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Spring 4-22-1988 Maine Campus April 22 1988 Maine Campus Staff

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The _y_ ,_ Maine cam us THE UNIVERSITY OF MAINE NEWSPAPER SINCE 155 11.11 22. NU val. 1112. N. Student life fee: fiscal year 1989 iv lads swab st,” w te,

Next.year's University of Maine students paY\tbe seine amount ts last year .for the mandatory student life fee, but the distribution of the fee funds has changed. - In fiscal year 1989. there will be a general increase in the replace- ment Of voluntary and optional student fees, and in the enrichment of student- life. Those increases, however,- will be at the expense of the replacement of education in general (E&G) funds. ii Although the distribution budget of student life fee fin ftscalyear 1989 is still in the working stages, tbe-Mandatory- Student 1..ifc Fee EvalUation Committee has been meeting for-several months.to:inaliie the figures. On Thursday, April 28, the fee evaluation committer will work toward a more completeversion to be submitted to President Dile Lick Charles Rauch, director of Financial Management for UMaine and member of the.evaluation committee, said that the 1989 changes reflect the committee's attempts to correct the problems experienced with last year's fee. According to the committee's Apnl 15 draft of the 1989 fee distribu- tion bOdget. $76,500 is allocated for the Maine Center for the Arts for ticket replacement moneys. This figure, which is $25,500 larger than I988, will not ong• com- pensate for last year's'underfunding of replacement monies, but should increase the reserved student seating from 20 to 30 percent. - For the athletic department, $263,000, or a $91,000 increase, has been allocated for the replacement of ticket funds. Of this $93,000 increase, S43,000 is targetted for a compensation of last year's underfunding and $50,000 will possibly provide an additional 400 student tickets for next year's hockey games. Rauch said the es aluation,committee is currently undergoing negotia- tions to determine what proportion of those 400 tickets will be for seaung. Both the Arts Center's and the athletic department's funding for ticket replacement is dependent Upon possible changes in the negotia- tions for increased seating Rauch also said that the committee was looking into Use possibilty of automatic student i.d. cards as a method of easing the ticket distribu- tion process SamneiSerak of Orono and his 80-year-old Day festivities attracted more than 70 bears furry Despite the claims of the Director of the Cutler Health Center Roberta friend Tomms grin and hear the news and their owners who competed in eight that they Berrien that last year's budget was inadequate for the increased ser- placed first in the "most like owner" categories such as best dressed and largest. category vices, the evaluation committee's proposed figures do not indicate an in the first year of the BOB (Bring_ Each winning bear and its owner were-award- increased budget for the health center. sour Own Bear) ledds Bear( ompetition at ed congratulators certificates as well as a new the I Cutter recieved $452,880 last year from the student life fee funds to niversits of Maine. teddy to accompans them home. 1 he cover the health care of alrfull-time, and many part-time students Contest, sponsored bs l Maine's Serak is a CMaine professor emeritus of I mon Board as part of V. edneulas (see FEE page 21 's Maine physical education and athletics. Legislature passes increased bond issue

W Naked• Owe I h 15 million, of which urr the House defeated the UMaine System ( hancellor s,an wow UMai e would receive roughly bill 85-55, Rep. Ruth Foster. R- Robert Woodbury, said he was $2 m hon. was proposed in Ellsworth submitted the blanket pleasantly surprised with the A larger than expected ver- respose to_an'amentiment by S5 million -concept .as ti---added $5 million. sion of the Unisersity of Maine Rep. Patrick McGowan. D- compromise. He said the extra. money System's $31.8 million bond Canaan to add $1.8 million The concept, which was later could enable the UMaine issue swept successfully through specifically for UMaine at proposed as an amendment by System to restore full funding the Legislature yesterday. Farmington. Sen. John Baldacci, D-Bangor, to some projects on all seven After compromises between Rep. John Bon, R-Orono passed 33-0 in the Senate and campuses which were hurt after state 'Republicans and said House Republicans balked 127-6 in the -House. the original $60 million board Democrats os er proposed add at McGowan's amendment The $36.8 UMaine bond of trustees request was_decreas- ed monies tagged specifically calling it 'pork-barrel issue is expected to gain ap- ed earlier this year. fox UMaine at Farmington, a politics." prOval by- Gov. -John R. Bolt said UMaine stands to Senate-sponsored amendment "The amendment came from McKernan, and like all bond gain almost SI7 million from added a flat $5 million to be one lawmakel to benefit his issues, it will go before the the total $36.8 million in the split among all seven campuses A\ district only and did nothing for voters in November. -- bond issue if it passes Rep. John Bon, R-Orono referen- instead . the other campuses," he said. Kent Price, assistant to dum this fall. _

•••••••. Magazine Sports Points of View The Rad% N Alec weekend '('Maine sweeps. Hasson in Thin week'.. question: eelelwation will feature- four doubleheader. I-0. and 1-0. "Should the Maine Stein of his filnia..Page Nage 9. Song be changed?" Page 12.

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, 2 h.- Dor. Afaine Campus. 1- ridaV_ April ZZ. 191I professor pension The Dativ A Committee pro- beg plan Co: le Slim laps rnent, especially the retirement of pro- nutted a repon to the DOT in February. ed information and case studies The state, ssii..re, fessional recoaunen- Burr responded to a people.” 1981 which included seseral recent proposal 1111 NINO II submitted Jul) 1967, In '1961, McKay established the dations name's, that _pre-1975 retire- _ and other cgs. —6iait sioetter Most University of Maine professors rneiriti Retirement Committee. ment benefits should be brought to the muniques."by recommending a Ig will retire comfortably, but it -wasn't cent increase in all S5.0130 le% el for those who *forked over retirement benefits Sam Web long ago — 1974 — ss hen retired for the selected group. 20 years in the system In addition. dig Executive B academics lived on annual pensions of issue has been brought Reactink 'to the proposal. BOT before a IOT ty is tourin less than Si3.000. Some we as low at finance comrnittee members hired—;Tmanctal ads ISCT and for further study. The Mail S400 or S500. "This is apposed a plan *loch put these retirees realls differed “smpensa- Portland ot Edgar McKay, now 84, had retired in non." McClure said. at a Wars percentage lesel comparable "The net cons mate a ICC 1969 after 35 years in the UMaine of any to the •university's present retirement funding they do now is much monist Part system. Formerly an associate professor below hat program. TIAA-CREF. which began in it would hase been if they of his visit! of Modern Society, McKay felt ad- 1975. had done it at the proper time " Concord mIstrative action was best encouraged The plan as reasonable hut, didn't Haves, who has worked 011 the retire_ , pellet and through diplomacy, not criticism.. In account for the low &tries of ment issue for the last 16 years. said the "The Pal 1974 a Council of Colleges committee' academics who retired years ago. recent plan is a step in the ngtis that there a succeeded in getting the .Board of McKay said. -• direction Communiv Trustees to approve add'ilieiWliidrii-is . "Some teachers in the burr local The rittbiem we run into, II that this socialist aft for outstanding cases, but this was only high schools had better salaries than we (group) is a fixed pool of people capitalist a beginning. cKas said. who y (bd.': he said "Many people kit the . base been permanently disadvantaged corporatio The committee was chaired by systeml.'' by the retirement system," he %wit release Political Science Professor Ken Hayes. Melsin Nit-ClUre Is a professor of ac- _ very hopeful that the The purr "I think there's an image that univecti- trustee counting and the onls non•retired _ coinnuttee proposes a long term solution press ICICA3 ty faculty are, if not wealths, at least in 14111, McKaY, dolman of the member on the Emeriti commince to this In the past, the trustees gentile poverty. I found hase nat ion* ide this was not the Iltessj Retirement Cesiniesse. depended case. "We know bs instinct that their on the Council of (Olicses, Live in mass Retirees and ottierg working to effect salaries were lose. but unic -Ieesl- who havessorkad for number equality, p —From what I know t-M-trusteei - of Years are _thauses_said_The). try gmeefiet tlyis---peopmsaFied mostly wealthy professional --in -getting adjustments, and bear no resentments, know how tow they really gusinesspeople with good investments, ssereir---through... but it wasn't until weeks ago that things ly with today's omparaireely. probably some stocks." highly efficient retire- the sort recent ad he said. began to look promising, McKay said. "They ment system in place." he said. tustment plan accounts for much less may have some difficulty in Picking up where the Hayes commit- The Emeriti committee submitted than the McKay proposal had suggested. understanding the problems of retire- tee kit off, the Emeriti committee slit'. other proposal,, which included detail said Robert Woodbury, chancellor of the Ctusertits of Mame ss-stem ot colleges ' "McKa) and his group have argued a different rational, which was to go a' the way back to the beginning and , I) a COOMUDII Prit4.-t Index inflator ose: the enure penod "Right now. somet tuns like S200.(00 goes into this benefit package. McKay;) package were adopted now, I think that figure would be increased by 75 percent," be said In fact. the McKay proposal would raise pre ISF5 retuee benifits close to N." •411," real dollar entitlements of the original. complete TIAA CAE} coserage, so,—• man) retirees feel they should be "It's still not enough.— said McClure. about the 1‘ Perceat ad iuu ment •Fee

Itemised from page I)

1 rider the areas of student enrich mcnt, while the funding for the Memorial Union programming board i TUB), for arts programming, and for the Cutler Health Center has stayed the same, the funding for athletic program, and facilities has increased. An allocation of $100,000 has been newly budgeted as a contribution to the field house modifications, and $189.(Xx) has been allocateBioaddetic provams This represents a student enrichment increase of 189.000 for athletic Iwo: grams over last year. All of the above increases have ocoir red at the expense of the student life fee 14W/replacement fun& which has beit reduced from S704.000 to $400.6211 While the base budget of 183,001i • hildcare. $30,000 for the C'ounst- • Center, and $26,000 for Student 's- 'ices has not been effected, the mories available for academic departments and organizations has been reduced from $500,000 to $250,000. Rauch said that h replacing less EACi funds with those generated by the stu- dent life fee, it also means that more state and tuition motiey will go to SLIP- - -pon the union and athletics in 1989 than it dad in 1988 A $259,000 increase from state and tuition monies will go to athletics and / a $44,000 increase *ill go to the unioo

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' rhe Dath tlaine( ampu.s. Enda., April 12. 1988 3 Communist party to recruit in Bangor tuches The LI Or°Penal lis Ilbsais bib Webbs theme throughout his tour organized." members of the Party and racist violence, said a press release. Other onsa. sret *me, will be an attack_on the linkage of drugs said. • Participants from the Soviet Union, IS a 15 pa. and foreign policy in the United States. If people do not have the opportuni- Canada, South Afnca, Greece and other mt benefits Sam Webb,; member of the National "The links of the CIA, Pentagon, ty to hear Webb speak during his Nev. countries are expected to attend ,the !dowü. the Executive Board of the Communist Par- White House and underworld elements England tour, the third annual National University of Massachusettes at me a, WT. , ty is touring New England this week. with the drug trade reflects the serious Convention of the Young Communist Amherst event. Ser ouch The Maine native began the tour in concern of the Communist Party of League convenes June 17-19 at the "We expect mastic tirnout, said John 4.-ompetii Portland on April 14 with plans to in- Maine. N.H. and Vt. University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Bachtell, national chairman of the Com- e net costs mate a recruiting drive for the Com- "There is a growing threat of that in- The convention will be "a political munist League. "Everything points to rw_ it muck munist Party throughout the remainder terconnections, not only to the public. and cultural extravaganza" featuring a shift to the left among youth and nen if they of his visits to Bangor. Maine, safety and health, but also to the discussions and workshops. students. ime " Concord. N.H , Brattleboro, Mont- democratic traditions of the U.S. and to Coining the theme "Turning Our "The fight against racist violence, the ri the retire- • pelier and Burlington. Vt. peace in the world." members of the World Around", the convention will struggle against the CIA on campuses, its. said the 'The Party's recent expenenca show Communist Party said. focus on the need to abolish nuclear campus sit-ins all point in this direction. the right that there are many who are open to the Funhermore,the Party stresses the weapons, defeating Reaganism in the The convention will make an important Communist .Party's__aletnocratic and importance of uniting young people to upcoming 1983 presidential elections, contnbutiosto uniting the youth and that this socialist alternatives, to the decay of the participate in upcoming U.S. govern- fighting against youth unemployment student movement," Bachtell said. leoPle who capitalist system and the rule of giant mental changes and multi-racial idtantaged corporations."• said a recent press movements by voicing their opinions. he ..aid release • "(You) must force the government to the trustee The purpose of the tour, according to create job programs to deal with the -m solution press release, is to inmate a party drive economic insecurity which threatens all Penobscot Terrace meet ha.e nationwide to attract those who are,isc- young people, in the age of stock market Colleges. ' live in mass movements for jogs, justice, convulsions, high tech displacement and ier at years equality, peace and solidarity runaway shops, we must be united and grit trig Auartnients Write for The Daily Maine Campus! ream ad- much less Contact Monica Wilcox at 58 1 - 1 268. Now available 3 bedroom tunested. incellor of IMILIIIIMWIS111113111MIMIWICIVIVCSICIPICIANAILIMILIMIVII•V apts. with 2 kitchens plus System of • 0 • Ise argued per mo. • study. $620 ss to go'all • • I and app- and hot over Join us on Friday and Saturday includes heat April 29th and 30th for a • S200.0(10 • water. rckage, if Spuds McKenzie Weekend pied now. Spuds here live. doing the Spuds Slide increased mile from UMaine 866-2429 Prizes and dancing until 3 a m Specials on Bud Light sail mould o..misnwwni.wwswiss.wassisisimisseswwwwnwwwwwwwwomaissisf 410c. MIK YRS< Wit NNW AOC MINK MK )11111K AMC MIIIIrwoor 1 s close to mo-de-ag. r original. tSe,va here Id be I." said • percent a Open Hearings

I Mae I) Par-Facuity,-Staff, it enrich- for the with the ng board . and for Committee on rayed the Advisory Fit Olif atlas

has been on to the S189.1300 University Reorganization Mgr&MS nchment rtic pro:

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4 The Daily Maine Campus. Friday, April 22, 19111

Midnight Oil burns hot with new

bl 11•18 arm flies The Blues Brothers. This xou must be crazy if you think _you're Stet Wf,to• — doesn't last long however,, and they find . areal." with their was back to reality to finish the At well over SLR root tall, with gaunt When Midnight Oil song facial features, sunken eyes, and a clean mom It would be difficult to prose that shascn skull. Peter Garrett i easily the Diesel and Dust most intimidating Midnight Oil is the most politically con- performler in the I leg Perhaps the best way to describe scious band on the scene, although they business these &Ass When he sings Om I Diesel and Dust. musically at least, is to are certainls one of the most politicalls "lour dreamworld is just about to end" lb. on call it Midnight Oil's Listen Like active; and philanthropic ()vet the the sets upbeat "Dreamworld." Ail If Thieves. This is not to say.that Midnight years. the Australian band has donated you can't help but heheire rt•-r going TO IMISlar Oil has copied 1NXS, rather both mond to help their native counny's en- happen- share similar flavors. vironment, and JO help the Ahoriginki-- In sharp contrast to his outward sp- beam Often buried, yet neser hidden attain their proper land rights. • ot-armee. Garrett is a pacifist, as are his beneath layers of keyboards, trom- The band's call 'for world peace. has handmaid. This point as driven home A. 1 bones, cellos, drums, and what-not, is always been a staple of drummer -Rob on the soft, ad'Artic World," and notice( photo by •'Viarakurna." the crisp sound of an acoustic guitar. Does Vancierwrode Hirst's lyrics: No where is that call more well IC World" making each song a little sharper, and horns. "Beds Are Burning" will soon he clear than on '-'Put Down That "Aro, is about a pacifist's that yi Weapon." Peter Ciarreirs worst nightmare. a little more personal. one of the most popular songs_in hip- I tad singer The realization that it mcone screaming whispers add desperate may tie TOO late save Diesel and Dust opens with "Beds per dance arenas. An interesting ro the world and _weak Are Eturrnng,--''the album's first-single rrainfornon occurs midway through urgency tothe &treads tense lyrics "Put the sense of utter hopelessness which boyfru and video. Bass dris en and decked with the song when the hand momentards Joan that weapon or we'll all be gone evolves out orthat. "W arakurna" Is J you're tall to arms in the battle for equality If y Side tao takes up where side one left about off, crying for equality on "The Dead at pret Rudy Vallee weekend planned Heart •• The rhythm is sharp and the matter mekisfy clear. giving ample opportuni should T N4zo- p, namir ail irtellerg awl, *Yi F. ty for listening knees to keep the. heat to lool eimmor, Fen_..j 11;•_11.e The pace remains about the same for mean Li 1.; 1 thc rc-st of the'album. dipping slight!. bovine " on "W hoab" and "Sell rn. Soul " it. you Diesel and Dust .,winds up with are attr "Soniet " perhaps the best cut on Litatj.-Pit the wa •:.-• •.. •• - the album ta tOugh call since t hes'IC all That good) Along with "Beds Are Burn- fessioni • - '•••:-;:eigtkiatafk -Z11.i4Vai ing." "Sometimes" is an easy to- talking ting-along-with bookend on a great •-,.•*014,• • ways oi • ...it album • t301411 Filled with the plight and passion of • ...Ait i"; logaktia.. Australia and its native poeple. Ariel '1AL and Dust will undoubtedly propel Mid- ..tatt-x,r iftre, • night t hl toward commercial success, as 'Pr well it should. Very few greatest hits albums arc this solid and this good Sinhead O'Connor arm the Lion and the Cobra porCaP4ct eb, 4.4Abe, stkr- 11 pt.,. gintrai ti Avv• There is no easy way to des.ribe Sinhead (pronounced Shin-aid)(rCott- Pvt.*"ilthatizik 4. -nor'' debut- atbunt. Cobra Well, there is, but it's com- plicated. and I'm not sure •oh why not. it's either this or another Anieri.an Heart Association ad

First, a distinction has to he made bet- ween 0•( onnor's album and hcr s °Kr photo by John Ran W hile both are Intricately entwined, for • David Smith, professor of history at UMairie. and Irani. &este. a colleague of the lalr Rudy V alike. peruse the **Stria the purposes of discussion and disses Sous" at the Maier eater for the Arts. thin. they Must he considered separate Music. entities mos;es. and memories of the late Rudy Vallee will 1-k will be followed at 3 p.m. by Marvin Smith, klibrarian highlight a tribute to the Hollywood legend today and IOITICK- from Thousand Oaks. California, talking about "Research Sinhcad O'Connor's soice is nothing row at the Unisersity.of Maine where he was a student in in Show Business History: The Mace of The Thousand Oaks short of_a__Molligan'-vsitiss-r-containing the earls 1920s L ibrary." the strongest aspects of. the voices of • • Kate Bush, Suzanne Vega, Kim Wilde. %afire who populanz_ed Speaking at 4 p.m. about "The Maine Rudy Vallee" will the "Stein Song" among his many Debbie Harry, Sioussie What-'s-Her- contributions to the uruversity, be C. Doty.chairperson of the UMarne History Department will be remembered during Name, and and other prominent women the tribute with the showing of Held in the Bodwell Dining Area -of the Maine Center for four of his films- "The Vaga- Singers who have emerged in the last 10 bond Lover" the Arts, the les:tures are free to the (1929), "International House" (1933), "The public Music of the era years. Palm Beach Story"(1942), and "How to Sucixed in Business will be featured between lectures. Without Really Trsing"(1967), which will be shown at 1 - 15 Even though at times she sounds like p.m. and 6:30 p.m. today. The evening of festivities, which are also free anckopen to anyone in above mentioned group, the public, to be held in the Hutchins Concert Hall of the O'Connor surpasses all of them There Maine Center for the Arts, will begin "The Vagabond Lover" will be shown tomorrow at 8 30 at 7:30 p.m. With a is power and energy in her voice that presentation titled "Rudy Vallee: a.m., "International House" at 9:45 a.m ,and "The Palm Films, Records, Television rivals the greatest At DC riff, and a TheConsumate-Entertainer"- by Beach Story" at 11:00 a.m. All films are being shown in the Frank Bresee. a Valleecol sweet innocence that which would let her league. Also feattired will be the music Coe Lounge of the Memorial Union and are free to the public. Vallee made famous pass for viz-year-old choir girl. It is as presented by Don Stratton and the 200 Century Music %trimly incredible Ensemble. Tomorrow's films will be followed by an afternoon and The Lion and the Cobra is, to say the memories least, Interesting. dening of Vallee music and beginning at 2 The highlight of the evening will be an honorary degree At any given time it can be confusing, when John DiNIeglio of the University of Minnesota. of Doctorate of Humane Letters awarded posthumously to captivating, or lecture about ."The Popular Entertain- desastating. Mankato, presents a Vallee, who died in 1986 The degree will be accepted by his ment Scene in the 1920s.and I 930s c" widow, Eleanor Vallee Hustedt twee SINHF_AD page If •

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-•• 22. 1988 The Daily Maine Campus, Friday, April 22. 1988 5

some people into prolonged sexual in- Some people, instead of practicing activity. The AIDS crisis has altered caution and "safer sex." will attempt enormously the sexual behavior of the to abstain entirely and then break out gay community' and to a lesser extent the into reckless behavior from time to time behavior of heterosexual people. Unfor- Strict monogamy and safer sex are much tamely • many straight poorile persist in. _more reliable courses to rake. thinking, erroneously, that they are at But for vast numbers, the stricter need rn such loss risk they can be careless. for sexual caution and for keeping to Many people will be so fearful of one reliable sex partner will no more disease that they avoid sharing sex and create dysfunction or neurosis than does ink you're also sharing most kinds of intimacy With a strict religious or moral code. I have Q. 1 am 30 and btinilsItins going -"Rehm—Sic-Med ideas like yours. they timid other people. Others will feel it is a time not found strictly monogamous people . - svilik-nay bo,friend for three years. • *hat 'Stalled reinforcement, with gaunt not just to of despair, and despair will color all more perplexed sexually than others. Whew we go out to a restaurant or have their problems pointed out, not ind a ilcan their sexual experiences. (see RUTH page 8) somewhere. I watch him looking at just to be told what .ca.t1 the to do, but to rein- ether grouses. Whs.. we are i• a crowd force what they already er in the know. Friends. I look around to we what pretty gins are frankly, will not 1 he sings be able to listen long there and check on in, boyfriend to see enough or often enough iut to end' to be helpful. if be is looking at them. I keep asking They may become bored and irritated. Bumstock Frisbee Ill% °rid," him if he thinkt l'imigeetty. I am sot • It is wonderful when ''s- going to — a man and a unattractive and I whit I coal Mop woman can be devoted to each other thinking and acting this way. Am I that and not mind that natural award ap instinct to Throw Contest insecure? look at the opposite sex. I will make . as are his this exception: When one member cn home of a cou- A. Yes, you are that insecure. You ple makes a display of looking... and irld." and 2-3 p.m. noticed it yourself. I think you would do when this draws attention, this is not ac- well to talk to a psychotherapist. Not ceptable. But from what you tell me, pacifist's that you are crazy, but you need so- that is not your boyfriend's wn behavior. that it mcone to talk to about you low. self- world and, esteriss. and I _dosiLt__mcazt_asking-your--- —Q.-110-mat-tattalk that the Categories: iris which preisot. boyfriend again and again if he thinks health crisis, curtailing as it dont anit tuna" is a you're pretty! sexual freedom, will harm people's Longest Throw T equality. If you have no other complaints hits and lead to sexual dysfunction mad de one kit about this boyfriend, then his looking create new emotional problems? Longest Time Aloft 'The Ilead at pretty women. which is natural no rp and the matter how devoted he may be to you. A. Any overwhelming social disrup- opport u ni Most Talented Dog should not bother you Don't you like tion will cause its special emotional pro- p the heat to look at handsome men? Does that blems and affect the sexual behaviocof me same for mean you don't really like your individuals, but not every indisydual will ng slightly boyfnend? But you know the illogic of be affected in the same way . For in- Cash prizes will Soul." be it. you point that out when you say you stance, a war will drive some people in- up._ with are attractive and shouldn't have to act to despair and relieve others of the anx- best cut on the way you do. iety over what to do and what priorities awarded they'rc all That's why you need to talk to a pro- to give things. A war can damage mar- • Burn- fessional, someone who can help you by riages by separating couples and will. ri easy -to- talkini not iust to what is wrong but to generally, create an atmosphere of relax- in a great Sponsored by Vill ways of feeling differently. When peo- ed sexual morals, but war also drives ..Zr!arZa'Z''''r''''..Z2" passion of w"...... ar- -..L""--..Zfflo-zz'''-..7Z•r..Z2m-ZZ":..e,r--.z ..''Im•-ZVP.....-- -"S..T plc, °tete rope' Mid- success, as engem hits Look out folks, here we go again!! us good (you can blame that radical OCB gang) Cobra o describe id) _ BUMSTOCK XVI it's corn- 41 %shy not. American That crazy time of year is upon us once again, this

' Made bet- coming Saturday, April 23,from her voice 12pm to 9:30pm wined, for rtsl dissec in the CABIN d separate FIELDS (rain date Sunday the 24th, same game plan as Saturday) is nothing Avntaining BANDS,TOOD, k. voices of BUT my Wilde. haCs-Her- nit women Certain General the last 10 Rewinders Anni Clark ounds like Some Assembly Required bed group, em There BLUE FLAMES I- Tones voice that iff. and a yult1 let her Kinsmen Ridgerunners girl It is FREE TO ALL FREE TO ALL to say the en time it ating. or HAVE A GRATEFUL DAY!! I) page It

5. -

The Doily Maine Commis, Fridas', April 2.2, PAIS The D.& Ai M111.11.111 Editorial Last wo-rd: dirty little fee Ode to the Se*iors he Datly Maine Campus initiated its series on the Many part-time students did not really know what o the edii mandatory student life fee with a survey of stu they were qualified to recieve. • Tdent opinion. And a few full-time studenfs-diiffil even real101W- - . Monica Wilcox In the results, which were published Monday, the had paid a mandatory student life fee. spurt and a students rated their use of the gym, the health center, Whether the sursey ratings of the student life fee .. sect-twice and their attendance at sports events. On a scale of zero would hase been more lasorable if students were better ' For my final send off of the school of Maine to ten, the average student response .for each of these informed is beside .the point. year, 'I ve decidolto dedicate my col- Assoctatiot areas was lower than three. It is impossible for students to make any accurate umn to the graduating class of 1988: theme of th Approximately 67 percent of the students surveyed assesment of the fee without accurate information. On the one hand. lam envious of dent Alum said they did not favor the student life fee, and 74 per- Who is responsibk for getting that information to the you.. No more classes, no more pro-- dent Four cent said that they did not feel as though the ad- students? fessors and no more studying You that will bt ministration-considered -student input for ttir-t98-7:--t988 Perhafn it is llielidministratitinTot Pet{hlipii don't have to deal • with pink tickets ,ampus Si fee. yanous departments and organizations that recreived fee on your windshield, strip searches at !ions are Probably the question most 'key to the survey, money. , the library or Norma mandatory stu- however, was the fallowing: Perhaps it is the responsibility of The Daily Maine dent life fees...You've got it made.. "On a scale of zero to ten, rate how well do you feel Campus. or the general student senate Sp( .you were informed how the fee money was spent?" Regardless of whose responsibility it is. it is Rig on the-Other hand, you now The average response of the 206 students surveyed something that must be done' in order for the student has e to take life seriously . .You must 10 the obi was 2.5. , . population to (-set regard the mandatory student life fee find a job, a place to live and start It becomes immediately clear that this is the _crucial as anything but -"that dirty little fee." a new life. point of the whole survey, for every other clue:Ultra is would a ac o in ormation. .. Tog intave to ovetcoene fears of comment o the Many non-traditional students were very vocal in their future and Maki:decisions on articles sbri careers. The oppostion to the fee, and yet did not know that profession you choose and R. Ks now may SI13.000 of the fee went to cluklcare. not be the one you'll want Thursday 20 years from Many traditional students who did not support the fee now, bin keep in mind The Daily that things did-not realize that the new photocopyer in their depart- Editor's note Due to a lack of space, we were not able aren't always as bad as thev. ment office, or the new computer terminals in the stu- to report on Monday the results of a question regarding germ; they're usually worse. I will And don't dent cluster were paid for by fee money the student use ofthe ArtsCard forget you can still use the (of M)'s c sers ices Many were not aware that they were entitled to a. free Of the 206 students surveyed. fall usage was 39 per- of Career Planning . and beautiful. I ticket to performances by the theater, music, dance cent. while 32 percent of the students used the card in Placement. . heathen ri ckpartments. the spring No more skipping classes and giv• If [Use MS the-dog-ate-my-paper excuses. Baseball, I (That. I think; I can wall another now tha rear for.) n um bi4 ye ., But you all should be sery proud \attonal L . of I.-Ourselves. If you'se made it in ads antage M'IALGF.8RA BOOK four years. you should be especially this sear.' proud, you're in the minority. he in Shea HP NO MENTION OF )iiOfi1 1 So for the remainder of my col- Boston- I's THE exisdrENCE OFOOPift umn, I'd iflte to congratulate a few Series individuzgs for a job well done Second $0 r DuRNEP scsen vier, To Joe Merrill, business ma of The Daily!Nom Campus. and best business manager that vt known at the Campus. iNot to non the onlv one.) , To Tim Hubert, Yaledict rian of the graduating class. If you' e receiv- ed the highest accumula se grade point al.erage and are chemical engineer, you not only -e to be allpvied to speak at g , suation and drise a new car, but . • also deserse to take me out on c it frornial the money you'll. • making- after 41nrommEmo graduation. (N se' forget your, friends1

. To R. Key n INetri,:h, alias staff writer, you finally made it' Alt hough - The Daily Cam wejtaven'i always weed on. yosu if/99"v OF Wit WiP9AFF 1Y5 'taste in column topics, you'se been a sincere inspiration in my writing MN.Ape 12 all career- veL 1St as.18 'T wish To all the hard-working dedicated day, Ai Overachievers on the second floor of The titk kness Hall, you all deserse a medal. Plagued You guys have worked harder in one By we semester Vertefeuille Managing 1- ditor Brenda smith Editorial Page Editor Dine Gridie, than I have my entire col- I am all 4 Jan lege 'career. such as Manager Catherine Bergeron City Editor Michael IN( icco 4dv. into the Editor And Production Manager-Jan ertefeuille 4dv. Prod. Manager Karen Bancroft finally to Reggie, alias Bert, I also alias Photo Editor John Bier Magazine Page Editors Keith Brann Vern. I told you it would allssa-y--- women off someday,,•I'm sery proud of you. Joe Merrill Sports Editors Dase Greely Tempest lark.) lit areas John Holyoke as they Business Manager I wot —Monica Wilcox is a junior jour- some of Putheard five iirsweek al 14* of Mont Ofreees as Suite IA Lora 1461, Ua.ii,siiy6l Mm Pow Molar 04469 Telephone nalism major from Presque Isle, state Up Ad.errisang Office. !9111.1271 Iluseree%c Offere, fa -1272; Editor. J014211: City &Oil*, 511•1240:tirromis. Nil .1 NA and sal .1270. 044414“: - %lathe, who wishes she was hecklini stens • 241 Ade filming and %uttuription rafts avadaltle upon ?Nome Premed al The Earmorra A r ..••• lia,fte TI,t API* %I..mt (*mous MI pints reser.rd graduating in Xfas, hut is looking Bobel, forward to one more year. the one 22., 1988 Ouril tlairw Campus. lido, April 22, 1988 Res nse tiors "Bear Necessities" festivity lo the editor: prestigious event in which we dians. This is an event for our WHEN WRITING... will host 800 college students campus to be proud of and a 3X —readivintr, -Teaderithip, from the United Stites and fine time to Show our visitor"— The Daily Maine Campus welcomes let- spun and service arc the "Bear Canada. Activities for the Maine pride and hospitality. If Necessines" of the Unisersity weekend will Include motiva- by chance you encounter any of ters to the editor and commentaries from e school ot Maine's Student Alumni tional and respected keynote our guests point them in the members of the university community. Let- ' my col- Association and make up the speakers, leadership seminars. right direction and help us ters should be 300 words or less, and com- make this the most successful or 1988: theme of the 191(8 National Stu- a Maine lobster-clambake, a mentaries about 450 words. In order to •1 Alumni Association Stu- spirit competition and social ac- convention ever! vious of dent verify the validity of letter,s, we must have ore pro- dent Foundation ( onvention tisitles at the Maine Center for a name, address, and telephone number. tia_ You - that will be held on the Orono the. Arts, including a perfor- It ticket* campus Sept. 8-11. Prepara- mance by Attrahms and Ander- Melanie Jones Although the newspaper welcomes Bangor itches at, tions are underway for this son, improvisational come- anonymous letters, it will not print them :orY unless a gpecial for withholding made th( s been made with the editor. Sports stories are criticized Trir ;plume Campus reserves the right to rou now ou must edit letters and commentaries for length, nd start 1 the editor and Smith balked in the second Also the Bruins will beat the taste, and libel. run, it would give the Mets a Canadiens this year and the I worild very m_uch lik.iu_ i-is- Llead in inttop of the-- Raiders will no evert - come (ears of comment on two.of your sports '- ninth. with Boston having its close to beating the Patriots ports on articles written by Dave Comb fi,nal at bat in the bottom of the next year. choose and R. Kevin Dietrich in the ninth It would not give the 'Oh yeah! One last comment ant Thursday April 14 edition of New York Mets the World to Dietrich. I noticed that you Owner misses pet I in mind -The Daily .Wame Campus. hampionship did not csen dare to put down bad as the Boston Celtics, so-it sounds To the editor: scared to death of crossing the worse. I will start off with Dave And last of all, there is no like to me. that you're just an street. He may have been chas- II way the New anti-Ness England fan, and that use the acely's column "Halks...rtre York Mets svil‘uld I your help! cat is ed or carried across and now he that need My Ins and beautiful, but what ANN/ those beat the Boston Red Sox in the you can't accept the fact lost and I'm going crazy trying can't get back. hangers' this Boston teams are the better heathen rim i.orld Series year because to find him. He is a yellow tiger If you've ever had a pet, you has & better team teams this year. Boston far cat (like Morris) and he has know how attached you can and gis - If Dave knew anything about than the Met.. Smarten up Dietrich. get. Please help me find him! If excuses. . yellow-brown eyes. He's about Baseball, first of all. he would The other column by Resin a year old, has been fixed and you have seen him around, or another Dave Clifford know that this is an csen Dietrich is absolutely has a light scar on his right know where' he is, please call Kennebec Hall number scar, whi.h means the ridiculous My first-questionto front foot pad. Jennifer in room 234 at (*pit has field him as sstscre are you-from? My or Steve at 866-4464. proud National( home His name is Charlie; but he 581-4724 the Sales second question IS de you know --Editor's N'ote: R. Kevin de it in advantage in Von1d doesn't answer to it. I'm sure game %even would that the Red Sox are one of the Dietrich did put down the Jennifer Slocum pecially this year. sci he's on campus because he's and not in best teams inthe Major *Ramon Celtics. He wrote, ''Oh, ty. he in Shea Stadium. Boston's- Fens.as Park. for a Leagues. and were predicted to the Celtics. They're at the tail end of what was a mildly suc- my col- Boston-New York World win the A.L. East by Sports Il- cessful run. It's over though. e a few Sales lustrated, Inside Sports, 1...SA rOdiTY and ESPN. No tnterna They'll be knocked out in the Dfl Second of all, even if game Boston. Ilona' team could beat them first round by the Pacers." en were played in iasx laircfmummi,a1PROrip nanag arid t C"Zs Iwacititlook- at ve "A& to n- Have a gripe? Let other people rtan of C Mtn - c grade know what's on your mind. isK• hemical ye to be ion and letter to d2erse Send a n I the i. after Campus. r your, the Daily Maine

as staff It bough your— _ se been it for ev %voting • Radical feminisrn-ruins crease rape awareness, but to take that approach she is doings accusing all of the hecklers of being wish to mike siresponse to an article in the Fri. reduces the cause to a little war, in which each side rapists. dicated day, April 15 issue of The Daily Mame Campus is only trying to antagonize the other. Also, in this analogy, she has reduced all men to loot of The title of the article is "Rape Awareness March Bobel also said that women live with this inter- being dogs. The stone being thrown is the march, medal Plagued by Hecklers " nalized fear. I have no doubt that she is speaking and the one that yells represents the hecklers. r in one By way of introduction, I would like to state that from personal experience, as well as the experiences ire col- I am all for women's rights I also feel that issues of her female counterparts and colleagues. such as acquaintance rape need to be brought out Guest Column However, how can she know for sure that ALL into the open to Increase public awareness. women feel this way? Did she take a poll? I have is Bert, I also feel that it is very unfortunate that some women-friends who have told me that they do not allpay-- • women unconsciously feel the need to walk in vs ell- feel this way. I admit that this campus should be of you. by Terrance Antworth lit areas at night, and to take other similar measures more well-lit than it is, but she is basically' saying as they live in this constant fear that the are not safe: "...it's choosing a place I agree that men who rape are dogs. but to apply dorms I would hke to make known my displeasure at that's strategic..." that to all men in general is unfair and unjust. By to live r Jour- some of the comments made in the article. Let me closing, I am not knocking feminism and doing so, she has made herself out to be on the same In le Isle. state up front that the hecklers should not have been women's rights in general; what I am protesting is level as the rapists. r was heckling the issue However, a comment by Chris this kind radical feminism which is damaging for Bobel also said."We will continue to force them of Vloking Robe!, "If you throw a stone into a pack of dogs, Serves to weaken the feminist cause. resist." I feel that it is one thing to try to in- men, and only the one that gets hit is the one that yells." What to The Op* Maine Campus. Friday. April 22, 1988 The Daily Masai

•Sinhead tcoatinuett (rum page .1i

It opens with the slow burning except with Debbie _Harry on Iced 1)r. ered. dark, and funk.- almost herd something out of Jethro Tull's Rile of "Jackie." which builds and builds. vocals. "Mandinka" is a much re- to enjoy after the sweetness of "Man- leftover rhYthins. The red bribe album but never reaches the expected crescen- quested dance track in the big cities. dinka." continues, is one form or another.:king do, leaving the listener hanging, wanting However, its straight forward pop O'Connor's vocal powers step into this brillianetherne. more. The song gives ample warning melody is atypical of the remainder of the spotlight on "Just Like You Said It On "Troy" she pulls off the difficult that what is to come will be a new aural the album. But that's all right because Would Be." Starting off soft and task of simultaneously expressing the Dill experience. the rest of the songs are atypical of the naive, her voice soon begins stretching 7-anguish and Anger et a wounded lover, Hot on the heels of !lack*" comes album too, and that's what makes the the boundaries of how vocals fit into a and, without even breathing hard, goes kv 'star 'reels "Mandinka," the LP's first single. Lion and the Cobra so enjoyable song. The MUSK also changes. from a on to demonstrate a lover's sexual •-• Very reminescent of Missing Persons, "Jerusalem." by contrast, is Sunday afternoon picnic ballad to frustrations in "I Want Your (Hands OT1 It wasn't your The intro of j•weaa "Drink Before The sweep. War" could have easily been on side two The liniversit of Dire Straits ftrotheri In Arms. but team collected on O'Connor's singing escalates it from ;list five runs but that sorry fate. The song * * never takes of - their games * 'off but, like "Jackie," the grinding, Thursday by sco relentless power that "Dnnk Before The Pitching was c War" emits does not go unnoticed Maine Head Cost SEEKING PRACTICAL "Just Call Me Joe" has a fuzzy guitar pleased with h track that be feels Out of place, even's for In the first ga WORK EXPERIENCE? this album. Its grainy. choppy. _blues) perfect game soil Call Dunhill Temporary Systems tor information bite stands out against O'C'orinor's quiet voice. titth inning, but I on a large vanefy of assignments from which tO Chris Khoury rut The -best choose thing about Ow I4on and the he clapped a star - Cobra is not found on the album. No, line. the field Earn ss and gain practical expenence' shass,try Dsm Vmdervisise best thing is the promise. of great was the or records It yet to come allowed and his Register with Dunhill and discover the Dunhill secured a spot ti difference' economised from page 51 rotation. •Ruth "It was an in Call now to set up an appointment' Dillon," Winlii behind in the co 1 Q. M. girtfriead pleasures herself are a human male and nerd intimacy cellent." • Union Street 761-TEMP excessisely with her vibrator and does with her It may turn out something is Maine got all not want to have istereourve with at, bothering her She may be one of those need in their hal What should I do? Dunhtll mentioned above who are retreating I eftfielder Temporary from shared sex sbecause of AIDS. Or leadoff walk and You A. have to have a talk with this she may be mad at you about something chinson followed Systenis girlfriend and point out that her vibrator like your never mentioning marriage It ding I aPierre t may be a of Portland, Inc help to her but is only a would be worth your while to find out Sweenes's sal:nits machine', EEOC and is incapable of receiving what is going on second and scor pleasure or of losing her, but that you delivered an RBI ************************ Dell.ucia and Col 900000000000000000 000003 singles, i br * CALL NOW, ing the Black Be * INV/ 13 saccm. o t 4, Reserve Your Apartment For Next Fall* !MAC( .4•• Meanwhile D * ri/141- THE_ a .11:12. e COUird coglWei.' powering Hussor AT o his third win of tl • 13 SPRING full seven inning, .*; • walking no one *$,I' llR(71is.-- Illr - 2 GRADUATES: trOt problems he EVERGREEN* whole way. * -fe ..1...- -. 2 * 0 t. Maine .core * 0 fourth bXICRonttry * . * With one out I * 0 ed and stole sec( 0 LaPierre k'aftle I GET single to center. * "The Woods": 0 •FULLY FURNISHED 1 BEDROOM UNITS * 0 +MI * •ON SITE LAUNDRY-STORAGE Cubs, II * * •QUIET SETTING CLOSE TO U of M 0 * * THE •FROM $410 PER MONTH 4-UTILITIES CREDIT CHICAGO and * 'CUT YOUR RENT IN HALF-SHARE WITH A FRIEND * 0 Vance Law 0 * •SENIOR LEASES AVAIL.64BLE * streak to 14 gist * 0 homer, and Andr, * •••• run and a sacrifice * 0 * Once again DESERV Greg Maddux and SUMMER STORAGE AVAILABLE we re proud to . cretin re'-- * * O offer the a 6-2 victor> over GMAC conege You ti get Saab ' fROM-$100-FORMAY, AMC41itr -11— AUP UST Graduate ' * Finance Plan chase price, Or a 90-day ass s homer.- GAAAC wants to help us deferral on a * Summer Leases Also Available your payments season, capped a give you the credit you as a graduation and came off la From $525 Including Utilities present deserve, and the keys to a f morn GMAC Madduli, 3- I , gas, new Olds or Jeep Alter all graduating from backed by four di For this ed special GMAC collage is no small achieve- three and stru P.1. Realty Management financing. all you need is ment We re proud to offer In Cincinnati. veOur diploma, proof of a job. you 942-4815 one of your first home Nick EsasK a low down payment the rewards GAAAC is an Equal • 12th inning to gis manager abiluty to meet 866-2071 for site monthly Credit Opportunity Corn over the San Frii **references required Daymen,, 'and no ran,/ *model can be shown Tel. 945-9458 and 947-9471 Esasky, who hi * by appointment opened the 12th Factory Rebates and Special Interest Rates Price, 0-1. Treadi ...Armed off the

ing Esasky easily the win for the Re six extra-inning to 1‘*********** ****Apt*** 7 - es

The Daily Maine Campus, Friday, April 22, 1988 Sports Dillon one-hitter keys UMaine sweep IV BMW Mae sum

It wasn't your typical doubleheader Brave Starter Alan Anderson (1-2) sweep_ allowed seven hits and took the loss. . The L'nisersity of Maine baseball In the second game pitching was "teamcollected only nine hits and scored superb for both team's.. nist five runs but managed to win both . Husson starter John Shaw allowed of their games with Husson .College Just two hits but was touched up for a Thursday by scores of 4-0 and 1-0. run in the fourth which was all the Black Pitching was .obviously the key and Bears needed, Slime Head Coach Iblin_Winkin had to Sweeney led off the inning with a be pleased with his stairs performance hunt tingle down the thirdbase line_ . In the first game Jim Dillon had a Ender sacrificed him to. second and perfect game going with two out in the DeLucia collected the game's sole RBI - fifth inning. but Fiuskin third baseman when he smashed a single to right. - Chris Khoury ruined Dillon's bid when L Maine got good pitching from be-slapped- a hair o sit •closni.r the kft starter PaukRomanoti.-who rwThcee. field line scoreless innings. It ,was the onls baserunner Dillon Winkin gave his bullpen some work allowed and his outing._ should hasc as Bob Wilder, Jim Overstreet, Glenn secured a spot for him in the starting Hannon and Mike LeBlanc each pitch- - rotation ed an inning and combined with "It was an important day for Jim Romanoh on the two-hit shutout. Dillon." said "He -wasn't Wilder (2:2) picked up the win and behind in the count and he threw es 'Allow got his fourth save, while Shaw celknt." • (0-2) took the loss for the Biases. Maine got all the runsthe would Winkin said he was impressed with need in their half. Of the first inning. Shaw and that the two games would be 1 eftfielder Gary LaPierre drew a say helpful to the Black Bears. leadoff walk and i101C second Don Hut - "This was a good doubleheader for chinson followed With a hunt single sen us," Winkin vatd-,,"It was the right ding LaPierre to third. After Mark kind of warm-up because our relief had Sweeney's sacrifice fi, Hutchinson stole to pitch with something on the line. Our second and scored when Craig Ender relief is as good now as it has been in delisered an RBI single to right. Mike some time, - he added DeLucia and Colin Ryan each collected UMame is now 24-16 on the year and singles, Ryan's brought Ender home gr. • have won 19 of their last 24 contests. ing the Black Bears an early 3-0 lead In the conference UMaine is in first Meanwhile Dillon (3-4). was oser - place with a .5-1 record, followed by powering Husson batters, in picking up Northeastern and Hartford both at 3-3. his third win of the season. He went the During the next week the Black Bears full sty en innings sinking out nine and will play nmeconference games against _walking no one Aside from early con- New Hampshire, Hartford and Ver- trol problems he was in command the mont, six of which are home games. whole way. This weekend UMaine will play New • UMaine .cored a single run in the Hampshire. Righthander Dale Plummer photo by Doug Vanderwesde fourth acco‘nting for the 4-0 final score 3-4,. $.10 ERA)and leithander Ed Thcr - l•Maine pitcher Jim Dillon bears down on a Henson batter in the first game With one .lut Disc Martorana singl nen (2-1, 2.87 ERA) are scheduled to of Thursday"s doubleheader. Mon threw a one-hitter, striking out nine and allow- ed and stole second Two batters later throw the Saturday doubleheader and ing onls one Nilsson batter to reach base as the Black Bears won 4-0. (Maine LaPierre came through with an RBI freshman right bander Gary Taylor (3-2, won game two, 1-0. single to center . 1.69 ERA) will start Sunday's contest. Cubs, Reds win

CHICAGO and C1NCINNAT 1AP) Vance Law extended his hitting streak to 14 games with a two-run homer. and Andre Dawson hit a home run and a sacrifice fly Thursday, leading Greg Maddin and the Chicago Cubs to 6-2 sictors over. the Mantra.'&piss _

homer his second of the season, capped a ehree-run sixth inning and came off loser Bryn Smith, 0-1. Maddu s, 3-I, gave up eight hits but was backed by four double plays. He walk- ed three and struck out four.

In Cincinnati, Jeff Treadway triled home Nick Esasks with none out in the 12th inning to give the Reds a 7-6 win over the San Francisco Giants.

Esasky, who homered in the third, opened. the 12th with a single off Joe Price, 0-1. Treadway lined a ball that caromed off the right field wall, scot-

Eng Esasky easily. Pat Perry picked up the win for the Reds, who have 'played six extra-inning genes so far this year. 7 - UMaise &maw Dove Mineral". Melee mohly mood bias.. Howe Oloottoup Mk. Goo•whi kips foe Oho The Dar4 Moine Camps."Friday April 22. 1988 Orioles keep 0-for-April streak alive Bad pitching-f-.201 BA =15 straight losses MILWAUKEE(AP) - Balt'more con- • Baltimore starters Mark Thurmond, one run use times and shut out tbrec tinued to struggle on baseball's skid row season over the fence in left and reliever Mike Boddicker and McGregor lasted a times during the streak. Thursday Milwaukee ()Mild° Pef&Li replaced as the Brewers combined nine innings in three games - McGregor. Paul'Molitorsmitied to right to begin- -%,--04.1kicCiregor. scored six runs in the third inning and ...against Milwaukee. and gave up 18 hits who gave up six hits and the third. moved to second as Robin 'six sent the Orioles to a major leigne-record and 18 runs. The Breweri runs, has not won a game since May used the Yount reached on an infield hit, and 16, 1987 15th straight season-opening MN with a games to extend a winning streak to five scored on Glenn Brew's broken bat .- 7-1 victory. games after ending.lseven-game The Brewers tackd on mother run in 1 ma& to center, Bill Schroeder's two-nut homer cap- skein. 1Ile faun h on Jim Gant ner's clout* and Rob Deer doubled in Yount. and ped the six-run Milwaukee third off Milwaukee right-hander two wild pitches by Peraza. Chris Homo, Greg Brock gave the Brewers a 4-0 lead Baltimore loser Scott McGregor. who 3-1. stopped the Orioles Milwaukee has now beaten the on eight tuts in with a ground ball double down the first lasted just 2 2-3 innings, as the Orioles Pus third complete Orioles in 20 of the teams' last 23 game as the Brewers base line, scoring Braggs and Deer added 'another loss to their improbable beat the OUOICS meetings, including 10 straight at Coun- for the fifth time this After Joey Meyer grounded out. beginning. season. The ty Stadium. Orioles did not score until Schroeder sent his first homer of the The Orioles broke the major league the eighth when, with one out, Terry record with their- 14th straight loss Kennedy doubled and cored one out Wednesday night and contined the later on a ogle by Rene Gonzalez. streak as their starting ottctuns.failed _ Elnitisiore, which entered the.same_. Red Sox rip Tigers 12-3_ - once again. The previous mark a 13 with a .2131 team batting average, scored losses to start a season was set by the 11 runs in the first two games of the DETROIT _(AP) — Ellis Burks had didn't strike out a batter before giving 1904 Washington Senators and 1920 series but now has only 29 in its 15 four hits and four RBIs, Spike Owen hit up a leadoff homer to Matt Nokes Detroit Tigers. in the losses. The COTIOICS have been held to a two-run homer, and rookie Steve seventh inning. It was Nokes' fourth. Ellsworth scattered six hits over seven Tuesd Plymouth State College innings the Boston Red Sox beat the Ow en's two-run homer, his second, LUNCH Detroit Tigers 12-3 Thursday. came in Boston's three-run ninth • Burks, Plymouth, New Hampshire who drove in three runs with Burls. Wade Boggs and. Jim Rice Black I .6 . a bases-loaded triple, also scored four followed with dales that 'Cored another -times- Owen and-Rict-Cyrone - each Graduate and Undergraduate scored three runs in support C'edit and Non Session: 1 of credit Caere.. in Elpiworth. I-2. a quart Aninropoiogv Aicrwology.. An who walked one and Jeff Robinson, 1-2 took the loss\ Business Computer fOucation May 23- fro 11 Computer Science Econom.cs Education. Engiisn Cieogracirir June 17 Nietory. interclisiciptinary Studies Math, Music Natural Science 1 WO:MI 146111040Priy Physical Education Polpiest Science Psycnotoov Session: 2 ancl.SotoOlOgy • MAINE June 20- ti/cipate CO /14, Fel more inforrnation call the Help Want•d Office of Ccultinuirig Education Aug. 12 OICTUR __the Bounty Tavern. is accepting (603) 536 5000. 2227 applications for part time door persons and cocktail waitresses Start ren pay $3.86/hr. phis Is. Must be personable fro and be able to work weekends Please apply in person. eyes 8 30-10 ti m with "H , Banana Thursc , I PUB CP 1113113 Friday Night , continu April 22 , yet. We be avail , p everyor , DRIVE! Reggae , the fest Margari , world ,for ourfl5t(5)::14 \ UMaine .4.-.„,...e.,... off. riroe..gk,. fengficfit , et p -:: Friday o i , 1-SeN101 Dani Dibesinen Rio 1)isbte,, °CB,4 This one's a freebie , .1

' -77

11 The Dash Mauve Campus, Friday. Apnl 22, 190 FINC.:MIMIC:=11111111C: =IIIII1C: 1111111111C: MEM :=Ill= : MSC ' =MC : MIMIC • =MC . 111111111C •=11111=: n111111111C,:n1111111M:=11111C:=111111111C: =MC: 111111111C: MIIIIIIn - 1 I Seniors! i Time is running out! Purce your Senior Week 1 1 and Bash Tickets today. 1 1 i I. Senior Week I April 17th - 22nd 1 1 "Fill the SteinsI _Celebrate in 88" i Tuesday-April 19th 1 •• LUNCH BY THE BEAR! Join us by the the host of this year's formal. Poolside lack Bear for an outside cocktails will begin-at 6:30 and a three en- - lunch. Ham- tflogs will be-available for _tree_dinnei will begin -at- 8:00 Com pi i me n - I t a a quarter. All you want! Drop by. anytime ry wine at every table, The "Inspectors" from/11-2! wilite playing all night. All for $12.00 per person. If you'i‘interested in overnight ac- •w dnesday-April 20th comodations, contact the Ramada. They are running a special MAINE DAY We encourage everyone to par- that night! $42.00/2bed double room. t'cipate in Maine Day but be ready for We will be runn- ing free buses. The buses ICTURE NIGHT AT THE DEN! Come to the will start picking t up at 5:30. They will pick ten from 8-1 and get your picture taken up at Stillwater Village, Maine Center for the with "Harry" out lovable UMaine cop and Arts and Park Place. PLEASE TAKE Bananas the Bear. Pictures will be $1.00. THE BUSES! They will be returning at 12:30 and at 1:00 a.m. 4 Thursday-April 21st YOU MUST BUY YOUR TICKET BY THURS- DAY APRIL 21st!! PUB CRAWL This annual UMaine tradition continues and promises to be the best one Saturday-April 23rd I yet. We'll be starting at 5:30 p.m. Buses will BUMSTOCK! Don't miss out! be available and we strongly suggest that I everyone use them. DON'T DRINK AND Friday-May 6th DRIVE! The buses will go to Yianni's where the festivities begin and then on to Pat's, SENIOR CELEBRATION! GeTebrate-the end Margarita's (El Cheepos). and finally the of your college career at this annual UMaine I world famous "Oronoka". Wear your event! This year it will be held at UMaine sweatshirt or t-shirt and get $1.00 the JV Baseball field. Beer will go from of f 1-5:30 and FREE FOOD will be available all day (1-7). The "Cereal Killers", the -Make" Friday-April. 22nd and the "Boyz" will be playing for 6 hours lof great music! At-The-Ramada-Inn-wilFbe All for only $5.00. T-shirts ---available for $1.00.

All tickets and graduation announcements are available at the Senior Council Booth in thelJnion or in the Student Government Office. 10-3 every day.

BUY YOUR TICKETS TODAY! Formal Tickets $12.00 per person, last day Thursday BASH Tickets $5.00 or $7.00 at the door BASH T-shirts $10.00 or $12.0G day of BASH ANNOUNCEMENTS $4.00/100 or $.35 each :mem_ _mum: .zonarc. ustc

• The Daily Maine Campus, Fridas. April 22. 1988 r Popits. Of view "I don't knoss much about the song, but I think that the part about drinkins te Oft Iladonmile should stay the same.. but tithe sous . silo, Writer puts_ downrri nen.. ttiat should be changed.'" Should the ,Vfaine Stein — Paul MacDonald Song be changed to be Senior Economics gender-neutral and without reference to drinking?

"No. I don't. les a tradition of UMaine "I don't think it 'should be changed. -71 - and should stay the as it is The tradition is far too-important. I don't think the ilumnissould let it he — Lauren Scribner changed. either." SS,Phomofe 'Elementary Education — Ron Sagarino Junior Business Administration

"No. 1 think it's fine. It's tradi• "I think it should be kept the same Ilona]." It's the Stein Song." — Den inc Allsop — Sono Mchanosich Junior Sophomore . Business Administration Elementars Education

* * *Impress Future Emp ers * * * The Bear's Den * with a Professional* * Looking Resume! Art *4( it Presents * :Have your * — *-4( resume * * : typeset * * at * 4( * Friday, April 22nd :The Daily Maine Campus** * * 9 p.m.-1 a.m. * * in the basement * -*- 4( of Lord Han— *4( Ata * 4( * * COVER * .er 4 * Just Contact * * Karen, Mike, or Jan * *4( 4( * * 4( *and choose what style of: 4( H'S :resume you want, at a: ti reasonable cost. * EN ****************2*********