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Volume 127, Issue 17 www.rel·iew.udel.edu Frida)', October 27, 2000 Del State consider~ arming police force While Del State administrators lean in favor ofthe · guns, UDPD officers will rempin unarmed in Newark BY ALEXIS M. COOPER University Police on this campus will not be prepare for," he said Staff Rtponer anned," said Lawrence Thornton Jr., director of In addition to DSUP overseeing the campus, With the recent formation of the Delaware Public Safety, in a UDPD forum Wednesday Wyche said, the Dover Police Department has State University Police, officials said they are night. a concurrent jurisdiction and a mutual aid deciding whether to arm the officers. "That is a decision reached by our agreement for the campus. DSU had an informal meeting on Oct. 17 administration - not a recent decision. It has "The Dover Police Department is and for staff members to express their feelings been that way for a number of years." integral partner in our relationship," he said. about the issue of officers carrying guns, said S. Officers who work here know the The DSUP officers will deal with most of Renee Smith, director of public relations there. circumstances we work under, Thornton said. the situations on campus, Wyche said, but the "A few people did say yes, that without Public Safety is dealing with a particular DPD will aid in felony cases. guns the officer is incomplete," Smith said. population that a normal police department DPD Capt. Jeffrey Horvath said in the "People feel safer with the presence of a police does not. Uniform Crime Report for I999, Dover officer." Although this university' s•administration reported to the FBI the following statistics for Although the decision is still in the does not deem it necessary to arm officers, senous cnmes: evaluation stage, Drexel B. Ball, executive DSUP Chief Carl Wyche said studies have • 94 robberies; . assistant to the president, said it is almost indicated that most police officers are armed to • one murder; certain that the force will be carrying guns. ensure they respond appropriately to situations. • 150 aggravated assaults; The Board of Trustees will make the The DSUP wants professionalism and • 225 burglaries; decision in the immediate future, Ball said. preparedness that is necessary for any state • I,979larceny and thefts; While DSU may be leaning toward arming department, Wyche said. The DSUP advocates • 24 cases of ar5on; its officers, at the University of Delaware use of guns because it enables officers to better • 15I motor vehicle crimes; debate surrounding the same issue has respond to crime, Wyche said. • and 40 rapes. lessened. "There are possibilities that we have to Most of these crimes are not related to DSU, :'Our administration has decided that the Horvath said. THE REVIEW/Internet Photo Wyche said that the majority of offenses on Delaware State University Police officers may soon patrol the campus campus at DSU are property crimes and some arnied with guns, officals said. Faculty members were invited to voice disorderly conduct charges, which are less their opinions in a meeting held on Oct. 17. serious crimes that are not tracked or recorded. Bryant Paden, president of the Student carry guns," Bedle said. 'There's only a n.eed incidents where a handgun would be useful." Government Association at DSU, said he has if they feel so uncomfortable without them that University of Delaware senior John Klaus, no problem with officers carrying guns. they cannot do their job." who attended Wednesday' s Public Safety The reason he said the SGA supports Students on both campuses have various forum, said he was hoping to discuss campus officers having guns is because some students opinions about the issue. safety and the use of weapons by officers. will feel safer with anned officers on campus. bSU freshman Jason Sparks said he He said he is in favor of arming the UDPD ''No one will be 100 percent happy with the believes many students on his campus own officers. decision," he said. "Adequate security is ·the guns. If administrators bring any more guns on "I feel they have the same duties as regular major issue the student body is asking for." campus it, would only cause more problems. police officers," he said. "They' re out Though SGA members said they support ''Tt would be very bad," he said. "We don' t patrolling the streets." arming officers, the University of Delaware's need a shootout on campus." The university will maintain working student government has not come to a · Sparks said that although he feels the conditions where Public Safety officers will not conclusion about the issue, said Jamie Bed._le, situation at DSU is not good, he does not think be armed, Thronton said. treasurer of the Delaware Undergraduate guns are the answer. ''It's one of those issues that comes to the Student Congress. University of Delaware sophomore Chris surface and then ebbs and flows," Thornton He said DUSC officials are thinking about Stiegler said he is also against arming said. TilE REVIEW/Andrew Mehan the officers' needs as well as those of the University Police. Delaware State University Police Chief Carl Wyche said his officers advocate students. ''I don't think it would benefit the officers at - Staff Reporter Jill Liebowitz contributed to the anning of police to promote professionalism and preparedness. . ''Until there is a need, the officers should not aU," he said, "and I dpn't think they come into this story Shorter tailgating time to be enforced Study

BY JONATHAN RIFKIN enforcement of the Greek Five-star grading "Last year students were very cooperative Managing News Editor system. in leaving the tailgaiting areas," he said. "We hope to see that same cooperation again Abroad Tomorrow' s Homecoming tailgate will be Interfraternity Council President Bill one hour shorter and will have four fewer Wolf, a senior, ·said under the system only this year. student-organized tents set up on Woods Greek organizations with a ranking of four In spite of the shorter amount of Field than last year, officials said. or five stars may have social privileges like tailgaiting time and the decreased number of The tailgate, which will begin at 9:30 tents at Homecoming. ' tent spots, Thornton said, there will be 60 to Israel a.m. and end at noon when the game begins, Although the lower number of Greek officers from the university, county, state will represent the university' s second year tents on the field will make Homecoming a and city to watch over the designated of enforcing a policy that prohibits little different, he said, he does not foresee tailgaiting areas. tailgaiting once· the football game has begun. any dramatic change in the event's These areas include the parking lots in canceled Mike Holdren, manager of a.thletic atmosphere. front of the stadium, behind the stadium and ticketing and coordinator for the various "You might see less numbers in terms of on Woods field. BY SUSAN KIRKWOOD tents set up in honor of Homecoming, said Greeks," he said, "but the [Woods Field] is During the tailgate officers will reserve Staff Reponer he has granted II of 23 available lots on where a lot of the students go and there will the right to ask people in the vicinity of The university' s study abroad Woods Field for Greek and student be a lot of other student organizations with alcohol for age identification. However, he winter program in Israel has been organizations to celebrate. tents, so it should still be pretty much like it said, officers will respond mostly to how canceled due to the ongoing violence "Last year we had I5 applicants," he said. always is." students behave. in the Middle East. "This year, of the 1I spots, there will be Larry Thornton, director of Public Safety, "Clearly, when an officer observes a Officials dec ided on Oct. 20 to four student organizations and seven said a decrease in the number of tents will person acting in a way that shows they terminate the Jewish Studies program Greek." might be hiding something, we will follow this winter due to continued conflicts not necessarily correlate to a decrease in the THE REVIEW/File Photo While the fewer number of applicants has number of students who visit the field. up on it," he said. "But mostly we will ~e Tailgating at this year's Homecoming between Israelis and Palestinians, said not caused any kind of concern in terms of As a result, he said, he has taken steps to observing and watching how people festivities will end at noon, when the game William Wren McNabb, director of preparing for the event, Holdren said, he has replicate last year's security procedure. behave." against James Madison University begins. international programs. speculated that the drop is due to "For safety reasons, it is just not prudent for the university to continue to go," McNabb said. "We do no t want to risk the students becoming involved with the conflict or subject Meeting calls for voter action the group to violence, either directly or indirectly." BY MEREDITH BRODEUR and then make an informed decision. by university groups. He said the decision was based on StaffRep oner ''Voting is about two things- access and A play called ''The Black Vote Throughout faculty input and advisories from the The Black Student Union and the power," she said. "When you have gathered History" was performed by the Khulamani U.S. State Department. university's chapter of the National Coalition all of your information, you can form an Theatre Troop. ' ''I receive periodic advisories, and for ' co-sponsored a "nia" opinion based on fact." The finale of the evening was a dance Israel was not recommended for community meeting Tuesday to inform Tsoi-a-Fatt discouraged students from performed to the En Vogue song "Free Your travel," he said. student voters about the election and voting Democrat because they might think Mind." The performance was given by 15 Other institutions, including New encourage them to vote. that is how all African Americans vote. members of the Dark Arts Performing Dance York University, also dec ided to "Nia" means purpose in Swahili, said "Black issues are not addressed like they Company. cancel their trips to Israel, McNabb senior Angelika Peacock, BSU president and once were because they expect our vote," she Peacock said she thinks voting is important said. organizer of the event. said. because it is a way for citizens to let the There is al so concern that if The meeting included a speech given by Tsoi-a-Fatt said if African Americans do government know where they stand. problems did escalate while the group "You don't have a voice if you don't vote," Rhonda Tsoi-a-Fatt., a university alumna and not get to the polls, there will be a reversal of was in Israel, there would be no way she said. ''It's especially important for black former BSU president. all of the gains the minority group has to get the students out of tl1e country, people to vote because we didn' t always have Tsoi-a-Fatt spoke to 75 students in the achieved. he said. Bacchus Theatre of Perkins Student Center, Following the speech, a question and this opportunity." "While we could stop t11e program THE REVIEW/Christopher Bunn Junior Craig Beebe, president of the stressing the necessity for black students to answer session was held with representatives at any time, there is the possibility that Junior Craig Beebe (left), president of the College Republicans, said the meeting was an vote. from the College Democrats, College we would have difficulty getting the College Republicans, looks on as junior Matt In her speech, Tsoi-a-Fatt encouraged the Republicans and the College Green Party. Poynton, treasurer of the College Democrats, audience to learn the issues, gain information The meeting showcased two performances see STUDENTS page A 7 see SAFETY page A6 addresses audience members Tuesday night. A2. THE REVIEW. October 27,2000 Alaska to vote on legalizing pot In the BY DAVE O'NEILL "spring up like mushrooms," but most of it is voiced Staff ReJXJr1er quietly by citizens too afraid of having their views Alaska citizens will choose more than their leaders exposed. when they enter polling sites on Nov. 7 - residents "People are afraid to publicly support us," he said. will also decide the fate of a bill that would legalize "Every day we get letters from college professors, News the use of marijuana for people over the age of 18. police officers, prosecuting attorneys and even USF COACH SUSPENDED UNDER INVESTIGATION OF BIASES If voters approve Ballot Measure 5, the new law politicians who are all for us. They just can't go on TAMPA, Fla. - University of South Florida suspended its women's will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2001. record with it for obvious reasons." AI Anders, chainnan of Free Hemp in Alaska, said Anders said he questions the severity of the drug. basketball coach Wednesday after an in-house investigation found evidence she he is confident about the result of the upcoming vote. "It' s at the most as harmful as soda pop and retaliated against a black player who complained of racism. Coach Jerry Ann Winters has 15 days to appeal the indefinite suspension with "The drug war will soon be over," he said. '1..ast coffee," he said. "Yes, there are some reasons not to year, the state of Alaska spent $11 million on trying to use marijuana- that's why we're giving the people pay ordered by athletic director Paul Griffin. prosecute the one-third of its citizens who use the choice." Winters has been under investigation since August, when former player Dione marijuana. St. Pierre said marijuana is not as harmful as Smith filed a federal lawsuit against the university. . In that suit, Smith claimed she suffered retaliation after reporting rac1al "Alaska is ranked flfSt in the states for marijuana generally believed. He compared marijuana-related arrests. It is also ranked first in federal drug deaths to alcohol-related fatalities, stating that studies problems in the bast

NEWARK HIGH.FIGHT UNDERAGE CONSUMPTION Laurethia Rush, 37, stole two An altercation at Newark High A 20-year-old man was arrested K-Mart Home Essentials Premium School Thursday resulted in eight for underage consumption rugs Wednesday at 6:40 p arrests and no injuries, Newark Thursday 'after he was found to be worth approximately $34 .mh., Police said. under the influence of alcohol po Itee. sat . d . eac ' Sgt. Gerald Simpson said two while driving his vehicle, Newark The rugs were recovered f adults and six juveniles were Police reports indicated. Rush, police said. rom arrested for disorderly conduct Police said Anthony Rossi was Thursday at _10 a.m. after school seen in his white 1990 Geo Metro PELLET GUN administrators notified police of a at the intersection of West Main An unknow~ person shot a 22- fight that had broken out in the Street and Elkton Road when he year-old male tn the buttock . S With hallway. was pulled over. a pe II et gun Wednesday p t · The students were taken into Rossi was charged and released said. • o 1ce custody and released to a relative, on his own recognizance, police The victim notified p I' Simpson said. said. Wednesday at 8:22 p m f o ICe · · a ter he Police remained at the scene for was struck from inside a h. I 81 E M · ve tcle at FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY the remainder of the school day at SHOPLIFTING I . am St., police .d the request of school officials to A woman was arrested for Th . . sat . · e vtcttm suffered mmor· soft Fog in the morning, Highs in the upper Highs in the lower assist in controlling any further shoplifting Wednesday at K-Mart, ttssue damage, police said. , highs in the low 70s 60s 60s incidents, he said. in College Square after she was caught removing items from the -compiled by Jaime 8 d en er -courtesy ofthe National Wemher Service store, police said.

.: October 27, 2000 • TH.E REVIEW. A3 Winter chill attracts ladybugs BY LINDSAY TROY "Ladybugs eat aphids and mites," she said, "so if Becker said. Staff R• purter you are a farmer, they actually help keep pests The bugs enter the buildings by crawling through Ladybugs are usually considered a sign of luck,. away from your crops." the concrete sections and joints of the building, he fortune and good harvest - until they appear in The coloring of the ladybugs is important, said. Many find a suitable spot in the wall to live clusters outside classroom buildings and residence Godwin said. in. halls. "The red and orange colors of the beetles are Becker sai'd he advises students to use a vacuum With the onset of cooler weather, ladybugs are actually warning colors to other insects and animals cleaner to suck up the ladybugs. moving into warmer places to escape the winter that the bugs are poisonous or distasteful," she said. Freshman Matt Sallon said he lives in Harrington chill, said Tim Becker, assistant director of Though potentially harmful to other insects, and has had a problem with the ladybugs this year. residential and conference facilities. ladybugs are not threatening to humans, Becker "About a week ago they started coming into my Each year, ladybugs make their homes within said. room," he said, "I've seen them crawling all over buildings to avoid the freezing weather, he said. "The ladybugs are completely harmless," he said, my windowsill, and there has been a lot more on Matt Lenno, complex coordinator for the "and they won' t cause any damage to the room or the outside of my window and a lot of dead ones in Christiana Towers, said he has lived in the Towers property, but they' re just a pain to have around." the stairwell. for two years.' Becker said the university chose a few methods " I know a lot of people have been calling "In the 10 years that I've been on this campus, to keep the bugs from crawling and flying into maintenance about it. I haven' t called because I've never seen them in this number," he said. buildings. they're ladybugs and they don' t really bother me." "They almost remind you of bees because there are From ground level to the sixth floor, he said, a Sophomore Sara D'Angelo, who lives in the just thousands of them outside the building." spray was used outside to help prevent the ladybugs Harrington Complex, said has been very lucky that Ladybugs, or ladybird beetles, are beneficial from entering the building. the ladybugs have not visited her room. insects, said Cherie Godwin, a university graduate Floors exceeding the sixth floor require an "We haven't had them, but our neighbors a few THE REVIEW/Fric J.S. Townsend student and researcher for Royal Pest Management, exterminator to enter the room and spray Ficam, a doors·down have had big problems with them," she Many students in the Christiana Towers have been host a local pest control agency. wetable powder, along baseboards and windowsills, said. to ladybugs looking for a wanner place to spend winter. Business Junior runs for · maps out cancer research

Internet Mitchell also said an injury has Nonprofit group slowed her pace. "I hurt my knee last weekend," BY COLLEEN LA VERY trains marathon she said. ''I'm not running this , Staff Reporter week and just taking it easy. I was The Internet allows millions of runners in return hoping to qualify for the Boston people worldwide access to vast Marathon. Right now I'm just amounts of information in seconds. for fund-raising hoping to finish." But it also has what Colin Rose, the Young said Team in Training co-founder and chief operating officer BY KYLE MARTIN would raise nearly $3 million for for Actis Technology Limited, likes to SraJJRepo rrer leukemia research at the Dublin call a dark side. Some people run for fun, while marathon. He defined the dark places of the others run for those who cannot- In exchange for participants' Internet as any Web site viewed as even if it takes them around the fund-raising efforts, she said, inappropriate for corporations, world. Team in Training provides runners educational institutions or for Junior Nicole Mitchell is with coaches and trainers. humanity. scheduled to run Monday in Young said she was pleased Some inappropriate Web pages 1HE REVIEW/Ouistian Jackson Dublin, Ireland, in the Friendly with Mitchell's fund raising. include pornographic, pedophile, cyber The Brickyard Tavern and Grill will undergo a name change this weekend as the bar's new owners Marathon. She will join 44 other "Nicole has done a great job," stalking, anarchist and hacking sites, look to improve the establishment'~ reputation. The new name-Main Street Tavern and Grill• . runners from the Delaware Valley she said. "She has done her fund plus sites generating false credit card in raising money for patients with raising really well." numbers, Rose said. leukemia and lymphoma. · Mitchell said it is exciting to Rose's company has developed a Mitchell is running with the help other people while doing way to counteract such sites. eastern Pennsylvania chapter of something she enjoys. Actis Technology, operating out of New 'ID' for Brickyard Team in Training, an organization "I think the whole concept is Glasgow, Scotland, is a computer devoted to helping families with ill amazing," she said. "People are software company started in April that · BY BETH ISKOE placed on a regular rotation with us, which· could open Sraff Reporter children. The nonprofit group is using themselves to show recently released a product designed to doors for their future music careers." part of the ------commitment to Homecoming weekend will bring a new name to a The new owners are interested in making the monitor corporate Internet activity. Leukemia and "I think the others." Actis Public Relations and Events familiar Main Street Galleria business. establishment better than the current Brickyard, Schwartz Lymph o m a Mitchell said Manger Fiona Robertson said, "We've The Brickyard Tavern and Grill restaurant will said. The management has already brought positive s 0 c i e t y ' whole concept is she receives developed something that is so officially change its name to the Main Street Tavern and changes to the restaurant. coordinator money through Grill during its grand reopening Saturday, manager Chris Physical changes to the restaurant should be completed groundbreaking, nothing can compare Ashley Young amazing. People flat donations to it." Schwartz said. within the next two weeks, he said. said. and pledges1 of The reopening will publicize changes made by the new "We are going to be painting the place," Schwartz said, Robertson said the product, called Participants are USing an amount per Net Intelligence, can trace all Internet owners since purchasing the location on Aug. 24 of this "along with adding a canopy over the bar, raising the from Team in mile. booths so customers can see out of the windows onto the activity on a company's computers. year, he said. Training are themselVeS tO " People have Rose said Net Intelligence is geared Changes include new drink specials, a revamped streets and redecorating the interior with different items competing this been pretty menu, new promotions, 'structural remodeling and we fmd from antique shops." towards corporations with more than year in honor of show gene r 0 us ' " 500 users on its network. improved staff and security. · Schwartz said the restaurant has also been made a lot 2 - y e a r - o I d Mitchell said. "I The new product is meant to make The corporate restaurant group U.S. Hospitality cleaner. I y mph o m a COmmitment tO sent out letters it more difficult for employees of large manages the former Brickyard establishment and the "We have definitely cleaned the Brickyard up," he patient Mark and received corporations to visit "dark sites" on majority owner of U.S .. Hospitality, Ray Harneli, makes said. "We are trying to improve the reputation, and R o d g e r s , Others." donat10ns . . company equipment. many of the day-to-day business decisions. although we have improved to this point, I believe the Mitchell said. "They raised It does this by tagging questionable Schwartz said U.S. Hospitality also owns Bottlecaps grand reopening will allow customers to witness our E v e r y money goes bar in Wilmington and Baha Beach Club in . upgrading." sites and relaying employee use back weekend since -junior Nicole Mitchell ~owar~ ~y fl_ight, to a company administrator. Schwartz said the previous owners of the Brickyard Schwartz wants patrons to come to the Main Street F e b r u a r y , m addttton to the "We're not telling employers what did not manage it as well as he though they could have. Tavern arid Grill to have a good time with their friends in Mitchell said, the team has met in money that goes to families and they should and should not allow their ''Customer service and consistency was a big issue," he a comfortable atmosphere, he said. Philadelphia to train by completing research." employees to see," Robertson said. said. "Food was prepared and served in different ways. "Other bars on Main Street are dirty - people only go a series of long-distance runs. However, Mitchell said, the trip "Net Intelligence merely provides the "You could come in one night and get a good meal and to them because their friends hang out there," he said. She said the team uses long- is not all work. means for corporations to control another night, for whatever reason, it wouldn't be that "We want to make people come here because it is clean, distance events to simulate the She said she will be in Ireland inappropriate occurrences from the great." safe and their friends go there." struggle people with lymphoma f or eight days as part of her workplace." Schwartz said the goal of Main Street Tavern and Grill Senior Randy Colonomos, a waitress who has been experience. European excursion. Daniel Grim, university executive is to provide a place for people to hang out in a clean and working at the Brickyard for a year and a half, said she "I started running last "I'm really excited," she said. director of Network and Systems safe environment. ' can already see the positive differences the new owners February," she said. "This will be "I've never been .overseas before, Services, said he doubts there will ever "People can go anywhere on Main Street and eat or have made. my first marathon." and I'm looking forward to it." be such a program on the university drink for a cheap price," he said. "However, the "Ever since Ray got here, all these changes occurred Mitchell said· she met Rodgers None of her professors have network. atmosphere is what really sells people to come to a place. quickly," she said. "He cleaned up and took care of and his parents at a dinner. objected to her participation, she 'The university keeps a pretty open That is what I hope to provide." things. "He was a cute boy, and his said. policy on access to the Internet," he Schwartz said the Main Street Tavern and Grill would "We are a very close-knit staff, and he is our leader. He ·parents were really nice to use him "One thinks I ' m crazy," she said. also have a improved ente~inment schedule. knows exactly what he wants to do and has a very good to help leukemia research," she said, "but every professor was very Grim said he worries a program like "We will have live entertainment every night of the attitude about the whole business." said. supportive and accommodating." this would tag legitimate ;;ites as week except Monday," he said. "Every Friday and She said Homecoming is the perfect opportunity for Mitchell said she pled ged Mitchell said she plans to run in inappropriate sites and miss some Saturday night we are going to have a DJ. We may also the business to show off its new image. . $5,000 to the Leukemia and the future. other inappropriate sites. have bands every Saturday night. · "We are looking forward to Saturday and seeing the Lymphoma Society but has yet to " I definitely want to keep 'The map is not a representation of "On Wednesday nights, we will have local bands restaurant become more successful," she said. '1 think reach her goal. running," she said, "but I want to geographical relationships," Rose said. perform," he said. "At the end of the month they will patrons will come to check out the$e changes, and I think " Right now I've onl y raised take so me time off after I get "It is a huge list of locations, of content compete in a Battle of the Bands. The winner will be they will leave very satisfied." around $4,000 and had to pay the back." and of links between locations." rest myself," she said. The Internet map makes up only a small portion of the Internet, Rose said. No one has mapped the entire Internet. ''I'm not saying it is impossible," Professor finds enjoyment playing in 'the pit' Rose said, "but it is highly unlikely because it changes so rapidly." The map is updated daily to keep it BY ELIZABETH RYAN because music plays a Feng said he challenge for me to work with someone not as current and reliable as possible, he Sraff Reporter large role in his enjoys playing the involved with music on a dail y basis." said. Watch out Flea, there is a new bassist in personal and bass guitar. Corigli ano said Feng also brings experience Many law enforcement agencies town - university English professor Peter professional life. "It's a really great and light to problems he may not catch during have been interested in the new Fen g. "Music is instrument," he a rehears a I. technology, Rose said. Feng, 34, is the only faculty member important because it said. "It's the glue "For the two of us, we are on opposite While the map cannot trace participating in the Harrin gton Theater ~rts is a creative outlet," of the music. It is fences where he is essentially my student ," he information and images directly to Company' s production of the mustcal he said. "You have to almost I ike the said. "I feel that is a refreshing change for both individual users, Rose said, it can "Pippin." , think about the drums, but not as of us." generate Internet protocol addresses. After completing three days of performances material and really flashy." Feng said he has also learned a great deal by After the IP address is generated, last weekend in the Pearson Hall Auditorium, look into it and feel it. Casey Corigliano, working with fe llow musicians. the information is given to the Feng said, HTAC will conclude the production It is a great way to musical director for "The stude nts really make me fee l appropriate law enforcement officials, with three shows this weekend. communicate with "Pippin," stated in welcome," he said. "It is such an honor for me he said. Feng is the lone bassist in a 12-member pit your audience." an e-mail message to play with the other musicians. Robertson said past customers have orchestra mostly comprised of undergraduate He often finds that the other "They' re pros, most of the m are mus ic included the Federal Bureau of students that provides music for the actors .on connections between mus1c1ans value majors and they know the music forwards and Investigation and the Pentagon. stage. . music and teaching, working with a backwards. I just try and keep up." Some governments would like to Feng said he did not have to try out for hts Feng said. professor. "Pippin" director Brian Soliwoda said Feng obtain the program to monitor all position because this is the third show he has "It is like teaching THEREVTEW/Fric J.S. Townsend "The other is a pleasure to work with. Internet activity within their done. He said hi s repertoire also includes in so far that both are English professor Peter Feng has performed mus 1c 1a ns reall y "He's reall y a good guy," he said. "I got to boundaries. HT AC mus ical pe rformances in " Damn communicative," he on many occassions in the HTAC orchestra. appreciate his time, work with him in our production of 'Charlie " It becomes a very big ethical Yankees" and "Charlie Brown." s aid. "I try to be effort and musical Brown.' He never steps on any one's toes or issue," Rose said. "We have to be Feng said he has been playin g music for creative in both my music and my teaching." ability he adds to the pit orchestra," he said. oversteps any boundaries." extremely careful." most of his life but his involvement with the Feng said one of his favorite classes to teach "They usually forget to realize he is a professor Corigliano said he has felt the audience's Grim said his biggest concern lies bass was chance'. · was the Hollywood musical class he offers in and treat him as a fellow peer." response first hand. with the entity monitoring the network. "I've been playing for about 20 years," he the spring. Corigliano said working with a professor "The reaction has been extremely positive," "It's not necessarily a privacy issue said. "I started in music at age 9, and I picked "Musicals are a fascinating genre of fi lm," has been an unforgettable experience. he said. "We have gotten a lot of comments if certain sites are blocked," Grim said, up the bass at age 15, when my hi gh school he said. ''I got involved with IffA C because I " It is very rewarding to play w ith a from people saying how thi show has been "but monitoring all visited sites does jazz ensemble needed a bassist." love musicals, and they do such a good job professor," he said. " Most of my other one of the most professional shows that IffAC infringe on the right to privacy." Feng said he became involved in HTAC with them." musicians are music majors, and it is a has done." A4 • THE REVIEW. October 27, 2000 Political Winter session numbers up BY CAITLIN FAULKNER The three-week period continued for getting into earlier in the year. Stn.ff Reporter the next three years until 1974. In Senior Justin Ray Lanier said he is figures While many college students look 1975, Winter Session was expanded to taking classes during Winter Session forward to winter break as a time to five weeks with a total enrollment of because he needs the credits for relieve stress and be with family, others 7,500 he said. graduation. trade in relaxation for five weeks of Since the program's birth 28 years "There are some courses that I've intense classes. ago, the total average number of been wanting to take that are only shifting The number of students enrolled in students enrolled has fluctuated offered in winter, such as Tai Chi and Winter Session has risen dramatically between 8,000 and 9,000, with the Japanese Calligraphy," he said. since its conception in 1972, university highest enrollment in 1988 of 9,353, DiMartile said Winter Session is also Registrar Joseph DiMartile said. Fanjoy said. a good chance for students to take some ad focus In 2000, the . enrollment of of their more difficult requirements. undergraduates at the Newark campus Freshman Melissa Edge said BY RAND I HORNSTEIN was 6,816, consisting of 2,294 seniors, "Once your attending Winter Session will give her Sw.ff Reporter 1,821 juniors, 1,777 sophomores and friends left for more time to focus on one course. With E lection Day only 11 days 923 freshman. '1 won't be able to pass calculus if I away, voters are now questioning Registration for the 2001 Winter take it with other classes," she said. Session began Monday and continues all their schools, which candidates they will support. THE REVIEW/Christian Jackson Although Winter Session is a good Many members in the community Bumper stickers have become less common this year as candidates through today. It is estimated that it was kind of opportunity for many students, used to show their support for political for public office divert money toward media advertisements. approximately the same number of DiMartile said, there are also some candidates with bumper stickers or pins students will enroll this year, said Allan drawbacks to the program. pins because of her involvement in the Sophomore Jordan Brown said he lonely." -but not this year. Fanjoy, administrator of special He said Spring Semester ends later campaign. reads campaign stickers but only While it is important to have sessions. than most other universities so when " I don· t see bumper stickers as remembers the funny ones. stickers, s igns and posters, fewer Winter Session began in the late -sophomore Julie Wilezol other schools are finishing finals, much," she said. "But I think it's '1 don't like the TV ads because I people are using them, said Devona 1960s as three weeks of free non-credit Delaware students are still in class. because people care more about the am from Texas and hear all the bad Dolliole, deputy national spokeswoman classes, DiMartile said. There are many reasons students ''Winter session certainly influences cars they are driving and don't want to facts that are said about Bush," he said. for the Gore/Liebennan campaign. The "interim," as it was then called, take winter classes, DiMartile said. the academic calendar," DiMartile said. ruin them." Brown said he uses the Internet but " Bumper stickers and pins are consisted of classes that allowed '1t allows students to try things they Sophomore Julie Wilezol said the Brian Selander, campaign has not seen any advertisements on the significant to help build momentum students to study areas outside their normally wouldn't try in the usual eight break for students who are not taking spokesman for Gov. Thomas R . Web. and get people excited about the race major, but it did not attract a large semesters," he said. 'There are also a Winter Session classes is too long. Carper, said the distribution of stickers '1 think in the future, most of the ads and elections," Dolliole said. following because students wanted number of travel opportunities offered "Once your friends left for all their and buttons varies from state to state will be seen on TV because that is what · She said the Democratic Party still credit for the classes. in Winter Session." schools, it was kind of lonely," she said. and depends on the candidate. the public watches," he said. receives requests for stickers, to have a Fanjoy said the first three-week He said Winter Session provides a Wilezol said this year she will take "We are using peel-off static Brown said campaign coverage seen well-balanced campaign, television and Winter Session for credit was offered in larger variety of classes than Spring and advantage of Winter Session window stickers that can be put on the on CNN and CNBC has been strong radio time is also purchased. 1972. The total enrollment was 3,191, Fall semesters. Each department opportunities by studying in China. inside of the window," he said. and ruled the election. 'The overall comprehensive strategy which included undergraduates at the decides what will be offered based on "I wouldn't want to do the whole More buttons and pins are seen for Freshman Michelle Costello said is important," she said. Newark campus, undergraduates in the demand during the Fall Semester, semester abroad," she said. "[Winter those running for local council than for she has not noticed many bumper Basil Battaglia, state chairman for Parallel Program, graduate and giving students the opportunity to enroll Session] gives you a good chance." the Senate, he said. stickers. the Republican Party of Delaware, said continuing education students. in classes they might have had trouble . - candidates spend money elsewhere. - Selander said many candidates She said most of the signs she has He said his campaign uses political choose to spend campaign funds on seen have been for Ralph Nader. .... other media. '1t's not effective because ifl see a _• mailings, radio and television as advertising. "More and more, candidates are sign or a sticker, it doesn't make me Battag lia said the Internet is also advertising on TV," Selander said. vote for them," Costello said. being used more frequently than in past "Even those running for local positions Junior Bryan Hess said he sees TV campaigns. like insurance commission are doing it. campaign ads but does not see bumper ''Years from now, it may be the only "TV ads can' t say all the stickers regularly. way to advertise because it cuts the information that can be read on the '1 think political ads will be seen costs," he said. Internet. You can learn a lot more from solely on TV in the future," he said. Sommer Ross, campaign manager the Internet than a button." 'The public is not advertising who they for Rep. Michael N. Castle, R-Del., However, Selander said, people want to vote for as much as they have said she notices bumper stickers and collect presidential buttons and expect in the past." to see buttons distributed. 302-454-7800 DI!LAWARI! 1 $2 OFF PHL Shuttle SPORTS CLUB 800·648-5466 4:r.tlfll'.ll'll RESTAURANT Airport Shuttles • Vans • Sedans • 8 & 10 Passenger SHUTTLB : $3 OFF BWI Shuttle f-~e Limousines • 16 Passenger Limousine Bus • EXP. 3/08/01 (30Z) 655-8515 Up to 57 Passenger Motor Coaches Driven to Excellence Since 1984 I .!;!o!_!a!!2_ ~ ~y~~ ~':!.. _ 1050 S. Market St. (30Z) 655-8560 (Fu) Wilmington, DE 19801 Ski the Blue DAY TRIPS Every Wed. (Jan. 3-March 7) ~ Ask About: i 10% OFF any 4or Ski Blue Mountain, the highest vertical in PA. Includes lift tickets anc transportation. S now-boardin~;~ & tubing available. Feb. trips include Broadway Shows in NYC NOW HIRING ALL POSITIONS! McDonalds breakfast and lift trcket. 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*=New "R R Ch. 49 Fri. Sat. Sun. Mon. Thes. Wed. Thurs. Schedule Oct. 27 Oct. 28 Oct. 29 Oct. 30 Oct. 31 Nov. 1 Nov.2 0 ~E~IEW SJArFWU18E 0 Noon - 1:00 PBS The Big South PBS PBS PBS PBS 1:00 - 2:00 Kaltuna Park 2:00-2:30 Adven- Galaxy Ameri- Manon Drown- Ameri- Time ; , c 2:30 - 3:00 tures of Quest can the ing can .Code C PUTTING IN THE]~- B~LLOffiS~. 3:00-3:30 Sebas- Beauty Moon Mona Psycho 3:30- 4:00' tian (:ole K K 4:00 - 4:30 The Three Cradl~ Get The Election Gossip 4:30 - 5:00 Straight Kings WiD Real End of 5:00 - 5:30 Story Rock the 5:30 - 6:00 . AlTair 6:00 - 6:30 · Burly The Burly CBN CEN Zilo ·- T HO~E TO SEE ~~ru ~ill 1H[ ~~~~S T 6:30 - 7:00 Bear Cider The Bear 7:00-7:30 House End of 7:30 - 8:00 Rules the H H 8:00 - 8:30 Get AlTair The .Galaxy My Orgazmo 8:30 -9:00 Real The Deuce Straight Quest Blue 9:00 - 9:30 World 'Bigalow Story Heaven

9:30 - 10:00 Is Not . ~ . 10:00 - 10:30 T.W.U. Enough T.W.U* W.I.T.H. Seizures W.I.T.H. E Atl E 10:30 - 11 :00 Vintage Seizures DE Vintage DE ADME~TlSING ~EA~UNES SLTV Nuthouse SLTV Nuthow.e 11:00 - 11:30 Seizures CTN Vintage Vintage T.W.U. Vin,age v v SLTV SLTV SLTV 11 :30 - K.T.D. K.T.D. 24FPS K.T.D. . V/on Too Midnight . Punch Mtdnight - Adven- The Big South Manon Drown- Ameri- Time 0 12:30 tures of Kahuna Park the ing (.'an Code 12:30 - 1:00 Sebas- (Repeat) (Repeat) Moon Mona Psycho (Rei>eat) i : I : BE MONDAY, NOVI 6BY 3:001T (Repeat) (Repeat) (Repeat) I :00 - 1:30 tian I : I :30 - 2:00 (Repe~t) I : I : :2 :00 - Noon CTN CTN CTN CTN CTN CTN CTN i : ------J:I : E E

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l i October 27, 2000 • THE REVIEW • AS Special Olympics NSF gives $9 encourage youth million to fund BY JEN BLENNER Senior Susan Mazess, a student Copy Editor athletic trainer, said she enjoyed "Let the games begin" echoed volunteering at the event. across the soccer field next to the Bob '1t' s fun," she said. 'The kids have a math teachers Carpenter Center Tuesday as athletes real good time. By supporting them, we from around the state met to bring get a thrill out of it. It allows them to BY HIDE ANAZA WA uni versity's undergraduate home the gold. try their best." · TilE REVIEW/Andrew Mehan Senior Staff Reponer programs. Two hundred thirty children from Sophomore Caitlin O' Leary, The university hosted the Special Olympics of Delaware Thesday as · The Natio nal Science "More students wi ll be required the Delaware Special Olympics of another volunteer at the event, said that 230 children competed in the 23rd annual Soccer Skills Competition. Foundation will provide a total of to take 12 hours of mathematics Delaware competed in the 23rd-annual although effort is what is most $9 million over the next five years and mathematics educatio nal Soccer Skills Competition. important, winning is an extra benefit. · said. feel great about themselves." to severa.l colleges dedicated to programs to teach elementary Children ages 8 and above "I think when a kid gets given a Each team had a coach who Angel Lopez, one of the athletes improving mathematics and school," Hiebert said. "We plan to competed in both individual and team medal, it means the world to them," she motivated the children to keep moving competing, said this was his fourth education. examine the concept of courses and events. They were tested for their skills said. "This is a chance for them to and try their hardest. time participating in the event. Charlie Drumm, a NSF public a new way of teaching courses." in dribbling, kicking, shooting, show people what they can do." Susan Dunbar, a Meadowoods "I hope to win," he said. "I play officer, said his group selected two Under the center's program, the running, controlling and ball passing, The children trained for weeks to athletics coach and teacher, said some good, and afterwards I feel better about organizations from a pool of 30 to university will cooperate with the said Keith Handling, associate prepare for this event. To participate, of the children hope to participate in myself." 40 proposals. state Department of Education to professor of health and exercise they must be approved by their the team soccer skills competition in Junior Brian LaRue, a student The Mid-Atlantic Center, which improve the quality of teachers in sciences. physicians, said Abby Schaefer, Dover next month. athletic trainer, said helping children is comprised of the universities of elementary, middle and high Sixty students, including student director of public relations for the "For many of them, it's a chance for motivates teamwork. Delaware and Maryland and schools. athletic trainers, volunteered their time Special Olympics of Delaware. them to use the skills that they have "There is no negative feeling," he Pennsylvania State University, was "Our cooperation with the to help motivate, support and cheer on "Kids feel satisfaction, happiness learned in individual competition," she said. 'The kids just have a great time, one of two institutes chosen to Department of Education is the participants at the different stations and a sense of accomplishment for all said. 'They look forward to it. They are just fmishing. They don't have to win, receive the f unds. The Texas assessing and evaluating the set up on the field. the hard work they have done," she able to see former friends and get to and they still feel good." Science Center preparation of was the other. ------undergraduate The funds "We plan to students, so we will be can use that distributed to examine the information to Platform issues concern voters each school by improve our the Mid-Atlantic concept of pr og ram , BY JILL LIEBOWITZ Voter Web site show that only 23 still certainly think everybody the candidates are still. the primary Center, at which Hiebert said. Srnf!Reponer percent of Americans age 18 to 29 who' s eligible should vote." influences on the platform." point each will courses and a T h i s Many university students will knew the date of their state' s Begleiter said he does not Researching the issu_es and determine how new way of philosophy will consider voting in the November previous primary election. understand how young people can preambles of each party enables to spend the be applied to presidential election, but not all will Several political science say the issues do not interest them. students to make informed choices, money. teaching graduates of the exercise their right to vote. professors at the university said ' "I just think there are issues of he said. The NSF university 's Political science professor Joseph they believe students should be interest for people," he said. "I think The platforms state in written conducted an courses." education Pika said the U.S. Bureau of the more involved in this year's you should vote because you want form the general philosophy of a analysis of all program, Census concluded that election. paved roads, Internet and beaches. political party and of the candidate potential grant -mathematics professor James Hiebert said. approximately 35 percent of "I even asked if I could make it a "You can pick a_ million things they are about to nominate, Pika recipients by Hiebert Thus , more Americans ages 18 to 20 and 41 requirement in my classes to vote, and you're going to pay for it, but said. sending experts -----"------fully integrating percent of Americans ages 21 to 24 but I can't, so I'm not," the government is going to decide Academic studies have shown who work for the education voted in the last five elections. Distinguished Journalist in how. Instead, you should let them approximately 70 percent of universities and private agencies to department with Delaware schools. Statist~cs from the Vanishing Residence Ralph Begleiter said. "I decide with you." promises made are kept by the investigate the merits of each " When students have ~------. Begleiter suggested that students winning parties, he said. Therefore, applicant, Drumm said. graduated from the university and Quigley's Hayrides, Inc. who say they do not have the time the platforms are a good indication James T. Fey, director of the take a job in Delaware schools, we to follow the whole election should of what the candidate would like to Welcomes you to visit our new World Wide Web "Farm" Home Mid-Atlantic Center, said the are able to coordinate with the pay attention to one issue in the propose if he or she were elected. foundation will help centers Department of Education and Page! http://www .dca.net/pennfarm campaign. Although registering to vote is improve the quality of math Mathematics to follow the students *Dorm Parties *Sorority "In general, I don't think one­ relatively easy, not all students are teachers. from the field, into the school," *Fraternity *Social Groups issue voting is a good thing for the familiar with the process. "[The Center] is designed to Hiebert said. general population," he said. "But I Students are able to find voter *Clubs *Birthday Parties prepare better teachers," Fey said. "We evaluate the effectiveness think it might be a good idea for registration information almost "It improves the programs teachers of the teaching so we can improve *Celebrations of all kinds! *Theme Parties young voters who are possibly anywhere- at the mall, at the use by preparing teachers for our preparation programs." lt's time to make your fall hayride reservation! voting for the first time." DMV and on campus. school." Fey said the center does not aim Call (302) 328-7732 Pika said if students have the Many students are also familiar Fey said the center's funding to increase the number of teachers, Bonfire included! 20 minutes from cnmpus! . time, political platforms are worth with the Web site will open up opportunities. but rather the skills of current . reviewing. www.rockthevote.org, which is "Sharing information with teachers. • ._-r!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!l!!!l!l!!l!l!!!l!_!!'!l_!!!'!_ !!'!l_ ~.!!!!!!!!!-=_"!'__!'!'_!!!!!!5!!••••• ... -' "I do think that students are not designed to facilitate voter coileagues and other universities "It's designed to improve the completely knowledgeable about registration. will give school systems a chance quality of mathematics teachers, the party platforms, but neither is Begleiter and Pika have also put to offer better pro grams for not to improve the number," he Amrita, Amy, the general public," he said. together a Web site with links for graduate students and for said. "The primary goal of the "The candidates can disavow information about the campaign at prospective teachers," Fey said. center is to increase the number of different planks in the platform if www.udel.edu/poscir/road. James Hiebert, professor of leaders in mathematics education_ they don't want to support them, but mathematics, said the University of "University mathematics Kerri, & Mari are Delaware will use $2.5 million to ~ducation faculties have a long­ fund 15 doctoral students' standing rule to help teachers who research. are already in classrooms become The funds will also improve the better teachers." J22 SUBlRBAN DRIVE educational level of the IN THE SUBlRBAN PlAZA ON ELKTON ROAD ' J02-7J7-1100 s WWW .BLUECRABCRIU..COM UMO' UI:LI Open 7 Days - llAM-llPM Featuring Newark'• Be•t Homemade Seleclio,.. 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..: October 27,2000 . THE REVIEW A I DNA researcher gets grant Students BY CHRISTOPHER LEPINE Rodney Foil, director of the grant program for the USDA, Staff Reporter said the funding is quite significant and is expected to benefit A healthier, leaner broiler chicken with higher levels of world poultry production and help alleviate world hunger. talk politics protein is a key goal of a $1.8 million grant earmarked for 'The goal is to sustain a supply of high-quality protein the university's College of Agriculture and Natural that' s affordable and available to those who need it so continued from Al Resource . badly," Foil said. If researchers are successful in mapping the breed's genes, John Nye, dean of the College of Agriculture and Natural opportunity to educate voters on the Republican their findings could lead to better results in combating world Resources, said the grant is particularly relevant to the candidates' views. hunger, officials said. poultry industry within the state of Delaware. Senior Kimberly Foster said she attended the Larry Cogburn, a professor of molecular endocrinology, 'The goal of the research is to develop chickens that grow meeting because she did not watch the election received the genome grant from the U.S. Department of faster and leaner so they' II be a better food," he said. coverage on television. Agriculture last month. The grant will fund a four-year If Delaware poultry producers utilize these findings, it will '1 wanted to know more about what's going program to map thousands of genes in the broiler chicken. give them a competitive advantage and help keep them in the lliE REVIEW/Christopher Bunn on," she said. "I think that the election is very, This mapping will make it easier for breeders to find the state," Nye said. University professor Larry Cogburn received a $1.8 very important with the issues of the black traits they want, s uch as leanness, and produce them in Cogburn said his work over the past 20 years has been million grant to study broiler chicken DNA. community." chickens using traditional breeding techniques, Cogburn limited to only two genes. New DNA analysis tools will Junior Matt Poynton, treasurer of the College said. greatly increase this volume, he said. Cogburn said. Democrats, said his group was trying to raise He will direct research teams from the universities of "Now we are going to be looking at the expression of tens The findings will be applicable everywhere, he said, and political awareness and get people interested in Maryland and , as well as the Institut National de Ia of thousands [of genes]•at once," he said. "We want to bring Delaware may become the global chicken genome center, voting Democrat. Recherche Agronomique in France, he said. chickens to their rightful place." attracting and training many researchers and increasing Senior Nick Galasso, College Green Party The study plans to use several Newark research assistants Cogburn said his team will have prepared samples of activity at the OBI. president, said he thinks the two-party system and associates, he said. It will give them opportunities to liver, fat, muscle and hypothalamus and pituitary tissue "We're going to be center stage for avian genomics," does not appeal to most Americans and that is study DNA at the university and the Delaware taken at the French site for the DNA analysis process. Cogburn said. why many choose not to vote. Biotechnology Institute. After numerous ~teps by the U.S. research teams, the Cogburn said bioinfomatics combines molecular biology, Sophomore Rashaun Davis, a representative Cogburn's grant is one of four given by the USDA this genetic information from different tissues· will be stored in endocrinology, mathematics and computer science to enable for the BSU, said he thought the meeting was year in animal genomics. He was awarded the funding after the university's gene database, expanding its records by tens researchers to see significant gene expression patterns in the helpful. 15 review panels examined his proposal, "A Consortium for of thousands of sequences. vast sea of data. "We're the future," he said. '1 think our vote Functional Mapping of Growth-Regulating Genes in Broiler Scientists worldwide will be able to view the new findings "Visualization is ..a problem," he said. "We want to see the counts. We complain a lot, but we need to be a Chickens." online in the database to help their chicken research, forest. We don't want to look at the trees." part of the solution to the ~roblems." Alumni pride themselves in magazine work

BY MEREDITH BRODEUR editorial content we present every month. Spiker, 32, graduated in 1990 and has taught Staff Reporter Crain, 25, graduated in 1992 and has since worked at periodically at the university since 1991. Three young alumni returned to campus to discuss magazines such as Rolling Stone and Cosmopolitan Like women's magazines, Spiker said, he recognized their lives in the field of sex and the media. before securing her position with Glamour, the second the criticism of men's magazines, such as Men's Health, Sex, pornography, health and relationships were largest magazine for women in the country. receive as a result of the perfect body images they some of the topics discussed by editors from Penthouse, While Glamour does not cover material as sexually portray. Men's Health and Glamour magazines in Memorial Hall controversial as Penthouse, Crain said, her magazine is Spiker said he knows Men's Health is a sexy on Monday. often blamed for presenting unrealistic body images, magazine and their sexy covers and stories are what sell Alyson Zamkoff, managing editor at Penthouse, which drive young, impressionable readers to dieting the publication. Esther Crain, senior health editor of Glamour and Ted extremes. "I think that we definitely have sex appeal," he said, Spiker, senior editor of Men's Health, spoke about their She said Glamour does not publish anything that " and we use sex to attract readers because our readers careers at three of the largest magazines in the country. cannot be found on prime-time television. are interested in sex, even though it is just one of five The visiting editors, who are all university alumni, "We don't push the envelope on sex - we write main topics that we cover - health, nutrition, stress, discussed their experiences as high-ranking editors with articles about things we know our readers are fitness and sex." 60 students confronting sexually controversial issues experiencing in their own lives." Spiker categorizes Men' s Health and Glamour in published in their magazines. She said Glamour always presents their information what he calls the genre of service magazines. THE REViEW/Christopher Bunn Zarnkoff, who will be 26-years-old next month, has responsibly. Service magazines began with a demand for Ted Spiker, professor Dennis Jackson, Alyson been working at Penthouse for three-and-a-half years 'That doesn't mean it can't be sexy, edgy and fun to information readers can take with them and use in their ZamkofT and Esther Crain (right to left) spoke and said she loves it despite the controversy full-frontal read," she said. "People don't lead politically correct daily lives, he said. with students Monday night in Memorial Hall active nude material causes. lives - they want to read about the reality of being a "My life can change by reading a sex story of a about sex in the journalism profession. "The sexual controversy means little to me," she young woman in 2000." position I didn't know about," he said, "or [a story said. ''I'm proud of my work [at Penthouse], and of the Instead, she said, Glamour tries to make its message about] an exercise that can help me lose weight. one of positive body image. "Penthouse is a whole different ballgame. They do "The truth is," she said, "we're always writing straight journalism but also the artwork." articles about why readers should love their own body Although she has always had a passion for writing, shape and size. Crain said, it was not until she had been in the work "We're constantly quoting men on the street who tell force for several years that she developed an interest in us that they don' t want super-thin girlfriends - they magazine journalism. like the uniqueness of each individual woman. "What's funny is I never read magazines like Crain said Glamour sends this message to their Glamour and Cosmo until I was about 24 and began readers. looking for a full-time magazine job," she said. "I read "To blame Glamour or any other magazine for them all now and because I have to for my job, but I society's superficiality is passing the buck." like reading them too."

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AS • THE REVIEW • October 27, 2000 Amtrak changes eastern Virginia stops BY DEANNA TORTORELLO Walter Peters, spokesman for the less attractive way to travel. high-speed train that wi ll run from Boston, Staff Reporter northeast corridor unit of Amtrak, said the Junior Kathryn Cunningham said she Mass., to Washington, D.C. Upcoming c hanges in the Amtrak trains going through Newark will not run to would probably not use Amtrak unless she "We needed to j uggle the Northeast Northeast train timetable will leave Richmond due to the time of day trains stop exhausted all other transportation trains around to make it safe for Acela trains university students from eastern Virginia in the city. possibilities. to travel through at 150 mph," she said. "By with a long ride home. "The trains with the most flex ible Ivan Levin, a sophomore from Norfolk, doing this, we won't take away service to Trains through Newark will no longer schedules stop at places like Newark said he would still use Amtrak if he needed Newark." travel south to Richmond, Va. Instead, the because they are quick, once-per-day stops," the service. " Since we are so c lose to Dunn said Acela train service will begin trains wi ll make final stops in Washington, he said. Wilmington, I will take it from there to on Nov. 16, 2000. D.C. The Amtrak train schedules allow for the avoid the long layover," he said. " In the beginning, they will stop in Service will be available for students in extra train sets needed to provide Newark Amtrak has not offered a direct route to Wilmington twice a day," she said. "As we need of transportation to Richmond, but - residents with service to Richmond, Peters Levin's area in the time he has spent at the get additional train sets, there will be 19 THE REVIEWnntemet Photo travelling north and south of the city - said. university. high-speed stops in Wilmington." Amtrak train service between Newark there will be a layover of more than two "We tried our best to duplicate current "I have taken the train from Newark once Peters said the Wilmington schedule will and Vrrginia was reduced this month. hours in Washington, D.C., said Nancy schedules, to keep service at the same time or twice," he said, "There was still an hour be revamped. Rich, a consultant at University Travel of the day," he said . to an hour-and-a-half delay before another "Though there wil l be significant · will also be reiated timetable changes on the Services. Peters said Amtrak would do its best to train left for Newport News, so I have schedule changes, Metroliner and Northeast Southeastern Pennsylvania Transit Before the schedule change, the trip from fit the schedule to students' needs if many always had to wait in Washington." Direct Amtrak service will be stopping there Authority's R2 commuter train line. Newark to Richmond took four hours and find the new timetable an inconvenience. Karen Dunn, Amtrak public relations virtually every hour,'' he said. "Changes to the R2 line will begin on 10 minutes. It will now take more than six Some students from Virginia said the officer, said changes were also made to Drew McCaskey, marketing manager of Oct. 29," he said. " Schedules will be hours. scheduling change would make Amtrak a accommodate the new Aceta service - a the Delaware Transit Corporation, said there available to the public next week." Geological society recognizes Delaware _official BY RANDI GLADSTONE Talley said he was excited about years of service to Delaware geology. established in his name." affiliated with a number of organizations," Staff Reporttr winning the award and the recognition he " It's excellent - all his energy, Kelvin Ramsey, a scientist for the DGS, he said. . "He works with state and federal The associate director of the Delaware has received. enthus"iasm and experience," he said. "It said he feels Talley ' s award is well geo logical organizations, local Geological Survey .at the university "It's very rewarding to be recognized may be given annually, but mainly the deserved and reflects the positive example communities and towns." recently received a prestigious award for for my efforts in relating geology to those award is given when they feel it is he sets for his peers. Talley has served on a number of public service. who can use it in their everyday lives," he deserved. "I've worked with him for 12 years and boards and organizations including the John Talley received the George V . said. "To know that the work you are he is exceptional," he said. "In addition to governor 's Water Supply Task Force, Cohee Award for Distinguished Service doing is being utilized and recognized by doing a lot of work on the water resources, ·· Delaware State Board of Registration of and Achievement in Public Affairs from the public is rewarding." "Some people find he does an excellent job of relating it to Geologists, Delaware Water Well the Eastern Section of the American Talley said he feels the fields of the people of Delaware." Contractors License Board and the New Association of Petroleum Geologists, DGS hydrology and geology are important geologic terms hard Ramsey said the geological survey has Castle County Resource Protection Area director Robert Jordan said. because they monitor the ava ilability, benefited from the work Talley does and Technical Advisory Committee. Talley said he regards his work quantity and quality of the state's ground to understand. I put the kind of person he is. Talley said serving on these task forces researching hydrological and geological and surface water. "He's a good people person," Ramsey and committees has ensured the successful subjects in the Delaware area as a "We mapped the state water supply and it in a language so said. "By knowing contacts thro ughout distribution. collective effort of the organization. labeled it poor, fair, good and excellent,'' Delaware, he helps to make our jobs easier " Understanding t he location and "Our major initiative is to translate the he said. "Geology plays a major part in they can." and get the information out. He is a good distribution of aquifers is important," he results of geologic investigations into a our everyday lives when it co~es to water. example of a public servant who is also a said. "They are geologic units that are language that land use managers and water scientist." capable of storing water to wells." Geologic mapping helps to locate the -professor John Talley managers can understand to help them water sources, and we are responsible for Charles Smith, senior research The American Assoc.i ation for make good land use decisions," he said. "I . providing that information to land-use." technician at DGS, said Talley commits Petroleum Geologists was founded in 1917 function as the middle man. Some people Jordan said he feels Talley received the "George V. Cohee was a very much of hi~ time and energy to the and is the wo'rld's largest professional find geologic terms hard to understand. I award, which is presented to one recipient distinguished geologist who served the facility. geological society with over 30,000 put it in a language so they can." per year, because of his more than 30 geological survey, and the award was "He is quite a busy man , as he is members.

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J j October 27, 2000 • THE REVIEW • A if

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Athletic supporter YE A~-\ The H o mecoming football You've hauled yourself out Whe.r-e. \S game is Saturday at noon. but of bed early, dragged yourself we all know that the festivities down to Delaware Stadium, . •, you've had a bit more to drink £ve_f'tbod. /? will start several hours earlier. ·· ~· Students a nd a lumni gather tha n you probably s h ould - , I ~- .. ~ tl I a t various tents and in the have, considering its not even . ·' , .. parking lo ts to prepare for the noon - so why not go to the '· .....__ .. - \."'-- ...... __./ game. game and contribute to a ___ Of course. this preparatio n rowdy student section? -~ ...... A~ · ).;I;.,..'"· ' " · -&::~~ · Ctf?>:: often involves The football "'-.. D ...., ..... (. a bit of pre- team has put 0 game l ibatio n. together an 0 This inevitably Review This: impressive sea­ keeps so me son so far. peo ple from Go :;upport the The Hens actually mak­ football team at the football team is ing it to the currently 7-0 game. Homecoming game. and ranked sec­ The univer­ What else are you ond in Division sity began a I-AA. new policy last going to do when Dating back year to cut­ to last season back the you are drunk at the team has amount of tai !­ noon?. posted four gating at each straight shutouts game. at home. In the past, The Hens students could spend a ll day h ave their highest ranking o utside the game witho ut a since 1993. thought of going inside the sta­ At most schools Homecom­ dium. ing is a big deal - not just Each year, the Homecoming another o pportunity to get game is sold out, but the stu­ sloppy with a bunch of friends. - dent section remains nearly And for the record, there is no empty. reason you can't do both. The university' s tailgating At the very least you will policy will have everyone out get to see YoUDee kick the of the parking lots and off the crap o ut of JMU' s mascot. field by gametime.

REVIEW Alana Kaper L·~ Exercise caution

University officials have decision by cancelling the trip canceled the Winter Session to Israel. program in Israel because of The region is incredibly Letters to the Editor the current situation in the volatile, and fighting has con­ Middle East. s isten.tly escalated over the Genetics is not inher- · ensure an individual will have a on Israel to ·do so in this case. And Real fans left out of The decision was made o n past couple of weeks. higher quality of life without cer­ that's what many of those refugees Oct. 20 due to travel advisories To take a group of students ently dangerous tain diseases, why not? Should we want- they don't want to be resettled Subway Series article and low enrollment in the pro­ into this type of situation is stop giving vaccinations because somewhere else. gram attributed to the violent illogical. The potential for a I find it extremely frustrating they favor the increased survival of Also, Greenberg referred to an arti­ As a New Yorker and a baseball conflict. tragedy is sig­ when people are called upon to some individuals over others? cle of the Palestinian Liberation Orga­ fan I was personally insulted by Hide The universi­ .------...:...----. n i f i c a n t make value judgments without I am not advocating e ugenics, nization charter that calls for the Anazawa's article about the rivalry ty was con­ enought to knowing all the facts. I think that but with increased genetic screen­ destruction of Israel, but he failed to between Mets and Yankees fans. I cerned that if merit caution. there are a couple key points of ing certain diseases can be com­ mention that that article has been for­ cannot believe this article was even the fighting Review This: The U.S. information that Susan Stock forgot pletely removed from the human mally renounced. And although he printed. escalates, stu­ Until things settle State D epart­ to mention in her article concerning populati<>n. I, personally, ·would not speaks of a "commitment to dismantle While I am a Mets fan (a true blue dents might be ment has issued genetic advancements. want to play roulette with anyone' s Israel," this is exactly what the PLO is blood, if you will), I read this article put in danger. down in the Middle travel advi­ In regards to the Minnesota case, health. I don't want to hear that my not calling for, even amid the current hoping to find a decent contribution to The concern East, Hillel should sories because what was mentioned is the fact that child has a one in four chance of violence. It is merely calling for the the media hype surrounding this mon­ for these stu- it has deemed the form of anemia the couple' s six developing a fatal disease when I release of the territories that have been umental event. Instead there were dents out- think about the the region year-old daughter had is fatal, know there is something that can be illegally occupied since 1967. quotes like, ''I hate Mets fans, they are weighed the unsafe for resulting in death around the time done to prevent it. And orie of the most baffling leaps annoying." value of the safety of students Americans. when the child reaches 13 to 15. As long as we regard genetic of logic is that Greenberg is more than What is that? Couldn't the author experience. participating in There has Without a suitable, donor this child manipulation with the respect that it happy to accept the British mandate of this article have found some Yan­ Hillel said it already been an would have died: demands, we can only benefit from over Palestine and the British decision kees fans with a little more of a clue of is pla¥ing to the Birthright Israel attack on What wasn't mentioned was that its increased advantages. to create a Jewish homeland there what this actually means. go a head· with Program. Americans in the main reason genetic screening under that mandate, but he refuses to Another quote stated from a Y an­ its trip to Israel. the Middle East was done on their embryos was to Matt Kuhls accept the borders of the mandate. This kees fan is that, "The Mets do not ensure this rare anemia wasn't pre­ Senior is the only way he could reach the con­ have any stars." What about Mike The separate L------1 and I i ves were 'Hillel trip is lost. sent in their unborn child. [email protected] clusion that Jordan (which was not part Piazza, the greatest hitting catcher of part of the national Birthright It is unlikely that this is any I highly doubt the parents would of that mandate) is a "Palestinian all time, a perennial All- Star and Israel program and plans to student's last opportunity to go wait six years to conceive a child if Greenberg utilized state." arguably one of the greatest hitters of take 20 university students this to Israel. Hillel should strongly it was for the sole purpose of creat­ Finally, he played the "holy war" all time? Anyone who doesn' t know winter. consider putting its trip on ing a transfusion donor. Since inconsistent logic card, implying that Muslims are com­ who he is does not know enough Officials from Hillel said hold. screening was already being done manded to be warlike in general and about the sport to make a comment in that the region is still relatively The fighting will eventually for this fatal anemia, why not I have a few comments in response toward Jews in particular. The truth is a sports article and newspaper that safe as long as reasonable pre­ subsides. There will be a safer ·screen for a possible marrow donor to Michael Greenberg' s Oct. 20 col­ that Muslims are told to fight oppres­ puts a quote like that in an article is cautions are taken. time to make this trip. for their daughter? · urnn, ''Is peace really possible in the sion but to seek peace, especially with obviously not fit to print such an arti­ The univers ity's Jewis h If something were to happen A ll too frequently science is Middle East?" I'll stick to the most bla­ the other "People of the Book" - cle. Studies Program made a good to these students, who is going viewed as the menacing manipula­ tant factual errors, omissions and leaps Christians and Jews. I have even talked to Yankees fans tor, somehow disrupting the normal oflogic. Here's a sampling of what the that said that these people who were course of nature. Genetic screening First of all, maybe Palestine was a Quran really says about "holy war": quoted have no idea what is going on. has bee n going o n for centuries "sparsely populated and desolate cor­ "Fight in the cause of God those who There are intelligent Mets and Yan­ w ith animal and plant breeders. ner of the Turkish-Ottoman Empire," fight you, but do not transgress bounds, kees fans out there that have respect Over the course of time we have but then where did all those Palestinian for God does not love the transgressors. for both teams and wo n' t reduce WHERE TO WRITE: deve loped various species better refugees - who now number 3.5 mil­ ... If they cease [aggression] let there be themselves to common insults . The Review suited for the tasks we use them for. lion and make up the largest refugee no hostility, except in those who prac­ Next time The Review waflts to With the developing tool of genet­ population on the face of the Earth - tice oppression" (chapter 2, verses 190 write an article of this type, find peo­ 250 Perkins StUdent Center­ ics, we can more directly alter the come from? and 193); and ''If they seek peace, then ple who know what they are talking Newark, DE 19716 desired genes. Second, Greenberg blamed the Arab seek you peace" (chapter 8, verse 61). about and can actually spark an intelli­ Fax:302-831-1396 I'm not suggesting that we start states for not absorbing those refugees. gent debate on the subject. up mail-order babies and pick our What he didn' t mention was that inter­ lina Hashem E-mail: picasso~udel.edu children from a catalogue, but the national law calls for letting refugees Class of2000 Rick Decker benefits of genetic screening cannot go home whenever possible, and the [email protected] Senior The Opinion/Editorial pages are an open forum for public debate and be denied. If there is a way to United Nations has specifically called [email protected] discussion. The Review welcomes responses from its readers. For veri­ fication purposes, please include a daytime telephone number with all letters. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit all submissions. Let­ ters and columns represent ·the ideas and beliefs of the authors and should not be taken as representative of The Review. Got a proble01? Advertising Policy for Classified and Display Ads: We're listening. The Review reserves the right to refuse any ads that are of an improper or inappropriate time, place and manner. The ideas and opinions of advertisements appearing in this pub­ lication are not necessarily those of the Review staff or the university. Questions, comments or input may be directed to Send collllllents to [email protected]. the advertising department at The Review.

City News Editors: Copy Desk Cbief: Layout Editor: Jaime Bender Dan DeLorenzo MIIJUIIIDI News Editors Jenna R. Portnoy Domenico Montanaro Jen Lemos Jonathan Rifkin Editor in Chief: Eric J .S. Townsenq Editorial Editor: Entertainment Editors: National/State News Editors: Andrea N. Boyle Yvonne Thomas Managing Mosaic Editors: Paul Mathews Adrian Bacolo Clarke Speicher Shaun Gallagher Paige Wolf Photography Editors: Features Editors: Student Affairs Editors: Christopher Bunn Caitlin Thorn Laura LaPonte Melissa Scott Sinclair Andrea Benvenuto Stephanie Denis Executive Editor: Susan Stock Managing Sports Editors: Mike Lewis Rob Niedzwiecki Administrative News Editors: Art!Grapbics Editors: News Features Editors: Alana Kaper Justin Malin Sarah J. Brady Jason Lemberg Amanda Greenberg Carlos Walkup I · - L------~ • • llllOll October 27, 2000 A 11 An on-campus look at the presidential race Voters should take chance on Bush Gore is safe Election Day choice

to provide a quality education that par­ ents are accept. If they don't meet the criteria, a school with a better program. Paige Wolf will receive the benefits of the educa­ tional dollars. Howling AI Gore has been throwing out a message of populism - "I will help you fight against that evil I percent." Call me hasty, but I filled out I have never seen such a level of my absentee ballot two weeks ago. hypocrisy in a presidential candidate. The presidential candidates Not only does Gore receive money made their platforms clear way from the same special interest groups before then, and I know there's he rails against, but he has also con­ nothing to be said before Nov. 7 stantly knocked the same people who that will change my opinions on are responsible for the incredible tum the simple facts put before me. in our economy. Each of the candidates has held I really don't wish to be the one to fast to his beliefs, and it is in break it to everyone, but the 1 percent domestic policies where the two he wtiines about actually constitutes a major candidates differ the most. larger percentage of the population. Fact: If Bush were to be elected Even CNN pointed that out after one president, he would likely have of the debates. the opportunity to appoint at least Bush's tax plan is an across-the­ three Supreme Court justices. He board tax cut, and because of that the · will appoint social conservatives top income.eamers will get some of and Roe v. Wade will lil\ely be the money they have paid back. But in overturned, making abortion ille­ the end, they will end up paying a gal. THE REVIEW I Paul Mathews higher percentage of the total tax rev­ Pro-lifers will be thrilled. But THE REVIEW I Paul Mathews enues. those who believe in a woman's same time we reach retirement age. This is still a progressive income right to choose and understand the registration of new handguns and remaining wildlife to build more By allowing younger workers to vol­ tax. The wealthy are still footing the detriment of bringing unwanted Craig Beebe favors mandatory child locks. roads and drill more oil. untarily choose from a list of safe bill for the vast majority of govern­ children into society realize the Bush opposed the Brady Law in Haven't recycled since you investments, the governor's proposal ment services. implications of this possibility. College Republicans 1993 requiring a waiting period started college and you like to will aUow us to substantially increase The self-proclaimed champion of This doesn't mean that women wear fur? It's still pretty clear that the rate of return on our money and campaign finance reform has consis­ would stop having abortions. It Bush's anti-environmental plan provide us with retirement funds. tently been among those who most simply means that we would We as a nation need to elect a lead­ Before asking what would cause irreparable harm. Equity is something we all hope to abuse and corrupt the system. This is return to the day$ of unsafe, ille­ er who believes in a philosophy that You may not agree with every­ build and possess, and Bush's plan a man that you cannot even trust to gal abortions. would happen if you makes all able citizens productive, thing Gore stands for. You may provides exactly that. The money in follow the most basic of finance laws Fact: Bush proposes a tax cut contributing members of society. were attacked while not believe he is the perfect candi­ your retirement account is yours - such as those prohibiting fund-raising that would benefit the wealthy. We can generally agree that when date. But voting for Bush in the when you reach retirement you can calls from the offices from which you The rich would get richer, and the waiting to purchase a it comes to social programs and upcoming election will · certainly use it to provide for your needs, and conduct your official business. poor would get poorer. · finance, the basic goal should be safety rifle, think bring about each of the aforemen­ whatever is left over can be trans­ It disturbs me that very little is Trickle-down economics are a!>sisting individuals to the point tioned consequences. ferred to your heirs. heard about the Gore's involvement in plausibile - with about 200 years about the psycho where they no longer require the sup­ Other options on the ballot may Education is a complicated subject the fund-raising problems from the before' helping anyone but the port of others. Once people achieve confronting you who where individuals in one area require Clinton White House. Even when he -already wealthy. There are only so seem more appealing. Ralph this they can begin to bring up those different services than residents of admitted to his fund-raising impropri­ many gold-plated license plates Nader's campaign appeals to that still linger on the fringes of soci­ just picked up a many people with his pro-environ­ another. The people of Tennessee eties, an offense punishable by fines you can have before you start to ety. mental and fair labor stance. have different problems than those in or imprisonment, there was no conse­ notice the destitute in the streets. 9 mrn at Wal-Mart. We require someone who can unite Alaska. Bush's plan will allow the quence. Gore wants to uphold taxes on He may be an ideal candidate all groups, public and private, in 'the - butr he's not going to win. The flexibility needed by states to solve The Clinton/Gore campaign high-income earners to benefit pursuit of common goals and ideals. before gun purchases. university community could vote those problems. · received an estimated $5 million indi­ college tuition, job training, health We need someone who can think out­ Before asking what ·would hap­ for him six times over and it The only federal oversight will be rectly from the Chinese and happened insurance, childcare, education side of the Washington-style box of pen if you were attacked while wouldn't make a dent in the final that if you receive federal money you to authorize the sale of nuclear missile and retirement savings. "we know what's best and are the waiting to purchase a safety rifle, will be required ·to show student technology. Fact: Bush opposes employ­ ballot. only group who can move the country think about the psycho con­ progress. This is the accountability "Risky." This is the word you have ment nondiscrimination laws, So don' t waste your vote. Don't forward." The only one of the three fronting you who just picked up a section of Bush's education reform heard from the Democrats about all of affirmative action, gay marriage withhold your vote in protest. candidates that has this vision is Texas 9 mm at Wai-Mart. package. The second portion of the Bush's proposals, and I say this is a and adoption. He supports the Even if it comes to voting for the Governor George W. Bush. Fact: In lieu of spending fu!lds · plan allows parents to remove their good thing. exclusion Of open homosexuals lesser evil, cast your vote at the The Social Security program is to rebuild public schools, Bush child from a school that doesn't meet New ideas are always frightening. from the military. polls. Letting George W . Bush proposes a voucher system, allow­ another outdated govern~ent pro­ their needs and have the money allo­ People are hesitant to leave the per­ Gore supports laws to end job win the presidency is too disas­ grams that is full of good intentions ing parents to send children to pri­ trous to risk. cated to that child follow them to a ceived security of what they have for discrimination and supports civil but lacks proper implementation and vate or religious schools using school of their choice. the possibility of something better. unions, health care for same-sex efficiency. Bush has proposed a mod­ public education funds. In our capitalist system competition However, without innovation there is partners and the rights of gays to est reform to the system that will help This seems like the first step on Paige Wolf is a managing Mosaic will produce better results at a lower no progress, and progress is exactly adopt. He also backs anti-hate save it, not just prolong the inevitable. the road to prayer in public cost than a mandated one-size-fits-all what this country needs right now. crime laws and privately argued editor for The Review. She has This should be an issue that res­ program. This is the basic philosophy against Clinton regarding the schools, something I'm sure Bush also read evidence that Bush is would get right behind. onates with anyone reading The behind the Bush plan. Craig Beebe is president of the uni­ exclusion of open gays i.n the mili­ quasi- illiterate. Send comments to Review since AI Gore's proposal will Fact: Bush wants to tear down [email protected]. If schools wish to succeed and versity's College Republicans. Send tary. run out of steam at approximately the flourish with students, they will have comments to [email protected]. Fact: Gore supports mandatory national forests and the scarce Votes fot Nader lead to viability of third-party candidates

I recent­ interests of the rich and few. democracy in our politics, AI Gore and the ly read a Most people believe everyone voting for Nader Democratic nationals are preaching the politics of Nick Galasso letter to the is a reformed Democrat and would have voted for fear. editor in Gore if Nader were not running. • They are scared of Ralph Nader because he is College Greens The Review · This is an extremely large misconception. The not a bought-and-sold politician like themselves regarding Green Party's member base is comprised mainly and he can speak his conscious. Why ~lse was he why one of independents, disenchanted citizens and people prevented from debating in public? student plans to vote for AI Gore. who have never voted. In fact, the Democratic The only rhetoric the Democrats can say is that She admitted that Ralph Nader is a better can­ Party should thank the Greens for the mill,ions of "a vote for Nader is a vote for Bush." didate but didn't think he had a chance of win~ new liberals who will be coming out to the polls That's ridiculous- a vote for Nader is a vote ning. and voting for Democrats in their local and con­ for Nader. They harp on the terror that Bush will Hmmm. I wonder why? gressional elections where there is no viable impose on the Supreme Court, when in fact civil 1 thought we were taught to vote for the best third-party candidate. · liberty violations were worse under Clinton/Gore candidate - the candidate whom represents your The notion of Gore as an environmentalist is than under Reagan/Bush. hopes, dreams and aspirations of what America laughable. If AI Gore is an environmentalist, then They spew that if Bush is elected, a woman's should be like? I am Mickey Mouse·: right to choose will be revoked. I hardly think Many people say they don't really like AI How can a person of Gore' s political stature that Bush, a moderate Republican in his state, Gore, but he's safer than Bush. If you vote for the sleep at night knowing that his family stands to wants to be remembered as the president respon­ lesser of two evils, you are still left with evil. make a large sum of money from the exploitation, sible for the return of back-alley abortions and A vote for AI Gore is a vote for the perpetua­ removal and threatened mass suicide of the U'Wa other grotesque, dangerous procedures. tion of the system as it stands and ensures the . people in Columbia due to the actions of the It'slialso important to realize that the election is same two choices in four years. .Occidental Petroleum Corporation. decided in roughly 35 states. This means that A vote for Ralph Nader expands democracy by Gore's mother reportedly owns roughly $1 either Bush or Gore has already secured those bettering his chance of getting 5 percent in the million worth of stock in the company and his states' electoral votes. In those states the Green election and qualifying the Green Party for presi­ father served as an executive. Party is reaching out to voters who are unsure. dential matching funds in 2004. More importantly, Occidental is a financial They don't like Gore, but Bush scares them. Voting for Nader is not only about winning the supporter of Gore, and during the Clinton/Gore You can vote your conscious and help the presidential election. It's about sending a mes­ administration Occidental was given political Green Party get the 5 percent it needs. sage to the two-party duopoly that their days of a favors. You can be a part of this inspiring movement corrupt, unrepresentative, exclusive stranglehold If Gore is half the environmentalist he claims, of social change, civic participation and the THE REVIEW I Paul Mathews on American democracy are numbered. why isn't he railing against the oil industry as a return of democracy to its rightful owners - the The Green Party, along with other third par­ whole and advocating alternative, clean and safe American people. ties, is representative of disenchanted Americans power sources like solar power and hemp seed and people who have dropped out of the voting oil? Solar power was researched in the 1970s and system because of lack of choice or disgust. This found effective and environmentally sound. Nick Galasso is president of the university's Col­ The Green Partv 50 percent of the population historically does not Instead of embracing the prospect of new lege Green Party. Send comments to vote because the Republicrats only represent the ideas, social change and a wide spectrum of [email protected].

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from the Ghosts of Civil War POWs now roam the corridors of very own Alcatraz - F art Delaware BY MELISSA SCOTI SINCLAIR down into the 16-foot-deep moat. Femures Editor As the group passes over the moat on a narrow bridge, DELAWARE CITY - The waterfront of this historic Jennings cautions against falling in - guess where the fort's town is quiet on a chilly October night. latrines once emptied, he says. Once, gunshots and prisoners' screams might have rung The humor is enough to get people laughing again, but the over the canal from Fort Delaware. Now, only ghosts remain. brooding stone building still commands a sense of dread. During the Civil War, 33,000 Confederate prisoners of war The smell of burning torches wafts on the wind, and the were held in the fort on Peapatch Island. days of war and death seem not so distant. More than 2,400 never made it home. They died of small­ · Those times are still real for Ed Okonowicz, mystery author pox or fever, says park historian Jim Godwin. A few were shot and university journalism professor. Dressed in black, he · by guards. appears from behind a red smoking door to confront the audi­ And some still remain. ence, which is now seated in the old fort mess hall. "When they die far from ·home, oftentimes they will Vampire lore is his specialty. He tells the tale of Missy return," Godwin, an adjunct professor of Brown, who was found still rosy in the history at the university, says solemnly. grave after her family perished in Rhode 'They will linger in their place of con­ Island in the 1880s. She was a vampire, he finement." says. 'They cooked her skull on a tomb­ About 75 people clutching coats to stone." their chests circle around Godwin, faces Yet Delaware offers stranger and nuer pale in .the streetlights. tales. He recounts the history of the 1860 Patty Cannon, ''DelmaJva's first serial fort, which was built to defend killer," was captured in 1929. She took Delaware's coastline but found practical arsenic before she could be executed for use as a POW camp. Some visitors laugh poisoning her husband and a pile of other when he tells them that ghosts still inhab­ people, Okonowicz says, but her skull THE REVIEW I Melissa Scott Sinclair it the sprawling stone building, but rests today in a hatbox in the Dover Godwin is used to it. Of course there are library. The prison cells of Fort those who doubt, but he's not one of them. And only a few years ago, in the very · "Yes. Something is there:" he says room where the crowd sits now, an Delaware (above) used to apparition was seen by a roomful of wit­ hold Confederate POWs with absolute conviction. People come looking to be frightened, nesses. during the Civil War. They he says - including resident 'assistant Okonowicz says he was speaking to a now hold life-size figures Jenn Hopkins, who brought 15 university group in the candlelit room when some­ dressed in period costumes. students to Fort Delaware's ghost tour. one asked, "Who was the woman who ''I'm spooked already," she says. 'The carne out in Civil War clothes and began Frights abound at the Fort anticipation is scaring me." dusting the mantel?" . Delaware .tour. At right, a At 8:30 p.m., the visitors file onto the Others had seen her. "She carne out of volunteer 'butcher' clutches small white, brightly-lit ferry. As it chugs this door," Okonowicz says, opening it to a heart she's obtained across the flat black water, the lights of Delaware City fade. A reveal a brick wall. during her mock surgery. green light flashes in the distance and the dark, looming shad­ 'They say there are tunnels and secret passages in there," he ow of the island approaches. warns. "You'll be leaning on a wall- you might just rub After 15 minutes, the ferry docks at a wooden pier, lit only up against a spirit." by a half~bumed-out string of electric lanterns. People stumble As the tour of the fortress begins in a labyrinth of dank brick on the uneven boards, laughing nervously. vaults, Jennings confums that ghosts may roam tonight. A new guide leads the way - senior park historian Lee Pointing to holes for cannons in the walls, he says, "A lot of Jennings, an eye-catching figure with glasses and a grizzled the ghost sightings we've seen have been ghosts looking· in· gray beard. through those, trying to figure out what's going on." Jennings orders the crowd onto a truck-towed train of wag­ Visitors peer through them from the inside, searching for a ons and warns against wandering off. After a hesitant start, the gray and ghastly face. train rolls through the marsh grass. One common apparition, Jennings says, is · a 9-year-o ld Cannons suddenly fire from the fort's ramparts. A few peo­ drununer boy who tried to escape by hiding in a coffin that was ple scream. Red flashes illuminate the sky, and sparks float see GHOSTS page ~4 he Art Garfunkel talks about interstate strolls, draft dodging and his post-Paul Simon music career ed and looked for new adventures sep­ BY SARAH J. BRADY I In the Bible. '' Adminisrrnrive News Editor "Last night I had the strangest arately. "And who might this be?" asks Soon after the breakup, Garfunkel dream I I ever dreamed before I I I "Why don't you write me I I'm out the melodic voice on the other end appeared in the films "Carnal dreamed the world had all agreed I To in the jungle I I'm hungry to hear you I of the phone. Knowledge" and "Catch-22." put an end to war I I dreamed I saw a Send me a card I I am waiting so hard Taken by surprise and a bit on "A lot of people think that I wanted mighty room I The room was filled edge, I struggle to find an answer. to pursue an acting career," he says. with men I And the paper they 'were I To be near you." "Well, who's this?" ''But this isn't true. The only reason I signing said I They'd never fight "This is Artie Garfunkel," he acted was because I was offered the again." In 1979, Garfunkel's girlfriend, Laurie Bird, committed suicide in their says, "and I' ve been waiting for your opportunity. I never thought, 'Hey, I'm call." going to be an actor.' "I didn't want to get killed in New York apaitment. Without prompting, Garfunkel "It just happened." Vietnam," he says. "I was protecting He turned away from the limelight dives into the subject of his fans' Although Garfunkel is best known my own neck. But I've always wres­ and cornered himself in a world of interests and feelings. for his talents while paired with tled with the thought that someone else seclusion. "Let's go to the gut of it," he says. Simon, his career was far from over had to do the dirty work in the war." "I really backed away from every­ "Let's talk about Paul Simon." after the breakup. When 26 finally rolled around in thing and shut myself up," he says. "I His first solo 1967, Garfunkel was had a lot of time for myself." Once he forced himself to become "I've built walls I A fortress deep album, "Angel pursuing a Ph.D., a THE REVIEW I File photo part of life again, actress and producer and mighty I That none may pene­ Clare," was a hit goal he disposed of Art Garfunkel will share some of his and Paul Simon's leg­ Penny Marshall ("A League of Tneir trate I I have no need offri endship I that carried him shortly after. endary songs on Oct. 27 at the Bob Carpenter Center. He did, however, Own") entered his life. The relation­ Friendship causes pain I It's laugh­ into the interna­ days, when he performed for his peers ter and it's loving I disdain I I am a tional scene in earn a master's ship eventually ended, and Garfunkel into his soul. Garfunkel sat up one day in in talent competitions. rock I I am an island." 1973. He has degree in mathemat­ continued to pursue his personal goals. Manhattan and said to his friend, "I really like playing campuses," he released eight ical education. On top of creating a new solo career "Forgive me, but I'm going to walk says. "I think I'm a good act for college As with many artists, it seems the albums since "Math was so bor­ for himself, Garfunkel felt he needed more than what he was getting from across the country now," he says. "A kids. The university style is still in me lyrics . to Simon and Garfunkel' s then. ing," he says with a sigh. "I should have life. week later, I was at the Delaware and I like the idealism of college. I'm famous songs ring true to his life's Garfunkel says the guy who's been d1ere and I want to experiences. The question on every­ his artistic career gone into literature He began walking. River." or something." Garfunkel's friend could do nothing joke with them in their own language." one' s mind: What happened to the began in high school with a friend and Garfunkel's philosophy on college a dream. Teamed with Simon, Garfunkel's "schizophrenic" life­ "But I've got to creep down the but sit by and watch as he strapped on dynamic duo who swept listeners life includes everything from getting away during the bra-burning era and Garfunkel played in talent contests for a recording star by day and a student alley W£Zy I Fly down the highway I his sneakers and started formi ng the by night - was an enlightening time Before they come to catch me I'll be stride that would take him through along with roommates to finding out the time of revolution of the '60s? school and soon became fascinated who each person really is on the inside. Where did Garfunkel go and what with the idea of performing profes­ for him. gone I Somewhere they can't find me." three states. His goal was to gain invisibility, to "You need to know, 'Who am I?' did he do after Simon? sionally. Enchanted "I was delighted at the acceptance Armed with a suitcase, a map, an lose the face of Arthur Ira Garfunkel "Don' t let the dean force you into a "I think we just got tired of each by The Beatles and the way the band of our work, of our song," he says. American Express card and a tennis for a short period of time. premature answer," he warrants. "You other," he says. "We spent so many shaped rock ' n · roll, Simon and "The affirmation was a great feeling. "I like to adapt a non-persona," he have to find out on your own. years making hit records, everyone Garfunkel combined their talents and It was a really nice time in my life." ball, he set out on a voyage across the says. ''I'm not on a star trip in real life. ''Turn off the noise of society and wanting more and more everyday. I pushed their way to the top of the With the quality of music progress­ rice patty fields of Japan in 1983. "You could call this my freak out, I'm just trying to be the good guy, to be listen to your inner person - there's think we just needed a periodic charts. ing from mono to stereo in the '60s, or my dropping out of life for a while," a little kinder, to be like everyone else.'' too much noise here today. People like rest." After graduation, Garfunkel looked Simon and Garfunkel's sound became he says. "I get these tendencies tb do me just drop out of real life and walk That rest was more than a hiatus, to further his academic career while highlighted. Their lives were filled "Time, time, time, see what's across continents.'' however. It transformed the two into continuing to pursue music. He with fans and recordings, an atmo­ weird things. enrolled in Columbia College and in sphere Garfunkel says they never "I brought the tennis ball because I become ofme I While /looked around I solo acts. The parting was a mutual "Hang 011 to your hopes. my friend I doing so, avoided the Vietnam draft. expected at such a young age. wanted to play with the kids I met For my possibilities I /was so hard to decision between the partners after That's a11 easy tlti11g to say I But ifyour In 1964, the song ''The Sound of ''I'm extremely fortunate," he says. along the way wh ile never breaking please I 8111 look arou11d, leaves are making their album "Bridge Over hopes should pass mmy I Simply pre­ Silence" captured listeners by the thou­ "We always knew that this music was my stride. It worked great." broiVn I A11d the sky is a ha::.y shade of Troubled Water." telld I That you can build them again 1 sands. At the same time, Garfunkel pure and true and we could make it. When Garfunkel got back from wime r. " Japan, he continued working on his Look arou11d. the gran is high I The "It's the same old story I was trying to meander through college We believed in what we did." music career. Then, like before, the Garfunkel has continued to move in fields are ripe. it's the springtime ofmv Everywhere I go I I get slandered I and reach the age of 26 - the cutoff After the release of "Bridge Over urge to do something different crep a steady pattern since his high school life." - Libeled I I hear words I never heard point for the government draft. Troubled Water," the two friends part-

1 f lurking Within: Inside: Local-based film soon to Alternatives to tr ck or debut in theaters, 83 treat1ng , BJ Ei\TERTAINMENT TilE ARTS PEOPLE FEATURES Friday, October 27, 2000 • l from the Ghosts of Civil Wa r POWs now roam the corridors of Delawares very own Alcatraz- Fort Delaware BY MELISSA SCOTT Sli\'CLAIR down into the 16-foot-deep moat. Ft•fllurt'\ Erluor As the group passe~ over the moat on a namm bridge. DELAWARE CITY - The waterl'ront of thi\ hi~toric Jennings cautions again~t falling in - gue~s \\here the ton '~ town is quiet on a chilly October night. latrines once emptied, he say~. Once, gunshots and prisoners' scream~ might have rung The humor is enough to get people laughing again, hut t11e over t11e canal from Fort Delaware. Now, onl y g h o~~ remain. bnxx.ling tone bui lding still comma.mh a ~e n ~e of dread. During tlle Civil War, 33,000 Confederate pri!>oners of war The smell of burning torches wah.;, on tlle wind, and tlle were held in tlle fon on Peapatch Island. days of war and deatll seem not . o distant. More tllan 2,400 never made it home. They died of. mall­ TI1ose times are still real for Ed Okono\\ icz, my~tcry author pox or fever, says park historian Jim Godwin. A few were shot and university joumalism professor. Dre~sed in black, he by guards. appears from behi nd a red smoking door to confront t11e audi­ And some still remain. ence, which i ~ now seated in the old fon me~~ hall. "When tlley die far from home, of1e m ime~ tlley will Vampire lore is his specialty. He tells t11e tale of Mis~y rerum," Godwin, an adjunct professor of Brown, who wa~ found still ro~y in tlle history at tl1e university, says solenmly. Ghost tours at Fort Delaware grave after her famil y peri~hed in Rhode 'They will linger in t11eir place of con­ continue throughout the Island in tlle 1880~. She was a vampire, he finement." Halloween season. For more says. 'They cooked her skull on a tomb­ About 75 people clutching coats to infonuation, call the park office stone." tlleir chests circle around Godwin, faces Yet Delaware offers stranger and truer at pale in d1e streetlights. 302-834-7941. tales. He recounts the history of the 1860 Patty Cannon, "Delmarva's first serial fort, which was built to defend Other events with storyteller killer," wa~ captured in 1929. She took Delaware's coastline but found practical and author Ed Okonowicz and arsenic before she could he executed for use as a POW camp. Some visitors laugh historian Mike Dixon -meet at poisoning her husband and a pile of otller when he tells tllem tllat ghosts sti II inhab­ the Historical Society of Cecil people, Okonowicz says, but her skull T HE REVIEW I Melissa Scon Sinclair it the sprawling stone bu ilding, but County, Elkton. Md. (call 410- rests today in a hathox in the Dover C.JOdwin is used to it. Of course tllere are 392-3946 for reservations): library. The prison cells of Fort those who doubt, but he's not one of them. And only a few years ago, in the very Delaware (above) used to "Yes. Sometlling is tllere:" he says Elkton Town Ghost/History room where tl1e crowd 'its now, an hold Confederate POWs witll absolute conviction. Walking' Tour: Saturday, Oct apparition wa::. 'een by a roomful of wit­ People come looking to be frightened, nesses. during the Civil War. They 1 28, at 5:30 at!d 7:30p.m, $10. now hold life-size figures he says - including resident assistant Okonowicz ~ay ' he was speaking to a Jenn Hopkins, who brought 15 university group in the candlelit room \vhen 'ome­ dressed in period costumes. students to Fon Delaware's ghost tour. Elkton Cemetery Tour: one asked, "Who was t11e woman who "''m spooked already," she says. 'The Saturday, Oct 28, 9:30p.m., and came out in Civil War clotl1es and began Frights abound at the Fort anticipation is scaring me." Tuesday, Oct 31.6:30 and 8:30 dusting tlle mantel?" Delaware tour. At right, a At 8:30 p.m., the visitors file onto d1e p.rn.,$10. Others had seen her. ''She came out of volunteer 'butcher' clutches small white, brightly-lit ferry. As it chugs tl1is door," Okonowicz says, opening it to a heart she's obtained across the flat black water, the lights of Delaware City fade. A reveal a brick wall . during her mock surgery. green light fl ashes in the distance and the dark , looming shad­ "They say there are twmels and secret passages in there." he ow of tlle island approaches. wams. "You' ll be leaning on a wall - you might just rub After 15 minutes, tlle ferry docks at a wooden pier, lit only up again~ t a spirit." by a half-bumed-out string of electric lantem ~. People ' tumble As the tour of the fomess he gin!. in a labyrinth of dank brick on the uneven boards, laughing nervously. vaults, Jennings eonfinns tl1at gho!>ts may roam tonight. A new guide leads the way - senior park hi ~ torian Lee Pointing to holes for cannon in the wall:,. he says. "A lot of Jennings, an eye-catching fi gure witll glses and a grizzled the ghost sightings we' ve seen have been g ho~ ts lookinf1 in gray beard. tluuugh those, trying to figure out what'' going on.'' Jennings orders the crowd onto a truck-towed tTain of wag­ Visitors peer through them from t11e in:, ide, earching for a ons and warns against wandering off. After a hesitant stan, the gray and ghastly face. train rolls tllrough tlle marsh grass. One common apparition, Jennings says, is a 9-year-old Cannons suddenly fire from the fort's rampans. A few peo­ drummer boy who tried to escape hy hiding in a coffin that Wa\ ple scream. Red flashes illuminate the sky, and sparks float see GHOSTS page 84 State of the Art Art Garfunkel talks about interstate strolls, draft dodging and his post-Paul Simon music career

BY SARAH J, BRADY I In the Bible.·· ed and looked for new adventures sep­ Arlmuwitrnm·e Ne~,·s Edaur "Last night I had the strangest arately. "And who mi ght thi s be?" asks Soon after the breakup, Garfunkel dream I I ever dreamed before I I the melodic voice on the other end appeared in the films ··carnal dreamed the world had all agreed I To "Why don 't you write me I I'm 0111 of the phone. Knowledge" and "Catch-22." pllt an end to war I I dreamed I saw a in the jungle I I'm hung1y to hear you I Taken by surprise and a bit on "A lot of people think that l wanted mighty room I The room was filled Send me a card I I am waiting so hard edge, I struggle to fi nd an answer. to pursue an acting career," he says. with men I And the paper they were I To be near you.·· ·'Well, who's this'J'' "But this isn ' t true. The only reason I signing said I They'd never fighr "This is Artie Garfunkel," he acted was because I was offered the again. " In 1979, Garfunkel's girlfriend, says, '·and I've been wai ting for your opportunity. I never thought. 'Hey, I'm Laurie Bird, committed suicide in their call." going to be an actor.' "I didn't want to ge t killed in New York apartment. Without prompting, Garfunkel "It just happened." Vietnam," he says. '·I was protecting He tumed away from the limelight dives into the subject of hi s fans' Although Garfunkel is best known my own neck. But I' ve always wres­ and cornered himself in a world of interests and feelings. for his talents whi le paired with tled wi th the thought that someone else seclusion. "Let's go to the gut of it," he says. Simon, hi s career was far fro m over had to do the diny work in the war." "I really backed away from every­ ·'Let's talk about Paul Simon." after the breakup. When 26 finally rolled around in thing and shut myself up," he says. "I His first solo 196 7, Garfunkel was had a lot of time fo r myself. " if,:' # ,,~ . Once he forced himself to become '" I've built walls I A fortress deep album, "Angel pursuing a Ph.D., a l lll RI, VII .W I hk pholo and mighty I That none may pene ­ Clare," was a hit Art Garfunkel will appear goal he disposed of pan of life again, actress and producer Art Garfunkel will share some of his and Paul Simon's leg­ trate I I have no need offriends hip I that carried him at the Bob Caq}enter shonly after. Penny Marshall ("A League of Their endary songs on Oct. 27 at the Bob Carpenter Center. Friendship causes pain I It 's laugh­ into the interna­ Center Friday, October 27, He did, however, Own") entered hi s life. The relation­ days. when he pe1fnnneJ fi1r hi!. peer\ ter and it's lm·ing I disdain I I am a tional scene in at 8 p.m. Tickets are $15 earn a master's ship eventually ended, and Garfunkel into hi ~ ~oul. in talent compctitHllh. rock I I am an island." !973. He has for students; $20 to $50 for degree in mathemat­ continued to pursue his personal goals. Garfunkcl sat up one day in re leased eight alumni and the general ical education. On top of creati ng a new solo career Manhattan and said to hi ~ fri end . "I really like pia) in !:' C J.m pu~e~ ... he sa y ~ . "I tlnnk m a good act fi1r college A <:. with many anist':. , it seems th e albums since public. Call (302) 831 -4012 ''Math was so bor· for himself, Garfunkel fe lt he needed '·Forgive me, but I'm going to walk r kid\. The uni\ er\ il ~ ~ ~ ~ le i\ ..,till 111 me lyrics _ro Simon and Garfunkel's then. for more information. in g," he says with a more than what he was getti ng from acros~ the country now:· he ~ a y~ . " A and I like the ldeall,fll of wllege I'm famous so n g~ ring true to hi s life's Garfunkel says sigh. "I should have life. week later. I wa~ at the Del a\\ arc the g u~ \\ hn . .., he en there anu I \\ .mt to ex periences. The question on every­ hi s anisti c career gon e into literature He began walk ing. River." one' ' mind: What happened to th e began in high school with a fri end and or something." Garfunk e l · ~ fri end could do nothing jnke \\ ith them 111 the1r <'" n bngu.tge. dynamic duo who swept listeners a dream. Teamed wi th Simon, Garfunkel's '·schi zophrenic" life ­ "But I've got to creep d 0 \1'11 the hut -,i t hy and watch a; he ~ trap ped on G:ui·unkel ·, phlio'l'phy on C<1llege away during the bra-burning era and Garfunkel played in talent contests for a recording star by day and a student alley ll'ay I Fly dmm the ltiglnmr I his ~neaker~ and ; taned forming the lite IIH.: IuJe, t'\ er;.th1ng tmm gettm:; alon g \\ ith lll'"' Hrr1 11 '"'" hmun 1.-\llllthe 1 ~ 1' 11 a ha::1 1/radc of h t>l>< I lh cttlf,/1'11\\ <111<1\ \ c•l/fl/\ (lf r Troubled Water." Silence" captured li ~ t e n er\ by the thPu ­ "We always knew that thi s mu~ i c was my ~ tride . It work cu great." \anJ\. 1\t the \ame time, Garfunkel pure and true and we could make 1t. When Garfunkel got had fn>Jll 1\ '///It I 1< ntf I I !rut \tit/ ,·,111 l•rn .ITht n '''<•1111 1 Japan, he continued working on h1 ' I ,,,,1, I

1 82. THE REVIEW. October 27.2000 Leave Book of Shadows closed

"Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2" But Jeffrey seems to have recovered and profitted Artisan Entertainment from the Blair Witch craze by selling official Rating: fl 1/2 Burkittsville dirt, rocks and twigs over the Internet and creating the Blair Witch Hunt tour. Stephen Parker (Stephen Turner) and Tristen Ryler (Tristen Skyler) enlist Jeffrey's help as their tour guide Sn~ so they can further research their book, "Blair Witch: Hysteria or History?" Erica Geersen (Erica Leerhsen), a Wiccan who believes the Blair Witch isn't an evil entity, and Kim Diamond (Kim Director), a Goth chick with psychic abilities, also set out into the woods with the others. They set up camp near the foundation of a house that BY CLARKE SPEICHER has a connection to the Blair Witch and then set out for Enrerlainment Editor a night of boozing and marijuana smoking. In October of 1994, three student filmmakers disap­ When the campers awake the next morning, all of peared in the woods near Burkittsville, Md. their cameras and notes are destroyed, and none of them A year later, their footage was found and shown in can account for the previous five hours. 1999 as "The Blair Witch Project." The only thing they have to rely on is their video­ After the success and believability of the original tapes, which were buried beneath the same rock where film, a group of would-be filmmakers try to capitalize the original Blair Witch film was found. on- and nearly destroy- the Blair Witch mystique in They return to Jeffrey's loft (a former broom facto­ the process. . ry) where they attempt to unravel the mystery. The "fictionalized" account of what happened is the Unfortunately, the film becomes so boring no one insipid and uninspired "Book of Shadows: Blair Witch really cares what happened. 2." All of the characters are annoying to the extent that Jeffrey Patterson (Jeffrey Donovan), a native of the viewer roots for the Blair Witch to come and kill all Burkittsville, truly believes in the Blair Witch. Of of them just so the movie will end. course, for reasons never explained in the film, Jeffrey When the Blair Witch hunters return to Jeffs home once resided in the local mental institution. to figure out what happened, they simply yell, scream ematography. gent movie with higher motives by posing the question, and argue with each other. All the while, nothing hap­ What Berlinger forgot to do was write a logical script "What is reality?" Unfortunately, the best answer the The Gist of It pens. and cast people who can actually act, as opposed to film offers is a naked, dancing Wiccan. "Shadows" was destined to .fail to meet the high standing around, acting hysterical. His film lacks origi­ "Book of Shadows" belongs in the same sewer as ~~~~~ Wicked witch of the west expectations set by the original, but it doesn't seem like nality and genuine chills - basically everything that other horror sequels that failed to live up to their prede­ anyone involved tried to make a good film. made the original "Blair Witch" great. cessors, such as "Halloween 2," "The Exorcist 2: The -cc~~~ Samantha Stevens Directed by Joe Berlinger, who received critical The film especially disappoints since it does very lit­ Heretic" and ''Psycho 2." -cc~~' Ham Sandwich acclaim for his documentaries "Brother's Keeper" and tle to further the Blair Witch mythology. Instead, it wal­ The scariest thing about the film is that it was made. ~~' Glehda, the good witch "Paradise Lost," the film does away with jerky camera lows in a pseudo-psychological plot that ends up as -cc Sabrina, the teenage witch movements in favor of more aesthetically pleasing cin- incoherent as it is tedious. Clarke Speicher's past reviews include "Pay It Forward" For one brief moment, "Shadows" seems an intelli- (t'.-t'.-112) and "Meet the Parents" (t'cflflt'c). . ' •"Bamboozled" "Bedazzled" New Line Cinemas 20th Century Fox Rating: t'cftflfll/2 Rating: t'cft 1/2

Provocative and disturbing, Spike Lee's When God turns a silent ear to the prayers of the "Bamboozled," the story of a television writer's revenge pathetic, there's still one place they can turn - The • gone awry, is a painful 135-minute watch. Princess of Darkness. Pierre Delacroix (Damon Wayans) is the sole At least that's what Elliot (Brendan Fraser) finds African-American writer for TV network CNS. When he when he receives a proposition from the Devi-l . , is pressured by his white-but-I'm-blacker-than-you boss (Elizabeth Hurley) in the tepid "Bedazzled." Dunwitty (Michael Rapaport), Delacroix unearths an Satan offers Elliot seven wishes to gain the g-irl idea long thought to be extinct- the black-face minstrel (Frances O'Connor) and life of his dreams in exchange shows that were prevalent in the 1840s. De I a croix' s for his measly lit.tle soul. suggestion of reviving such a show is recognized as After being seduced by the Devil's bountiful ·politically incorrect, offensive and blatantly racist - a contemporary minstrel production. Beelzeboobs, Elliot signs the contract and humorless Hurley, though dangerously seductive, never quite · · precisely what the struggling TV network has been At times, Lee's fanatic views complicate the film and wackiness ensues. achieves the status of maniacal cruelty necessary to ··searching for. form unnecessarily intense sequences. . A remake of the 1967 film of the same name, make a believable Satan. The most devastating scenes include Manray and "Mantarf the New Millenium Minstrel Show" follows "Bedazzled" lacks the fire of the original, substituting The best scenes are when Fraser and Hurley share . the exploits of Mantan and Sleep 'N' Eat, a pair of urban Womack's silent application of their "black face" and penis jokes for. wit. the screen. The duo generate an unlikely chemistry blacks, depicted as "ignorant, dull-witted, lazy and fire engine-red lipstick before each taping and the clos­ that manages to sustain the film for half its running · . unlucky," who relocate to a Southern watermelon patch. ing sequence, in which Lee provides a cinematic collage The movie's shortcomings are most apparent in the wish sequences, which play like one-joke "Saturday time. It's only then that the film comes close to daz­ Delacroix's point is that "the network does not want of numerous scenes from cartoons, movies and televi­ zling. :to see negroes on TV unless they are buffoons." sion that feature Sambo-like portrayals of African Night Live" skits that go on far too long. Fraser, arguably the most annoying actor working When they' re apart, the weaknesses and flatness of · Surprisingly, "Mantan," starring street artists Manray Americans. ' the script prevail. 1 ' (Savion Glover) and Womack (Tommy Davidson), is an "Bamboozled" is an extraordinarily moving film in film today, crosses the line into ingratiating as an unlovable loser. "Bedazzled" isn' t a horrible movie by any means. · · absolute success. because its suggestion torments and forces viewers to In fact, it's a testament to mediocrity in its purest realize the silent crimes (even in entertainment) that He eventually grows on the viewer when Elliot's _ Director Lee calls out nearly every primarily black form. humanity often gets away with. failure to achieve his ideal life actually makes him a -~ . · TV show, from "Good Times" to "In Living Color," as - Clllrke Speicher - Adrian Bacolo more endearing person.

Rish Kunzru Nick Soares Megan Chudzik· Grad student .Junior .Junior

"It's too bad she won't "People who say "There's no crying in baseball." live, but then again, money is the root of all "A League of Their who does?" evil don't have any." Own" "Biaderunner" "The Boiler Room"

Stephanie Iacono Alison Saluti Matt Maryniak Sophmore Soph more Sophmore

"You complete me." "Brothers dont shake "I keep my friends "Jerry McGuire" hands, brothers get a close but my enemies hug." closer." ''Tommy Boy" "The Godfather"

Digimon: The Movie II :55, I :55, 4:35 Meet the Parents II :50, 12:20, 2:20, It's homecoming time. But school THEATER FOR THE LIVING ARTS (215-922~1011) Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 II :30, 2:50, 4:50, 5:20, 7:20, 7:50, 9:50, 10:20 spirit and ice blocks aren't the only SATURDAY 12, 2, 2:30, 5, 5:30, 8, I 0, I 0:30 Hootie & the Blowfish, Oct. 28, 8 p.m., $25 Remember the Titans 12:05, 2:35, 5:05, things you 'IL find on campus this week­ Lucky Numbers 12:25, 2:45, 5:25, 7:45, 7:05, 7;35, 9:35. 10:05 end. Stone Balloon: Chorduroy, 9 p.m. No Blues Traveler, Nov. 8, 8 p.m., $20 10:25 The Exorcist (2000 Version) I, 4, 7, cover with student ID . The Jayhawks, Nov. 11,9 p.m. , $15 The Little Vampire II :55, 2:15, 4;55, 9:15 FRIDAY 7:15, 9:25 CHRISTIANA MALL Deer Park: Agents of Good Roots, 10 Bedazzled II :40, 12: I 0, 2': I 0, 2:40, 4:40, Lucky Numbers 1:40, 4 :20,7: 10, 9:40, Stone Balloon: Burnt Sienna, 9 p.m., p.m. ELECTRIC FACTORY (215-627-1332) 5:10,7:10, 7:40, 9:40, 10:10 12 1 no cover with student ID Pay It Forward II :25, 2:05, 3:50, 4:45, Moby, Oct. 28, 8:30p.m., $26 The Little Vampire 2, 4:40, 7:30, East Enrl Cafe: Sin CiJy, lO p.m., free 6:50, 7:25, 9:30, 10: 15 9:50, 12 TrabatU: "Scary Movie," 7:30 p.m., The Mighty Mighty Boss tones, Oct. 31, 8 p.m., $17.50 Bamboozled 12:50 Bedazzled 2: I 0, 4:50, 7:40, I 0, 12 ''What Lies Beneath," I 0 p.m., $2 Trabant: "Scary Movie," I 0 p.m., Slipknot, Nov. 1, 8:30p.m., $25 The Legend of Drunken Master 12: 15, Dr. T and the Women 1:30,4:10, 7. 2:55, 5:15, 7:55, 10:15 9:30 " WhaJ lies Benealh," 7:30p.m., $2 Bob Carpenter Center: Art George Clinton, Nov. 8, 10 p.m. , $25 The Contender 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:45 Meet the Parents I :50, 4:30. 7:20, Garfunkel 8 p.m., $ 15 to $50 Pearson Hall: "Pippin " presented by Macy Gray, Nov. 9, 8 p.m., $25 Lost Souls 12:40, 3, 5:35. 8:05, 10:35 9:45, 12 The Ladies' Man II :45, 2:25, 5:35, l-IT AC. 8 p.m., 5 with student ID 8:05, 10:35

I' r B2 . rill·, IH .\ IE\\ . ( h:h•ht'l ' . ,:'( )()() Leave Book of ShadoliVs osed

··Boo!- of Shado11\: Hl.tir \\'itl' h :!'' IlLII Jdlrcy '-L'L'III'- to ha\'l· rl'etl\L'f"cJ a11d prolitteJ .\ rti, all F11tntai111ll~lll llt\111 the Bla1r \\'1t ch u.:;c b~ ,cJiing olflclal R atin~-:: .'t 1/.! llull--lthl'tik din. 1ucl..' ,1nd til I!!' OI'L'r the llllernet and Cll'a tlll !! the Bl.1ir \V1tch 11 11111 tour. Stl·phen l\ 1rl..cr (Stephell rumer) a11J Tn ~ t e n R; le r (Ttl,tCII Sl..ylcr) cnl1't Jdftcy·, heir a' tiH:ir tnur guide IS eakPe_...... ,o tht' l can funher rc,c.udl thc11· bonl.. . "Blair Wi tc h: ll y~ t n1~1 til I J i,tor~· )" Fnu ()ecr,en (!·.ri ca Leerh,en). a Wiccan who hL·Iie1c' th e Blair Wnch i~n · t an evil entity. anJ Kim D1anwnJ (Kiln Directm). a Goth chick 11 ith p ~yc hi c .thtlltll''>. ~d'o -.ct out into th e \\(ll\d~ 11 ith the o th er~ . Thl'Y 'let up cJnlp near the fuundation of a h o u ~e that B\' t'I..\IH\:E SI'EICIIER ha\ a con ll t'Ctlon tn the Blair Wi tch anJ then ~e t out for ~ ~ 111ght of boo;ing JnU lll. 11 hich \\'ere huricu beneath the ... a me roc k \\'here ftlm . " group of lll>Liid-bc filnllnal..er.., tr~ to cJpita ii/C the original Bl air Witch fil m wa~ fo und. on and n cJr l ~ uc~lltl) - the BL.nr W1tch my..,tlquc in They return to Jeffrey ·~ loft (a former broom fac to­ the pnll·e,~. ry ) 11 here they allempt to unrave l the m y~ t ery . The "ftctionaii;.:J" account of 11 hat haprened ~~ the Unfort unately. the fil m become~ ..,o boring no one 111\lptd ,1nd un1n~p1red "Bool.. of Shado11 ': Rlair Witch reall y care.., what happened. , " All of the characteb arc annoyi ng to the extent that Jctlrc~ P, ltter~un (Jeffrey Dnnova n ). a nat i1 e of the l' iewer roo t ~ fo r the Bla ir Witch to come and kill all Burl..ithvilk. trul;. believ e~ in the Blair \\'itch. Of of them ju ... t ... o the movie\\ ill cnu . cour,e. for rea so n~ never explai ned in the film. Jcffre) When the Blair Witch hunter... return to Jeffs home ematography. gen t movie with h1gher mlllilc.., by pu..,1ng the que~ t ion. once rc\lded 111 the local mental i n ~ t itutton . to figure o ut 11 ha t happened. they simply yell . ..,cream and argue with each 11ther. All the while. nothing hap­ What Berlin ger forgot to do 1\J' write a logical script "What i.., realit;. ?" {Jnfortunatcl). the he\! amwer the pe n .... and ca' t peor le 1\ ho can actu~lly act. ~" orpo,ed to film offer''' a nal..cd . danctng \\'tLL:III. The Gist of It " Boo I.. of Shadn11 ," belong' 111 the 'a me ~c"e r a~ "Shauo\\'<." wa'> de"ined to fa il to meet the hi gh standing aro und. act ing hysterical. Hi.., fi lm lacks origi­ ex pectations set by the original. but it doe,n' t seem like na lity and ge nu ine chill .., - basica lly everythin g that other hot ror 'cqucJ, th.ll l.lllcd tn 111 cup to their prede­ ce,,or~. \Ul'il ,, .., " I [,liltmcen :: ...... , he L\orci't 2: The anyone invo lved tncd to ma ke a good fi lm. made the origin al " Blair Witch" great. ~f .,'( ~,( ,( Sa m a n t h a S t e v e n s llcrctic" and .. p,,dHI 2." Directed hy Joe Berlinger. who received crit i c~ ! The film especially di,aprwint\ , ince it J oes ve ry lit ­ ,'c ,'c ,{ H a 111 S and vv i c h acc laim fur h i~ documentaries "B ro th e r ·~ Keeper" and tle to further the Blair Wi tch myth o lu g ~ . l n ~ tead. it\\ al ­ The 'cartc't th111 g ahuut the ftl1n '' th.ll it 11a.., made . ,'( ,'( Gie flcl a . th e g o o d \.Vi t c h "Pa radi se Lost." the film doe~ away with jerky camera lows in a p~eu d ll-p~yc h olo gic al plot that ends up a~ Clarke Spcicil<'l'. l Jllllli'I'IICI\ 1 111clud, "Pa,· /t Fonm rd" incoherent a · it is tediou ~ . ·,'( Sabrina. t he teenage w itc h rnovemenb in fa1·or of mme aestheticall y pl ea~ i n g cin- ( _\· , }- I r.!) a111/ ",\ft•ct the Pan 111.1 .. ( ,'( .'( ,'( .'c- ). For one brief moment. "Shadow~" 'eem~ an intelli-

"Bamboozled" " Bed azzled" :'\ew Line Cinemas 20th Century Fox Ra ting: ·.'c- :( -:( }d /2 Rating: -~'c- :} 1/2

Provocati1-e and diqurb ing. Spike Lee ·~ Whe n God tu r n~ a ~ilcn t car to the prayer~ of the "Bamboozled ... the \ torv of a telel'i,ion ll' riter' ~ re1·en!!e pathetic. th e re·~ ~t i ll one place they can turn - The gune a11ry . i' a pai nful -135-minute 11atch. ~ Pri n ces~ o f Darkne..,s. Pierre Delacrpix (Damon Wa yan~) i' the sole At least th at's what Ell iot (B rendan Fraser) find .., Afr ican-American 11 riter for TV ne tll'ork CNS. When he when he receives a propo it ion fro m the Devil i' rrc ~s ured by hi' white-but-1' m-blacker-than-you boss (Eli zabeth Hurley) in the terid "Bedazzled.'' Dunwitty (Michael Raparort). Delacroix unearths an Satan o ffe r Ell iot ~even w i ~hes to gain th e girl idea long thought to he ex tinct - the black-face minstrel (F r a n ce~ O'Connor) and life of hi~ J reams in exchange ~ b oll's th at 11ere prcvalelll in the 18-tOs. De I a c r o i x ·.., for his measly littl e ~n u l. ~ uggeo., t i o n of reviving ... uch a ~ b oll' is recognized as Afte r bein g ~e d uce d by the Dev il '~ bo unti ful ilurlev. thou!!h d,lll!!CtllU>il 'l'UUCtl le. ne ver quite roli ticall y incorrect. offensive and bl atantl y rac ist - a contemporary m in ~ trc l production. Bee lze boobs, Elliot sig n ~ the contract and humorl e'' achieve,- the ,,;llh ()I~ lll,lntaLJI L" IUL'it) ncce~!--a r y to p reci~ely \\'hat the struggling TV network has been At times, Lee' s fanatic views complicate the film and wackiness ensues. ... earchul!! for. form unnecessarily intense sequences . A remake of th e 1967 film of the same name. make a belil'\'Jhlc s ~ltJil " Mantan the New Mi lleniurn Mi n trel Show'' follow~ The most devastating scenes include Manray anJ "Bedazzled" lacks the fire of the origin al. substit uting The he't \L'Cnc' arc \\ hL·n h ."n ,111Ll llurlev share Womack 's ~ il e nt application of their "black face" and th e sctecn. The du() gcncr.llL' an unltkel; c hemi~ t ry the exploih of Man ta n and Sleep· · Eat. a pair of urban penis jokes for wit. fire engine-red lipstick before each taping and the clo - that mana ge' to '>ll'>t~lln the film for half tts running blacks. depicted a~ "ignorant, dull -witted. lazy and T he movie's s h o rt co m i n g~ are most apparent in the unlucky." who re locate to a Southe rn watermelon ratch. ing sequence, in whi ch Lee prov ides a c inematic collage wish sequences, whi ch play like one-joke "Satu rday time. It's on I ~ then that the I tim t.:ullle'> clll~e to daz­ of numerous scenes from cartoons, movie and televi­ zlin!!. Dclacrnix's point is th at "the network does not want Ni g ht Li ve" s ki ts th at go on fa r too long. to see negroes on TV unle~s they arc buffoom." ~ ion that feature Samho-like portraya ls of African Fra,er. arguably th e mo<,t an noying actor working When they're apJtl. the IIL'JI..ne,,e, and f'!Jtnes' of .\merican~ . th e '>t.:ript prcva1l. urpris ingly. " Mantan." starring 'trcct arti..,t~ Manra;. in film today. cro,~es th e li ne inw Ingratiating a~ an "Bambomled'' i~ an ex traordinarily mo1·ing fil m "Bed.vzlcd' t\11 t a lwrnhlc 111\l\ te hy any mean-.. (Savion Glover) and Womack ('f omm1 Da vid,on). i~ an unlovabl e loser. ab~o l ute succe~s. - bec au ~e it' suggestion torments and forces viewers to In fa ct, it' '> a te,tJment to mcdi1lLTIIY 111 it ' pure~t realize the silent crimes (even in entertainment) that He eventuall y grows on the viewer when Elliot's Director Lee call o., out nearly every pri ma rily black fa ilure to achi eve his ideal li fe actu all y makes him a form. T V "how, from "Good Times" to "In Li ving Color." as humanity often gets away with. - Clarke Speicher - Adrian Bacolo more endearin g person.

Rish Kunzru Nick Soares M egan Chudzik Grad student Junior Junior

-"'(" ''There s no crying tn ..t( "People who say "It's too bad she won't baseball." live, but then again, money is the root of all "A League of Thetr who does?" evil don't have any." Own·· "Biaderunner" "The Boiler Room"

Stephanie Iacono Alison Saluti Matt Maryniak Sophmore Sophmore Sophmore

"You complete me." "Brothers dont shake 'I keep my fnends "Jerry McGuire" hands, brothers get a close but my enemies hug ." closer ' "Tommy Boy" ''The Godfather··

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r October 27, 2000 . THE R EVIEW • B3 Franks and Wieners Newark-based film debuts in .local cinema

BY CLARKE SPEICHER not go for it." Emertninment Editor The film has already garnered considerable Movie premieres are usually reserved for the buzz in the city, after the marketing firm A grand movie houses of Los Angeles, like the Renaissance of Thought launched a campaign famous Mann Chinese Theatre. including posters featuring a man with a hot dog But on Nov. 3 and 4, that tradition '¥ill come for a head. to the Newark Shopping Center when ''Franks Damion Williams, president of Renaissance & Wieners" debuts at the AMC Cinema Center of Thought, says the campaign was intended to 3. be subliminal while still managing to captivate Filmed primarily in Newark and Wilmington the residents of Newark. and featuring a prominently local cast, ''Franks "It was meant for the savvy individuals who & Wieners" is the story of Frank Nethers (Paul actually pay attention," he says. THE REVIEW I File photo Goodman), a thirty-something loser who gives Taking a lead from the tremendous success ''Franks and Wieners'' was filmed in Newark locations like this convenience store. up on life. of 'The Blair Witch Project," Williams and Frank visits a convenience store to buy DelGiorno also used the Internet and e-mail to ters) will also be in attendance, including stars After the incredible local reaction, Williams Nyquil so he can overdose but ends up being spread the word about the film. Goodman and Roen. says the fi lmmakers now have big plans for the taken hostage by Jac~ie Lazer (Yvonne Roen) Apparently, a lot of people took notice - Goodman has lived in Delaware since the future. as she holds up the business. "Franks & Wieners" sold out its 1,000 tickets in age of 5 and began his acting career 20 years 'The way it's been building, everything Frank becomes consumed by her world of less than two weeks. ago. A former university student, he appeared in seems to be going according to plan," Williams crime and soon finds new meaning for his life DelGiorno says he was somewhat surprised several local plays over the years and makes his says. ''We're even excited about the possibility by joining Jackie's heists. by the eager response and explains that part of feature film debut with ''Franks and Wieners." of nationwide distribution." Gordon DelGiorno, who wrote and produced the allure is also the distinct local angle. Scenes The New York-based Roen also makes the DelGiorno says distributors will be at the the film with his brother Greg as part of their were filmed in places familiar to Delaware res­ leap to a film lead after appearing in indepen­ screening, but the director plans to first spread Film Brothers production company and also co­ idents, including the Park Deli on Elkton Road. dent films and plays. the film throughout Delaware. ''Franks & directed, says the movie may not be for every­ ''Everyone wants to see someone they know The planned festivities at the premiere Wieners" is already scheduled for the Rehoboth one. on screen," he says. ''Now they have that include raffles for free dinners, massages, Film Festival on Nov. lO and the Delaware Art "Some people have called it a cross between chance." hotels stays and bowling alley passes. Museum on Nov. 30. THE REVIEW I File photo 'There's Something About Mary' and 'Bonnie The ''Franks & Wieners" event will begin on The movie stub also includes a free hot dog, Since university students may not have been Promotional posters for ''Franks and and Clyde,' but there's a lot of uniqueness," he Nov. 3 at& p.m. soda and the motion picture soundtrack, featur­ able to get tickets to next weekend's event, Wieners" can be found in and around says. "There's a lot of in-your-face h.umor." Most of the 83-member cast (in comparison, ing such local artists as Matt Fagan and Daze DelGiorno is also planning a special screening Newark, where the movie was filmed. DelGiorno cautions that "uptight people may the indie hit "Slacker" had around 60 charac- Alone. for students in December. Halloween offers a slew of options BY SUSAN KIRKWOOD It's very theatrical." little bit on Tuesday, but it will be community events. Staff Reporter · Attention to detail is very different this year than in the "It' s always an exciting e vent," Deciding what to do on important to Frightland. The past." Buren says. "I know that the side­ Halloween weekend has never haunted house is a replication of a The Sto"ne Balloon will change walks are so full that you can ~ t been easy. Trick or treating seems Victorian mansion and a profes­ their regular activ ities and ho ld walk because there are so many reserved for little kids, and most sional makeup and costume mug night on Hallo ween. people." people don't appreciate overgrown designer was hired to ensure the "We have a costume party After the parade, there will be college students knocking on their characters' authenticity. planned with a DJ," general man­ the traditional trick or treating on door-s. Such characters include the ager Tim Tully says. "In years past Main Street. This year, there are several dif­ UltraVampire, Sweettooth the it has been crowded with a lot of * * * ferent activities around Newark Clown, Comstalker the 9-foot-tall people in costume." The E-52 Student Theatre co m­ that promise something for almost Scarecrow and Pigboy .. The Brickyard will also be par­ pany is presenting its third annual everyone. "Frightland is the interim ticipating in the Halloween festivi­ haunted house with the co-spon­ * * * between young kids trick or treat­ ties. sors hip of E vent Services in Off Route 13 in Middletown, ing and the parties - such as beer Manager Joe Augustine says a Perkins and the Christiana Towers carnival rides illuminated by mul­ bashes - that young people go to," bimd will fill the bar with music Residence Life. ticolored lights and the loud music Warren says. during Tuesday' s costume party. The haunted house will be held of Britney Spears seem to make "It's something for people to do " Last year, it was very festive on Oct. 28 from 7 to 11 p.m . in Frightland 2000 look like an invit­ as a family since less and less peo­ with dancing and prizes for cos­ Bacchus Theatre in the Perkins ing amusement park. ple are trick or treating." tumes," Augustine says. Student Center. The event is open A five-minute walk to the other * * * "This year, we will be changing to the public and costs $3 for those side of the carnival reveals a large Anyone over 21 can take part in the name on the 28th, so there will in costume and $4 for o thers. barn and a silo with a skeleton the 21st annual Halloween Loop in be a grand opening, too." C hris Goering, treasurer for E- painted on it. Wilmington on Friday, Oct. 27. Klondike Kate' s will be having 52, says the event promises to be a Police officers with metal detec­ A one-time $7 cover permits their usual Tuesday night DJ dance lot of fun. tors stand guard before a long line entrance into 20 participating clubs party . on Halloween, manager "It's really scary," he says, "bl!t of excited patrons. Old and young and provides free shuttle access Brian Letnaunchyn says. we won' t give away any secrets.'1 alike are waiting to see what horror with 24 buses running from 8 p.m. " A beer distributor will be here, The Trabant U niversity Cen t~r awaits in Idalia Manor, the barn of 'until 1 a.m., says Sean too," Letnaunchyn says. "We will Theatre will be showing two horror, the haunted corn maze and McLaughlin, marketing director for be having a costume contest with frightening films over the wee~ ­ the haunted hayride. the Loop. People who go out will be Street, until they were quickly prizes. end. "Scary Movie" and "What ·open Fridays, Saturdays and "The Halloween Loop was start­ dressed in costumes and the partic­ sold-out. "Tuesday night is usually busy Lies Beneath" w ill be playing on Sundays through the Halloween ed to revitalize the nightlife scene ipating clubs will be decorated and * * * here, so I think Halloween will be Oct. 27 and 28. Show times are ~ t season, the attraction is in its in Wilmington," he says. "It's just filled to capacity, McLaughlin Locally, bars on Main Street crowded, too . I expect that abo ut 7:30 and lO p.m. fourth year of drawing large num­ as big now as it was then; Between 25 percent of the people will come Also on campus w ill be a specittl says. I plan to participate in the bers of guests. 18,000 and 19,000 people come out "The Halloween Loop is Halloween spirit. However,things dressed up." Halloween presentation of ttle "We expect about 20,000 people each year." Wilmington's answer to Mardi may be different this year, says * * * Tuesday Night Coffeehouse Serie;w; . to come through," says Aven A pre-loop costume contest held Gras," he says. Brandon Giles, manager at the · The 53rd annual Newark This· will take place in the Warren, operations director. "We in front of the Grand Opera House "It' s the biggest nightclub event Deer Park Tavern. Halloween Parade will be held on Scrounge at the Perkins Student get people from all over - we on Market Street will offer prizes of the year." " Because Halloween falls on the Oct. 29 at 3 p.m. Center at 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 31. 1 have a good show so people come to the winners. First place wins Tickets for club entrance can be same weekend as Homecoming, it There are more than 40 entries * * * ,; back year after year. $100 cash, a $100 gift certificate to purchased at the door, while tickets eclipses it," Giles says. "We' ll this year, which include fl oats, The abo undin g activities th~s "The big draw is the hayride. the 821 Restaurant in Wilmington includin·g bus transportation from probably get a mix between the marching bands and large march­ Hall oween should give e v ery o ~e People love riding in the dark and and two tickets to any show at th~ Newark to Wilmington were avail­ different ·crowds that weekend. ing groups, sa ys Sharo n an alternative to begging for can4y having things jump out at them. Opera House. able at Campus Surf on Main "The Deer Park will be doing a Buren,recreation supervisor fo r door to door. : ~ TA The Screen Actors Guild strikes back

BY CLARKE SPEICHER that will last three years and will allow American Association of Advertising Entertainment Editor advertisers to show commercials on cable an Agencies, said the strike lasted as long as it Striking members of the Screen Actors unlimited number of times without paying did because both sides thought they could Guild prepared to return to work Monday actors an additional fee. make breakthroughs in the contract. after a settlement was reached between SAG Greg Krizman, a SAG spokesman, said "Each side thought it could achieve major and the advertising industry. union officials are expected to meet objectives and each was mistaken," he said. The work stoppage lasted 175 days - the Saturday to sign the contract, and actors "Both sides made compromises, which is longest in Hollywood's history - and cost could begin work as early as Oct. 30. what a negotiation is all about." · $125 million in lost production as advertis­ Paul Reggio, the strike captain for New ers went to Canada and Europe for actors. York's SAG members, says the unions now With five months left until SAG's dead­ "It was a long, hard have a stronger sense of unity after the six­ line, the resolution to the strike has caused a month strike. sigh of relief for film and television produc­ road but it was "When the strike began, we were nothing ers - the union threatened to cease produc­ more than a collection of individuals," tion on all movies and TV shows if its worth it. I think' Reggio said. "Now we' re a union." demands were not met by March. Advertisers expected SAG and AFTRA to But actors and writers could still strike we've proven how cave in to demands within the first few THE REVIEW I Internet photo again next year when negotiations for con­ weeks-, since this was the first union strike Actress Susan Sarandon speaks out in support of the Screen Actors Guild strike.· tracts between the union and major tough this union can since 1988. Hollywood studios, producers and TV net­ "We stuck together even though we were how tough this union can really be." Actors turned out in force to protest works are up for re-negotiation. really be." unproven as a union," Krizman said. "Actors Union activists will now redirect their Woods appeared at the Buick Open bearing SAG and the American Federation of are very competitive about what they do, but attention from the advertising industry to signs that read, "I'm a golf fan, and I'm teed actors who broke through picket lines and Television and Radio Artists, which have a - Los Angeles Screen Actors Guild they learned in this strike to be very gener­ off." combine,d membership of 135,000 actors, performed struck work. More recently, un ion actors booed Hurley strike captain Jack Rubinoff ous." went on strike May 1 to protect the fees paid The strike received support from such "We' re changing this from a strike hunt to at the premiere fo r her new film, each time a radio or television commercial is high-profile actors as Tom Hanks, Paul a scab hunt,'' Krizman said. "If scabs tum "Bedazzled." Hurley recently came unde( broadcast. Krizman said the union is satisfied with Newman and Susan Sarandon. Each actor themselves in or someone e lse, they will be fi re by the union for appearing in an Estee Advertisers and SAG finally reached an the agreement. donated money and spoke at rallies to help shown a modicum of leniency." Lauder ad. Hurley claimed she didn' t know agreement after advertisers agreed to give "The deal we got is better than we could the cause. SAG wi ll most likely go after the two about the strike and donated $25,000 to the SAG and the AFTRA jurisdiction over com­ have hoped for," Krizman said, "bearing in Los Angeles strike captain Jack Rubinoff most prominent scabs - Tiger Woods and guild. mercials for the Internet, increase actors' mind no one wins in a strike because you said the settlement finally gave the actors a Elizabeth Hurley. ·'SAG and AFTRA want 10 craft a good pay in commercials on cable and preserve never get back the time and money that you sense of relief and validation for their pick­ On Aug. 2, Woods caused controversy by solution and get results without having rci pay-per-play compensation for commercials lose." eting. appearing in a non-union commercial for strike," Krizman aid . ·'But, if forced to, the on the major networks. John McGuinn, a representative for the "It was a long, hard road but it was worth Buick in Canada, j ust weeks after turning un ions are capable of going out and defe nd" In exchange, SAG agreed to a contract Association of National Advertisers and the it," Rubinoff said. " I think we' ve proven down a Nike ad. ing their contracts." · f ' B4 • THE REVIEW • October 27, 2000 FEATURE FORUM Adrian Bacolo Where the streets have no name I find it hard to believe the droves of freshmen Can't miss it." Avenue, I sensed that I was being tai led. parading strips like South Chapel Street, Main So appreciative, the group of froshes scampers My suspicions were correct. Creeping slowly Street and Cleveland Avenue on Friday and away along a course randornJy chosen by moi . behind, practically chafing the curb, was a gentle­ Saturday nights actually know where they're By intervening, I feel as if I've done something man who was apparently not native to Newark. going. by implanting hope. I've given the ambitious When I turned around, he sped up (to four mph) Obviously in search of a party, freshman girls, munchkins something to do-even if they end up beside me, rolled down the passenger window of with their hair charmingly positioned and cleavage traipsing for an hour in the frosty, wintry cold. his car and said something, which I could not dis­ engagingly propped.travel from North College to But let me not be biased here. I like freshmen. cem over the blaring homs of the anxious drivers. Wilbur Street, Wilbur to Ke~haw Stret;t, Kershaw Some of m:J best friends are freshmen (lie). And I I flagged him into a nearby driveway and asked to Chapel Street. even used to be one - twice in fact, once in high him to repeat himself (it became evident English Accompanying them are guys with new, used­ school and again when I came to the university. was not his primary language). He was looking for looking Abercrombie caps and half-pressed but­ People from other lands who do not speak Kirkwood Highway. ton-downs. English are fun to play with, too. Don't go think­ "Oh," I began. ''It's that way," I said, pointing From my deluxe first-floor porch on Cleveland ing, "Oh snap, he's hating on foreigners - that's East along Cleveland A venue. "When you get to Avenue I get to wimess this phenomenon each racist." [insert first street that comes to mind], just make a weekend. No, it's not like that. right. Follow that." Back and forth they go. This side of Cleveland, I don't differentiate between a Peruvian man As appreciative as any lost driver would be, and now, that side of Cleveland. and a French woman, because with my twisted the gentleman thanked me a time or three and went And seeing this pains me- literally. mindset, aU men (and women) are equaUy created on his way. Nothing concerns me more than remaining a to be misled. My roommate later told me that Kirkwood spectator while a freshman flock cavorts in the do­ I think it's a problem of mine, almost a sick­ Highway was really not that way and that I was an or-die streets of Newark. ness, where I can't help but misdirect people. idiot. . So occasionally I take action. The humanitarian When someone asks me how to get somewhere - He also informed me the street I said to make a in me steps off the porch, and like a modem day and I don't really know the way-I still feel com­ right on only went one way- left. Moses, I provide my tribe with direction and guid­ pelled to say something rather than nothing. ance. OK, story time. I don't drive at school so I'm Adrian Baco/o is an entenaitvnent editor for The "Oh, you're looking for the party? That's down not as familiar with I-95, 896 or 273 as a student Review. When he is not misguiding the nai've, he that-a-way," I say, and my arm hails some direc­ equipped with an automobile might be. enjoys scripting a sequel to the New Testament. tion west. ''It's on the right ... You'll hear it ... Once, while walking east along Cleveland Contact him aJ [email protected] Halloween Costume Craze GH~SlS ~ffl~f C~ASl BY AMANDA GREENBERG over cover." Lee. says she was a gangster from the News Features Editor continued from B 1 The feminine personas of princesses '20s her senior year. carried out of the fort. He was buried six feet under. Will it be a witch or a gruesome killer? and angels were always popular with "I wore fishnet stockings and had a Another is the two prisoners who tried to swim the river A Yankees player or a member of young girls. play gun," she says. "I wore a guy's tie and were allowed to drown by a guard. 'Their hands went N'Sync? Maybe Luke and Princess Leia, "When I was little my favorite costume and a work shirt. I wore a skirt and blazer down last," Jennings says. "Sometimes you' ll see hands or how about Gore and Bush? was a fairy princess," says junior Ashley too." stretch·ing out of the water." Halloween is almost here and costume Peterson. "I had a crown, dress, wings, Another popular costume is the infa­ A distant shriek echoes in the recesses of the fort. "Don't stores are overflowing with new options. wand - everything. I even had green mous baby outfit. worry, that's just my ex-wife," Jennings jokes. But the audi­ However, it's the costumes of the past that glue-on eyelashes to match my dress." "Many people are babies - they wear ence's laughter is ahnost hysterical now-they shriek too as are dear to many students' hearts. Freshman Katie Lang says the cos­ pajamas and have a pacifier," Lee says. a white-clad woman runs through the crowd. "When I was in fourth grade, my broth­ tumes of her younger years were tradi­ "Most high school kids are babies at least Volunteers dress up in period costumes to fill in when the er and I went out as Popeye and Olive tional. once." real ghosts don't appear, Jennings says. Oyl," junior Lisa Iannace says. "I was an angel one year with elastic Enthusiasm doesn' t wane when stu­ But sometimes the line between the living and the restless "My mom made the costumes from wings that had glitter on them," she says. dents go away to college. Many universi­ dead blurs. scratch after asking us what we wanted to "My mom made the costume - she was ty students use their energy to concoct Once, Jennings says, a park volunteer was putting on his be." very crafty. interesting costumes on All Hallows' Eve. costume in the fort's dressing room. Iannace says her mom worked hard "One year, I remember, my friends and Peterson says last year her costume In the mirror, he glimpsed two perfectly dressed creating unique outfits. · I went as witches," she says. was extremely creative- she might even Confederates walking by - ''He'd never seen any this "My mom made my Cabbage Patch Freshman Jessica Lee says she took do it again. good," Jennings says. doll an outfit- the doll was Sweet Pea," part in trendier fads in her youth. "I was a Freudian slip," she says. "I got When the reenactor peeked out the door, the men had dis­ she says. "She made my brother muscles "I was Rainbow Brite's horse one a white slip from Goodwill and wrote psy­ appeared. from materials and we stuffed them so year," she says. "I was Casper once, too." chology terms like 'id,' 'ego,' 'superego' These tales are delivered in a solemn tone, and the audi­ they were puffy and attached them to his, In high school, students put the car­ and 'Oedipus complex' all over it." THE REVIEW I Andrew Mehan ence begins to feel the chill in the dripping halls lit only by arms with elastic." toonish, packaged costumes aside and "It was really a great costume." Main Street will be awash with candle lanterns. Groans and footsteps are heard in the dark. Senior Lauren Rowand says her outfits used their imagination, hitting thrift stores Rowand says her sophomore year cos­ ·costumed kids ·on Oct. 29 after Couples clasp hands. Some high-school kids crack jokes, were always fun whep she was in grade and their parents' closets. tume was probably one of her most mem­ the annual Main Street parade. but they grow more subdued as they venture deeper into the school. Dickerson says his junior year in high orable ones. fortress. "When I was little, I was Yoda from school was one of his better years for cos­ "I was a Wu-Tang killer bee," she says. "My costume consists of a Hawaiian The hour-and-a-half tour ends with no avowed sightings, 'Star Wars,' "she says. "I had a mask and tumes. "My costume was all black with yellow no visions of waving hands or bloody bodies. everything." . shirt, fake mustache and fake chest hair "My friends and I dressed up as people felt stripes, wings and even antennae, and and a wig," he says. "I ·am going as As they re-board the ferry, people are already talking "Star Wars" themes seem to have been from the '70s," he says. ''We wore bell­ of course a Wu-tang symbol. about going out to get ice cream or a few beers. popular back in the early '80s due to the Magnum P.l. I am a big fan of the show bottoms - white ones - a leisure suit · "First I was going to be just a bee then and never miss an episode." · · But one boy; who looks about six, is still caught up in the variety of costumes the movie inspired. shirt, one with the ruffles on the chest an~d someone suggested the Wu-Tang bee, so I So remember there are no dumb cos­ ghostly adventure. He tugs on his weary mother's sleeve. "I really love 'Star Wars,' and when I chunky gold chains. added the symbol." tumes - the wackier, the better. And if ''I saw a person's head," he says. ''It was all white. It was was about 8 I dressed up like Darth "It was really funny to see our group of Junior Jeff Evans says he is going out you're cute enough, people might still on a shelf. Vader," junior Taylor Dickerson says. about six people walking around like we for the first time this year. and is excited give you candy. ''Wasn't it scary?" "I had the plastic mask and the pull- were stuck in the wrong generation." about his costume.

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CL'lllll\cr the hlanng hom-."' the .1\l\HILI\ um·e''· \\'tlbur SllL'L'l. \\'ilhtn to Ker~h;"' Sucet. 1-\. er~h:m SuniL·ul 111:0 I"X' ~ tlnciiJ, are fre~htnen (lie). 1\nu I l ll.1ggcJ h1111 llll<> a nc.uh; dll\l'lla) .IIlli a-.kcd HI ( ·h.tJll'l su·L·ct c\ en u~d tu lx <111c - l\\ icc 111 !.tel. llllcc 111 high lwn to Jqxat him~ if ( 11 bee.UllL' c1 iJent Fngli-.11 :\L·comp.tn) mg th~· m an.· gu)' 11 Jlh IlL'\\ . 11\l.'U­ ~chool aml aga tn ''hen I Glllll' tu ll1e u n ivcr~it) . 1\J'> not In~ pnnwt: langi!Jgc ). l k ""' ltK>~mg f01 I.. x l ~lllg .\lxn.:n HnhJc cap-. ,uJd h.tlf· pll:'~'ed hut­ Peorlc I rum other lanJ., "ho Jo not '>!'><.'a~ KJJl\l tK >tll [i gllwa;. lllll·d< 1\\ n\. l:ngl"h arc fun ll> play '' ith, too. Don 't go thi ll ~ ­ "Oil:· llxgan. ' It \ that \\J)' ... I ~;JJJ. po11ning Frol11111) delu\c fiP.t ~ fl phcnnllll'non each raci~1. .. I in,en fiN ... u·cct th:ll conJe\ to mind 1. JLI\1 make J 11cdcnd. No. it.~ not like· ll1.11. nghi. Fullm1 that. .. B.td .111d lonh thl') !:!''·'I hi'> '>ide nf Cleveland. I Jnn't difkrcl!liate between a Peruvian man A::. appreci:Hil't' a.'> all) lo-.1 dri1er \\Ould he. .111d tll 111 . ll1.11 ~iJe uf Cln eland. anJ a Frend1 " oman. hccaLL'><' with my twi~ted the gentil'm.tn thanked 111e a time or three anJ went :\ nJ 'ceing llu-. pairh llll' litcr.tlly. minu.\l'l. al l nll.'n (and" omen) arc cqu:.t lly crcatcJ on hi' way. Nothillg conccnb llll' more Ul.Ul rcmain ing a to he mi'>lcd. My nxllnmate later toiJ me llwt Kitlwo1Kl '>!'l<.'Ciator '' hile a frc'>h man floc~ c.tvot1.'> inll1c Jo­ I thin~ it·, a prnhlem of m111e. almn~ t a ~ick­ llighway 11 :L'> really not that way and ll1.11 I wa~ an or-d JL' -.u·ceh nf Ne'' ar ~ . nc~~- "here I c.m ·t help hut mi~dircct fXOplc. idiot. So ncc.L\Ionall) l ta~e action. The humanitarian When sonxo11c :hb me hm1 to get ~lllll'\\ here ­ l ie al-.<1 infimneJ nll' the \U"CC I I saiJ to ma~e a 111 llll' '>ll'P'> oil the porch, anJ ltke a nx >tlem Jay ;md I J nn ·t really ~11ow the 11ay-l ~ti l l feel com­ right on only went one way lefi . Mo\l'~. I pnl\ JUt: Ill) trilx 11 ith dirceuun and guid­ pcllcJ to say "Oilll'thing rather ll1:u1 null1i11g . anec. OK. "tory time. I Ullll.t drive at "chool '>O I'm Adrian Bau•lo is an Cllfl'ltainmcnt cditorjin· 77u• "Oh. you're looking fi 1r ll1c JXU1) '! Tha t' ~ Jown not as fa miliar with 1-95. 896 or '27J a_, a -.tudent Rcl'iCII'. When he 1.1 not mi.,guiding the IU/1\'C, he tha1-a-11ay ... I '>a). anJ m) ann had!- "onll' Jirec­ eq uippeJ will1 an autonx1hile might he. enjoy.1· .1cripting a ~equc/ to the Ne11· 11·.\tmnent. tion 11e~t. "It''> on ll1<: nght ... You' ll hear it ... Once. while walking ca.'t along Cle1elanu Cnntacr him m adrianb0 udcl.cdu. Halloween Costume Craze HY A :\1Ar\DA GREE:\HI·: IH; o1·er cover. Lee ~ays -.he was a gang~tcr frllm the continued from 8 I '• It\ I t'Uflllt'' l.dlfm The feminine persona' of prince,,es ''20s her !- almost here and costume Peter,on. "I had a crown. li re\~. wi n g~. Another ptlpular co,tutne i' the infa­ A distant shriek echoes in ll1e recesses of ll1e fon. "Don·! s t o re~ :Jre m erfl owing wi th new option-.. wand - everything. I even had green mous ha hy outfit. worTy. that's just my ex-wife," Jennings jokes. But the audi­ However. it' ~ the co~ tu me' of the pa-.1 th at glue-on eye lashes to match my dress.'' "Many people are hahie' - they wear ence's laughter is al most hysterical now -they shriek too as are dear to many s tude nt ~' hearts. Freshman Kati e Lang says the cos­ pajamas and have a pacifier:· Lee "aY'· a white-clad woman runs through the crowd. "When I was in foun h grade. my broth­ tumes of her younge r years were tradi­ "Most hi gh school kids are bahie~ at least Volunteers dress up in period costumes to fill in when the er and I went out as Popeye and Olive tional. once real g h ost~ don' t appear. Jennings says. Oyl. .. junior Lisa lann:Jce s:1ys. "I wa s an ange l one year with elastic Enthusiasm doesn't wane when stu­ But sometimes the line between the living and the restless "My mom made the co>tumes fro m wings that had gliner on them.'' she says. dents go away to college. Many universi­ dead blurs. scratch after :Js king us what we WJnted to "My mom maJ e the costume - she wa~ ty students u~e their energy to concoct Once. Jenning' 'ay. . a park volunteer W~ an episode." But one hoy. who looks about six. is still caught up in the variety of cn~ tum es the mol'ic in , pired. shin, one with the ruftles on the chest and someone suggested the Wu-Tang bee, so I So remember there arc no dumb cos­ ghostly adventure. He tugs on his weary mother\ sleeve "I reall y love 'St:Jr Wars.· and when I ch unky gold chai ns. added the symbol.'' "It It lllme~ - the wackier, the hener. And if "I saw a person's head," he says. wa..<, all white. was was about 8 I dres~e d up like Darth .. It was really fun ny to see our group of Junior Jeff Evans says he is going out you're cute enough, people might stil l on a shelf. Vader:· junior Taylor Di cker, nn says. about six people walking around like we for the fir t time this year and is excited give you canJ y . "Wasn't it scary·r· .. , h:Jd the plastic mask and the pull - were 'tuck in the wrong generation.'' about hi s costume.

D's Nuts by Dan Strumpf Opposable ThuQl.9ablambert A weekly chronicle of the bizarre and unbelievable Inventor, philosopher, prophet But in order to find the real nuts in this to the leaders of member countries while the entrepreneur, scholar- Alex Cbiu is a man fruitcake, scroll down past his design for a rest would be sold to investors. of many talents. teleport:ltion device. A COJPOration would eam money through But to fully gauge the depths of Chiu's Go beyond the link advertising Chiu's taxation and would give a {X>rtion to share­ genius, one need go no further than his Web intention to build a machine to cure the dis­ holders as profit. site, www.alex.chiu.com. abled. By improving itself, a corporation would Here, Chiu hawks his patented immortali­ · Here, at the very bottom of Chiu's Web increase its value, attracting more sharehold­ ty rings (supposed to prevent physical aging), page, lies the answer to the dreams of every ers. Incompetent leaders would cause their as weU as a confused collection of his other swimsuit-clad Miss America contestant corporation to lose money and investors,

1 • inventions, philosophies and ideas. Chiu. who ranks himself among such resulting in a loss of their own profits. I great thinkers as Thomas Edison and Albert At this point Chiu makes the most pro­ Einstein, has found the answer to one of the found statement of his entire discourse: "So I most troubling questions of our time - bow money becomes the main motivation for our do we create world peace'? future politicians." In only 10 rambling pages, composed with . _I have no idea how this would be a I the grammatical skill and spelling ability of a change, but who am I to question such a fourth grader, Chiu explains the only way to genius? ' ~ achieve peace. The corporations of tile world would be Logically, the fl.fSt step toward world overseen by a mysterious group, dubbed by I peace is World War ID, according to ChilL Chiu ''the agency," that would bold IX>Wet Only after a nuclear holocaust can the over all the militaries in a corporation. 1he remaining members of the human race grasp agency would only declare war if 80 percent the need for world peace. It may seem harsh of a corporation's citizens approve. at first. but after studying this plan, a little Why didn't I think of this? AJI we have to radiation poi.'IOning sounds like a blessing. do to attain world peace is hand our fates over After wwm, Chiu suggests consolidating to a mysterious group of world leaders who the strongest countries in the world into a cor­ wiU make the decisioos for us.

THE REVlEW /lnternel pholo poration. Other countries would also come If you don't understand this, don't wony, Alex Cbiu, budding world peace together in small groups and form separate - neither do I. But have no fear, Alex Chiu theorist, shares his unique ideas on corporations. is on the case, and with his immortality rings, his Web site, www.alexchiu.com. Shares of a corporation would be granted he' IJ have a long time to think things through.

Sh 0 rty by Hedy lankelvich

1 October 27, 2000.THE REVIEW.BS

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Community Help Wanted j ~,_I_H_e_lp_W_a_n_t_ed_ __,j.__I __F_o_r_S_a_le __ __Jj ;_I.:._____T_r_a_v_e=J ·=·===: Community Bulletin Board Bulletin Board .A.G . Edwards & Sons Inc .. a nationally Tl-82 Graphics Calculater tor sale. $75 Largest selection of Spring recognized New York Stock Exchange The ·'Write•· Help: editing: school 777-0407-Lauren Break Destinations, including member firm , is seeking a candidate for an Cruises! Foam Parties, Free applications and essays (undergrad. GARDENING WORKSHOP: German Christmas Festival - entry level· position ass.isting a registered grad, foreign); student assignments; 1993 Olds 98 Touring Sedan. Drinks and Club Admissi~;~ns. "DESIGN YOUR DREAM ·'Christkindi-Markt"-will be held on broker in new business development and resumes: job search; career help. Excellent cond., fully loaded. $5000. Rep positions and Free Trips LANDSCAPE'' (three parts), Tues. Sat. Nov. II trom llam-5pm at the portfolio administration. Part time. 12-15 Call (302) 764-2099 or email: Call 737-3276. available. Epicurean Tours·t- Nov. 7. 14 and 21 (;30-11 :30am. Delaware Saengerbund. The festival hrs/week. $7/hr. Send Resume to: Mr. writeon99@hotmai I. com 800-231-4FUN. Sign onto our University of Delaware Cooperative will feature German food, hand craf\s, Michael A. Mele, Jr., P.O. Box 8096. Extension, 91 0 S. Chapel' St, Newark. Christmas decorations, imported Newark, DE 19716. Orcall731-2131. website today. · Announcements- Conducted by NCC Master Gardeners. German gills. candies and chocolates. www.EpicuRRean.com as well as a rallle, white elephant sale Child care providers needed. Call for info. Call 831-COOP to pre-register. Earn $1000-$2000 this quarter with the and book table. There will be Bavari an Wage neg. 302 836 9906. Roslynn Meadowlark Clinton Bouncepasses Elian to easy Campusfundraiser.com three hour Wanted! Springbreakers' Cancun. Bahamas. dance performances at I pm and 3pm, Fidel: Miami in Uproar. Read all about it in fund raising event. No sales required. Florida & Jamaica. Call Sun Coast Santa Claus will arrive at 3:30pm. and Videographer needed Oct 2 7-30 (one day or www.lredoniapost.com. the world's largest Interweave-New Castle County Tri­ Fundraising dates are filling quickly, so Vacations lor a tree brochure and ask how the rallle will be drawn at 5pm. all days) Sports Experience a plus Call newspaper coop. ' Congregational Chapter Halloween call today! Contact you can Organize a small group & Eat Handicapped accessible. Free (904 )462-2234 or email Dance lor Gay. Lesbian. Bisexual and Campusfundraiser.com at (888) 923-3238 Drink, Travel Free & Earn Cash! Call 1- Admission. Located at 49 Salem [email protected] Audible Illusions DJ's has a new number Transgendered persons and their allies or visit www.campusfundraiser.com 888-777-4642 or email Church Rd. in Newark . For more info. , Call 994-6600 to· book your date party or and friends. Saturday. Oct. 28 at 7:30 [email protected] call 0 02\ 3611-9454. formal pm, .Unitarian Universalist Fellowship. WE ARE LOOKING FOR STUDENT TUTOR NEEDED! Math tutor for 8th grade student. Three I hr. Sessions per WillaRd, Park Place Park, Newark. DEVElOPMENT OFFICERS TO DO Call 792-1183 for ·intormation. ON CAMPliS FliNDRAISING FOR . week. $10. Per hr. ASAP til' Dec. !st. Spring Break! Deluxe Hotels, Reliable Air, Delaware GIS 2000 Conlerence will be DEL\ WARE. Responsibilities include Will bring student to you if needed. Alpha Sigma Alpha-Great retreat last Free Food, Drinks and Parties! Cancun, held Fri .. Nov. 17 at the Sheraton Hotel Call atler 4 pm 73 7-8831. weekend! You girls are the best! contacting alumni to update records and Jamaica, Bahamas, Mazatlan & Florida. FREE TOW SERVICE!' The National in Dover, DE. This event is geared seek support for academic programs and Travel Free and Earn Cash' Do it on the MS Society. Delaware Chapter offers toward both novice and experienced PAID MGT. INTERNSHIPS FOR Kholanhips. $7/hr plus monetary Web! Go to StudentCity.com or call 800- free tow service to anyone who donates users, policy makers on the state. SUMMER 2001. GET "REAL LIFE" STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES incentives. Caii831-48S9 for an 293 ~ 1443 tor info. a car, van, truck, R V or motorcycle to county and local levels as we II as EXPERIENCE EARN $6-10,000, ON­ TELEPHONE COMMENT LINE-Call the interview. help raise funds for valuable local members of the public who are LINE APPLICATIONS AND MORE "comment line" with questions. comments. interested in geographic public policy. Early Spring Break Specials! Cancun & programs and research. Donations may INFQ @ ":_~w ;tuitionpainters.com and/or suggestions about out services-831- also be tax deductible. For more info, Registration deadline is f'ri .. Nov . 10, ... , 4898 Jamaica trom $389! Air. Hotel. Free Meals. Assistant teacher positions available, Drink! Award Winning Company! Group call Bill or Susan at (41 0) 527-1770 or for additional ·info, please call: (302) MWTh 2-6pm. lor our one year old 1-800-MS-AUT0-4. 831-8971. Parcels, an outstanding company Leaders Free! Florida Vacations $129! · program. Day Care located inN. Newark. springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386 serving DE law firms & Courts, · PREGNANT? LATE AND WORRIED? Call Edu-Care 453-7326. has various opportunites for Pregnancy testing.. options counseling and Delaware Hospice presents its 2000 Mathematical Sciences Dept. sharp. Energetic people. FT hr PT, contraception available through the Student Festival ofTrees. Nov. 17-19. Oberod announces the lo ll owing seminars: flex scheduling.·Casual, team Health Service GYN Clinic. For information "Discrete Mathematics·· with Prof. RAISE $1600-$1700 +GET FREE CAPS ...... Conference Center. Rt. 52, North atmosphere. Call 658-9971 or an appointment, call 831-8035 Monday Yoonjin Lee on Fri . Oct.' 27 at 3:30pm T-SHIRTS & PHONE CARDS! SPRING BREAK Centreville. 10-4 pm daily. The through Friday 8:30-12 and I :00-4:00. in Ewing 204. and ·'Applied Math This one week fundraiser requires no Delaware Hospice annual fundraiser Confidential services. 200.1 Seminar: lntro to Forward and Inverse investment and a small amount of time from will feature a magnificent display of Scattering" with Prof. Peter Monk on you or your club. Qualified callers receive a Jamaica, Cancun, decorated trees and wreaths, Fri . Oct. 27 at 3:30pm in Ewing 436. tree gill just tor calling. Call today at Be a Substitute Teacher in the Florida, Barbados, entertainment, ratlles and vendors. For J-800-808-7442 X 80 Christiana School Dist., Chances are ·information call 478-5707. you are already qualified, Weekly For Rent Bahamas and Padre. pay, excellent benefits. training, Free Meals & Drinks•••• The Sivananda Yoga Center. Unitarian flexible hours. Free fingerprinting at Come out and join over 300 runners Universal Fellowship. 429 Willa Rd .. Available to type and/or edit any typing Zoned 4 Bedroom/ 4 tenant townhouse. Book by the Kelly otlice tor all applicants. and walkers tor the Arby's Riverlront Newark. DE presents a Free Light requests you may have. Call (302)366- 8 Madison Dr. Expanded kitchen, TV room Nov. 3rd. AS~i ' Vegetarian Indian Dinner. Sunday, 8816 for more information or email Kelly Educational Staffing I OK/5K Run/Walk benefiting Big 323-4748. in basement, AC, WID, Dishwasher. Brothers Big Sisters of Delaware. Nov. 19. 6pm. All are welcome. [email protected] $975/mo. Available immediately. Lease Q Call for .. • begins at 8:30am on Oct. 28 at Frawley M editation workshop will be given term neg. 475-2581. ' FREE Info "' • Stadium in Wilmington. Free T-shirts, Dec. 2 from 8am to 4pm. $30/person. Work with Zig Ziglar. Learn and The Roadhouse Steak Joint is prizes, cash raffles and a Halloween We oll'er authentic yoga classes. 57 Madison Dr. 2 Bdrm avail. 2 Bath pack or vlst us on-line EARN from your dorm. Global ,looking for self-motivated fast Costume Contest for kids! For more Mondays 7pm-8:30, 6 classes for $70. $350 + uti I. Newly Renovated upstairs. Internet Gold mine for only S19.95. paced individuals to fill our sunsplashtours.cotn info call 654-6400, or visit Marathon We meet every Sunday at 6pm-all are Close to Campus. Call Kazy 837-1863 or Free Info server,' hostess, bartender, and bus 1-800-426-7710 Sports at www.mscal.com. welcome! For more information. please At:www.zigbiz.com/rhino/zol.html person positions. We work around .lay 382-9002 c~ ll 234-8553 . ·school schedules. Only 10 minutes from· U of D. Earn top dollar while Efficiency Apartment for rent. Call for """" """" Arden Folk Gild announces the Less than I 0 minutes from campus. into anytime. 302-737-7923. ' ...... in school. Please apply in person at ...... tollowing upcoming dance events: Folk Cavaliers Country Club is seeking food 4732 Limestone Road in the Pil(e Dancing with lsmat Shah. beginners servers and line cooks for the member Great Deals for Students and Creek Shopping center. Call 302 2 BR Apt. Priv Entrance. E. Main St. welcome, Nov. I 7:30-9:30pm, $4. dining and banquet areas. Great pay and Teachers for Travel Departing 892-Beef for directions Avail Jan I. $600/mo. 215-345-6448. Contra Dance with George Segebade, working environment. Flexible schedules Betwren November 1-December Nov. 5, lessons I :30-2pm. dance 2- and golfing.priveledges available. Please II, 2000 A prime location in Newark w/ private 5pm, $7. Square and Folk Dancing call Gina or Mr. K at 73 7-1200 entrance, oft' street parking and much New Yo!"' and London: $279 plus tax with Dave Brown and Liz Dubravcic. inore under $720! $100.00 security and 10 . beginners welcome. Wov. ~ ; 7:30- deposit special to qualified applicants, ARE YOU ADDJCTED TO MAKE­ Paris. France: $349 plus tax and ID 9:30pm. $4. For more info on these but must act now! Call 368-2357. Need UP? Would you like to earn $500- Dublin: $389 plus tax and ID events or to learn about others. please $1500 every month sharing witb your Singapore: 5799 plus tax and ID call478-7257. Money? friends how to use the make-up you Looking for a place to l.ive? Sydney. Australia: $1299 plus tax and love? Call 893-2977 Www.housing I 0 l.net 1D Your move off campus! Costa Rica: 5459 plus tax and ID Read THE REVIEW Huge 4-day sale (10/24 - 10127): You Could PARENTS-STl}DENTS - Buy Europe: $339 plus tax and ID Classifieds to find your own townhouse for 4. Abercrombie & Fitch Advertise Here! Minimum down payment, positive Up tu Six Month Stay! a job that wiD cash flow~ increasing equity, tax Catalog Customer Service break. For details call Chem. Prof. National Student Travel Service Call the Review! H you ll'e Interested in working in 1 ~02 -737 - 1771. 9 Haddon ~venu e work for YOU!!! cool, ceauel end fun environment · Haddonfield, NJ 08033 831-2771 within welking diatllnce of the 800-257-7446 University of O.lewere cempua, end hive the ebllity to Interect with people, IMS he1 immediete openings inn our A&F Cell Center locetld on Meln StrHt. Full Paid Training Good Luck IMS Ia now hiring entry-laval phone reprenntlltivea for receiving !r.- , T~t fA21~ iS tv01 Bound telephone orders for our A&F At Megulne eccount. If you have 1 !t's Ali't'e! ~tP,JKtMtt. pieeaant voice, end excellent listening skills, we will treln you to Pt(Y(U. Homecoming help Abercrombie & Fitch customer• Hours September 5-November 21: piece their orders end enawer their quealiona. IMS Ia open 24 hours • · UD Football!! dey, 7 deya 1 week. Some weakenda ere required. Full and Part-Time GOOD LUCK ON Day, N1ght and Evening ~.. 1on -Thur: 8am-12 midnight Please epply In person at lnterectlva Merketlng Services, Inc., 13 Haines • Friday: 8am-8pm StrHt, Newerk, DE 19711 , on the corner of Meln and Haines Streets. Saturday: 9am-8pm Entrence In reer of building. I M s Sunday: Ham- 12 midnight A NewRoads Company EOEJMJF/DN MID-TERMS!!!!

.. .I B6 • THE REVIEW • October 27, 2000 ..

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cii¥~ ...... ' .. watch the blue hens . peck out the Good LuckU.ofD... • I ··~•. .., ''. ~::,. ':; :.• : ~., ' James . . . Football Teaml< .-.. .: ·· ·· . '·" ,·. madison ., bulldogs ' ' ·at . . UD's HOMECOMING . . 6uses will be running to and from . . the UD football games . . Oct. 28 James Madison 12:00 PM Buses start at 10:30 AM No,,_ 4 New Hampshire 1:00 PM Buses start .at 11 :30 AM . Nov. 18 Villanova-- 1:00 PM Buses start at 11 :30 AM

.' Stops on Route: Laird (Ray St., Pencader, Towers), East (Perkins), West (Rodney/Dickinson), School Lane, University Courtyard, Towne Court Supported by: . the Resident Student Association (RSA), Delaware Undergraduate Student Congress (DUSC) and Student Centers

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BY JOE O'DONNELL Newark. Swff R•porttr "We need to go down there wi th Last March, in the frigid cold of a road trip mentality," Brandwene Minot State in North Dakota, the said. Delaware ice hockey team faced off "We have to be more united, against Towson University in the more disciplined and more intense, American Collegiate Hockey he added." Association National Tournament. It will not be an easy task for No. It was the Hens first tilt in the 7 Delaware (4-1) to skate into round-robin tournament. Maryland and sweep the series Coming in seeded No. 8, from the No. 8 Tigers (2-1 ). Delaware was the favorite against Nonetheless, revenge is on the its perennial Hens' mind as they expect to rival, the escape with two wins. No. 9 "We owe them one," junior ICE Tigers. defenseman Ryan Falvey said . HOCKEY However, Intense, exciting and bitter are the outcome three words that aptly describe the of the game rivalry. was not what the Hens expected. Since the 1997-98 campaign, the With 6:44 remaining in regula­ Hens have gone 6-3 against their tion, Towson's Earl Ambler scored most hated opposition. a back-breaking goal to make the In eight of those nine contest-s, score 6-4, erasing almost all hope the winning team has not emerged of a Delaware comeback. THE REVIEW/Andrew Mehan victorious by more than three goals . THE REVIEW/Christopher Bunn ·Towson added an empty-net goal Sophomore forward Geo Harris braces for a check in a game ear­ The only exception was in Sophomore forward Maria PoUaro (dark jersey) battles for con­ late in the third period, thus finish- · lier this season. The Hens take on local rival Towson this weekend: February of the 1998-99 season trol of the baD in a game earlier this season. UD is 11-5-1 this year. ing off the Hens 7-4. when Delaware blasted Towson 9- That devastating loss still lingers "I don't think anybody who was going down there." 3. in the thoughts of many associated on this team last year has forgotten The two game series will mark "They are our biggest rival," with Delaware hockey as the team one second of that," Hens head the first games on the road this sea­ Brandwene said. "We need to be Boston trip key prepares to play the Tigers twice coach Josh Brandwene said. son for Delaware. Last season the ready to go down there and pick up this weekend. "That is a huge motivator for us Hens went 10-4-1 away from two wins." to Hens season Yanks win Game 4 BY JAMES CAREY " We have to focus on the Assistant Sports Editor whole attack," Valoris said. "We Two games. need to get everyone involved, continued from page B8 out, this time from Glendon After 17 grueling contests including the midfielders." The crowd erupted. Rusch. Rusch, who was facing filled with blood, sweat and The America East Player of Fans were on their feet, clap­ pinch-hitter Jose Canseco, gave tears, the Delaware women's soc­ the Week, freshman forward Fran ping, yelling. Fireworks shot out the crowd what it wanted. It was cer team must beat its next two Termini, will need to continue from beyond the center-field wall two outs, two balls and two opponents to reach the America her outstanding play to spark the and ticker tape exploded into the strikes. Canseco watched strike East Tournament. Delaware offense. air in the right-field corner. three go right past him. Winning one of the matches The Terriers not only have a It was new life for the Mets and "This is it," proclaimed one Mets seems feasible for the Hens, (11- great defense - they also have a for the fans as the team had quick­ fan. "We're gonna do it." 5-1, 4-3 America East) as they potent offense. ly pulled within one run behind its Bottom of the sixth and in comes face Northeastern (10-5-l, 4-3) Reigning America East Player superstar. Jeff Nelson, much to the delight of on Sunday.' of the Year Deidre Enos will The monster was again "out of the crowd, who believed the Mets But Delaware needs to triumph cause numerous problems for the its cage" and the fans, who were could get to Nelson as they had in in both road games - including Hens. once laying back in their seats, the recent past. first-place Boston University The senior forward has 15 were now on the edge of them. "We love this guy," another fan (11-6, 7-0) today at 7 p.m. goals on the season, making her Could it be another "Amazin'" said. "Let's go Mets." "We have to win these next the main scoring threat Delaware comeback? These fans had seen Not this time. two games," senior defender Lisa needs to focus on restraining. this before. The drama. The enthu­ After giving up a lead.!.off single Valoris said. "Otherwise we are Senior midfielder Mandy siasm. This was nothing new to to Todd Zeile, Nelson retired not making the tournament." Merritt said Enos is the highest them. It's the way Mets games are Robin Ventura, then induced Valoris said she expects the priority defensively and stopping scripted. It's what gave them the Benny- Agbayani, the Mets' Game Hens to compete with the Terriers her game could energize the league's most come-from-behind­ 3 savior, to line out to him. Nelson because they have the pressure of Hens. wins this season. turned and lobbed the ball over to maintaining an undefeated con­ "We have to shut her down," There was only one problem - first, doubling off Zeile. ference record. she said. "The chal­ the Yankees and their bullpen. "You've got to be kidding." "This is the biggest lenge of not letting her Mets fans tried to stay focused "Oh, come on. Can't we get a game of the season for WOMEN'S score will raise our on their mission: to drown out break?" us," she said. "We level of play." Yankees fans and help their team Mets fans reverted back to their have nothing to lose. s<:l~~R Valoris agreed with - wi:n. seats.,------We are the under- Merritt, saying Enos is In the fourth, the crowd was As Nelson got more batters out, THE REVIEW/Domenico Montanaro dogs." vital to BU's attack. loud after a Jay Payton single. the crowd got quieter, except for ''Freddy" shows his support for the Yankees before Game Three at The strength of BU is its "The defense needs to mark But the Amazin's failed to the Yankees fans. Shea Stadiwn. The Yanks led the series 3-1 priorto last night's game. defense. [Enos] tight," she said. "We have advance him. Yankees fans began to tease and In their America East victo­ to stop her dribbling." The crowd was loud again in the taunt the home crowd. cohort and shouted into the crowd were smiling, high five-ing and ries, the Terriers have only ' However, the greatest factor in top of the fifth when Jones struck "Let's Go Yankees" chants began "This is the major leagues, not the pumping fists. Even down the allowed one goal all season. the. match-up may not lie in· out the dangerous Jeter and then to grow loud, which were coun­ minor leagues." Then he went on ramps to the street, Yankees fans Overall the squad has relin­ Delaware's game plan. got Bernie Williams to line out to tered with "Yankees Suck." to mock the Mets' playoff anthem, chanted with pride, "Let's Go quished 16 goals. The energy the Hens have after ·} Mike Bordick at shortstop. Some of the taunting got out of "Who Let the Dogs Out?" · Yankees, Let's Go Yankees." To Delaware must be able to pen­ winning three games in a row But in the bottom half of the control, and five of New York's He changed the words and sang which Mets fans replied the same etrate the stingy BU defense and and snapping their. four-game inning, when David Cone was finest had to break up at least one his own sa'f"castic anthem, begging they had all · night long - score on the few chances the losing streak could provide the brought in to relieve Neagle and scuffle in the right-field section of the question, "Who Let the Mets "Yankees Suck." Hens might get. intangibles Delaware needs to face Piazza, the crowd came to its the upper deck. Out?" Only this time it didn't hold as "They are a defensive team," beat the Terriers. feet looking for some more hero­ The Mets fans were frustrated. In the bottom of the ninth, the much weight and a sole, booming Valoris said. "We have to capital­ "It was nice to get out of our ~· ics. The Yankees fans were gloating. Yankees contingent stood on its Yankees fan's voice prevailed. ize on all of our opportunities." slump and get· back on track," No, Mighty Casey did not strike In the bottom of the eighth, feet in the sold-out stadium of "Hey, who's up 3-1? C'mon." She added the offense has to Merritt said. "Hopefully, we can out, but he popped out weakly to Yankees closer Mariano Rivera more than 55,000 and begged A chuckle came over Yankees play as a unit instead of relying bring this momentum into the second base. And once more, the came on and brought his "A" game Rivera for a strikeout to end the fans. on the forwards to win the game. game." crowd was deflated. with him. Rivera, who was pitch­ game and seal the Mets' fate. "The series ain' t over yet," said Come the sixth inning, Mets ing on just two nights' rest, kept Rivera reared back and blew a one Mets fan. fans were looking for anything to the Mets bats and the crowd quiet. fastball by Matt Franco. Suddenly, "Give it up," the voice respond­ cheer for. They were on their feet One Yankees fan with a Jete!" like a burst from a cannon, the ' ed. No.2 vs. No. 15 again, calling for another strike- jersey on rose to his feet with one Yankees fans came to a roar. They continued from page 88 team," said Raymond, who is seeking his 292nd-career victory tomorrow. New York's day, Delaware also played James "Probably the best thing about them is Madison and fell 42-38 on the road. their defense. They are relatively small The Dukes (6- 1, 3-1) enter the contest for Atlantic lO standards, but they are rated No. 15 in The Sports Network quick and all 11 of them run well. As .. 'fmest' come poll. you watch the tapes, you marvel at the ~ "We started out low in the polls," way they get off [blocks] and run the said Nagy of the Hens' No. 16 presea­ ball down." son ranking. "To be able to come out The Dukes defense ranks fowth • ·out for W.S. [this season], win ball gan1es and put among Division 1-AA teams in rushing ~ ourselves in a position where we can continued from page B8 defense, giving up a paltry 87.4 yards be No. 2 in the nation is special." per game on the ground. The unit will the Yanks are best" on the back. The sign is Delaware has also been special on look to halt Delaware's Wing-T rush­ nailed to a wood stick that also has a pan on it the defensive side of the ball, where it ing attack, which averages 215.6 yards with a shamrock painted on that he bangs with a currently has a four-game shutout per game, good for 18th in the nation. : spoon to support his team. streak at home, including whitewashes The winner of Saturday's game will • · Sitcom-actor Steven Hytner, who is from of The Citadel (38-0), West Chester have the inside edge in the Atlantic 10 Valley Stream, N.Y., said he grew up a Mets fan (84-0) and Northeastern (42-0) this race, with Delaware holding a one­ and was there to support his team. Hytner, who season. game lead over James Madison,:. was in the canceled television series "Working" To keep their scoreless streak alive, Villanova, Richmond and " with Fred Savage, said his devotion to New the Hens will have to contain senior Massachusetts in the conference race. York sports works the following way: Delvin Joyce, the catalyst of the The Dukes only conference loss was a "Love the Mets. Like the Yankees. Hate Dukes' offense. 7-6 setback at Rhode Island. Roger Clemens." Joyce has enjoyed a record-setting "We assumed that James Madison Those arriving early at the stadium were sur­ 2000 campaign, becoming Division 1- would be the team to beat [in the con­ prised to find they weren't allowed to tailgate AA's all-time leader in punt return ference] ," Raymond said, "and that we because of the New York Police Department's yards (1,463 yards) on Oct. 7 and in would have to raise our level in practice rule implemented at the "beginning of this sea­ combined kick return yards (punt and and in our attitude to play with them. son. However, fans could walk over to the fes­ kickoff returns for 3,293 yards) on Oct. Now, here we are confronted with that. tivities at Club MLB, which was set up in the 21. '1 anticipate that our team will be parking lot. In addition, the 5-foot-7, 190-lb. ready." · It offered batting and pitching cages with tailback averages 7.4 yards per carry Hen Nuggets: Nagy needs 109 passing ' radars, free of charge. There was a big-screen on the ground (290 yards through yards to pass Bill Vergantino (1989- television, for those who didn't have tickets, and THE REVIEW/Domenico Montanaro seven games) and leads James '92, 6,487 yards) as Delaware's all- • Madison in receptions with 2('? for 259 a historical baseball display. Mets fans were out in droves this week as the first Subway Series in 44 years came to Shea time leading passer. He is also three : yards. There were old-time bats, gloves and uni­ Stadiwn Thesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights. Many celebrities (not above) attended. touchdowns short of Vergantino's all- : forms and even video games, pitting none other "Delvin is a real competitor," Dukes time touchdown passes record (47) . ... than the Mets and Yankees against each other. waiting 10 years for this." were also not allowed to stand on the subway head coach Mickey Matthews said. The Hens are 34- 11 all-time in • "The only time we're going to see the Burrofato described the Yankees demeanor platform looking into Shea Stadium, where "He likes to get the ball up the fi eld, Homecoming games at Delaware • Yankee's win today - on fantasy games," Mets as "professional" on the way to Shea. hundreds of people without ti ckets usually and like all good runners, he's not wait­ Stadium. Delaware lost the '99 ; fan Dan Lindemann said. "They' re all business," he said. "They' re gather well in advance to watch glimpses of ing around to get tackled. He is very Homecoming game to Lehigh 42-35. ·0: At least one other person disagreed. quiet. They' ll talk. They' ll laugh amongst games. They were all owed to gath er during this intell igent and he's a great leader on ... The Hens have lost four consecutive : · "Yankees in five," said the Yankees bus dri­ themselves, but never about baseball. You year 's playoff run, but police said they are tak­ our team."' games coming off a regular season bye ver Gary Burrofato, who has been driving the know they lost 15 of their last 18 games at the ing extra precautions during the Subway Series Hens head coach Tubby Raymond week. Delaware last won following an • Yankees' bus for five years. end of the season. It didn' t mean nothing. They because Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, a staunch said James Madison was a team he had off-week in '86 when it beat UMass 4l- Burrofato said driving the Yankees is "like a get it done. That's the magic of th e Yankees." Yankees supporter, is taking the subway to the looked for in the pre-season to be a 13... . The Hens lead the all-time series dream come true. It's cool, man. I've been Notes: On top of the no tailgaiting policy, fans game. contender within the conference. with James Madison 6-4. "They have an exceptional football

.· This date in sports history iusidt: • On October 27, 1991 , the • Preview of ice hockey two­ Minnesota Twins defeated game series against Towson the Atlanta Braves in 10 • Preview of women's soccer innings in Game Seven to weekend tests in Boston w in the 88th World Series . •••••.• .see a page B7 www.review.udel.edu October 27, 2000 • B8 The Subway Series: Live from Flushing would later score. 3-0. Three innings. Characters Game Four That's all the Yankees would need to silence the Mets and silence the crowd as they went on turn up for grumblings to win 3-2, taking a commanding 3- 1 lead Wednesday night at Shea Stadium in Game 4 of the World Game Three from Shea Series. "This is going to be a long BY DOMENICO MONTANARO BY DOMENICO MONTANARO night," uttered one Mets fan fo l­ News Layout Editor News Layout Editor lowing the Yankees' third-inning FLUSHING, N.Y. - Thesday. FLUSHING, N.Y. -Game 4. run. "Timo Perez is scared of his Hours before Game 3. Upper Deck. own shadow, and Derek Jeter is The Willets Point subway station It took one pitch. swinging at the first pitch." was flooded with people rushing One pitch - the first pitch - As the heavy infiltration of down its steps to Shea Stadium, the helped the Yankees Yankees fans grew Mets home park. They showed up move within one game louder, Mets fans sat in Mets jerseys and Yankees hats. of becoming World with their hands sup­ Faces painted orange and blue, Champions for the porting their chins, navy and white. Friends, families fourth time in five confused and dejected. and spouses were divided by team, years. They were pacified, unwilling to venture across enemy Derek Jeter ripped distraught, seemingly lines. the first offering from Mets starter waiting for a miracle. They engaged in amiable dis­ Bobby Jones into the left-field They thought their miracle had agreements, agreeing to only one bleachers. 1-0. One inning. come in the bottom half of the thing - this series, the first of its Paul O'Neill, bad hip and all, third inning as Mike Piazza took a kind in 44 years, was bigger than tripled down the line, then scored. pitch from Denny Neagle and themselves and any friendship, 2-0. Two innings. slammed a one-out, two-run family or life commitment. THE REVIEW/Domenico Montanaro Then, Jeter again. First pitch homer 375 feet over the left field "Let's ·go Mets," shouted Ed Robyn and Jorge Camus put aside their differences for one embrace before Thesday's Game Three and Jeter's eyes were wider than wall. Kestenbaum. at Shea Stadium in Flushing, N.Y. Many Yankee fans attended tbe game at tbe Mets' borne park. the gap he hit the ensuing triple To which long-time friend and into in right-center field. He see YANKS page B7 Yankees fan Darren Yelin replied, With the Mets down two games "Some balls. That guy's got some hard Mets fan." "Sounds like he drank too much on to none, Kestenbaum could say balls," uttered one fan draped in Robyn just smirked and inno­ the way over here." what he wanted, but it held no Mets gear as he quickened his pace cently asked, "What?" "Ah, you're either a weight with Yelin. to catch up to the offender only to "She doesn't even watch base­ Mets fan or an asshole," · "The Mets are down," pass him, slightly bump the man ball." Kestenbaum said. Yelin said. "Tell me and mutter some anti-Yankees epi­ "I watch baseball. I don' t watch "Yankee · fans are just something when they thets. the Mets. That's not baseball." arrogant." actually beat the The undaunted Yankees fan All the characters were out at "Whatever. Yankee Yankees." smirked and kept up his twirling. Shea, dressed for the occasion. fans are much more pas- As expected, Mets fans Married couples like Jorge and There was the man. in the black sionate. A Met fan might root for far outnumbered Robyn Camus, who have been mar­ cape and silver mask holding a the Yankees when their team sucks, Yankees fans, but the Yankees defi­ ried for two years, are also divided black pot with the saying "Witch's but you'd never see a Yankee fan nitely let themselves be known - by the Mets and Yankees. They had Brew" on it. He was holding up a root for the Mets. Never. You see and not always with their voices. no qualms joining in the bickering. sign that read, "Let's Go Mets" and the passion at Yankee Stadium. One Yankees fan walked around "The Subway Series broke us "Let's Brew the Yankees" on the Look at this place. Met fans are Shea countless times without say­ up," Robyn, a Yankees fan, said front and ''The Magic is Back" on like, 'Hey, yo Mets.' That's not pas­ ing a word, but didn't need to. He jokingly. "But we made a bet that if the reverse side. sion." was wearing a Yankees jersey that there's one next year, then we' ll get There was Freddy, who has one "Shut up, what do you know? on the back said, "Mets suck" and married again." good eye and carries around a sign See what I mean?'' twirled a New Year's-type favor When asked why she likes the that reads, "I won't brag. I just . "And the stadiums. This is a that digitally flashed the same say­ Yankees, Robyn said, ''They have want Yanks to win!" on the front THE REVIEW/Domenico Montanaro Parks Department Stadium. The ing. more history!" and "The Mets are very good, but The only thing more intense tban the rivalry between Yankees and Mets are just the replacement for Not every Mets fan was, well, "She likes Derek Jeter's ass," the Dodgers." accepting of his antics. said Jorge, a self-proclaimed "die- see NEW YORK'S page B7 Mets fans is the action on the field. The Yankees won Game 4, 3-2. Katsorhis injures foot Delaware hosts ' BY JEFF GLUCK was placed in her foot during have two choices. One, I can back Sports Editor surgery in February. down from it, but in my mind, AE championship Junior guard Valerie Katsorhis After getting the cast removed in that's a failure to myself. has re-injured her foot and will be April, she was cleared to play this "I can also take the other road, BY ROB ERDMAN · "I've been racing the same guys out for th"e season, Delaware year following months of rehabili­ where I can take this thing head on Spons Editor for the past two or three years," he women's basketball head coach tation. However, recent X-rays and beat it." Tomorrow morning, most stu­ said. "I've beaten them before. On a Tina Martin said. revealed another fracture. Martin said she expects dents will quench their thirsts and good day, I should beat them again." Katsorhis, who was forced out "I thought the pains were ,natur­ Katsorhis to rehabilitate the injury celebrate the football team's superb However, in order for the Hens to last season by the same injury, al," Katsorhis said. "But apparent­ and be able to once again con­ season as it prepares to take on be successful as team, they cannot broke a screw that had been surgi­ ly, my foot just never heal'ed." tribute to the team. Atlantic 10 rival James Madison. simply rely on DiGennaro. cally placed in her right foot to Martin said that Katsorh.is need "She will have to overcome However, members of the Consistent improvement within rejuvinate the blood flow, Martin the same surgery, which will this," she said. "There' s no reason Delaware men's and women's cross the entire team during the season said. replace the screw in her why she can't. When something country teams will put lessons allows the team to emerge as whole "I'm pretty bummed foot. like this happens, you just have to learned throughout the season to the Saturday, he said. about it," Katsorhis said. "With any surgery, you· pick yourself back up and work that THE REVIEW/Counesy of UD Sports Info. test as they host the America East "Our eight, nine and 10 runners "But I'm getting a lot of run the risk of getting re­ much harder. I'm sure that's exact­ , VALERIE KATSORHIS conference championships. are running really well," DiGennaro posi tive and encouraging injured," Martin said. ly what Val is going to do." Senior Mike DiGennaro, a said. "Our top seven started out slow support." "Her body just reacted Katsorhis is from Jamaica, New continue to make a contribution." favorite for the individual champi­ at Lehigh but have been running Martin described adversely." York, and was named Queens By encouraging her teammates onship, will lead the men into very well since then. Katsorhis as an emotional leader Although Katsorhis said doctors Player of the Year as a senior at she will be able to help the team, tomorrow's race. He said he was "Some in the top seven have said for the team. do not know exactly what caused Cardozo High School. She saw Katsorhis said. optimistic about the Hens' chances. they are ready for a breakthrough, "She has a lot of enthusiasm," either injury, she does not place the action for Delaware in four games "Any time I'm cheering the "We have a few teams of equal .and I believe it." Martin said. "She keeps everyone responsibility on anyone for her last year before her injury. team on, then I will still be able to ability, like Boston University, DiGennaro also said there is a up, and she is great working with misfortune. Martin said Katsorhis will con­ contribute," she said. Maine and New Hampshire, com­ noticeable change in the attitude the younger players. "I don' t blame anyone," she tinue to be with the team and play Katsorhis said that through all peting," he said. "We are hoping among team members going into the "Val is a great director and moti­ said. "I'm not one to point fingers." an important role off the court. the adversity she has faced, she has that being on our home championships. vator. She's always the first t<;> pat Katsorhis said she has been able "This is a very team-oriented been able to keep her injury in per­ course will give us an "In cross-country, we . someone on the back when they get to stay positive through strong sup­ group," she said. "They will give a spective . advantage. always talk about 'If we off the court." port from her teammates, coaches lot of positive emotional support to "You have to be able to see the "Having the race at win'," he said. "This we Katsorhis said she originally and family. Val, and she' ll give it right back. big picture," she said. "Everything Delaware is huge." week we have been talk­ injured her foot last year after play­ "I just look at it as another chal­ That off-court role is very impor­ happens for a reason, so in the long DiGennaro stressed ing about what we are ing on a stress fracture. A screw lenge in front of me," she said. "I tant to us, and that's where she can run, this is just a minor setback." the importance of the going to do 'when we team's knowledge of a course and win.' how the Hens' should reap all the "We want it more." benefits. Finishing third in 1998 and sev­ Hens hOst JMU for He also said the team's familiari­ enth last year, DiGennaro is yearn­ ty with the course could allow some ing to improve. slower runners to finish ahead of Entering the meet as one of the Homecoming test those who are typically faster. favorites, winning the individual "We have one of the toughest championship would be something BY MIKE LEWIS started. courses in the east," DiGennaro special. Delaware has not had a runner Managing Sports Editor "They put it to me last year at said. ''Luckily, we get to practice on "I'll never forget that f eeLing I had James Madison," Nagy said. ''I just it every day, so we know it well. crowned the individual conference after that gatne Last year after Letting wasn't on my game last year and they "I can't believe most of these champion since 1959, when Carl­ our team down and not playing up to did a good job defensively. I'm going teams haven' t come down to see it. Olaf Homen achieved the feat by my potential. Last year, they put it to to have a little extra motivation this They don't know what they·are up winning Middle Atlantic Conference us. week to play a little harder." against." title. Senior qunnerback Matt Nagy, Nagy and the Hens will get their Along with home field advan­ The women's team also enters reflecting on last year's chance at redemption tage, competing against the same tomorrow's championship witl~ con­ runners th~ Hens have defeated in 21-7 Loss to James t Saturday in Delaware fidence, coming off a first place Madison. , Stadium when the Dukes the previous meets will give the team finish in the Delaware visit at noon for team an edge Saturday, he said. Invitational, where it claimed the For Nagy, it was an Homecoming in an DiGennaro did not have a partic­ top-three spots. entirely new experience. It Atlantic 10 conference ularly successful cross-country sea­ Junior Aimee Alexa11der has lead had not happened to the 6- game. son last year, but he ·improved his the way for the Hens, notching top foot-2 field general in his two years as Delaware (7-0, 4-0 conference) performance throughout the indoor fi nishes in every meet she has a starter at Manheim Central High enters the contest ranked No. 2 in The and outdoor track seasons. e nt~red , inc_luding a sixth place fin­ (Pa.). And it had not happened in his Sports Network Division I-AA Top-25 Winning three of the four individ­ ISh m the D1sney World Invitational. fLTSt two years at Delaware either. poll. ual conference championship track She and DiGennaro will set the But against the Dukes last year, It is the fLTSt time the Hens have events he competed in (he finished pace for their respective teams Nagy, after throwing only four com­ been slotted as high as No. 2 since second in the fourth) gave tomorrow. The women's race THE REVIEW/Christopher Bunn pletions in nine attempts for 61 yards Oct. 9, 1993. Coincidentally, on that DiGennaro the confidence necessary begins on the White Clay Creek site Senior fuUback James O'Neal (455 yards) will ·look to lead tbe and one interception, was pulled for to dominate his final cross-country at 10 a.m. The men begin their quest at I I a.m. Hens' ground attack against James Madison Saturday in Newark. the fLTSt time from a football game he see NO. 2 page B7 season at Delaware.

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