sitter'? College student with Homccnmin>! a1 Dcla\\are E\'E R "~ Then Frtt parking! Don't s hare a bdr .• rent 630/mo. included. Call C hris@' Books al lhe Millennium" lhc new exhibi­ wm ed in Ponmo \loumain,; is >CeJ..in!! [!c'nrral \\II lrliiiSJ>Ortation and yceri· n1m.: In our ~nee1in~ on Fridav. March theSt! i\ladison Dr. townhouses . .thd/2bth . .t56 - 1297 o r 598-2360. coun,dor' and Iaero' e ' peciaJi ,l; . 6 2.'- nee! Flexihl•· hnurs and references. Call ::!::!nd a1 -1 p.m. in T rabam. room :!OS to d i>­ tion in lhe Special Collecliuns gallery. The WID. W/W carpet. «h•. central air. ample ::; 15 Go,•d Sala n . Ira\ el allo\\ ancc and a ·aitlin @' ]02-!137-60 12. cu" I he pro' and <.:on' of Homec·oming lour> k d b) lri' Snyder. As;.ocime parking. all units han decks. 12 mo. Ho u'c for rclll. o n.: bloc~ off \lain. J per­ !!r~;n ,umma' Join our '1aff of'" er I SO . ~001 and brain,IOnn idea' for an awc,nme Librarian. Special Colleclions Department. lease starting .June & .Jul~- . $ 11UO+util.. '1>11. \\' D. $930 ml>nlh + u1il. 7:-1-57:1-1. ~·or an imen ir" call 1-XOO-no. 7.\ 5. \ ·i,il lh.:me~ Plea~.: ;.end an .:maillo will be held on: Thursdav. March 28th. call Earle Anderson 361'1-7072 before PcrlmanCamp.org In till nul an applinllinn >and~ j h @ udd ..: du if you would like 10 2002 al 12 noon. Wedne~day . April 24th. IOpm. HEST \ "ALUE. To"nhou'.: for -1. excel. allcnd the meet in!!. If \OU are unable 10 2002 at lpm. and Thur:,day. May 23rd, cnnd .. '"ail 6 I . -1 Bdnn.:! Balhrm. \\'i D . Child Care for 9 \c"ar old ~irl 7 ,-ear o ld come. hut \\Ould lik.: io participale in plan­ ~002 al 12 noon. Eat·h lour will last abou1 S. Chap. Ck\e ·\ \o.~. Pro'J"'<:I A''-'· 2 . .\. -1. ampk p;u·J..ing. 737-1771. bl)\ ... umm1...·r 200i. :\el.·d ,;,\. n G.tf . Care Travel ning. pka,e <·all or e-mail Sand~ Jenkin, 30--15 mimliC>. For further infurmalion 5 bl'droom hou'c' .\olJ- 12~ • . nee1kd carh J un~ lhn>U!!h enJ of Au~u". Har!!ro\ c al I h.: aJure" abm c or call ~ 1- co macl su,an Brynteson. The May Moni\ ,\ic·~ Hmhc Rooms nr lD & 195. Free :"o nh W iln;inl!lon. Caii-Chri, (ci .\02':76-1- f-1(1\ \\'c look for\\'ard In 'eeing ~ou' Di rec10r of Libraric . lll 302-831-2:!3 I. HothC> Pw,pec·l .-\\. -llc·nanb. -15-1- 1360. par~ing . 5275- 1100 + l.J 1il.. call (30:! ) 155~ for m ore-de ~ail' . PI S prin~ Br.:a~ \ "a,·,u1on' ~ Cannm. 9XJ-(112-I. Jamaica. Baham;h. & f'J,,n da. !:Jc,l Parltc·,_ Direcl from Ihe R.:-publir of China. The Come shop a1 I he S1a1e ·' Lmgcs1 Indoor Gant!!e Sale' Merchants' Allie II and 2. 3. -1 Bdr HothL''" d . p . Jt-~ cTealll ,hop$ 10.11()1) I hi' 'lillltnl'r f:k,l Ht>IL"i-. Bc,l Pri ce' ~ Gn>up Di,n>Uill'. \ aliunal ,-\c·robal> of Taiwan "ill pcrfon11 campth no p.:h 7.~ 1-7(Xl0. J-1 :"nnh St.. -1 pc·opk. n I. porch. pr~ing. Part-tirnc. all " ~ end, off. call 1.>02 > 'J2- Group 1> r ~anit.:r' lr;l\.:1 !"r.:c'' .·paL"L' I ' linnl­ 111~'1 11: a l f.:;n, .ttlhc Grand Opera H<'ll>e. General Public Gc.IIL'J un 'I,. \l.trl-..:1 '\1 in SaiUrda' . :\l ,~rch 30. :!002 in R.:hobclh 13c.ld1. fh.: hL•Ur, .trc '-1 a 111 . to 2 p.p Koom for rcnt.lO-' ~-- l'arl.. l'h••·e. 1war· -1,0- \ ". \\ ,\ 'lh..i 1... '''llll •11 ,.'1l1'lil ... 1. t 1111 \\lin md ·ll 1m \\ s.:dn\.'-..d.l\. \ larch 20. iJI:. Harrington. m ·a il. Spring ~;,mc~ter or \bdhon DR. -1 BR f .H. \\ '"h.:r &. Dner. l?_ummcr J nh!> LiH~ in Ocan l"il~ • .\ID ~ (IIJ ~ .u-~ r rn. T1.:~.: t- arc ~ 25 . S~.'. and and ;.~ d rnt"lnn pnce i.' one penny. The pen­ ' all ·02. (;all Dann~ @ .t20-639!!. i\'ilil 6 I 900 per mo. Call 9lJ-I-3304 .· ~· elescope Picture :\orthcnd Studio is S.:>O: di,cnunb arc· ;1\;lilablc fL>r ,enior'. ,llJ. nie> "ill he donalcd lo Bear HU!!S for ~ow hiring for the S ummer of 200:!. Lhc denl'. and group,. To purchar ll111fl' informal ion . call The Grand Bnx 2002. Call :\htin St. Court tJ6!!--t7-t8) for ·\bo 2 bJnn Main S1ree1 apanmcnl. A\ ail ~otil·at ed people. earn up to $ 10 .000 O flice al ( JO~ J 65'2-5577 1•r 1011 free al LAUGHTER IS T HE BEST MEDICI ' E! details. ) 1 (215><'45-6-1-18. !ha •·ing an incredible time. :\o experien ce (Slllll .17- G R.-\:'\D. \V i111c" chair balanc­ r our of I he nalion · s ho11es1 , land-up i"ecessa r~ . Just run. outgoing students in>!. ll.t!! dane in!!. and biC\ d.:- ridin>r made comi<.:> . will all be 2athercd for one hilari­ 4 Bdr To\\ nhou,.:. W D. Collc!!c ParJ... Hou'e for rem - £real local ions Call .\-!all al jchl>ck out our websill' for m ore info and inlo brc~uhtah ing art b~ ttie!lc amaLing p~r­ nu, nigh1 o f cnl.:nainrnent al The Grand $925/mo .. call Bill aiv;tl will fealllre 2 Bedrooms . For Details Please Call 36!!- " /bonus rm in finished basemen!. cemral 1!-Jousing a\·ailable. ning ol 1he Cilit~n ;. B an~ Cae,ar Rndne\· Bobcal Goldwail. ,lar of Ihe "Polit·e 7912 or stop in. A C. WID. one of I he nice>l on i'vladison half-marallwn "ill lake p l ac~ Sunda). · Acadenw " fihm and "Blow". Also in allen­ . ~7 5 lllll + u1il ,\\ail (i I :<78- 1963. Graduat ing E nglish .\h1jor s \lard1 l71h. Rcgi,lralion for lhc race dance will be Wendy Liebman. whose one­ ·h ·ailahle fo r rental - .\ladison Drin• JBK Educational publisher is luuking for be~ in' a1 7:.'0 ;1~111 . in Rolin.:~ Square and li ners crowned her Be>l Female S1and-Up ownhoust'S. t:all 376-0181. I Bdrm_Apt. fr sublet. ,\\"ail ;\Ia~· 1st to English majors to till customer Sl'n icc 1he half-maralho n hc!!ilh al 9 a.m. The Comi<.: a1 1hc Amerit·an Comcd) Awards. Juh· Jist 2002. Address: t:olonial positions. Great benelits . a nd puhli, hing proc·c·.:cl' lrnm lh L" e\cnl \\ill bcnelil lhl' Kc,·in Meaney and Bobb\ Collin>. arc 1wo .\'IADISO:'\ DRI\"I:o To"nhnu, c· -1. '"ailablc (; ai-dens. ]3-t East .\lain Street. Newark • career paths. On campus intcn-ie"' will LAST MINUTE SPECIALS!! American Lung -"''ocialion of Dc·la"''Jrc . olher fabulou~ comics on. the bill. Come 1 6/1 . .:\l" condilion. \\' D. ample parJ..mg. DE. R Ent $571 per month. If interested be conducted beginning April. Email SAVE UP TO SIOO PER PERSON! Pn>t race pan~- for 1he runner' i, com pi i­ for one uproariou' C\ening Ticket> are Call 7.'7- 1771. k;l\e lllL'"agc. contact (302) 266-9185 or 695-6825. resume in the bod,- of ,·our ema il to mc•m, o f Pine \lounlain Spring Wa1er. 535. 532. and 529: di,coums arc avllilablc careers@' prestwickhotise.t·om or fa~ Super G. Ltllk Ca.:,ar' Pilla. ancllhe for ,eniors. students and group>. To pur­ \Vh, -hare a bl'droom·.• I ha\.: 111<~11' r~no­ Houst:s For Rent - a .t Bdrm Twnhse on resume and cover letter to 0 02) 7.'-t- OR (•pus Contacts: Fammh Bagel Boy,. chchcr 45-I-R69, . I ••ear lease. $ 1100/mo + $1100 sec. Call Jason 456-1865 your ' Jllrih ;.oar a' ~ ou reach nul 10 olhero, iDCbb~- a t .'68-~2-t Mon-Fri 9am to Spm in ~our t=t 'mntun it ~ . Our training progran1 Hou'c~ on !". Chapel.\\'. C ia~ Dr.. Kell' & .. For Sale oiler' JX'r, nnal enrichmenl 1hrough li,l.:n­ 200:! BIG BROT HERS BIG SISTERS MaJi,on. John Bau>l·her 45-1-tl69X. lnl! , J..ill' "'ll "ill ha'c for a lildimc. BOWL FOR KIDS" SAK E Sprtnl! T r;1 in ing begin' on l\larch 20. 2002 Come on April 131h to Bowlcrama. Pike f'leat. clean. exceptional hous ng a•·ail. 3 Help Wanted Mo10r Home 22fl 68k SXYS · ~ r\\'oi Slid fur lhc 2-1 hr Cri'i' Helpline ('!.-1-hr lele­ Crcd Bo\\'lin!! Ccmcr, or Pkasanl Hill> iJx!r m houses a nd townhouses zoned for 4 5795 (40 1) 6:!0-32 17 El~ton phonc cmi' imcneminn. L'OUtbding. and Bowlinl! Lane':; in cw Castle Coulll\ 10 1ith AC. WID. DW.J>riv. J•arkinJ:. & n:fs.: rral -..en ict:-.. ). Ra J~ Crj,j, S.:rvicc' enjoy f;ce lx" ' ling and food. conle,ts. ;rass C ut. Incl. Also. Trip le :~. apartments THINK SPRING - 93 Red l\liaw .!< -1~ b upp,)n j, c -..L"n i c\..~ '- to 'i~t.:tim-.. of .... c,ual pri7e, and lois of fun' Form a 1cam of 5 11> rnilc'. 5 .700 oho. ·all Jon ~0 ~ - .11 -4 799 6 people and call for l<:S o f 5 .I). .-\II un [ I) bus islralion inform:llion. The C\ 'Cill require' ·casonal ~-r & J>T sales associates. Dav. 800-648-4849 phnn.:- call ll> lht: ddcrl~ l homL·bound l: Call Yr . le aw~ start 61 1. Email to grratlo- 199.\ Geo Pri11n -1 dr. 'f"'L'J. 'unrnof. each bO\\'kr In 'ccur.: 'pon>~>r> prior lu II ll' t . n-ning. and weekend s hifts ava il · 5 AC TOD.-\ Y for more in f1> . ii• (302 ) 761-9, 00 ·atiuns6@ aul.com ur call 7.17-01!6!!. 1 1 3 ~ . 'c·r~ lkpendahk. ':-2 .500. c"all cwn1. Call t.\02 ) 99!\-3577 for adtlilio n•tl ~7 .50/hr start. Appl~ @ Eastern \Iarine. www.ststravel.com (ii t 3tC 1 inform:ll ion. Rt. 72. :'l:ewark .t5J-7.\27. ~' t:ni n g.~ -~ 76- lJ2 (l ~ The .-\merican Diabc·ln ""LKialion·, Tour C lean Hnu ~es. (;real l.nc.llion~ . \\"/1). FACULTY HO SE FOR SALE. de Cure "ill he· on T htn·,da\ . \1arch 2X. A/C. ll\\.I'ark liccn$e agent. L·n mp li mcnlar~ food and b.:\Crage>. June ·2ntl:! mme in •·all · .\lain Street out th ci r lllOllC\". These jSea.,nna l FT & PT. Da~· . c•·e ning. & or t:uurt @ .\6X-474M fur ddail,. \\eekcnd 'hil"ts ;n a il. $7.5CI/hr. Appl~· @ companic!-> c.xi!->t t)nly long Join e\p~n ganlencr J.P. :\laltoc>a) a11hc Ea~t crn .\Iarine. Rt. 72.1'\ewark .tS]-7327 cnou!lh to recci\'c aJ, ancc pay­ D.:-1:1\\arc Cc·nl.:r li>r Hon icullurc on t·ur lh\.· nll...'l.' 'l hnu'L'' Pll ~laJI,(~n :tlthc Salllrda\ . .\larch 16 from Ill a.m. ln 12 lt.l\\l''t rat~...· ... ~..all ~~l) I ~n -. -.;ceding cnergl'lic. faith-tilled person tu ment~ and then dissoh·c before ll1>\ >11 ft>r a '""l'hop nn Gard~ni n g B ;~>iL·,: "ork "ith church ~outh Jlrugram. Jcli,cring '"the: goods .. . Other Prunmg in Springlimc. Whal "' Do. What B l.ur Cl hl\'- nholhl' . -l rx·r,olh. Ulk' ut th ~ Pru~:ressile Christian ,·ungregatiun seeks 1'\nl In Do. i\lal<><:''" "ill lead \Oll lhn>u!!h niL".:'I 1>n lb.: hfpc~ . \C. \\ D . L".up.:h. un-.crupulouc., tra,·el companies h..·duuqw: ... fl) f pnmiilg nf snmenne tn \\Urk \\'edne<;da\ and Sunda1• t h~ p~·\,p~r tr~~~ A l o wn rnow er Pov,.er garbage cfl,p. II'-'" ''"' L". lu II ha,.:nK·nl. t·>ening' "'nell a" nccassiunal additionai promi '>t.' Ia\ · i~h accomnd:llion~ ;md .... hruh"'. and ~..· ln ~..·r the ht...·,t rc.· ..., tlu rc~ .... \ '11 par~rng . LL".I'c hc~llh h I . ':, I IIKI . tools R<>corderl mu'>rc J>rn:::rams '" needed. Contratl runs and deli\-cr far ks~. The lhc· 'uhj.:cl in lhL· C.:nle(, lihrar~ . H.:'ll ,\ ml~ hpl-i~ (n ll\11111.1il.com 1>r 5-10-93 '7. th rou~:h end of Det·embc r. al .... u .... ho\\ \oll th~ tool' nct...·lkd for 'ariou' lhrouqh l1eorlphonc,_ Rc' ic'' dot:!-> not ha\'l~ the . \ pprnximatcl~ $5.00(1 ~tipcnd. Conlal·t pnt111ng l a~k' and""" anJ "hL'Il In prune· Live n1uStL wtlhout Craham \ "an Kcuren. clu J>res b,·terian mean!-> to di rkrc:ntiatc bet ween diflc·rL'III I\ JlL'' of pbnb . l·cc· li>r Hl~ '"'r~ ­ Cam pus Ministry @' UD. at 454-7801 or Unique post & beam contempo­ hont:!--1. reputable companic:s ,flltp: 0:,5 DCH lllL'mhc-r'. K fllr lll>tHncm­ ltcodphone,_ Repeated at J!l"<>ha mvk@' udel.edu to im1uirc. h~ r -.. .. .·\ th a iKcd n.... ·ui ... tratton j, t\·cummcnJ­ rary with new two story acltlition and '"lh -h\·-ni!!hl .. advcni-.crs. c•J . Call ( 10:!) 65X:6262 for lllC ~-.: ~~arch all Spring tiPn . lt-"vPis •85 c1 c tbels) con HAKTE-.;1)1:\'G . Training J>n" ·ided . mins from campus, close to Brc:ak oiTcr c., cardullv. and con­ cousP grnduol n t sud dPn 1-XIItl-29J-J985 ext. 20-t White Clay Creek State Park and :--. ·\ \ E THIS J) ,\TI:~ 1\ id' Counl 111 tact UniH~r-.itv Tra\t.:l a! 8JI­ hroru1g loS!:> o cund tt10n cycle path to U ni\' c rs ity~ :\ \~t..' lllh." ln r Al·trun: A ~...ha ncliH! .\ d \tX'ilt...' \ Fratcrnitics-Suroritic:s -B2 1 (Trabani ni,· c:r~ity thor of f ~< 1~ une t fl ten C lubs-Student (;ro ups Incred ible vit:\\S. E-mai l \\',•1!.. 7\l.trdl 20.2002 al Dd;;\\atL" . Cc:nterl for a fhc:r '' hich li~h Arncrtc0n!:> F=or an Earn $ 1.000-$2.0110 this semester with the chri !->[email protected]. campus tel. I c·dulrL·al and Curnrnunil\ Culk~c· Ill ,. ,,_~ Ca mpu ~fundrai,cr.nun three hour !->ak and k !litin.latc tour~ . The 1),1\t...' l Jn111 lh for out 'l.' ~,..·~ ,n d ~tm;ua l Ollt...' Pvo uot ton of the notSP xR I YI.J. d;l\ u>nlcrc·nc·L· k.tlurin.: n;III\Hlalh ~n'"' 11 . fund rabin~: c• cnt. lluc' nut in•·uln• credit Rc,·ic:\\ \\ i~h c::. our rc:adt.'r~ a -..rX-a ~t...·r-... pral.·t H.·.tl \\or~...... hllJ'' :md .. lHlr IPVPI!--. tn your \.'\101 k 01 Victoria Mews .-ani a pplicaliuns. Fundraisi111: datl'S an: sak and run Spring Break. till in:.: ' "hilt· hal'in:.: the Prl· ~ tl.lll t' I ;til' .md \\urn~d' Pn:~ll.LIIl.\ ~ I h. ;md \ ]a, 21 ,, I II till 11 : '11-S ·_IIIplll al lite· Laun r) F.J '" 1eo;onSttc u plHIIh .IIH.I ... ;tllll .h... \\ ( \ mntlllllll\ (\:tll\.'f. u mmt•r uf a lifclime . . \ppl ~ un-line al h.._·..,t1nt:. \..( llll h~ltll~ ~p~ DAYS (i~o:nr~"· ~~~\'ll Jint•f••n·,tcamp.crun non .1\arbhk lhron>:h llll" ';lmknllk.tfth lh·~ J ~It:llltHl k~...·-.. .til: '-lO t;,r r"·-..u.k·ru-.. ;uh..l Foxcroft Sl·n 1\..'l.~ GY:\ Clulll:. h 1r 1n fnn11:tth'll Pr an <.,.j }; for 111111 rc,rtfc"ll h ('.tJJ \(>(1 "l()(,•) f1tr If Yuu l.ikt The Outdoor' \\"c Ha\'l' T he .1pp•unlrncnl.c;tll '.I I · xo .\~ ;-..t on l·n s 111 111\W\.' llllnnii.IIIIHI \H 1\.'~ l' ll"f lh\\\ .ll 22(1 (302) <-1 56-9267 UNTIL 1\";,~uc t nltOfl u l I 800 C>38 lnh Fur Yuu . Fie:~. St·hed. 2 :\lile-" From 12 .00pnt a nd I :lX I -I:IXIpm . ( ·onlldc·nlr:Jl 1 -l ~l" n Rd. \ c" .11 L ni'. Two blocks to Ccltc·d Pn~~<.• tF. E:n Cluldc.uc.l'l lf''"'rhk IT 111 'llll llliCrl. ll•r ~tud.:lll I k .tlth S.:n ILL"' I ,·kphunc· SPRING .tl (>IJ I \l.uu Strn·t \\Ill he· h11l drr1~ l '.d lll P;I ...... HIII S und.l\ s ~..·n t~...·c ... Pll \J.m.:h ' hn\ ,_ ·H!L"' -.t 7 .md X til Ill\ huml' lk".lr (\llllllll'nl I tnc C.tlllhc· ··conllnL· n(" lrnc ~,, -.·li ..t •• I on~,,o,~l (j;u\kll"lll Pt\. :\:,,n,moh.t·r and \\ 11h q Lh:-.IIOih. ~.. .- nl1111h.. ' llh .•md nr -.ug~e' + 2-1. ~1102 .ol S.llll. •I it I. IIlLI~ ~ 116'Xl Chrld De,cf :'\ l;qo> t .1 N lnft pfu, h1r1 th >I r.:qturnl \ 86. THE REVIEW . March 15,2002

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' ,_ '· •, I .,...... - ~~ ' ' March 15, 2002 • THE REVIEW • B~ ------~~ "Big three" big pain for UD~J.. BY MATT DASILVA Oha (6-of-14, 18 points) and told her to take over the game. George Washington enough breatlit• . . ~ Sports Editor Joens (7-of-14, 23 points) were She did just that. mg room to av01d the upset. o-:.J Revitalized and rejuvenated, the equally as deadly in a game where Delaware buckled down on "We forced them to use differe.! Delaware women's basketball team George Washington shot 52.8 per­ defense, throwing everything it had people at different times," showed new life after its Colonial M~~ cent from the floor. in a full court press that was suc­ said. "Lawrence started out in ~4 Athletic Association Tournament lf one of these players has on off cessful for the beginning part of the collapse. short comer look and we shut that• night shooting, Delaware may very second half. down. And then Oha is just so b(it: Playing in their first-ever postsea­ well be on its way to the second For about a seven-minute span to and mobile at 6-4. She picked it ~"' son WNIT, the purposeful Hens hit round in Virginia. begin the half, George Washington [in the second half] but we fm~ the floor Wednesday night at George It was like clockwork for the "Big went cold and tallied just seven got a handle on their two outstan

BYMATTAMIS Carolina's third victory over said his team has scouted the Staff Reporter Delaware in as many years. Terrapins early and often, but they A grueling road trip continues The loss in Chapel Hill began a will still provide a formidable chal­ for the Delaware men's lacrosse rugged three-game road swing for lenge. team tomorrow as it pays a visit to the Hens that will continue with the "We've seen pretty much every No. 5-ranked Maryland. Terrapins tomorrow. game they've played so The Hens have won three of The defeat sent far through tapes," he their last four, but suffered a 16-9 Delaware back to .500 said. setback to No. 10-ranked North and into a tie for sixth "They're just excellent, Carolina last Saturday. place in the Colonial no doubt one of the top The host Tar Heels jumped out Athletic Association. four or five teams in the to a 6-0 lead to start the game and Maryland (4-1), country." Delaware could never recover. meanwhile, has been surging early Shillinglaw added Maryland The Hens (2-2) got two goals on and demolished Bucknell 16-6 has All-American depth on both each from sophomore midfielders THE REVIEW /Lauren Deaner • in its last game. ends of the field. Sophomore defender Kristin Cavaretta tries to beat a Rutgers defender down the field in : Ryan Metzbower and- Andrew Head Coach Bob Shillinglaw "They're athletic and they prob­ Wednesday's 11-10 home victory over the Scarlet Knights. With the win, the Hens improved to 2-1.- : Benazzi in the Joss. It was North ably have one of the best defenses • in Division 1," he said. "[Junior • attackman] Mike Mollot and [sophomore attackman] Dan Lamonica are both tops in the Hens turn Knights scarlet country and potential All­ Americans. Their goalie backed up BY CRAIG SHERMAN offense on her back. She scored three reclaim the momentum. Moderacki an All-American last year. i Spons Editor straight goals,_the .fus~ coming at the "We're going to have to be at scored to tie the score ~t eight with i Making its first home appearance 12:48 mark-, wlien"" ~fle recovered a 9:03 left and junior midfielder Nikki f our best." of the season, the Delaware women's loose balP~d launched it over the Kucharski tallied 1:08 later riglit in , Unfortunately, injuries have rid­ lacrosse team rebounded from last head of Rutgers goaltender Lauren front of the net fto give the Hens a 9- ~ dled the Hens' young season. Saturday's loss to Old Dominion by Gulotta for the tally and 3-2 advan­ Junior attacker Matt Alrich is 8 advantage. ~ defeating Rutgers 11-10 in a grudge tage. Over the next three minutes, both :• lost for the season with a stress match Wednesday at home. By the time Moderacki finished teams fought their way to a 10-10 tie :; fracture in his foot. The Hens were not only dealing her scoring explosion, the Hens found and realized the winner of the game ~ In addition, sophomore mid­ with a tough opponent in the Scarlet themselves up 5-2 with 6:41 left in would be determined by who had the ~ fielder Andrew Benazzi is on the Knights (l-3), but with a damp sur- the half. ball when the hom sounded. ;. shelf with a torn ACL and freshman face as well. Howev~r, Rutgers came storming said the team was face-off specialist Scott Boyle is Sh~ck fully ~ ' The rain, like the game, went back back, scoring twice during the last aware that the Scarlet Knights had the ~ gone for the year with a hamstring and forth, going from a slight mist to 2:36 of the half to bring it within one. offensive firepower to match it shot ~ injury. a steady downpour with Delaware (2- Both tallies came from Scarlet for shot. ; Nevertheless, Delaware will pre­ 1, 1-1 Colonial Athletic Association) Knights junior midfielder Missy "[Rutgers] always gives us a pare for the Terrapins with extreme good ~ scoring in the game's last minute to Mosey, who was wide open game," she said. "We know we can 1 precision, Shillinglaw said. come away with the dra- • in front of the net for the never take any team lightly and we ~ "We have a couple of different matic win. first goal. Then with nine knew we had to play our best." ~ offensive sets that we're looking to The Hens were strong WOMEN'S seconds to go before half- Delaware took control on attack, ~ utilize against them," he said. offensively right from LACRossE time, senior midfielder possessing the ball over the final few ; "They have a variety of offen­ the start, scoring · their Susan Duccilli found minutes. Finally, with I :56 left in the i sive schemes that they are very first goal 2:18 into the Mosey for the second tally. contest, freshman midfielder Erin ~ good at, and we have been practic­ game when senior mid- Rutgers 10 Mosey then scored her Edell battled her way 'through the ~ ing trying to counter that. fielder Corinne Shuck Hens 11 -c third goal of the game 44 Scarlet Knights' defenders to put the ~ "We have worked our defensive converted on an unas------seconds into the second Hens up for good at 11-10. ~ coverage with Maryland in mind, sisted goal. half, tying the game at 5. After the game, Wescott said sh~­ as weli as our special units." Five minutes later, with 22:38 left, Hens head coach Denise Wescott was pleased with her team's ability to~:~ Metzbower has led the offensive Shuck ran the length of the field to said the team's defensive lapse was maintain a determination throughout ~ strike for the Hens thus far. find senior attacker Ashley more mental than anything else. the up-and-down affair. 'of He has tallied 12 goals and two Moderacki, who scored the first of "We forced some passes, and we "There were moments when we :~ assists in the opening four games her five goals to give Delaware a 2-1 gave up possession of the ball," played well," she said. ''We gave up a ~~ and will be looked upon to score advantage. Wescott said. "And if you continue to few easy goals but we hung in there some goals to keep up with the t Moderacki said her scoring spurt give possessions enough times, the and didn't back off from their chal- ~ Terrapins scoring machine. came as a result of the play of her other team will sooner or la~er take Jenge." ~ Delaware and Maryland will teammates instead of her individual advantage of it." Wescott said she is glad to see that ~ face-off Saturday at 1 p.m. in Byrd performance. With five minutes left to play, the her team has developed a never-say- 1 Stadium, as the Hens attempt to "I was just able to cut to the net Hens regained the lead when Shuck die attitude. .;- gain position among the nation's successfully today," she said. "But a ran along the left side of the goal and "Sometimes, we have this attitude it elite. lot of it was my teammates who were broke down the Rutgers' defense to come hell or high water, are going to '~ .... "We have one of the hardest able to see the field when I was score the go-ahead goal. get things done," she said. 'They're ~ . . : schedule's I've ever seen," open." The Scarl,et Knights responded also starting to believe in themselves.~ . : ... Shillinglaw said. "Maryland is as Rutgers finally found the back of with two straight goals of their own lUld understand what they're capable ~ : · : · . strong as ever. the net against a stingy Hens' defense culniinating in sophomore attacker f " i4 . "With the schedule being as it is, 0. ~ when junior attacker Kate Slotrnan Cali Wojdyla's unassisted tally to Delaware's next challenge comes -~ we feel we' re in a position to chal­ scored an unassisted goal with 15:53 give Rutgers an 8-7 lead. Wednesday when it hosts conference ;. THE REVIEW /Ben Thoma lenge for a playoff berth. A member of the men's lacrosse team looks to pass to an open to tie the game at two. But the seesaw trend continued. rival Towson at 7 p.m. at Rullo There's still plenty of lacrosse But for the next six minutes, Delaware scored two straight to Stadium. teammate earlier this season. The Hens face Maryland tomorrow. left to play." Moderacki strapped the Delaware Rowing looks to repeat as champions

BY DOMINIC ANTONIO repeat. , The lightweight squad consists of Delaware lost six members to Staff RerJOrter "That's the plan." rowers weighing less than 130 graduation this season, but that After winning the Dad Vail Delaware has a long way to go pound, and the open weight division doesn't stop them from being com­ Regatta last season, the Delaware before the Dad Vail Regatta, with is open to everyone. petitive, Kukla said. women's rowing team show confi­ seven regattas scheduled between This year's team consists of 52 "All of [the graduated rowers] dence going into the 2002 season. now and then. rowers. Senior Susan Krause said were good athletes," she said, "but 1 "One of our goals this season is However, beaming with confi­ for some, rowing is not just a college feel we have a better team dynamic winning the Dad Vail dence as a result of last experiment, but a part of their Jives, this year." Regatta again," head season's finish, junior and many rowers have benefited Overall, Kukla said she is antici­ coach Amanda Kukla pating this season as reigning Dad RowiNG Lauren Heller said the from such experience. said. "I think we have a ultimate goal of winning "I've been on the team for four Vail champs. very good chance of the Dad Vail will be on years now," she said. "But I started ''I'm looking forward to seeing doing it." · the team's mind all sea- rowing as a sophomore in high them improve and watching them The Dad Vai I Regatta son. school." . succeed," she said. "We've been is the largest collegiate regatta in the " I definitely think we can win," Kukla attributed the team's possi­ training hard since January 19 and I U.S. Every year, hundreds of col­ she said. "We won the women's ble success to the depth of this feel the team is ready for competi­ leges from around the country come point trophy last year and, this year, year's squad. tion." to Philadelphia to compete. we are going to try to win the over­ "We have a good freshman team, The Hens will travel to This year's Dad Vail Regatta will all point trophy." but our depth comes from the varsi­ Connecticut tomorrow to compete take place May I 0 and II. with Massachusetts, Boston College THE REVIEW /File Photo Women's rowing is split into two ty squad," she said. "They are all Members of the women's rowing team practice for a regatta Senior Lissa Kutz said she feels classes - the lightweight division good athletes and have been work­ and host Fairfield in their first regat­ la~t season. The Hens compete in their first regatta tomorrow. th e team has a good chance to and the open weight division. ing very hard." ta of the spring season.

I ' .. \ jpsjde UD Facts, J:i,igures and Notes • Women's lacrosse defeats Senior forward Christina Rible Rutgers 11-10. and senior guard Megan • Men's lacrosse preview. DeUegrotti were both named to • Women's basketball sidebar. the AlJ-CAA Women's Ba ketball Second Team. ••••••• .see page 87 www.review.udel.edu . ·. ·. . · March 15, 2002 • B8 . Commentary CRAIG SHERMAN Hens ousted from WNIT by GW

BY BETH ISKOE 28, it turned the ball over on three consecutive pas- Managing Spons Editor sessions, allowing the Colonials to take a 38-33 In its first game since its premature ousting by advantage into the locker room at halftime. UNC Wilmington in the Colonial Athletic The Hens shot 10-of-24 from the field in the Association Tournament March 8, the Delaware first half, including 4-of-7 from behind the arc, to women's basketball rebounded to play one of its keep pace with a George Washington team that was best games all season last night in the WNIT at the regular season Atlantic-! 0 champion. George Washington. Delaware's size deficiency was made worse Unfortunately for the Hens, their best was not when junior center Christine Cole picked· up two good enough. The Colonials were too strong, hand- fouls in the first three minutes of the game. She did NCAA ing Delaware a 78-71 defeat. not play the rest of the half. Senior forward Christina Rible said even though The Colonials' halftime advantage was due the Hens lost, she was not going to walk away mainly to the play of Lawrence, who scored 17 from this game with a bitter taste in her mouth. points in the first half. picks ''We're not upset," she said. ''We're OK with The game went back and forth for most of the the way things ended, we had a great season. second half, as the Hens remained in striking dis- he. second week of March Delaware (23-7) was able to stay close the entire tance the entire game. They trailed by as many as ---'T brings us all to the same game, but the Colonials' (21-8) threesome ofjunior 11 and as little as three points. · · - ' place - a state of March forward Erica Lawrence, sophomore center Ugo In the beginning of the second half, it was Oha · · · _ madness, which consumes Oha and junior guard Cathy Joens played too well who stepped up big for George Washington, scor- : : • all we do and think about to be stopped. ing its first seven points. · · : · ~for two short weeks. Lawrence and Joens finished with a game-high Toward the end of the game, Joens took over for . Starting last Sunday, when the 23 points each and Oha added 18 points. the Colonials. At one point, she scored 'NCAA selection show aired, there has The Hens were led by senior guard 11 of George Washington's final 15 ·been one question on our minds - who Megan Dellegrotti, who scored a team- · ts pom. .00 you think can win the tournament? high 22 points on 6-of-10 shooting, ' WOMEN ' S When the Colonials took their .~ Now, I will not be sneaky enough to including 4-of-5 from three-point land. BASKETBALL largest lead of the night 60-50 with pick the winners of yesterday's games, From the onset of the contest, it was 7:49 remaining, Delaware responded 1>ut I'll skip ahead to today's contests obvious that George Washington held a by scoring seven unanswered points to ·lind tell you who will win. distinct size advantage, as it started four Hens 71 pull within three points with 6:20 left ·,The East Region: players taller than 6 feet, including one George Wash 78 ~ in regulation. Maryland will win easily in the first 6 foot 4 and one 6 foot 5 player. George Washington answered the 'round over Sienna, which comes in as In contrast, Delaware's starting five included Hens' streak with one of its own, putting together ·the only team with a win so far in the three players 5 foot 10 or shorter, a 6 foot I and a an 11-3 run to take an insurmountable 71-60 lead •tournament. St. John's will find victory 6 foot 2 player. with 2:12 left to play. Jlgainst a depieted Big-10 team in Hens head coach Tma Martin said she expected Rible said the teams battled•hard the whole Freshman forward Tiara Malcolm boxes out a George Washington player in the - WISCODSin. Delaware to be at a big size disadvantage, but did game, but Delaware was a little relaxed on defense Hens 78-7lloss to the Colo~als in the WNIT Wednesday night at the Smith Center. · Bobby Knight and Texas Tech will not anticipate it being so blatant. for a stretch in the middle of the contest. ·inflict their anger against ESPN as well ''For only our second time being in the postsea- ''We !axed up on defense a little bit," she said. Martin said the fact that Dellegrotti walked off "No'¥ we can play with teams like George .as Southern lllinois, and Georgia will son, I thought we played very good basketball," ''If we had kept playing that hard for the whole the court like that typifies the way she has played Washington. I think our program has taken a big make short work over Murray State. she said. "However, they had size over us. It actu- game, we wouldn't have had to come back." her whole career. step up and we can now get some recognition for - Also, in our nation's capital, ally surprised me by how big they were. They were However, the Hens were unwilling to concede ''If she could leave a body part out there she the type of team we are." ,Michigan State will upset NC State and huge." defeat, as Delaware battled back on a layup from would if it means the team could win a basketball Dellegrotti said playing so hard and having a .uconn the most-underrated No. 2 seed, Despite this fact, the Hens actually jumped out Cole and a three-pointer by Dellegrotti to pull with­ game," she said. chance to beat the Colonials was a great way to will give Hampton its ticket home in the to an early lead, holding a 13-6 advantage with in six points with 1:20 remaining. Althou~ Delaware lost by seven points, Martin close her career. first round 14:55 remaining in the first half and a 23-18 edge Unfortunately, the comeback was too little, too said this game was satisfying for the Hens. When "We just wanted to play with them and com­ In the second round, Maryland will with seven minutes left while scurrying to keep the late, as the Hens were forced to foul the rest of the they faced George Washington last.se ason in the pete," she said. ''We wanted to make it a game and defeat St. John's and prove yet again it Colonials at bay on the defensive end. way and could not puii any closer than within five WNIT, they lost 78-56. give ourselves a chance to win, I didn't want to roll .is one of the top teams, in the country. However, Geroge Washington scored seven porn· ts . But, Delaware has taken great strides in being over and let them run all over us. Also, Marquette will upset Kentucky. unanswered points to swing the momentum in its At the end of the game, Dellegrotti got tangled more competitive this time around, Martin said. '1 think our good postseason showing was a big ~ · Mississippi State will allow · Mr. favor to take a 25-23lead with under three minutes up and received a large cut on her right eye that ''We are still building and gaining respect," accomplishment for our program to have. That Knight an opportunity to !.ash out the to play in the half. required stitches. she said. ''We've built this program to where now postseason win will come one day." press core he has come to love, and After Delaware fought back to tie the game at we've gotten national attention. .Michigan State will be defeated in the 1inal minutes of the game, handing .uconn a trip to the Sweet Sixteen. The Midwest Region: Kansas will cruise to the field of 16 The ~its just keep on coming forDelaware after convincing wins over Holy Cross and Stanford Aorida, which I have always been a Mihalik, Delaware (5-8) was able stepped up to the plate following fan of, will not make it out of the second Hens defeat the to cruise past Quinnipiac (0-3). junior shortstop Kris Dufner's round after lllinois defeats it. · Mihalik pitched six solid monster two-run blast that left Bob The Longhorns will defeat the worst innings, allowing j ust one run on Hannah Stadium in a flash. No. 12 seed in the tournament in Boston Braves to win five hits to go with five strikeouts. Directly after a conference on College, only to lose to one of the best "I felt alright out there," the mound between freshman relief teams in the bracket in Mississippi fourth straight Mihalik said. "It was good to get pitcher Mike Spahr and his coach, State. Oregon will beat Montana and some work in mid-week against Schneider was drilled in head with then Pepperdine. BY BRIAN PAKETT these guys. I did what I wanted to a first pitch fastball that echoed The Sooth Region: Managing Sports Editor do." throughout the stadium. Duke defeats Wmthrop as well as Not a single person on the Mihalik had the privilege of After a few seconds of shock, former Delaware head coach Mike Brey Delaware baseball team wears a receiving run support early in the Schneider paced towards the and Notre Dame in the second round ruby pair of spikes, but for certain contest: mound, directing comments they are all thinking in a similar Indiana finally breaks its first round In the bottom half of the first towards Spahr before he was con- jinx, as it will defeat a tough first round fashion. inning, Hens sophomore designat- tained by the home plate umpire. foe in Utah and will continue with a win ·"There's no place like home. ed hitter Doug Eitelman "I told him, since the over USC after the Trojans brought a There's no place like home." knocked a single to right ball that [Dufner] hit smile to all the Hens fans by defeating Coming into Tuesday after­ field, scoring senior left BASEBALL still hasn't landed yet, if UNC Wilmington in the opening round. noon's game against Quinnipiac at fielde~ Casey Fahy, who he wants to hit me, hit Bob Hannah Stadium, the Hens had California will be able to use its mus­ was hit by a pitch and me in the back or the ass posted a 3-1 record to start their ·cle against smaller and slower Penn, stole second. or something," <;>nly to be defeated by my sleeper pick first homestand of the season, Eitelman, who went ------Schneider said. "It Central Connecticut, who will have outscoring their opponents 57-24. 3-for-4 on the afternoon, Quinnipiac 4 looked bad when his defeated the worst third seed in the tour­ And, after a Braves 13-4 rout of would eventually come Hens 13 ~ coach came out there. If the Braves, Delaware's hot streak nament. You know who I mean , around to score on a he said brush hi m back, Pittsburgh. Don't worry. I've seen the continued. Schneider ground out to the short- that's fine, but don't hit me in the panthers play and they're not that good "We' re pretty excjted right stop to give Delaware an early 2-0 head." anyway. Come on, take away their one now," junior catcher John lead. "I told him, ' Don' t do that player and they crumble like the Review Schneider said. "We did what we "As a pitcher, the early runs because you're not good enough the needed to win and its coming in rain. really didn't change my mind set," and your program's not good together now offensively and : Oklahoma State wins its game, only Mihalik said. "I' m still going out enough.' be destroyed by Alabama, which is defensively. tO there and trying to shut things " You never know with a pro­ able to show that an SEC school can "We love playing [home]. We down. [Whether] there is one run or gram like that if he's trying to do it, win when it counts. always say we don' t want anyone ten runs, I'm still going to try and or if it got away from him. But I to come in here and beat us." 1be West Region: do the same thing." know the kid had a lot of control Now, what you all have been waiting With the detonation of the Hens The Hens would go on to score most of the way, so I just told him for, the biggest and most mind numbing offense pairing up with a solid another pair of runs in their next he better not do that again." bracket in this year's tournament. pitching performance from sophoc inning to pad the lead. Following a After Schneider had some more Cincinnati advances to the third more starting pitcher Michael Fahy walk, junior second baseman choice words for Braves ftrst base- round after beating Boston University Nick DeCarlo doubled and both man Sal Puccio, head coach Jim and UCLA. The Bruins, to their credit, were brought home when · j unior Sherman lifted him and the game find their rhythm but only for the first right fielder Reid Gorecki tripled. returned to some sense of normal- round. With a 4-0 lead under its belt, cy. - Ohio State will have no problem Delaware did not look back. With Delaware now up 11 - 1, the beating Davidson as well as Missouri, Quinnipiac would eventually get Hens cruised through the next three and will show the Hurricanes that you on the board in the top of the fifth innings, on route to their third need a strong schedule to be a winner. inning after a walk and an RBI sin- straight win, and fourth out of their Gonzaga. We all know about this gle helped the Braves score their last five. Cinderella team and what it has done first run of the game. Sherman said the team is very but for the first time, it will have to The Hens, however, would happy with the results it has seen prove it can win. And, I'm sorry to say prove to be too powerful at the recently and feels it is beginning to it, the Zags will do just that when they plate, as sophomore centerfielder click as a unit. defeat Wyoming and Arizona. The Steve Van Note belted two home " We're hitting the stride that we Wtldcats, for all reasonable purposes, runs late in the game to seal the should we be," he said. "We are only received a third seed because they W in. handling the mistake pitches like play in the PAC-10. Van Note now has four homers fastballs that are on the belt and In this deep bracket, I will give you already th is season. hanging curveballs. w e·ve come one team to watch: Oklahoma. If any­ Quinnipiac was unable to retire around full circle from our early one saw the beating it handed to Kansas Fahy, as he reached base on all five start. That"s the big difference. they would agree with me. Oklahoma of his plate appearances and would .. Our key is getting Fahy and will leap over its ftrst-round game and go on to score four runs and steal Gorecki on, turning them loose and outmuscle a Hawaii team that reverts thr.ee bases. letting the big guys in the order back to Hawaiian time. Fahy has been on fire of late. swi ng the bat and knock them in. I am fully aware that every year there currently holding a five game hit­ With our pitching staff pitching are major upsets and my selections will ting streak and batting over .400 wel l. I think we·re going to be ftne take the bashing they are sure to (11 - 19) during that stretch. wit h those ingredients:· deserve. As the Hens began to pull Delaware will attempt to build Only time will teU the tale. away, things nearly got out of hand on its three-game winning streak for both squads. when they host Boston College in a Craig Shemzan is a sports editorfor The THE REVlEW!Lauren Deaner Wi th the score 7-1 in the bottom three-game series. starting tomor­ Review. Send comments to bigsh­ Left: Sophomore pitcher Mike Mihalik looks to deliver a pitch in the first of his si~ strong innings of the seventh inning. Schneider row at 12 p.m. [email protected]. pitched Thesday. Right: A Delaware baserunner dives back to first base to beat a p1ckoff attempt.

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