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Panel ,Explores Canal Treaties lyKIMAYERS Program, the panel guests were basis for defense and allow moderator Antonia Chayes, Panama to build up its own in­ a result of United States assistant secretary of the Air ternal security. vote upcoming ·on the Force; the Most Reverend From an economic standpoint, canal treaties, a panel Marcos G. McGrath, Archbishop Wallace said the new treaties on the two treaties, of Panama; General ~ John B. would place no burden 'On last Wednesday night in Wallace, Ret., Delaware's American taxpayers. The Hall. director of Transportation; and revenue gained from tolls would Terry Garcia, head of the new keep the canal running, he said. lobbyist group New Directions. As a comparison, Wallace said Maragret Mead was scheduled to · the U.S. paid Spain $20 million ih moderate- the_ panel, but was 1976 for the lease of land for three unable to attend due to inclement military bases, but in the same ' weather. ' year the U.S. paid Panama $2.3 Chayes said that the new C!ffial million for the lease of part of the Treaty would remain in effect canal zone on which 14 military until the year 2,000, and bases are built. authorizes the creation of a Guerilla warfare and Com­ Panama Canal Commission, munist intervention is always a made up ultimately of · possiblity, but the Panamanians Panamanian members. It also have no history of terrorist' recognizes that the U.S. remains violence, McGrath said. They primarily responsible for the also have no reason to~ endanger security of the zone and operation their gr~test natural resource, of the canal until 2000. the canal, he added. two treaties were signed on The main opposition to the 7 by _President Jimmy Then the second tre_aty goes into effect, the Neutrality Treaty. treaties is coming from large and. General Omar Torijos banking interests in New York, With no termination date, it The new treaties those fearful of communist in­ the Panamanians authorizes any action by the tervention, and those doubting over the canal and United States or Panama to the technical capability of zone and replace the 1 maintain the neutrality of the Panama to run the canal tr~ty that has recently canal and the canal zone. smoothly, Garcia said. Garcia Chayes said the joint chiefs of under criticism. added that most Americans do ,....,.... ,,r,tl by the Delawareans staff in Washington have given not want to give up what is theirs Panama Canal Treaties their approval of the treaties, and what they built, but he said the University Honors because they provide a sound the canal and the zone belong to Panama. - In the Senate, Garcia said there niversity Theater: are 60 Senators for, 25 _hard against, five leaning, and 10 undecided · about the treaties. An Identity_Crisis Garcia said Joseph Biden (D.­ Del.) is for the treaties, but By KEN MAMMARELLA William Roth (R-Del. )- is. still 'Richard Awniller was not the only problem. undecided and could be leaning Nor was he the first, and he wijl not be the last. Aumiller is against ratification. Sixty-seven Review Photographer Andy Cline the most public example of the problems the theatre votes needed to ratify the treaties HERCULEAN STRENGTH and grace are easier to pursue liftllr+m,...,t is having in its search for a niche in the university, in while 34 votes would block now that Carpenter Sports Center is open 13 extra hours a in Delaware. passage of them. week. , as manager of university theatre, was in charge of the dozen productions presented each year. Aside from the time. energy spent on his case (Aumiller was fired for his alleged •ocat::v of homosexuality), and unwanted, negative publicity Carpenter 'Mystery Money' Tracked Down it, "one of the victims of the Aumiller case is theatre," said department chairman Brian Hansen. The "mystery money" used to year than expected" in the ice that one third of the athletic ""; .. ,.,.~;•., still has no one specifically filling that position, open Carpenter Sports Building arena, explained Nelson, "so we budget had been given to the the theatre department had applied for a replacement. In ~ 13 extra hours a week, amounted decided to give the surplus to department for athletics, one interim. Hansen is managing university theatre irt addition to to $2400 and came from the Carpenter." third went to physical education duties of running the department. "I very much m1ss Aumlller; recreational budget of the ice " Nelson was also able to dear up and the final third, allocated for also "!iss someone to be fully in charge of university theatre," arena, according to Athletic where the money had come from recreation, was put towards the Director David Nelson. last year to open the sports opening of Carpenter. ·,•••mill .. r'q other iniportant asset to the department will not be "We had a higher income this building on weekends. He said The Resident Student quite as easily as hiring a new theatre manager. "He had Association (RSA) worked last of picking challenging productions that appeaied to the year to keep the building open as " said Hansen. That talent is sorely missed now that much as possible. Five hundred is gone, for theatre is ultimately judged by the selection of dollars was raised for the cause On the Inside by soliciting 25 cents from each season, to put it Inndly, was not well received. The student. According to Joan in this newspaper of the three plays presented this year all Mm-Mm Thorogood Sorbello, RSA vice-president, the ~~~n~~,. .. t~,~tl the choice of material while praising to some degree, The Destroyers Rip the Lid Off Rock 'n Roll ...... page 4 money was used to keep Car­ and production. ~ penter open on weekends from selected in a complex procedure that considers a Oct. 28 until Thanksgiving. An open meeting is held each Spring for next Nelson found allocations to 's oroduction. As a result of the trouble with Aumiller, the slate Equus Pulls Up Lame keep Carpenter open both last "SOIIIle\17hat hastily" put together, said Hansen. The slots are You Can Lead a Horse to Celluloid But page 8 semester and this semester, char"acteri.zed to type; for example, black theater, dance, according to Anthony Graziano, and children's theatre. Plays are suggested to fill these director of institutional research Pllt.~antoi""' technical criteria and to create a varied season. and financial planning. are followed. Plays should not be those done by Six-Pointed Star Carpenter Sports B'uilding will COilniDIIlJlil;y groups. This eliminates many British sex farces Ex-_Hen Hoopster a Hit in Israel ' ...... - ... page 19 be open until U :30 p.m~ on week that are frequently done by high schools, dinner nights and will open at 9 a.m~ on (Contlnuect on Page 7) Saturdays and Sundays. Page 2 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Nework ~ Delaware February 14, 1978

The Marine Corps College Chrysler Plant Production Stalled; Relations Representative win be in the Student Center on February 14 Student Workers Feel the Crunch and 15, 1978 to provide interested Four thousand employees at down, with 800 men laid off in­ for employees who call in sick on students and faculty members with Newark's Chrysler Corporation, definately. Friday evenings and Mon~y including 35 university students University students have been · mornings, due to the high ab­ information concerning the Marine are still out of work today as a working part time at the plant sentism at that time, according to result of a layoff, which occurred since a program was established Lee. Corps and its officer programs. on February 2. A decline in sales last May, according to Michael Students were recruited The representative will be available on the auto company's Dodge Lee, from the University office of through signs put up around Aspen and Plymouth Volaire Employment. campus last spring. They were between 10 A.M. and 2 P.M. models caused the two week shut The students had been f~g in also able to g$ employment at the plant during· summer months, thanks to the reeruiting efforts. Fred Crowley, tlniversity of I>elaware Coordinating Council The Marine Corps officer programs All you need is love. (UDCC) president, has been involved in the program since offer: monetary benefits; aviation last May. "Where else are you going to make close _to seven guarantee; opportunities for AWannAnd · dollars an hour? said Crowley. individuals contemplating law The ·only drawback is that Wonderful students are required to work at school; civilian pilot training while different jobs each time they Book About report to work, he said. in college to qualified applicants; Don Koffield, public relations spokesman for the plant said, and the possibility .of receiving TheL~est "To the best of my knowledge, all of the students will report back to $100 per month durin·g the school Experience work after the two weeks." Chrysler has reportedly . ha4 . year. All training takes place · In Life problems with the Aspen and during the summer to allow Volaire including the necessity of a 15 minute warm up period, to maximum devotion to coll~ge work ,drive shafts falling out, and hoods Now in paperback. $1.95 flying up, according to an ABC during the school year. news evening feature . ' "' . Koffield declined to · comment on this problem though, saying that he could not speak for the •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••company . : ROBERTA FLACK : •e N •I •• • ~ .• FINE, FINE DAY .• THE ClOSER I GET TO YOU REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware Poge3 Giving Physics Mass Appeal By KEN MAMMARELLA , He went to Harvard, receiving an very hot. Most of his research iS One descendant of Henry MA in astronomy in four years, compiled from computer data, Wadsworth Longfellow has again graduating summa cum quite possibly from stars that written two books and two dozen laude. Shipman said he was a Shipman has never seen. . scholarly articles, received his "~ypical confused freshman" at He is interested in teaching, doctorate in two years, has Harvard, and it wasn't until he especially since even beginning taught at a university for six was halfway through his students can 1,mderstand the years, has tenure, and packs a sophomore year that he decided latest theories in astronomy. For hundred people into his classes in to go into astronomy. (He had example, "Quasars, Black Holes, physical science. This man, who been pursuing a general science and the Universe" concentrates is not yet thirty years old, is Dr. curriculum.) on a few areas of contemporary Henry Shipman of this univer­ It took him only one year to get astronomy, abandoning the 50,000 sity. his MS at the California Institute foot approach of most in­ Shipman is not a pied piper, but of Technology, and one more to troductory courses," he said. instead a genius who popularizes get his PhD. "It was mostly physics for the average student. a certain amount of luck" that He uses his own book as text for "People. around here have the permitted him to get his doc­ th~t course-, donating the conception that a course labeled torate so quickly, he said. He was royalties of 50 .cents for each six physics is unreasonably hard," able to take all of his required dollar book to the university. He he said. That is certainly not true courses the first year in does this because the book was of the interesting lectures of California, and he already had written while he was a faculty Shipman himself. - experience at Harvard doing member here, but he "doesn't His courses do not reek of research. presuine to dictate this same Newton or calculus, fortunately Shipman came to Delaware in course to others," he said. for the liberal arts major; they September, 1974, and he was Although he writes profusely, ~ I are the interesting exploration of named an Associate Professor he has no desire to write poetry I' astronomy and physics. with tenure last fall, becoming like his great-great grandfather 'I Astronomy, which is "really one of the youngest to hold that Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. applied physics," according to position at the university. Shipman calls Longfellow's Shipman, is taught in such An astronomer might be ex­ works "dated, but very good for unusual courses of his as pected to spend a lot of time his time." "Quasars, Black Holes, and the observing stars, but Shipman Universe;'' ''Celestial said, "Even people who are Shipman is looking forward to Navigation," and "Physics, observers spend very little time remaining in the "vecy en­ Power, · Pollution, and the actually looking at stars." joyable, stimulating" at­ Government." Not exactly F-ma. Shipman has almost no need to mosphere of the university, THE STAR OF STARGAZERS, Dr. Henry Shipman, excells in Shipman graduated from a continuing his research and the sciences of astronomy and physics, bringing interesting look in a telescope himself, since Connecticut high school summa he said, "Most of my work is teaching. and easy· to comprehend courses to University Students. Review cuni laude in 1965. "Since my He likes astronomy. · "There photographer Joy Green. theoretical." father had gone to Yale, I had to Shipman's special field is white are enough problems, and few do something different," he ~d. dw.arf stars, which are small and enough people," he said. Tolkien's Silmarill_i9n: -WXDR Presen.ts Radio. Theatre- ! By SUE CLINTON .. plays. Wally Shotwell, audio-visual media specialist Don't miss the exciting adve~tures of "Liquid at the university, who was also involved with the Shelf-Indulgent Effort Louie," a story about a Kojak-type crime fighter course, mentioned technical difficulties such as lack carried around in a thennos bottle by star reporter, of facilities. - Candy Cane. By MARK ODREN author explains the origin of the "A n.!w T.V. series?" Ainur, creators of the World; the "We didn't have enough time for rehearsal, and I'm afraid that J .R.R. rise of the several tribes of No -it'saradioplay. Thisandmanyotherplays, due to the snow, we had to jump around in sequence, Tolkien 's posthumously Elves; the coming of man; the ranging from soaps to satire, will be presented on depending on what characters were available," published work The SUmarfllion struggle between Good and Evil; WXDR beginning Feb. 17 after the 6 p.m. news, and Shotwell said. Despite difficulties, Shotwell said he will sit on many dusty shelves and the history of the elfin jewels, continuing throughout Spring Semester every enjoyed working with the class. In "Dracula," he •-- ~.nth a bookmark placed after the Friday night. was responsible for over 100 sound effects used in first fifty pages, where many the Silmarils. It's literally an Students in an experimental course titled Winter account of generations upon the play. have given up. Its sales (25 weeks generations of elfin kings, Session Radio Theatre (Com 267) taped these series Shotwell, along with many who were in the class, on the New York Times best leaders of men and dwarves of radio plays last January. would like to continue the radio drama by seller list with a long tenure as "The class presented some radio classical drama, developing a Radio Theater Workshop. Shotwell number one) indicate a · wide serving as a prequel for his some plays by area playwrights and original scripts earlier works. range of buyers who normally do written by the members of the class," said Deborah not read fantasy and may lose With the narrative style aside, Haskell, instructor of the course. "Each student has patience with this one. the book seems jumpy in a few been involved in three or niore productions during places, especially in the early the length of the course either as director, writer or The book is five narrative chapters of the major piece actor, so to get all the. aspects of theater," she pieces chronicling the origin and "Quenta Silmarillion." Later pointer! out. the first three ages of Middle­ !:hapters in the book have· a According to Haskell, the first plays to be Earth, first introduced ' in definite transition from chapter presented will be "And Adam Begot" and "This Tolkien's The Hobbit and The to chapter highlighting the lives Precious Freedom," followed by special presen­ - Lord of the Rings. What may of particular individuals instead. tation of Bram Stoker's "Dracula." The third disappoint many readers of the of the events around them. With -presentation will be an ada}>tion of Edgar Allan earlier books iS · the belief that the change of emphasis, Poe's "Fall ofthe House of Usher." Presented next The Silmarillion is another Tolkien's narrative is smooth, will be plays by area playwrights James Symmons, Middle-Earth epic featuring enhancing the commg of man into Drury Pifer and Richard Stout, followed by dramas . Tolkien's flowing lyrical and Middle-Earth and his subsequent written by students. The plays last anywhere from descriptive abilities with battles against Morgoth of the 15 to 45 minutes (except Dracula which runs two delightful characterizations. It is North. hours.) . a history, written from Tolkien's Plays written by students include a soap opera first conceptions of the When working with the human called, "Four's Company, Two's A Bore," which mythology in 1917 to the final element (or for that matter, the takes a comical look at life in Christiana Towers. weeks before his death in 1973. In elfin element) Tolkien is at his The story begins when Terry, an "experienced" its best sections, the book is a best. What may happen however junior, and her not-yet-exposed-to-college-life fresh­ powerful display of imagination is the "borrowing" of his man roommate, Pat, find out that their other two and genius. In its weakest, an mythology by other less talented roommates, Chris and Gene, are males. The play avalanche 'of names glue togeth~r writers for their own use. Keep deals with their determination to stay roommates, sections of sparce descriptions. an eye out for paperbacks in the even after the evil RA discovers the truth and tries To any true lover of Middle­ fantasy section of the bookstore to extort $200 to keep it quiet. Earth, the inconsistent pace can with the phrase "In the vein of Other plays written by students include a be over-looked because of con­ Tolkien's Lord of the Rings." historical drama called, "The Lost Livingstone FOLLOWING IN THE FOOTSTEPS of Orsen tent. Tolkien covers a lot of Expedition" by William (Buff) Benson and "The Wells, students Helen·Rose Tan and Jerry ground. Within 289 pages (plus Unfortunately, they won't Holocaust" by Jeff Friedman. Strusoski perform original radio drama for the additional pages of index, ap­ mention "and stolen from the Students in the course said they enjoyed the work, Winter Session Radio theatre cours·e on WX­ pendix, and genealogies), the history in The Silmarillion." but complained of lack of time to organize their DR. Review Photographer David Resende. Poge4 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware February 14, 1978 Thorogood Creates Frenzy· ~ tNCOl!;t~ played intensely and at a By RAY SULLIVAN breakneck speed, good from the basic framework of the ~ (With Reality) ~ A band has finally cast aside musicianship wasn't sacrificed song without flashing back to the the hackneyed and phony for- for flash. Drummer Jeff Simon melody to keep the music mulas that are the backbone of laid a solid foundation for each flowing. It's a credit to today's rock music to make number. It sounded like he was Thorogood that he wove lines ·"To go where no man music that is different, alive, and using tree trunks for drum stick& from practically every blues song more importantly, fun. and an Army boot to kick the bass he has ever heard into each song, has gone before••• " The band is George Thorogood -drum. Simon didn't just batter and kept it sounding fresh and cohesive. Capt. Kirk and the Destroyers, from the dru~ though, he packed ~ Wilmington. The Destroyers same cnsp wallop that Char~e Thorogood's gruff voice is whipped up the same kind of Watts of the Stones uses. Bassist frenzy at the Main Point that Bill Blough added punch to the perfect for the raunchy brand of Elvis Buddy Holly and Chuck songs with good, solid playing rock 'n' roll he pla:v.s. The only From Us At SCC. • • BerrY did during the 50's. Rock that he occasionally spiced up difference between Thorogood's 'n' roll didn't die, it was just with loopy bass lines. This voice and Fat Albert's is that the waiting for someone with enough rhythm section handled tempo fonner's is an octave or two talent and exuberance to kick it changes and Thorogood's im­ higher than the latter's. When back onstage. provisations as if they were Thorogood growled "bartender, The Destroyers play the blues reading his mind. come down here" during "One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer," and 50's rock 'n' roll: the music of Fronting the trio is guitarist I could picture a bartender Chuck Berry, John Lee Hooker, George Thorogood, who plays obediently jumping to WON'T YOU Elmore James and Bo Diddley. excellent slide · guitar. Thorogood's barking command. They aren't imitators though - Thorogood's slide ran, hopped they add their own style to the and glided over the strings with BE OURS ON basic, three-chord rock 'n' roll precision and vitality. His Not only did Thorogood play and play it with a possessed fury. technique is good; his fingers hit, and sing intensely, he perfonned Their music is the kind of loud individual notes that guitar intensely too. When he did the STUDENT rock 'n' roll that peels wall "wizards" like Ted Nugent Chuck Berry duckwalk, he didn't flowers from their secure, dark usually blur over to play faster just glide across the stage, he corners and draws them to the but end up playing sloppily in­ jammed his Hush Puppies into CENTER dance floor like a magnet. It's the stead. the stage. During an exhausting kind of music that makes you Throughout songs like encore he waded through the DAY7 smash your hands together until "Delaware Slide," "Who Do You crowd and played to groups of they are red and stinging and Love," and "Madison Blues," dancing people before jumping March then do it again for the rest of the Thorogood wrung the neck of the on top of a rickety table to let his show. It's the kind of music that guitar until it and the audience guitar wail. 10-11 makes about 300 people who were screamed for more. They got it shoe-horned into the Main Point with Berry's "No Particular The Destroyers are a band that dance, holler and sweat to the Place to Go," after Thorogood shouldn't be missed. I only hope point of collapse, and still scream said, "Here's that grand slam I they don't drop from exhaustion for more, promised you earlier." before they put Delaware on the Although the Destroyers His solos never strayed far map. ~PLAN YOUR SUMMER NOW! 1978 FIRST SUMMER SESSION JUNE 2-JUL Y 7 Discover The Wonders .LI. of Italy While You Studyl - I. The Italian Language and Culture Ml166 {3 credits) P/F Emma Mangone-413 Smith. 738-2452,731-9049 Practical Italian based on formal grammar instruction and drill, through everyday conversation, creative writing, performance of skits;' History of Italian-Society; Characteristics of regional Italy, ·for a. better understanding of its culture: Campagna. lazio, Toscano, Umbria, lombardia, Veneto, etc ...

11. The History of Italian Art: ARH266 (3 credits) P /F Elaine Banks -Art History 738-8415, 366-1661 The Art of Florence and Northern Italy SCHEDULE AND SITE OF ACTIVITIES First week- Orientation and Introduction to the Italian Language and Art History· University of Delaware. Second, third and fourth weeks- in picturesque and historical town of COMO, right on Lake Como, with an ideal summer weather. Visits to artistic and historical churches, museums, famous villas in Como and around the Lake, and in Milan, visits to the Sforza Castle, the Brera Gallery, Santa Maria Delle Grazie, The Duomo, the Scala, as well as the Do Vinci Museum, San Satiro and the Ambrosiana Gallery. Optional half-day and day trips to Pavia, Bergamo, Brescia, Monzo, the Borremean Islands (Logo Maggiore) and to Lugano (Switzerland). Optional weekend trips to: Verona, Padua, Vicenza, Venice. Fifth week- FLORENCE (cradle of the Renaissance) . Visits to the Duomo and Baptistry, Giotto's Tower, the churches of Santa Croce and Santa Maria Novella, San Lorenzo, the Monastery of San Marco, .Orsanmichele, and Pitti, the Uffizi, Palazzo della Signoria, etc ... 71'1U~,.~'I.--- - ~ . . - . COST1 Round trip Alrl'are, Room, partial Board, museum Pass, $1000 (approximately) APPLICATION. DEADLINE APRIL 5-GROUP IS LIMITED FOR INFORMATION AND APPLICATION CONTACT EMMA MANGONE 738-2452,738-2591,738-9049 YOU ARE INVITED TO AN HOURS ORIENTATION PROGRAM OF IT ALlAN SONGS AND SLIDES OF THE STUDY TRIP TO ITALY, WED., FEB. 15 & THURS., FEB. 16, 4·5 EWIN.G ROOM STUDENT CENTER s?~~~~~~Yt~:~~ - ~~~~~i~!~~~~~~ a~~ Fourier to Heisenberg." 4 p.m. in 131 Sharpr' ULEdNEsdK ' Lab. Free. n1 Fii.M:·;smokey · an·:m.: ·9· p.m.". Christiana Commons. 8 to 11 p.m. Free. and 11 p.m. $l.'With I.D. Fii.M:·;Fir5t. iiive_;.- ca5tie ·Mali· Qiiee,li: i writers, actors and technicians. Smith Hall p.m., 7p .m., 9:15p.m. All seats $1. R. Lobby. 7p.m. Pitooii.ui~s1iil~ .and soogs.oi ita"1.Y: 'Ewing Room, Student Center. 4 p.m. Fii.M:.;uow ·slicitii :ffi. III and IV. Bacchus, Student Center. 7:30 and9:15p.m. PG p.m. Free. woaK"Sitop:jci~ ·5ea:rc:h ·sii:8ie8ie5.· 25 "Am- Fii.M_-.;iie · TW-ning. P~iDi:·; ·citU5titui · Hiii stel Ave. 4 p.m. Stgn-up reqwred. Pitooii.ui~Iii:ffi. p.m. only. Equipment and popcorn p-ovided. and9p.m.R. Iit'EE.iiNo:i.fedie~&i s~ciet"Y."oa.ti81lei-i.Y Hall. 6 p.m. Organizational meeting. IitiiE:irN~sailliti!" dull." ii2 "Memortal.uaii. Fii.M:·;F:Qitw.·_;, siaie ·Tlie&ier." ;,·i>:ti;.·ani! 8p.m. Pitooii.ui~s1iil~ and 50~· oi itiil.Y: 'EWing s:30 p.m. Students s2. R 4 IitiiE:irNG~sxc: i:iaccllU:S; siuile~i ·cenier. Room, student eenter · p.m. Fii.M:·x Piece. ·or ·tit~· ·Acit~·. ., ·iriansle NOTICE-Alpha Phi Lollypop Sale. 25 cents. 4 p.m. All members must attend. 7 9 20 Student Center and Newark· Shopping riAiitE:aiN·G~coifeeb"ouse b.Y "Q;niPiJS Goi

time in its history stalled when Police said York had made a stituents in West Virginia and charged author Gerard Zilg in a Mounties Get officials said the club's stadium rambling, incoherent phone call Ohio make up over ten per cent of million-dollar damage suit. Their Men lease had not yet run out. to the police last Wednesday, the United Mine Workers Zilg alleges that pressure was Negotiations with the Giants giving an account of his in- (UMW), said they didn't like applied to Prentice-Hall and the Eleven Soviet officials were failed to bring a solution. Fortune Book Club by Harold G. from Canada Friday for volvement with one of the vic- provisions in the contract that Last year the two teams had a tims. York was charged with would penalize wildcat strikers Brown, of the DuPont Co. public W.nptil~g to bribe a Royal combined attendance of only 1.2 murder .and held while police or people refusing to cross picket affairs department in 1974. Mounted Policeman to million, and most people feel the According to Michael Stan­ part In espionage activities. investigated his claim. "We lines. One member said to UMW San Francisco-Oakland area really don't lend much credence President Arnold Miller, dard, Zilg's lawyer, the club attempt was first cannot support two teams. withdrew the book as a selection :lill'llvll•riPII by the Royal to what he's saying," said one "renegotiate the whole damn official. When released, York contract, because it stinks." at about the same time Mounted Police promotional tours and ad­ early last year, when a . said he had been smoking Indiana and West Virginia have Desegregation marijuana while in jail and announced "energy emergen­ vertising were cancelled. was offered "an The DuPont Co. somehow got a sum of money" by a continually "prayed to the Lord." cies" because of the strike. Bills Passed Ironically, York had recently President Carter can impose a manuscript copy of the book agent to spy for him. Eight Delaware Gov. Pete du Pont appeared on "Starsky and back-to-work order under the before publication. According to otmted Russians were signed two bills Thursday aiding Hutch" as a policeman and had ~Taft-Hartley Act, but has said a New York Times story, Brown of the Soviet Embassy the order for New Castle County tried out for the part of a that he would not. called the Book-of-the-Month club two were industrial schools to desegregate by Sep­ policeman on "Alice" last month. "and said DuPont ~onsidered the tlamtives. Two other officials, tember, after the state Liquor Labels Urged book 'scurrilous and unfair.' out of Canada, will not legislature took 17 hours to pass Director Flees Trial Medical experts said recently Brown denied that he at­ back in. the bills.· they endorse proposals to require tempted to discourage the case," said Canadian The General Assembly con- Film director Roman Polanski, warning labels on alcohol bottles printing, advertising, or Secretary Don vened at 2 p.m. Wednesday to through his French lawyer, told because heavy drinking during distribution of the book. The :..m~~a~~1n, "proved to be a classic vote on the bills. One bill reporters Thursday that he pregnancy is known to cause manuscript had been looked at of an intelligence authorizes the state Board of wouldn't return to the U.S. to face birth defects. · said Brown, and that "it was involving complex Education to combine the eleven sentencing for having allegedly Women who take five or six inaccurate in a number of systems, coded school districts into four; the sexually assaulted a 13-year-old drinks a day during pregnancy references to the DuPont Co." "I IIIIWOI'dll and secret concealed other sets limits on local property girl. run a high risk of damaging the said I hoped those errors could be all for the purposes of taxes. Du Pont waited and slept Polanski's lawyer George fetus, the experts said before a correcte1 prior to publication," limlllliJ~~g clandestine meetings in his offices in the State Capitol, Kiejmann said remarks by the Senate panel. Brown continued. --.-...... RCMP member and while one floor below the vote to judge in the case indicated The Food and Drug Soviet agents." pass the measures remained in . Polanski wouldn't receive an Administration has urged that R • · 0 kl d deadlock. "equitable sentence." Polanskl pregnant women take no more Senate Approves 1ma10 10 a an · Du Pont sent a state police fled California last week and has than two drinks a day of either helicopter to southern Delaware been hiding in Paris. hard liquor, wine or beer. to pick up a snowed-in legislator Polanski, a naturalized French Although no final decision has . Carter Choice who supported the bills. Several citizen, carmot be extradited to been made on labeling other southerners switched their the U.S., but his trial could be ·requirements, agencies such as Federal Judge William H. votes, enabling the school bill and transferred from California to The Food and Drug We~ter was confirmed by the tax bill to pass with votes of 23-13 France for French authorities to Administration and the Bureau of Senate F)'iday to a ten year term and 24-12 respectively. conclude. Alcohol, Tobacco and Fireanns as Director of the FBI, replacing are taking steps to develop the retiring Clarence M. Kelly. Coal Strike Goes On warning labels. an honest effort was Strangler Still at Large We~ter, 53, 1s a Court of bridge the gap," said Los Angeles police released Appeals Judge from St. Louis, Colosseum President Ned York a 37-year-old actor who DuPont Co. Charged Mo. President Carter chose him 1'. Nahas. The A's were had claimed he was the "Hillside The DuPont Co. and publisher after his first choice, Judge to a group of Denver Strangler," responsible for the Prentice-Hall · conspired to Frank M. Johnson, Jr. of IIIDeumen last year, but plans deaths of 12 women in the past suppress the book "DuPont: Alabama, withdrew because of the team for the third three months. Behind the Nylon Curtain," medical reasons.

Want to try out your "GREEN THUMB"? SPRING FOOTBAll PLANT GROWING ORGANIZATIONAl CONTEST MEETING open to All University ~·- - Students Full or Part-time ~ · · THURS. FEB. 16 4:30·6:00 PRIZES A WARDED I Welcome Back Students 130 SHARP LAB Pick up FREE materials, instructions and information at the East 10% Off All Purchases If you want to ploy lounge ;,f the Student Center · Fairfield Shopping Center football in the fall, you Feb. 16th & 17th must attend this 11 a.m.·3 p.m. meeting. Sponsored by Horticulture Club February 14, 1978 Page6 REVIEW. University of Delaware, Newark. Delaware INTERCOLLEGIATE SPRING FLING SKI WEEK AT KILLINGTON, VERMONT A Cat Frolics in the Owl's Nest "March is Killington's Best Ski Month with Plenty of Snow. Sun and Fun." March Ski Weeks Include: By PAT LISELLA • Five Day Killington Lift Ticket (Mon-Fri) • Five Nights Lodging excellently by- Archer Page, a other productions, but this was (Sun-Thurs) • Five Full Breakfasts&< Four Complete Dinners Can a prostitute find happiness sophomore drama major at the made up for by a good script, fine • Ski 50 Runs with up to 3000' Drop on 14 Lifts • Night Time with a frustrated writer? This university. Doris uses her body acting, and an air of enjoyment. Entertainment&< Walk to Movies, etc. • Free Keg Party&< Dance to Live Bands question, and many others, are as a means of support while The theater, located at T1 N. ONLY $119.50-$139.50 or $79.50-$99.50 (without meals) answered in the Chapel Street struggling to become an actress. Chapel Street is small enough for Special Drive-To Package Players' production of "The Owl The "W" is her last name, which even an outsider to feel the To receive all the details on this great trip, send this ad with your and the Pussycat." is just as changeable as Sher­ address to United Intercollegiate Skiers Association, 4040 S. 28th St., personal touches in the Arlington, Va. 22206. (703) 578-3322 (No collect, please) Subject to The characters are F. Sher­ man's first. production. There is no curtain, 6% tax and service charge. man, a bookstore clerk who The two meet after Sherman, only a raised platform flanked by believes that he is an intellectual using peeping Tom tactics, tells a crude and simple set so -Writer, and Doris W., a prostitute Doris's landlord that she is characteristic of the rundown · •********************** who insists she is a model and apartment in which Sherman actress. lives. These two characters react ! DID YOU FORGET? ! The play revolves around the skillfully with each other, interaction of the two characters drawing the audience into their ir Are you a student, ir over a one month period. The changing relationship of love, ir graduate or undergraduate -tr momEUtts shared with the anger, and comedy.-. ir and 25 years and older? ir audience are sometimes filled The audience empathized with with anger and at other times the changes in the~ relationship : Come ioin the members of : love, but they are always funny, because these two characters well acted, and entertaining. were so believeable; many of the : Returning Adults : In one scene, Doris wants to go traits in F. Sherman and Doris W. to sleep, but to do this she has to are all too familiar in ourselves . watch TV, listen to the radio, or . The performance will be ._ Student Assoc. ._ be with a man. There is nothing repeated next Frhlay and : For a delicious chicken lunch : good on television, and Sher­ Saturday nights, at 8:15 p.m. The Cost $1.00 members ir man's only radio . is in the cost is $3.50, a reasonable price -tr headboard of his double bed. By for an evening of pure en­ ir $2.00 non-members ir morning, Doris finds two sleeping tertainment. ir (includes membership fee) -tr aids. The owl, F. Sherman, is played STUDY IN by Leo Irwin. The "F" stands for "entertaining men in her GUADALAJARA. MEXICO • 15, 12:00-tr• Felix, Fred, or any otl)er name apartment. Evicted rom her :VVednesday, Feb. this character chooses at any apartment with nowl re to go, The GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL a fully accredited UNIVERSITY OF • • given time. Sherman is employed and only 72 cents in l.cr pocket, ARIZONA program. offers July 3· ! Daugherty Hall : by a bookstore, but prides Doris arrives on Sherman's August II. anthropology, art. bilingual himself on being an intellectual doorstep. education. folklore. history, political author. His writings include In its third major production of science. Spanish language and litera· : DRAGONS DEN : "intellectual" statements like the season, the Chapel Street ture. Intensive Spanish. Tuition: S245; -tr Next RASA Meeting ir "The sun spits over the horizol}-" Players provide the audience board and room with Mexican family: -tr March 1st, Noon, Daugherty Hall -tr Sherman tries to rehabilitate with an evening of delightful · S285. For brochure: GUADALAJARA the pussycat by increasing her entertainment. The production SUMMER SCHOOL. Alumni 211. vocabulary. Doris is l>layed did not have the polish of many Unlv.-slty of Arizona, Tucson. Arizona *********************** 85721. (602) 884-4729.

ELVIS COSTELLO JOURNEY MYAIM IS TRUE &~cl~ INFINITY including: Two Tickets To Paradise/Baby tlold On including: Alison '( The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes You've Really Got A Hold On Me lighls/Somethin' To Hide/Patiently Less Than Zero Watching The Detect1ves WannaBe A Rock 'N' Roll Star Feeling That Way/Winds Of March Welcome To The Working Week Gamblin Man

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Crack the Sky Safety In Numbers 2·RECORD SET including: Ted Nugent Nuclear Apathy A Night On The Town (With Snow White) DfJuole live GfJhZfJ Long Nights/Aashlight including: Gonzo/Baby, Please Don't Go/Stranglehold Motor City Madhouse/Cat Scratch Fever

new voca s com· plimented by a fresh progressive musical direction makes for a super· KE2 35069 The ultimate live rock charged third LP by this hot rock & album from the ultimate live per· roll group. former. Ted Nugent live is not for the weak-hearted. Warning-if it's too loud, you're too old. WONDERLAND REVIEW ·. University ot Delaware, Newark: Delaware Page7

... University Theatre FREEDOM VALLEY GIRL SCOUT CAMP fContlnued from Page ) is spread too thinly. For example, community, he said, "It may theatres and other a:~:ea one performance of "Everyman" want a Gino's, but it doesn't_ need trpnlzations. Nor should the was given to. only 14 people in a one." play have been recently house capable of holding 850. SUMMER JOB· JIHII!Dted in the area, no matte~ Finally the audience is con­ The department, however, may wbat type it is. sidered. This consists of students, not be fulfilling its obligation to . INTERVIEWS 'lbe pool of -talent must be faculty, staff and nearby the university. Since it is sup­ ealdered in reference to the residents who patronize ported by the College of Arts and flit of an individual play. Since university productions. Here, I Sciences (in addition to revenue IIIGit of the acting students in­ argued with Hansen that he was ·from tickets and grants from Sponsored by the Med are young females, the ignoring the taste of the other sources), it does have some flit C8DilOt be all middle-aged audience, pointing out the poor duty to present, . on some oc­ STUDENT EMPLOYMENT OFFICE ellracters, nor can it have an attendance at many of his casions, what the students want. Ml' abiDldance of male roles. productions. Outside of the problems Ukewlse minorities cannot be associated with the selection of lllmlnated by having all cast For many of the 14,000 students Jobs Available: here, university theatre is their· plays, people in the department Mnbers as part of the same do have other ideas. They have CAMP COUNSELORS •LIFEGUARDS flmlly. only exposure to live drama, but university theatre is "not sup­ plans for the remodeling of CAMP NURSE • CRAFTS DIRECTOR Tbe play must help develop the Mitchell Hall to better ac­ Ml'8ll talent of the students. ported by the students," said STUDENT BUSINESS MANAGER Hansen . commodate theatre' productions. .Adors and actresses must be It supports the construction of a aposed to periOd pieces, verse Hansen felt that university large, roughly 1500 seat plays and plays with strong theatre must consider the entire . auditorium so the university can llllects. community in selecting what he · present "big name" productions. 'lbe stage crew must likewise called "the best season" possible, Maclane Room, Student Center their skills. Therefore but he will not cater entirely to It would like to have a small cannot pe a box set popular taste. (200 seat) theatre to let the typical of soap department present the plays it February 15th & 16th nor can they all be set in We "cannot merely produce would prefer. The department day America for costume musicals," he said, despite their would also like to invite other 7:00 p.m.-9:00p.m. l'dlllliJI!IIPI'!l to have the chance to proven popularity. Such a move college's plays, but, again, outside of contemporary would not fulfill the department's facilitiesUniversity do nottheatre permit has it. many .______.. educational programs. If a member of the department Hansen compared choice of good ideas, but they are still desire to direct a specific plays to choice of restaurants. then the alternative Referring to the students and the stateunfortunately of transition. ·floundering in a ..------. should have at least sort of approval from the ...--1111!!!!!!!------. facilities are also kept in Mitchell Hall, which Interested in called a "barn" or an PASSION. MYSTERY. ~'1ftii1M~trrlll" is the wrong size for Backpacking? It. is too small for LOVE. expensive performers to the cost among enough Ctieck It is too big for university Out NO WONDER IT WAS THE BROADWAY'S BIGGEST PLAY. . OUTING CLUB.

PHILADELPHIA'S BAND F THE YEAR RICHARD rr · 1 BURTON IPUERARTHI

n~)s . "Far richer, more fully dimensioned · experience than it was on the stage ... With FLY BY NIGHT an Oscar contender.. :· -Kevin Thomas, LA. Times SUN~- , FEB. 19, IN BACCHUS . - SHOWS 7:00P.M. -10 P.M.

STUDENTS $3.00 W /I. D. · OTHERS- $4.00

7:00 & 9:30 NIGHTLY Tickets Available in Rm. 100 STUDENTS $2 WITH I.D. Student-Center , FINAL NIGHT PageS REVIEW: University of Delaware, Newark. Delaware February 14, 1978 Equus Hobbles From Stage to Screen By KEVIN MAHONEY one dimensional nature. ·It is who has blinded six horses at the we all possess beneath the veneer boy as the psychiatrist dredges I am sad to say that the film imprisoned in a net of sen­ stable where he works. The play of civilization_. up the events that led to the boy's version of "Equus" does not sationalism that is abetted by utilizes the imagination of the As the psychiatrist Dysart crime. measure up to its staged com­ Richard Burton's ranting per­ audience to give it energy. The says, "We need a way of seeing in The explicit settings of the plement. In substance, it is a formance. as Henry Dysart. horse-god, Equus, is evoked by the dark." He insinuates that the movie also detract from any pantomime horse with its seams However, in spite of all the suggestion and gesture. One is set of circumstances that sum­ sense of imagination, unlike the and loose ends exposed. The film shortcomings, vestiges of power aware of his presence as he is moned up Equus from the depths stark, · Greek original.· Lwnet ' ultimately fails because director still remain from the original. fleshed out through the elaborate of Strang's mind merely reac­ blatantly litters the screen with Sidney (Network) Lumet and First things first. The main ceremonial masking of the ac­ tivated a former mode of reminders of the evil of Sl!riptwriter Peter Shaffer do not complaint is the lack of inventive tors. thinking. When I looked at the technology, particularly in the present an adequate translation directing. Lumet cannot decide The domain of Equus is a realm metaphorical horses in the play, Field of Ha-Ha scene. As the boy f;·;m stage to sUver screen, what he wants to do with of the mind, of some ancestral, there was a sense that Equus was gallops across the field during his illllike Welle's "MacBeth" or "Equus". primative and nucleic memory. indeed residing therein. Lumet, religious ritual with Nugget, the Oliviers r.Henry the V". - At times I felt as if I were The landscape of the film is however, uses real animals in the horse, the camer9: shows the field This is not the first time the watching a filmed play that did firmly rooted in reality. A sense film and this immediately littered with electronic debris. kadeq hands of Hollywood have not incorporate the strengths of of violence and turmoil is present destroys any chance for the Another blatant ·.scene is squeezed any kind of subtlety out either cinema or theater. Equus but none of the mystery from the audience to use their Dysart is visitirig Alan's home to ·J; a dramatic work whose is basically a trek through the play. Shaffer intended to convey imagination. This also negates look for clues to the boy's psyche. ,;,.s,c:;ential nature hinges on such recesses of the disburbed mind of that the god is a throwback to a the fact that the play itself is The mother of the boy tells o~ qualities. The film is strictly a Alan Strang (Peter Firth), a lad crueler consciousness, one that enacted within the mind of the (Continued on Page 151 FREE. NEW FILM SERI E.S ~ HOW SHOULD WE THEN LIVE? SEE THESE 10 EPISODES BEING SHOWN AT: STUDEt{(' CENTER UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE ~ Academy _S~reet, Newark, J;lE Coffeehouse in basement.- Use adjacent parking lot. -- EPISODE TIME DATE '/OIJ 1"\1 ~0>1\• I The Romm1 Age 7:30 FRIDAY II The Middle Ages FEB 10 ~/o~Tt- \S<;; a ten episode color film series III The Rcnaissa11cc TI-l£ R£ r ~ THURSDAY . 7:30\ FEB 16 A documentary spectacular IV The Rcformatioll Over 2 1h years m the makmg v The Rcl'Oluti

FREE Francis Schaeffer has written a 11umber See all 10 films within 7 weeks. Begins on of books including "The God Who Is There," Friday night, and six successive Thursday "True Spirituality" and "Escape From nights. Discussion follows showing. Reason." These have bee11 widely read and studied in over 15 differellf la11guages. Dr. Schaeffer asks The sales of his books have exceeded one • Wily isn't it safe to walk the streets at nisht? 1nillion in the U.S. alone. • Wily is there more violence on one hand and a11 ever-increasing authoritarianism on the other? " rl'", • Wllat:s happening to our accepted lturnan .... freedoms?

10 moving 30-minute episodes ...

EPISODE I The Roman Age EPISODE V The Revolutionary Age A

a heated disc~ion in the last meeting, the has also been asked by Food Service to formulate a A new and startling chapter Student Association (RSA) Sunday night policy to deal with food fights. passed a motion to loan Gilbert A-B $130 to Last semester, according to Sorbello, Food in one of the great journeys of television set. Service charged six students with misusing was 14 to 5 with one abstention. Gilbert university property and had them brought before enlightenment of our time been unable to obtain a loan from the the student judicial system. Two were declared Department which may loan money to guilty and four are still waiting for a verdict, said a television, but not for repairs. Sorbello. VW•i'rl!.nt Joan Sorbello reported that Dean The-possibility of making central campus coed is Raymond Eddy had recommended the also being investigated. There are three proposals get involved in putting out a Freshmen being considered which concern Sharp and Canon According to Sorbello, Eddy said the RSA halls. Males and females may be put on the same be of more service by helping improve fresh­ floor, segregated by halls, or Sharp may become a orientation. women's dorm and Cannon a men's dorm. Ia new business, the RSA plans on investigating "Surveys have been done," said Sorbello," and arrest of the seven Christiana students and the students were overwhelmingly in favor of going M ltilllngtlllealcohol and discipline policies. The RSA coed." ..

The Second Ring of Power goes far beyond anything Water Co. Gives UD 40· Acres Castan~da has yet written. In his great journey towards knowledge and power. he finds himself in a deadly psychic university has received a ceremony December 22. decision to donate the land to the battle with dona Soleda. a female apprentice of don Juan. of 40 acres valued at Taylor said, as he presented university. who turris her power-power she learnt from.don Juan lfiiOiiJJUittely $305 000 from the the deed, that the gift was an act himself-against him. Water Co., together with of civic responsibility and The land is between a property already owned by the university Literary Guild Alternate Selection Norman Taylor. gesture of confidence in the and the Middle Run stream. Psychology Today Book Club Main Selection Prl!!lident and Chairman of the excellence of the university. Taylor presented The family's deep interest in $9.951-t SIMON AND SCHUSTER E.A. Trabant with the higher education, said Norman to the land during a brief Taylor, was a big factor in the ... WXDR (Continued from Page 3) zi= said, "With more time to con­ centrate on each script, we can improve the quality."

But the project can only be successful if more students show interest and join up. Shotwell encourages any student who wishes to write, direct or act in any radio play to contact him at a meeting concerning the workshop Tuesday night, February 14, in the lobby of Smith Hall at 7 p.m .

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Acareer in law­ '•7:00 Wednesdays •Good people, good ideas wtthoutlilw school. •Informal discussions efree and open Artificial Intelligence Language and Communications · What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap oetween an March 1 Dr. Ralph February 22 - Dr. Henry undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible · Weischedel, Computer Science, Shipman, Physics, career. The Lawyer's Assistant Is able to do work tradi­ tionally done by lawyers. - Is Artificial Intelligence Extraterrestrial Intelligence: Three months of intensive training can give you ,the Intelligent? Communications. -ekllls....:the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose March 15 - Dr. Frank Murray, March 8 Dr. William one of the seven courses offered-choose the city in which you want to work. Ed. Foundafions, Can Pepicello, English, .- Sex and Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has Intelligence Be Boosted? Language. placed more than 2,000 graduates in law firms, banks, and corporations in over 80 cities. April 12- Dr. Douglas Stalker, April 5 - Dr. Louis Arena, If you are a senior of high academic standing and are Philosophy, - Public Opinion English, Structural Interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like Polls: Tapping the National Fingerprinting: The Written to meet you. Mind. Language. Coritact your placement office for an interview with our April 26 - Dr. Fred Hofstetter, April 19- Dr. Sandra Buechler, representative. Music and PLATO - Plato - The Psychology- The Language of We will visit your campus on: Genesis of an Intelligent Madness. Educational System . . Monday, February 20 •Everyone is welcome to ioin in on the discussions. Explore and expand. Come and" relax with us: bring nothing but your The Institute 'for naturally Inquisitive mind in sear~h of New Encounters. Paralegal Training •For additional information call738-1195. 235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania t9103 (215) 732-6600 eThe Honors Center Is located beneath Rodney F: across Operated by Para-Legal, Inc. Elkton Rd., under the RR tracks and to the ri·ght. L------~------I I & It I til I II I I. I I Pa9e 10 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware February 14, 1978 ,------Our Man Hoppe------. Dig That Canal

By Arthur Hoppe

The Committee to Bring Our Canal Home from Panama has run into a slight - but by no means insunnountable - problem. No, it isn't money. Funds keep pouring in. And our members are waving their little flags and pounding their canes on the floor as enthusiastically as ever. There isn't a one of them who wouldn't gladly march off to the jungles of Panama to fight to the death for our canal if their geriatricians would let them. · Nor have the bleeding-heart liberals found a flaw in the irrefutable logic behind our cause. We say with Ronald Reagan that it's not the Panama Canal; it's the "American Canal in Panama." Or, as Senator Hayakawa put it so well: "We stole it fair and square and we ought to keep it." +++ At the same time, the Panamanians want what the{iike to call ~~~tiT OOtR PLANS TO Bt AMl§lCNARV ~ LfAVING 114E WHITE HOUSE .. their "sacred soil" back. They're sick and tired of seeing our flag fly over the ten-mile-wide swatch of territory that bisects their little two-bit country. Editorial------Well, when you stop to think about it, what decent American wants so much as a cupful of dirty Panamani.m soil? Lord only knows what strange bugs it's got in it. Yet we can't simply walk off and abandon our American Canal to the tender mercies of General Torrijos, who is either a Communist Making the Grade or Facist dictator depending on what day of the week it is. Dq you think a fellow like that cares a fig about our ca~? No, we dug that precious canal ourselves at great expense. And There wqs a short article in the last issue of longer send a boy to Viet Nom. Also, with the · now it's high time we dug it up and brought it home where it can be The Review entitled "Arts and Sciences 'Flunk job market as satiated as it is, a university easily def~mded and kept in tip-top shape for all Americans to enjoy. Outs' Increase." It seemed straightforward'· must turn out excellent products to maintain through generations yet unborn. enough - students simply aren't cutting it the its reputation and economic stability. Of cour­ Price is no object. It cost us $336 million to build 65 years ago. se, we would like to believe that faculty and Taking inflation and shipping costs into consideration, it's way they used to. But, why? estimated that $9.2 billion would do the job that lies ahead. And Students may be of a poorer quality than administration want to raise the quality of considering that we spent $100 billion before we got our boys out of they were in past years. If this is the root of education for altruistic reasons • a concern Vietnam, surely it's worth less than a tenth of that to get our canal the problem at the university, why isn't for the minds of the students. But, no matter out of Panama. something more positive done about it? In­ what the cause, if the standards are higher, As a matter of fact, the only problem the Committee has run into stead of allowing a student fresh out of a higher quality students must be recruited and thus far is this: Once we dig up our sacred canal, shake the dirty mediocre high school experience to sink, why enrollment requirements should be stiffened. Panamanian soil off it, and bring it home, what on earth are we doesn't the university provide a more esten­ But, then again, the quality of students and going to do with it? sive remedial program? If students aren't as scholastics may not have changed. People prepared for college as they used to be, may be flunking out because they simply are +++ prepare them while they're here. Teach them not motivated by grades and glqry any{Tlore. to read, write, take notes - these are not Face it, no matter how intelligent a st'udent If it's worth dying for, certainly our canal is good for something. inherent skills. Programs which are already might be, and it doesn't take that much to get There's been talk of using it to replace the Erie Canal, which is getting old, but it's not long enough. Las Vegas has put in a bid for available on campus, Such as the Writing Cen­ through this institution, if the reward isn't satisfying enough, the motivation doesn't it. But we suspect they plan to turn it into a cheap tourist attraction ter and the tutoring service, are often not as very little shipping passes through southern Nevada any more. knowr:~ to the disoriented freshman, and ap­ exist. Better that we dig a hole and give this faithful canal that has served parently not enough. The system of grading here leaves much to us so long a decent and honorable burial. But, maybe the change is within the univer­ be desired. Busting for a grade somehow There must be a higher use. To find it, we have nominated Mr. sity itself, and not in the incoming academic cheapens the learning experience and Reagan for Director of Disposal. No one wants to keep it more than consumers. The individual professors and perhaps students are beginning to realize he. departments may be raising the standards of this. Reassessing the grading system may not Suggestions, in five words or less, as to what Mr. Reagan shQuld their courses, thereby making it more difficult solve tlie -problem of more students flunking do with the canal will be gratefully accepted. for students to stay in ·school. There are many out, but it' may be the most practical and ef­ possible reasons for raising the standards. fective way of dealing with a problem that (Copyright Chronicle PublisbJDg Co. 1978) Professors don't have to feel guilty about won't disappear with the next batch of "drop- not passing a male student - an F will no . ped" freshmen.

Vol. 101, No. 33 Tuesday, Februa~y 1 4, 1978

Mark Odren AI Mascitti Beth Moore managing editor editor editorial editor Mary Ruf Valerie Helmbreck Robert Podems advertising director executive editor business manager news editors ...... , . • . . . . . • ...... • . . . • . • . Tom Conner, Jennifer l. Schenker sports editor ...... • . . . • . • • • , .•.•...... ~ David Hughes, Kevin Tresolini features editors ...... •.• : • .•.•. , .•.•. , .•.•...... Eric Ruth, Ken Mommerella copy editors ...... , ...• . •.....lorraine Bowers, Bonnie Brescia Mark Bailey ·

~7.~~~~~~~~1 ~ :~~;;~,: .: ::: : : : : :: ::: : : : :: ::: : : : : : ; :: : : : : :: : : : : : : :: : : : : : : : :: : ~~~~~:: ~:~~~ 0 assistant news edifor ...... •.•...•.•...... • . • ...... Oorl Flood ossisfont sports editor ...... •.•...... ·.. •...... Rick Benson sfoff writer ...... •.••••...... Kim Ayers assistant advertising manager ...... •...... •. , . • . • • ...... Trish Milito classified advertising manager ...•.....•...•.•.•...... Barb Schlesinger, art director ...... •.•.•.•... , ... , ...... Nancy Hammond assistant ~rt director ...... Karen Bach

Pultllshed twice -kly during the academic year and once -kly during Winter Session loy - atuclent loody of the University of Delaware, Newark, Dela-re, 19711. lolltorlol and ltusl....,s offices located at ..1 Student Center. Phone numloera: 731-2771, 731- 2772, 73.. 2774 . 1ushteu houra:10 a.m. to ,I p.m., Monday through Friday. February 14, 1978 REVIE_W. University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware Page 11 Transcendental Levitation­ /Opinik Defense of Bierbaum I Dematerialization c~~e .. · [ .: Trabant's performance as an Well, Bierbaum negle!!ted to educator and administrator, and By Eric Zencey mention all this (thouglt he did WORLD OF ILLUSION found them consistently inept. give us a nice multiple choice Only then did Kalinowski raise exam). He has used his position Actual demonstrations of the fourth d1mens1on w111 Tom Bierbaum has long been the issue of Art Trabant, htunan on the Review to misrepresent a be created live on stage an easy target for attack, and being. The justification was, I situation, and disguised that few, least of all those who are believe, that even if Trabant is propaganda as a concern_for a Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ. capable of understanding the hopelessly incompetent, we fellow human's dignity. purpose of education and the role students and taxpayers might In defense of Bierbaum, we a student newspaper may play in find some solace in the hope that should recognize that he has done promoting that purpose, have he is an all-around nice guy. what he has done because he had PLAY restrained from attacking him. Unfortunately, the Aumiller to. If that thin shred of respect for Criticizing Bierbamn is as easy affair was in full swing, and it authority, however abused, is as criticizing E.A. Trabant, and was rather difficult to refrain ever broken, if everyone around requires conside tably less in­ from seeing Trabant as a vicious campus expressed disgust at Club Lacrosse telligence. person, capable of using his such a blatant misuse of public Thus, although I would never administrative position to en­ trust, Bierbaum could no longer assent to any decision that gave force a private moral code, even hold his position as an editor of ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Bierbaum a platform, in print, in defiance of the law, even with the university paper. from which to propound his the certain knowledge that only Tom, dear Tom, why do you doctri:te of administrative the Board of Trustees (and not make it so hard on those of us who i Everyone Welcome-Everyone Will Play sychr,phancy,_I do feel some need the courts) would support him. would defend you? to defend him when the criticism Other critics of Bierbaum's Editor's note: Tom Bierbaum Thurs., Feb. 16th- 7:00-ln 326 Purnell is unjustified. defense of Trabant (by way of is no longer a Review staff Call738-8373 For Info Crowley, versus Kalinowski) member. His "In Defense of have pointed out that he entirely Fr~" (The Review, Feb. 2 ) was Criticizing neglects the heroic aspect in written as an extension of his Be There If You Want To Play! Trabant. After all, here is a column, "Editorial Feedbag." single, lone, (albeit powerful) Bierbaum is · man, standing up for the forces of pettiness, narrow-mindedness, as easy. as and falsehood, against the overwhelming tide of com­ passion, generosity, human un­ criticiZing derstanding, and honesty, with -. lJelieft It orNot/ only the financial resources of the Board of Trustees to sustain him. EVERYBODY'S TALKING ABOUT OUR••• E.A. Trabant... One wonders why Bierbaum neglects such an epic struggle. Bierbaum notes that Bierbaum has defended Kalinowski was an invited Crowley's reaction to speaker at that rally. He also Kalinowski's speech at a UDCC implies · that Kalinowski's rally last May. For this simple remarks were rather, ah, action-calling them as he sees pungent. Bierbaum's critics them-Bierbaum has come under charge him with failing to note fire. the connection between the two. Some critics point to the errors Kalinowski has a reptuation as a of fact Bierbaum committed; _public speaker; he was invited Kalinowski wasn't a guest lec­ because he is not a wishy-washy, turer at the university, but a paid toadying administrative "yes''­ employee with the rank of lec­ man. That the UDCC knew this turer, on a one year contract, the before the rally was clear; that renewal of which required the they attempted, under Crowley's administration's approval. direction, to disassociate · Kalinowski's remarks did not themselves from the respon­ *Prewashed Straight leg Jecms. $1299 "degenerate," but followed a sibility that knowledge implies, is l~t. $11.50-$19.00. Waists 21-31 •• : • • SALE logical order. He first assessed .equally clear.

LEnERS The Re'rlew encourages letters from students, faculty and members of the a~lnistration. All letters should be typed on a SO-spaced line and addressed to: The Review, B-1 Student Center. Although The Review will honor all requests for anonymity, names and addresses must accompany all letters for verification purposes.

r------519 ------: r-\ . LEVI'SDENIM WASHED JEANS LOOI · · :' .•·•..... •·•. : SUPER STRAIGHT ! THE I 519-2913 STIAIGHT LEG 1 I ••-s1a:a 99 ILEG ~:~.!~~NS! $-14 .... $17.00 OUTING 646-2913 FLARES $ . 99 ' 99 $1t.H 15 ) $15 CLUB Waist Size • will be meeting tonight at 7 p.m. "~~···& ~ in 112 Memorial Hall s-a. ALMART ... 100~/0 OFF ~~~SHOPPING CENTER,~~ ·~ ,BE THERE! LIST ON All KIRKWOOD HIGHWAY SNEAKERS & SIIOES Page 12 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware February 14, 1978 Theologian Ponders Decline of The West · By GARY CAHALL theologian, is the creator, writer there more violence on one hand The moral decline and carnality said, "yet they flourished Can modern society learn any and narrator of the ten-part and an ever increasing of the Roman people increased in because of their strong foun­ lessons from studying the series, subtitled "The Rise and authoritarianism on the other? the later days of the empire, dations: the Bible." histories of past cultures? Over Decline of Western Thought and What's happening to our ac­ according to Schaeffer who According to Schaeffer, what 200 people who would say "yes," Culture." The British Broad­ cepted human freedoms?" showed examples of early and enabled Christianity to even­ filled the Ewing Room of the casting Company (BBC) assisted To find the answer, Schaeffer later Roman artwork, and tually become the religion of Student Center Friday night to in the series' production, which . plows through history, starting commented on the decline of Rome was the early church's see and discuss the first two took over two years of filming in with Ancient Rome. Rome quality and increasing preoc­ practice of being "in the world, chapters of a film series by Dr. 12 countries. collapsed, said Schaeffer, cupation with sexual overtones. but not of it. The Christians not Francis Schaeffer entitled "How The iirst episode opened with because it had no strong more­ One group that differred from only rejected other religions," he Should We Then Live?" And, Schaeffer walking down a dark ideological base on which its the majority, Schaeffer said, was said, "but also the cultures based sponsored by · lnter-Varsify urban street, looking at the culture could stand. The plethora the early Christian church. on those religions." Thus, when Christian Fellowship. camera and asking the of religions, combined with "Their refusal to worship the Germanic tribes conquered Schaeffer, an internationally questions; "Why isn't it safe to mandatory emperor-worship, emperor as well as God made Rome, the people were made known lecturer, author and walk the streets at night? Why is worsened the problem, he said. them martyrs many times," he Christian in mass baptismals, he stated. · The second episode, "The Middle Ages," presented a view of the Christian church in the first centuries A.D., describing a gradual collaboration with the government but corrupted by humanistic ideals. Schaeffer would not call this period of time . 'the Dark Ages," which he said is a misnomer. There was much art and literature, but most of it wa~ made for the wealthy alone. The art and music became less personal and more other-wordly, he concluded. There was a strange paradox, said Schaeffer, between the opulence of the church in Rome and the relinquishment practiced by monastic orders such as the order founded by St. Francis of Assisi. The writings of ancient philosophers were rediscovered in monestaries, and their esteem of man's intellect collided with the Bible's teachings of a fallen t l world. St. Thomas Aquinas, ' according to Schaeffer, brought in his writings and teachings of a new humanistic philosophy that weakened the basis Christianity was founded on. Only later, in the I Gothic period, did the work of \. translators Wycliffe and Hus help reaffirm the Bible, according to Schaeffer. Discussions were held after each episode, led by assistant Language Professor Dr. Gerald ~ Culley and Rev. Will Metzger of \ I Inter-Varsity Christian \ \ Fellowship. The films, called I The TI-57. The super slide-rule that'll "fascinating," "one-sided" and "thought provoking" by various viewers, spurr·ed questions on get you into progran1n1ing... fast and easy. history, philosophy and religion. The free film series will con­ .. .. 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Estimated • ·· Programming a calculator -The end result is more effi- PERSONAL ELECTRONICS : living, airfare, tuition, fees: : : $3400 N.Y. residents: $3900 • • others. Professor David : : Blankenship, Philosophy : : Department, SUC, New Paltz, • TEXAS INSTRUMENTS • New York 12561 (914) 257· : @ 1978 Texas Instruments Incorporated INCORPORATED : ...... 2696. : Page 13 Februa,.Y 14, 1978 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, D~laware The Middle East: A Syrian's Reflections By MARK ASHWILL , doubt that very much. might help in bringing peace, but is to think about those who are what we need; the Arab world is Editors Note: The following is REVIEW: Should the both parties will find another going to be in the war physically greatly divided. We must be an intervi-ew with Usamah Palestinian • Liberation major source like Europe. and to think about the families united and talk about one single Bismar, a student born in Syria Organization (PLO) be the REVIEW: How Ca,t peace be who are waiting for them in both thing and then we can go to Israel who is currently doing graduate representative group? brought to the whole region parties. I can give you an and say, "here are out points" ... work at the University in BISMAR: I think the PLO is without the addition of the other example. During the 1973 War it's then we can negotiate. chemical engineering. Bismar probably the strongest party countries to the negotiating been said that every single reflected upon the situation in the representing the Palestinians, so process? family in Israel had a relative Middle East in late Jannary. why not? BISMAR: Egypt is not only the who was captured, injured or Use REVIEW: In your opinion what REVIEW: What are your largest Arabic country killed. It is not as bad in the Arab motivated Egyptian President comments on the idea of de­ population wise, but it is probably world but still we also suffer. In Review Anwar Sadat last year to iniate militarizing the Mid-East by way the strongest military power the 1973 War I could feel what serious negotiations between his of a concerted U.S.-U.S.S.R. among the Arab countries. Many was happening from the letters Classifieds country and Israel? reduction of arms sales to this other Arab countries, even if they that my family sent. My brother BISMAR: I personally believe area? combined together, would still told me about Israeli fighter jets that Sadat knows his country is BISMAR: Is it really a benefit need very desperately the help of coming to a popular circle close not in the bes! position to go for both the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. Egypt in the event of military to Damascus and how they toward war. They must proceed to have some kind of peace in that action. Now Egypt is out of the dropped a few bombs and much more towards economic area? Is this really what they picture; there is no war. It's not seconds later seventy people Love Knot development. For instance, want? The Middle East is a very necessary to have all of them at were dead. Let us just think about by Egypt, as everybody knows, is healthy place for experimenting the time being. It must be done by the human beings that are being the leading country in the Arab their (the U.S. and Russia's) own steps. I don't expect that sud­ killed during these wars. Human world with something like forty military products; at least this is denly after war for twenty-eight lives are not easily replaced. FADED! million people living there, and I what has happened so far. It's a years that all parties would come REVIEW: Can you describe would say the people are below very big market regardless of together. There is no way you can what sort of a role you believe the GLORY.! average as far as standard of how many people have been see an Arab and Israeli leader country in which you studied living is concerned when making killed in the wars. However, it seated together. (Saudi Arabia) should be playing a comparison with other coun­ turns out that probably the U.S. is REVIEW: As an individual in relation to her neighboring tries. Even the economic con­ more interested in peace than \¢to will help make up the future states? dition of Israel is very bad. The maybe the Russians. I don't know generation of leaders and general BISMAR: The only way I see it value of their money (lira) is exactly what they are after, but population in your country, what is for Saudi Arabia to sit with going down, ... so I don't think they at least that's what we hear from do you see as a key element ( s) in Syria, Iraq, Egypt and others and 165 E. Main Sl are really in a much better state the news. To reduce military aid a peace plan? to agree on one single opinion Newark, De. than others and they are really in toward the Arabs and Israelis BISMA~: An important thing instead of having many. This is i debt witb _t}le _U,S. ~~~~~~------_. REVIEW: Do you believe that if future Middle East negotiations were to fail war would be im­ minent? BISMAR: I doubt very much that there is going to be another war; at least not in the near future. Let's assume that there is some kind of a peaceful agreement between Israel and Egypt; what's going to happen between Syria and Israel, or say Jordan and Israel? Jordan is in no shape. to fight a war with Israel by itself, and neither is Syria. However, combining the two countries together like in the 1973 war (Egypt from the south; Syria from the north) proved to be some kind of a successful step. But are Syria and Jordan, for example, ready for.such a war? I ~············································································································!• • e RESIDENT ASSISTANT S8mlw: i• "Developing a Personal Physical Fitness Program" In v1ew of the ep1dem1c ol heart d1sease POSITIONS AVAILABLE I occurnng m the Umted States. a ma1or • effort IS be1ng 1n1t1ated to encourage the Application materials for RA positions for the 1978-79 school year • pract1ce of preventative med1c1ne pro­ will be available at Candidate Interest Meeting to be held in each • grams. Th1s seminar w111 enable you to • learn how to start such a program ~omplex on Tuesday, february 14 and Wednesday, February 15 at 4 • safely. Dr. Cooper IS a former Lt. Colonel ·. p.m. Candidates are expected to attend a meeting at ONE of these, • in the Med1cal Corps and Sernor Flight • Surgeon, he 1s author of the best -selling .. times. Please attend the meeting In the complex to· which' you wish to • book "AEROBICS ". He is a graduate of • the University of Oklahoma School of apply. • Medicine and the Harvard School of Pub­ • lic Health . • Interest Meeting Locations • COMPLEX LOCATION OF MEETING • Tues. Feb. 21 Central ••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• .••••• ·••• Warner Hall Basement =• 7 pm-10 pm Christiana ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Christiana Commons =• Clayton Hal~ Newark Campus Dickinson •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; •• Dickinson C/D Lounge • ·Fee: $5.00 General Public and Gilbert ••••••••••••••••••••••••- ••••••••••••• Gilbert D/E Lounge • $3.00 U.D. Full-time stu­ • dents on space available Harrington ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Harrington D/E Lounge = basis after February 15, 1978. Pencader ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Pencader'Commons II Lounge • 1. Rodney ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Rodney C/D Lounge • Register by phone now • Russell •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Russell D/E Lounge • • (302) 738-8151 • Candidates unable to attend either meeting may pick up • UNIVERSITY OF application materials from the complex office of their choice between • 9 a.m. february 14 and 12 noon february 17. .-• DElAWARE • DIVISION OF CONTINUING JOUCATION ...... ~ ...... ~ • .- !' Page 14 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware February 14, 1978

...... ~ ...... HAIR CUTTING EAR PIERCING HAIR PAINTING . McElhone Needs Tightening PERMING CRIMPING HENNA . By KIM AYERS Their first effort, "Never Been rather mediocre mixing job . . It's typical for most debut A Prom Queen," is a mixture of Musically, the album is . . . artists to float around between easy rock and folksy jazz. Most of diverse, with many stylistic . AT CLINIC PRICES : various styles of music within a directions. The spaced-out . ALL SERVICES PERFORMED : particular genre, and to ex­ background keyboards by Tony . . BY SENIOR STUDENTS . periment with various mixing Vattimo on "I Remember," a . . arrangements. Joe McElhone sassy jazz hom section on "Trust 87 E. Main Sf.(2ndfloor) :· and his band, Late Entry, are no Me" and the nice sax work on ef . NEWARK, DEL. 19711 exception. "One Way Conversation," all "Joe who?" you say. Well, if show the promise of future . HAIR •us-..1 737-sloo . ·...... ··,# ••••••••• • . •••••••••••••••• you were around during Winter success. Reminiscent of vocals Session, and either had cable TV from Pavlov's Dog, McElhone's or spent your early evening hours voice is a nice change of pace at the Deer Park, you might have from the run-of-the-mill lead Interested in caught this act on Winter Term screecher in a rock and roll band. Cross Country Television. A show produced by The whole company;s . work on student Jean Leonard, featured "Trust Me" is one of the ;Wbum's Skiing? McElhone and Late Entry, minus highlights. The mellown~ss on the hom section and "shoo-be­ their problems are the inevitable "Fair Weather Friend," with Check Out The Outing Club do's," prompted this review of ones found while working in a flute work by Mike Falcone, has the Delaware Valley artist. small recording studio, namely, a that easy jazz feel, and Late Entry is good at it. Some of the cuts, "Sand Piper Suite" and "Love Don't Come Easy," are hokey - late sixties orchestrated rock that's a little outdated for most of today's . audience. The female background vocalists are just a little too prominent. They aren't necessary and detract from cuts that were better left alone. The group has some tempo problems, and some of the vocals lack that quick tightness - just shy of professionalism. "Never Been A Prom Queen" shows a lot of promise for a debut album. If McElhone and com­ pany pick up on the high points they have going for them and tighten up their act, they'll be going places. Time and ex­ perience are all they need.

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Any Calculator purchsed at the University of Delaware Bookstore, defective within 90 days, will be replaced over our counter. We will provide you with a loaner calculator while repairs are being made. Buy from us and you are assured of a working calculator for one year. University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware Page 15 Technology Lacks Artist's Approach

track, threatening rear-end scientific component of sophisticated control gear had devoid of a "sense of fitness," collisions. technology has expanded, the failed to consider that, during a said Ferguson. For instance, it is The management finally trend has been away from non­ snowstorm, the fan that sucks in not fitting during this time of high resorted to a very old-fashioned verbal thinking and toward air would also suck in snow. unemployment, he argued, that safety measure: phoning ahead, verbal and · mathematical ·He realized that failure to automatic fare cards be used in · station to station, to warn of on- analysis. Nonverbal thought is consider such simple possibilities transit systems instead of human Dedl!ltrllans in downtown coming trains. now generally viewed as less also lay behind many of the ticket salesoeoole. It also is not look apprehensively BART "is a classic result of . rigorous and useful than failures of BART. It also helped reasonable, he said, "that a man when passing the· systems engineering uninformed cognitive reasoning. him to understand why the John who earns six dollars an hour on Jobn Hancock Building, by minds that can visualize the "There may still be Hancock Building in Boston kept an assembly line should be forced time popping windows mundane things that can go . engineering graphics courses in popping out windows until an to have someone come in to day hit a target. wrong," Ferguson wrote in a some schools," said Ferguson, expensive stabilizer was devised replace a part on his washing it that so many of our recent issue of Science Magazine. "but they are going out as the on top. machine. That machine could be a technological "Absurd random failures that new breed comes in and the old The current "systematic but designed simply so he could fix it iM:::al= continue to be have plagued automatic control dies out." · intellectually impoverished himself by changing a washer, by near disaster? Why systems are not merely trivial Engineering students used to engineering approach" to design but to do so would be bad cor­ 111ything work anymore? abberations; they are reflections be assigned exercises that is leading to a technology that is porate policy. S. Ferguson, curator of of the chaos that results when required them to think in ways Museum in Green­ design is assumed to be primarily that could not be reduced to ..------.. believes he has the a problem in mathematics." mathematics: design a container 'l'1le problem, he says, is Much creative thought in for an egg that will let it drop STUDENT engineers who design design is visual. Its language is in three stories without breaking; technological behemoths pictures that cannot easily be design a wheelchair that will go conceive them visually. translated into words or up stars. They used to work a lot SPECIAL SERVICES has been sub­ equations. with three-dimensional models. Accepting Applications for human vision. "Pyramids, cathedrals and Now, said Ferguson, engineers predicts that the rockets exist not because of learn the computer approach to Tutors and Advisors will only get worse. geometry, theory of structure of drafting and designing. This for Summer 1978 and more complex the thermodynamics, but because requires them · to convert Academic Year 78-79 the more often it will they were first a picture-literally · mathematical descriptions to or order," he said in an a vision-tit the minds of those who pictures in their minds. In the built them," Ferguson argues. process, they can easily lose sight aMBmithbti! that the man in the Many of the great technological of the whole amid the scattered Applications Available but most of our designers in history have also parts. ldlllcia:ns don't is that much of been artists. Leonardo da Vinci 231 S. College Ave. out of order much of may be the best known among Ferguson began to understand 738-2805 assumption of the them, but in his time he was not the problem, he said, one snowy is that it will work." alone. In Renaissance day when he boarded the modern engineering, art-not science-was high-speed Metroliner to New DEADLINE-MARCH 10, 1978 the guiding discipline, according York only to find that all trains to Ferguson. that day were being pulled by LIMITED NUMBER OF slow forty-year-old engines. The POSITIONS AVAILABLE Even into the 19th century, new engines were out of service some of the great technological because the . designers of the designers were also artists. engineers can Benjamin Henry Latrobe, a often can't see their prominent consulting engineer in relation to their con- and architect, was an ac­ complished watercolorist. Robert Fulton, known for his steamboat, failure to see whole pic­ and Samuel Morse, inventor of leads to fiascos such as the electric telegraph, turned that have affiicted the from careers in art to technology. automated BART system, has malfunctioned in Using their intuitive sense of ways. Doors have rightness and fitness, designers -lwhill.. trains were moving. created the suspension bridge, zoomed past stations the clock, the motorcycle. The stopping, carrying notion that scientific information commuters to the end of alone shaped them is "a bit of line. Electronic monitors modern folklore," said Ferguson. failed to detect a train on a Yet in recent decades, as the .Equus Hobbles

dilemma. On one hand he tr1es to that where a picture of a live with the spirit of the ancient is hanging on the wall, a Greeks. In reality, he has all the of a crucified Christ once passion of a J. Alfred Prufrock holds up the type. As he cuts-Equus out of the ~n~~rl•h view of Christ next boy's mind, he is fraught with borse·as the camera notes guilt that he is aiding in the llmularities for example, destruction of the very passion he hair tranformed into a worships. Of the remaining mane, and the shackled players, only Peter Firth Into the chained mouth. r~eates his Broadway role with presents us with the any vigor. His performance on idea that Alan stage allows us into his secret ont God (Christ) with ritualistic life. Here, the flash­ (Equus). This kind of back format of the film syphons a answer detracts lot of energy away from his ac­ validity of the film. It is ting. typical of ~me med­ Despite the picture's short­ movie executive deman­ comings, it does manage to keep tbat nothing be left to the viewer on seat's edge. The 11111'-tion or chance. ceremonies that the boy con­ performances of the cocted to worship his god were actors are of average and bizarre and brutal. Of course, the below average quality. climax of the film in the stables is Burton's Dysart is a real gut render. Only during the with "intensitv". Dvsart depiction of ceremonial brutality ebaracter caught in a is the film truly successful. ------g-e_1_6----~------R:E:V:I:E:VV~.:U~n~iv_e_r~s:i~~o:f:O.~Io=wo~=r•=.~Ne~w~a:r:k~. :De::la=w~.=a~re~------~------~Februa~14, 1978

1e ••view Claulfled Send your ad to us :1 Student Center with payment eV~>arlc, Del. 19711 CLASSIFIED Rates: 5C/word per Issue What big eyes you have. My modified jacket. iYi>ing.' Ali ·kiiicis·. · ities'is; ·te<:imi~i ·~p.;.:s, M:'a~rieci stuiteniS::earn. eitra money.iii yoii'r mnouncement personals Our long weekends. The dining hall spare time. Be Rent-A-Parents. Move in and manuscripts. IBM Selectric. Many d1fferent scare... salty eggs. The modified sing. I ~in typing elements. Reasonable rates, former Happy Valentine's Day to the interesting take care of children whose parents are re you interested in that chOre:cicinia:t. · stticien~:McA.:r. Danny A and his friend, Lurch, Nick Nolte, Wolf-on-lease. P .S. Tliis time I have the ~P~Y· ·vaie~tine ; s ·nay:· Freit:.:v<>U· are. 50 'a8SiC8i · K\Jiiar · ies5on8 · 'by · experienced OAT comprehensive review manuals $6. the "striped" men, History Boy, Beach Boy, basket of goodies. acher with B.A. in guitar performance. Moneyback guarantee, free information HiiZhland, Teddy Bear, and Mucko. (We spec1al for aso many reasons, Love you, .so beginning popular styles. $4 per half Datar Publishers, 1620 McElderry, noficed your name in the last issue.) Love to seware! ·, · iiriiei;~ ·se:coiici ·a~n~i ·wine ·and Sleph. Baltimore, Maryland, 21205. >ur lesson. 737-7563. all F0410160719. cheese party is going to be even better than ciuti · i.acrosse:..meeiS ·Thursday: ·i:oo· 326 wir ANDF-oUNi>· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · the last. Don't believe it .. Come Sunday at Purnell. More info 738-ll373. t.ere•s· ~·yellow i>US' iliai ~iii taice.you.lci ~ 8:30and see! d and white church each Sunday morning. ~~~t~~~f:~~~iZf~l=f~ Warner Hall's main lounge. Ideas, concerns, stella · b&&ite·t· tiaii ~iiarci. · NcitiOciy ·does· i.t ere you will meet people who follow tlie me io·sa:u :: w&ni.io iW:~ ·ti~ · io 5an::. ·. better'. A secret admirer. ml of the Scriptures. Leaves Christiana ~~::;~ · 5~~~~~~¥~~n and spring activities will be discussed. Spon­ Find out how, when, and hwere ~th the ommons 10:15, Rodney tunnel 10:20, sored by the Women's Co-ordinating Council. Sailing Club-Wednesday, February 15; 8 c1uti · i.acrosse; · E:".i.;ryone · i>iays ,· ·Meeting ·tudent Center 10:30. Evangelical p.m.; ]Worn 112 Memorilil resbyterian Church. Fot~i;~~~~;i =~t~·h,-~ti&na c1uti · i.acrosse:..meeiS · TiliirSiliiy: ·7·=oo· ·326 Thursday. Call738-ll373. Purnell. 738-8373. More info ic.M.'1i: ·Happy · v&ieniirie·5 ·Day! ·-rhis ·iS Aitiy.:.iiappy v8IeiitiDe;s n~.:me agi.iit · · · · iptia 'i>iti ·lollypop ·sii1e:.:a1i ·proceeciS ·go ·tc> the best oqe ever. Love, P .L.P. eart Fund. Buy your valentine a Iolfypop for sale oli Timi"i ·rm ooi ciirifuse~Y· a;ila;; tci my ex- 20 yeiir· oici i:O:.V. A. ·sPciCiili tb&iix i~ my. ;·pei-Si>ei:ii".ie·; coacti, til John ;lfill:2922 or SI.P.vP 7!UI-!14.'ill. Our first have a little growing up to do but I'm not K-K Marella ·actice IS 2, 14, our first gan1e is 2, 18 quite ready yet. Please be there. Happy Bill Butler and his infallible magic .. N.J.H. Valentine's Day, I love you. "Larks" T~ ·my. ·cie&r · irieiKi ·i.UArui; ·a · ~oricierr.il 1ainst Villanova Chomel. =i~~~~~V!i·~i~:n~~~~;r~ P~ui =· ·we;re ·gOing ·lei miSs ~ou: gOOd' iui:k 0275 for details. Valentine's Day. Love, Richard C. ' nforiatiie rooms.' uof·n ·siucients·. ·co~. 6uti · i.acrosse: · E:".ie..Ycine · Pia~! ·Meeting with you last semester. Hope 1ts a good one! .1rlring. Meal ticket suggested. W. Main St., stidr ·icir. 'N20i:· 5ieiliciSCoP.!: bOOk's. •· SiZe. io Thursday. Call738-3373 . scliWiny. ·it·;,· 'been·~ - reai · ·, ;learning. ·ex- From the Gilbert C and F staff. mr Rodney. Winter Session and Spring white pants, hat. Call Pam 368-1181. perience:" Remember M and C, wa:ced rm. 731-4729. 1-Wej.p:.:Y.ou·~r.; ·a·m.y !ox: ·Fnim ·the M~d beans and maid low phone bills, studymg, Aitiy.:.i COOid ·reaiiy use·a ~ai~iine·._:. siiii me FunC:tamen~is ·of. Piiysitiii. science~ · Kraii- Farmer and the Swamp Rat. Petey: Hellen Keller's new house, Mr. HC?od, i·m &'tiUitilr:man ;nys.;u· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · skopf $14.00; Music: Politoske $11.00; Hand- · the silly Dottie and Nancy surpr1se, 1uti · i.acr~-l.ieeiS · ThUrsda·y: ·7-:oo· ·a2;; mai in ·ca~ier =· Wliat ai>OOt ·titiit ·ffiixeIes matcll .. A gymnast. bite .. , the cars go beep, oeep, New year s Beautiful women everywhere Eve, who's on first, Hey, weren't you in my Cards is one thing, life is another. Aii>ie5 ·.\:K::c.· siicit5 ·a nil. wor- Pilot. what a pal and ...1 forgot! Thanks for the ~rns, and spring activities will be med. 12 weeks. Price negotiable. Call 368- come s.;e j'citimiy;s·nan.ce saiici in aacclitiS · .scussed. Sponsored by the Women's Co­ memories, more to come. Penn. soon, 6 2504. niiA 'LO~e or my ·ure·Taite .my iteart Take my weeks 'til F.L. See you at the Balloon. Be ···.····· ··············· ·· ··· ····· ······ ·dinating COuncil. soul Take what you need. KJB. there, aloha! Love, Chris. ·68 ·s:M:: w: i600. ·s6:ooo :mue5; engine ·in. gOOd Mabel, Thanks for the car so many times, ·OOi>ie iDiereiteiay~,· condition. Call738-a527 after 7:00p.m. Open House and f1nd out! Wednesday, Feb. miracle is on its way. Happy B'day to my be1ng 'polite. Can't we end !his insane· •1ursday. Call738-ll373. 15th in the Blue and Gold Room of the favorite bruise! Love the bruisee. comedy of misunderstanding . . Shalom and Tecimie5 · sL-isoo ·iuniia:t>Je · ~.-iili · stanton Student Center from 7-9. See you there! Happy Valentines Day to you and yours. Sin­ 68 EE cartridge $175. Call 366-9275. Ask for To iite. jims .wito. ~ea:Cooriin; iite'giri5 ·of cerely, Batyah. available Doug. 109F: If you don't want to be classified as rue Iov.e is a summer job found thr~gh · E:n~ii-onmenia:I. conservation: 4ili · ~~~t~~~~f~~~~~t~~if~l~~ f~ jerks, be our valentines! . C~urm , nook1e, c235 cici:. Warner Hall's main lounge. Ideas, concerns amor--Susan, Sheree, and V1cki. · joliruiy;s Dance aanci,'stiDitay·. Feb.' i9: · · · · merica's largest summer employer dlrec­ Dasmann $6.00 Human Environments and and spring activities will be discussed. Spon­ •ry. Ma.ster application included. Sum­ Natural Systems, Greenwood and Edwards sored by the Women's Co-ordinating Council.' Hiliei ..va·nt5.ycitii ,· ~i siiring.seffiffi.tili-;8 wine Joice, Box 645, State College, Pa. 16801. $3 $3.00. 738-1403 PHD 309. DearMafl, and cheese party Sundily at 8:30. >mplete. Though it s like , Mii:liaei · it·5'J.iiain anci simPle. and from my T'would warm me more than wine sky ·:BitS.73 ... 'E:ii'roi>e. the ·woi-ici a·t· no. iriiis heart--I 'Jove you! Happy Valentine's Day. If on this our fourth ·series ~~~-:t~Jiy · ~~~~~~~ri~~:t~~ Always, Debby ~~ ;~y~~~~!~~iii:Co~Cciri rices. Global Travel, 521 Fifth Avenue, 366-9232. You'd be mine. .Y., N.Y., 10017 (212) 379-3532. Yeppermint Patty-I lia~e· 'rii>i>eil. 'i.inus's Love, Mim N-ew · nilii.oiia'I. ·P~M.Sonic · cas5etie · Recor- security blanket. Won't you be my Valentine Tui-iie-~iiappy. · vale.ntine··;, · ·naY'.' N.iii.' ·ffii~e5 ·he.: ·cliWrileY'·5.:.i::icin't.· si>i-e~Dgi7~ · :page.· · sai-ail. · 998-39i.o: ··Near der Player with scrabble kit. $25. Contact and share it with me .. Charlie Brown 'i.i>v·.;, yourself thin, stop in! Dammmm it. r1ces comer. Pandya 368-2'774. Tigger. stena · ~iteitiau· ~zard ·irom . smytii.' wai- uappy ·-v~ieniine; s ·nay · ·my · iitile. ·r'~- Kim. i adore Y'ciu so much. itiai i·ii i>Ui io..i on l~~ -~j~~~~ilai>ie. for . tYi>lng .' ·Mrs. c~eitil. Dei:k. AIi-cii~ ·ioooi · T¥Piiti. · m:M· ·5electric. Silent Star. 'erm papers, theses, ·etc. Call738-7867. st&eoi.: cr~n ·1C-iso pr:e.imii>: D-iso-~er nebi>y. c;: ·My ·Fo~.:On-iW.! ; · compli~tions amp, Philips GA212 table w m1cro our lease With options, O!ristmas Vac., the Frecierick, · M&y ·our io~e · c~niinue i~ ·ti1oom room change .Yi>i~g ik>ne. call ·:Mi-5: Figie1. 737:3557: · · · · · Acoustics cartridge, EPI 602 direct reflec- first date. Our first month ... your sear­ as the years slowly pass. M.L.A. Sharon . ting Speakers, $650.00- 361H1286. · ch ... then roses. My first honk, hit and run. Interested in changing sin!Pe in Rodney C for nan·. ·va ·k~o..v: · d~n;i Y'oo ... ')iai>i>Y. valen- a single in Gilbert A or a smgle on East Cam­ tine's Day. Love Always, Justine. pus. <::ontact Mark at room 109 (366-9301 or 731-5204) n~i- 'j~n::we ; ~e · tieen · ttirciUgli ·it· ai( anii i must say that 1 don't regret a minute of it. Happy Valentine's Day. With all my love, Mike rent/sublet Spac1ous 1 Bdr Apt sublet AC pool CArun­ -EXCELLENCE IN TEACHING dei-Rt. 7 off Kirkwood) 200 til April. Can =~~;u 1~ · t~~e~~~~~~~~y~~~! renew. Call366-1678. been my valentine for the past five months. Thank you for being home when we stopped T~ .s.tiare %·oi 3·a :R. ·i~Dh005e ·near ·c.;rii. by for walking back from the library, for pus. lN bath; washer, dryer, dishwasher. AWARDS FOR 1977-78 being there. Tllank you for football games, Rent$69 month, plus utilities. Call366-1905. . "Star Wars," birthday sweaters and study breaks. Thank you for I.V., square dan!!es, (NOMINATIONS CLOSE FEB. 20) Homecoming, movies, meals and r1des home. Thank you for helping me·grow in wanied Christ and in the two of us. Most of aU thank you for loving me and for being so easy to One female roommate needed to share Red love back; thank you for my future. Mill apartment with two others. Move in as Only one week left to nominate the outstanding faculty I.T.A.L.Y., Gary. soon as possible for spring semester. Happy, study atmosphere. Bus service. Janice 7.31- and graduate student teaching assistants to receive this Aitiy.:.iia:ppy sii-iliC:tay:.:ffie· · · · · · · · · · · · • · • · 7527. year's Excellence in Teaching Awards. Do your part to Female i~ ·stiare :Pai>ei-mui Apt.· for siiring :Meii! · woffieni · iriiormatic:in · atiOOi · jotiS ·on Semester. Own room. 737-4161. make sure they receive the recognition they deserve. Ships! Learn to find jobs that have excellent pay, require no experience and offer world­ wide travel on American and foreign shi{lS. o~ersea·s· · · · j obe'-:suffimer · ·ye~i- :.: ciu nii. Perfect summer job or career, Send $3 form­ Europe, S.America, Australia, Asia, etc. All formation guide. SEAFAX, Dept. C-ll, Box Fields, $500-1200 monthly, expendes paid, 2049, Port Angeles, Wash., 98362. Moneyback sightseeing. Free information-Write: BHP Nomination Forms Are Available at the Student Center guarantee. Co., Box 4490, Dept. DA, Berkeley, Ca. 94704. Main Desk, in 303 Hullihen, and Dean's offices of the ? :s:.:vou· ~i-e . corciia.Iiy ·inViieci io.ciinner at camPtiS · i-ei>: ·rcir ·soi~i- · ~aicii .' sig ·:Bui:icS the restaurant of your choice, on the day of Potential-demonstrator $32. 366-8699. following colleges: your choice (price, ~f m~l not to exceed $2.50) And to another VIewing of STAR WARS. Love ya, R.G. P.S.- Happy Valen­ .\ ·sinirici; i>referatiiy. in ROdney ·or i>eiicacier. I tine'sDay! !,or half a Smyth Doul>le. Call378-8191. •Agriculture •Education •Morine Science •Arts & Sciences •Engineerinn •Nursing •Business & Economics •Home Economics •••••••••••••••••••• Forms should be completed and returned immediately to : ~f.lCdJnElW:K; : any of these locations. Remember, the deadline is Feb. : LEONARDO'S DELl : 20. Any campus groups wishing to distribute nomination • 738-1816 WE DELIVER • forms may pick them up at 303 Hullihen or the Faculty e SUBS, SANDWICHES 6-10:45 P.M. e Senate Office. For further information, contact the HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10-11 • Faculty Senate Office. : Grainery Station Elkton Rd. • ···········~······· REVIEW, Unlveriity of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 17 Macs Defeat Wonten Cagers ly SUE WHARTON The game was far from over, though. The Blue University is not ranked 20th Hens made an explosive comeback in the second for nothing; Denise Burdik put in 33 half to come within 8 points of 7-6 Inunaculata. for the Mighty Macs - nearly 40 per cent of "We got more shots, played more aggressively 13-75 win over Del8ware's women's basketball and the press worked better. It created turnovers 111 on Saturday. that we could then capitalize on," said Campbell. -' aeemed as though Denise couldn't miss," said "Sharon Howett did a lot to initiate the comeback." C .coach Mary Ann Campbell. "She only ., _ .... u, ... of 26 from the floor, but it seemed like 14 High rebounder and scorer for the Hens, fresh­ Neither the zonepr~ nor the man-to-man man Lori Howard br.ought down 16 bounds and stop her." added 22 points to Howett's 18. Another example of llad:lunbelartced scoring and Immaculata's clean Delaware's "100 per cent effort" was Karen Conlin ll'eaks gave the Hens trouble in the ~ half with nine assists. iilltluw•"·""only able to convert 23 per cent of their Campbell felt mixed emotions over the loss which started off cold and nothin~ was fallin2 puts her team at an 8-2 record, but she added, "Our said Campbell about her team's 25-49 deficit comeback just shows what kind of quality team FOR balf time. Delaware has." pplers Gain Dual-Meet Split MEN AND WOMEN Delaware's wrestling team Williams (5-2-1), Larson (1(}.{) Next Saturday the Hens with a split in a · with five pins), and Booth (9..()..1 journey to Easton, Pa. for a dual meet held at with three pins) were all double meet with much-improved GRAINERY STATION University on winners on the day. 134-pounder Lafayette. The feature match ELKTON ROAD 737-8624 . •tur•dav. upending the host Mike Hobyak (5-5) and 167- will be at heavyweight where Joe ·•aea41,o-1il but dropping a close pounder Mike Morris (7-3) split Booth will face old nemisis Dave match against Drexel. two decisions while 150-pounder Pletcher. Pletcher has beaten .____ SALE------SALE------~ John Boyer (6-3-1) and 158- Booth three times, including the 'nleHens,now7-3,lost only two pounder Dennis Dankosky (3-1-1) finals of last year's ECC tour­ against American, at 126 each picked up a draw. nament. lCpounds (forfeit) and drew 151.

Another forfeit at 142 hurt Delaware as Drexel built up a 21- margin through the first seven as only 118-pounder Dale lo,d could manage a d~ision. At 177 Jolh Williams edged Drexel's 58 E. MAIN ST. Daa King 3-2 and Gregg Larson IIIII Joe Booth followed with pins NEWARK MINI MALL ti pall the Hens within three. Boyd (5-5 dual meet record),

--~tre•e•t•-- "Hens Lose THE KIM MILLINER BAND JASS e SWING • ROCK BIG BAND SOUND FROM BENNY GOODMAN TO FRANK ZAPPA APPEARING THURS., FRI. & SAT. FEB. ~6, 17, 18 NEXT WEEK· SPRING HARVEST

The U of D Shotokan Karate Club will have Beginning (and Advanced) Classes opening this _semester for all students (men and women) interested in MISSED BREAKFAST??? (Remember Us) learning a traditional Japanese style of Karate. Blackbelt Stop By On Your Way instruction - no previous training necessary. Classes T & R nights 6- To Class or Office 7:30. For more info come to our orientation meeting for all new And Let Us Serve You!! members on Mon., Feb. 20, 6:00 7:30 a.m~ - 10:00 a.m. in the Blue & Gold Room, Student Center .

Hall - Main St. . ALL STUDENTS ARE WELCOME Page 18 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware February 14, 1978 Hens Fall to Lehigh Penalties Kill Skaters' Rally By RICK BENSON If professional In a game which saw the momentwn of play switch with almost every line change, the Delaware Ice Hockey Club rallied from a four advancement is goal deficit only to go on to lose to a tough Lehigh team, 6-5 last Friday at the Ice Arena. your goal and The penalty box was the story in the final period and the story of nursing with a - the loss as the Hens failed to capitalize on an early powerplay ad­ vantage.' From then on, penalties crippled Delaware's chances, as challenge appeals Lehigh'sJim Cillo scored from the slot on the powerplay to win it for the Engineers at 7:09. The Hens had a chance to even it up again on a to you, then breakaway but the play was called back by a trjpping penalty. you'd enjoy the life as a "We lost because we spent too much time in the penalty box," said ·Hen coach Dan Bouchard, swnming up a good but not good enough NAVY NURSE OFFICER perlormance. · . The first period saw Hen goaltender Vince Ponticello face 17 shots on goal as Lehigh outskated, ·outmaneuvered and· outclassed the The Navy Nurse Corps ca-n offer more than just a nursing job. You bewildered Hens. The Engineers'thris Talgo took a left circle face­ will have the opportunity to specialize, continue your education, . off and fired one into the net just nine seconds into the game. At 3:20, work in hospitals throughout the world, and take advantage of the Murray Wilmerding took a blast from the point to make it 2-0, Lehigh. many benefits including free health/dental care, travel, and 30 days paid vacation. The Hens got one back as Mark Delaney fed Eric Johnston on a For information concerning the many career opportunities contact: beautiful breakaway, faked the Lehigh goalie out of position and fired into the open net. But the rest of the first period was all Lehigh as they capitalized on Hen mistakes and tallied three more times to LT Kathleen M. Lousche make it 5-l. Talgo got two of the goals to gain a hattrick. The second period seemed as though the two teams traded jerseys 128 N. Broad Street during the intermission, as it was now suddenly Delaware who Phila., PA 19102 controlled play. Duane Brozek replaced Ponticello in goal as the Hens began to roll. John Reid skated down the right side and fired a or call (215) 564-3820 Rick Sheppard pass, beating the Lehigh goalie wide side. Then on a power play, Stu Layton scored on a drive from the right circle. to or make it 5-3. Next, it was the combination of Johnston and Delaney again, with Delaney taking the pass and beating the goalie short side. Another Robert Nobles Reid tally tied the game at five after two periods of play. 31 Prestbury Square "We woke up in the second period", commented Bouchard. "We Newark, DE 19713 knew what we had to do." (302) 738-0660 POWER PLAYS - The Hens bowed to Dayton, 6-4, in the opening round of the Pitt Invitational Tournament on Saturday. Delaney scored a pair of goals in the losing effort. Delaware faced Navy in the consolation game. February 14, 1978_ REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark. Delaware Page 19 Slam Dunks------....,------~~-----., Former Hen Playing Israeli B-ball By ALAN ~RAVITZ KIBBUTZ SHEFAYYIM, was just happy . to get the op­ Hebrew, aqd although I ca:n STOP GRIPIN' ISRAEL-It is a chilly night on portunity.'' understand and speak the this settlement located about 15 That summer Schlachter went language, it still makes it ~ind of BOUT WINTER! miles north of Tel Aviv. The to Israel and signed a contract tough. The material is pretty YOU CAN ENJOY IT temperature has dipped to 40F­ with his present team: Hapoel rough also, but PT is some thing I frigid by Israeli standards-and Ramat Gan (literally, The really want to do when I'm · WITH THE PROPER the kibbutz's small gymnasium is Workers of Ramat Gan), and finished playing ball." CLOTHIN' SO .... not much warmer. began practicing with the team. "I think the students here are Inside, a ragged one-sided In addition, he began taking different from American MOUNTAIN game is played in front of a noisy intensive courses in the Hebrew students,'' Schlachter noted. crowd of 150 children and language. His first season went "They take things much more HIGH( ·soldiers. The .players -slide well, with his team finishing seriously. Many of them don't ISHAVIN'A around on the slippery linoleum­ second i(\ the league and even go out at night, they just tile floor while two overweight Schlachter being selected. for the study. This is a small country, WINTER referees struggle to keep up the All-star team. and when the people here un­ pace. The game's highlight oc­ "I'm surprised that I adjusted dertake something, they go 100 CLEARANCE SALE curs midway through the first that easily," Schlachter stated. per cent. I see it everyday.'' ON JES THAT. LIKE half when an excellent fight "I really like playing basketball Next year he will begin to serve SELECTED DOWN & breaks out among the rowdy here. The competition is good in the Israeli Army, for two spectators. Meanwhile ex­ and the fans· are vecy sup­ years, which is required of all ~~~!!~POLAR GUARD JACKETS Delaware captain Steve portive.'' He is also able to play Israeli citizens. "In the states I · AND ALL Schlachter quietly . pumps in 27 basketball on the international would be too tall to serve in the points with 12 rebounds for the level now. Every season, his army," Schlachter jokes. ."But YOU NEED FOR COLD WEATHER COMFORT winning team, and continues to team plays several games here there are no exceptions. SALE ENDS FEB. 28 be the top center in Israel's against foreign teams-last year They take almost every man 737-6450 National Basketball League. they traveled to Bulgaria. Last and woman available.'' Schlachter, 24, is. running summer Schlachter started for "This is really a great country. away with the league's the Israeli team in the World You can do your own thing and no rebounding title and is ,third in liillflllllli•IJIII@