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>: V r^ V*i«)» ports Pl|9« 92 • • Jmiary 27, 19i9 S ( mien's tops St. Joseph By The contest remained tight for DOUG SCANCARELLA and it showed in their squad's Sports Editor a few more minutes, but the Mi^ hustle. When it got down to the Wildcats were just too strong and end, however. Villanova's quick- Vol. 64, No. 12 . VILUNOVA, PA February 3, 1 989 When Villanova and St. Joseph's MM pulled away from the Hawks in ness and strength proved to be too meet on the basketball court it is the last four minutes. relentless and overpowering for almost always an outstanding "This was a terrific basketball the Hawks. contest. game," Wildcat Head Rollie Coach "We tried our hardest," St. Committee formed to study In the last two years, their Massimino said. "St. Joe's made Joseph's Head Coach Jim Boyle games have been settled by one it difficult for us. They were said. "Our players gave 100 per- point each time. In addition, constantly changing their cent and that is all I could ask. 17 of their battles have been organization of defenses it bookstore and making tough for Villanova is just too strong, decided by five points or less, or US. though. They can beat you in so By sity is aware of the problem and University community," Delano in overtime. MAUREEN STAPLETON It appeared early that the many is acknowledging it, ways. They are just a N^ws Editor said Feb. 1. This year's game, played on Jan. Hawks were indeed making things terrific team." An order for 20,000 books w^s He added, "It is not acceptable 24, was not expected to be as difficult for the Wildcats. The Villanova not delivered on time this semes- has many ways to University President the Rev. that literally hundreds of sections memorable as in recent years. Cats played well and managed to beat an opponent, and although ter because of an outstanding bill Edmund J. Dobbin, O.S.A., has from every department across the Villanova, while not enjoying one outshoot and outrebound their those things of $500 from W. W. Norton and Co. have rarely shown up created a committee to examine University are without textbooks of its more successful years thus Philadelphia foes, but Villanova together in publishers, said Delano recently. the same game this the organization and administra- for the first week or two of the far, was heavily favored. could just not put theni away until year, most of their assets did come tion of the University Shop. semester." V.U. enjoyed a 10-8 record the end. together H is not acceptable Jan. 24 to give Villanova The committee will also consid- Delano described the space for entering the game and had topped Wildcat shooting guard Doug the Big 5 victory. er whether the University should that literally hundreds the University Shop as "woefully several top 20 teams, while St. West attributed the closeness of One such Wildcat weapon was lease the store to a private inadequate." Joe's came in com- with a record of only the game to the rivalry. "This is West. 7- of sections from every The senior guard went pany, said committee members Welsh said Feb. 1, "We're ex- 4-11. a huge rivalry and both teams are for-10 from the field to score 18 this week. department across the amining whether the University Despite this fact, however, the always up for the game," he said. points. The 6-foot-6 captain also The committee consists of the Shop should be run under the Hawks played tough ball with the "All of our games with St. Joe's added University are without six rebounds. Rev. Patrick Rice, O.S.A., vice auspices of the University or Cats and kept the J. I*.' game close for are physical and go down to the "Doug West played well should today," president for Administration, the textbooks for the first we have someone else do much of the night. Villanova did end." Massimino said. "He has never it." Rev. Robert J. Welsh, O.S.A., manage to win by a wide margin, West hit week or two of the may have the nail on really had his best days in Big 5 Fenner explained that if the 69-55, assistant to the president, Gary but the game was closer the head. St. Joseph's, though play, but tonight, in his last Big B. semester. committee decided the store was than the final Fenner, vice president for score indicated. obviously not as talented as the 5 game, he got that monkey off Financial Affairs, Dr. Sterling Dr. Sterling Delano not working well, the University "The final score of this game Cats, was sky high for this game (Continued on Delano, chairman of the English Chainmin would not sell the store. Rather, was deceiving. This game was page 27) of the department, and Dr. Donald Kelly, the store would be leased by a close," St. Joseph's forward Henry English Department chairman of the history private company which would Smith said. department. organize and run the store. Swimmers prevail The goal of the committee is to The score was close. At halftime Fenner said Delano said in an interview Feb. create recommendations that there was a "strong Villanova led by only four and at By Photo t}y Scancarella STEVE KIRSCH John Carroll finished fifth through 1 that the formation of the com- possibility" that the store would the 14:11 mark of the would "enable the University second half Staff Reporter be leased to a private company. In Villanova's 69-55 win tenth, respectively. mittee by Dobbin's office is a Shop to become an operation that over St. Joseph's Jan. 24, point guard Kenny the Cats surrendered the lead for Wilson scored 14 points and dished The key Wildcat at LaSalle was "positive sign" that the Univer- can effectively serve out six assists. the first time in the the entire (Continued on page 7) ball game. The Wildcat swimming and junior Lou Dearstyne, who ( Photo by Castano) diving team has won 10 of its last claimed five victories that day. 1 meets to 1 raise its overall record Dearstyne won the 100-meter and Senior Paul Lanza practices administering cough medicine to fellow to 14-1, the most wins ever by a Alumni driving force in 200 freestyles, and swam a leg on House O'Fun resident, Paul Bailer. The flu spre^j^ through Pennsyi* M.U. upsets Villanova men's swimming team. during the last week. Hawks, 63-61 the winning 200, 400 and 800 vania / The high point of the season has freestyle relay teams. By WAYNE CRESSKILL with 12 points and eight rebounds record of 2-2. been They also defeated the 300th victory for Head Dearstyne, sophomore Brian Staff Reporter a piece. success of University , but fell to La Salle Coach Ed Geisz Jan. 12, when the '*•" * Stagg, senior Chris Craft and sea: Rounding off the Wildcats' and Temple. Cats defeated Delaware, 166-77. freshman Jerry By JENNIFER LUNDGREN On campus, approximately 50 money is networking. We get Going into the attack O'Mara set a new Jan. 24, was Pasik, who tallied 'Nova's next contest Geisz has been percent of the faculty will be head coach at school record in the 800 freestyle Staff Reporter and admin- people to meet people through the 's women's basket- eight points, while adding seven tommorrow when it V.U. since istration are alumni, battles Big 1953 and his first relay with a time of 6:46.43, said Capone. clubs and help in any way we can. ball team had a huge task in front rebounds and six assists. East rival victory Tuition rise Boston College came against St. Peter's 8 "No one knows better than you "It is a good mix, as I do not think try to keep the personal aspect at may breaking the We of them. 7-8 old record by nearly The Wilcats were This game finished Villanova's duPont Pavilion on Feb. at 2 p.m. The 10, 1954. He was inducted a full second. [alumnij of Villanova's extraordi- we need all Villanova graduates of a big institution like Villanova, pitted against the St. Joseph's 1988-89 Big Five campaign. The Cats will then battle into the Pennsylvania nary of engendering to keep the Villanova tradition," Monmouth Sports Hall Freshman Russ Stockman also knack deep which you cannot get at many of Hawks, who were 12-2. Cats finished the series with a on Monday. of Fame in 1987, and has had 18 set a new school record '89-^90 loyalty, affection and love in those said Capone. our counterparts," said Riley. Not only did St. have with a percent Joe's for an swimmers the who were Ail- time of 16:05.81 in the 1650 who work and study here and Among students, 20 percent Homecoming and reunions are extremely impressive record, but A. Its suggestions to the committee Americans a total of 46 times. freestyle By ELLIOT FUS then continue to identify with us of every class is composed of sons also an integral part of maintain- the Hawics have also been ranked event. Other winners The Cats first Staff Reporter to provide the parameters for long after and daughters of defeated East included O'Mara in they depart," said alumni and one- ing alumni relations, Riley nationally for much of the season. the 50 frees- Stroudsburg, 106-103, constructing the budget for the University President the Rev. third of every class is connected explained. are Nov. 29. tyle, sophomore Steve Petrie in "They becoming so In addition, Villanova had not "Tuition will increase 8 percent next fiscal year, Fenner said. They then followed that with the 100 and 200 Edmund J. Dobbin, O.S.A., in his to other alumni relatives, Capone largely attended that we have to beaten St. Joe's since 1982 backstrokes, and when a at least [next yearj," recently said Other members of the adminis- said. resounding victory at the Craft in the 100 inaugural address. l(X)k for other kinds of manage- V.U. defeated the Hawks, 69-57. and 200 butterfly National Catholic Gary B. Fenner, vice president for trative budget committee include The Rev. George F. Riley, "What we do best with all the Championships events. To top it all off, Geisz was (Continued on page 6) Perretta's Cats could have Financial Affairs and member of the Rev. Lawrence C. Gallen, held at LaSalle University Dec. 1- named the coach O.S.A., vice president for univer- folded, but instead they stood of the meet by 3. The 'Nova men tallied 805 the administrative budget O.S.A., vice president for Academ- sity relations, and Alumni Direc- their the other coaches at the ground. They outshot, out- committee. ic Affairs, Larry R. Wegscheider, points to LaSalle's 742. championships. tor Robert J. Capone, class of 1962, rebounded and beat the Hawks, Don't forget controller, Dr. your Fordham Fenner said he understands Angelo Armenti Jr., are the driving force behind Vil- finished with 478 and 'Nova went to 7-0 by defeating 63-61 in overtime, in what is easily certain other dean of University College, and Notre Dame was fourth with 438. both Notre that tuitions at lanova's Alumni Association. Villanova's biggest win of the Dame and Fordham Boston College, Providence, St. institutions will also rise at least the Rev. Robert A. Welsh, O.S.A., "It i§ now three times the size year. Dec. 4 by scores of 139-104 and John's, Creighton, Fairfield and 8 percent for the 1989-90 school assistant to the president. since we became involved," Riley overcoat V.U. shot 42 percent from the (Continued on page 28) year. The second major committee said. The association, which once floor and grabbed 39 rebounds, The administrative and Univer- involved in the process of formu- had 18,000 members, now has Flu hits Philadelphia area while the Hawks shot 39 percent sity Senate budget committees lating the University budget is the 60,000 members. Twenty million and recorded 30 rebounds. By KEVIN C. HEIL experiencing symptoms of it, said Teams of the 90s? have received the 1989-90 budget Senate budget committee. A part dollars in cash has been raised The Cats were led by junior News Editor Elaine Jurs, assistant director of captured their third championship priorities from the planning and of the Senate, this group was from the association in 35 years. Helen Koskinen. Koskinen, who is the Office for Health Promotion of the decade. The Steelers would priorities committee and are cur- established to "monitor the devel- Thrity-two percent of alumni the team's leading scorer, account- Flu is spreading around the and Education. repeat that feat a year later in rently considering them. opment of the budget in accor- contributed last year, a high ed for 25 points in the game. The Philadelphia area and Pennsylva- Pasadena when they won their dance with policies, priorities and number, and 24,000 of 40,000 Tests done on throat cultures junior also dished out five assists nia, but there is no increase in record fourth Super Bowl. Tiiftlofi wHI Increase resources," explained Clay. The undergraduate alumni have at from several Penn State students while grabbing five rebounds. Villanova students with flu symp- the presencce of Who will be the "Team of the 10-member budget committee is some time given, Capone said. have confirmed In addition, Koskinen was the 8 percent at least [next toms, said Dr. Dennis Boyle Jr., flu virus, said '90s?" Buddy Ryan and the Eagles composed of administration, Riley attributed much of this the Type A Sichuan Wildcats' main weapon in over- University physician. have been stockpiling a tremend- year.] faculty, students and alumni, success to the duo's personal Bruce Kleger of the state Bureau time, scoring six of Villanova's The state's Health Department, ous amount of talent in Philadel- fiiry B. Fennor according to Clay. efforts. Riley and Capone have of Laboratories. eight points. however, reported last week that have phia over the past couple of years. VicoPrttkloiitfor Currently, the committee is travelled to 30 cities and called Up to 60 students a day several thousand students at Contributing the most for the Buddy may be discussing precedence of treated in University Park brash and obnox- Flwawcial Affairs money over 18,000 alumni. The alumni been Hawks in the losing cause Penn State University's Universi- was ious, but he is a winner and with allotment with the Senate's plan- records are now on computer. facilities. Many students are forward Kim Foley. Foley tossed ty Park campus were afflicted quarterback Randall Cunningham University officials are approx- ning and priorities committee. There are also 50,000 files' for treating themselves by resting in 26 points and pulled in 12 with a flu-like illness, according approaching stardom, one has to imately midway through forming The committee is also negotiating alumni and alumnae, including and taking medication. The worst rebounds. By JOHN F. to the Philadelphia Inquirer Jan. SWIFT believe that Buddy and his young the budget for the coming fiscal a fourth preliminary budget draft letters, pictures and newspaper of the problems are over, said Jurs. She also hit two shots at the Associate Editor Eagles are 31. on the right track. year, said Fenner. The University with the administrative budget clips. The flu has also affected schools end of regulation to tie the game. After Students visiting Villanova's years of being little more maintains a balanced budget each committee. Villanova University has many in Philadelphia. At Archbishop Her last shot was a layup, which The Super Bowl this year did than infirmary are commonly afflicted an atrocious football team, year. For 1989-90, the budget may "The University budget famous and successful alumni. Ryan High School. 340 of 3.021 she converted with 55 seconds something that it has not done in the with upper-respiratory infections, Buffalo Bills came within one total approximately $121 million, includes all expenses regarding These include the late singer Jim students called in sick but "we're not seeing Jan. 30, remaining. a long time — it actually lived up game of more [cases reaching the Super Bowl said Alvin A. Clay, dean of the salaries, student services, finan- Croce, of the Los many because of the flu, according In overtime, however, the Wild- to the expectations and hype that this of illnes») than we normally see," season. Armed with one of the College of Commerce and Finance cial aid, dining, bookstore, athlet- Angeles Raiders and the Honora- to the Inquirer. Incarnation cats put the game away. After are associated with this Boyle said. game of league's premier young defenses, and Senate budget committee ics, dormitories, library, offices ble Chief Justice Robert N.C. Nix, parochial school was closed Jan. Beth Pasik nailed the first shot games. He said that students are more quarterback Jim Kelly and chairman. and departmental costs," Clay the State Supreme Court Chief 31 because many teachers had of the extra period, the squad Joe Montana and the San Fran- unbridled cognizant of the flu now because enthusiasm, the future The administrative budget com- said. Justice who is the first black chief contracted the illness. never surrendered its lead. cisco 49ers firmly many may know a few friends entrenched looks bright for the Bills. mittee 18 the ^(arting point of the "Employee salaries and the justice of the United States. In the Once again, Koskinen can>e themselves as the who have acquired symptoms. He Three types of influenza virus "Team of the Al Davis, the man who has budget-making process. In Octob- consequent raise in tuition are business world prominent Villan- f '.» through for the Cats. This time 80s" upon winning added, however, that the flu are affecting the nation this flu their third claimed to have committed only er, the committee sends budget always big issues for debate," ova alumni include William T. she hit two game-clinching foul championship of the decade. which is spreading is not a cause season. They are Type A Sichuan, one bad personnel move (Marc requests to all departments and Clay said. Dunn, class of 19S5i, executive shots with 1 :30 remaining. Ironically, the last for alarm. Type A Taiwan and Type B r«.»«-^ «i o^,^ i«in,m-.i«« Super Bowl Wilson, QB), has been working services of the University. This In October, John Lewis, Student vice president, E.F. Hutton and Penn State's serious Also playmg well for Villanova . . /> played in Miami was the one th

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P«gt 2 • THE VMJ-AMOVAN • FUbniwry 3, ItW Weekend Inside this week. . Weather band protests Seton Hall Editorials PrmfitMl 6y Dr. Bdward Guinan Letters regarding the Abortion By SHEILA COURTER helped us." Theodore A. Aceto, director ot This was confirmed by issue, . . . From the Left . . . From Staff Reporter Susan Dilley, associate athletic athletics. Friday # the Right examines Proposition 42 director at Seton Hall, said that Linda Bruno, assistant commis- and OpEds cover topics ranging Mostly Cloudy The pep band travelled to Seton the decision was based on a space sioner to the Big East in charge from the Right to Life to Ethics Hall University Jan. 16 carrying problem. She said that when of championships. temp. 35-40 in the Media to President Bush in Hi^ kazoos, instead of their instru- "institution^ have facilities whith Aceto said it is part of the this week's Editorial Section, ments, to protest the school's are sold out, it is hard to provide college tradition for the band and beginning on page 10. Features decision to exclude visiting pep tickets." She also said she "under- the cheerleaders to be part of the Villanova students return to Saturday bands from performing at basket- stands it is a league policy" for game. He said college life has campus telling stories of enrich- ball games played there. bands ndt to travel to other become "sterile" because of this exclusion of pep bands. (File Photo) ment and enlightenment as a This year Seton Hall joined schools. . Partly Cloudy/Cold Villanova Pep Band may attend fewer result of time spent abroad. Also, other Big East schools who do not The duPont Pavilion meets the ViJlanova allows those schools ^* away games as other ""'versitics restrict their attendance . _ Black History Month begins, the High temp. 34-37 allow visiting pep bands into their Big East's minimum standards in which permit its band into their Dec. 22 game in the duPont according to Clarence Underwood, Philadelphia Zoo celebrates Val- arenas, including Providence Col- seating capacity, 6,500 seats. arenas to perform in the duPont Pavilion. assistant entine's Day and more, beginning lege, University of Connecticut, Seton Hall utilizes the Brendan Pavilion. commissioner of the The Seton Hall decision points league. He said the policy has been Sports on page 13. University of Pittsburgh and St. Byrne Arena, which has a seating The Big Five teams allow for John's capacity of 20,000. visiting bands at their games. to a trend developing within the in effect for two years because of Tom Greis scored 25 points and Sunday University. NCAA to exclude visiting pep space resti-ictions within the Sophomore band member Eliza- It is an "unwritten policy for Villanova's band played in the Chris Walker hit a 15-foot field bands from arenas. beth Broderick said, the host institution to determine Palestra Jan. 24 against St. basketball games. Big goal with 16 seconds left as the "Our director Continue(J Cold helped whether the visiting band can Joseph's University, and LaSalle 10 conference teams only allow Marvin Francis, information Villanova men's basketball team Seton Hall to start their 33-36 pep band and come into the arena," said Dr. College's band was present at the bands to play on their home court. director for the Atlantic Coast edged Pitt, 79-78. Also, the wom- High temp. now they haven't (Continued on page Si en's basketball team defeated Increasing clouds with Monmouth College behind a 17- 30% chance of snow/rain point effort from junior Helen ,-, . , "-^^^^.^i. Decision expected soon on academic in afternoon freedom Koskinen. Entertainment and evening on in By PATRICK L. MOUSSEAU event which conforms to estab- walls and faculty mailboxes. University property by this for." accordmg to the report. William Hurt and Kathleen Staff Reporter lished University regulations," The report stated that Betz "felt group," according to the report. Shields made no official com- in "The Accidental Turner reunite the motion stated. he would be doing the Naval Shields then informed Gallen ment recently because he said he Tourist." For the latest movie A committee which examined McGann was part of a group ROTC a favor by letting them see, about the lecture. believed the report summarized information, Dial-A-Movie hits Beyond the Main Line an alleged violation of academic which damaged and poured blood hear and meet McGann." The report stated that Gallen the mcident and any questions the market. The Beach-Boys and Compiled by Samantha torlini freedom last spring recently sub- in the cockpits of aircraft at a "He wanted to challenge the was more concerned with the could be answered in the report. Chicago mesmerize the . officials for the Sia/f Reporter mitted its final report to the military base in protest of, war on NROTC and give them NROTC students creating a dis- He said he is waiting begins on page 23. Entertainment — 6, 1987. the opportunity to confront some- turbance than with any actions of decision of the faculty council. North on trial — Faculty Council for approval. Jan. Oliver L. North, the National science and health care, according Indian affairs The council will vote on a one who they think did something the group. Shields said in the report that FYI can now be found inside to wide-ranging public The Bureau of Indian Affairs wrong," the report said. "What he did "it is Security Council aide hailed by the most motion concerning the report Feb. FiKuHy Council believes was done with my Navy policy to promote Ronald Reagan opinion poll ever conducted within should be overhauled or abolished Betz was aware of obtaining the approval. It was a prudent step academic freedom tlie Features section former President 21. completely." and millions of others, as being the Soviet Union. The poll also due to its paternalistic attitude, The report deals with actions firmly that ^se ac- necessary approval for posting taken in order not to exacerbate Shields said he supports his that Soviet President Indian leaders told a Senate panel fliers disre- what could a national hero is on trial on revealed surrounding the appearance of the tioas violated the prin- but "consciously have become a chaotic decision and that the situation charges of covering up the Iran- Mikhail Gorbachev is more pop- in Washington. Wilma Mankiller, Rev. Thomas McGann on campus garded" them, the report said. confrontation," stated a memo presented a danger to NROTC ular than former President Rea- Cherokee nation chief, said it is ciple of flier read in part, from Gallen to Betz. students. Collegiate News contra affair. The trial is expected at the invitation of Dr. Joseph academic free- The He added that his will gan in Moscow and in four Amer- "maddening" to deal with the "Why would a Philadelphia priest The report stated that Gallen "action not to last about five months and Betz, philosophy professor, April dom necessary for the was intended as an ican cities nearly identical Bureau. The panel is investigating take help felt turning the interference Across the Country focus on the dozen criminal where 14. a hammer and cause class into a lecture of free speech or charges against North. questions were asked. reports of corruption in bureau Cap. Charles D. Shields, com- $160,000 damage to three military was against the unwritten academic freedom." By College Press Service — Medical waste disposal — programs. aircraft at the Willow Grove "rules." The "students Toxic -waste cleanup manding officer of the Universi- timely and substantive have paid Betz said he believes that The government's toxic waste The New Jersey Senate is con- Jackson and Soviets — Naval Air Station?" Shields was for their classes, outsiders have Shields' order to Betz's Campus calendar controversial ty's NROTC program, ordered all students cleanup program has become so sidering a bill that would require Jesse Jackson, on his first trip midshipmen in his unit not ideas by the Universip "concerned about the possible not, and the students are not was "academically impermissi- Such images can be trouble- to Administrators at Louisiana reliant on private contractors that the state to track medical waste to the Soviet Union, said he met attend the lecture. destruction of government and getting the attention they paid ble." some at schools funded by the community. halted sales of a of knowing whether from its source to its final disposal. an aide to Gorbachev in an attempt College have it has no way The Rev. Lawrence C. Gallen, J Baptist Convention. Southern organize telethon to aid fundraising calendar featuring Superfund cleanups are working, This bill was prompted by beach to a O.S.A., vice president for Acadmic by Faculty After Playboy magazine deter- Mothm CouacU in bathing states. The closings due to medical waste victims of Armenia's earthquake, campus students a congressional report Affairs, gave his approval for the Housing lottery key mined that Mfercer University, to suits, fearing it was giving the report recommended that the build-up. which killed 25,000. Jackson's action taken by Shiel4sj according McGann entered a pleabargain a Baptist campus, was among — Baptist school a "playboy" Environmental Protection Agency Papal document aides denied reports he is consid- to the after two trials which ended in schools" in the m'oliipn.r. the top "party have a role in the ering to run for mayor of the image. spend more of its Superfund Women "Faculty Council believes firm- hung juries. He served 100 days nation in 1987, literalists in the raising money for billion since 1982, on Catholic Church — but not as Districtof Columbia in 1990. in prison. residency at on-campus Aimed money, $4.9 ly that these actions violated the Georgia Baptist Convention priests or their assistants. the college's chorus, the "Men developing in -house scientific and Pope Child abuse — of McGann was invited to Betz to cam- principle academic freedom said. Remley said that although the mounted an unsuccessful II in By SINEAD QUINN of Louisiana College" calendar, engineering talent, to provide John Paul wrote a document Joel Steinberg, the New York necessary for speak to his class, "The Ethics of the full examination participating student incoming freshman class will paign to replace Mercer's trus- issued Assistant News Editor "Each be which even campus President better federal oversight and man- Monday. The Pope, how- lawyer accused of beating to death of timely and War," in order to present the conservative substantive ideas by will receive their lottery number comparable to the size of the characterized tees with more ever, condemned discriminating Robert L. Lynn agement of the contracts. his illegally-adopted daughter, the University community," stat- views of pacifism, a side which church members. For those wishing to live on before leaving for spring break present freshman class, there will as "about as scintillating as a Moscow poll — against women in the 195-page Lisa, was found guilty of first- ed the motion. was not strongly covered in a class Calendars have caused trou- campus* next year, the annual and the cut-off points will be not be a significant increase in the Sears catalog," was tame Muscovites rate the United document, "The Lay Members of degree manslaughter Monday. that focused on the "just" He "Faculty council . . . urges war and bles" campuses, but that posted soon after," Remley said. number of rooms set aside for Alexan- at other Christ's Faithful People," reaf- housing lottery has begun. enough that the local States as more democratic and facesv-a maximum of eight to 25 the vice president for "total" war theories, said Betz. for different reasons. Academic A number of variables are con- freshmen. "About 40 percent of Talk pub- usually Soviet firming his position on women The intent-to-participate cards, dria Daily Town hard-working than the years in prison when he is sent- Affairs affirm that no member of According to the committee Only 23 Louisiana College which were due Jan. 27, will be sidered before the cut-off numbers the rooms will be allotted for the lished a photo from it. and see a U.S. lead in published in September. enced March 8. report, Betz Union the University community may opened the class to incoming freshmen," which calendars were sold when Lynn processed as students begin to can be established, Remley said. he said. However, the photo, use his authority to prohibit others and distributed approxi- banned them, but students find housing for 1989-90. These variables include whether After the cut-off numbers are was of a male student in a hot EDITORS students from attending any mately 150 fliers, which he placed seemed to agree with their The lottery is conducted by a the Board of Trustees approves posted, eligible students who tub with two female classmates NEWS FEATURES ENTERTAINMENT SPORTS president's view of its modesty. computerized random number choose to live on campus must generated complaints. Kevin C. Heil Jim Bowman Allen Ambrosino John Ricco generator, according to Daniel C. hand in their room selection Maureen Stapleton Megan Guidera Jeffrey P. Giiles Doug Scancarella We start with each stu- Increase seen in forms, Remley said. The room Pie man problems persist ASSISTANT EDITORS Remley, assistant director of Residence Life for Assignment dent's first choice, run selection forms allow each student Dan Moriarty Karen lovino Peggy Kellar Joe Guarino Baylor University's pie man, campus have been pied this Services. to designate eight possible choices Sinead Quinn Andrew Mathls Amy C. Spencer it through the com- or someone just like him, has school year. Several students A tentative timeline, includes for where they would like to live. Stephen Powers sorority rushing if returned. and professors were pied in mailing lottery numbers to all puter and we can't Remley suggested that students A long-haired man recently class during first semester, but By JENNA WARD tor return to five parties at most participants, posting cut-off place them in their make their initial choices specific Art Editor Brad Bookler Photography Editor Greg Castano Advison June W. Lytel-Murphy barged into a business class, Baylor spokesman Dr. James Staff Reporter on Wednesday; if invited back to points, arranging room preference and then follow with choices more ran up to student Jim Wyatt, Baker reports that the first all seven, they are required to and informing residents of room first choice, we go general. semester pie man had been Business Section: and hit him in the face with Approximately 600 women eliminate two sororities. The assignments. lire list until Juniors' choices are processed Advertising Dirscton Dave Weidman Assistant Advertising Director: Daniel Galo down we a pie. apprehended and punished recently registered for formal third round parties, where each The intent-to-participate cards first, followed by sophomores and normal disciplinary Personals/Clsssifisd: Adrina Movsesian Layout Directors: Eileen Grady. Karle SmKh "I was just sitting in class through sorority rush, almost 20 percent woman is permitted to visit with provide a space in which students freshmen, he said. Subscriptions/Delinquent Billing: Carol Fasano channels Billing: Marie Ivanov three sororities, are tonight, Remley said that the office of looking at my notes when I more than last year. have the opportunity to designate Daniel C. Rtmtoy, The pie massacre in Kasner s Office Secretary: Jeri Smith heard this guy say *hey," and Those rushees remaining may a preferred roommate. In desig- Resident Life tries to fulfill as had to be ^ dIrtctM-of class, he concluded, "first choices" as possible. then I looked up into a pie," Those registered attend up to two parties on Pref- nating a roommate, the pair would many people. represent Housing S«nric«s the work of different "We start with each student's Wyatt recalled. nearly half, of the women in the erence Night Sunday. Each rushee receive only one lottery number. Atkins, Beth Barrow, Karia Beckner, KathyBielomyza, then her final decision. first choice and run it through the Pie attacks .Staff: Michael Aimette, Ed Alvarado, Christine E. freshman class. makes The housing lottery informa- When Wyatt left class to were common on the proposal to make the two new Borowski, R. Michael Bullotta, Monica Byrne, Bill Carr. John Carr, Diane A. Ciltone, Sheila computer. . .if we can't place them in many campuses in the early Lynnae tion bulletins suggested that clean up, he was pied again south campus residence halls, 123 Cresskill, David Criblez, Jim Crossan, Nancy Cuttita, Michael Denison, Vlcki DiStefano, in their first choice, we go down eighties, when the weapon of Courter, Wayne students who choose to room with the restroom. Villanova Bonas estimated that after first rooms each, house men in one and Dragonette, Leonard Ellis, Chris Etgen. Kristen Fallen, Samantha Forlini, Elliot uses a formal rush to the list until we can," he choice seemed to be cream or Diane Bob Duggan, someone in another class should all round parties, 94 women with- in the other. Approval on Meanwhile, back in the class- Gentile, Susan Guerette, Luci Jankowski, Michael Jones, Terry Kelly, enable participants to choose women explained. berry pies. Professors Fus, Jackie Kate Geoghegan, consider submitting separate at Mich- drew, and he expected that an will room, the pie man stuck his V. Langran. Anne Marie Lombardi, Maria Lovett, Jenn Lundgren, the sorority which is right for whether St. Mary Hall house Students will be notified of igan State University and the Steve Kirsch. Bart)ara Kresch. Irene cards, as the student in the higher them, according to additional 50 rushees would drop women next year is also pending, head into the room and yelled Maureen Mahead, Cathy Martin. Dave Maylish, Ellk)tl McEWowney, Natalie McKenna, Garen Meguerlan, Gary Bonas, class has a lower probability of room assignments in late March University of Colorado were out over the week. ' "Hey Gina, you're next" to Davkl Nassar. Mary O'Neill, Kathryn Ouigley, Dana Rao, Jennifer Reidy, Miriam assistant director of Student he said. (Continued on page 6 victimized, as was the dean of Patrrck Mousseau, success in the lottery. another student, professor Robinson, Kristine Ryan, Jeanne Savitscus, Johanna C. Sharp, Rob Shershilkxiks, Tara Slligato, T. Activities. He added that doing so students at the University of Students rooming together in Leslie Rasner reported. Trimble. Jenna Ward. Hallie Zimmerman. ensures that as many women as Wisconsin at Madison. Patton the same class who do not desig- Bonas, however, said that possible will receive bids to pledge he nate roommates double their In a scene like one out of a feels this year's Corrections sororitv. rush will be a Celebrities visiting cam- a chances of receiving lower television cop show, several great success. Only about In puses in those days had to be 20 Students last week's issue, Lee tees. Dr. Margaret M. Healy, is articles, pictures and format are the responsibility of the Editor and the Editorial numbers. with lower class members bolted up to The writing, lay-out percent of those registered will careful, too. William F. Formal rush consists of a type Atwater was incorrectly des- not the current dean of Rose- Buck- represent the view of the administratk>n, faculty and students unless numbers choose dormitories and chase the assailant. One stu- Board and do not necessarily not get the sorority of their ley, New York Senator Daniel of mutual selection prxxress. On choice. cribed as a possible candidate mont College. She is a former, specifically stated. The University subscribes to the principle of responsible freedom of expresskxi rooms first. These students will dent, Steve Spoonemore, man- This, he said, is due to the indi- for the dean of Moynihan, conservative Phyl- Jan. 23 and 29, this year's first have the opportunity to Republican National Rosemont. for our student editors. choose a aged to jump into the pie man's vidual's poor rush techniques. Committee (RNC) Also, Diana P. ^ lis Schfaley, former Ohio Gov- round of "rotational parties" were roommate when handing in room chair. Atwat- McCauley, getaway car, but eventually Many neglect to keep an er is ernor James Rhodes, Watergate held. At this time, each rushee open selection forms, currently the KNC assistant dean for the College Subscriptions are according to the had to roll out of it while it was The VHIanovsn ie published Fridays. 10 issues a semester. Circulatk>n: 8,500. mind about sorority choices. chairman. of conspirators E. Howard Hunt visited with eiKh of the teven lottery information bulletin. Liberal Arts and Sciences, moving. available at $25.00 per year. For advertising informatkxi contact the ofHce 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. and G. Gordon Liddy, artist cafflfnis chapter sororities for half Remley said that each student The headline, "St. Mary Hall was not responsible for over- The pie man and a woman 215-645-7207. to seeing Andy Warhol, anti-gay rights an hour. The sororities then invite competes with only his or her undergo conversion for Project Sunshine. The companion in the car were By maintaining all of their females" activist and singer Anita Bry- particular women back for a class members for housing. Each should have stated, Office for Social Action Pro- screaming at him and hitting reserves the right to refuse any sd insertions due to questk)nable content and opportunities, Bonas said that "St. Mary grams, for ant and former CIA Director The VMsnovan second round, which was held class will be allotted a certain Hall may undergo which McCauley him, Spoonemore said. limltilions. The deadline to pliM advertising is 12 p.k Ihe Tuesday prkx to publk^^ 99.9 peixxnt of the women will be conversion for used to William Colby all were pied at F^l. number of housing slots and from females." work, was responsible. not the first time accepted into a sorority in which The new vice It was various schools during the this number the cut-off point for chairwoman of The VilUnovan regrets of the Waco, Texas, University. tliey will be jenuinely Happy. the University's these errors. habitues period. The VNisnovsn is tie of record for Villanova have the opftportunity each class is determined, Remley Board of Trus T^

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tNt4#TiiiVtiJ>iiO¥iyi»^ibni>ncl,i .««- % SF«'.. drivasMwIliiled Utoeratioii fiescae Biiid to a gymnasium filled hope for pints the officers begtn dragging er led us Sponiom 600 the "rescue" Show, the Morton. Downey Jr. while By HALUE ZIMMERMAN The second step in Rescue pirtici- with mats and aleeping "raa- "20/20" male OiK»rati arrest, reasoning Tuesday through Thursday, 10 Giving bkx)d takes only 10-15 is that everyone who is healthy Post-election polls showing ab6r- don't assist.** The An inside view were being brought Officer Jerry Kane answered, that charges in give blood so it is available behind this is that the longer it Christmas, a.m. to 5 p.m., the Villanova minutes, but at least one hour should tion as the No. 1 issue and the I figured the best way to get the city of New *it was sort of like against me by the are sick, he added. for the police to clear the nieces Room of Connelly Center. shoukl be set aside for the entire for those who recent decision by the Supreme takes flavor of an Operation Rescue was York and the National Organiza- You know, when all your longer the "mills," The campaign is one of three prooediune, Hardin said. It consists Five percent of the population Court hear an abortion case entrance, the to see one in action, from the and nephews are crawling under to tion of Women. of donated blood, Operation Rescue refers to hanging on your annual drives at Villanova spon- of signing in and getting one's gives 90 percent from Missouri indicates the public as inside. At 8:30 we arrived at the police your legs and closed. sored by the American Red Cross temperature and blood pressure he said. controversy over the Roe vs. Wade them, stay The rally was held Jan. 13, the officer, was in arms, and you're outnumbered academy. Each of people claim on how well- 1." Pennjersey Regk>n. taken, along with a blood sample. The majority decision which made abortion Depending night prior to the "rescue." Unfor- of five "rescuers." Our like 30 to charge is never given blood )y Soofie) equipped the police department is, Sophomore Mark Hardin is After that, one pint of blood they have legal. tunately, I missed the speakers taken and our Villanovans for life will sponsor the Red Cross blood drive which pictures were We stayed in the gymnasium of drive. given they have never been demonstrators may be ^.» chairman the Hardin is taken. The

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Nimwry 3, IW • TMC VILtAMOVAM • Pye»TMeVILLAM0VAWF»bryfy3,1t» Bii# Middle States committees ssad members wanes fOmtinued from pom in the V involved Smoking on campus Editor's nott: ThU is a list of all the committees He cited a mise of 5 percent as Unipersity's Middle States Evaluation. Restrictions tighten a reasonable fwnllel to projected 1989 inflatkn rates between 4.4 Steering Committee For Middle Stoles Self Study Organization and Administration Committee combat smoking on campuses lead to cancers and heart disease By College Press Service to percent and 5.1 percent. Lewis, several decades. for nonsmokers, too. Liberal Arts for however, said he expects tuition Dr. Helen K. Lafferty, assistant dean, College of Dr. Richard Neville — vice president. Student Life Some feel colleges are not edu- of schools have Colorado's Metroiwlitan State chairperson — director of personnel A number however. to rise close to 10 percent, despite and Sciences, Thomas Bull bookstore stopped selling cating students enough, announced tougher smoking res- Collie's these suggestions. Yolanda Carter, student Kevin Heil — student hjovember, while "We must continue to do better trictions in recent weeks. From cigarettes in Stephen Franklin, J.D., dean, Law SchooM Carolyn Lea — University Senate in helping present smokers give Big Bend Community College in Georgia State University banned Lewis, a three-year member of Robert Gross, student Maurone — physics do much better Dr. Philip such sales in 1986. Scores of other up the habit and the Senate budget committee and science Washington state to the East Dr. Fritz Hartman, professor, mathematical Julie Meehan — student universities in encouraging young people not of the Coast, campuses that began lim- schools, including the a two-year member planning Dennis Kuhn, assistant professor, business law Michal-Johnson — communication arts wrote in the J.D., Dr. Paula Illinois, Nebraska, North to start," Longest and pnorities committee, said, iting student smoking as long as of Texas, Dr. Ann Lesch, associate professor, political science Cheryl Riillo — bursar Mankato State ACHA's policy papfer on smoking, "Student involvement in the a decade ago have taken the last Dakota, Tulane, Chris Lysionek, assistont to the dean of students Ben Summers — assistant to the associate dean, sciences which calls for tight limits on this school year. and Southwest Missouri State budget process is reasonable in assistant dean. College of Liberal Arts and big step substan- Dr. Diana McCauley, Frank Suwalski — UCIS campus campus tobacco use and comparison to other universities. "Smoking is pretty much also have restricted (Photo Courtesy of CPS) Sciences Kathryn Wuest — Commerce and Finance tially increased educational of college 'However, there could be banned now" at Big Bend, spokes- smoking. Smoking is being restricted or banned on a number more Dr. Philip McLaughlin, professor, mechanical engineering Dr. Diana McCauley — liason member, steering committee health efforts. openness in access." man Doug Sly reported concerning School officials cite campuses. Rose O'Driscoll, assistant to the dean. College of Nursing 1. concerns as the reason. assistant to the president new rules implemented Jan. educated people, the U.S. the Rev. Robert J. Welsh, O.S.A., ••• moral Better "Currently the budget is unbal- In 1976, Penn State University "We have practical, even William Werpehowski, associate professor, religious studies Public Health Service found in a Dr. Governing Board Committee reasons to restrict smoking," anced by $3 million," said Fenner. was one of the first U.S. campuses report released in late 1988, explained William Hetrick, direc- When the budget committees to ban smoking from its labora- respond better to artti-smoking Housing lottery Accounting Committee services reaches a suitable balance, the Strategic Planning, Budgeting and Dr. Emily Binns — religious studies and classrooms. On April 1 tor of Penn State's human tories efforts than less educated citizens. president department. budget draft will be presented to Dr. Charles Cherry — associate vice of this year, it will forbid smoking gradu- The proportion of college the university Senate to be voted Dr. Angelo Armenti — director of planning, dean, University Matthew DiCamaro — student everywhere except certain dorm ''Colleges need to recognize ates who smoked decreased from College O.S.A. — provincial, board of trustees people are at a volatile point on and approved. the Rev. Joseph Duffey, rooms. young school in the fall. 28 percent in 1974 to 18 percent she returns to the Rev. George Burnell, O.S.A. — assistant to the president Fitzpatrick — dean. College of Nursing of habits," fill out room change forms if they Dr. M. Louise "It's too strict of a rule. I have in their development that students in 1985. For people without a Remley suggested The budget proposal is finally Courtney Chester — student — student, commerce and finance said John M. Pinney, executive decide that they are not satisfied Beth Gaffney a smoking habit and I don't feel decrease — decide not to live on campus given to the of Trustees for college degree, the who Board Lisa DelConte — studeint Philip Griener — nursing rain or director of Harvard's Institute for with their room assignment. Dr. like standing out in the percent in 1974 to 34 or decide to take their names off approval and modification. The from 36 notnoi the .. Dr. John Edwards — chemistry Dr. Margaret Healy — board of trustees Penn State the Study of Smoking Behavior MuaentsStudents whowno doao makemane me j. snow [to smoke]," said percent in 1985 — was more ^ ^^ ^o so as budget will be implemented dur- Umv^^^^^^^^ Dr. Michael Hones — physics Margaret Hutchinson — nursing Policy. "Colleges can influ- cutoff, along w^h any .^, senior Mary Helen Moran. and ..^ ^^^^^ ^ academic year. modest. [^ ^^^^^ ing the following . trustees letting College students or fifth-year Robert Kelly - UCIS the Rev. Michael Scanlon, O.S.A. — board of Stanford University banned ence their young people by still students who are ' j^^ easier for This year, the Board of Trustees Kathryn Lawless — assistant to the vice president Barbara Walker - UCIS them know smoking is not the new cam- seniors who are looking for on- . smoking at outdoor events in But even among housing," he will meet April 11 to decide on the " '^ Dr. Robert Lynch — dean, engineering Dr. Lee Christensen — liaison member, steering committee acceptable." pus bans, there are signs college campus housing, can enter their 'V'Xi * 1988. 1989-90 budget proposal. — Financial Affairs are employers, and as names on a waiting list after the ^''E'". Frederick Sieber "Some colleges have been set- "Colleges students may be smoking more For those5J* students who need cut-off nurnbers are Connie Smith — Law School ting the pace" said Dr. John employers they have a responsi- again. lottery off-campus assistance in finding Dean Steven Franking, liaison member, steering committee Longest, the former Mississippi bility to their employees and posted. do we residency, the Rev. Frank Farsaci, students to ensure a healthy "The key question is how These students will be placed Faculty Committee State University student health O.S.A., advisor to off-campus Books workplace," Pinney added, citing get to these teenagers?" a frustrat- on the list, which currently center director and American residents, is available to provide Outcomes Committee 1986 Surgeon General's report ed Longest said of the survey includes off-campus students who (Continuedfrom page 1 College Health Association the information about local housing. Dr. Gerald Long — psychology led efforts that said second-hand smoke can results. have already entered their names Dr. Greg Bonner -— marketing (AC HA) official who has His office is located in Dougherty Fenner explained that the Uni- Cathy Connor — assistant registrar on the list, Remley said. „ „ ^r.^ Dr. Linda Copel — nursing |i^»^j;pom zu/ versity has already been Mary Agnes Boyle — student "Two factors allow us to use the Margaret DiCicco — student approached by two private com- .Pam Braxton — r^strar's office retention rate of waiting list, the Robert Capone — alumni Dr. Lucy McDiarmid — English key to V.U. success pending panies. The committee will also Alumni and the participants Sean Nobel — student, engineering Marchers bear a presentation from another the Rev. Arthur Chappell, O.S.A. — religious studies (Continued from page 1) Villanova news and feature stories since 1973, Riley explained. decision on the two south campus Dr. Ed Reilly — counseling center (Continued from page company, Fenner said. Mary Lou Cubbage — career development literatur^and Alumni Association runs said. 4) ment," Capone said. on alumni to art, The dorms," Remley David Flannery — student Dr. David Sprows — mathematical sciences nine annual fundraising school, and I felt really moved, It would be fair to assume that promotes sports. one of The retention rate of partici- our Dr. Dorothy Wessbecher — chemical enginnering The Association also we will make a decision by the end Dr. Lowell Gustafson — political science programs. This year the associa- I agreed to do it," he said. to The structure of the Alumni pants is variable because students so Dr. Daniel Ziegler — dean, graduate school faculty and staff members of this semester," added Fenner. Dr. John Kelley — acting director, research tion raised $3.5 million, Capone The overwhelmingly white pro- the various clubs, Capone Association consists of an execu- often enter the housing lottery Dr. William Werpehowski — liaison member, steering committee speak at as Last year, the Program Evalua- Dr. Douglas Klieger — psychology and a board .of said. Seventy-seven percent of decide that they will live testers heard speakers such said. tive committee and later Chris Lysionek — liaison member, steering committee elected these funds is unrestricted for the March for Life president Nellie tion Committee (PEC) stated in its "Coach and governors, composed of off campus, Remley said. ••• University's use. Gray; Brooklyn, N.Y., Rabbi Yehu- final report that "Faculty, staff Coach are always candidates. The board of gover- Donna Puntilillo, a sophomore or da Levin; and New York Cardinal and students indicated that they Library for us and they nors consists of the presidents The fundraising the association arts major, lived at Rosemont Mission, Goals and Objectives Committee Committee willing to speak go to the University of the John O'Connor Shop because at certain times representatives from each does is divided into three groups. College last year and put her name Eigo» O.S.A. — religious studies are very popular they to the Rev. Frank of the President George Bush, in a have and not because they Dr. Mary Ann Griffin — director. Faivey library Capone said. clubs and past presidents Annual giving is an annual gift on the waiting list for this year. — and Finance of the year," want to." Dean Alvin Clay Commerce Association. to be so telephone address to the crowd, Dr. Aaron Bauer — biology "Dobbin will also visit a number National Alumni from an alumnus which he gives "I was fortunate enough Dr. Dobbyn — Law said •The also stated, John waiting list. affirmed their optimism. He PEC "There Dr. Michael Brown — psychology of the clubs and in turn, five local to his class, Riley said. high up on the Dr. John Doody — philosophy low, Roe vs. Wade was "wrong and seems to be a lack of drive and Sally Christ — bursar's office clubs will gather at Connelly Because my number was so — Nursing Ifan creativity from the Dr. Nancy Engel alumnus wishes to contrib- that chances should be overturned," expressed leadership in Timothy Feeman — mathematical sciences Center next month to meet Fr. they^ told me my Joseph Gili)ert — alumnus ute more, there is the capital on-campus support for a constitutional amend- the University Shop. There is a Louise Green — Faivey library Dobbin," said Capone. were good for getting Jennifer Healey — student campaign. An alumnus would bother to ment banning abortion and said sense of complacency." Kevin Hughes — student "In an average year, there is a housing. I didn't even Chris Janosik — director, residence life pledge to give $5,000 over four the pro-life cause "must be won." Currently, the position of man- Kimberly Lindgren — student Villanova function over 300 nights look for off-campus housing," she Marie Lovera — religious studies years, which will son go towards Rose Reddy , who came with ager of the University Shop is Jeanne Maguire — student life of the year throughout the coun- said. Dr. William Rice — engineering paying for duPont Pavilion or junior engi- David, friend Alice Lancaster and being advertised. Rice is working Dr. Joseph Thompson — political science try," said Riley. Most alumni Camille Corletta, a Laura Stevens — student Connelly Center, Riley said. that had Lancaster's son Tom, traveled in the shop until a replacement Dr. Paul Wood — English functions are social but occasion- neering major, said ^e the Rev. Shawn Tracy, O.S.A. — director. Campus Ministry with friends to Ijve off with 23 busloads of pro-life acti- for the former manager, John R, the Rev. Robert Welsh, O.S.A. — liaison member, steering ally there will be a speaker, Riley Covenant II was a large alumni made plans Dr. Dennis Kuhn — liaison member, Steering Committee on the vists from the St. Louis, Mo., area. Bauman, is found. Bauman retired committee said. campaign which raised $25 mil- campus but kept her name Reddy, on her ninth March for Dec, 31. Capone and Riley travel lion, $5 million more than was waiting list. "I found out the day Both for ^ ••• that I could Life, said, "It's a pilgrimage Last week Rice attributed the extensively. They go at least once expected, according to the 1986- before school started something we feel so there 87 Annual Donor's Report. get housing and I really wanted us. It's problems of the University Shop Committee a year to California, where Curricula Committee Student Services strongly about. It's a sad trip, but the lack of staff. Currently, Program and the fourth largest alumni In April, the Board of Trustees to live on campus so I decided to to is be back I paid the I hope and pray we won't there are only 11 full and part- pocket, Riley said. There are 59 will discuss the possibility of a take the opportunity. Dr. Duffy — education Kelley — history ' James room- next year." ^ time employees of the bookstore. Dr. Donald alumni clubs throughout the Covenant III. first month's rent until my Mary Anne Dowling — director, women's sports Reprinted by permission, National Kelly com- Kimdolyn Boone — student United States. mates found another roommate," Last September, Nancy Dudak — director, career development This year's graduates are put Catholic Report. P.O. Box 419281, persistent Dr. Michael Burke — Honors The alumni clubs financially she said. plained of "serious, Dr. John Friede — biology Kansas City, Mo. 64141. — student on the mailing list for Spires and Corletta said that this year she problems with the bookstore. The Nancy Burns sponsor saferides, the Association and Finance Lucyna Gorski — director, student activities the Villanova Magazine, Riley simply are not predictably Dr. Frank Eby — Commerce of Commuting Students and alum- books Patricia Harris — student said. After graduation, the asso- the Rev. Kail Ellis, O.S.A. — dean. Arts and Sciences on the shelves when and where Ministry ni speakers for all majors for both arts Sr. Beth Hassel, P.B.V.M. — Campus ciation acquires their new teachers are Dr. Marguerite Farley — communication education and networking pro- they should be. The engineering addresses a notice Gallen, O.S.A. — vice president for Academic Dorothy Lairdieson — and sends them TheNaikm's also not notified when books are the Rev. Uwrence cesses, Capone explained. "We are (File Photo) Richard Mairone — student about the nearest club, how to join lafgest PuMiiihcr SUMMER JOBS out of print until the classes have Affairs the base of all the main facets of The Rev. George F. Riley, O.S.A., orcjunpuii student and a calendar of events, Riley Dr. Harriet Goldberg — modern languages Kevin Najarian — the University, Capone said. vice president, university rela- rdq^MNic Dirtrctorkrs started." — mathematical sciences said. Dr. Janice Knepper — biology Dr. Joseph Pigeon of Alumni tions and alumni director. The problems of the bookstore The goal the —'English Nancy Rothman — nursing OPPORTUNITY! persisted for many years. In Dr. Philip Pulsiano Association is to establish a — 1989 graduates can be an asset have student Dr. Sathyanarayan Rao — engineering Timothy Ryan — transition into the business an editorial cartoon in The student association which would The association services the to themselves and the Alumni Make the 1985, Stack, O.S.A. - dean of students Colleen Sullivan — Common Heritage the Rev. John undergraduates with their alumni in the continental Association after graduation by world selling ycUow page advertising for Villanovan depicted the same - liason members, steering involve 54,000 Todd — nursing Yolanda Carter and Robert Gross your can^His tclq)hone directory or for problems that the store is expe- Catherine hometown clubs, Capone said. United States and abroad. contributing time and effort steenng committee committee other campus directories nationwide. 'if Dr. Fritz Hartmann — liaison member, /,> .. Two to three students would The average age of an alumnus through participation in the riencing now. (Continued on page 8) in area, Riley The PEC found that greater represent each club and learn the is 34 and more than half of active events their coordination makeup of the Alumni Associa- Villanova alumni have graduated explained. EXPERIENCE! cooperation and alumni between the University Shop and tion, he added. While the Gain Valuable Experience in Sales. the faculty is needed to ensure ALL TANS ARE NOT CREA TED EQUAL would assist students in job Advertising, Marketing and Public '89 books are acquired on time Look great for SpringBreak placement and career counseling, Pep band Relations. that and the faculty are notified in the students would provide because (Continued from page 3) lem with limited seats , advance if the books are not updates about campus life, Capone • UVA Tanning confer- TRAINING! explained. Conference, said that the games are played in the Carrier available. • Compl«t« Privacy Training The Alumni Association also ence does not include visiting pep Dome, which has a seating capac- Five Day Expense-Paid Soles Kate Wagenmann, director of • Malaxing Atmoaphara Program in Chapel iiill, North Carolina. publishes three publications bands at basketball games. They ity of 32,000. The band is seated Personnel for Student Govern- • Tralnad Tachnlclans Train with 200 other college students from which serve to inform and connect are allowed to play only at cham- on the floor, separate from the ment, organized a used book sale TANNMG • Panama Jack Tanning acToss the cxNmtiy. the alumni. pionship tournaments, said Fran- paying spectators. for the past two semesters. The producta mn6 aprlng- Every four to five years a cis. It is too expensive for bands profits gained this semester waar aoM at tttit Dunphy, director of music location directory of alumni throughout to travel, he added. John MONEY! doubled the last sale's profits. 566 Lancaster Avenue activities at Villanova, has made the world is compiled. Since 1984 Boston College and Syracuse 13.100 A%cn^ Eanikigsfbr the Ten Week At the used book sale, students Express over the few years HaverfordfPA American there are 10,000 additional alumnk an attempt ^t Saks Period Opportunity for a ProAtabk books for half University are the only ochools in couW sell their ns^ Next to Al E Gators to form a band directors' associ- Located Cards Accepted to be added to the next addition, the Big East to which Villanova's of the original price. Student ation. He said this association CAU FOR AN APPOINTMENT Riley said. pep band travels. Syracuse's Government's department of Inter- could help to prevent the contin- Spires is a newspaper that is athletic director John Crouthamel nal Affairs originally conceived of every six weeks which uing "erosion" of the pep band 14 - sent out idea. 20% OFF said the university's policy is a the COUEOE MSOOUNT offers alumni and campus news. froHm basketball games. The "poor man- reciprocal one similar to Wi^cnmann faulted yMWMM ma**! (.0. w««ii(f»* response received from other "Villanova Magazine" is dis- Villanova's. i^^emeiM" for the problems of the AMYFAOIUME schoolt, however, has not been 525-7125 tributed four times a year. This bookstore. journal rangei in content from Syracuse does not have a prob- favorable, he added.

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^U^ '»'- xji 1 i— i_i **^-^^ act^i^^^a^ Nn> t • THE yiLLAWOVMI • yifctyify >, ms Ca*^.».«, f^mi^X TMl ¥fcJJMmmiM» INni § [ COMMlnKS oiMiMri4 luNhtweriied, beek sliews At 10:30 am. Sunday, they curriculuraftoaocommodatetheir By ties in the cmirtry, like the tion of University Professors, ically. (Omtinmed frwm ptigi 7) At ^:dO lum. I got on t bus to called my pinsoa number and MUfB own and selfish inter- nanow University of IfidKigan, Berkeley, would destroy academic freedom. Centnl Booking in tower Manhat- kro^ght me t» be fingennnited. I **Sykes believes that by elimi- Other Resources/Plant and Charles Sytos' book, Fn^ktnm, ests," Sykes writes. even Harvai^, baaid on the rep- People tan. It was tlioe that I planned gave my name and Had to the who like and are good at nating tenure, you'll weed out the Equipment Committee has stirred osalroverty because it These interests are so trendy utations professors," teaching to give my real name in order to guard, telling him of their often do not get tenure deadwood and the incompetents, that Sgt. Cos- depicts with aoademicians as overpaid, that they produce "curriculums Sykes said, because they make my 9:30 class on Monday telk) said I should go straight may not be good at people won't get free rides." Dr. Aileen Compton — director, environmental safety underworked prima donnas who that kxk tike they were designed "What they find is something publishing, morning. Forty gf ys were put into down to the courtroom to be Sykes contended. Knight argued. Yet bosses who Gary **almost siintehaiylffdly ... des show host,'* Bonas — Student Activities by a game Sykes very different from what they and "To be a. teacher in hire ^ cell designed for 20 pecyle. We arraigned. He be^eved me and I higher incompetents often are k)athe Kathleen troyed the tmivernty as a center in interview. Burke — registrar's office added an their parenu have been led to education is virtually to to oomplainca to the officer and I went down to the basement, past ** commit admit later they made a hiring Steven Cauterucci for learning. Sykes, professors are respon- — maintenance To expect. They think they'll be professional suicide." he said. mistake, By Disney Pubik: Relations asked her if I could give my name. the "real" prisoners, to the and untenured teachers Dr. Terrence Erdt — library science He charses that professors have sible fori a variety of ills. These learning at the feet of those She said she would check on it. courtroom. would be unlikely to risk angering John Gallen — executive College students in search ot been made comolaoent bv tenure, include, he writes, "pseudos- It should be different without director for facilities management professors and what they find is, their bosses by asking high adventure this spring will tenure. to weeidout Thomas Kurke — student I which frees them to abandon their cience," "junkthink" and "twist- professors at all, "Tenure corrupts, ener- was arraigned at 1 a.m. Mon- if they see those their bad (x>lleagues. spend less for more thrills during Six hours later, the the Rev. William McGuire, O.S.A. — Operation day and students in favor of chasing [ing] the ideals of academic free- in the parking lot." vates and dulls higher education," assistant director, Athletics the court closed at 1:30 it's as a blur Without Disney Break '89 at Walt Disney Rescue lawyer came and toid us prestige through Sykes wrote in the job security tenure the Rev. John McKenzie, O.S.A. — sociology a.nr. money and office dom into a system in which they Syk^ maintained it can all be Pro/scam. World in Florida. that all gives them, Knight added, the best Rodney Rivers — student charges were being politicking, useless research and are accountable to no one." changed by eliminating tenure. professors would move on to Dr. Ann Lesch -- liaison dropped. We were then moved to By the time I reached my home big grants. member, steering committee vacation- f» "A lot of undergrads go to some Sykes' idea, noted Dr. Jonathan Knight, one of Sykes' most Throughout March, in where the real money is: private less crowded cells and I was put New Jersey, showered, took a " They have distorted university of the of Associa- ing students who present a valid most prestigious universi- Knight the American vocal critics, disagreed emphat- industry. in a small cell with four people. two hour nap, and drove to Tol- •••• college I.D. card save nearly half entine for my religion class, it was the price of admission to the A sergeant came at 2:30 p.m. 9:30 Monday morning. Magic Kingdom and Epcot Center r Admissions Committee and told us that the district attractions, where they can cele- I had been held attorney was adding a charge of a total of 40 brate with legendary characters hours, seven Dr. Nicholas Rongione — business law resisting arrest to the original was pounds lighter, such as Mickey Mouse. had seen Dr. Sheryl Bowen — communication arts charge of disorderly conduct. and the inside workings of Operation Rescue. r Dr. Edward Collymore — director, Social Action To add excitement to the sun This, he explained, made it a Thomas Gormley — admissions and surf routine, collegians will double misdemeanor, which There was no violence, most of Peter Harrington — student have a chance to conquer Space required four sets of fingerprints the participants were either James Johnson — University College Mountain in the Magic Kingdom that took 12 hours to send to Catholic or Protestant, and Ran- David Leibig — career development and brave the "Maelstrom," a Albany. N.Y. dall Terry and other leaders had James Markham — associate dean, sciences wild ride through rivers and fjords been there to insure that every- Denise McGarry — director of admissions, Law School that is part of the newly opened He informed us that we prob- thing went as scheduled. Ellen Moran — student "Norway, Gateway to Scandina- ably would not be released until Dr. Kishor Thanawala — economics via" showcase at Epcot Center. Wednesday or Thursday. Similar rescuses have been Rose O'Driscoll — liaison member, steering committee A two-day special Disney Break staged in Philadelphia, Atlanta, '89 ticket available He then told us that we would for $30.95 Buffalo, Seattle, San Francisco, offers savings with have to be moved to Riker's Island I admission on Rochester, Detroit, Columbus, to make room for the "real" separate days to each of the two Portland, New Oreleans and San prisoners. mmmmmmmmmmm parks. Antonio. 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P«e»12*THgVILUmOVAM»Nbnpry3,Hi9 Freedom of speech is a right to be respected Features FabruaryAiy^JATHE VILLANOVAN • Pagt 13

By JENNIFER REIDY moreover, it is increasingly clear insufficient for journalists to hide that this Constitutional privilege behind the catch-all phrase "free- Spotlight on. . .Villanovans The power of press is a formid- requires a more precise definition. dom of press" in order to justify able force in today's society. Just Recent events in the college their mistakes. Thus, it is impor- ask Vice President Dan Quayle or media reflect the need to redefine tant that the media maintain hip:h Sen. Gary Hart, whose pohtical ethical journalism. At Dartmouth standards of ethics and integrity traveling around the world careers and personal reputations College in Hanover, N.H., the in light of its huge responsibility. have been irreparably affected by editors of the Dartmouth Review The Dartmouth Review reflets investigative journalism and sear- were suspended by the adminis- poorly this quest for impartial, Wordly ing political commentary. tration after secretly taping and investigative, reformative, yet Or ask the families of the allegedly harassing a black music ethical journalism. Maneuvers victims who died on Pan Am professor for information for a such as secret tape recording and note that freedom is not necessar- Oftentimes the press presents satirical piece in their irreverent unsolicited personal attacks are ily defined as the absence of all Students Flight 103, whose private grief reality in its starkest form; indeed, weekly. was exposed to the public by local ridiculous and embarrassing to constraint; rather, it involves the inherent da^^er in this is how TV cameras eager for a reel of The Review is well known for anyone who takes journalism proper action and justice. Just these individuals interpret and Considering spend- gripping human drama. its conservative stance and sear- seriously. action truly liberates both society convey these events to the public. At Villanova, ask Tense Fusco, ing attacks on liberals, blacks, What is further alarming is the and the individual; in turn, cor- The media should not create the 1988 Student Government presi- feminists and gays. Recently, the number of journalists who have ruption and injustice enslaves news: the news necessitates the ing a semester or a dential candidate, or Chief Rowan suspended editors were allowed rushed to the Review's defense, both the mind and the spirit. media. P. Kelly, director of Security, back on campus due to the decision including William F. Buckley Jr. Freedom is a powerful and over- The Dartmouth Review, in of about the effects of a critical a New Hampshire district court and the editorial page of the Wall whelming privilege, and it must essence, is guilty of the former. summer abroad? media. judge that the original hearing of Street Journal. Incredibly, one of b^ executed in a manner which Freedom of speech* requires the case had been biased. In their the Review's editors has already understands and the Individually, the ethical justifi- appreciates a particular ethical responsibility Many Villanova stu- cations for these events are debat- own defense, the editors scream, been offered a job by the National consequences of its misuse. and it cannot be used thoughtless- able. In most cases, the media is "Freedom of the press!" and Review: this is indeed a scary Journalists must maintain a ly or carelessly. Effectively used, sincere in its attempt to present blame the liberal administration trend if we allow this sort of special reverence for the tenet of freedom of speech is perhaps one dents not only enter- a fair and accurate picture of for wanting to censor their polit- mediocre, embarrassing journal- free speech, for in this way, of the greatest attributes of a world events, as well as provide ical views. ism to infilitrate and lower our freedom can be either exploited or democratic society. The editors of insightful commentary and anal- This situation is representative standards of excellence. cultivated. Ultimately, the media the Dartmouth Review, as well as tain the thought but ysis. This is indeed an important, of a very dangerous misuse of The t)artmouth Review fiasco, provides an invaluable service to all journalists, would benefit to unchecked power. Indeed, the for all its blunderings, prompts an society, for it protects the sover- yet difficult task, and its impact recognize this obligation. actually follow is permeating and far-reaching. power of the press is so great that important question: what is free- eignty of the American people by The freedom of the press and it, on the national level, often dom of speech and what respon- checking governmental corrup- Jennifer Reidy is a senior biology influences and shapes public sibility does it entail? tion and initiates essential change the right to free speech are pro- major and senior reporter for the through on it, studying moted and protected by law; opinion. For this reason, it is First of all, it is significant to in the status quo when necessary. Villanovan,

in places most Abortion negates the importance of iife people By KEVIN C. HECHT as her partner and family. An act them. Life under any circumstan- that places a heavy psychological ates from an abortion is fir only dream about and that carries with it such a heavy burden upon the woman who ces is still a great gift. How many greater than any that would be spiritual and emotional price tag The issue of abortion is very carries the baby to term, the brilliant minds have been des- endured through an unwanted clear and uncomplicated. Stated proves that the Supreme Court's troyed due to this distorted sacredness of life cannot be taken pregnancy, and it will be gaining academic simply, God's greatest gift to us 1973 decision to legalize abortion reasoning? away. Murder is murder under exchanged in time for the joy of cannot be allowed to end in was wrong, and the country is There are those any condition. I do realize the pain who vehement- life. .murder. The United States, by paying for it with its very lives. ly argue that it has not been a situation like this will cause and The nation must begin to under- experience as well as allowing abortion to be performed It is true that I am a man and proven that life begins at concep- 1 empathize with those who must stand that we are ignoring the legally, is undercutting its moral I will never have to go through tion. If this is the bear this cross, but the life beg- case, when does most fundamental and universally foundation as well as its future. an unwanted pregnancy, or any it happen? Does a lighted sign important right that exists, the greater cultural aware- The young lives being destroyed pregnancy for that matter. But I flicker on halfway through a right to live. The gift we are given will never get the chance to too hold the responsibility to pregnancy that says, "I am alive ... a woman cannot be through conception is mind- contribute to the nation protect life, and I ham the moral and the now"? I have no doubt that life boggling. God gives us a chance ness. Read on to find world, and it is tragic to think of obligation to share tne burden of allowed to choose to begins a when sperm meets an to be born, to grow and to learn, what is being thrown away for the choosing life over abortion. egg, and even if I not sure, abort the life that was to feel emotion, to make the world sake of convenience. Unfortunate- The arguments condoning abor- I could not take the of out more about the life chance a better place, to love, to work and ly, the mentality that would allow tion are many. All are invalid. It grows within. Her right supporting a practice that may be to have the chance to overcome legalized abortion is a symptom of is sadly true that if Roe vs. Wade destroying life. to choose took place any obstacle and feel all the things a very unhealthy society. was overturned, many women and times of students The courageous decision of that make life worth living. How An unwanted pregnancy is would seek abortion in illegal and before conception. choosing life under any condition can we deny the unborn the right clearly a painful and inconvenient unsanitary clinics. It is also true can be seen logically when one to do these things? How can we in foreign settings. situation, but a woman cannot be that people are shot and stabbed understands that carrying a baby senselessly destroy our nation's allowed in dirty backstreet alleys. These otten must have the right to be to choose to abort the life to full term under painful circum- future? born. that grows within. Her right to facts do not make it right to stances is a way of delaying Some argue that if abortion We, as a iiation, must begin to choose took place before concep- legalize murder under sanitary gratification instead of seeking recognize thie importance of life, conditions in either case. were legalized, children would be tion. The unborn child has its very temporary relief. It is an illusion Inside: born into impoverished situations the sacredness of conception and own right to life, a right that is The most painful preg;nancies, that abortion eases the pain of an and would suffer greatly. This is the crucial right of the unborn to currently being denied. those that have been incurred unwanted pregnancy. In the long true, but who are we to decide that live and seek out a future. The women who have abortions through rape or incest, are still run, the damage done to the Villanovans in: because of this, we should deny are often victims themselves. The not an excuse for abortion. woman and the country due to the unborn the right to live? Kevin Hecht is a graduate student procedure can be emotionally Although conception has taken We abortion far outweighs the tem- cannot make this decision for andformer entertainment editor of — China devastating to a woman, as well place under a traumatic condition porary relief. The pain that eman- the Villanovan. t. Letters to the Editor. — Ireland Seniors remember Mary Hitselber^er — Chile To the Editor: seems to us that the attitude of this article hearted, fun-loving care- ness disgusted and — Vienna of the Villanovan toward the many members of the senior free, yet responsible. Those, (Photo courtesy of Nunes) In reference to the article tragedy of Mary Hitselbergr's class who had known Mary that knew her knew she was "Senior Dies" in the^ Jan. 27 death was extremely disres- and lived in the same commun- the type of person to always isue of the Villanovan, it pectful. The brevity and cold- ity with her for three and one put others before herself. From Senior political science half years. The following is her early days in Good Counsel how we think Mary should be Hall through her senior year, Letters policy major INarlc Nunes remembered, and we hope the Mary truly loVed Villanova. ViHanovan will print the extraordinary in that She was The ViOanovan willpript "Let- (above) models a taste picture of her, which we sub- a great friend to many, she was ters to the Editor" received at its mitted along witji this letter. regardless 6t the amount of offices in 201 Dougherty prior to of Japanese culture Mary was an excellent stu- time she had known them. the weekly deadline, Tuesday at 2 dent who pursued a career in In the last eight days of p.m. All letters must be typed and during a recent accounting. She had received a Mary's life the realization of double spaced. The editors will job offer from Arthur Young to losing one of our closest friends withhold a name upon request, but semester abroad. work in the city of her choioe, devastated us all. We stood at all letters must be signed and should Boston. Mary's dedication was her bedside, unable to foresee incUuie the writer's telephone Brian DanielewicZt not only portrayed through her that she wouM never speak to number. Because of UmHai tpace, academic performance but also us again. We k>ve and miss mtail litten — bepHsUad. Others^ Faith McAdams, M through her ability to support Mary very much. Thank you may be edUed. Letien may be aemt Also: herself through college with for reading this letter — we by ami to: the VUUmmmm, VU- MoGoMrick, and Dan part-time jobs. Mary loved just want^ to give Mary the iamwa Umiveruty, VUlaauHta, Pa, spending summers at the Jer- recognition and respect she — The Philadelphia Zoo il908S. Olawte'lbelow) tooli , sey Shore, where she enjoyed deserved. s bringing -together family and Midiele Severance tima ^irt to pMO dHrlng — Black Mistory Month friends. Here the indulged her friends by teaching them how fUMOeltMlo hMft yMTje mriig Seater Marv HiUelberiMr and h&t Mtlor4g|it:IUyy to wateniki, jet-tki and sail. »m CannaMy — Operation Crossroads Horrigim. HitselbergM'. Michcle Sev( We knew Mary toH)e kind- CiMaaflOae hraalf trbi to Iralmd. (Pholo courtesy of McGokJnck) , ,

' '^'.t *«*

Fabfuary 3, 1900 • THE VILLAIIOVAN • Riga IS ^ f\* F.Y.I. T China presents challenge for adventurous junior Homeless Committet Writing Lab By KAREN lOVINO Kelleher and her group were available. Instead, Beijing was Feb. 3 Feb. 16 Assistant Features Editor housed in dorms on campus. She crowded with bicycles. Chinese We need you for all committees. The English Department's Writing found a large number of Ameri- youths learn to ride bikes at about Streets, Sunday, 5-9:30 p.m., Monday^ the age of 16, the age that Lab is open and kicited in the Coun- cans as well as European students same 5-9:30 p.m. and Tuesday 6-10 p.m. Work For a college junior to spend a most Amntsty hrtematioiuil Busfaisss seling Center, Room 106 Corr Hall, on her campus, but noted that the Americans are learning to with local or8anizatk>n to serve sand- semester abroad is commonplace. drive during day hours and in Room 201 Chinese were kept separate from cars. Because of the conges- Day wiches and help the homeless know England, France and Germany Commimicstions tion of bicycles on the street, it Villanova Vasey Hall, during eveningliours. It is the foreigners. Kelleher spent her The Chapter of Amnesty all for a where they can fet help. are popular destinations with student is simply too dangerous for Chi- International will staffed by three graduates assistants, semester rooming a have its initial meet- tables for the student wants to his Soup kitchen — wait who expand Univesity. nese youths to ride them e&rlier. ing of the at 4:30 Where: Wayne/St. Davids Room, Elizabeth Biebel, Susan ^age» and frqm Cornell semester p.m., in the homeless, Thursday, 3:30^ p.m., Sat- or her horizons and study in the Connelly Center. When: Feb. 16. Time: Robert Waller. For further imormation According to Center for Peace and Justice Education urday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Environment. midst of a foreign culture. Kelleher, the Chi- discussions, On campus Kelleher attended located in the basement of Sullivan Hall. Four one-hour roundtable contact Thomas Martinez in the English nese generally like Americans Every Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m.4 class but each covering a different topic, begin- from 8 a.m. to 12 noon, Those who want peace must work for Office. Vasey Hall have a "Dynasty" view of life p.m., fix or repair homes or shelters for Bridget Kelleher, a junior eco- Monday through Friday. She took ning at 1 p.m. and ending at 5 p.m. WriUng Lab Timea and St^ justice. nomics and honors major from here. The Chinese work long the homeless. Sandwich-Making dates -- written Chinese and conversa- , Schedule of Events Monday — 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Elizabth hours, six days per week, and available, Sunday 6:15-7 p.m. at St. Leola, Pa., felt this same desire for tional Chinese, and all classes 1 p.m. — Speaker: Paul McCabe, Biebel It)6; — Corr Hall, Room Tuesday Kelleher met one woman on a Clare House. Sign up for all committees cultural as well as academic were conducted completely in president of McCabe & Jacobs, Topic: — 14 p.m. — Susan Page — Corr Hall, train in setting. whom she described as in the basement of St. Rita Hall on the education a foreign But Chinese. "When I was in China, "Advertising Agency Management" Room 106, 6-7:15. p.m. — Elizabeth "resentful. She Feb. Homeless Committee bulletin board. the location Kelleher chose was said in America 5 I practiced my speaking every day 2 p.in. — Speaker: Bill Fetterolf, Biebel — Vasey Hall, Room 201, 7:15- everything is different. the 1988 fall so easy, that we Trip to China: Two weeks in China, She spent because that's what I was there director of marketing and advertising 8:30 p.m. — Susan Page — Vasey'Hall. don't have to Bridget Kelleher (left) and friends took time out to pose on the Great Peking, Xiam, Suzhou, Shanghai, semester at Beijing University in work." Honcf to improve. I made progress," Wall of China last Clothing Drive Chilton Company/Food Engineering, Room 201; Wednesday ~ 10 a.m.-3 p.m. (Continued semester. Kong and Nikko Narita, Japan. See the Beijing, China. explained Kelleher, who now on pag^ 18) Topic: "Promoting the Issue — The — Robert Waller — Corr Hall, Room Great Wall. Forbidden City, Ming, Marketing of a Magazine" — contends that she can "hold her 106; Thursday — 10 a.m;-3 p.m. for Our Mother of Good Counsel Parish Tombs and more. See Noreen Cameron Kelleher studied Chinese own" in any Chinese 3 p.m. ~ Speaker: Patricia DeNale, Robert Waller — Corr Hall., 106, Room years at Villanova, and felt students in two ' share experiences Bryn Mawr, located on Lancaster in campus ministry (645-4084) conversation. V.U. manager, advertising and public rela- 6-7:15 p.m. — Susan Page ^ Vasey Hall. Avenue, across from the Acme super that "if I didn't start using it, I tions Nilfisk of America Inc. Topic: Room 201, 7:15-8:30 p.m. — Elizabeth market, is having a clothirtg drive from would just lose it." She spoke to Greater than the academic By PATRICK L. MOUSSEAU point. Going abroad to study School for International Training "The Ad Manager — Director of the Biebel — Vasey Hall, Room 201; I^riday 8 a.m. — 1 p.m. If you have any clothes Philosophy Club her Chinese instructor Professor education Kelleher received was Staff Reporter provided an opportunity to look at (SIT). Show" — 10 a.m.-2 p.m. — Susan Page — Corr* you would like to donate to the poor, Yinliang Chi, who referred her to the cultural experience she gained. the United States and at Villanova The SIT College Semester 4 p.m. — Speaker: John Trumbore, Hall, Room 106. please bring them to the St. Vincent de The Philosophy Club will be showing Dr. Thomas J. Ricks, director of She described the Chinese as During the second week of University from a world perspec- Abroad is a non-traditional yet vice president and managing director, Paul truck that will be parked in its a film on Sunday, at 7 p.m. in the library international studies. "very tough. They've lived October 1988, a "Welcome Back" tive, an opening and an awareness highly structured program which JRP Marketing Research Services Inc. school parking lot during those hours. viewing rooms. All are welcome to Project Sunshiiie through a lot, had very tough conference for Villanova students of myself as well," Sweeney said. injmerses the student in the Topic: "Marketing Research: It's Any- She applied for the semester in attend. times. But they're basically good studying abroad took place in the Japan culture of the country he or she thing You Want It To Be" China through Georgietown Uni- people." Connelly Center. Now imagine yourself in Tokyo, has chosen as a destination. Project Sunshine needs two persons versity and the Council on Inter- Dr. Thomas Ricks, director of Japan, two days after your arrival Though Nunes had originally who would become insured by Villanova national Educational Exchange Kelleher found the city of Beij- J. Feb. 7 Blood Drive international studies, had invited and after only one day of Japanese thought of studying in Ireland — to drive our van for a group of volunteers (CIEE). After a series of written ing very large, very windy and Bicycle Racers students returning from foreign language training, sent off on a he had the possibility of an intern- who want to tutor kids on Wednesdays tests, oral tests and applications, very dirty. The Chinese burn coal Giving blood saves lives. The Red academic programs during the Tokyo "Treasure Hunt." Senior ship in the Irish Parliament — 2:45-5:20 p.m. call 645-4079 Kelleher was informed last March in the winter, which worsens the EncKsh Please political science Cli* This spring, there Cross is especially in need of donors spring and summer 1988 semes- major Mark Ricks suggested that he consider will be bicycle immediately if you can help out or stop that she had been accepted into air and was the probable cause of races every during the winter months. Take time ters to a celebratiojn of their Nunes, another recent returnee, something totally new. Sunday in Valley Forge. We at 121 Tolentine Hall, Monday between the program. the bronchitis Kelleher contracted to give blood in the Villanova Room of successful completion of what recounts just such a situation. "I could travel and see Europe The English Club will hold a meeting are looking for anyone interested in 2-6 her last month in China. However, p.m. We wouldlove to have you tutor 12 at 12:45 p.m., in the North Lounge in representing Connelly Center this week. Kelleher left for China on Aug. might be considered one of their He and other Americans and the U.K. [United Kingdom] Villanova as a team. Please a youngster that day too. on the positive side, she said, 23, from New York City. After a finest Villanova experiences. were each sent alone to a different with English and the little French Dougherty Hall. All members are contact Frank Palacios or Dave Hahn, "Beijing is opening up and build- two day orientation in Hong Kong The party provided an oppor- area of the city with instructions I know," he reasoned, "but not welcome. Stanford 319, or call 527-2538 after ing. I saw the Beijing World Trade ^ 6 ROTC Scholarships tunity to bring something back they had Japan on my own." p.m. where she met the 23 other stu- Center going up." for students to share their Commencement dents from many different univer- thoughts on overseas study, to never seen before costing less Thus, he joined John Harrobin, sities in her CIEE group, the Beijing was crowded, but not discuss the problems of "re-entry" than $1. a finance major from the College The Army is offering two-year scho- Feb. 8 Colloquium Series with cars as might be expected in to He accomplished this by sub- of Commerce and Finance, and group moved on to Beijing. campus and to evaluate their larships for either active or reserve If you are senior a who meets the large cities. The supply of cars is diverse programs. The evening way and returned with "some- other risk-takers from Wesleyan duty. The application deadline has been following cumulative G.P.A. require- Beijing University (termed All full- and part-time faculty, grad- At low and most Chinese people was a success. thing totally Japanese;" a cassette College, American University and Inter-Varsity extended until Feb. 5. This scholarship ment for your college, and you did not by Chi), uate students, English majors and other the "Chinese Harvard" cannot afford the few that are Returning students described tape liner which he described as Tufts University, among others, will take effect in September 1989. receive the recent mailing concerning interested members of the community classes and homestays in places a replacement paper jacket for an on a journey which has trans- The Army is also offering three-year the 1989 Student Commencement Speak- Inter Varsity will be meeting in the are invited to attend the lectures and as divergent as India and Japan, audio cassette, certainly an formed him and added a dimension scholarships. The application deadline er selection process, please come to the Haverford Room of Connelly Center at participate in the discussions. Feb. Studentflies south France, Austria and the United unknown item in the United rare on the average resume. 9, 15. This scholarship p.m. interested for these is March Dean of Students Office, 213 EHHJgherty 8 Anyone in studying 4:30 p.m., Radnor Room, Connelly Kingdom. Without exception, States. No wonder, then, that "If 1 go into business, I hope 1 will also take effect in September 1989. Hall: Arts Sciences By JIM BaWMAN trip northwest to Antofagasta, Matthew 5-7, otherwise known as the Center, Mary O'Malley, University & (3.5), Commerce "independence," "self-con- Nunes ascribes a new self-reliance will find myself dealing with the the is and Finance (3.5), Nursing (3.0), Engi- Features Editor where her family awaited her Sermon on Mount, welcome. College Galway, Visiting Professor of fidence," "growth and maturity," to his recent semester program in Japanese; the language proficiency neering (3.0). arrival. Harkess' mother is the auspices of the Irish StucTies — "The Irish Tinkers: "friends in other countnes" and Japan under (Con tinned on page 1 7) Career Day 1989 When Villanova sophomore Chilean-born. While in Antofagas- Language and Culture" also April 6, 4 an "awareness of other cultures" Tania Harkess returned to cam- ta her family stayed with her p.m., Radnor Room, Connelly Center, Career were the phrases heard over and Asii Wednesday Attention underclassmen! The Summer in Italy pus last week looking tanner than aunt, uncle and three cousins: Dr. Patrick J. Nolan - "The Use and over again as enthusiastic Viilan- Ireland study tour Office is Planning and Placement a full-time Miami lifeguard, you Pepe, 26; Maria, 24; and Pablo, 23. Abuse of Memory in American Drama" ovans regaled each other with loioking for freshman, sophomores and Ash Wednesday is the might have guessed that she spent Her father, Paul Harkess, met beginning of Discussion and refreshments will follow Registration for the Villanova- experiences abroad. Lent. will juniors to help organize Career Day her holidays somewhere south of her Masses be at the Main Chapel. each talk. Rosemont Summer Program in Siena, mother Rebeca as a Peace 1989. If you wouki like to assume an recalls 'Nova heritage Ashes will be distributed within the Italy starts in January. The June the chilly Northeast. Corps worker in 1%5. They mar- leadership role and have a context of the important If you guessed Florida, you ried in 1966 and moved to the liturgy and not at the program is Villanova's first foreign Returning students By PATRICIA McGOLDRICK great time doing it, contact Judy Madsen track; beginning or end of Mass. We encourage program fully accredited by the Middle would be on the right you United States shortly after. Tania Staff Reporter in the Career Planning and Placement you to b^n your Lenten journey in this States Commission on Higher Educa- would have to keep going a few has been a frequent visitor to described classes and office. Career Day will take place in beautiful way. The times are 8:30 more miles south, however, to get Chile since her first trip at age As I nestled back in the seat of a.m., tion. The courses offered for a total of liomestays in places Students Against Sexual Stereotyping September 1989. Time commitment this destination. Actually, a few as 12:05, 5, 8 and 10:30 p.m. six college credits include choices in to her 1. the Aer Lingus jet, 1 looked over (S.A.S.S.) is planning a publication to semester is minimal. 4evels). Dante in thousand miles more, over the divergent as India and to my friend Faith and said, history, Italian (all This visit must have been honor the women of Villanova. We are ari history, studio Caribbean, past the equator and "We're really going." English and Italian, torture for Harkess, though. Since Japan, France, Austria find into Santiago, Chile, the capital seeking the names (and where to Blue art or independent studies. Participants Key Society it was 89 degrees, sunny and Feb. 10 shoestring-like South It was March 4, 1988. and 40 them) of women and contribute unique will live in Siena and visit Padova, of the large and the United States. summertime in South America, Villanova students were on their qualities to the Villanova community. Assisi and American nation sandwiched Gubbio. Florence. Parma. daily habit of — what The Blue Key Society is looking she made a way to the Emerald Isle. Ireland EngHshChib We are also collecting written work by, for San Gimignano. They will spend several between the Pacific Ocean and some responsible, dedicated, fun-loving else — going to the beach. England was the highlight of English about and for women — including in Venice Rome. For further' Brazil. days and John Sweeney, a senior English original people to be new members. The Blue flying from York to all I professor Dr. James J. Murphy's poems, journal entries, essays, information, call Dr. George Radan. art After New "It was summer, so wanted English Club will sponsor a major, told of his four months at The Key Society is a service oiiganization to Santiago, said Travel/Study in Ireland course artwork, etc. Send us names and work and art history professor at 645-7439, Miami Harkess to do was go to the beach," poetry reading and workshop featuring that represents the St. Catherine's College, Oxford worth three credits. — Peace and Justice Center, Sullivan University, as well 645-6100 or Dr. Thomas Ricks of caught her last flight, a two-hour (Continued on page 18) poet Paul Martin. The workshop will as a social club. Applications University. Sweeney attended Basement. will be at 645-7393. in the Lounge of Dougherty International Studies with 20 The course began with an intro- be held West available in Dougherty, Room 108. eight lectures a week Hall at 3:30 p.m. other American students from duction to Irish literature during Film Series Sunday evening meetings and CuKurePrograms several other colleges. ^eer Cttunseiing Sweeney added with a certain concluded with an extensive paper relish "teachers and lecturers written about an Irish topic of (Photo by McGoldrick) Italian director Federico Fellini's first that Pick a culture — Irish, Italian, Polish don't test you. That is done by an choice. international success, "La Strada, "will Patricia McGoldrick (left) and be Peer counselors are available and or Russian — and explore that culture examining board. Such a system Feb. 15 presented by Villanova University's As other Villanova students Faith McAdams (right) in willing to help you! Peer counselors are learn to the language or both. Cultural Film Series or speak in a sense tests faculty and stu- last as part of the flew southward to catch the Kennedy Airport spring office or retrace rays Spring 1989 holding hours every Tuesday Speak the Arabic language dents alike, which leads to a team before they took off for Shannon. series, "Great European of Cancun for spring break, my Directors." Four evening in the Career Planning and your Ancestors' footsteps through a feeling that extends even to social- Ireland. showings are sche- class knew that we were in for Seniors X located in non-credit pro- duled in Placement Center the base- genealogy class. These izing in the pubs." the Connelly Center Cinema: something other than a tan. of Corr Hall. will available the Office Feb. 11 at 7 .ment Peer counsekrs grams are through Originally Sweeney was looking p.m.; Feb. 12 at 3:30 and After flying for six hours and be available from 5 to 7 p.m. Educatkm (Vasey 104) Our first stop t(K>k us westward If you are considering a year of 7 p.m. and Feb. 13 at 7 p.m. Admission of Continuing for something more "off-beat." learning it was now 6 a.m. in Peer counselors are trained in resume and begin February, March and April. of Irish heritage and an to the town of Tralee. which volunteer service for the poor of our is $2 for students and senior citizens Being Ireland, due to the time difference, means "the golden veil." Tralee nation or in other parts of the and and VIF critiquing, career counseling English major, he sought to study world, $3.50 for the general public. The everyone was wide awake. The skills and general knowled0e (d the little less familiar. is legated in County Kerry, where there will be presentations by three film will be shown in its original somewhere a sun rose above the thatched we spent the first two days of our volunteer organizations Career Planning and Plaoenient Center. Help Others "However, Dr. Ricks mentioned I —Jesuit Volun- language (Italian) . with English cottages and the 15th century journey. teer Corps, The Maryknoll Volunteers subtitles. Stop by and see what we can do for you! might qualify for such prestigious castles, while the class sat in awe and the Pallottii Center^ an "umbrella'* universities as Cambridge and A variety ofnon^redit short pratframa of its new-found surroundings. Although many of us have riK>ts organization that helps college students Seniors Oxford, which were off-beat in Scflptmis on sgiedfic helping it a little time to lleflsctioa skills aMotferad by their own way, and perfect places in Ireland, took locate volunteer placements ibompatiUe ' class piled out of the tour the Office of As the culture. fmilsiMii^iliii to study political science — anoth- adjust rathe new with their interests and skills — at%'30 to Ibmv other bus to take a closer look around, Senior portraits were Afl kifonnal time to^ Classes include fell on our first day. taken during sign liiuiriip. er of my interests — along with As dusk p.m. in the Wayne Room of the Connelly we soon learned our first lesson the tprifw and fall. stuients and to dkomm the term Any portraits not English courses. I'm glad iTinally we soon found out what Center. Undeqpntfuates who are con- ipsrtriln — how to cross streets in Ireland. taken l>y CaH Wolf PhoU«raphy Studios theiJoMdmiii^ Md^^oaMMdalooM. Lflini "crack" that we had heard si> to iMip I did," he explained. sidering taking a year away from thdr chose as The Irish and most European at this time will not apfwar in the 19S9 aaMKonMwayaaaoHrwma. much about meant. "Crack" did studies to pursue a volunteer in CMIe tkat wm vtekcd by Tania linkSM The benefits of his overseas option are Belle wtti beMiat i p4n., tt. tHa^aClapfll. countries drive on the left side Air Yearbook. The senior pi^es % Vuey 104 for mart infoanatkiii on beyond the not define a drug but is instead alsoenooursied to attend. Refreshments experiences went rather than the right, as we soon have already been printed so All are sMkome! Sponsored by there will mmtftmnam, wUoh aocw in Fobm. it turning will bejierved. All are wekxxne. obvious. "For me. was a discovered. JOmtinued on page I6i be no exceptions. Miaiatry. try. ifardi and April.

- -^ t » 1 ^ f^i See the world; study abroad

By HARRY D. GRAY ities and free electives that my The second thing I realized is Staff Reporter classes abroad filled. that a study-abroad experience is promises culture Language requirements vary in different and something only a I Studied abroad. different programs and countries. few students do. It opens doors to By MEGAN GUIDERA Now, those people who have Programs in France, Germany, many careers. For those people is originally from Cadiz. decided to continue reading Italy normally are career-oriented, Features Editor this and Spain require who study article are expecting the typical language experience but it could abroad should be an important Julia, has been at Villanova who story of a student who went to be as little as two years of college- consideration. If .you are tired of the typical for two years, said she wanted to some exotic place to study. level study. program Since my overseas experience, college summers of waiting tables, My required of Villanova unite both her homes, Though such articles are to no ability, I can state during cleaning houses, babysitting or nice language even thoujgh an interview and Cadiz. read they seem to distance many Austria is a German-speaking that I have self-reliance, flexibil- vacationing on beaches filled with students from the possibility of a country. ity, perseverance, independence hospital waste, thfe summer of Julia said that Cadiz is a beau- semester abroad. rewards of and the ability to take risks. will start of The overseas study My 1989 mark the a brand tiful city filled with life« warm Students read about a small are noticeable after returning resume would support my ability new program of intensive SpaTiish people and rich culture. minority of their peers I realized to adapt to environments, study co-sponsored by Villanova who have home. Upon my return, new to bicycled in Beijing, skied in Yugos- that I had gained two important identify problems and solve them, University and the Universidad de She selected the location of lavia or swam off the coast of things. The first was intangible; to handle difficult situations and (Pholo courtesy of Gray) Cadiz in Cadiz, Spain. Cadiz because it is on the Atlantic Spain. All these are real experien- "internationality" would be the learn through listening and observ- Villanova senior Hank Gray, (second from left) and Jamie Middleton Ocean, isolated from tourists and (fourth from left) ces to those who have studied best word to describe it. I lived ing. In what is becoming an enjoy the Austrian Alps with feUow students from The seven-week program runs one of the oldest cities in the The Institute for European Studies. . overseas but only unattainable ill a foreign country not as a international world, such skills from 7 to Aug.' is Western Hemisphere. July 26, and dreams for students in the sub- tourist but as a typical citizen are valuable to businesses. I can six credits. worth The program urbs of Philadelphia. I will spare going on my daily routine. prove skills acquired through Cadiz is one of the two capitals includes six weeks of study at the the specifics of my trip in order Through such an experience one studying abroad and use them as 'Nova of the Costa de la Luz, or literally, travels world Universidad de Cadiz studying to introduce studying abroad as gains insight into politics, culture, tools to get the sort of electrical (Continued from page the Coast of Light. The Costa de 15) bath; and the oldest Tori Gate, an the Spanish language, grammar, a very realistic to traditions ideology. engineering position I supplement a and am looking I gained is the la Luz is very rich in history. first step to estab- entrance for the gods, in the conversation and composition college education. for in (Pholo ccHirtesy of Julia) the United States or abroad. lishing According to a travel brochure on good relations. Now I world. The colorful city taught by professors from Cadiz. of Cadriz will be visited by Villanova students this summer in a new, intensive There should be no barriers in No student should hesitate to understand the Cadiz provide^ by Julia, it was ''For the first time, I customs, I can On his own, following the end six-week cultural program. the way of a student wishing consider studying abroad. It is ^ to a handle chopsticks and eat sushi." there that Julius Caesar dreamed of the term, he visited Hong Kong study abroad. At one time, I viewed my own country realistic prospect for everyone. of his great empire. Intensive language classes are and China. He returned with an viewed a semester abroad as a College years are the only time augmented by throi^ the homestays, a vital album full of photos and with CadlM Is one of the two program only for liberal arts eyes of when no family, or Volunteers help in Africa Julia said the climate of Cadiz and job personal part of SIT's programs. Nunes he feels will language what be a competitive is beautiful. majors with loads of another culture. I saw commitments tie people down. stayed cepHels of the Costo de She added that the with two families while in edge upon graduation, regardless money. The opportunity to live in By TOM CHRISTMAN roles." health care projects. They teach sky is always royal blue and the another Japan, and the faults of this he was interested by of the type of work he does; There le IHerelly, the Nor, I consider country Staff Reporter Much of the organization's health education, nutrition and Uu or weather is cooler than cities that myself an excep- may never again present their basic differences. is not a doubt that Nunes can tion to itself. involvement includes community immunization programs and pro- inland. the stereotype. I am an country more clearly Talking to any student who first CoestofUght. are further "The was a contemporary succeed at many things, attribu- Dreading another construction projects in rural vide basic medical services with Electrical Engineer. If I could do has completed an^academic pro- traditional summer of but I saw the good family consisting of a table in large measure to his mindless areas. These projects include the the help of a physician. The seventh week of the trip it, anyone can. gram abroad will serve as good father minimum wage employ- who taught at the univer- semester in Japan. ment? building of much-needed medical Named foe its founder, the will consist of a tour of south and If a student can afford Villa- things too.^' first-hand information. sity, Escape the mundane by a mother who stayed home In 1986, the Office of Interna- nova's If participating in this clinics, community centers and James H. Robinson Internship Evening seminars will be held central Spain. The tour will tuition and room and board your interest persists. Dr. and year's Cross- two high school-aged sons tional Studies was established for roads experience. schools. Program offers talented minority to discuss Spanish culture and include trips to Seville, Cordoba, costs for a semester, the average Thomas Ricks, director of inter- who travelled For the first time, I viewed my daily on the train a variety of purposes, among those Volunteers also assist in the graduate students a unique oppor- civilization. Optional seminars Madrid, Avila and a half-day trip cost of an academic program nation studies, is the person to to a Operation Crossroads Africa own country through the eyes of private school, returning the coordination and evaluation of painting and reconstruction of tunity in international develop- will be held later at night. Free to Toledo to visit the cathedral, abroad may surprisingly be within talk to. His office is in Room 208 Inc., a non-profit organization, another culture. I saw the faults home in the evening to dinner and non-Villanova overseas programs homes. These projects call for ment. For one year, a select optional courses will also be the home of El Greco and the reach. Students going overseas in Tolentine Hall. Get some infor- study. focuses on international develop- of this country more clearly, but One of the sons was the- as well as the development of hard physical labor, including number of minority students will offered in flamenco dancing church of Santo Tome. may even save money, while mation and consider it seriously. ment and cultural exchange and I saw the good things, too. In the captain of his school ping-pong summer and semester programs digging foundations, be provided with professional folk singing. earning the same number of Hopefully, more students at Villa- throughout Africa and the Carib- hauling end, I was able to form a better team." abroad with University sponsor- water and mixing cement four work placement in Mrica. Robin- The comprehensive fee for the credits they would here on nova will realize the benefits and bean. Each year. Crossroads sends to and more realistic view of the "The other was a traditional ship. Students ordinarily study six hours a day. son created this program to estab- The pacjcage will include three- trip is $2,650. This includes a campus. be able to say, "I studied abroad." hundreds of high school and United States in the world. nucleus-type of family. In the abroad during their sophomore or Crossroads teams also lish an intense cross-cultural day trips with Cadiz faculty to the round-trip ticket, room and full Often financial aid will be college students to participate in partici- Geographically placed as the same household there lived a junior years after maintaining a pate in a variety of experience for towns and villages in Cadiz Pro- board, tuition excursion fees and available to the student going Note from the Office of International a variety of agriculture, medicine agricultural some gifted minor- United States is, so far from other grandmother and grandfather in satisfactory academic grade point and farming vince and Andalusia. the one-week tour. abroad. Some programs offer Studies: Harry Gray is a senior engi- and community development projects. Using tra- ity students. cultures, stereotypes flourish their 80s, their son and his wife, average and receiving the approval ditional grants for students showing a neering major who spent the fall 1988 programs. methods of farming, The duration of the Crossroads from ignorance. We see only one who were about 60, and a grand- of their college dean and depart- Dr. Mercedes Julia, assistant Julia said is volunteers the program "strong need. The program I was in even semester in Vienna, Austria, with the manually clean land, experience is seven weeks during government, one currency, one son and his wife. I was the great- ment chairperson. Crossroads, founded over 30 professor in the department of academically [and will} introduce plant seedbeds and harvest the the summer. According had a work-study program in culture and one God. Institute for European Studies. grandson and treated accord- languages and literature, The person to look to for gui- years ago by Dr. James H. Robin- modern students, to a rich culture^ while which certain students could earn There, in addition to studies in crops. The food, as well as the to the program director, Europeans, however, are ingly." dance and advisement on interna- son, has sent over 9,600 volunteers is organizing the program. Julia having fun." technology, is extra spending money. language, history and art, he learned passed on to the Benjamin F. Lorick, "Crossroads exposed to many cultures in very Nunes and some of his program tional studies is Ricks. to 34 African countries and 18 villagers. There are of "about friends, people, Americans, seeks individuals who exhibit hundreds programs close proximity. For this reason, mates took advantage of a "spring Caribbean islands. According to Medical sponsored by accredited American America and, most importantly, This article projects sponsored by flexibility, patience and a willing- it is imperative for American break" and visited the following appeared originally in " Robinson, "Crossroads is not an institutions which offer transfer- myself. Two other Villanova students, Crossroads offer premed students ness to help others." students to go abroad and see the points of interest: Sawurajima The Spires, the official magazine of African tour, nor is it a study the opportunity to rable credits good toward gradua- Barbara Abseck and famie Middleton. the Villanova alumni. It was revised observe first- Those interest in applying real world as it exists, beyond ("Cherry Blossom Mountain"), an abroad. It is a process that chal- were with Gray in the Vienna lES hand the health problems of should contact Crossroads Africa, 'tion. While I could not transfer what they see or hear based on active volcano; a medieval castle; and reprinted with the consent of Ann lenges a fuller awareness of one's Africans. engineering credits, I program. Wilcox. Students observe and 150 Fifth Ave., Suite 310, New had human- the observations of others. a natural hot springs and mineral f. self, of one's attitudes and future assist in a number of preventive York, N.Y. 10011. Spring study in "AS FUNNYAS EVER! ASTOUNDING! break Ireland An entertainment unlike any other (Continued from page 15) too much hustle and bustle com- of friends. on the face of this earth!" pared to what we had fallen in love an Irish slang term meaning We experienced something that - WILLIAM B. COLLINS. Philadelphia Inquirer "good time." As we traveled from with thus far. HOMELESS COMMITTEE would never be forgotten. As we pub to pub, we were soon singing Departing Ireland and return- returned to our sunkissed fellow and dancing to all of the Irish ing to the United States was Villanovans, there was no com- songs that we never thought we something all of us wished could parison in complexions, but the the NEEDS Tout!!!! knew words to (O.K., so we travel- class realized experienced have been delayed. The 40 we had (Photo by McGoJdrtek) faked it). All in all, it was a "good ers who had started out complete something that would last a lot Faith McAdam and Patricia McGoldrick pose in front of Gallarus crack." strangers had come to be the best longer than a Coppertone tan. Oratory in Ireland. Sign up once or fifty times In the northern towns of Gal- and Sligo, way the music of the > » T-atlllliiMM ' country's history seemed to lift our hearts in songs of joy and UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA SCHOOL OF NURSING wonder. If you like to paint, sand, nail

The beauty of the country and Graduate Education bay its people created in all of us an or fix things the environment air of love for our heritage. Friday, February 17, 1989 committee is for you!!! Sat. The beauty of the Learn about the Master of Science in Nursing & Doctor of Philosophy (Programs. country end Us people and Sun., 10-4:00 p.m. • Adult Health and Illness breethed into all of us Perinatal Nursing Advanced Practice Specialist Neonatal Nurse Clinician an air of love for our Critical Care Primary Care: Family Clinician Oncology heritage. Young Family, Mature Family Make sandwiches for the • Community Health Nursing Occupational Health • Gerontological Nurse Clinician Psychiatric Mental Health • Health Care of Women As we passed by the rolling hills AduH, Child A Adolescent Sun. 6-7 p.m. • Nurse Midwifery homeless. of green, our tour guide, Willie, Nursing of the Chronically Mentally III • "jointed out the places of interest Nursing Administration Nursing of Children and told us of the country's (School of Nursing and Pediatric Critical Care history. As the tour progressed, the Wharton SchooO Doctor of Phlloeophy Program Willie chortled some witty Irish • Occupational Health TICKET INFO jokes and even shared in a "few A.^' SIGN UP: BASEMENT OF 215 732 5446 pints of Guinness" (beers) with us . EXTENDED THRU FEB. 19!! (more good crack!). .. Bf a leader in Nursing Earn a graduate degree at Penn WED., THURS., FRI. • 8 PM, Descending south again, our For reservations and information. caM the AdinllfSions Qfficoat the Schdbl of Nursing, ST.RITAHALL SAT. 2, 6 A 9:30 PM, SUN. 3 A 7 PM tour concluded in the city of OLJI IDCOT LJBATBD at university ofTNC arts I I rlCMI Cfl 2so south broao street Dublin. During our visit it was OnUDCfl Dublin's centennial and the city PHONE ORDERS: TELETRON 1-800-233-4050 wa» full of life, but Dublin was Jim

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t •••K Pibnitry3.1WTMEVILLAMOViAN#Pagi19 Ri^ U • TItg ¥ILLAMOVAN • NbfUfy a, 1ft9 Junior shares thoiights on Beijing University in China SoMg Bad G^Bgf^ Move? (CatdimtMl/rtm pagt IS) world). She described her trip as a **fan- languace. you're thrown into a new The Chinese are "starting to tastic expenenoe. I learned so Kelleher's experience has culture." know the outside life through In the square they visited the much about the' Chinese." Kelle- helped her locally as well. She She is considering a career in THE contact with foreigners and are Great Hall of the People and the her's improvement in Chinese has finds herself "more secure on the import/export business, hope- getting restless. They are happy Chinese Museum of History, as been "unparalleled. You have to campus because I have a new feel fully dealing with China. "The with the little freedom that they well as viewing Mao-Tse Tung's totally submerse yourself in the for myself. You learn a lot about trip was an incredible challenge," have but the more they see, the preserved body. They took a five- culture^ to really learn the yourself and wha^ you do when she concluded. more they want." day study tour south to the Shan- dong province, an agricultural It is, perhaps, for this reason area south of Beijing. There they Chile proves a warm respite that the Chinese government visited the city where Confucius keeps its people so separate from (Continued page 15) lived (Qufu), and met some of the from Accompanying this spirit to for the corruption and resulting foreign tourists. "Whenever you villagers. The group also had the Tania. "We (she, her brother, Ian, imbibe is an even greater spirit problems by the Chilean people. go on tour, the Chinese are treated opportunity to travel to Hong and cousins) would go at 10 a.m. to dance and celebrate. "Everyone 'The pepple hate the U.S. one way, and foreigners are treat- Kong and Shanghai. and stay until 1 p.m. Lunch begins dances. It's big — there are discos Government. They hate us as ed another," Kelleher observed. at 1:30 and that's the main meal everywhere ih Chile," said much as Pinochet," said Harkess. of the day." Harkess. "Chile is not as Third World as On a trip to the Great Wall, The meal schedule in Chile is Chileans enjoy getting the most HAL'S HOUSE oF everyone thinks. The education is foreigners were dropped off at a slightly different than the type out of their holidays. They begin than good, Illiteracy rates are low and more advantageous spot GrMter Unmi Me familiar to Americans. Breakfast celebrating New Year's Eve in the the technology is far more devel- were the Chinese. At the entrance consists of fresh bread with jams afternoon and do not finish until City the Chinese jcaffemjc eiftfMtioii oped than most Latin American to the Forbidden or a delicious caramel-type spread the next afternoon. The same is countries. The main problem is were required to pay over $1.50 KelMier received was known as "manjar." Also included true of Independence Day. "If the government and the resulting NEED STUDENT at the entrance than the fee WE more are eggs and a homemade pow- there is a reason, they party," for foreigners. the cultuni experhnce poverty," she added. R/VTS dered milk, which Harkess des- Harkess explained. / DA/ cribed with an "ugh." The final and most encouraging (GOOD OR she gained. There was a somber side to her ARTISTS aspect of the visit, and the reasori Even the facilities in hotels visit, however, concerning the Next is lunch, which is served the Harkesses traveled this dis- were more accommodating to political turmoil of military dicta- from 1:30-4 p.m. Businesses dose tance to begin with, was family. BAD!)FORTHE tourists. Most Western-style tor Augusto Pinochet, who was and families come together for hotels will not permit the Chinese recently voted out of office by the "It's hard to be independent. ^^^^ this multi-course meal. Chileans people to stay there, probably Kelleher's CIEE group had the people of Chile. He is scheduled Students live at home. You never do not cook dinner. VILLANOVAN because they are "so elaborate chance to make some history to leave this year, but there is see someone go off alone in an After a soup or salad, there is that the Chinese would be upset while they were in China. The apprehension over whether he apartment with a roommate. You a heavy emphasis on vegetables, in the treat- group chosen to represent will actually step Fam- CARTOONS, about the difference was down. The depend on family too much. LOGOS, especially potatoes, and fish, ment," said Kelleher. Americ^i in a film that Beijing United States has long been a ily is the most important thing, although HarH^s admits, "I hate University was making for distri- staunch supporter of Pinochet definitely. We're still very close," . fish, personally." Dishes with EDITORIALS. bution to all Chinese embassies and is thus held equally to blame she explained. The food in China is very zucchini, avocado and varied about foreign students in China. different from the Chinese food potato mixtures are common. CALL to in the INTERESTED we are accustomed As for beverages, the American IF United States. Kelleher ate mostly They had to learn a song in preconception of Latin Americans pork, rice and vegetables, with a shipped to the SEE Chinese, then were as heavy drinkers is accurate, 645-7206 OR COME roast duck dinner on Thanksgiv- Great Wall at night where they according to Harkess. ing. The Chinese food in America singing were filmed atop the wall, "There's a lot of drinking," she US AT 201 DOUGHERTY is more like Southern Chinese the song with other representative explained. "If you look old enough, flavor spicks. food, witji more and groups. "There I was on the Great you can buy and drink. We used bland. The food Kelleher ate was Wall in China with people from to go out to the beach and drink all over the world. It was kind of all the time." it a different In China, Kelleher and her humbling; gives you Chileans drink beer and a domes- I // / LA re POR CLA« CIEE group visited the Great view of the world," she reflected. tic liquor called "pisco." A "pisco A&AtN...UOOKS Wall, the Forbidden City (where sour" is a lemon-lime mix and LKg X*W- MAVe Chinese emperors used to live) Kelleher strongly encourages when this is mixed with Coca- La Portada in Antofagasta, Chile, which was viewed by Tania Harkess and the Tian'an Men Square (the anyone who is considering a Cola it becomes "piscola." during her Christmas break visit to Chile. ^" V \ largest public square in the semester abroad to speak to Ricks. •^^ ACROSS /^BHOiL X FiEUtt.. Earn up to $4,000 per year in »» elrt»L« A ^/l«''^il O Tuitioii Assistance in addition "GetTOASTEQ ..C- to earning a regular salary BEACH When You Wanna X^ Eden Restaurants has day and evening positions available for Get ROASTED" ~ . ir- servers, cooks, bus persons A /^ Gf?CAT„. \ and cashiers. 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'vJ ^Nova sponors summer abroad Ko knows, who cik^es Bloom County By DANIEL MORIARTY Jerusalem trip, including air fare, $2,650, Ricks said. It replaces a Yo, Villanova! Read any good books lately? Not if you expected Assisttmt Ntm Editor tuition, room, board and tours will former trip to Paris. - { Ito buy them in our bookstore ... Fear not — Fr. RIoe's m be approximately $3,400. The Vienna program is being committee will look into it — you know, the committee with no I BLOOM COUNTY *jr The office of International The summer trip to Sienna is offered in collaboration with the students on it ... Who buys the books, anyhow? Not all of us Studies is offering students six ai) eight-week program focusing Institute of European Studies in I Learned it All in Kindergarten . . . Maybe duPont will buy us summer abroad programs this | BOl»$nM£Nf)FF10A on art and art history. It is being Chicago. It will be a six-week trip a new. Division I bookstore ... We could call it the John E. duPont sumcAL cMBimif yokk.. year. offered in cooperation with Rose- and the comprehensive cost is White Elephant ... Doesn't matter. We hear Prop 42 limits The humanities programs are mont College. approximately $2,900, Ricks said. 1 bookstore access to only those with presidential scholarships, ffiosr fWftMf/^ located in Sienna, Italy; Cadiz, The comprehensive cost^is Like the Cadiz and Dijon pro- . . (anyway . . . Presidents . . . George Bush has a cold (uh eh) Spain; Dijon, France; Vienna, approximately $2,500, Ricks said. grams, the Galway program is a^ does the entire population of Pennsylvania . . . COLD! "The Austria; Jerusalem, Israel; and Participants in the Cadiz pro- new offering by the office of* [Revenge of Alaska: Part One" coming sooooooni ... We welcome Galway, Ireland. Travelers gram will study Spanish language International Studies. It is being you, SIBLINGS, and we warn you that you should not be reading enrolled in the^e programs can and culture during the six-week offered in conjunction with Uni- such jaded columns at your tender age. Get psyched for the CATS gain humanities credits. trip. The cost for the trip is $2,650, versity College Galway. Partici- game Sunday! Let's hope it isn't a close one this time . . . anyway, Basic Spanish, German and according to Ricks. pants will study Irish history^

[who knows? who cares? , . French are required for the pro- ^ -. . ,,... .-. , literature, theater and language. Edited by the Villanovan edttonal board grams in.. Spain, Austria and Ukt the Cadiz and Ricks said. France, respectively, according to The program will last seven International Studies Director Dr. Dijon programs, tiie weeks and the comprehensive cost Thomas M. Ricks. The other is approximately $2,790. Gaiway program is a programs are open to all students Credits earned for all six pro- during the summer. now offoring by tlio grams will count toward human- '• Ricks said interested students ^w ities and social sciences require- Offico off intomationai are encouraged to attend an infor- ments, according to Ricks. 6- mational meeting Feb. 20 from Studios. Participants «m. 8 p.m. in the Wayne/St. David Ricks also said students inter- irisii rooms in Connelly Center. wiii study iiistory, ested in studying abroad this fall Professors accompanying the iitoraturo, tiioator and should set up an appointment to six trips will each make their own see him as sooii as possible. ianguago. presentations, Ricks said. Any sophomore or junior with will Participants receive nine a 2.5 GPA who is in good health credits for the Jerusalem trip, six Ricks said the Cadiz trip, which is eligible to participate in a fall credits for all others. is being run by Villanova in or spring semester abroad. The The Jerusalem program will conjunction with the University cost, he said, is about the same last eight weeks. It is being of Cadiz, replaces a former pro- as a semester on campus. offfered by the office of Interna- gram in Madrid. Ricks said the office for Inter- tional Studies in cooperation with The Dijon program also will last national Studies now enables '^^i Fordham, Georgetown and Notre six weeks, focusing on French about 60 students to study abroad Dame and will focus on Arab and language and culture. The com- each summer. Islamic studies. prehensive cost of the trip is Bon Voyage! The comprehensive cost of the

(Photo courtesy of Julia)

Villanova students will spend six weeks in the beautiful city of Cadiz.

Tune in next week when the Villanovan ..ffNPonimemfr ceP6G^5HBercFUFe, exactly/ ) IN ep KOCH'S] I5H0ULPLm explores OFTHfS Philadelphia 5mjmKM... \ Spring Break (Photo by Kelleher) Bridget Kelleher poses with villagers from Shandong province in China while studying abroad last semester. Celebrate St. Valentine's Day To Be AWinner with the Philadelphia Zoo

By MARIA LOVETT "G.I. Joe Show" and "The Trans- as $25. This is the one Valentine Staff Reporter formers" will entertain the crowd. gift that, unlike a box of choco- "T.K.," the station mascot, will lates, lasts all year long. Have you ever wondered what give away free canvas book bags goes on at the zoo during the cold and autographed pictures. Grab Each adoptive parent receives a from fun, months of the year? No, the ypur sibling or a bunch or your kit including a "legal" ADOPTion Just send us a photo of your most outrageous dare the animals do not move South for the friends and head for a day at the certificate, an information sheet new DARE game. Your dare may win you ... winter. In fact, the winter months zoo. about your new beneficiary, reg- OfM of three 1989 at the Philadelphia Zoo are filled ular newsletters from the zoo, a Spring BreakVacatloiis for four iPirorth $S«ooo!

R»i«j«i r-. "iMiut jf :< j<. •' with fun for both animals and free gift and gift card, and last but 1. m MMHMi MGHMRT Tf TTM M CUMM Pjt)"City •IT b Mis V y .f *»!' Of ^'C ^ll. :• •,• loeoiff mjiijjii a'4i6 oAwofcoio' inosi'df^iofoic dfo-ci'igi suOsi'iui'O'' 0' tijfsift p'./fs On* C'/f Of' i#^' > 4. Ccrfst ,\)fr .-i,, !•'>•' people alike. certainly not least, the fulfillment aj'f hom !»* DAfll amie logtttiff •fW you' ptintwnynt/Kioifss or t ? i i c^r a US •e^'Of'itS 'Il3' •"O'll'-'Tf C'ffl"V f»CfOt''^CO»ff<. jn 'r^ifS' The wkitermonths at >,' Paur B'offifi IS J" M% 'jtsa^oi ^^f^•f4 !« .i-ofss oi* j": of knowing contribution tyiSI It* nifntcjni no( ,' On Feb. 12, from noon-4 p.m. your PfHXO Of O'lflin*! imrt jnfl r\nt Off OufiiSfffl C PuO'C'v •jg'jpfifs voia «(«f'p s'o'iD'ifc 'jifi i-f ^ s:f >ws.o 't> 'v ai»i*yM Onf fnf* Of fnveloot *" K*fO D'i/f iot.t.cilN"i''5 f'n'«Sftcy^D'OCr% Jiso^>nv)'«'Mi 3'"s l)»PMC »<>«i()«o*iiudon(jigency oiffw MS'SOiO'igiiii'iYiC Moc'ilsi i-Kiufling If* rgii lo fdi' BuB' S^ »ni tw maiato (jc^ •'!< Of * ''V)n.(ifS*Oulf<>l'«*' Of fnlftfO "'0 noi^iiipriolCSBf *."«' »o.,if4:fOiiio*g'ffir"t)fN)u''JB>!>v..(~. dOJfJl 10 mnnKi ifSKfencrs ty)tfi l0< i nigWs inC 'fHHfl fiOfSfS uC 10 I jnfljiafcs'csotiheiudgfs •''<•'' iify I.T.-'oeU' •nifs y sfs

12 will «" under be admitted free if enlmels ' hoth and nwiffiuffl rmil Ot iftum AfiOavit ol Sfll "nf's »a*ut tS 000 Wmnrrs must %'r tnO J'' i •Wnsffl Sljnoffl fivfioof f» 3 »< 'C 0»W * Bc« EiigiDililyjndlijO *fsttx)" CT OtMO they bring a valentine for their people alike. So, instead of buying that favorite furry, feathered or fishy expensive stuffed teddy bear, buy friend. All valentines will be ^$3.00 REBATE $1.50 REBATES real thing. ' the For more informa- WHEN VOU tUY A OL-7 CAMERA WHEN YOU BUY i . .OLLS OF FUJI FILM posted at the North Gate and later tion about ADOPTion procedures, miltfi^OL-TcmttibtNmnUn 1 19M«ndI)K II 1919 R««imi •UV 3 PKtxgtt ol ^ui<040' ^tt«ttt forwarded to a local hospital for At 2 p.m. in the small call the ADOPT office at 243- 1 100. mammal 1) TNIS COmpMtd rfOM ctflitKJte ANO 2) ytM( (MM cnh Mt tim% «4dm> orginuatno c locition

r«e«ipt mUi mt pnct p*K) ci'cM Pi US 3l IM UPC cod* Irom 1 ) THIS compMM r«Mt cfTi'icjlt ANO 7l youi dittO cn>\ Valentine's Day. house, will It is the perfect opportunity to MM WTXF ADOPT (Anim- 1 trom # ngiMf r*c*<»l wKMtl* pfict pwd CirclM PV US 3 m« UPC p*n««i Mcfi o< 3 o( Fmi Mm 74 3( *i«n itic •o'0% als Depend have the pet always m* padugn o txxnu'rs "The tiger, twins will be On People Too) Aava you dreamed 9HOIIifP.O.Ni117yi Miir Manulatlufttf io< iti* U S A voui rttiftt n bated on O'oott o* 2 on ll«yiTO:RH40iTltot m m . pufctta«« MM at on* imd* Valentine's and Aandrew, the zoo's two of. Day," said public TO RM PHm t1 M (totaM ONw f Sm U7« relations worker Arlene Kut. In famous aardvarks. MIM. M MMS-MTt honor of the birthday Are you stumped on what to visit Phi- celebrations, Do not forget to the CH give AMtftS API the zoo will be giving away free your sweetheart for Valen- ladelphia Zoo Feb. 12 and share /« tine's MMIMH THnii tiger mans. Day? How ibout a jaguar? in these unique Valentine festiv- ^Oit |N««M||iltNUSA J) oodon«ironliiiitiaiinduMiiawn )iP>oa(t .c panr youi iiquM 4(0«ii«o««i»if«f uw) o» o<»< 4> o*** gooo on fu'i i* i» every nfupitnottiponiMipiioti u»o'nM»'«cM'«itii linHMiiiMu(iiolOaMio'«r»«*» the mmnititi week Villanovan. Cvmmutmn jugglers, clowns and cartoon the Philadelphia Zoo. You can certain to melt your true love's characters from Channel 29'$ ADOPT any animal for as little heart, even if you cannot!

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22 • TMg VILLAMOVAM • Nbwiicy 3, Hit C^l?f R v.r^nt"*^ m l«A\/OVf* f J^^^HT • 5S '«« Courageous American slave inspired liberty By MIRIAM ROBINSON was sent to Edward Covey, who prominent speaker aiaifist slav- was known for "taming" slaves. ery. He met William Lloyd Gar- Staff Reporter While with Covey, he suffered rison and was asked to become a numerous beatings until the one key speaker for the Anti-Slavery February has been officially day he fought back. Usually it Society. He traveled in the com- designated as Black History Month meant death to retaliate against pany of abolitionists such as in the United States. In order to the master, bui this day was seen Wendell Phillips, Charles Lenox commemorate this occasion, the Top stars go to as a turning point. As Douglass waste Remond, Samuel May and in will J. 'Tourist Villanovan be featuring codes, severely motti-eaten later wrote, "when a slave cannot William Lloyd Garrison. By rou- nightmiare of an American. At weekly profiles of outstanding black LEONARD ELLIS American who has retreated to his Sadly, the world believes Amer- be flogged, he is more than half tines and a home effeciently run Americans Staff Reporter home, he IS secure and withdrawn, favorite easy throughout the month. While traveling through differ- by Rose. chair. His isolation ica is loaded with Macon Learys. free." Abroad, he explores for ent states telling of the food and from affairs Keeping with the will evils of The Leary adults are old money, makes his character up Learys slavery, service he can get at home. He is interesting. Frederick Douglass was one of Douglass never revealed with the benefit Ask yourself: how get you nowhere. Leave home of the best schools not an his true name. a result, ugly Amencan. just an does Macon fit in? without the greatest leaders in the black Frederick Douglass was As he w^s *^he Accidental Tourist" and opportunities, who do abso- them. struggle for called a liar many times, in addi- Directed by Lawrence Kasdan freedom and equality one of the greatest lutely nothing to improve their lot tion to being stoned and beaten. Warner Brothers during the 19th century. He was in life. They are childless. They leaders hi the >»> known not only as a great abo- Uack After writing the narrative of are not Kennedys or Rockefellers. litionist but as a famous writer, struggle for freedom his life and revealing his true Indeed, they are the kind of heirs lecturer and politician. identity, he traveled to England Macon Leary (William Hurt) is who are best left out of the will, and equality durh^ the for his a travel writer who hates to travel Douglass was born into slavery own safety. There he gave so that a hard-working patriarch's »n "The Accidentia! Tourist." as Frederick Augustus Washing- 19th century. speeches and made many friends money is better spent. who Macon and his wife Sarah (Kath- ton Bailey on the eastern shore of eventually bought his Geena Davis seems lost in freedom. leen Turner) make up a nuclear Maryland in 1817. Like many "Tourist." She allowed Muriel to family that expenences meltdown slaves, he was separated from his Two years later Douglass was Douglass eventually moved become a special effect with an when their son dies a year earlier, immediate family at an early age. sent to work for William Freeland. back to the United States to help outlandish wardrobe. They are They are trapped in tired rou- He was sent to a different plan- It was here where he started to his people. He started an anti- frightening clothes that might tines. He travels and writes, and tation than his mother and was teach Sunday school classes in slavery paper called The North vault Minnie Pearl's wardrobe she teaches a little and relies on under the care of Aunt Katy, a secret. He even planned to escape Star. One of his main goals in onto Blackwell's 'Ten Best with him to organize their lives. Sarah harsh woman whose job was to five other men but the plan creating the paper was to fight the Dressed List" and might earn and Macon separate, and his care for the slave children. was uncovered and all the men Jim Crow laws, which enforced Cindy Lauper's wardrobe honor- travel docket forces him to find After a year Douglass was sent were sent to jail. the practice of discriminating able mention. The end effect is Villanova celebrates a sitter for his dog Edward. The that to Hugh Auld in Baltimore in against or segregating blacks. we beg to see more of Turner, Douglass was then sent once sitter IS flea market queen Muriel order to look after Auld's son. During the Civil War, Douglass her muted wardrobe and her again to Hugh Auld in Baltimore. Pritchett (Geena Davis), who sells Mrs. Auld took a liking to convinced President Abraham superior acting ability, and much Black There he worked in a shipyard Lincoln Macon the idea of training his less of Davis, History Month Douglass and that blacks should be able proceeded to teach only for his wages to be given mourning dog. him to read. Her husband found to to fight for their freedom. Here, flattery of turner's Sarah his master. Frustrated by the Book deadlines and a broken leg By MEGAN GUIDERA Blakely, who was born in Ala- out and the lessons were stopped. After the war, Douglass con- gets us nowhere. Sarah is beau- bama, was educated in continuing injustice of slavery, he tinued force Macon to live at his family tiful, lonely and Features Editor Oregon Douglass continued to learn, to work for the rights of intelligent, yet and California. disguised himself as a sailor and home with his middle-aged broth- He is the author however, teaching himself how to blacks and women. He died on Macon spends too little time of one book and numerous articles escaped to New York. Soon after Feb. ers and his sister (the demurely trying to pull her out of Villanova will join the nation in write. 29, 1895, in his home in the funk dealing with blacks in Russia. he arrived in New York, he was captivating Amy Wright), who is induced by his celebrating Black History Month By age 16, Douglass was sent Washington, D.C., at the age of self-involved life. married, changed his name and in her mid-30s. Among his during February. to the village of St. Michaels as 78. It is because of his contribution Turner does the best she can with A "Fun Night" will be held Feb. settled with his wife in siblings, Macon slips into nightly the property of Auld's brother, New to American history that his home limitedmted material. WilUam 11, displaying Hurt and Kathleen Turner sUr in the criticaUy acclaimed-t^cmimea The events at Villanova black culture and Bedford. bridge games, familiar language ' ^ Univer- Thomas. Life here was filled with in Washington, D.C., is preserved Macon Uary is an American's "Accidentia! Ta^rit^t." sity are co-sponsored talent. The eighth annual BCS by the his- punishment and misery. One day Within three years of living in as a national monument for all awards luncheon is scheduled tory department, the Black Cul- for Americans to noon he received a horrible fate as he New Bedford, Douglass became a enjoy. tural Society (BCS), Student Feb. 12. Coalition Against Apartheid and Fulghum Professor Frank Snowden from excels Racism and the Villanova Student Howard JJniversity will speak in have learned it pays to Union. By JIM CROSSAN be in the Bartley HaiV Room 209, Feb. 23 Staff Reporter right place at the right time. As at 7 p.m. ILookfor more about a Unitarian minister, he would Many different events are write a credo each spring. Some planned to make this month Snowden received his under- were long and special. some were short graduate, master's and doctorate All I Really Need to Know and simple, comprised of things degrees from Harvard University. Uarned : Black History Month in in Kindergarten he would read in newspapers, his A black Greek festival will He is a writer be and lecturer on By Robert Fulghum own experiences and childhood held tomorrow to introduce black classical art and literature with Villard Books stories. He shared his creations sororities and fraternities. a special emphasis on the African with his congregation. impact on classical society. next week 's Villanovanl When he was asked to share the credo at a local school celebration, In All I Really Needed to Know The U.S. Sen. Dan Evans happened to month of February I Learned in Kindergarten, Robert be sitting in the audience and was will nationally Fulghum examines the little so impressed that he requested a things in life that are frequently copy of the speech, which was commemorate Black overlooked. This collection of later read into the Congressional innovative and witty thoughts History Month. Record. evokes a simple and moving phil- From Washington, it found its SERVE THE HOMELESS osophy that is certain to challenge way into the Kansas City Times, readers to view life from a new On Monday at 4 p.m., Dennis where it received perspective. much praise. Brutus, a South African poet and courtesy of Spectrum) The credo then began to gain a As Fulghum says, we are taught professor at the University of growing reputation in WE NEED The Beach Boys came to the Spectrum on Jan. 24. in "Reader's YOU kindergarten, "Beware of wond- Pittsburgh, will read from his Digest," "Dear Abby" and the er." With age comes recollection, works. radio shows of Paul Harvey and . reflection, happiness and sadness, Larry King. Finally, Southwest- Professor Allison Blakely from but it definitely does not bring all Veteran groups ride ern Bell sold hundreds of thou- high the the Howard University history right answers. In episode after sands of copies as a poster to its department will speak stepped into episode of television's "The Wond- on "The (Photo by Keating) STREETS the spotlight, saying formed, but unfamiliar to the customers. COMMITTEE: By THOMAS MARTIN er Years," the narrator African Dr. comes to Presence in Europe Maghan Keita, history profes- a few words. silent crowd. through the 20th sor, is one of the many people Staff Reporter After the realization that all he really Century," in who completing one and one- The Beach Boys returned to the Bartley Hall, is helping to organize the celebra- half needs to know, he learned in Ihe eruption of Room 209 at 7 p.m. hours of material, Chicago stage and introduced the cheer- enthush tion of Black History Month. It was like a 1970s flashback kindergarten. Wednesday. SUNDAY, was finished and left the stage leaders in MONDAY when the a prelude leading up to asm blasted this small "Beachago" tour hit Fulghum, without an encore. The lights a Unitarian minister town. the song "Be True to Your The Beach Boys and Chi- who lives in Seattle, has held a book Into the came up and the anticipation of School." Once in htefront cago mesmerized a sold-out progress, the crowd the variety of jobs ranging from folk main event began. cheerleaders danced in front of the ofnewly published AND Jan. 24 at the Spectrum. singer and bartender to WEDNESDAY Twenty minutes later, cowboy the stage group and ended the song with The big question was, who and IBM salesman. When asked books comlim out. was set. The Beach Boys were spectacular high-flying acrobatics would open the showPChicago is what he does now, he replies, introduced and the crowd went and cartwheels. The dazzled "[II riding high on the success of its wild. think about a lot of ordinary The opening song, "Califor- audience responded with a deaf- The 9:30 No. 1 eruption of enthusiasm 5/6 single "Look Away." The things and then express what (I nia Girls." was accompanied by ening roar. blasted this small Beach Boys are basking in book into the the six think] by writing or speaking or cheerleaders in bikinis. Love was in good form as spo- forefront of newly sunlight of "Kokomo," another painting ..." published kesman when he decided to books. No. 1 hit. play Through a wave of White This is exactly what he does in a joke on Chicago by asking the House tattletales, junk jocks and Chicago was the perfect opening IhehlgiiuesaonwaSf his book, appropriately subtitled crowd for an overwhelming ova- other writers, this act, but Beach Boys drummer Uncommon Thoughts On Common minister's SOUP who woirid open the tion in order to, as he said, "trick work has prevailed by facing KITCHEN Mike Kowalski revealed in a brief Things. His unique ability as a Chicago into thinking we did common situations with adult interview that the bands used a show? creator allows him to correlate something great without even understanding and childlike scientific method to solve the some feeling from a meaningless playing a note." It went over compassion. problem. He said. "We flipped a well THURSDAY 3:30-6: The show was fast-moving childhood game with adult society and with the audience. Fulghum's thoughts capture an coin and won the toss!" and his life. well-rehearsed. The absence of The book reaches a beginning The Beach Boys* set included essence all their own. He accepts The of the show was level where all are one and the Brian Wilson was felt until four songs like "Good the less than exciting when Chicago Vibrations," flaws of his credo and admits songs into the show, same, as if we all were sitting in SAT. 0-^ when lead "Barbara Ann," "Wipe Out," and to the contradictions that some- MORNING 1 began playing without introduc- the same sandbox, singer and spokesman crushing each Mike Love "Sloop John B." At the end of the times arise, but essentially to tion. Lead singer Jason Scheff, other's castles. be introduced Wilson, who was wait- show, the group left however, handled the opening the stage for human is to admit to mistakes. ing in the wings. a short period and returned song "25 or 6 to 4" well. with This book is highly recom- The group sang "Surfer Giri," Chicago for an all-star encore. The mended to anyone of (Photo by Keating) The crowd any age. was hip to all the then left the stage to Wilson and highlight of this was "Kokomo," Despite a lull midway through the Soplioiwtrt classic tunes, but became B«tli DtpMviccairtmtf tiMstadMtpriztiRtiM 'quiet his band, which induded several backed by Chicago's sign up in horn section. book, it excels at its task. In the basemont and almost unreoeptive to new players from the Beach Boys. Even though rOHIICI|,«CiillC# PifMfMMMt t Chicago delivered college, the students praise them- MtCtlM liradiCtiM CMteft* material. At one point, it seemed Wilson played three songs from a weak set. it gave a good show. selves for as though their great knowledge, Chicafo was uninspined his self-titled SL Stta album, including his It was the Bieach Boys, though, If yet it is Hcdl Ix or 5Qx and running AU I Really Needed to Know in kindergarten the on auto-pilot. Key- .^ latest single "Love & Mercy All who really captivated the I Learned im qualities boardist Kindergarten is truly that last a lifetime are ^bby Lamb finally the fionga were ejqMrtly per- aiMHenoe. Fulghum 's philosophy, he may taught. ^

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vi< #> CHICK SUP£R IfOOPS iV UIVUM\ 3 ON 3 BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT SIBLINGS Welcome to MEN'S AND WOMEN'S Villanova DIVISIONS & don't miss \ r^ Feb. 2 ft Feb. 3 ''Who Framed Entry Deadline: Feb. 15 Roger Rabbit" /_ Piay Begins: Feb. 18 Thurs.: 6:30 S 9:00 p.m.

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F^bfiify' 8, litO • THE VILUtfiOVAM • Pagt 27 or» rwff '^Wisegtuf fiiferfaAMMiif By STEPHEN basketball teams POWERS The network has committed NCAA profiled to in NONE: is book Here some bad news AssistMMt En^rUimmtnt Editor four episodes so far, but is pre- By ALLEN AMBROSINO years. last book, and some good news for fans of past few His A facet of the sport in depth. A the most exciting games of 1988, unknown whether the team's pared to order more in anticipation Entertainment Editor on ike Brink, spent NBC's "Tattinger's." The bad S$ttton 25 Season Inside is filled with from the Villanova-Temple game leading scorer and rebounder, of high audience interest. news is weeks on The New York Times that the hour-long show Calendar hundreds of intricate facts that in McGonigle Hall all the way to Danny Manning, would return for Actually, the new series Will not has Most people feel that the excite- Best Sellers List. Feinstein chro- been taken off the air, but the serious college fans would love to Kansas' stunning upset of the his senior season. Even after he focus on Presley's entire life, but good ment ti ooUa|e basketball trans- nicled the Indiana Hoosiers and news is that, in an unusual know in orc&r to heighten their Oklahoma Sooners in the NCAA decided to stay, the Jayhawks rather on the years he spent move, cends the MBA's level of play their controversial coach, Bobby NBC is bringing it back as awareness of the sport. final. played sub-par basketball and singing before LIGHTS! joining the Army, a half-hour because of the enthusiasm it Knight. He showed what it takes Out of comedy. Music a fieW of 291 teams, were not a strong favorite to even when he was in his early 20s. generates and its unpredictability. to recruit and coach a winning CAMERA! "Tattinger's," which stars Ste- Feinstein chose to focus on 10 make the opening round of 64. While the role of young Elvis has Unlike, the Lakers-Celtics final basketball team in the 1980s. ACTION! phen Collins as a New York programs, including Villanova Unbelievably, they fought their not yet been cast, ABC is looking that seems to occur every year, restaurateur, was one of the University. He also dedicated way into the tournament and for someone, preferably an the NCAA has an electrifying 64- A Season hiskh Is most innovative shows of the new chapters to recruiting, being a travelled the improbable road to unknown, who can sing and act. team tournament where anything of the season. Like its timeslot predeces- Fekisiekils one referee and investigating what fmedwhk hundreds of the championship. Their triumph Jerry Schilling, the creative sor, can happen, making it virtually ''St. Elsewhere" (which feiW writers who has happened to college stars David hitricate showed the true essence of what director of the Presley estate, was 23 East impossible to select a winner. For facts that shared the same producers), it Cabaret Robinson and Kevin Houston. had college basketball is all about. ^^^ approached with the idea and took 23 E. Lancaster Ave. most programs, every game is , trouble attracting viewers the ahmty to cafiwre Coaches like Rollie Massimino serious coHego fans CBS Wiseguy" for its Feinstein is one of the few is about to it to the late star's ex-wife, Pris- early Ardmore, Pa. 'tfi crucial and tension caused by the episodes. However, while and players such as Billy King, writers who has the ability to ^"^1?? °" * "^^ storyline that cilia Presley, universal th»$pkUofMMAIia»- wouU hvo to know In • who will be the NBC gave "Elsewhere" 215-896-6420 "winning is everything" defensive specialist for wil bring a chance Duke capture the spirit of NCAA bas- several rock stars to the executive producer of is the show. to find an audience, the Feb. 3 — The Daves/Matthew Sevier and the Flood factor everywhere. IrettallL University, allow the reader order to he^lhten their acclaimed crime network, to see ketball. A Season Inside is the drama. Glenn Priscilla Presley previously wrote Feb. 4 — The Daves/Donnie Allen As fans, we are kept sufficiently - now in Band ' first place, is under pres- . what they think and experience awareness most comprehensive book on this Debbie Harry and Patti £/vtsfl«JA/^ and produced the hit Feb. 7 - Big informed by the press, but never of the sport. J^l^iy- sure to air Edsel Band . everything successful programs . they feel through a subject in the past 10 years. It was Arbanville will all have prom- miniseries p based on her novel. and is making Feb. 8 — StrectBeat Band really find out what is happening Recently, Femstem successfully grueling 30-plus inent some major creative game season. a joy to read and is definitely roles in the seven-episode The series is tentatively on the inside track. titled changes in "TattingerV" Feb. 9 — Missionaries/Blue Period John Feinstein completed the ultimate challenge. What makes this arc, book complete. Feinstein's crowning achievement which debuts March 1. "Elvis: Good " has taken Rockin' and is set The half-hour version the initiative and has He has covered an entire season however, are the vivid In of the descrip- It was intriguing to follow the in an impressive career of bringing the new story, Vinnie (Ken to debut this fall. of series is now filming been our guide through the daily college basketball, attending tions of the Wahl) in New York actual games. Fein- season of the Kansas Jayhawks. sports directly to the people that IS sent undercover by the VALERIE'S FAMILY: world of NCAA basketball for the 104 games and exploring NEW and NBC plans to air it every stein allows the reader to relive i\ FBI as the as soon Before the season started, it was make it happen: the fans owner of a struggling Valerie Harper is back at work, as an appropriate timeslot is record studio. Frey, who once this time on a new sitcom for CBS. available. appeared on NBC's "Miami Vice," "Desperate Women" Chestnut Calmret (Harper says SHORT TAKES: Filmmaker btana-up plays comedians a crack company insider the title is 38th and Chestnut streets up who tongue-in-cheek) will David audiences Lynch, who directed the shows Vinnie the shady side of the feature an Philadelphia, Pa. ensemble of six strange "Blue Velvet," tines, including appearances on rather entertaining. record is busy By DAVID J. CRIBLEZ comedy is more rigid. He is def- name a few. Will Miller be the business. Harry, formeriy actresses and is being produced 215-382-1202/215-382-1201 by developing a new nighttime Reporter "Late Night with David Letter- Clay is known as the initely of Blondie, series Staff king of worth catching in concert next one to hit the silver screen? is playing (surprise!) MTM, the studio responsible for Feb. 3 — Big Edsel Band and Me and for ABC. The proposed series will Those Guys follows man" and "Saturday Night Live." dirty nursery rhymes. A "Dice" and is someone to a singer watch for in I would not bet against it. on the comeback trail and Harper's first series, "Rhoda." WYSP's Friday focus on the darker side Night Live with David Dye Stand-up comedy is rapidly classic: "Jack and Jill went films. D'Arbanville of small- Currently, Kinison can be seen up the is the wife of a top In the new show. Harper plays growing in popularity. town life . . . Director Feb. 4 — NRBQ/Pierce Turner Such estab- hill both with a buck and a quarter These three comic company Susan Sie- surrounded by his heavy metal Miller gems, Kin- executive. Six other a Brooklyn native who divorces lishments as the is better known as the deiman ("Desperately Feb. 7 — Nick Cave with Improvisation, . . . Jill came with $2.50." ison, "Dice" musicians Seeking Wolfgang Press buddies in the video for his remake down and Miller, are the are expected to appear her Dan Quayletype politician "Weekend Update" anchorman Susan") is currently working Feb. 8 — Murphy's Law/Wargasm Press Dangerfield's and the Comic Strip of future stars of comedy. in some on the Troggs' "Wild Thing." In "Dice'' is a real character. He on Whether of the episodes. husband and returns home with " are "Saturday Night Live" (SNL) a new movie called Feb. 9 — David Bromberg Big Band Reunion/Aztec becoming yuppie hot spots all the it be stage or screen, these "She Devil 2 Step video, Kinison is found wres- comes on stage wearing a leather- Miller. guys "Wiseguy," which just finished her teenage daughter. It A yuppie comedian, is is her which will star sitcom across America. have the talent to rise a garment queen tling with the queen of controv- studded jacket, chain-smokes rather to the top industry story featur- second project since she was fired Old ingenious with his frequent Roseanne Barr. In a bit of unusual and new fans can choose ersy herself, Jessica and that is what counts. ing Hahn. The faster then lilorton Downey Jr., sarcastic Jerry Lewis, had a shaky from NBC s Valerie over a year from a wide remarks. His work is casting, Barr's co-star will be -- variety of comedians. song can be found on his freshman year last new wears an Elvis-like haircut and finely portrayed on his season, but is ago (she starred in a highly rated no kidding - Sam Kinison, Andrew "Dice" new album, Meryl Streep . . album Have You Seen Me Lately? now proving itself has such a vulgar attitude that he The Off- White Album, In response to a poll to be one of TV movie. The P«)ple Across the Clay and Dennis Miller are a pun upon conduct- And finally, Joan Rivers is re- cur- on which Kinison addresses such CBS' most consistent , makes Howard Stern look like Bob the Beatles' White Album. Miller ed by Pulse Magazine, the performers. Uke. last fall). She will be an entering the rently in the limelight and look Producers late-night talk show topics as the Pope, lesbians and Hope. Villanovan hope that the music executive producer of the series, The Spectrum seems to have captured some of is conducting a wars this fall, with a program as though they will remain there drugs. story will continue to attract the along with husband Pattison Place Letterman's hipness and com- similar poll. The sole question Tony Cacci- titled, appropriately enough/^The for some time. "Dice" can be seen on his new young He also makes fun of rock stars bined it in this viewers who are making otti, who held the same position Philadelphia, Pa. "Oh. special, with his own suave style. poll is: "If you were Joan Rivers Show." It will be aaaaaah," screams Kin- HBO "The Diceman the series successful. 215-336-3600 who do "Rock Against Drugs" His comedy is filled with an stranded on a desert island, °" syndicated by Paramount, ison, who resembles a gnome from Cometh," filmed in Philadelphia. J'^J?"^- , ^ . . . which ads. "Rock against drugs? Give me overcast of what 10 ELVIS RETURNS: With the he first Feb. 4 — Poison/Tesla sarcasm and dry albums would you 1 of the initial 13 epi- also produces "The Arsenio Hall the inner depths of hell. His He has an Italian persona and a success of last Feb. 10 — Sam Kinison/The of a break folks. That's like straightforward want with you?" season's "Elvis and sodes was taped last Outlaws Comedy is his humor. Any type of month, and Show," hosted by Rivers' replace- ^ream trademark. Kinison Brooklyn accent that would put Me" miniseries, Christians against Christ. There's music qualifies. Please ABC is planning CBS hopes to have is known for Tony Danza to send the series on ment on Fox's ill-fated "Late his role as the shame. "Dice's" It seems that "SNL" has become to turn Elvis Presley's no such thing. Rock created lists to P.O. Box 1554 in life story the air this spring. Show." psychotic history teacher in the comedy is extremely funny, but a movie-star-making into a weekly drugs," he quips. machine Kennedy Hall by half-hour series. HALF IS 1987 Rodney is 6ften Feb. 13. BETTER THAN Source: USA Today Dangerfield movie found offensive, especially with the likes of Eddie Murphy, Results will be printed in the His comic style is • "Back To School." From there, he unique, yet by women. Although "Dice" is not appearing on the big screen, to Feb. 16 issue, ijciiuriiieu sometimessunicimics vulgar.vuigdi. performed many stand-upsiana-up rourou- Overall,»^veran, hene is asdb ouuanaisnoutlandish as Kinison,Jvinison, his BillyKiiiy Crystal and Chevy Chase, mSS^SSi^S^^m^^^^^^^sl shows The Empire Roosevelt into the Boulevard and Princeton commercial rock world throwaway that boasts the verse Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. about a year ago with the multi- By BILL CARR and "I used to love her/but I had to 215-338-6100 p\at\num Appetite For Destruction, kill her" and shows MICHAEL AIMETTE that Guns N' Feb. 3 — Andy It was apparent that these King/Laura Mann Staff Reporters LA. Roses has a sense of humor too ^ bad boys were not ~ SharpA^ow KingsA^ice ^'Classified Personal your typical "One In Versa Advertising A Million" is and the tour reb.pfh" i n^^^^'^i?'? metal band. 5 — Danzig/Hades From Axl Rose's blood de force of Side 2. Although the Feb. 8 - Mapp * Magazine . rk- curdling howl to Slash's Contest . blistering song should best be remembered H«lp WantMl. Telemarketer, Feb. 9 - Le Compt/Shaghai HELP $6.50 an hour Hey, hey, Smurfette! Hows your Smurfl Two* yet surprisingly adept and com- for Slash's J WANTED guaranteed. Call 6Q7-9822. SPRING BREAK TYPING SERVICES brilliant acoustic solo, more weeks til V-day. Love n Roses — plex guitar NROTC. riffs, Guns N' Roses it is bound to get more attention j^ ]f Summer Job IntwvleMrs: average earnings separated itself from ihe mun- for its exceedingly angry and $3,100. Gain valuable experience in )f adver- Word-processed term papers •* dane. limiting conventions of Using, sales, and public and re- Hey Tim ~ Beware! Becl< admittedly controversial lyrics. jf relations selling sumes at & Red. Attention competitive prices. Laserjet printer heavy metal. yellow page advertising for the Villanova — Hl |l Government jobs — Taken as a whole, probably ^ Hours by appointment only. Keyboard the University Telephone Directory. Travel your area $17,840 19,485. Call 602-838- days. con- X 8885 nection. 688-3612 ext Ra097 anytime, organize , most interesting thing about ^ opportunities. Expense paid training program arvd cruise free. Jk-. n- in Chapel Hill, N.C. Looking tor entui^iastic, Beware of provincial, polysyllabic, penulti- (iN'R Lies is that it j^ shows just mate pomposity* And FOR WHAT IT'S WORTH W goal-oriented students for chaNeriging, well- promiscuous prohibitedj^ how far Guns N' Roses has deve- payino sunnner job. proem presented oy professionals. T The new tracks show a )f Some intsmahips avaii- loped in the course of only two yL able. Intsrviews on campus Tuesday, Feb- jL, njary 14. Sign up at your career Ing Break to Puerto La Cruz. Venezuela! FOR RENT side of Guns vears. ^^placement . 199 N'Roses -T office. Dtoc»Woclieye Mid vidoo photographers includes airfare from JFK. hotel and transfers within Venezuela For details, call ,^„pail tirne, must have car. Purple-Haze will 4- no one even Jennifer, 525-1 181. Hey Mr. F.f Thanks tor the piain^ yogurt. thought Riverfront Dinner Theatre train and provide equipment 667-626a ^ City Line and 63ftt Street. Large, one- Hope you^ celebrated Groundhog's Day — T existed. Delaware River at Poplar Street bedroom apartment all utilities included from one Phil to another. SignedTwells. U you Orbison is represented freshly painted and renovated. appreciate the intelligence Philadelphia, Pa. Close to ' transportation. $470/month. and songwriting — pportunity for ambltiouf student to earn Open fiouse skills of such : * byhisguitar, resting In 215-925-7000 Sunday. 10-1. For information, please call iproxinMMy $1000/mohMy to represent Spring Bfoak ~ ftessau/Paradise Island Deer Chris, Thanl« for coming to visit English groups as The Earn 342-2595. Just ^ Smiths and GN'R Lies is ie Event at Villanova selling $8-$20/hour11 Washington Energy will from 699. Package inckidea roundlrip air, the group's new Feb. 9 — Fiddler on the Roof qusMy person- remember, I don't want a card for that dreadful bet 4 New Order, a rocking chain ized shirts, sweats you $100 thai we have Iha best part-time translsrs, seven nighis hotel, but cannot stand their and caps. Nolnvsnlory beach parties, day arourKJ ttie comer. I love youl Jeff. release and it explores two com- markaling if investment required. Onepoilllon avaiiibis. Job. V you'ts nxmey molivalsd and free lunch, cruise, free admisston to night- whiny pretensions, Lloyd Cole pletely have a & different sides of the band. •imeoriews wilt be held in Sludent Union good personality. CaH Selh for an ckibe, taxes and more! Cancun packages imsrview. 971 The Commotions is your band. ^WMnesday. Feb. 8. CaM -9300. also available! Organize small group, John — Heal fast, so you can enjoy Side 1 is a re-release of the 1986 800-8S2-4996 for earn MISCELLANEOUS Cancun J free trip! 1 -000-231•231-0113 ( to the fullesL It won't if 5" Cole writes witty, melodic songs •PPt -Q1 1 3 or (203) 967-3330, be fun ya can t walk. EP Live Like A Suicide. All The son^, OTHER STIIFF- vou couW do wouM be sit on the beach >r about things other than .«»nd drink. . himself, all recorded live live ' Well . get better anywav. — Amy. Jf uo to the p/v nt!; r i ,w Shubert Theatre and he "*"" ' ^"?^' ^^'' offers his novel insights EP's title, as Wanted: One ticket tor VillarK)va vs. Seton Guns N^ Roses f^ Gir/,r / ^^T' 250 S. Broad St. on the band's ^O' was released this past Hall, Saturday, Feb. 11. Please call Meg at Jf third album, freneticalf; whip through i-ennayiwMMa ooad ooarniqut camp irr^^^^^^^^ Wednesday. The album Philadelphia, Pa. FOR SALE 526-9111. Putter, Curtis, Pischka — Sony big guy forlf Mainstreamiviainsirearn. ^r^t tuJLlJr . ^1} ,^ features "^ reskJential and summer staff. Alhtettc Director, Division ent 4Sy!^S!?P*^ tt>e three-mmute numbers like inconvenience. I didn't mean to do dJ^ guest oerformanrp*; hv «i.rh 215-732-5446 heads, swim, goN, dsnoe, crsAs. Isnnis, spofte. Song subjects range from angst Anyway, wait till Otis sees us, he toved us!]f "Reckless Life" and ''^^'"»'^Aerosmith's^ fyti.. o n ^1 ^ u^ Feb. 3-19 nsture, rsdto, sailinQ, Head Waterfront, ^"^ -Penn and Teller ycail 874-5135. Leave message. ^^ Yours truly, Joe GamtMSia jl, ("Hey Rusty") to AIDS ("These "Mama Kin." assistant cook. 941 -01 Need Basketbsli Tickets to any remaining frn^^th t"''^"''^ Wilburys.w'^r'"*^P For Sate — Black 1974 VW Super Beette Days") to love ("From The Hip"). In home games for the men's team. Please call The latter is the best sonir from a^.^^^^T^^'""^- (ak.a "Oarth Bugger"). Weil-maintained, one 527-3871 , if you want to sell extra tickets. owner. $1 . /: • asColenarratestheselittlestories the 000. Parked near Totenline. Contact EP; this fact is Nooch, Ono, Spike. Troll. Cuddles, 4* pS TZ^'l^t ^TT'^'V'^^'' John H. Fiekter (phiioeophy department) 306 mtliesameempathetic ^^ Steps. Jughead.Jujg^ F-IMan. Virgil. manner .^e^ -i^i-ce that cSn^^^^^ Si Thomas Hal. 645-471 Pigpen.]^igper ta£fe EKBOflanced wDfflHfB (WaHrees. Bartenders. a "FreshmanI. Li as Ray Davies of the Kinks. The t^.TrOr^l^^n': .urch & Tonto. rule light Side ]^ m 1986 was a band that had not KMchan, Doorman) lor Snicfcers Restaurant Qfaduate atydsnt to tmeh Attention — Government homee ft^om $1 of l-D first full length LP in 10 ^__j QMAT course years ftilniiiiiii lii band itself is also quite — - in (U-repair). Delinquent tax capable. yet refined its songwriting arMifagraauD,— Stone HartMr.NJ. Can (609) 'wwwned laat preparalton property Repos skills, a related *?2!!!??S!!y The members make m story, the Traveling 368-3tO0aik lorKMi lamzalton. Wifl train. Qraei Valtav arM r.mu sesstons. Call 60^-638-8885 9xL GH 8097. guitar-based, The four songs are interesting Jon in Wilburys made a difficult 526-9744. American-sounding rock, decision 19M Hyundai Excel — 4-door hatohback. which Calp, Murph, and BWy G.. eat wafftes with fk- ^«'«»*'"« Excelani oondilton. 29.Q00 mites. Askkw serves as a contrast '^^ ^y « ^^^ video from syrup and read romantic poetry together to Cole's very ^tential^en^^that^'^^"lJ'^^T±'7led to $4,050. CaN 649-4771.' jf Appetite For their Attention — Qovernment aeind veMctee Friday nights at the Hoto ^^ British style. current album. "End Of The from $100. Fords, Mercedes. Corvettes, f, Line "was shot P.O. (post-Orbiaon) While Cole has had great '^Zo^^.n^w . Chevys. Surpkis buyers gukte. 1-602-838- suc- ^c SCNtATIONAL tUlMeil availabte at "" 8685 extI A-8097. cess in his native ^"<1 ^^P'^^^s the Wilburys sitting t England, he rnni^inc? i^^'T^^'^"'"^^'" sharpcontrast braiter-tteisrohldran'scteapinPoconoMte.. in a circle on a train; Orbison i? Pa. PoaMons awailatate tor cabin oounaators. To my favorite staff Thanks remains a no-name here in the T^l^ tk"*' tor Works 8teMsModtingAgsncy.Caltor;wikia>or;:ry. telling everyone I fat by Comedy m - but at least I have United States. In his,guitar. resting votoas«nd rhyfims. buM-in AM/ 3 fact, it took eight '^^^'ia^V'^'^yjy^:^. '^^^^r'^ If hired CaM a semblance of personality |l wonder if you'll ^ '^ 126 Chestnut St. ™^ "^ l^^"^ "^ ^ '"a rocking chair, vfiien 649^7877 lij^interviaw FMMsreosnddoubtet^dsokwitidubbing PERSONALS readlhis?) 4- months until a record label Lf^lu^ ^w'J"^ ?^ Orb^in'l would capability. Philadelphia, Pa. CaM wssitniohte. S27-2S42 ' ^«*^^ 's hS^d. the chair begins to release Mainstream in America. arr.l^^ T'f^ T 'K^^' 215-WACKY-97 This is too MAIIVLVNN Amy^ « bad, since this excep-, Wilson - So what's \^ wm Spring i; if*?*^ *^'!i^ •J '^^^*^"'* *" Feb.'S^ — Gary Delena/Johnny Steele/Rocky "^ST*'*'»'~ •*«»«» — '^ t"t>"t«. but it is more than a Httle fireair rirswerwwi»nailia-bountf?Sharttyiximwr jiiaikif aCkibt.CluL ^*""•»"^^f^^^.P^^..^r*"" it" '^ ""t tional album would certainly ItVL^l . >.w>^.«t>>^.wi: J^ ^ "^•^Slr ^"^Z If3 Feb. 10-11 — Nick Kamen/Randy Eppley/Buddy Fitzpatrkk Boca and Coconut Rspubkc are awalkng us oneOTM who strongivstrongly dislikes lousy ptitowsptitows. W ^^'^ ^^ ^»^^b ... Na.hville'8 appeal to a vwide variety LCSSONS Ateo. I think Brendan is waling of "C'r??«?v'-'*IS a stowedr*-:.^*^'^^ tor swk on° tor me to give ' down Royal Court him listeners. Jii £^^ Of China juat n^H aMNvn oranammsni anoiterMakay. Love yaabunch.AiMna. To llw GUNS N' RdSES: "The apkil of Ptbstehia." FuM- mtt What an awsaoms dirt board''^ wmj^ C^Mwasn • N was worth waalng Sunday to do it Who4> folk>wup to the band's impreMive am Curtlsprad. aaaaitenoad When Guns N' Roses first stormed ^E!iTn? '^T'*..^ tt^f'^' 4M. — MMy flat B.-Oayf i hope us a carec N no one undsrslands N - Used To Love Her is a hilarious toundHonliraHsinoino. F we do andj debut. «00Od ofte. I 8.P #47*iM7 N^ youl Love, that's aN that —

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PmtMmmmMikumovtm* «j( Mythical dictomtiry FMkufffy 3, 1000 • THE VtLLANOVAN •

•y STEVE bremtstroke, 1- but it was the ly in 1:51.94 «nd the 500 freestyle Staff keporter meter and 3-meter diving events in 4:41.31. AtMefe doubles which broke the Cats' back in this Dearstyne was as victorious in a novel the For the first time this •Mson, meet. cise in the study ol language. Pavic creates a fairy tale kingdom 200 freestyle in 1:43.66 and the the Villanova men's swimming Through the unique format he of wit and folk wisdom in lines Senior Cris Craft led 'Nova by 100 freestyle in 46.09. By ROBERT DUGGAN and diving team has dropped uses, Pavic makes the such as "the daughter had taken back- winning both the 200 individual The Cats Reporter reader were unable to cap- Staff to- back meets. medley in conscious of the creative process all her best features from her 1:56.40 and the 200 'ture either of the two relays and of the Their smooth sailing came to an Week butterfly in behind reading that is often over- mother, who after birth remained 1:52.57. only managed a third-place finish abrupt end when the Cats were looked. The reader builds the forever ugly." Other Villanova victories came in the 3-meter diving. beaten by Penn State Jan. 23, 137- from freshman novel as much as the writer. Even language itself receives Russ Stockman in 'Nova gained second-place fin 106. in State College. the 1000 Dictionary of the Khazars Pavic's strange, magical touch: freestyle (9:44.75), junior ishes from Stockman in the 1000 They returned to the duPont Lou Dearstyne in By Milorad Pavic books are written in an ink that the 200 freestyle freestyle, O'Mara in the 50 frees- ,Swim CenterJan. 28, only to run (1:43.84), and the Alfred A. Knopf Publishing poisons those who react them, team of Dear- tyle, sophomore Steve Petrie in into a Pittsburgh Panther buz- styne, senior letters of the Khazar alphabet Blaise Matthews, the 200 backstroke and senior MVw MMMb tM zsaw and a 143-100 M loss. It was freshman have the power to kill, records are Jerry O'Mara and sopho- Tim Truax in the 200 their first home loss of the tattooed on professional mes- year more Brian Stagg in the 400 breaststroke. and it lowered the Cats' record to sengers, forming a strange living freestyle relay (3:09.44). Sopho- Besides the five Craft 14-3. and language and history. more Jay Dillenschneider added Dearstyne victories, the Panthers Hoping to match the success of The In perhaps his most intriguing The high concepts keys to the Penn State loss second-place finishes in the 1000 other and the won eight of the thirteen remain- European imports such as ploy, Pavic has created male and were the two diving events in earthy fables the book wonder- freestyle and the 200 butterfly. ing events.. Umberto Eco's The Name of the female editions of the which the Nittany Lions book which fully mixes together are often captured Hoping to get back on the Rose and Patrick Suskind's Per- ^ differ in only 15 "crucial" lines. first, second and third place. PSU winning track, the Cats bogged down by some dry pedan- put on a Head Coach Ed Geisz's squad fume, Milorad Pavic's Dictionary This ploy is a wonderful state- held a 32-6 edge after the 1 -meter try that makes it often difficult two-man show versus Pitt upon will attempt ofthe Khazars has come to America to return to their ment on how gender, like religion, and displeasurable and 3-meter diving events. their return to duPont. to read. Die- winning ways when Navy visits after best-selling runs in France is a "crucial" PSU also determinant in how tionary is not poolside won the 400 meter Craft won three individual and Germany. reading but, Feb. 4. It will be the last regular we shape our world, it medley relay, the 50 despite approached correctly, can be freestyle, the events and Dearstyne captured season Pavic, a professor of meet before the Big East literary being only one factor in our lives. 100 freestyle, the 200 backstroke, two. Craft greatly entertaining and enlight- won the 200 individual Championships in history at the University of Bel- the Pittsburgh. Those not caring to delve into ening. Pavic, like 500 freestyle and the 200 medley in 1:55.71, the > truth, - the .. 200 . ._-* \ gives butterf- Feb. 10-12. grade and one of Yugoslavia's such concepts will still find the you only what you put into him, most acclaimed poets, has book enjoyable for the magical, and should only be read with this achieved international fame with mythical quality of the tales. in mind. HELEN KOSKINEN Dictionary, his first full-length This week's Saco East Athlete of the We^k is novel. Helen Translated from the Serbo- Koskinen, a guard on the women's basketball Croatian of Christina Pribicevic- team. Zoric, the novel now comes to Koskinen, the March 5th to April 8th, 1989 a junior, was recently honored for the English-speaking world. second time this month as the Big East Player of The book is loosely based on the the Week. actual Khazar race, a She scored nomadic and 25 points in a win over St. Joseph's warlike tribe that flourished Jan. in 23, netted 16 points and dished out seven assists Europe between in a victory the seventh and over Boston College Jan. 26. scored 15 10th centuries. Only BERMUDA ix)inis as a few threads the Cats conquered Seton Hail Jan. 2^ and of information about pumped in the tribe 17 points while handing out five assists have survived, in but Pavic takes a Wildcat victory over Monmouth Jan. 30. these threads and weaves a tapes- Her totals ,. for the week were 73 points 19 try of his own poetic and imagin- CX)LLEGE rebounds and 19 assists. ative fantasies. WEEKS The Kaghan, the Khazar ruler, is troubled by a dream he cannot interpret. is University Since he contemplat- ^ ing converting the Khazar nation " from its own religion to one held Sp rtsWea by its European neighbors, he '^''® Photo suspects that the dream is trying A£* J • w» ^ MOSTsmanmrsmmmpiumnamuimis After dropping meets to Penn State and Pitt the Wildcat men's to help him come to swim team must attempt to regain a decision. its winning ways. 1015 UNCASTER AVE. BRYN RMWR Representatives of Christianity, 5274in Islam and Judiasm are summoned. nmi*" The representatives who best > interprets the dream will win the To my new brothers, Khazar nation over to his faith. Thanx for a most enjoyabk

It can be read straight pledge program. Looking throivh, IResutne backwards or forward to a great spring howeveryou wish. semester! Writing Dictionary becomes the record of not only the religious dispute N for the Khazars, but also the entire Khazar culture. Each faith Love Jim "Bump City" Service makes its own account, with each claiming victory over the other . Bowman two. These three dictionaries are passed down through the centur- ies separately until 1691, when a From the instant your resunne gets to a potential man publishes them together a$ Nassau/Paradise employer it t^as ^ 60 seconds to sell you -^ the first dictionary of the Khazars. So if you're going to Unfortunately, all but two of the CANCUN, MEXICO V trust someone else to write your personal y history copies are destroyed by the Inqui- <^ " CDDIMA ALT » >. don't take any more chances than SPRING BREAKDDE v you have to. sition in 1692. Pavic's Dictionary At Printer s Places, ^ we get the information straight from you in recovers the lost writings. an FEBRUARY 24 - APRIL 1, 1989 interview. Then we write the resume from scratch Pavic calls his book "a lexicon and highlight all of your strengths. Sometimes we find strengths where noyel." The novel is indeed a WithaUttiebitofluck, f^f/AZy PePARnR£S from $299.00 you didn't know you had any ihen we typeset the resume dictionary, with alphabetized on-site and print it on fine quality paper you just might it COMnCTI PACKAGE INCLUDES: so that It looks entries under the three different make as it throu^ the week. good as reads. We II even write your cover letter. faiths, cross-indexing and an • *^* ''*°" PHILADELPHIA. In SmSST!!^** NEW YORJC, BOSTON, WASHINGTON just a few days, you pick up Right firom the start, the party is nonstopi AND BOrrALi as many copies of your new appendix. The entries, aside from Bermuda. Whirrinfi around our island on a ?SSSb TO NA84AU^IIiI!S"2' VSSSUrttxJSS™*" resume as you want and start Your CoUe«e Week opens with a day-kx^ • nOUNOTRIP TRAN8PBBS PROMAIRPORT TO HOTEL. sending them out to being informative, are supple- moped. (Do keep left!) Our British ambiance and • 7 NIOHTS HOTEL ACCOIMOOAtlONS get those ^ Barbecue Bash at beautiful • WBIOONE RUM SNISILS AT NOCT important )ob interviews. — - mented with short ifolk tales that Elbow Beach- ookHirful pubs. Great HOTELS. and golf. Tleasuie (HA»MD) ! °i" y»» «™ OK nW/lLA (CANCUN) PAKTY. form the story of the Khazars, as dandog, feasting, swimming and taimii^ on hunting in our shops. Jogging on quiet seaskfe 3SAS?s«s?.Tir[i;;o"r""™ "^ ^^^ *-" °* •«*" «tektainhent. well as the struggle endured in the softjpink, sun-splashed sands. LUNCH) roads-induding a 2-k "Fun Run" from Horseshoe I "™ "" MUilC AND ACTIVITIES (NASSAU) SSSLSS^^^J!!!i?"*»M8ION TO THE compiling of Dictionary. Tne beat goes on with spectacular SS^ESsIS?^ PALACE. MATEKLOO AND THE dSooHr beach Bay And the special fedii^ of being on a tiny{ BAHAMAS T0WKI8T Like a dictionary, one can begin parties feaniring ! S2*f^.!fS*-!!?*°"**' * "• OfTICE. Berauida's top rode, sted and flower-bedecked island, separated ftom • OM UXATIOM PMOFESSIONAL TOUK BSCOKT. reading the novel in any place. Gdypso bands. Daily kinches A limbo festival everywhere and everythii^ by 600 miles of sea The only order followed is alpha- Anfan outts^geous Party Cruise to ms^gnifkxm This spring, break away to an island betical. It can be read straight dut's

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'^•^•-«» * IP»TMlVIUANOVMI#Nbwiwy»,im

By DAVID N V.U. faces upcoming ASSAR games made a difference m the team this ViNanovan Sta/fRtporkr with Scranton, lona and St. year. Craig has added a fresh Boneventurc, among others. "The outlook to the team and players After a long break, the Ice Cats difference is that last year there are responding to him well. defeated St. John's 94 and 10-2 was only one line that couW score. Schneider said, "Spring break during a weekend doubleheader at Now we have three and we can is normally a really great time to the Haverford Skatium. really challenge these teams," get away, but with any luck we "We were nervous because Schneider of said. will be down at the Skatium. the long layoff — it had been a "There is a k>t of Team (Record) energy with putting the metal on the ice and Prev. while since we had the 1. Illinois faced the Ice Cats this semester, and the practicing for the ECAC (181) pressure. 2. But the team looked coach (Bob Craig) is pleased with playoffs." Oklahoma (172) great, we were not flat at all," the past weekend. 3. North Carolina (18^) He is really The Ice Cats will be away this team captain Mitch Doren said. proud," Doren said. 4. Arizona (15-2) weekend. Playoffs begin the first Doren started the 5. Missouri Jan. 28 game in The change in coaches has week of March. (18-3) goal and held off 23 shots in the 6. Louisville (14-3) 9-4 victory. 7. (Georgetown (15-2) Tom Dillon was the star of the 8. Florida Slate (lt>l) Jan. 28 game, recording a hat trick 9. Seton Hall (18-2) — three goals in one game. The 10. Michigan (16-4) scoring, however, came from 11. North Carolina State (14-2) many places this weekend. 12. Duke (14-3) On Jan. 29 Sean Curran and 13. Iowa (154) Hugh Maginnis had hat tricks for 14. Syracuse (17-4) the team, netting six of the 10 15. Ohio State (15-4) goals scored. George Schneider 16. Indiana (17-5) was also a big factor, adding a goal 17. UNLV (14-4) and two assists. This balanced 18. West Virginia (15-2) scoring attack is part of the new 19. Stanford (1,5-5) future of Villanova . 20. LSU (14-5) The return of Sean Curran was a definite plus for the Ice Cats. *^<^e«vin« Votes ^/r^^r. (Record): Providence (15-3) St Marv's He is the team of California co-captain and (16-1), Kansas (16-4). USalle (15-4) always a big contributor. (Compiled as of 2/1/89) He had been out with a wrist injury since eariy December and the team was hoping he would be byHofmann) back in time to help in the run Senior goalie Mitch for the playoffs. Doren was instrumental in the Ice Cats 9-4 victor^ over Big East foe St. John's, Jan. ^ "The team worked the puck 28. well in both games. We are scoring on our opportunities, which was a problem before, and the power play is really coming along well," Schneider said. The team is now 6-3 in the ECAC league 8-6 overall, and within reach of a playoff bid. "We have to win the rest of the impor- tant games and win them decisive- ly if we want to make it," Doren said. With Doren and Jimmy Clark in goal, the team has a shot. Clark recorded 23 saves in the 10-2 victory Jan. 29. The goalies have been the back- bone of the team all season, and now with improved defense, the Ice Cats are a team to be reckoned v/ with.

Cliff, Honcho and

especially

Haley. Welcome

A-. to my

home.

Love Hub ttOHC VNXANOVAN • Nbruvy i, 1M8

Fabfuary 3, 1SS9 •THE VILLAMOVAM • Pagt 33 Big East review Jan. 25 respectively. The Redmen were '89 led by Billy Singleton and Jason mien's BaskeUtall Syracuse 72, Boston College ORIENTATiON Buchanan who pumped in 12 60 — Sherman Douglas recorded points apiece. 19 points as Syracuse (17-4) defeat- Seton Hall 103, Boston Col- ed Boston College (8-9) in Syra- lege 79 — Senior guard John cuse. The loss marked the Eagles' Morton scored 30 points to lead foXirth straight defeat. APPUCAVONS AVAILABLE FOR Seton Hall past Boston College in East Rutherford. ^ Standings Jan. 26 The Pirates made 18 of 26 foul shots while outrebounding the Pittsburgh 82, Seton HaU 79 Eagles 25-9. — Brian Shorter finished >yith 22 Syracuse 100, Providence 96 points and teammate Rod Brookin — Sherman Douglas dished out added 16 as Pittsburgh (11-8) ORIENTATION COUNSELOR an NCAA record 22 assists as outlasted Seton Hall (18-2) in East Syracuse edged Providence in Rutherford, NJ. Syracuse. Douglas hit both ends Andrew Gaze led Seton Hall of a one-and-one with 25 seconds with 16 points. AND remaining in the contest, sealing the Friars' fate. Jan. 28

Connecticut 80, St. John's 52 ADMINISTRATIVE — Cliff Robinson Jan. 30 ASSISTANT collected 22 points and teammate Willie Pittsburgh 85, St. John's 81 McCloud pulled in 12 rebounds as — Brian Shorter scored 20 points ikf- Connecticut Pick them up beginning Feb. 6 in the (11-5) crushed St. as Pitt scored an overtime victory John's (12-6) in Hartford. over St. John's in New York. The The Huskies were also helped Dean of Students Office, 21 3 Dougherty Panthers scored the first 1 1 points by Chris Smith and Phil Gamble of the extra period as they defeated who scored 14 and 13 points the Redmen.

Informationai lyieetlng: Wed., Feb. 8 8:30 p.m. Conneiiy Center Cinema

Fiiing Deadiine: 1 2 noon Dean of Students Office Feb. 1-6

Dare to Make the Wildcat Difference!

WHO DO YOU LOVE? Let that ''Special Someone" (and the rest of University!) know your true feelings

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Hap)>y21mt TbtCMlttrFor Pibruery 3, lie • THE VILLAMOVAH • ViydiMiMlljtic niydwllienqiy Jackie Psychothempy for the Philadelphia Stanley H« Kaplas Women swimmers KuKnert Community HIGH LOW is now in QUALITY attain records By CATHY MARTIN set a season record in three Appointment races: Main Line and For Staff Reporter the 100 backstroke (1:02.6), the Ordtr Calaioo Today w«h Visa/MC or COO Center City Call 200 backstroke (2:14.52) and the MM-IBI-KCt Although the Villanova wom- 200 individual medley (2:18.42). mCM (213)477«26 OffIces ••1-3S1S en's swimming team fell to Pitts- She placed fourth, third and fifth, Or. mil $200 to: Wiiiinfc IhIiimIm burgh Jan. 28, 1 17-1 19, the women respectively, 11322 Wtfio Am #206-A. Lot AngHn. CA 9002S in these events. were able to shatter many indi- '88. to announce the opening There We survived Spring Bieok We are pleased vidual school and pool records. were several other swimmers on the squad who set Just of our newest FULL SERVICE TEST ''Hufricane Gilberi" was Eileen Consadine, a freshman, either personal or season records RESUME PREPARATION CENTER to meet the needs won the 100-meter Jan. 28. Susie Schroder swam a another parly animal. freestyle with of our Main Line students. a time of 52:36. This performance personal best in the 100 breast- strokfe 1 Do you want to was not only her personal best, ( :09.23) and the 200 breast- but was also both a pool and stroke (2:30.61). She placed fourth M in both Mil school record. races. be wearing II |1 BRYNlfAWR Geraldine Cortez set a personal In the 200 freestyle, Consadine record by swimming the 100 polyester for the 950 HAVERFORD ROAD placed second (to fellow Wildcat freestyle in :55.60. Maria DeLuca Laurel Fournier) and again broke 526-9744 (photo by Hofmann) set season times with her third- READY Villanova's women's fell to Pitt last week, 177-119^ her personal best and the school rest of your life? swim team place finish in the 100 butterfly record. The record-setting time Proud Host of the 1989 Ms. UNIVERSE PAGEANT (1:01.11) and a fourth-place finish CENTBRCITT WILLOW O1I0VE was 1:52.72. n the 200 butterfly (2:15.46). >— « 1 WEEK VACATIONS iSaa WALNUT ST. WILLOW OROVB PLAZA I bet not. COMPLETE rfc record 54e-3S17 eso-oiii was broken in the 50 Also setting a season-best time freestyle, but Consadine finished from «379! Sports Shorts in the 200 butterfly was Mindy first with a time of :24.41. Warmbrand. Her second-place • One day service RT Air, 7 Nights hotel, fun, parties and extras! finish came at 2:10.47. Fournier won the 200 freestyle • Acopulco 8l Bahamas available from some cities. Laser typesetting and also broke the school record. For free tour Information, call your area student Basketball Tina Louwers' 5:14.83 in the • HCAPIAN stars receive She finished 00.13 faster than Consulting 500 freestyle (third place) and Jean representative. SWUY KKAPUN OUDQimCBnBt Da Consadine. The time of 1:52.59 Magnier's 2:39.99 in the 200 • $29.95 gave her a personal best, as well . • • • - • • conference breaststroke (seventh place) I f DAI NCLhX NTL Cf'A were Kevin (215) 527-8793 SAl GMAl GHL MCA honors as the new pool record. • Satisfaction guaranteed BAR REVIEW & OTHER COURSES both season bests for these Or the Spring Break Hotline (713) 447-6670 women. Two Wildcat women basketball stars, Helen Koskinen and Fournier also swam a season's Rosemary Magarity, earned conference honors for their efforts best in the 100 freestyle, (52.77). Although she Main Line in the Cats' three-game win streak last week. This was fast enough to capture did not set any records with her times, Koskinen was named Big East Player of the Week for the second place. Teri Messenger swam Document Center week of Jan. 30. This is the second time this month that she strongly and has consistently in her events. She 61 West Lancaster Ave. received this honor. Mary Mayfield also turned in a Koskinen led the strong performance took second in the backstroke Ardmore, PA 19003 Cats in scoring with 25 points (six in against the overtime) in the win over nationally-ranked Panthers. She set a school record (2:12.87) and in the 100 butterfly (215) 896-0319 YOOR St. Joseph's, and LAUNCH (1:00.92). Messenger, with 16 poinds and seven assists in the win over Boston College when she swam the 100 breast- with a time Jan. 26. stroke in 1:07.44, finishing third. of 1:02.42, finished the 100 back- stroke She also pumped in 15 points when the Cats conquered Seton in third place. KmUD©^^}^ Mayfield also destroyed the Hall Jan. 28. She ended the week with a tally of 56 points, 15 woix ov roiTun see rebounds and 14 assists. school record in the 200 breast- Villanova's jmeet against Pitt CAREERIN stroke. She finished third, but her Magarity was chosen as Big East Freshman of the Week, was one of the toughest of the time was 2:25.01. PHOOIAMS 01 OAMFUS also for the week of Jan. 30, for her achievements in the same season. Despite the loss, the games. In the 200 individual medley, women were able to rise Mhool to the $800+ Meb jwt, Mayfield ended I She led the Wildcat scoring in the Seton Hall game with up second even occasion and swim their best. 8-4 (tttiibU) homn though she 16 points. Her week's totals were 34 points, 15 rebounds and set a season record of •aeh wttk pUeial k LONDON four assists. 2:11.59. The Wildcats' next meet will be filllBl pofton OM For oaapu. Megan Waters, the Jan. 28 the Big East Tournament, Feb. 10- meet was OAJUL TOLIr-nUU TOBAT International Internship a personal success. She 12, in Pittsburgh. l-800-8aM848 I8T With An We give recommendations Be a part of an exciting work-study Women soccer players program for juniors, seniors and graduate earn post-season students. honors For 1 5 unforgettable weeks, you'll live Ann Beirne, a senior on the women's soccer team, has been TRUMP PLAZA named to the NSCAA second-team Holt I in beautiful Kensington in central London. All-America squad.

You'll begin with full-time study at fully Beirntf, a defender, was also named to the All-Northeast Region first team for the third straight year, but this was her Junm accredited Richmond College. Then, first selection to the All-America team. you'll build valuable job skills and gain She racked up four goals and four assists for the Cats this ToThe season, and ended her career with 25 goals and 11 assists. She international experience working in such was also honored as the MVP of the ECAC Tournament this Tniiiq» year. \ desirable fields as business, advertising, (photo by Hofmann) Mary Mayfield finished third in the lOO-meter The most prestigious Hotel "Ann has been the backbone of our team throughout her breaststroke Jan. 28 politics, law and journalism. m the Cats loss to Pitt. & Casino in Atlantic City has career," said Head Coach Don Paxson. the right job for you loaded For more information about a semester with opportunities. Full and Junior forward Jeannine McLees was selected to the second- part time positions are now: team All-Northeast that could launch your career, fill out and Region squad. This season she scored six DEAD - available in all areas: HEADS FtOYD goals, second highest on the team, and passed four assists. Her NEADS career totals Come mail the coupon below. are now 21 goals and 10 assists. Food & Beverage Experience HEAVY WAfER CAT Finance Hotel Operations American Institute For Foreign Study. Philly't Premiere Psychedelic Art Rock Bend Casino Saturday, Feb. 4 10:00 p.m. Administration 102 Greenwich Ave.,Greenwich, CT 06830 VALENTINE GIFT IDEAS Security 1-800-727-AIFS The Rusty Nail 2580 Haverford Ave. COMPACT DISCS . . '6.99 $2.00 Cover Excellent salaries and Sports ^ Ardmore, PA (649-6245) full benefits packages YES, I'm interested in launching my career in Lx>ndon by taking CASSETTES a LPS fbom*3.99 TRUMP PLAZA ~~ part in Richmond College's International Internship Program. ""TAKfANixTRA EMPLOYMENT OFFICE I 7M W, OCULAH aOAO. is MOM AND DAD fl EASANTVILUE. N.J «t232 10% OFF Call mm for Name: WITH THIS COUPON SALES ITEMS more lattnutkm j MOT INCLUDED MINIMUM PURCHASE - HAPPY26th (800)243-7^^ I $1 6.00 OFFER EXPIRES 2-17-89 Address: aws! 1 JOB HOTLINE City: State:. ZIP: ANNIVERSARY TruMi^ Mma • an ^tyil Phone: _ to *ht fM vn LOVE ADRINA

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.^K%k^V< if*-: * -- . .^- orts Pto» 39 #TNIVHJLANOVAN • Pabfuwy 1, IMi the Grels, Walker lift Cats By JOHN G. RICCO had hoped. **In the beginning of 'That's the beauty of this Sports Editor the first half, it seemed like he M)' was team," West added. '^We hav« Vol.a4,lto.13 overpowered," Massimino said. Confidence in everybody's ability. VtUANOVA •I' UNIVERSITY. VILLANOVA, PA. Much like weary soldiers It was during the midgame Anybody could have taken that Ammmmmmitmm February 10, 1989 returning home after war, the break, however, that Greis decided shot down the stretch." Villanova Wildcats (12-8,3-3) toibecome more of a factor inside, V.U.'s defense prevented Pitt entered duPont Pavilion Jan. 28 in "(fdecided at halftime to be more from attempting a last-sftcond search of a much needed lift. Lower aggressive and be more of a force, shot and 'Nova came away with Merion to Fortunately for Head Coach in the game," Greis said. its third Big East victory. "Hope- Rollie Massimino's squad, that lift And a force is exactly what he fully this win will get us back on came both in the form of 6500 became. The junior center was track and get us back into the discuss housing screaming fans, and in the Wild- virtually unstoppable, especially winning flow," Massey said. cats' 79-78 victory over Big East in the last 10 minutes, tallying 17 Ordinance to be rival Pittsburgh (10-8,3-4). second-half points for a game-high examined The contest was only the second 25. By MAUREEN STAPLETON Pawprints addition, each home is allowed News Editor Villanova home game since Dec. . Led by Greis, the Wildcats ..., ^, „,.,. , , . only three Al on-site, off-street park- 22 and the team's first hough the Wildcats sche- duPont fought back, tying the Panthers . T ing spaces. game since that date. Over the 49-49 ''"'^ ?^*" "^^ «^^ ^"y easier their Lower Merion Township with 14:05 left in the game. will John Lewis. Student Govern- ^'^^ contests are all at home, hold a public hearing long road stretch, which took the The rest of the way was a seesaw S^^\ Wednesday ment president, '•(•* said, "Obviously. »^ Georgetown in the at 7:30 p.m. to team as far away as Florida and affair with the lead "P discuss a proposed I chaoging l'^^\ think it's going to restrict the Arizona, the Cats amassed a 5-4 hands *" ^ fi^"™^ housing ordinance which would with almost every trip. ^?^l'*\!!!L''" ^To^^^' constitutional rights of students record. ^^^^^^ ^^ ^^ P"?- designate "student" While Greis and Doug West (17 homes and and where they live." ^^ establish The team's steady January diet points) were supplying much of ~ ^^ |^^ ^^^"^ minimum distances Gilbert High, ^?^^^^ ^"^ DowdellJ.^'^!?^/ between solicitor for Lower of top 20 opponents and tough the offensive punch for the Cats, ^^f^ them. Merion «?,T; Township, said Feb. 6, conference both freshmen, started m place of The planning board foes took its toll on the Shorter (19 points) and point of the "Our office has researched township met the Wildcats and left them anxious to guard Sean Miller were keeping ^.^"iJ"?""!^^^?^ Feb. 6 and did not validity of Dowdell,whofouledoutn ^'!f ^^^^i*"; o restrictions and we get back home. "It's a great feeling with 1:18 recommend passage to the town- Pitt in the game. Miller, who think the ordinance is valid." remaining finished with seven ship commissioners, to have 6,0(X) fans yelling for us finished with 17, was on fire all however, (photo by Villi) instead of the other w ^F,.. . stating that the ordinance team," center night, hitting on five of six shots P^J^^ /"^ 1^^^^^!}'^^ In ViUanava s 79-78 win over Big East rival as it rebounds while u^?*"^ Pittsburgh the WUdcats' stands Obviously, I think it's Tom Greis said afterward. "It Walker had a junior center was "too restrictive," said was from three-point land. Tom Greis scored 25 points, 17 of which came in the "'"« Pomts Arline Kerrigan, a welcome change, definitely." Pittburgh's trouble at the foul ^^^^M^ second half. secretary of going to restrict the " external The game versus the Panthers line, however, especially for Shor- " ~ affairs in Student Government. constitutional ri^ts of did not begin like much of a ter (7 for 12 from the line) and homecoming, however. The proposed ordinance states, students and Behind Bobby Martin (5 for 12), continued 'Nova wins where fourth straight m part, that a student the powerful home is inside play of for- into the second half and prevented "A they live. living arrangement for a ward Brian Shorter, Pittsburgh the Panthers from pulling away. By AMY C. win, number SPENCER and then we beat Seton Hall, of John Lewis jumped ahead early, climbing to students unrelated by blood, "We're the better team, we just Assistant Sports Editor who was tied with us for second marriage or Student Government president a 31-20 lead midway through the missed a whole biinch of foul legal adoption attend- [in the Big East]. It was a big week ing or first half. shots and they 1 planning to attend either won," Martin said. The last seconds of the first half and I think this game was a let- TT undergraduate The township commissioners A 12-0 Villanova run, capped off "It's as simple as that." ticked away. colleges or univer- The women's has- down." will cast the final by a Gary sities, or attending to or planning vote on the Massey dunk with 3:47 Nevertheless, Pittsburgh was ketball team was trailing Mon- Important game or not, Villan- to attend ordinance. However, the planning left in the half put the Cats up clinging to a one-point lead with graduate programs at mouth by six points, 26-20, and ova was in a deficit situation apd board of the colleges or universities, township wiJJ ulti- momentarily, but the Panthers 16 seconds remaining * Decrease or who are when fresh- the Wildcats looked weary as they something had to be done, mately either on a semester or summer recommend or not responded with a mini-run of their man Chris Walker boldly nailed filed into the locker room. The team break started the second from studies recommend the ordinances that own and took a 37-32 lead in with a 15-footer to put V.U. 79-78. at colleges or univer- up Was this to be the end of their half with one goal — to the township cHp the sities, or any combination commissioners will them at halftime. The lead could According to Massimino, the Cats three-game win streak? of such Lady Hawks' wings. The tri- persons." vote on. have been larger, but the Panthers were looking primarily for Greis The players were not mentally umphs of the past week were set Kerrigan said failed to The proposed ordinance the ordinance convert numerous free or West, but the shot came open or physically alert KEVm also for this game, aside, and all the players' energy »y C HEIL AfliHw, said he agreed that demo- of Admi«sions was a result of complaints throws, hitting ' is in the process of stateo tiuLt student^ ^«„ „«««„homes "shall from just 10 of 20 in the to Walker and he took it. their fifth in Newt Editor ««„, 10 days. was channelled into the on-court '^ ^ deciding not Lower Merion residents half. upon a number of stu- be located on a lot any portion about "I had the shot so I had to take Junior "Playmg games this close 51?^,^^decrease i^^^l^'^J^^Jh Beth Pasik collected 13 tc«eth- action, m applicants. He ladded dents to of student housing in Lower Merion Despite accept in order to get a which is closer to another lot eight first-half points, it," Walker said. "If I . The office of Admissions was in the rebounds in the women's basket- er takes its toll on us," Head The difference fore- that the decline IS a Township. was noticeable normal quota of 1,550 students, he said. lawfully used for a student She said, "The consti- the 7-foot -3 Greis was not as much same position again I'd do the ball team's sees a possible drop in completed home victory over Coach Harry Perrefta said. as the regression and -. tuency has "We Cats slowly narrowed the hkened the appli- ^, , ^ ,, . than screamed long enough of a presence a distance determined by inside as Massimino same thing." Monmouth. beat St. Joe's on applicafiOns for next fall's fresh- cation ^^'^ ^^^ University television, went gap. They pulled even, 33-33 process to an expanding . ^^^^J^ multiplying times ... Villanova students in Lower man class, but not as drastic students twenty the to Boston College and had a big as economy, saying, "it has to cool ^ P^''^^"^ 2^'^^ Merion are a large . (Continued on page 31) f^^"^^ required street frontage for constituency at other area schools, said the Rev. off" irom SIX states. These are, in a and in a lot of ways, it single family detached dwelling in (the Adrian Gilligan, O.S.A., assistant Gilligan ing order, Pennsylvania. Cats qualify said the office of Admis- ^^''ef the^district^^^ ordinance) is pointed at Villanov^ for ECACs dean of Admissions, New Jersey, "•E,"'*''"ci wn,cnwhich it is located. Feb. 7. sions received 9 677 comnlptfd New York, Connec- students." By MONICA BYRNE much smoother^ and we showed Gilligan said the University ^*^"^' Massachusetts and ^"^"''' '^'P"^^"'es had applicatiSnsTst year As of Feb Mary- .u Jt .h. h ^^1? Staff Reporter much more intensity. *^«"^^ '^^'* Kerrigan pointed out that stu- At this received approximately 11,300 7 the '^"d- "^ ^^d^' however, that the UnivSr had r^^^^^ l-^'^OO\^i|^^ Tfu^^^-^^ dents point, our entire initial square feet of building area who wish to protest the squad appears to applications as of UniversitvUniversity has been ren.ivina .. - Feb. 7, 91^ ^ppl^^^^^^ receiving ^„j .^^ , . ,, .. , comS ' * Qualifying is the of be running ^ and the student home must be ordinance should go to Student name the* better than any Vil- but fewer prospective students entry ^ ,. this fall. This number is (Lontinued on page 5) registered with garae and the Wildcat women's lanova team has. have followed through on the township. In (Continued on the exp^ed to increase when appli- page 8) track team sure knows how to "We are on schedule with our application process by submitting cations not yet received from play">t. qualifiers and are solid in every the second part of the application. commuting students arrive, as The .Wildcats have competed in event from the 400, where A decline in the Wilke number of high well suspended as applications granted from exten- only four meets this year, and Michelle Bennett ran a tremend- school graduates brought about sion by the University, he said. already a great number of Cats ous 54.8 relay split this week, by a decrease in birth rate has have Gilligan added that the Univer- qualified for either the through the 5000, with Kate contributed to lower application sity does not plan to enroll more NCAA Championships, the ECAC Fonshell having an teaching at excellent early rates at area Villanova schools, according to than 1,550 students for the upcom- (East Coast Athletic Conference) season," he concluded. the Philadelphia Inquirer Feb. 1. ing freshman By JENNIFER REIDY rendered its decision in a report Arts and Championships class. Since every Sciences faculty,' the or both in their Villanova traveled to Harvard By JOHN F. arenas located at schools like Dr. Charles L. Cherry, Senior to Dobbin Dec. 21. SWIFT associate student who is accepted does not Reporter letter continued. respective events. Jan. 22 for the New England Associate Duke University are filled with vice TAC Editor president for Academic enroll at the University, In a Jan. 19 letter to Wilke, Dobbin concluded. Villanova the office "I consider competedjan. 8 at the Championship, where four indi- tradition and that as the pavil- Raymond G. Dobbin wrote that he accepted Wilke, communi- the (Wilke'sJ case, therefore, to be Manley Field House in the Syra- viduals ion is a relatively (Huber, Franey, and Ther4i^nt Pavilion was new facility, cation arts professor, has been committee's report and its recom- unique . . . The committee found cuse Invitational. O'Sullivan in the mile and dectric it is impossible to draw Bennett l^st Saturday night. upon suspended from the University mendations. He cited the report's that '«^^ Core curriculum you were negligent in the Senior quickly in the 800) qualified for the NCAA The Wildcats were preparing the "ghosts of Villanova past." without for indication that Wilke's pay one year as the case "is instruction of the students in secured her berths your in the NCAA Championships, to play the This might answer part of the result of a competency and sexual not a matter of isolated mistakes and classes; that you were not recep- ECAC championships for the Stern said, "Of all the great in a crucial Big East question, but surely not all of or misjudgments. battle. The harassment hearing held last but of deliberate tive to their questions: and that 3000-meter race as classmate half-milers it. we've had, Michelle players, the coaches and the findings November. and systematic ignoring of basic expected you responded to students in a Kathy Franey also qualified for [Bennett] has advanced as Villanova The duPont Pavilion, far as fans all realized the for Wilke may regain tenure at the needs of people in a learning generally abrupt and abusive the ECAC championships in the any of them have, and she's only importance whateveK architectural rea- By MAUREEN STAPLETON corej in any way," she said. of the game. University next January if he situation. manner. same event. " a sophomore." This rivalry has become sons, was not blessed with the News Editor "Although a specific course adheres to several ill- conditions also that The 4x800 relay "The committee found squad of Carol In its most recent outing, the more and more heated in best acoustics. With all of the may not end up a requirement. established the by the hearing com- The committee found you did not treat students with Haux, Sonia O'Sullivan, Michelle team smashed a world past few 1500 students located behind The core curriculum ad hoc other courses will indoor seasons with many be required so mittee,, including^...^ pojv.Mw.^,caipsychological Bennett and Michelle committee, that proper respect and that you used DiMuro mark. off-court incidents adding fuel one basket with a large, open formed by the College every discipline will have the counseling, according you were negligent to a com- disparaging ethnic qualified for both championship The outstanding area of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will and racial Cat relay of to the fire. Those incidents, behind them, the noise same amount of involvement in mittee report to the Rev. Edmund in the mstruction of the remarks to students in meets. Also, • ^ your a young Cat distance Bennett, O'Sullivan, Huber and however, appear to have buried created by the students is a meet with department chairper- the core," Desmond added. Dobbin, J. O.S.A., University classes," medley relay of Michelle sons Feb. to students in Dobbin wrote. Torelli, DiMuro broke the 16year-old themselves in history and all fraction of what it could be. 22 discuss its findings The members of the core cur- president. your Sharon Moore, of Conditions of Suspension Kim Certain and Soviet record in the two-mile that remains is a good rivalry Why not circulate the stu- the past semester, said Dr. riculum committee include Dr. The report stated that Wilke classes; that you were the Kate Fonshell qualified for the relay. dents Mary E. Desmond, biology Dunng year of his suspen that produces excellent around the arena instead profes- Emily Binns, religious studies offered choice between should be a sion. Wilke must undergo manda- ECAC Championships. In addition to that record- basketball. of placing them in one spot? sor and committee member. professor; Dr. Mkhael E. Burke, two not receptive to their different options: dismissal tory psychological Bennett and Certain also qual- setting performance, The upper half The charge of the comnuttee assessment the Wildcats The student section of the of the student director of the Honors program; from the University with sever questions; and that you ified for the and counseling by a professional ECACs in the 800 and qualified six individuals for the pavilion was filled to capacity section could be sold to non- was to study the core curriculum the Rev. Kail C. Ellis, O.S.A., dean ance pay equal to one and one half selected by the University. 1000, respectively. NCAA Indoor Championships students and of the College of Liberal Arts responded to students "Since and more than a half hour before some of the stu- and of the College of Liberal Arts and times his yearly contract salary, In the Yale the charges involved Professor Invitational, 10 eight for the ECACs. tip-off. With 1500 students dents could be located behind Sciences .and see how it applied Sciences; Dr. Debra Kenderski, or suspension from the University in a generally abrupt Wilke's runners qualified for the In a tremendous the to the phikxtophy of insensitivity in dealing ECAC performance. cheering wildly, the Wildcats opposite basket in the lower the college psychology professor. Dr. Frank without pay for one year with the with students, staff members and indoor track championships, and the sensational senior would appear level, in the first ten rows of and the M)ssk>n Statement of the and abusive manner. h' Huber to have a strong Maloney, astronomy professor; ability to regain faculty status. In (photo by Zachwkai Huber qualified for the University, individuals outside of the Univer- NCAA came from behind to beat 1964 homeoourt advantage. But they the upper tier on either side of Desmond expUmed. Dr. Joseph McFalls, sociology a letter to Dobbin this week, Wilke sity Championships in the mile. Olympic the court Desmond ... it Js our intent that such 300O champion Maricica do not. Why? and in the tier above said. 'There will be professor; and Dr. Philip Pulsieno, chose the second option. O.SJI.iiialftlwteWiiie Sonia CSoUivan wm pmrt of the counseling will help Professor Head Coach Marty Stem com- Puica of Romania. Why does the the opposite basket. definite changes, but we htve no English professor. two-niilc relay that pavflkm lack The committee was comprised finished in mented, Wilke adopt a more positive atti- "Even thoti^ our team Today the miler Pnuiey and the the iatiuudatioo (actor Not only would more tickets way of knowing what those Dr. Joihn Immerwahr, philo- first pUcc is the Kodak whkh of Dr. G. Lee Christensen, civil "|The committee's) conclusion tude did well at the towards others. " the report Is Ssmcute Inviu- two-mile relay of DiMuro, O^Sui- aifhcta visiting teaau in arenas be created for the studenU. but chanqnes will be. sophy professor, was on the com- engineering professor, Dr. Mary is supported by the great dispro- explained. tional, I thoi«ht that our perfor- livtn, "This Huber and Bennett wiH throughout the naCkm? thf arena would be much kMi4: committee has not yet mittee first semester but is now E. Desmond, biology professor portion in student complaints Wilke's counselor must nuMibe this week at Yale was oompetsattheMiUnMe G««ct. One might argya even fottoi to the point of con- fM sabbetkei. Dr. Joseph submit that the- (ComHaatdrnp^Si) Dsefsr- and Dr. Edward J. Mathi^ eco^ about [Wilkel «s compared with a written statement to the Uni- jiderinftperticulir courses in the (Gomtmrndomfrngig) nomics professor. The committee complaints about the remaining (Continucd on pagi' Si

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