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Today's weather: A fit>e star All-American Mostly sunny, newspaper high in the 40s I

Vol. 114 No .. 12 t Center, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716 Tuesday,March 1, 1988 Govt .. Runner dies report after annual s urs 5K for Bruce by Joan Maliczyszyn zigzag course through Copy Editor Newark. ebate Vince Touey, a track and A Newark man collapsed cross country coach from and died after finishing the Widner University, took first by Loretta Clevenger sixth annual Phi Kappa Tau place with a time of 15:06. Staff Reporter '5K Run for Bruce' Saturday. The first female runner to David G. Thomure, 44, suf­ cross the finish line was Kim Delaware is one of six states fered a coronary arrest ap­ Kogan, who finished in 17:59. named in a recent U.S. proximately 200 yards beyond Mter the race Touey said, "I Department of Education the finish line. He was taken to feel good about myself. A lot of report for failure to comply Christiana Hospital where he times you just have to let go with a 1971 court order to was pronounced dead shortly and just hope for the best." desegregate their systems of after noon, said Phil Wescott, This year's race was higher education, according to vice president of marketing organized by Phi Tau brother the Office of the Governor. and public affairs for Chris­ Stephen Garrett (AS 88), in The university and tiana Medical Center. order to raise money to help Delaware State College were According to Andre Bruce Peisino, a former Chris­ the two Delaware institutions Hoeschel, founder of '5K for tiana High School student who impacted by the mandate. Bruce', "Thomure had just was left paralyzed and confin­ According to G. Arno finished running the race and ed to a wheelchair following a Loessner, vice president for . was with [a friend] trying to 1981 football accident. advancement and university figure out his time when The proceeds from this an­ secretary, the university has [Thomure] dropped down." nual race, totaling an met its goals under the man­ Hoeschel said Richard estimated $40,000 in the past date, which included increas­ Shaw, a member of t}Je six years, help to defray ing black enrollment and physical therapy corporation medical costs of the Peisino recruiting more minority Cardio-Kinetics performed family. faculty. cardiopulmonary resuscita­ Last year, the proceeds Loessner said the Office of tion on Thomure ·until the Aet­ helped to purchase a new Civil Rights within the Depart­ na Hose, Hook & Ladder Co. ment of Education reported lightweight wheelchair for and New Castle ambulances Peisino. last year that "the activities arrived. and programs at the Universi­ THE REVIEW/ Eric Russell ' Hoeschel, a friend and Newark resident David Thomure, 44, died of a heart attack after The 3.1-mile race led ap­ ty of Delaware were com­ proximately 1,100 runners on a continued to page 14 prehensive and exemplary. the Phi Kappa Tau 5K for Bruce on Saturday. "We are pleased to have received such a positive report," he said, "but we are mindful that there is still a lot of work that needs to be done." Stein em looks to the future by Cathleen Fromm and Lori The university continues to see editorial, p.S work with the governor's of­ Poliski fice to build on the programs Executive Editors fragists' and abolitionists' movements, already implemented, It used to be that if we wanted to women achieved voting rights and posses­ Loessner added. become an engineer or a lawyer, we'd sion of property rights for legal and social He said the university has have to marry it instead of be it. Now we identity as human beings. requested funding for scholar­ are becoming the me.n we wanted to Now, said Steinem, women are strug­ ships for minority students· marry. - Gloria Steinem. gling for legal and social equality, such and has stepped up its efforts as comparable pay and reproductive in working with black students The Feminist Movement is entering the freedom. second stage of the second wave of pro­ "The Feminist Movement, and all of the and faculty. found revolution, manifesting itself in ''ef­ Muhammad Ahmed, coor­ great social justice movements, are striv­ forts to humanize the twin-caste systems ing for the day when sex and race will no dinato.c_ of Affirmative Action, based on race and sex in this country,'' said the·.\!niversity has rp.ade longer be the dictating labels of our according to the active feminist and foun­ lives," stated Steinem. more than'enough progress in ding editor of Ms. magazine. meeting the mandates. According to Steinem, the Reagan ad­ "The record for the last 10 Keynote speaker, Steinem, addressed ministration has stifled the progression of years shows our commitment trends in feminism to over 1,000 people, the Women's Movement. [to affirmative action] and we including Gov. Michael N. Castle and "We've had lots of presidents who will stand-by that record," he University President Russel C. Jones, in didn't know anything about equality and said. an aU-day event offering diverse we've had some who said, 'This is far "The university is still pro­ workshops during the fourth annual 1988 enough, let's stop here,' but this is the Gloria Steinem ceeding with its commitment Delaware Women's Conference at first president who's tried to turn Clayton Hall Saturday. the clock backward,'' said "We look at the continued to page 12 She said in the first wave, the suf- Steinem. continued to page 11

------·- ---- Shultz meets Israeli a cartoon portraying Falwell cessfully tested an Indian Medical Association Journal mon Pleas Court exist. The .as a drunkard committing. in­ designed, surface-to-surface and lauded as "very im­ commission was formed'to fill . leaders to n_egotiate cestuous acts with his mother missile in the Bay of Bengel pressive" by experts. .fi\ie positions ~hi'Cl;J. existed U.S. Secretar:y of State in an outhouse. Sunday morning, The New The authors of the study last year. . George Shultz wants Israelis York Times reported. recommend that any AIDS and P.alestinians to . undergo Owners vote to add Ghandi told the Indian victim should be considered rapid peace negotiations as lights at Wrigley Parliament that, the weapon for the treatment. However, soon as possible, The would soon become part of the AIDS victims are still House :reps·.---. want Philadelphia Inquirer For the first time, Chicago's army's arsenal. The state­ vulnerable to other deadly strict sanetiofis reported. Wrigley Field will have lights ment followed India's recent infections. Since early December, at and the Cubs will be able to acquisition of a Soviet-leased in -S. Africa least 69 Palestinians have died play night games, ending one nuclear-powered attack Pa. judges forced in disputes between soldiers of the longest traditions in pro­ subrp.arine. In a response to South and Jewish settlers. Four ad­ fessional sports, The New The actions strengthen In­ from office Thrirs. Africa's recent ban on anti-. ditional deaths were reported Yo'rk Times reported. dia's military power in apartheid protests, House The eight Philadelphia leaders announced a cam­ recently. The Cubs were the last Ma­ southern Asia and is expected judges who took Roofers Union Shultz met with top Israel of­ jor League baseball team to to increase the rivalry bet­ paign for tougher sanctions bribes were removed from of­ against the South African ficials Friday to initiate play their entire home ween India and Pakistan. fice Thursday. Under Penn­ negotiations. schedule during daylight . government, The Philadelphia sylvania's disciplinary code Inquirer reported. hours. Wrigley Field was the­ Drug discovered for lawyers they can be disbar­ last professional baseball field for AIDS-related red, The Philadelphia Inquirer Supreme Crt. rules without lights. reported. Hearings will begin March for cartoonists Also, Major League club fatal pnemonia The Disciplinary Board of 15 on legislation that may call The Supreme Court upheld owners voted Sunday to hold An antibiotic treatment has the Pennsylvania Supreme Jor .u.s. divestment in South the right of cartoonists to the 1990 All-Star game, which been reported to prevent Court forbids any actions in- , Afnca and an embargo on criticize public figures, even if is played at night, at Wrigley pneumocystis carinnii volving fraud, dishonesty or most trade to that nation. · that criticism is offensive, ac­ Field. pneumonia, the most common misrepresentation while cording to The New York cause of death in AIDS vic­ operating in the office of , · South African President Times. India tests missile tims, according to The New judge. Botha announced Wednesday The ruling overturned a in Bay of Bengal York Times. Gov. Casey announced the . that the government would decision which awarded The results of the Universi­ reinstatement of a nine­ ban most activities of 17 top $200,000 ·to the Rev. Jerry Indian Prime Minister Rajir ty of Miami School of Medicine member judicial nominating anti-apartheid groups-totalling Falwell in his lawsuit against Ghandi announced Sunday study were reported in the commission to fill the 10 over 2.5 million members. Hustler magazine. Hustler ran that his country had sue- Feb. 26 issue of the'American vacancies in the city's Com-

University of Delaware S~mester in Spain MADR'ID - FALL 1988

Earn 15 U. of D. credit!~, REQUIREMENTS

ARH 402 Seminar in History of Art • An official application . COM 421 Intercultural Communication: Applications in • Transcript of the student's records to date International Contexts · • Personal interview H 352 Contemporary European Society • Two letters of recommendation (at least one from a PSC 310 European Governments University professor) SP 211 Spanish Civilization and Culture • Proof of health insurance SP 205 Culture Through Conversation • Valid passport SP 305 Oral Communication • Completed first year of college in Spanish or its equivalent SP 301 Survey of Spanish Literature SP 400 level- if requested by students APPLICATION FOR ADMISSION

All classes will be taught in English (except Spanish courses) Admission forms should be obtained from the director of the on the campus of the University o.f Madrid. program or the Office of Special Sessions.

Students will live with a Spanish family. FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE

Participate in frequent excursions to places. like Toledo, Foreign Study Scholarship ($400) applications are available Segovia, Arella and Sevilla. Visit museums, historical sites in the Office of Special Sessions, 325 Hullihen Hall, or from and attend theatres, cultural events. Travel throughout Europe faculty sponsor. Any undergraduates may apply for the during the fall break and on weekends. financial assistance. This scholarship is open to·all U. of D. students. COST Organizational meeting Thursd-ay, March 10 at the Spanish Regular U. of D. tuition, room (multiple occupancy) and Hours at 7 p.m. board (19 meals per week), Fall Semester '88 rates. For further information, contact: Airfare: round trip to Madrid from New York, $525 (subject to Dr. lvo Dominguez . _change). Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures 420 Smith Hall · - (302) 451-2580 ------March 1, 1988 • The Review •Page 3 ...... ,...... "', ... ,.. I I Student costs to reach all~time high by Cathleen Klemm Cradler added that tuition will be held Friday. March 11. year's refngerator. carpet, wJll nse 5-10 percent next from 8 p.m.-1 a .m .. according frUJt basket. and Student Staff R epo rt e~ · semester, but the exact to Steve Stuart [AS 90]. RSA Directory supplement pro­ Students next fall will face amount will not be known un- assistant to the vice president. grams have all been ·'the biggest total cost in­ til June. The annual event will in- successful. crease ever.'' Resident Stu­ In other business, Harr- elude displays and activtties Cradler also echoed the en- dent· Association Prestdent ington Dining Hall is now open sponsored by umversity thustasm of Delaware :vlike Cradler (AS 88 ) said at for studying Sunday through orgamzations and clubs. as . Undergraduate Student Con- the organization's meeting Wednesday from 7 · 30 well as local bands and a palm gress officers .who are lookmg Sunday night. p.m .-12 :30 a.m .. said reader,hesaid. forwardtoasuccessfu!Sprmg 'We're looking at a $560-$890 Katherme Galbraith [AS 89]. Diana Baldwm [AS 89] com- Fling m May. · [yearly J increase,'' he sat d. RSA program director. men ted. "Maybe the palm ''We 're going to try to pull The cost hike is due to pro­ Kent Dining Hall will not reader can predict how I'm go- off the best Sprmg Fling posed 10 percent increases for open as a study hall until ing to raise the money to af- ever,"hesaid. ''[It] should be both Health Service fees and monitors are found, she ex- ford this place next year." a great chance for students to Food Service, in addition to plained. In his "State of the RSA" fight apathy as well as have a Housing's 6 percent increase. Also, Student Center Night speech, Cradler said this great time .' ~ontinued to page 14 Mike Cradler U AW protests Chrysler.sale of parts di v. conflict between Chrysler and by Eileen Kramer the UAW was resolved. Staff Reporter According to Doug Nickel, The United Auto Workers manager of manufacturing union voted Thursday to sus­ public relations, Chrysler pend local operating utilizes two types of union agreements at five Chrysler agreements. plants in protest of the propos­ "There is a national agree­ The Newark Chrysler Assembly Plant, located on Route 896, will soon be the site of the new A­ ed sale of the Acustar parts­ ment which deals with wages car production. production unit. and benefits, and then there suspensions "just put things on While Newark is not an workers "are protesting, but The UA W also voted to are individual local hold. Nothing is permanent." Acustar plant, Clemente said, [are] not on strike." postpone implementation of a agreements," Nickel The reason for the suspen­ he believed the Acustar sale VA W workers cannot strike Modern Operating Agree­ explained. sion, Clemente said, is to proJ posed a potential threat to the without giving seven days ment. Although Newark's The local agreement at the test the proposed sale of job security of all Chrysler notice to Chrysler and receiv­ MOA was initiated in Newark plant was to be Chrysler's Acustar parts­ employees. ing permission from the February, Bobby Clemente, replaced by the MOA, the se­ production unit. The unit ac­ He a·lso said "Acustar union's executive board. "It's VA W president of Local 1138, cond of its kind among counts for nearly 33 percent of buyers might not honor [ex­ highly unlikely that they ever said he would not implement Chrysler assembly plants, Chrysler's operations in isting] contracts between the will be [on strike)," Nickel the MOA nor recall local Nickel noted. America and Canada, and company and the union." said. operating agreements until the Clemente stressed the employs over 25,000 people. Nickel admitted that union continued to page 15 Candidate profile: Gov. Dukakis supports strong economic policy by Randy Farmer Securities Issues, indicated Staff Reporter that, in ' addition to his Democratic presidential economic expertise, the gover­ hopeful Gov. Michael Dukakis, nor also has a credible foreign responsible for performing a policy platform. "Massachusetts Miracle" on He explained that Dukakis is the economically ailing state, in favor of the recently now hopes to spread his magic negotiated Strategic Arms across the rest of the nation. Reduction Treaty (START), Unemployment had jumped but opposes further production to 12 percent when Dukakis of the Strategic Defense In­ took office in 1975. It is cur­ itiative ("Star Wars"). rently holding steady at three "He does not believe it is a 5 percent, according to Sean realistic program and does not Dobson, a Dukakis believe it will contribute to the research and development of spokesman. national defense," but en- the STEALTH Bomber, an air- His economic plan was courages further research in craft which theoretically is im- responsible for creating over SDI in order "to hedge against pervious to enemy radar, said Gressar. 400,000 new jobs and 73,000 a Soviet technological break He added that Dukakis new businesses in out,'' said Gressar. Massachusetts, Dobson added. Dukakis also opposes the B-l ' would take strong action bomber program, but feels the againsf the aparthied govern- Memol'ies - Senior basketball player Tony Tucker is Edward Gressar, Dukakis' honored before Delaware's game Saturday against Lehigh. assistant director of National United States should continue continued to page 17 ' Univ. ·athlete·s Jordan coaches are performing athletes in class by Carin Draney Staff Reporter well ·in classes "The experience at the university is no good if we cannot pro­ by Jeff James duce people, with degrees, who can_ go out an~ be successf~ on News Features Editor news analysis the court and in the classroom," said Dr. Jamce Jordan.,_ direc- tor of the Special Services for Athletes program. "" : In the past, playbooks, X's Edgar Johnson, umversity The program, which was instituted in October,. streSses and O's, and practice time athletic director. academics as the primary reason for attending the university, were the emphasis of college "We don't feel a minimum Ed-gar Johnson focusing on athletics as secondary. - athletics at many universities. GPA is to the benefit of student Among those services offered through this. program are The National Collegiate athletes," Johnson said. "We student body, according to Johnson. academic advisement, developmental groups and Career Plan­ Athletic Association has been feel it's to their detriment. The ning and Placement sessions which fit into an athlete's schedule. trying to change that - em­ student's will then major in For the · 1987 graduating class, 69 percent of all athletes "We make our services accessible to athletes by bringing phasizing academics over grade point average, not a them to where they are," she said. athletic capability. quality education." graduated on time, Johnson Spending approxi_mately 17 ho':lrs at the Field Ho~se ea~h NCAA bylaw 5-1-J He added that while the said, compared to only 61 per­ cent of all non-athletes. week Jordan is available by appomtment or on a drop-m basis. (previously proposition 48) re­ university is not in favor of a Sh~ said the sessions offered to athletes are those which are quires incoming college minimum grade pqint average "That makes sense to me," he said. "Athletes are more generally taken for granted by other students. freshmen to score at least 700 for athletes, it does require a "I am in favor of the program," said Eric Weber (BE 88), on the SAT (or 15 on the ACT) certain level of achievement goal-oriented and they will do what's necessary to stay eligi­ a baseball player. ''You make sacrifice~ to play a spo~t, tak~?g and have a 2.0 GPA in 11 core for its athletes. time away from afternoons when semmars are available. classes. An athlete is only eligible to ble. And staying eligible will move them toward gradua­ According to Director of Athletics Edgar N. Johnson, athletes It was initiated two years play sports as long as he or she are frequently required to choose between attending practice ago as a way to ensure that on­ does not have 12 deficit points tion." While the graduation rate and participating in a development program. ly quality student athletes or more - deficit points repre­ "Students now have another resource to help them with were attending college. sent the number of quality for athletes does not seem to During recent NCAA p,oints a student has below a be a problem, athletes do have academic demands," he said. . 2.0 GPA. trouble staying on top of both Although 69 percent of the university's athletes graduate in meetings, a proposal requiring four years, Jordan continues to work towards improving that a minimum grade point The deficit point system . school an~ sports. . number. average for athletes was gives athletes an incentive to Dr. Jamce_Jordan, _director "I don't find a problem with taking an extra semester or year rejected. stay above the set limit and of the special serVIc~s f?r either," she said. "Many of the non-athletes do." At Delaware, however, the helps them graduate on time. athletes progr~m, was hired_ m Emphasis is continually placed on completing the re­ university has always re­ At Delaware, in fact, October_to assiSt athletes With quirements for a degree and graduation, she explained. quired as much from athletes athletes graduate on time ac.~de~Ic problems., . The Athletic Department and the Counseling Center recogniz­ as other students, according to more often than the rest of the . Basically what I m. dou:~g nght now," Jordan said, "Is ed the need for the Special Services program through feedback helping with things such as from students and coaches. I60 Elkton Road • Newark securing tutoring and talking Jordan said the program has been successful, but it took a •(.302) 7 38-{)8()8 continued to page 13 continued to page 20

Fmt: I'EXlCArl Rr..ST.AIJIIAm' Vi~~a! J::',.ee s. OPEN Tues. & Wed. 11:30 to 10 pm Thurs. 11:30 to 10 pm f.-ee March 2nd 0 dot Fri. & S•t. 11:30 to 11 pm • ·-· 4 to 11 p.llt. On Wednesday, r--~~~~~~~~-~ PARK PLACE i ·at 7:30 P:M. I _..A.... P.... A.-.R .... T._.M.-.EiiiiiiiiN ...... TS~ l • Large, Spacious apartments I Socio-Drama with many closets i ncl ud i ng .I . walk-in size. IS • Conveniently located near Fun, Communicative, Dynamic, New campus (within 6 blocks) (PROBLEM-SOLVING IS OUR SPECIALTY) • Heat & hofwater included. 6 Month Leases are now Available One and Two Bedroom Apartments Find Out what it's all about! Available from $378.00 In the 368-5670 Kirkwood Room (Student Ce!'lter) 650 Lehigh Rd., Apt. 1·1 Newark, DE 19711 presented by the Human Relations Association M·F,9to7 SAT.10-4 Police Report Walkie-talkie taken Thief takes watch Man pleads guilty Two men arrested alerted by the sound of trash from univ. truck out of Carpenter following assault in Main St. lot cans being kicked over. Man arrested An unknown person stole a A Quartz watch, ski jacket Two men were arrested $500 Motorolla portable radio and pair of gloves with a total An 18-year-old Maryland shortly after midnight Monday for dorm prank man attacked a male univer­ from a university truck park­ value of $150 were stolen from in the Main St. parking lot A man was arrested for ed behind Recitation Hall the back gym of Carpenter sity freshman in Rodney F (across from The Deer Park discharging a fire extinguisher shortly after 3:30 p.m. Sports Building shortly after dormitory at 7:35p.m. Friday, Tavern); one a university stu­ in Dickinson F dormitory and Wednesday, University Police 10 p.m. Wednesday, Universi- University Police said. dent, for carrying a concealed also for underage consumption said. ty Police said. · knife and one for disorderly of alcohol Saturday night, He was charged with, and conduct, University Police University Police said. pleaded guilty to assault and said. $200 in cash stolen Wicker burro stolen trespassing Saturday morn­ According to police, they - Compiled by Lynn Gionta from Dickinson C from restaurant ing, added police. made the arrests after being and Jennifer Rich Someone stole $200 from an An unidentified person stole..------.. unlocked Dickinson Hall C a $500 wicker donkey from the room between 11:30p.m. Feb. · El Sombrero Restaurant on 18 and 4 p.m. Feb. 19, Univer­ Elkton Road between 2 and 7 Wanted: sity Police said. p.m. Wednesday, Newark Police said. 10-speed bike taken $325 radio swiped from Harrington B from Horizon Student editorial cartoonist. Great opportunity for a I talented, incisive person to develop design and editorial A $160 Huffy men's 10-speed An $325 audiovox AM/FM bike was stolen near Harr­ stereo cassette player and two skills. Inquire at The Review office, B-1 Student Center. ington Hall B between 4 p.m. speakers were stolen from a 0 Feb. 21 and 6 a.m. Feb. 22, student-owned 1982 Plymouth 451-2771. University Police said. Horizon, parked on Ray Street Wednesday night, Newark Policesaid. ~------~ OFFICE OF HOUSING AND RESIDENCE LIFE. 1988-89 HOUSING APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE NOW!! APPLICATIONS: Housing Agreement cards and. full instruc­ for details and descriptions of all procedures. IF YOU tions were distributed to residence hall students on February 29th. HAVE ANY QUESTIONS OR NEED HELP IN COMPLETING Off-campus stude,.ts may pick-up information and appli· YOUR FORMS, YOU MAY ATTEND OUR LOTTERY WORK· cation materials at .the Office of Housing and Residence SHOP ON THURSDAY, MARCH 3, FROM 5:30·1 0:00P.M. Life, 5 Courtney Street. Full-time matriculated undergraduates IN BACCHUS IN THE PERKINS STUDENT CENTER. who apply by the appropriate deadline are guaranteed housing next year. Although late applications are accepted and efforts are DEPOSITS: The housing deposit is $100,$50 of which is refunda­ made to house all who apply, no guarantee of a housing assignment ble if written cancellation is received before July 15th; the remaining is offered to late applicants. Housing Agreements are made for $50 is non-refundable. With cancellations after July 15th, the entire the full academic year. See Room Assignment Lottery Packet $100 deposit is forfeited.

Form Collection/ Type of Housing Summary of Requirements Date/ Location Christiana Apartment 1 Scan Form per Group 1 Blue Agreement Card and $100 3/7/88 ONLY 8:30-4 deposit for each student Christiana Mtg. Am. Pencader Complex 1 Scan Form, 1 blue Agreement card and $100 deposit for 3/ 14/88 ONLY 8:30-4 each student Christiana Mtg. Am. Traditional Halls 1 Scan Form, 1 blue Agreement card and $100 deposit for 3/ 14-3/25 8-4:30 each student 5 Courtney Street OR 11-4 Cashier's Office 3/ 25 ONLY Special Interest Houses Special Application, Interview, Blue Agreement Card, and Now-3/14 or until filled $100 deposit for each student 5 Courtney Street ' - Upperclass Honors Floors Special Application, Blue Agrement card, and $100 for Now-3/11 Honors Center or ·~ .. each student Brown Sypherd H.D. Extended Study- Hour Special Application, Blue Agreement card, and $100 deposit Now-3/ 11 5 Courtney Street Floors for each student Dickinson Pre-Lottery Special Application, Blue Agreement card, and $100 deposit Now-3/11 5 Courtney Street for each student Large Rooms and Apart- Special Application, Blue Agreement card, and $100 deposit Now-3/ 11 5 Courtney Street ments in Traditional Halls for each student Students may pay their deposit at the Cashier's Office inHullihen Hall any time before the deadline date and return their receipted housing Agreement card to the locations specified above at the appropriate times. · Page 6 • The Review • March 1, 1988 ------

Expected Population Growth in Newark City populace 31~------~--~- ~

30.5 ------30,900 expected to rise . __.....--·· 30------c Vi 29.5 - ~ - .2 -g ,/ 29,400 through the end j ~ 29- ./ !:) !:) •./ Q. 0 28.5- /./ o.c / Q. !:. 28 .// of this century / by Charles Kiesling Consortium was formed to 27.5 / create a unified model for /. Staff Reporter 27 _/ making population 26,500 Newark's population is ex­ predictions. pected to gradually level off Newark's slowed-down 1988 1990 1995 during the 1990s, then decline population growth, Ratledge during the early 21st century, said, "underlies a disparity according to Edward C. between development and Ratledge, university director population relating to family undergo a gradual decline as tium's representative from The large student population of urban policy research. size. , family-size continues to Newark's Planning Depart­ in Newark complicates the "Barring any major annex­ "Smaller household sizes diminish. ment, explained, "In the years projection process for the Con­ ations, the present Newark are increasing as a result of The Consortium bases its between 1985 and 1995, with the sortium. population of 26,500 is not like­ later marriages, higher findings on various present baby-boomers moving According to university ly to increase to more than divorce rates and more single­ demographic factors, in- out of the child-bearing age Housing and Residence Life, 29,400 by 1990," said Ratledge, parent households," Ratledge eluding birth and death rates and with their children leaving there are approximately 14,000 · who is also a member of the explained. in the community, migration home, there should be a undergraduates at the univer­ Delaware Population The Consortium expects and employment oppor- decline- or atleast a stabiliz­ sity1 including ~art -ti me Consortium. Newark's population to peak tunities, Ratledge said. ing- of population growth in continued to page 17 The Delaware Population at 30,900 in 1995. and then Maureen Roser. the Consor- 1\lewa~k." University to educate· students on AIDS by Bob Bicknell aem ror stuaent atfairs. prevention and distributing ~ea1 issue is, 'a.re stu~ents taK- ~tun, sa:Ukwueti~ et~~titt~eo- "What the university must pamphlets on the disease mg chances with their safety, !?g to a el ac 0 . d d~ st af.'!R epor t er . . ' th k' h . f see peop e droppmg ea Educating students about do IS educate [and] convmce Sharkey explained.. or are. ey rna m~ c, mces or around them. Acquired Immune Deficiency college students that they are Anne Lomax, director of behavior _change· Cradler who was involved Syndrome (AIDS) will be ~ulner~ble," S_harkey sai~. ~ellspring, said_that the issue She said s~u~~nts have ~o in a Nove~ber 1987 campaign more effective than installing That IS our I?nmary ~oal. IS not co~dom dispensers. take responsibility for their to install condom dispensers in condom dispensers in As part of this education pro- Accordm~ to Lom_ax, who own sexual actions. ·dence halls said RSA will residence halls, according to cess, the university is pro- has b~en mv?lved m AIDS Mike Cradler, president of ~~~concentrate on educating Stuart J. Sharkey, vice presi- .vi ding programming on AIDS education for five years, "The the Resident Student Associa- continued to page 16 ORK- STUDY STUDENTS T e Resident Student Association ds Study Hall Monitors to work we knights in the Harrington and Kent Study Halls. If Work Study is· part of your financial aid package, call 451-2773 or pick up an application in 211 Student Center. ------March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 7 Go team! • UD cheerleaders judge local com etition by Shirley Hawk money raised goes toward and Professor Trabant for fun­ Staff Reporter plane tickets and hotel ac­ ding [our current] uniforms," comodations for away games. Elia added. For four hours Sunday mor­ Scheider said the squad has ning, chanting, clapping and "We also rent university difficulty practicing because it whistling echoed through vans and pay for our food." is not recognized as a univer­ Carpenter Sports Building. · Co-captain Mark Scheider sity sport and does not get The university varsity

Off Balan.ce The idea of equality is no longer an alternative form of societal thought; while it has diffused in­ to the mainstream, inequality still reigns. "Current surveys show that with each year of a woman's education, a woman's self-esteem goes further down" as she learns only about dominant white, male perspectives, according to Gloria Steinem, prominent feminist and lecturer, who spoke on campus Saturday . "The future clearly is to study human history - not white, male history," she added. Viewing society through a white, male perspec­ tive has thwarted women's self-esteem, con- ­ fidence and socio-economic status, repressing ad­ vancement and growth. Take an economic look at the status quo in Delaware: • Women earn 55 cents for every dollar by their male co-workers. This wage gap is greater than the national average. • Women with a four-year college education earn 49 cents for every dollar earned by men with four years of college. • About one in eight Delawareans have incomes at or below the poverty level. Women and children make up about three-fourths of all persons living in poverty. Where're the Beets? • Unemployment rates are higher among I'm a vegetarian for moral and other various problem is the commercial attitude of the af­ women than men, especially minority women personal reasons. Fine, who cares? But the fluent in societies who have cultivated a taste under 25 years old. other day I took offense at the troubled reality for beef. presented on beef commercials. Advertising is Somewhere in the distant past, way back in • Women are a 52 percent 'minority' of the a way of American life, cool. And usually I don't the hunterI gatherer days, meat was needed to state's population, while 48 percent possess leader­ even realize I'm watching commercials which feed a changing human population. Animals ship roles. is scary in a ·subliminal way. But, that day was were a nutrient processing plant which con­ like no ordinary day, I was a non-person, I was verted scrub grass into necessary protein. Unmistakably, this is inequality. in the commercial world. Alright so what am I saying? This is no longer The government, local agencies, businesses and James Garner popped onto the screen and I a tribal society. With today's nutritional industry, as well as individuals, must converge saw a large, bloody slab of beef. The slogan was knowledge, meat is no longer needed but mere­ " Beef - real food, for real people." ly desired. In fact, beef often increases bodily with the single goal to improve the status of Now hold on Jimbo, the implication, that deterioration with a fat overload. women and all minorities or they will continue to you're not real if you don't wolf down chunks Now the instant comeback is "yeah, but it be regarded as second-class citizens. of seared flesh, is ridiculous. tastes good." That's just the kind of humanistic In her speech, Steinem also said, "We have to Millions of people are thinking that mak.es America ~reat - vegetarians, because of unadulterat~d hedomsm. Commercially pro­ make a place in our minds for change to happen, religion, health, practicali- duced beef IS one of the most wastef~l food before it can actually happen." ty or moral insight. ~ourc.es. Instead of scrub grasses, ~oday s ~f Until then, equality will only be a desired con­ Meat is not necessary in IS ~emg ~ed mostly on comme_rcially raised cept for most, and inequality a reality for all. America nor in most gra~n. which has been _grown u~mg pe~roleum societies. In fact, beef is fertilizers and e~pensiVe farmmg eqmp!llent. often detrimental. It takes apprmomately 16 pounds of gram and ..- I got mad so I read a three to 15 thousand gallons of :-vater to produce Kevin Donahue, editor in chief book. ' o~e, yes only o~,e,,pound of edible bee~. Accor­ Chuck Arnold, managing editor ' Cathleen Fromm, executive editor Michele Barsce, business manager I know you're thinking ~mg to Lappe, S_Ixteen P'?Unds. of gram has 21 Lori Poliski, editorial editor Ned Keene, advertising director Camille Moonsommy, executive editor that bleeding heart liberals tll!les more calories and eight hme~!'flore pro­ Keith Flamer and Jon Springer, sports editors Michael are always reading books tem than a pound o~ hamburger. So, that News Editors ...... Kevin Bixby, Keon Burenga, Lori Folts, Jeff James, Diane Moore, and then _ Blamo! _ ac- quarter pounder ~ou JUS~ ~carfed wo~d have Dale Rife, Jennifer Rogers, Cynthia Sowers Andres fed you or a starvmg mdividual on gram for a Features Editors ...... Amy Byrnes, Corey Ullman long time. . Entertainment Editor...... Michoel Andres tivism. Well relax, I'm not going to lecture Associate Editor...... ScoH Graham about being carnivorous, but I agree with In addition, to make grazing space for the Photo Editor ...... Dan Della Piazza world's vast herds of hamburgers, the land Assistant News Editors ...... ••••...... ••...... FietcherChambers, Anne Wright Frances Moore Lappe's Diet for a Small Assistant Photo Editor ...... Eric Russell Planet, which stresses the wastefulness of the must be cleared. Forests are chopped and Assistant Sports Editor ...... Ken Kerschbaumer commercial meat industry. jungles are leveled. The effects: trees which Assistant Features Editor ...... Kirsten Phillippe once produced oxygen are gone, the plants Copy Editon...... June Horsey, Joan Maliczyszyn, Rachel Newman, Ted Spiker Eating meat is becoming as much an Assistant Business Monager...... Christine Bellero ecological as a moral issue when the Earth is which prevent erosion are gone and the natural Assistant Advertising Director .. .,...... , ...... Jenniler Koelpp habitat of thousands of' creatures is gone. Published every Tu~day and Friday during tho academic year, Fridays during Winter Ses­ becoming increasingly barren. We all sion, by the student body of tho University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware. remember hearing about the starving Ethio­ So as topsoil washes away and land becomes Editorial and business offices at West Wing, Student Center. Phone 45 1-2771, 45 1-2772, desert, even the cherished cows will die. 451 -2774 . Business hours: Mondoy through Friday: 10 a .m. to 3 p .m. pians (who are probably still starving, though the news is now concerned with war - famine Welcome to the future - help conserve. Editorial/Opinion: Pages 8 and 9 are reserved for opinion and commentary. The editorial above represents a consensus opinion of The Review staff and is written by the editorial editor, was last year's topic). except when signed. The staff columns contain the opinion of the author pictured. Cartoons Lappe states in her book that most countries Michael Andres is the entertainment editor o.f represent the opinion of the artist. The letters to the editor contain the opinions of our readers. produce enough food to feed their people. The The R eview. March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 9 Oh, brother! Opinion I remember the first time I held him in my arms. Wrapped in blue, he was only a few days old and the newest Student anticipates deserve to appear in a college Themselves? From learning discovery in my three~year-old life. paper. Would Mr. Matthews from someone who's "been My baby brother. Review's views then remove anything the ma­ there" instead of from a white According to my parents, this little guy wasn't just pass­ I applaud the staff of The jority found offensive? male professor and the course ing through, but was here to stay. I wasn't really sure if I Review for its temerity in Not all comics are funny all textbook? Education draws on - liked this new arrangement very much, but then again, he grappling with the foremost the time. other people's expe rience. was awfully cute. public issues of our day. Kevin The Faculty Senate recent­ I decided to keep him. Donahue's searing exposition John Dunn (AS ND) ly passed a "multicultural re­ Looking back, I know that was one of the best decisions I've of the historical significance of quirement" of all its ever made in my now almost 21-year-old life. Through the the Jimmy the Greek fiasco in 'Apartheid' at UD undergraduates. While it is years, that bundle in blue has turned out to be a pretty in­ the Jan. 22 issue, stands as a says geology prof. commendable, I believe the credible friend. tribute to the paper's redoub­ university's lack of commit­ I'll never forget my Girl Scout cookie crusades through my table social conscience. Jeff I respond to "Alternatives to ment to bring qualified foreign old neighborhood, I would forge ahead on my top-seller trail James' eloquent and informed divestment sought" in the Feb. students here will continue to assessment of the distressing 23 issue of The Review and to detract from its efforts to at­ and my brother would•be in step behind me, towing the predicament in Nicaragua in Precious cargo of cookies in our bright the university's "properly sen­ tract qualified minority the Feb. 12 merits equal ac­ sitive approach" involving ad­ students. The university's in­ - red wagon. claim. Finally, Lori Poliski's Or the Christmas Eve jitters shared, mission of South African ability to attract foreign denunciation of biased, inac­ students. While I applaud the students will continue to be as we · both awaited the magical curate reporting in The New Christmas morning that seemed a administration's attempts to perceived as an inability to York Times in the Feb. 19 bring foreign students to the recognize the value and iden­ millennium away. issue is especially enlighten­ Sure, I lived through Evil Knievel academic and social com­ tity of other races and ing. Perhaps the Review's munity, I am sincerely con­ cultures. Until this is cor­ and his motorcycle, annihilating many resident political pundits a Barbie doll rendezvous, and the cerned about its level of com­ rected, the university will con­ should ascertain the veracity mitment. The university in­ tinue to practice its own sub­ heated negotiations over the "proper- of all information dispensed by ty line" in the backseat of the car on tends to bring a black South tle, almost imperceptible, J-enn er the media by measuring it African student to Delaware. form of apartheid. family outings. against that great model of But, I also had a great partner to ride Why just one student? And __R o_g __ e_r_s ____ the waves with me at the beach and journalistic impartiality, The why only from South Africa? Ronald E. Martin Nation. My reaction stems from Assistant Professor, Geology build award-winning snowmen with in the winter. I eagerly await the publica­ other university policies which Chairman Subcommittee on As we grew, things began to change. I didn't seem to win tion of additional incisive com­ seem at variance with both Planning in arm wrestling matches anymore and my head started to mentary by Review colum­ President Jones and Mr. Har­ Undergraduate Studies tilt upward to look at him instead of him looking up at me. nists - if not in The New York rison's statements. Approx­ Committee He was the voice of sanity in the Times, at least in The New imately 18 months ago, I met backseat of the car when I was learning to drive and my Republic, The Atlantic, or, as a young man from Cameroon, father thought he was riding in the doommobile. My brother Ms. Poliski called it, The Africa, who had saved his would sit there in patient silence, enduring my perpendicular Pravda. money in order to come to parallel parking, as poor dad almost put his foot through the Cheers. America for an education. He UD not responsible floor every time he wanted me to put the brake on. was in two of my classes the My brother was there after high school graduation with a Jeff Wolters (AS 88) previous year, and I consider for new fraternity ·big hug and a smile that let me know all that he couldn't say. him one of the best I was proud when he brought home varsity letters, became Logic makes sense undergraduates I have met In the Feb. 26 issue of The an Eagle Scout or surprised me with instances of a maturity I happen to enjoy reading here. Review, a sizeable advertise­ which continues to grow. Lauer's Logic. It has greatly He soon realized that his ment appeared on page 18 for I'm still beaming over the latest news. Last week my not­ improved and is achieving a savings and support from the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity. so-little-anymore-brother accepted an appointment.to the goal provoking this family were not enough. He in­ The national fraternity has United States Naval Academy. apathetic student body into quired about financial aid and no affiliation with the univer­ In July he will go to Annapolis, Maryland and begin a whole thinking. received temporary support. sity and it assumes no respon­ new chapter in life as a Nav.y football player and If the readers find it He was not a U.S. citizen and sibility for this organization. midshipman. tasteless or offensive, no one is I was outraged to learn that Yes, it seems through the years baby blue has evolved in­ forcing them to read it. Topics the university's attitude seem­ Raymond 0 . Eddy to Navy blue. This realization has left me reminiscing and like Nicaragua and the ed to be that it must "protect Coordinator of Greek Mfairs missing the little boy with the wagon, but yet so thankful that Reagan mis-administration its own." From what? and Special Programs I was lucky enough to watch the boy become a man. Our brothers and sisters. We grow and change with them, teach them and learn from them. Sure we fight with them, but through it all, we believe in '1.1'$ ~~ /4.. S"t> ~EE&.{. them and love them. It's a special love. Unconditional and comfortable. Never ~JMM.Y CoNFE.S~t:t>... P~T threatened and always there. fOP~ Off /4..6~\N... "-NO NOW Maybe that's why it's so easy to take them and the time \1\E S\Jff2EME ~SAYS we spend together for granted. Now, a phone ca'll or a letter means so much when I can C.A~TOOtUSTS CAW M~ talk or write to my brother and catch up on the latest games, fVN Of U~ ~:~.: girls or goals in his life. I miss being there to see things firsthand and put my two cents in, either teasing or encourag­ ing, or listening and trying to give sisterly advice. · I have so many invaluable memories of our childhood 1/ " (<1\1~ together and the plans and choices I've seen each of us make as we explore life and try to pursue our dreams. · Despite the changes, this' is where it gets exciting. Granted, it's always bittersweet to say goodbye to childhood and to its days of i~nocent fun am~ believing the world is one ~ig playground ~ b.!lt with the new pleasures and freedoms we fmd in adulthood cbmes the chance to build upon the strong foun­ dations of our earliest relationships. We can grow and watch one another blossom into men and women of integrity. The bond never breaks, it just gets stronger. Think about it, with the exception of any combination of multiple birth, no two people can be more alike or a share a common life bond that is so unique. we·and our brothers and sisters are part of the same whole. Without them, our lives would possess a different hole - one we could never fill or hope to replace.

Jennifer Rogers is a student affairs editor of The Review. Page 10 • The Review • March 1, 1988--....------~---- Recently formed DUSC groups thriving by Ted Spiker South Africa, according to investments in South Africa," began with six founding Copy Editor PUAA co-contact Jane Berger she said. members and has expanded to CAS 88). In early November, approx­ 21 members, according to Four campus organizations, ·presiDent Patricia Heins

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kinko·s· NEW HOURS 11 AM- 12 PM DAILY • Copies • Office Supplies • Convenient Hours Hillary's Gourmet Coffees are now available at Sbarro's • Binding . • Floppy Disks • Pick Up & Delivery MAIN & ACADEMY STRE.ETS 368-5080 731-2100 19 Haines St. Open til 9 Every Night ------March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 11 Profile: A Feminist in· the making by Cathleen ·Fromm In protest to the state's hearing, a few of her male colleagues, including raised funds for many political cam­ local feminist group asked women to Jimmy Breslin, told her "to stop hang- paigns, particularly women and Executive Editor testify about their real-life experiences ing around those crazy people." minority candidates, as well as for / There was a time when Gloria on obtaining abortions. Ignoring their advice, Stein em said Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers, Steinem wasn't a feminist, or at least Steinem sat in the church basement, she began taking an active role in the and other peace and economic justice she didn't realize it. where the protest was being held, ai)d feminist movement. efforts. Steinem, founder of Ms. magazine, listened to the accounts of women who Today, Steinem 's name is Steinem is also well-known for her the only national magazine for women had struggled to get abortions. synonymous with the· feminist exposition on the Playboy Club, where and controlled by women, became "For the first time, I heard women movement. she landed a job a·s a bunny to in­ aware for the first time in 1964 that telling the truth of what it was like to Currently, she travels as a lecturer vestigate what actually went on behind women deserved equal treatment but get an abortion," she recalled. "I'd and feminist organizer and appears the scenes at the establishment. were not getting it, after reporting on never seen women tell the truth [about frequently on televison and radio as an She has, in addition, authored par­ an abortion protest for New York abortion] before in public." interviewer and a spokeswoman on traits of well-known political figures, magazine. Steinem said she had an abortion issues of human equality. including Eugene McCarthy, Nelson At the time, the New York State shortly after graduating from Smith Rockefeller, Richard Nixon, and legislature held an official hearing to College· and had never told anyone. She founded and'supports several na­ George McGovern testify on the liberalization of the After the protest, Steinem said she tional organizations dedicated to Also, for the past nine years, Steinem • state's anti-abortion laws. Fourteen read everything she could find on women's issues. has been selected as one of the 25 Most men and one nun were invited to feminism and the feminist movement. Influential Women in America by testify. Noticing her interest in feminism, a In addition, Steinem has written and World Almanac. ... Steinem looks ahead continued from page ( Steinem, who founded and sup- · "As long as [women] have and we think this represents ports the Coalition of Labor two jobs and [men] have one, CONTACT LENSES the country. We forget it's on­ Union Women. it won't work," she stress­ ly 30 percent of the voters, at "It's extremely difficult," ed. "So, I look forward in the Special Student Rates the most, who put him there." she said, "to get into a position future to young men standing Steinem attributes the com­ in which [women] have ad­ up in college audiences and "for new fits" bined energy of women ministrative responsibilites saying, 'How can I combine a organized for a common goal over the dominant group." career and a family?' " as the factor which ''has kept The "Glass Ceiling" has Steinem added the sexes do Ba~ner Optical Reagan at a stimdstill, but we caused many women to aban­ not have to be in opposition to 18 Haines St., Newark could have been going forward don the corporate world and achieve autonomy. with this energy." start their own businesses. She said women and men 368-4004 However, she stated, the "[Women] need to integrate tend to assign specific economic and employment to the upper levels [of corpora­ characteristics to the opposite status of women has progress­ tions] and be entrepreneurs at sex, such as assertiveness in ed from the days of sexual the same time," she men and sensitivity in women The Airport Transportation Alternative oppression. explained. instead of "being them "At entry level, [a woman] Also, Steinem noted, women ourselves." DELAWARE can get the job and it's not bad and men are approaching "We don't have to defeat for five or 10 years, but the marital equality, but "the people to survive," Steinem _-=FXPRESS=­ middle management is still dividing line is who takes care explained, "we have to com­ the 'Glass Ceiling,: " said of the children?" plete ourselves." SHUTTLE, INC. 1- Door To Door Service • 24 Huur~ • 7 Oav- a Week z Serving w PHIL.A. · BAll. & OtARTER (302) 454-7634 • 1-800-648-LIMO :e­o.;! 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continued from page 1 curate." She added, however, that FINANCIAL AID to recruit, hire and train black "all programs and initiatives faculty, as well as students," that have been put in place [by Ahmed added. the university and Delaware Helen Foss, the governor's State] must be continued. education advisor, said "It's part of the .commit- Delaware State College has ment," she said. ·-.... . corrected - or is in the pro­ The other states which,. the cess of correcting -·problem Department of Education said RECIPIENTS had not , complied with the areas, by upgrading facilities. According to Foss, the court order included Florida, Department of Education's Georgia, Missouri, Oklahoma OF report was "based on out-of­ and Virginia, according to a · PERKINS LOANS date information and is not ac- report in USA Today.

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• • .Jordan coaches continued from pag,e 4 program. "She's hard-nosed, but the while to get acquainted with coaches and athletes think the the teams because they are not world of her," he said. used to having an advisor at Jordan was employed by the the Field House. special services department, Although she has become which later evolved into the familiar with members of the Office of Academic Advise­ football, basketball and field ment, when she came to the hockey teams, Jordan said she university in 1971. has not had much contact with Following the completion of other teams. her master's degree in college "My guess is that when counseling at the university, everyone knows who I am, she was employed by the more teams will take advan­ Counseling Center. tage of the program," she "I had said my ideal JX>Sition said. as a counseling psychologist Johnson said Jordan will was to work with varsity make students meet obliga­ athletes," she said. "So when tions and eff~ctively assist I was offerred the position [as about 1,000 athletes in the director], it was perfect." l/4argheritas t#festaurant "Main Street's Best for Less"

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University of Delaware F~ ~ flee 'P~tVQI(Qcg Aw ..... Special Free Attraction Sponsored by the Office of the President Sunday, March 12, 1988 8:15P.M. Mitchell Hall The Syracus~ Symphony Orchestra 7:30P.M. Tickets, t:No per I.D. will be distributed from the Mit­ cheM Hall box office to University of Delaware students McKinly Laboratory Skylight on Mo'n~ay, March 7. UD students, faculty, and staff, two tickers per I.D., may pick up tickets on Tuesday, March 8. Any remaining tickets will be given out Wed­ WEDNESDAY MARCH 2, 1988· nesday, March 9 to students, faculty and staff, and the general public. The Mitchell Hall box· office will be ALL INTERESTED FRESHMAN AND SOPHOMORES ARE INVITED open from noon untiiS:OO P.M., on the above dates or until the ticket supply is exhausted. Subscribers who REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED will be unable to use their tickets for the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra program are urged to send their tickets back to the box office. These tickets will be redistributed to University of Delaware students. • Page 14 • The Review • March 1, 1988 ------

• • . runner dies s.hortly after Phi Tau .5K for Bruce continued from page 1 admiration I have for him, [the race] is great. It's been so attempt to increase fraternity Although the individual [and so] that he can still have long, but people still care." brotherhood and possibly cap­ reasons for running the race former basketball teammate good spirits." The swarm of runners in­ ture the top spot among par­ varied, the underlying of Peisino, said, "I organized Bruce's mother, Marie cluded a wide range of per­ ticipating fraternities. message, as Trenton State stu­ this fundraising event out of an Peisino, commented, "I think sonalities, along with a varie­ Newark residents and dent Rick Worrell stated, "is ty of reasons for participatinr­ employees from local to get into the race, have a in the day's event. businesses also supported good time and run for_Bruce." ~.. MARRIOT-T CORPORATION ANNOUNCES Delta Tau Delta brothe Bruce. However many of the The Opening of Mike Procak (AG 89) ran the participants tra veiled to In the fraternity division, race in the name of his frater­ Newark just to run. Sigma Phi Epsilon took first SBARRO "The Italian Eatery" nity and for personal reasons. Coaches Richard Nicklas place over Lambda Chi Alpha on 1-95 at the Travel Plaza; 3 miles north of However, he said, his biggest and Don McNeal of Glen Mills and Kappa Delta Rho. Rt. 896, 1 mile South of Rt. 273. · inspiration was the six-pack of School, were en route to beer he would get for finishing Delaware with 13 of their track Chi Omega sorority sisters before his friend. runners at 7:30a.m. ran first while Phi Sigma NOW HIRING FOR: University ROTC members The Glen Mills school con- · Sigma and Alphi Phi came in Experienced Pizza Makers • Line Servers • Beverage rar;t the race together for en­ centrates its efforts on second and third, respectively. Cashier • Bus People joyment and to make a educating and training delin­ Winners were presented Excellent Wages • Benefits • Opportunity to advance statement. quent young men with family with '5K Run For Bruce' shirts CALL 731-8599 for Interview OR stop in MON.-FRI. EOE "Army ROTC is concerned problems. and medals or trophies. with other affairs than just Nicklas stressed, "Our guys what we're doing within our don't all have a chance to run Along with the satisfaction detachments," according to because our track team is so of participating in a good Jim Donlon

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------March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 15 plar:tt, Ni~kel said . modernization of the plant, one The Newark plant is cur- months, Nickel said. employee insisted, "This is rently reducing production of During this closing, the ...protest Though many Newark just an inventory adjustment. the K-car in preparation for plant will be retooled for the workers are temporarily Everyone should be back to plant shut-down in June which forthcoming production of continued from page 3 • laidoff due to continuing work very soon." may last as long as two Chrysler's new A-car·. Nickel said the MOAwas set up last month to make the Newark assembly plant more competitive. "Overall it is an outstanding . opportunity," Nickel added. " It gives the company greater flexibility in operating the plant, which makes the plant more competitive, and it gives the workers more authority and responsibility." WE THE BEST Under the MOA agreement, "the more an individual learns, the more he earns," DELIVER PIZZA ON Nickel said. TASTE WHEELS In addition, the MOA stresses teamwork in the car­ assembly process and does not limit individuals to specific jobs.

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• • .AIDS education continued from page 6 students about safe sex and She explained that these where condoms can be people silently spread the obtained. disease, infecting others who Cradler hopes to work in will eventually· spread the GLASNOST disease themselves. conjunction with Wellspring in providing information to Lomax said the university MONDAY AFTERNOONS FOUR PERSPECTIVES students on the issues. has an opportunity to prevent Lomax said she was disap­ many students frohl getting 4:00-5:00 -Media pointed when the administra­ the virus. • tio.n decided against the con­ MARCH 7 &21 -Politics dom dispensers, but now she is Unlike schools in larger APRIL 11 & 25 -The Arts able to concentrate more on cities, the university started othe_r aspects of AIDS educational programs about 004 KIRKBRIDE -Religion awareness. AIDS before the disease had Lomax added that society affected large numbers of must overcome its ignorance students, she said. Four lectures sponsored by the Department of Political Science and the International Relations Club and fear about the disease Lomax said these programs will examine GLASNOST from four perspectives - the journalist, the political scientist, the artist before people are able to con­ have helped contain the and the theologian. trol it. disease, but it is only a matter MARCH7: GLASNOST and MEDIA: Beyond Propaganda -Risk of the Truth. "The realness of it is very of time before large numbers Robert B. Cullen, Diplomatic Correspondent, Newsweek, Washington hidden to most of us," she said. of people start dying of AIDS. Bureau, and former Moscow Bureau Chief. An estimated two million to MARCH21: GLASNOST and POLITICS: The Problems of Balance between Ideol­ five million people in the "Wellspring has been get­ ogy and Pragmatist. United States have the HIV ting more requests from Jerry F. Hough, James B. Duke, Professor of Political Science, Duke virus and do not realize it, ac­ students to do [AIDS] pro­ University, and Staff Member of the Brookings Institution. cording to Lomax. grams," she said. · APRIL 11: GLASNOST and the ARTS: The Will to Create -The Will to be Free. Andrei Efremoss, Painter, Set Designer and Former Member of the Soviet Artists Union. Margaret Wettlin, Translator and Former Member of the Soviet Writers' Union. APRIL25: GLASNOST and ORTHODOXY: The Soviet Political and Religious Millieu. March 1, 8, 15, 22 V. Bruce Rigdon, Professor of Church History, McCormick Theological A Cut Above Hair Designs Seminary, Chairperson of the National Council of Churches Committee on Relations with Churches in the Soviet Union. Get Kinky With a Friend Before Spring Break! Bring a Frie~d in For a Perm or Body Wave SPEAKERS and Receive ($20 OFF) the total price of both ROBERT B. CULLEN is Dipolmatic Correspondent for Newsweek, Washington Bureau, and Perms together! his area of responsibility covers the Soviet Union. From 1982-85 he was chief of Newsweek's Moscow bureau. In 1983 he won an Overseas Press Club Award for best foreign magazine reporting. 92 E. Main St. Offer good till April 9 . 366-1235 No personal check please. Cullen received a B.A. in international relations from the University of Virginia in 1970. He served as a Professonal Journalism Fellow at Stanford University during the l980-81 academic year. His most recent publications on the Soviet Union include: "Soviet Jewry," an article in the Winter 1986/87 issue of Foreign Affairs and a chapter on human rights in Gorbacheu's Russia and American Foreign Policy to be published by Random House later this year. JERRY F. HOUGH is a political scientist who has specialized in the Soviet Union. He received his B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University. He taught at the University of Illinois from 1961 to 1968 and'at the U~iversity of Toronto from 1968 to 1973 before going to Duke University where he is the James B. Duke Professor of Political Science and the Director of the Center on East-West Trade, Investment & Communications. Dr. Hough also is a staff member of the Brookings Institution. m~~,~l~~~~~~*A7/~~• He is author of the following books: How the Souiet Union is Gouerned, Souiet Leadership in Transition, Struggle for Third World: Souiet Debates and American Options, and the forth-coming, T Q ~l»t{l?:~tJ~ ~ (}) 7 7'' :J-lvo 88~*(}) Russia and the West: The Politics of Gorbacheu's Reforms. MARGARET WETTLIN graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a major in history ft*Kiifll~?Pi'd•l ~, .R~~rrt:fto and a minor in English. In 1932 she took a year's leave of absence from her English teaching position at ,B;j<.lt)(i, /ii1lf0) B *i!fr.5X!i 1) '7 Jv- 1-- U. S. A. 1-c·o Media -High School to travel to the Soviet Union. In the U.S.S.R., Ms. Wettlin taught English as a foreign language and married Andrei Efremoff, the • RECRUIT U.S.A., INC. (800) 325-9759 director of an avant-garde theater company in Moscow. Shortly before World War II, the poet CITICORP PLAZA, 725 S. FIGUEROA ST., SUITE 3100 Marshalk persuaded her to translate some of his poetry from Russian into English. That marked the , CA 90017 PHONE: (213) 955-4900 beginning of her career as a translator of Russian literature which continued until the late 1970's. Among her translations are 12 volumes of Gorky's work, short stories by Tolstoy and his novel Anna Karenina. Following her husband's death in 1968, Ms. Wettlin continued living in the Sovie.t Union, returning to the U.S. permanently in 1980. On May 12, 1987 her son, ANDREI EFREMOFF, her daughter-in­ law, and three grandchildren emigrated to the U.S. and joined her in Philadelphia where she resides. ANDREE EFREMOFF is a graduate of the Stroganoff School of Art in Moscow and has exhibited his paintings throughout the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia, and at the Renaissance Gallery in Philadelphia. A former member of the Soviet Artists Union, Mr. Efremoff worked as a set designer and painter in a variety of media. While in Moscow his wife Larisa was a respected costume designer. V. BRUCE RIGDON graduated from Yale Divinity School and earned a Ph.D. from Yale in church history and historical theology with a special concentration on Eastern Orthodoxy. He attended St. Vladimir's Russian Orthodox Theological Seminary in New York from 1961-64. Dr. Rigdon is an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and is chairperson of the National Council of Churches Committee on Relations with Churches in the Soviet Union. He has traveled extensively in the U.S.S.R. and is the author of numerous articles on the history and theology of Eastern Orthodox Christianity, including iconography. In 1986 he served as a F~llow at the Washington Cathedral, doing research in preparation for the l,OOOth anniversary of the Russian Orthodox Church in 1988. Dr. Rigdon is a member of the faculty of McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago. The Committee for US/USSR Relations, chaired by Dr. James L. Hecht, is a non-partisan organization of Delawareans who are working to increase the public's knowledge about the Soviet Union and to improve relations between the two superpowers. For more information, contact the Committee at 1106 N. Adams Street, Wilmington, DE 19801 or call302-656-2721. ------March I, 1988 • The Review • Page 17

• • . Gov. Dukakis supports strong economic policy continued from page 3 · Hall, a downtown Boston shop­ criminating videotape which day), 20 states --including pie," Dobson said. ment of South Afri'Ca by ping center similar to indicated that Sen. Joseph Delaware and many southern " I think that's what Super establishing tough economic Baltimore's Inner Harbor, Eiden, D-Del., had plagiarized states - will be holding Tuesday is all about - who is sanctions,. such as boycotting Dobson said. parts of his campaign primaries or caucuses. going to survive and challenge South African diamonds, said Dukakis' "Fund to Rebuild speeches. Dobson looks forward to Dukakis," he added. Gressar. America" program would Dukakis fired the staff Super Tuesday despite the fact "[Domestically] he wants to renovate dilapidated urban member and 'denied any in­ that Dukakis is competing foster cooperation between and rural areas across the volvement in the incident. against two favorite sons of the Sports business and state," Dobson United States, he added. Dobson said the scandal South, Sen. Albert Gore, D­ Plus Tuesdays explained. In September, a Dukakis "probably hurt the campaign. Tenn. and the Rev. Jesse State and private contribu­ campaign worker admitted to It was an unfortunate thing." Jackson. tions helped build Faneuial providing reporters with in- On March 8 (Super Tues- "We can surprise some peo- -... growth continued from page 6 students. Only the 7,200 students residing in dor­ ''Mom says the mitories are_officially counted in the Newark census figures. house just isnt the "To avoid overlap in our predictions, we have to decide same without me, how many people living in the city who are counted as residents are actually even though its students," said Roser. "The real proble.m is about a lot cleaner.'' one-half of university students not living in dorms probably do live in Newark," Roser said, but their behavior is not reflective enough · of demographic trends in society­ at-large to be useful to the Con­ sortium in making generaliza­ tions about population growth." A similar situation exists with students living on campus. " Women living on campus can hardly be expected to have the same fertility rate as women in the general popula­ tion,') explained Ratledge. "The differential treatment of the university dormitory population is necessary," said Ratledge, "since very dif­ ferent birth rates and labor force participation rates app­ ly to this population." Since population study is a continual process, the Consor­ tium will meet three times a Just-because your Mom year to revise its basic ?Ssumptions, Ratledge added~. is far away, doesn't mean you can't be close. You can still share the love and laughter on AT&T Long Distance Service. It costs less than you think to hear that she likeS the peace and quiet, but she misses you. So go ahead, give your Mom a call. You can clean your room later. Reach out and touch someone~

AD.T Screen Printing The right choice. 400 Elkton Ad. New•rk 738-6824 • Master Card and • Visa Page 18 • The Review • March 1, _1988

LAST·CHANCE TO NOMINATE!!

Excellence in Teaching . A wards for 198 7-88 ~. .

The University of Delaware Faculty Senate Committee on PLEASE PRINT, USING BALL POINT BEN Student and Faculty Honors solicits the help of the University community in identifying both faculty members and graduate I wish to nominate ------. teaching assistants who merit consideration for the 1988 Excellence in Teaching Awards. who is a (faculty member/ graduate teaching assist ant) i n the ______department /college. My name is The faculty members we seek to honor should demon­ strate: mastery of their subject matter; sensitivity to the inter­ ______and I am an (undergraduate ests, needs and concerns of students; and the ability to student/graduate student/faculty member/administrator/staff member). broaden the students' perspectives. We are looking for teachers who effectively and enthusiastically communicate My major is ------the value and importance, as well as the substance, of their discipline to their students. These same criteria should also Expected date of graduation ------be applied to the nomination of graduate teaching assistants. GIVE THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION FOR EACH COURSE YOU To be eligible for an award a graduate student should either have full responsibility for teaching a course, teaching a reci­ HAVE TAKEN FROM THE NOMINEE: tation session, or teaching a laboratory section.lf you know Course When Size of Elective or Course Difficulty a member of the teaching community who fits the Number Taken Class Required (1 - easy 5 - hard) above criteria and .requirements, we urge you to nominate that Individual for a teaching award. 1. 2 3 4 5 2. NOMINATIONS SHOULD BE SUBMITTED BY 2 3 4 5 COMPLETING THIS FORM AND RETURNING IT 3. 2 3 4 5 TO THE FACULTY SENATE OFFICE (303 HULLI­ HEN HALL) BY MARCH 7, 1 888. FORMS MAY BE RETURNED VIA CAMPUS MAIL. ADDITIONAL 1. Why do you think this individual warrants consideration for this award? NOMINATING FORMS ARE AVAILABLE IN THIS COMMENT ON THE FOLLOWING GENERAL CATEGORIES AS OFFICE. "PETITIONS" WILL NOT BE CON­ THEY PERTAIN TO YOUR NOMINATION. SIDERED. 2. How effectively were his/her cour-s organized? (Sets clear goals, is abreast of current research and developments, has interesting You may want to nominate more than one person: for course assignments, relevant exams and written work, relates course­ example, a regular faculty member and a graduate teaching work to other courses and/or student experience.) assistant. A separate form should be submitted for each per­ son nominated, however. Awardees will be announced on Honors Day, May 10, 1988. The following teachers have received this award within the past ten years, and are not eligible to receive in it 1988. 3. How effecti-vely does this instructor communicate his/her ideas and/or respond .to student questions/concerns? Faculty: Margaret Andersen, Jerry C. Beasley, (Available to discuss student problems/ progress, is sensitive to differ­ Maryanne P. Bellman, Henry Blount, John Burmeis­ ent experiences and prespectives, is enthusiastic in pres~nting subject matter, is sensitive to and presents material in a manner which does not ter, Maurice E. Cope, E. Wayne Craven, John S. demean any group. Lectures and course materials are free from sexist, Crawford, Jeffrey L. Davidson, Mary Donaldson­ racist, and other denigrating jokes, references, and innuendos.) Evans, Edward Fagan, Richard Garvine, John Gay­ nor, Florence Geis, Jackson F. Gillespie, Michael Greenberg, Selcuk Guceri, Kenneth Haas, Laurence Kalkstein, James J. Magee, Allan McCutcheon, Donald Mogavero, Raymond Nichols, Lucia Palmer, Joseph Pika, Donald Puglisi, Henry Reynolds, Dan­ 4. Has this instructor been a motivating force or influence on your future plans? (Were you stimulated to take other courses in iel Rich, Thomas R. Scott, Harry L. Shipman, Steven the field? Were your professonal/career goals affected?) • D. Sopik, Eugenia M. Slavov, James R. Soles, Gerald Straka, Allan Thompson, U. Carl Toensmeyer, Carl A. Von Frankenberg, Carol J. Vukelich.

Graduate Assistants: Dale A. Beams, Janet Bla­ secki, William N. Knisely, Mark R. Noll, Nancy FOLD THE COMPLETED QUESTIONNAIRE AND IIAIL TO: ·· weida. FACULTY SENATE OFFICE ROOM 303, HULLIHEN HALL March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 19 \

DEVELOPING MUTUALTRUST THROUGH UNDERSTANDING a symposium dealing with black and white WORKSHOPS: 11:45 am - 12:45 pm relations at the University of Delaware. Residence Life THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1988 Social Interaction 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm ...... 9:00A.M. - 5:00p.m. • Classroom Environment PERKINS STUDENT CENTER Minority Retention KEYNOTE SPEAKER: 3:00 pm : 4:00 pm DR. GLADYS MOTLEY Greek Life Vice President of Student Affairs Dealing with Differences For More Information Call: Delaware State College Delaware Undergraduate Stl.)dent Congress 451-2649 9:45AM Cultural Planning Advisory Board 451-2991 ...... ,......

Wednesday March 2 Thursday March 3 Bible Study -The good news of Mark, Christian Gatherings - 7 p.m., Two International Coffee Hour Bonhoeffer House, 247 Haines St., 7:30 locations: Ewing Room, Student Cosmopolitan Club, 52 W. Delaware p.m. For more information call Center and Dickinson E / F lounge. Ave ., 5 p.m . every Friday. All Interest Meeting- Peers Against Stu­ Operations Research Seminar- Prof. 368-3078. Inter -Varsity Christian Fellowship, Welcome. dent Suicide, 5:30p.m., 209 Smith. All Anna Naqurney from U Mass will be 368-5050. interested are welcome. the guest speaker. 2-3:15, 536 Ewing. Friday March 4 Folk Dancing - 8:30 to 11 p.m., Operation Research Seminar - Prof. Gymnastics - Gymnastics Club prac­ Daugherty Hall. UD Folk Dance Club. Gymnastics -Gymnastics Club prac­ Combinations Seminar - Prof. Ronald Jochem Zowe from University of tice, 3-5 p.m ., Carpenter Sports Beginners welcenne, no partner tice, 3-5 p.m., Car.penter Sports Baker, 3:30-4:30, 536 Ewjng. Bayreuth. 3:3Q-5 :00, 536 Ewing. Building. needed. · ..,_ Building.

We Accept Mon.-Thurs. MC, VISA & 9 a.m.-8 p.m. ... classifieds Fri. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. WSFS Sat. continued from page 27 Want to know where the hot spots, local bars Personal and activities of Spring Break in Florida are? 9 a_m,-5:30 p.m. Sig Ep is selling the Breakers Guide for $3.00 Checks OPEN Sun. at the Student Center March 9, 10, and 11 or call 453-9980. 11 :30 a.m.- 5 p.m. SPRINGSTEEN TICKETS - 4 tickets for sale. Good seats. March 8 at the Spectrum. WORK - STUDY STUDENTS are needed to Call 368-2079. work as monitors in Harrington and Kent Study Halls. Weeknights only - plenty of time ATTN: P .T. INTERESTSTUDENTSSweat­ to study. If work-study is part of your finan­ shirt will be sold starting Mon. March 7. If in­ cial aid package call 451-2773 or pick up an ap­ • 68 EAST MAIN STREET • NEWARK, DELAWARE 19711 terested contact P.T. Club in 053 McKinly. plication in 211 Student Center. OPEN: MON.-THURS. 9-8 • FRI. 9-9 • SAT. 9-5:30 • SUN. 1 1:30-5 Get involved . . .help your peers ...meet Want to know where the hot spots, local bars other people. Applications available for Peer and activities of Spring Break in Florida are? Counselor positions from Feb. 29 to March 18. Sig Ep is selling the Breakers Guide for $3.00 Pick-up applications at the Center for at the Student Center March 9, 10, and 11 or Counseling and Student Development, above call 453-9980. the bookstore. Application deadline is March MEN'S AND LADIES Automatic 23. WORK - STUDY STUDENTS are needed to work as monitors in Harrington and Kent GUYS! PLANNED PARENTHOOD is for Study Halls. Weeknights only - plenty of time FOLDI~G UMBRELLAS you, too. VD tests, treatment. Birth control. to study. If work-study is part of your finan­ HIV tests and counseling. For appointment: cial aid package call 451-Z773 or pick up an ap­ 731-7801. plication in 211 Student Center. PLANNED PARENTHOOD offer: Birth con­ Going to Spring Break? Sig Ep is selling trol for MEN AND WOMEN. FREE pregnan­ Breaker 's Guide, a quality magazine full of cy tests. NON-JUDGMENTAL pregnancy articles, n!aps and guides to Florid's Spring $2.77 WITH THIS COUPON counseling. Abortion. VD test, treatment. 140 Break activities at Daytona, the Keys, etc. E . Delaware Ave. Call 731-7801 for appoint­ Get yours for $3.00 at the Student Center ment. CONFIDENTIAL. AFFORDABLE. March 9, 10 and 11. "Need extra money? Be an Avon Represen­ Interested in swordS and how to use them tative. Several dorms still available." Call legally? Call Jennifer about new U.D. FEN­ POCKET T-SHIRTS 453-1882. CING CLUB! 738-1411. $13.00 HAIRSTYLE - NOW $6.25 FLAT­ Magic T-shirts and Boxers proudly announces SML to X-Large Many Colors S1ight Irs TOPS SAME PRICE. NEWARK'S ONLY its spring line of clothing: Hen's Gym Tank BARBER-STYLIST WE CUT, WET, DRYER­ Tops and Sweatshirts, Certified Barhopper T­ STYLE. SCISSORS PALACE 16 ACADEMY shirts, Delaware Republic T-shirts, Delaware ST. 368-1306. Party Animal Boxer Shorts and Long Boxers, Delaware Boxer Pants. We will be in the Stu· SUMMER J OBS FAIR March 14, 1988 I p.m. dent Center March 7, 14 and 21 from 12-5 p.m. · 4 p.m. Rodney and Ewing rooms Student Come by and get the best in Delaware $1.77 : enter . a pparel. • • • .unzv. athletes DELAWARE FIGHTIN' BLUE HEN continued from page 4 " I think the professors don't understand the time athletes SWEATSHIRT with athletes about problems spend playing games," said they've been having with Glenn Oneidas (AS 90), a Regularly 19.99 SAVE% PRICE course work and scheduling." member of the baseball team. Jordan said athletes have "And [the professors] don't trouble attending help sessions give you enough time to make for their classes because the up the work missed." sessions are held at the same Some schools have been ac­ only S9.99 times as some of the teams' cused of padding their athletes practices. grades or putting them in PERFECT QUALITY • QUANTITIES LIMITED • SIZES SML to X·LG " I don't think athletes have classes that are easier than more problems academically others to complete. than most students," she said. Johnson said he had never "I think they have unique pro­ heard of those practices occur­ MEN'S and LADIES' blems and they have some ring at the university. "I hope things to juggle that most not," Johnson said about SWEATSHORTS other students don't." special consideration to Long road trips and extra athletes. "That's what Slight Irs time outside practice put separates Delaware from strains on athletes and their other institutions. attempt to complete course " All our athletes are requirements. students first," he added. only $2.99 Wanted: CROWN CORNING 24°/o LEAD CRYSTAL GLASSWARE Student editorial cartoonist. Great • Champagne • Wine • Tumblers. opportunity for a talented, incisive SET OF 4 erson to develop design and editorial skills. Inquire at The Review office; B-1 Student Center. 451-2771. COMPARE AT $19.99 SET ------~------March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 21

Professors' progenies admit it's all .relative by ·Kristin Calhoun and grant you this one favor. "Dad, can I borrow the car Staff Reporter You turn the corner, you see tonight?" You're walking up the stairs his office door. Stop. Compose · College professors' kids - in Smith Hall, wondering if yourself. Smile. Knock. they have it made, right? your appointment is going to "Come in." . What could be better than go well- if the professor will "Hi." receiving free university tui­ understand your point of view "Hello." tion, the choicest of dorm rooms and the recognition of other professors? Not much. Especially in the situation that Bruce Finnie Jr. (AS 90) encountered. "I was late for -drop/add my first semester THE REVIEW/ Eric freshman year. I didn't get in Quinn Kerrane (AS 89) concedes there are advantages to hav­ there until about 11 a.m.," ing a father, Dr. Kevin Kerrane, who is a university professor. recalled the son of English professor, Dr. Bruce Finnie. [to the university] for free," Winter Session,-my professor "There was a huge line and said Holly Hynes (NU 91). would always turn to me with they were trying to close up for "It's basically my parents a question about political lunch. There was a professor working hard to {>ay for their science, since that's my dad's standing by the door who knew tuition." · department,'' explained my dad and he was telling However, such a benefit is Jamie Diener (AS 90). everyone that all of the classes not taken for granted by its "I suppose that if my dad were filled and to just go on recipients, according to Dr. was a gourmet chef, the pro­ home. But he tugged on my Larry Peterson of the music fessor would have been asking sleeve and sort of pushed me department. "I know of some me how to make an omelet behind him, so I went in the professors who have taken a during classtime." door. I got the class." lower salary for that When choosing courses, Some children of college [reason]," he noted. some professorial progenies professors try to keep a low On the flip side of these overhear disparaging profile on campus because seemingly positve aspects of remarks concerning their other students sometimes being professorially spawned, parents' classes. THE REVI Eric have a bad attitude toward exist some awkward "Some people ...say not to His son's free tuition is a fringe benefit of the job for Dr. Larry them. moments. continued to page 24 Peterson, an associate professor of music. ''I think it stinks that they go "In the class I had over Comedy Cabaret cracks Bacchus by Rachel Newman Copy Editor Three men gathered in a dark room Friday night with one common goal - to induce laughter. Comedians Rocky Wilson, John Selletti and Jim Carroll were the featured performers ~ at the Comedy Cabaret held in the Bacchus Room of the Stu­ dent Center. Although the show started almost an hour late, the crowd's enthusiasm could not be subdued as the audience members clapped in unison for the program to begin. Following._a brief tribute to ing the bars/And stealing the cars/In my hometown," to an white and ugly women, Wilson, the open­ acted out each, telling the ing act, moved ·~n to perform enthusiastic audience of over musical parodies of artists 200 people. timeless tale of Jack and Jill ranging from Janet Jackson to By the way, he's a decent to an audience-supplied Bruce Springsteen. singer. background of "amens" and Wilson gave an excellent Wilson went on to make a "hallelujahs." rendition of Springsteen's "My somewhat obscure social com­ Selletti, who is · blind, ap­ Hometown," altered to fit the mentary by portraying a drug­ peared on stage next, along background of someone from free urine dealer. He then with a Seeing Eye Dog, pencils the ghetto. moved smoothly into an imita­ and a saxophone. His handicap He crooned, "Plenty of tion of a rapping Jesse became the target of many Photos by Fletcher Chambf!rs (From left) John Selletti, Rocky Wilson and Jim Carroll were drugs/They're sold by the Jackson. continued to page 24 • thugs/In my hometown/Robb- He wound up his act com- the headliners of Friday night's hilarious Comedy Cabaret. Page 22 • The Review • March 1, 1988------"If you hear a whistle blow, that there's the other Bruce, Bruce Willis. means you have just enough time to Feature .Forum Yes, that obnoxious · king of kiss your sweet a-- goodbye." "Moonlighting" madness. Then, we Words to the wise from an acquain- have good ol' Blue Eyes himself, Frank ~n~~m~ekom~~m,N.J.------~Mtra .( Doo't~~eme ,b~Frnnk home of the Salem Nuclear Power . could be perhaps the coolest man Plant. NO _EX 1t alive.) And, then, possibly my favorite And, she could have been expressing heavy-metal, long-haired, rock-'n'-roll ~~::""\"'~~-- the most desirable Don't get me wrong. On the surface, blems of the state causes a New wonder, Jon Bon Jovi. (Just a touch of . reason to have a New Jersey seems like a peachy-keen Jerseyan to take offense. But, then sarcasm there.) perm anent place. It's got Atlantic City, Great again, how can you expect to serious- Oh, by the way, where' are these ski­ residence in the Adventure, and easy access to ly talk to someone who uses a turnpike ing and weekend retreatS'-fve been glowing Garden Philadelphia and . The exit number for an address'? hearing about'? Skiing down a slope of State. If the state state has even spawned some wonder- It's a shame what has happened to frozen acid rain scares me. And the does happen to ful people in its time- among them, New Jersey- especially the shore. I threat of camping near buried nuclear have a massive several of my closest friends and one used to frequent the beaches there (I'm waste is enough to keep me home. But, nuclear meltdown, of the best roommates a girl could hope still waiting for the after-effects) and I guess it doesn't matter anyway. If at least New for. I happen to agree that they seem to be I'm going to ski, I'll go to the Poconos; Jerseyans wouldn't There even happen to be charming the nicest around. However, Jersey like the New Jerseyans do. have to deal with suburban towns - such as Haddon- beaches, still a big tourist attraction, Of course there's always Atlantic Ci­ Kirsten the effects of The field, WoodburyandRidgewood,justto have become syringe-saturated ty, the Sodom and Gomorrah of the Day After. Death name a few- sprinkled throughout the graveyards for diseased marine life. East Coast. Phillippe would be condemned three-story row homes and Granted, the medical waste that wash- I suppose we can't blame New ins~ntaneous. housing projects. I'd even bet that ed up on the beaches last summer was Jerseyans for being loyal to their state. Meanwhile, thousands and Jersey is home to some fabulous New York's "crap" (for lack of a bet- After all, who else would be'? thousands of innocent Delawareans historic sites. I just haven't seen or ter word), but it's still New Jersey's Well,Ineversaidmyownlittlestate and Pennsylvanians would haye to hob- heard of any yet. problem. · was an utopian paradise. Those of us ble-around on nuclear-infested appen- But, below the surface (probably a And Bruce Springsteen'? A misguid- from Delaware have a New Jersey all dages, searching the contaminated couple of feet or so, where the glowing ed features editor once described the our own. We call it Delaware City. We countryside for scraps of food. (Maybe nuclear sludge flows freely), New man as the ''patron saint of New know it's there, but we don't try to hide a Jersey tomato'?) Jersey is becoming a toxic wasteland. Jersey." Does that mean Camden is it - it's too big. Ah, New Jersey! A state that, tome, The Garden State is nota place I'd care the Mecca of the East Coast'? Give me Personally,·! think Delaware City is is too close for comfort. A state that to plant my next horticultural experi- a break. I mean, Bruce is a great enter- a piece of New Jersey that broke off, will eventually be condemned by the ment. Who cares if a Jersey tomato tainer, or so I've heard. But, besides floated down the Delaware River, and federal government. A state I can looks and, admittedly, tastes good if its that, he's got mediocre looks and a relocated itself near our precious state. smell when I hit the toll gates at the going to make your future offspring a half-decent singing voice. What's it But that's beside the point. Delaware Memorial Bridge. (What is funny shade of blue'? take to be a saint in New Jersey'? A lit- that undistinguishable smell anyway'?) Those who hail from Jersey remain tle bit of money and a sexy wife'? New Jersey- the sights, the sounds, blissfully unaware of the faults of their Well, besides Bruce, who else does Kirsten Phillippe is the assistant the smells. homeland. Just discussing the pro- New Jersey have to offer'? First, features editor of The Review: ------~---March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 23 Grammy Grab Bag Artists vie for music industry's top honors by Chuck Arnold. Managing Editor And the winner is ... . Anybody's pick, for now at least. The 30th annual Grammy Awards, to be televised live (CBS, 8 p.m.) tomorrow night from New York's ritzy Radio City Music Hall, promise to leave no envelope unopened, so here's my chance to sign, seal and lick my picks. • Record of the year. The nominees are Steve THE FACT IS••• Winwood's "Back in the High March is Women's History Month Life," Paul Simon's "Graceland," U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," Los Lobos' "La Bamba" and Suzanne Vega's Septem~er, 1872- six women attended " Luka." lectures and recitations as freshmen with From a disappointing field, my pick is "Luka," but those male students at Delaware College. crazy "La Bamba" guys will SOURCE: Blue Hen Messenger, January 1978 probably win the top spoils. Belinda Carlisle, Grammy-nominated for best pop vocal per­ • Album of the year. formance, female, will probably lose to Whitney Houston. In this category, the Na­ and Michael Jackson's Bad. rans in a tight race: Sting, tional Academy of Recording My pick: Prince's Sign o' the Elton John and AI Jarreau. Arts and Sciences (alias, The Times. The voters didn't • Best pop vocal perfor- June 24, 1885 - The Board of Trustees of Voters) touched on just about crown him for Purple Rain in mance, female. Delaware College voted 13 to 8 to abolish every conceivable pop musical 1985, and they won't commit What would any !llusic genre, from the raw funk of the same act oftreason twice. awards show be Without coeducation. Prince's Sign o' the Times and • Best pop vocal perfor- Whitney Houston sashaying to SOURCE: The University of Delaware: A History, 1986 the religious rock of U2's The mance, male. the stage in sequins? Maybe Joshua Tree to Trio, the coun­ This Grammy should go to next year we'll be lucky try collaboration of Emmylou Bruce Springsteen (my pick) enough to find out. My pick: Harris, Dolly Parton and Lin­ for "Brilliant Disguise," but Suzanne Vega for "Luka." COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN da Ronstadt. Also nominated: the winner will be "Bad," as in continued to page zs Whitney Houston's Whitney Too Many Nose Jobs. The also-

Signta Tau Delta The National English Honor Society will hold its first meeting on Tuesday, March 1 6:30p.m. 036 Memorial The meeting is mandatory for all members. Prospective members are welcome. Read News Look in The Review, Page 24 • The Review • March 1,1988------... Comedy Cabaret cracks up Student Center crowd the volume and face the dog with some less-than-amazing, Carroll remembered. "[It dating as, "the early part of con t inued from page 21 toward the TV." yet much-appreciated, magic was] usually the same kid who dating when the guy still has jokes throughout his The dog, whom Selletti af­ feats as well as dog tricks. He forgot it was Picture Day manners." monologue. fectionately referred to as then l}anded the stage over to every year." Carroll concluded his Selletti, who wore dark Herpes, remained calm and Carroll. He lamented the memory of routine with a number of first­ glasses, shared with the au­ stationary throughout the en­ Sporting a shirt, tie and Jor­ his mother making him wear rate celebrity impersonations. dience painful .college tire performance. Herpes dache jeans, Carroll went into Sears Toughskins when he was The most notable one was that memories of his roommate didn't even blink an eyelid a lengthy dissertation of his a child. "[Toughskins are] the of Jack Nicholson:who he im­ taking his braille homework when his master recalled, elementary school days. He only pants in the world that ac­ itated with a .baldihg wig, and changing all the answers "One time we were walking reminisced about picki,ng out tually make a noise when you squinty eyes and a protruding by walking on the text with down the street and [the dog] lunch boxes for school and walk," he told the audience. belly: cleats. saw a sign saying, 'Wet ce­ sniffing ditto-copy ink. Carroll eventually began a All in all, the Comedy "I do watch television," ment,' so he did." "They always made me sit discourse on relationships. He Cabaret, sponsored by the Stu- . Selletti conceded. "I turn up Selletti completed his act next to the guy who ate paste,'' defined the "cutesy" stage of dent Program Association, of- · fered an engaging evening, complete with giggles, guf­ faws and a dog named Herpes . . . .profs' kids

continued f.-om page 21 • take a class with Dr. Peterson, and I say, 'Hey, that's my dad,' " remarked Wes Peter­ son (AS 89 ). But the good outweighs the bad, according to these facul- ty offspring. ' "You can find ways of going around [university] bureaucracy - you know how to get what you want," said Joel Sandler (AS 90 ), son of Dr. Stanley Sandler of the chemical engineering depart­ ment. "If not, ask Dad." " One time, I got a parking ticket, so I went up to the office and told them who my dad was," Peterson recalled. "They forgot about the ticket." "Some of my professors know my dad," said Quinn Kerrane (AS 89). "It gives us a basis for a relationship and some of them are more friendly. "When you're in a lecture hall · with 300 students, ( sometimes it's nice to have a Nothing adds up like the great taste fact about yourself that of Domino's Pizza®. In fact, we ..- Ca.ll us. DOMINO'S . separates you from the guarantee it. If you're not happy with Newark '' PIZZA crowd,'' added the daughter of your pizza for any reason, we'll bring 366-7630 DEUVERS® the English department's Dr. you another pizza or a full refund.* 232 E. Cleveland Ave. , Kevin Kerrane. We al~o guarantee to deliver your hot, FREE. One of the professors' delicious pizza in 30 minutes or less. Open for lunch children conceded that when If we're late, you get $3.00 off your 11 AM-1 AM Sun.-Thurs. his father finishes creating a order. · 11 AM-2 AM Fri. & Sat. test for his students, he remarks, "Boy, I'm glad I'm So what are you waiting for? Call Our drivers carry less not taking this exam." Domino's Pizza today! than $20.00. Surprisingly, interest in or Limited delivery area. acknowledgement of the folks' *Check your local store for guarantee details. © 1988 Domino's Pizza, Inc. Ill work may not always rank high with some profs' kids. r------r-~------T------, · Finnie speculated, "I think [my father] teaches 'Great Double deal Dinner for four $2.00 off American Writers' and some Present this coupon to receive Present this coupon to receive a Present this coupon to receive a kind of medieval crap. two 12" regular cheese pizzas 16" large two-item pizza and 16" large one-item pizza and "One of the first things that for just $8:88. four 16 oz. bottles of Coke® for four 12 oz. cans of Coke® for my dad said to me was, only $10.40. only $10.40. 'Bruce, don't ever take my One coupon per pizza. Not good class.' " One coupon per pizza. Not good . One coupon per pizza. Not good "My dad is a totally dif­ with any other offer. Includes ferent person when he is lec­ rebate of sales tax if applicable. with any other offer. Includes with any other offer. Includes ~ Expires: 4/4/88 rebate of sales tax if applicable. rebate of sales tax if applicable. turing in front of a class," Ker­ Expires: 4/4/88 , Expires: 4/4/88 · rane observed. "He is a lot inore charismatic and funny in Safe, Friendly, Free Delivery front of class. At home he's Safe, Friendly, Free Delivery Safe, Friendly, Free ~elivery a just ~ad.' : · You l~ave your appointment with your professor over­ whelmed by frustration, long­ ing to take the matter to a I. Ill. ® higher authority. ------.a.------.1.~------"Hello, Mom?"

·. ------:------March 1, 1988 • The Review • Page 25 ... Grammy ~s Grab Bag continued from page 23 •. tist; Bruce Springsteen for • Best rock performance by best rock vocal performance 'a duo or group with vocal.· (male or female);. Stevie U2, my pick, will take this Wonder for best R&B vocal trophy home for The Joshua performance, male; Aretha Tree, but this may be the only Franklin and George Michael award the Irish band'wins if for best R&B performance by the Academy's older members a duo or group with vocal ; vote for maturity over mCl.S$ Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno appeal. for producer of the year; and Random picks: Vega's Jackson for best live perfor­ NEWARK'S FINEST IT ALlAN EATERY "Luka" for song of the year; mance ("Man in the Mirror") Jody Watley for best new ar- of the 1988 Grammy Awards. Pasta - Pizza - Salads - Deserts Standard Prices at the Bar WE'RE NOTONLVTHEAREA'S LARGEST Every Day! Musical Service Center ... for Guitars&Amps We SELL NEW, USED & STROHS $.65 MOLSON $}.00 ELECTRONICS & VINTAGE GUITARS and $}.45 *a COMPLETE LINE of ACCESSORIES BUD $.95 HEINEKEN M-F 10-8 S 10-4 Smiles fromUotD 368-1104 Peddlers Village Newark De. LITE $.95 BECKS $}.45 MICHELOB S.95 BASS ALE SI.75 Mr. Douglas Beauty Spa COORS, by the Mug - 95~ NEW HOURS II AM - I2 PM DAILY Hillcrry's Gourmet Coffees are now available at Sbarro's 733-0828 . MAIN & ACADEMY STREETS 44 E. MAIN STREET 731-2100 Perm $22 Manicure $8 · / Pedicure w/Whirlpool bath $20.,. Haircut $10 Tanning Facial & Body Massages Available STOP IN FOR OTHER GREAT SAVINGS

1 · * l United Parcel · ~service is seeking part-time applicants for loading-unloading positions in its Newark facility. Rate is saoo per hour Morning and Evening shifts: 5:00-ROO AM, Monday-Friday '1. . 5:3£k.9:00 PM, Monday-Friday (Shift times approximate) Apply in Person Mon., Mar. 7 9:30 AM or 2:30 PM 325 Ruthar Drive (turn right off the Kirkwood Highway Harmony Industrial Park) EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/ F Page 26 • The Review • March 1, 1988------Comics • BLOOM COUNTY -Berke Breathed YEAH. MTMY n'V6lle 15 K/Nt1A NO . TH6 t.E550N 8£1/'/&, 57TCI«:KY.. . 5ai?TA IS ~71/RCHY. TtJ /?flit. 9!1 Jf/ST 5TIIKCHY.. YA KM'N _-; ftJ!? HIIVIN& €//TeN AN fJN~R Rlf'E \ MNf/NII . '

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IIIIFAII- By GARY LARSON

• i -sure. I'm a crea1ure - and I can accept "No, wait! That's not Uncle Floyd! Who is that? ... Although troubled as a child, Zorro, as Is well that - but lately H seems I've been Crlmony, I think It's just an air bubble!" · known, ultimately found his niche In history. ( . developing lnlo a miserable creature." i ------March I, 1988 • The Review • Page 27

Th" Review Classified Classified deadlines are Tuesday at 3 p.m. for Friday issues and Frt B-1 Student Center day at:l p.m. for Tuesda)' issues. For the first tne words. $5 minumum for non-students. $2 for students with 10. Then 20 cents every ~ord Newark, DE 19716 Classifieds thereafter.

announcements TELEMARKETING: Easy part time job. RUSH ATO MARCH 9 FROM 8- 10 P.M. IN Phi.Sig wishes Pika a happy Founder's Day lost and found $4.00-5.50 to start for those who qualify. Start THE STUDENT CENTER'S RODNEY now, Ask about the $100 Spring Break Bonus. ROOM. Phi Sig Pledges- Not For Long ! We are ex­ ATTENTION COMMUNICATION, PUBLIC LOST: Guess jean jacket at Phi Tau Fri 19th Call Dave, 731-2973, M-F: 9a.m.-9p.m. cited to welcome you into the RE;LATIONS. ENGLISH, MARKETING AND - w/ yellow military ribbon on pocket - sen­ RUSH ATO. .MARCH 7 IN THE EWING sisterhood. . .and the good times only con­ ADVERTISING MAJORS! Make yourself timental value- Call Stacy 366-9290. Reward. Child Care - Director needed for afterschool ROOM OF THE STUDENT CENTER 7 - 10 tinue. .love, the Phi Sig sisters. more marketable with a summer internship program in Newark. 17-20 hours per week. P.M. that offers PR-related experience and pay. LOST: black P ILOT'S LOG BOOK, near Call 658-4258. Mark March 11 on your calendar- it's STU­ Application deadline-March 23. For applica­ Carpenter Sports Center on 2/ 12/88, of value RUSH ATO, MARCH 10 IN THE RODNEY DENT CENTER NIGHT 17. tions and information, call 451 -2341. to owner, offering REWARD of$40, call Steve Vet Hospital has position available for in­ ROOM OF THE STUDENT CENTER 8 - 10 at 454-8142 or 451-6602. terested student as receptionist/assistant, P .M.... YOU'VE SEEN THE REST, NOW CONGRATULATIONS TO THE NEWLY IN­ EUROPE, $29.50 ADA Y: Visit 7 countries by 15-30 hrs/ wk, Spring/Summer or year round. RUSH THE BEST. DUCTED PLEDGES OF GAMMA SIGMA bus, camp at night. Contact your travel agent LOST : Sharp calculator in PS202 lab rm. 101/ Contact Aston Veterinary Hospital, 3151 Pen­ SIGMA! or TRADEWIND TRA YELLERS CLUB, Wed. Please contact Barb, 738-1859. nel Rd., Media, PA 19063. For detail, (215) RUSH ALPHA TAU OMEGA MARCH 8, 7-10 (212) 832-9072 494-5800. P .M. RODNEY ROOM OF STUDENT To the girls in B-1 and 3 - here's to a party­ FOUND: A womans scarf, pink, approx. 4ft. CENTER. YOU'VE SEEN THE REST SO ing senior year in OUR new house! Robin­ Public Relations Student Society of America long with fringed ends. Found in !OJ Kirkbride Restaurant halp: Cook full time and waitper­ COME RUSH THE BEST. reality sets in with thoughts of an extra meetings: Wednesdays 6p.m. 206 Kirkbride. after Soc. class. Call 7:!8-8612. son lunch Mon-Fri. Mikasa Japanese GREAT NEWS KATHY WIDDER: YOU'RE semester- yo6 won't be alone. Adios- J. Members and non-members welcome! Restaurant. 3602 Kirkwood Hwy. 995-8905. - 21 ! HAPPY BIRTHDAY FROM US. LOST : Black wool long coat from Paper Mi ll RICH AND ADAM - Does Hennigan's deliver ATTENTION EQUESTRIANS' We have Apts. Building I. Friday night. Iffound, please Two rooms for rent $160 • utilities - in lovely JAMES CORDREY- you do not deserve a at 2 a.m.? P .S. Watch out for "C!" TONS of m&m 's to sell. 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The UD EQUESTRIAN TEAM is hosting ...the Annual Intercollegiate Horse Rent-a-van. U-2 move cheaply. No cows NEW ENGLAND BROTHER/SISTER Attention! Good-looking, fun-loving male Room Available Immediately on Madison Show on March 13. RIDERS: Get your spon­ please. Jern 454-1136. CAMPS - /1, 3/3 Come see what we're all about. To the brothers of AEPi, We hope you present 7:!7-8738 openings; also, Archery, Riflery and Bikmg; the " no sex" until marriage option. Signed a PULSATIONS on Thursday 3/3, all you need other openings include Performing Arts, Fine group of concerned students Room available in house - woman preferred. Here's you chance! Gain experience. Earn IS $10 to get m, EVERYTHING INSIDE IS Arts, Yearbook, Photography Video, Cook­ $1900. Apply for summer paid internship. Ap­ FREE, tickets for bus sold by senior class for Walk to campus. $125/mo. plus 1/4 utilities, ing, Sewing, Rollerskating, Rocketry, Ropes, Mike Craig- I thought I was your little goat! security deposit. 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The American"------Express•------~----~~ Card can play a starring role team," she said. virtually anywhere you shop, from 1\Jlsa to Thailand. "If nothing else, we ran well," she explained. "It Whether you're buying a 1V or aT-shirt. So during college wasn't like we went in there and after, it's the perfect way to pay for just about and fell apart. We were beaten everything you'll want. by two better teams. How to get the Card now. "For the most part, some College is the first sign of success. And because we believe kids ran faster or as fast as in your potential, we've made it easier to get the American they have been running all Express Card right now. Whether you're a freshman, senior year," McGrath-Powell or grad student, look into our new automatic approval continued. offers. For details, pick up an application on campus. Or "So, they were up to wher(! calll-800-TIIE-CARD and ask for a student application. they should be, they just plac­ ed behind other people who The American Express Carel were a little faster than they Don't Leave School Without It~ were," she said. NOVELTYY ITEIIS \ 'MUGS 'CUPS ?~? 'GLASSES ..·,/' .. 'KEY CHAINS 'PENCILS YOUR 'PENS LOGO 'BOTTlE· OPENE~ HERE 'KOOLIES .., 'FRISBEES • 'KAZOOS ' AND A WHOLE LOT MORE! New ·@ Image . . Screen Printing . 400 Elkton Rd. Newark 738-6824 ~ • Master Card and • Visa • IISEIMCES Accepted Hens limp ·into E CC tourney Drexel University Dragons. miss a match for the first time Delaware's Dan Neff step- season by saying, "I can't ta.ke by David B. Raskin· Delaware fell to 4-11 for the thisseasonwithashoulderin- ped onto the mat and anythingawayfromourteam. Staff Reporter season, with an 0-5 East Coast jury, forcing a ' number of swamped Drexel's Bill Ward, We worked hard." The best-kept secret on cam­ Conference record. The no-win moves in weight class. pinning the 158-pounder at The coach also noted that pus crawled out of hiding Fri­ ECC record is Delaware's first "Mike Roslon being out 3:37. Neff, finishing at 13-2 for the wrestling team had tried to day night at the Field House conference shutout since hurts," assistant coach Loren the year, seized control early keep a low profile through and was summarily beaten 1983-84, when the Hens went Kline said. "He had been and never relinquished it what Billy thought was a terri­ dead. 0-6. wrestling real well." throughout the match. bleyear.lnf~ct,theDelaware . In a meet marked by several Attendance was sparse, In the 118-pound class, "The guy was pretty tough," grapplers' records were not in- close calls, the Delaware much to the honest delight of Delaware's Andy Bloch was Neff said. "It was a good - eluded in the meet's program wrestling team closed out its the Delaware squad, embar­ able to close his regular season match. I did it up right." because the team found them regular season Friday night rassed over a poor season. with a 5-6 record by pinning Neff, the pre-season pick as em_barrassing. with a 25-18 loss to the Mike Roslon was forced to Drexel's Jeff Foor in 2:18. Delaware's top wrestler, was Billysummedupthe1987-88 - described by coach Paul Billy season in two words: "A Three-time ECC champion as having "looked the sharpest nightmare. '' Paul Zarbatany of Drexel he had all year," against Looking ahead to next earned a technical fall at 126 Ward. season, Billy foresaw an pounds over Delaware's Tim Going into the ECC tourna- equally dismal future. "Keith Appel. ment, Neff plans to "just train Neff would have developed Zarbatany completely hard this week and work it well. Mario Durso is a transfer dominated the match, winning up . ' ' from Old Dominion who should 19-2. Ray McAlonan, wrestling in help ,at 126." The match against Zar­ the unaccustomed 190-pound On recruiting, Billy said, batany was the first time that class, was able to defeat Drex- "There are a lot of guys walk­ Appel had not been pinned this el's Jeff Gabler in a 7-4 ing around that owe me." year. Appel will carry a record decision . The Hens will spend this of o-5 into the ECC tournament Coach Paul Billy awarded week preparing for the ECC this week at Lafayette. McAlonan "Wrestler of the Wrestling Tournament, which Year" honors for his perfor- . will be held at Lafayette this In a match that awakened mance against Gabler. weekend. the sparse crowd, Delaware's McAlonan, usually a The winners at each weight Chris Wagner (4-5) put up a 167 -pounder, boosted his class plus one "wild card" will strong fight before being record to 4-12-1 for the season. advance to the NCAA Tourna­ soundly d~feated by Drexel's After the meet, a downcast ment at Iowa State, March Hen Ray McAlonan has his hands full with Drexel's Jeff Gabler. Jerry Hulbert, 16-3. coach Billy reviewed the 17-19.

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March 2, 3, 4 10 am-4 pm Bookstore Concourse Wednesday, Thursday & Friday Deposit Required • C£. ucker and ·Chiz :· A class act Blessings. on the all-time NCAA assist list. "I feel ing n6.6 ppg this season). He has been They are quiet, unobtrusive. When I'm blessed. particularly tough the last two weeks. you are riding as high as the Delaware "I'm glad everything worked out the ~eading the Hens in sconng five of the men's basketball team is nght now. way it did. It shows that hard work has last seven games. following Saturday's 79-67 overpower­ tts rewards - that good things will But it has been far from clear satl­ ing of a double-barrelled Lehigh come to you." ing for the 6-foot-4 guard. His uncle, University squad, subtle things like For the five seniors, this iS true. Louis Tucker, died two Wef!ks ago in an blessings can get lost in the forest of After three years of irrepressible automobile accident. Wh'ereas most high-fives flying mediocrity they have seen their hours athletes' play would suffer after such about. of hard work transformed into a a trauma - a recent example being But teams that Delaware record for most wins in a U.S. speedskater Dan Jansen - forget about bless­ season ( 19). Amazingly, this team is Tucker has 'since excelled on the ings lose their drawing serious consideration as a basketball court. perspective. favorite in the ECC tournament next "Life has to go on," Tucker said Without perspec­ weekend. philosophically. "There is a period of tive, those forests Chisholm, though, admitted he once mourning and everything, but of high-fives get cut thought he might have made a Small everyone's life must go on. down quicker than Blunder in coming to Newark. " When a tragedy happens in your a pulpit full of'----~~--· "I did after my sophomore year," life, it makes you look around and see television K • Chisholm said. ''but there was more to that you should be thankful for all the evangelists. evtn Delaware than just basketball. things you can do. [You should] be Which is why this Donahue "My dad was the main person tell­ thankful that you're alive and can play team may do ing me, 'Hey, the NBA is a once-in-a­ basketball, because there are millions something a Delaware men's basket­ lifetime ... that it's definitely not of people out there who would love to ball team has not done in eight years guaranteed. So your main objective is be in your shoes. - win an East Coast Conference tour­ to get an education. Academically, ''There are people out there who nament game. Delaware is the best thing for you. It's can't even dribble a basketball, who This is a team that counts its close to home. You have good things can't even walk. It'makes you realize blessings. going for you. You can't ask for more how fortunate you are." Take, for example, Taurence than you have now.' About the team, Tucker said, "We've Chisholm. The 5-foot-6 senior turned in "I looked at it that way and I'm here had our share of adversities, but we've one of his everywhere-at-once perfor­ now. hung in there. I think this team is mances (17 points, 10 assists, five "It feels good," Chisholm concluded. strong, not only in talent, but in steals, six rebounds) in his final game "I'm about to graduate. We had a good character also. at Delaware Field House. All in all, he senior year. It's like everything is go­ "When things don't go our way," made life miserable for his Lehigh op­ ing in the right direction." Tucker said. "we ha,ve a tendency to ponent, Mike Layer. Fellow senior and shooting guard get tougher. I think this team is bless­ Afterward, Delaware's school­ Tony Tucker has also been moving in ed with a lot of character." pr.oclaimed Small Wonder looked back the right direction. Since transferring · As is its backcourt, which is a major upon this season. last season from the University of reason to expect the blessings to con­ "This was definitely the most satis­ Rhode Island to Delaware - where he tinue into the ECC tournament. THE REVIEW/ Dan Della Piazza fying year; you couldn't ask for more," was state high school scoring cham­ Kevin Donahue is the editor in chief Tony Tucker attempts a slam. sai.d Chisholm, who is currently third pion - Tucker has led the team in scor- of The Review. • 'Q' • Scoring his way to the NBA Where is Daren Queenan going to be • For the week ending, January 10, on June 28? 1988, Queenan was named Sports Il­ He'll be a king couch potato glued in lustrated Player of the Week. He front of the groove tube. "Either that averaged 35.0 ppg (including back-to­ or I'll be out having a good time," he hack 40 or more point performances) said. and 8.3 rpg. What's the occasion? Well, June 28 • He was named ECC Player of the is the day of the NBA draft and Week a total of five times, including Queenan is not like­ four of the first six weeks. Queenan ly to be overlooked. leads the conference in scoring and is ''I think my second in rebounding (10.1 rpg). chances to get • In 114 career games, Queenan has drafted are pretty scored in double figures 111 times, 21 good," Queenan or more points in 72 contests, and 30 or said. "All I have to more, 21 times. He has reached double do is put hard work figures in both scoring and rebounding into it and I'll have 39 times in his career. a pretty good shot. The list goes on. Queenan has been I have my good driving statisticians crazy for the past points, I just have four seasons· and he's made Lehigh's to work on some of media guide almost as thick as a Keith my weaknesses in telephone book. . vi order to make it to Even Queenan himself admits that I(' amer that level." he's gone way beyond his expectations. The 6-foot-5 Lehigh University for­ "By no means did I ever think I'd be ward has worked so hard on his college putting up these kind of numbers," he game that he has virtually perfected it. said. "When I came to Lehigh I just His statistics don't lie: thought I'd be a solid contributor, or • He is currently second in the nation maybe a starter who'd make an im­ in scoring (behind Hersey Hawkins of pact.'' Bradley), averaging 28.8 points per Queenan's impact on the Engineer game. squad is overwhelming, • His 2,603 cateer points ranks 16th He holds virtually all Lehigh scoring on the ..all-time Division I scoring list. records. Unbelievably, he is only 31 • He's on target to overtake Michael points away from doubling Lehigh's Brooks (LaSalle, 1980) as the top previous career scoring record holder. scorer in East Coast Conference THE Dan a Piazza history. continued to page 28 Lehigh's Daren Queenan is the nation's second leading scorer this year. Delaware shakes Lehigh.jinx Delaware up by only six Hens face Lehigh tonight points. ·· A lesser team might have crumbled with the loss of a ·. in first round of ECCs playmaker like Whitfield, but by Ken Kerschbaumer 10-point region for the entire junior Linda Malouf came in Assistant Sports Editor half, and if not for 57 percent for Whitfield and filled her shooting by Lehigh, the Hens shoes well. The Delaware women's lead would have been much "[Whitfield's fouling out] basketball team was looking greater. was a little bit of a letdown, but for revenge when they played Offensively, Delaware was Linda picked up the slack," Lehigh University on Saturday hitting from outside, inside, said sophomore Debbie Eaves. afternoon. and on the run. By the end of But the threat which Lehigh They found it. the first half, three Hens were posed was not over. The Hens battered the in double figures: Whitfield With 10 minutes left, Lehigh Brown and White black and and sophomore Debbie Eaves took the lead as guard Sherie blue during Delaware's 84-77 with 12 apiece, and center Androlewicz, who led both victory. Sharon Wisler with 10. teams with 23 points, hit a Delaware and Lehigh will By game's end, all five right-side jumper. . meet again tonight at 7:30 starters would be in double Over the next minute, the p.m. in the Field House for the figures. lead changed bands four times first round of the East Coast "If we get balanced scoring, until Robin Stoffel scored Conference tournament. we win," said Whitfield down low off a Malouf pass. "We felt good and really Defensively, the Hens were Then, with three minutes played well," said junior looking to shut down Lehigh left, Malouf decided to score Tracey Robinson, who finish- center Mary Kush, who had 26 six straight points of her own, ed with 10 points and five points against Delaware in the and Lehigh was finished. rebounds. previous meeting. Wisler "It was a big win," said The Hens win was a com- defended admirably against Wisler, "We'll get a little bination of a well-balanced of- the lob down low, and Kush momentum." fense and a physical defens~ was held to only three points. And with the confidence this that controlled the offensive The type of defense team has going into tourney and defensive boards, par- Delaware played was the play, a little is all it will need. ticularly in the first half. same used against almost all After. losing to Lehigh eight teams. If Lehigh scored, straight times, including an Delaware would play zone, if FOUL SHOTS: Correction: 84-72 slaughter in Bethlehem Lehigh missed, the Hens The ECC Tournament will be earlier this season, Delaware would play man-to-man. played at Rider College on was pumped for the game and Control of the offensive March 4-5 with games starting ready to win. boards, a rare treat for at 6 p.m. on both "We wanted it more than Delaware, played a big part in days. . .Senior Lisa Cano they did," said senior Sue the Hens' 47-36 halftime lead. THE REVIEW/ Dan Della Piazza broke the school record for Whitfield (16 points). Given a second chance on of- Hen Lisa Cano goes in hot pursuit of a loose ball Saturday. free throw percentage in a The flens took immediate fense, Delaware rarely passed season, shooting over 80 per- control of th~ game, and after up the opportunity to score. play. ing outside shots, and with 12 cent. . .Hens' ~6 wins was onlythreemmutt:sofplay.they "Everything was working B~t ' everyt~ing worked minutesleft, Whitfield:-easi- fourth-bestmarkmDelaware were up by etght pomts. for us," said Whitfield, refer- agamst them m the sec'?nd lyon her way to a 20.pomt ~r- history. Del~ware's lead was in the ring to Delaware's first-half half. Delaware started mtss- formance - fouled out With . Whitfield: Playground to playmaker For most third-grade girls, living machfne. No-look passes, a gift for fin- "Play every game as if you're meant across the street from a playground ding the open player, and a great out- to lose it," she said. "This way you would mean extra time on the swings, side shot all make for a fine point qon't take the team too lightly." see-saw, or jungle-gym. guard. But for senior guard Sue Whitfield, Whitfield intends to play basketball Comparisons are nice, and they're after she graduates from Delaware. it gave her a different opportunity - She plans to play in either an in­ a chance to play basketball with the flattering, btit it's the numbers that count. And if it's numbers you want, tramuralleague at the grad school she boys. 1"!!![11111!"!!!!!!'~""--- well, Whitfield has those also. will attend (still to be chosen) or in a "My older!: CYO league. brother is nine years older than Along with being the all-time It's obvious how much she enjoys the me, and he used to Delaware career, single-season, and game of basketball. But to get a full play basketball single game assist holder, Whitfield grasp of her dedication to the game, across the street," has. also never missed a Delaware you have to look back to an incident said Whitfield, of basketball game in her four years of that occurred during her high school Hyattsville, Md. "I play, logging 106 straight. career at Elizabeth Seton High. used to go with him "I'm happy with all of them," said When told by an orthopedic surgeon and hang out." Whitfield about the records, "but the By the end of that she might have to give up basket­ career assist record is most satisfying ball because of a leg injury, Whitfield third-grade, Whit- Ken 'cause that's my job." field found basket- Kerschbaumer walked out of the office, dismissed the diagnosis, and went to the courts to ball to be "fan----~--­ '~I like giving assists - it makes me tastic" and she began playing organiz­ feel good," she added. play. ed basketball in the local Christian While she has accomplished enough While Whitfield will be heading south Youth Organization League. to fill a few books, Whitfield feels her to go to grad school and get closer to Twelve years, and thousands of story would be incomplete without one her intended career in cardiac baskets later, Whitfield is still playing final chapter. rehabilitation, she will definitely carry organized ball - NCAA style - and "I want to win the [East Coast Con­ memories of her basketball days here loving it. at Delaware. And the University of Watching Whitfield play, it is im­ ference Championship] before I leave," said Whitfield, "and I think we Delaware, thanks to the record books, mediately obvious what ·kind of a will definitely remember her. player she is. The 5-foot-6 Physical have a grea't shot." Education major is a scrappy player, When asked for a playing philosophy, All-time assist leader Sue Whitfield. with the flash of Isiah Thomas and the Whitfield doesn't give one. She gives an Ken Kerschbaumer is the assistant durability of a Maytag w~shing attitude. · sports editor of The Review. • Hen wrestlers struggle with Drexel, p. 29 • Women hoopsters finish with fourth-best record ever, p. 31

• Straight from the playgrounds, senior s.ue Whitfield, p. 31 • Men's. basketball backcourt blessed with talent, p. 30 • Meet Lehigh's future NBA standout Daren Queenan, p. 30 ·.....

Hens rock-Lehigh in seas·on finale by Jon Springer Taurence Chisholm, Tony layups, Tucker sank a Sports Editor Tucker, O.J. Gumbs, Steve 16-footer and Elsworth Bowers Jennings and Barry Berger­ converted an offensive re­ Four years of struggling for slapped the Engineers with a bound into his first of three respectability came down to 40 brutal combination of offen­ thundering stuffs. In just 13 minutes Saturday at the Field sive and defensive intensity. minutes, Delaware busted House. .. Offensively, the Hens went open an 18-poiot lead. With emotions high and an to the hoop as well as they After another slam from East Coast Conference have all season. Chisholm led sophomore Curtis Dudley, the seeding on the line, the seniors Delaware with 17 points, Hens had a 45-31 halftime lead. of the Delaware men's basket­ Tucker added 15, and a sizzl­ "There was one point in the ball team bid a respectful ing inside game resulted in game when I looked up and farewell to a record crowd of five slam-dunks and 56 percent just said, 'Damn!,' " said Jen­ 2,490 by going to the hoop ear­ shooting. nings. "Everything was roll- ly and often, securing the best Defensively, Del a ware ing." . regular-season finish in school allowed Lehigh's two hottest Delaware rolled right into history with a 79-67 waffling of properties - Daren Queenan the second half, but with Lehigh University. and Mike Polaha - to amass Queenan at the wheel, Lehigh The Hens, who finished the 33 and 18 points respectively, also went for the ride. The regular season 19-8 overall, but slammed the door on the senior forward reeled off nine and 9-5 in the ECC, will enter other nine Engineers, who points in an 11-3 Engineer run the ECC championship tourna­ combined for only 16 points. to pull Lehigh within seven ment this weekend as the third On the boards, Delaware points for the first time since seed, also the highest in held a commanding 40-29 edge. early in the first half. Delaware history. "We played hard today," Even with a few Hens falling But to get the third seed, said Chisholm. "We played into foul trouble, Delaware Delaware needed to get by scrappy and we hung tough. went on the offensive again. Lehigh (18-9 overall, 8-6 ECC), Queenan and Polaha will get Jennings' dunk with 6:00 left a team that entered the game theirs, but what we had to do signaled the end of the line for with an identical conference was contain their other guys, the Engineers. record, and had dealt the Hens which we did." "I feel good for the players, an embarassing 86-75 loss in The Hens came out of the particularly the five seniors," Bethlehem last month. chute in the first half like a said a proud coach Steve THE REVIEW/ Dan Della Piazza From the outset Saturday,· Elsworth Bowers follows through on his third dunk Saturday. team hitting its peak. Steinwedel after the game. the Hens' starting five Chisholm drove home two continued to page 28 Track teams place third in ECCs by Bryan K. Wilkes and it even came down to the 1:13.31. The women's team did Bridgette Bicking, who was Staff Reporter last event," said men's team "Under the circumstances, equally well, taking third with expected to do well, placed head coach Jim Fischer. I think we pulled together and a score of 41. third in the 600-yard run. "We were down four did what we had to do," Sup­ "We're basically very "She wasn't feeling well," As the cold winds raced points," he explained, "and ple said. freshman and sophomore­ McGrath-Powell explained. through Lewisburg, Pa. Satur­ our one-mile relay team got Team captain Don Henry ladden," coach Sue McGrath­ "As a matter of fact, both kids day, both the Delaware men's second, just barely missing said, "We had a few disap­ Powell said, as she explained in the 600 weren't feeling too and women's track teams rac­ first [place]." Fischer con­ pointments, but it came down the third place finish. "We well," she said. ed to a third place finish at the tinued. "Their team got fifth to our last two relays." have another freshman who "Lehigh and Bucknell [ttie East Coast Conference place [in the mile relay] and Fischer explained that the was third in the hurdles behind first and second-place championships. that was the difference." loss of team star Bill two seniors. So if you look finishers] have some really In the men's competition, There were two first-place McQuillan to a sprained ankle down the road a little bit, good talent and our talent isn't the Hens barely edged out finishes for Delaware, Fischer made a difference, but he ex­ things don't look so bad for her quite as good as theirs/' Lafayette College by two said. Sophomore Jim Supple pected they would have come or us." McGrath-Powell said. points, 67-65, to secure a third­ took first in the triple jump in third place no matter what. McGrath-Powell said the ~'So, we had more of the kids place finish in a field of seven with a winning score of 45 feet, "It was a factor in that we'd team had only one first-place finishing third, fourth and fifth teams. 4 inches, and sophomore Dave have third place more easi­ finish. That came from than probably any other "Weknewwe'dhavea tough Sheppard placed first in the ly ... he's our fastest quarter­ freshman Erika Brandt in the fight with Lafayette for third, 600-yard run with a time of mile runner," Fischer said. high jump. continued to page 28