DELAWARE 100 DAYS MALE TO GRADUATION See Page 9, 10, 11,12

\ ~f:\'/;A p I Vol. 88 No. 21 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE. MARCH 3,, 1967 Progress Slow On Slarti.ng Facts Dispute Sororities Weekly Charge Recent talks with adminis­ trative personnel reveal that There is no evidence to do not show reports of the protocol and procedure seem substantiate reports made by incidents. to be two major stumbling the Newark Weekly that "per­ Worrilow revealed that blocks facing the establish­ haps as many as two ·dozen only three cases had come to ment of sororities at this uni­ incidents of indecent ex­ the attention of the security versity. posure had occurred in the for~es over the past several Dean of women Bessie B. presence of campus coeds months and that these were Collins, who has been work­ in the last two weeks," ac­ learned of through the Newark ing closely with the AWS cording to Newark Pollee Police who asked the campus sorority committee, felt that and university officials. guards for assistance. This there are many tasks to be The Weekly, in an article was confirmed by Newark Po­ completed before sororities which appeared Wednesday, lice Chief Arthur s. Haus­ may be established, ~4: claims that the incidents were sler, Jr. who said that during Letters have been received reported to the campus security -recent months there have from national sororities, In force, but were not reported only been four indecent ex­ the next few weeks, contacts to the Newark Police, Accord­ posure cases reported ,and will be acknowledged in order Cops Pinch Pot Nut ing to Vice-president for Uni­ that one did not involve a versity Relations George M, coed, to obtain more information. Cops pi ay chaperone on Feature Editor's date with Marr of The university's require­ J 171 e," (Photo by Fred Sinter) See page 7 for story, Worrllow, security records Dean Men Donald P. ments for sororities must then Hardy in expressing the be sent to those interested, Any university's concern said questions about these criteria that if the incidents are tak­ FROSH BLAZERS will be answered through con­ Senate Proposes ing place "we want to know sultation with the dean of about them.'' He then point­ Freshmen who purchased women. class blazers are requested ed out that none of the coeds · These and other preparations to pick them up Monday be­ supposedly involved in the two require much time. For this tween I p.m. and 5 p:m., in Reapportionment dozen incidents had contacted reason, Dean Collh'ls could Ewing Room D & E. The the Office of Student 1Services not verify whether the univer­ balance is due at this time. In a special meeting Wed­ residents, the final proposal or Dean of Women Bessie B. clarified the representation of sity will have sororities next nesday evening, the SGASenate Collins. approved a proposal for an commuters and fraternities in (Continued to Page 16) Hardy also reported that in amendment to the SGA consti­ addition and radically changed order to make communica­ tution and by-laws concerning the stat~s of senators-at­ representation. A complete large. tions between the security Students · Receive copy of the proposal appears In accordance with the SGA force and the Newark Police in a box on page three. constitution, the proposal still ·more formal, Hasan officers were appointed by both forc­ The vote of approval marked has to be passed by two­ the end of a continuing debate thirds of the Se.nate's member­ es. It was pointed out~ how­ Royal Treatment over effective representation ship at the next meeting and ever, that police and security which began last May. While approved by the administration officials often have meetings By NANCY LYNCH the changes were originally before it goes. into effect; how­ and that the new set up wtll dLiving as you would live at home''-is President Sidney intended to affect only the ever, the large majority sup­ merely make the relationship R; Peters' descrption of student life at Brandywine Junior representation of dormitory porting the proposal Wed­ more formal. College. nesday suggests that it has an Haussler also confirmed Students are treated to carpeted class rooms, tinted win .. excellent chance of passage. that the Newark Pollee and campus security were work­ dows, picnic grounds., cars on campus~ and all the coffee, If it does it will probably be ATO to Dedicate ing well together - and that mil~ and soft drinks they can consume. in effect for this spring's the guards were not 'Impeding The atmosphere at Brandywine is pleasant and business.. SGA elections. police work as was charged in like. Every physical detail has been carried out with a look House Addition The proposal evolved from recommendation of a commit­ the weekly article. According to the future. Planners have anticipated needs of tomorrow, Founders' Day will be cele­ tee on senator representation to the chief, "Any case that such as cvrridor floors which never need waxing or buffing, brated by Alpha Tau Omega co-chaired by present senators involved our attention was practically maintenance-free carpeting in all classrooms, and fraternity with a dinner-dance Pat Tate, ED8, and Tom Sand- (Continued to Page 3) electric heat. Efficiency seems to be a part of the school tomorrow, and a banquet on philosophy. ., (Continued to Page Hi) Sunday. The 5'16 academictsts at Brandywine represent seven Founders' Day commem­ states. Plans call for enrollment to swell to 800 by next orates the 102nd anniversary September. There, the figure will stabilize. Mechanical Marvel Neat But Slow of the Founding of ATO. The Students have opportunities for many outside activities: fraternity was founded Sept, the student senate, the chorus, intercollegiate basketball 11, 1865, at Virginia Military and baseball, intramural programs~ a sorority, and a fra.­ Institute. terntty. The Student Activity budget, under the guidance of a The principal speaker to­ Director of Student Activities, will run between $40 and $5o.,.. morrow will be T. Elbert 000 next year for 800 students. Chance, Director of Alumni Social events such as the Inaugural Ball and the Christmas and Public Relations at the Formal are preceded by a dinner at no extra expense. "Wed.. university, and an alumni of nesday Night at the Movies" is a popular activity under.. ATO. Thomas K. Pratt, Pres­ written by the administration. ident of the Chapter, will .pre­ Attendance at basketball games is outstanding. This may sent Gold and Silver Certif­ be due. in part, to student cars on cam pus. So far1 this icate Awards to distinquished is an unlimited policy. Eventually, the privilege may be Alumni. William G. Vosburgh, extended just to those students with a 3.0 or better. Jr., will be Master of· Cere­ Reception of a ski weekend and a spring trip to Bermuda montes. The event will be held are two more examples of student enthusiasm. "The 'esprit at the Kent Manor Inn from de corps' is most amazing," Peters said. Recognition is 6-12 p,m, given to the faculty who are encouraged to participate with The Founders' Day banquet the students in extra... curricular events. will be held to dedicate the The early success of Brandywine Junior College must be new addition to the ATO chap­ credited, in part. to its President, Sidney R. Peters, a very ter house, Stewart D, Daniels, dynamic and academically conscientious educator. "Everyone National President of ATO. participates in almost everything. There is always something wm be the guest spaker. going on; this is not a weekend eollege," he commented. A greeting from the univer- "Not only do you have to wait to get the ga~bag&., ·~" (Continued to Page 17) (Photo by Don Schmick) UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGE 2 29 More Days Zagoria to Discuss U.S. Policy To You•Know·What In Chinese Communist Lecture "American Policy Toward at last year's s·enate Foreign toward Communist China and China» will be discussed in Relations Committee hearings the China Relations Com m it• the fourth of a series of free on u.s. policy toward China~ tee of the National Council lectures on communist China is the author of "The Sino­ of the U.S. Zagoria is now an being given at the university. Soviet Conflict." associate professor of govern• The lecture , which will be He has also written a ser­ ment and a member of the given Monday at 8 p.m. in the ies of newspaper and magazine faculty of the Russian and East Rodney Room of the Student articles on China, and .last Asian Institutes of Columbia ' Center- w111 feature Donald s. year~ served as a member of University. Zagoria as the main speaker. the United Nations Associa- The series is offered through Prof. Zagoria, who testifed tion panel ori u.s. Policy the International Education Program C5 f the university~ de­ signed to keep students and Co-eds Receive Invitation other citizens informed on vital current topics. Earlier lec­ tures have dealt with the de­ velopment of Chinese society, To College Queen Pageant problems of the Chinese Com• Group Tries 'Hon~y' munist Party• and China's mil• Judging is based on academ• All undergraduate girls are itary power. The final lecture THE GROUP DOWNSTAIRS presents Shelagh Delaney's ic accomplishments as well eligible for the National Col­ in the series, on March 18, A TASTE OF HONEY. The production, which will be given lege Queen Pageant to be held a.S attractiveness, charm, and will be on the future of Chi• at the Newark, New Century Club. will run on tonight, tomor- row and next week. Performances are at 8:30 P.M. each in New York City, June 9 personality. The next National College­ nese-American relations. evening. thru 19. Queen will win a new auto­ A spec:al . invitation has mobile., She will receive a been extended to Delaware trip to Europe--a vacation tour students by the pageant com­ First Class Conducted of London. Paris and the Con• mittee, Girls on this campus tinent. In the field of fashions• have an excellent chance to she will be awarded a com­ become a state winner. plete wardrobe of suits, dress• At SDS Free University es, and sportswear. She can By BARBARA CLUNAN osophical Drama. Dr. C.A. This observation can be select $500 worth of her fav­ The F ree University, a Carpenter, of the university further exemplified in the ex­ orite styles. Berlin To Discuss function sponsored by the English department dis­ amination of the members of Best Foods, Division of Corn local branch of Students for cussion leader for the course, the . class. Only half of the . Products, who will sponsor the Democratic Society, which at suggests that the group study surprisingly large group of -Revolutions 1967 Pagean~ will award an present has no affiliation with the works of Shaw, Pirandello, about twenty students who at­ "Ethit: al and Political Rev­ interesting prize to the win- the university, metfor thefirst and Sartre. If, however, the tended the class were mem­ olutions in the 18th Century" . ner., They will present 10 time last Monday evening. students wish to alter the bers of SDS, Such an amaz­ is the subject of Sir shares of Corn Products Com~ Because of the SDS theory plan of the course in any way, ing fact may lead to the as- Isaiah Berlin's address on pany stock to the next Nation.. that there is a need for an they are free to discuss these , (Continued to Page 14) Ma rch 22. a1 College Queen. opportunity fo r students and changes with the instructor. Be rlin, a professor of Phil­ For full details--and a faculty to be able to discuss Ideally, both students and in­ osophy, has written e xten­ free entry blank.... just write contemporar y issues without structor will arrive at a selec­ UP I' s Stevenson siv e l ~' on the philosophy to: National College Queen intervention from either ad­ tion of materials which will be of histor y, on political theor­ Committee, P.,o. Box 935 most beneficial to the entire 1 ministrative or depa rtmental ies, and on s cientific methods New York City• N.Y. 10023. authority, the Free Univer­ group. Discussion will center To Give Lecture in histor y ..t Applications or nom !nations sity movement was founded around the ideas presented in Knighted in 1957, Be rlin must be received in New. York on this campus. Aside from the the works, rather than on the On News Reporting was educated at St , Paul 's City not later than February alleged intellectual freedom dramatic techniques involved. Professional news reporting School and Corpus Christi Col­ 28. offered to students of the Free techniques will highlight a le ge , Oxford, In addition, THE MOVEMENT University, it is als o operat­ talk by H. L, Stevenson, manag­ Berlin has published many ed without cost to the stu- The entire Free Uni- Petitions for the SGA versity movement had its be­ ing editor of United - Press bo oks. Elections will be avai I able dents. Instructors voluntee r International on March 14 at The lecture is sponsored ginning in New York several in the SGA ·office, Room 305 of their services to the class, 7:30 p.m. in Wolf Hall. by the Philosophy Depart- the Student Center, and the interested in the endeavor at years ago. Me mbers of the Office of Student Affairs, on As an experienced newsman, ment in collaboration with hand rather than material re­ Progressive Labor Party and the Committee of Outside March 20. the National SDS were the orig­ Stevenson will discuss his Elections will take pi ace wards. background and the events Speakers . The lecture will inal founders. on April 18 and 19 A~ present only one course is which have led him to his be given on Wednesday, March Detai Is will appear in being offered at the Free Uni­ The motive behind the The Review in future weeks. inception of the Free Uni­ present position with UPI, 22 , at 4 p.m. in the Ewing versity, that of Modern Phil- which he joined in 1953. Hoom, Student Center. versities, as quoted in an article by Judith Warden in the From 1953 to 1963, Stev­ September 1966 issue of 1The enson cvered virtually e·very New Guard' entitled 1The major civil rights story in Thefts, Damage To Phonographs Free Universities-- How Free the South from his home base Are They?" was as follows: in Jackson, Mississippi, As 'The Free University oi Southern Division news. man­ Cause · Library Policy Change New York is necessary be- ager, he directed the cover­ , cause, in our conception, age of racial violence which Students• repeated destruc.. -ucontinuing battle" to keep the. that the wires on one of the American universities have occurred in such cities as: Bir­ tion of the record players in record players in shape. He speakers in the listening room been reduced to institutions of mingham, Alabama; Mont­ gomery, Alabama; St. Augus­ the Morris Library has led the specifically cited the theft of have been cut, and that many intellectual servitude. Students library personnel to reconsider cartriges from the record of the stolen parts are difficult have been systematically de-· tine, Florida; Selma, Ala­ their policies concer_nini this players. to replace. humanized, deemed incomple­ bama; and Danville, Virginia. equipment. Giles stressed the fact that tent to regulate theirownlives, , Roy Sudlow, Head of Circular­ Clifton F. Giles, Assistant the library personnel do not sexually, politically, and aca­ tion, said that it has been a to Director, also pointed out feel that the entire student demically ... In the very face of body is to blame, but rather these circumstances and in a small percentage of careless recognition of the events of or dissolute students whose ef• the last decade, protest has fects are felt by the entire once again emerged on the col­ student body. lege campuses of America. Several solutions have been We welcome the protest: proposed, the most probable we fool the foundation of the of which is to keep the record Fre_ University is part of it.' players locked and have stu­ Carpenter made it quite dents sign out keys when they clear that he is under no want to use them; less likely, obligation to proselytize the and more expensive, would be SDS philosophy or to support portable machines which could their political views, In fact. be checked after each use. r.ontinued Carpenter, he would !: 9~ have consented to teach the · Library phonographs stand idle after thefts of cartridges Giles concluded that it is and other destruction forced officials to close listening room. ooped that the record players course unde r such condi- , {Photo by Don Schmick) will be operative soon. tions. H. L. STEVENSON UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRiDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGE 3 Cli-NSA Involvement SGA Amendment -Ec/itors note: The following is the text of the proposec/ amendments to the Stuclent Government Association Con· stitution one/ By-lows. For s.tory see page 1. Nation Reacts To Giant Scandal By-Laws ARTICLE VII - Section 16 The recent revelation of a few officers yearly were mediately appointed a three­ A. District Senators -- financial bonds between the told of the CIA connections. man panel to _investigate CIA All students living in residence halls shall elect their own National Student Organization While the NSA was free to subsidies to NSA and other representatives. These representatives shall consist of women and the Central Inte111gence issue its own policy state­ private organizations. senators elected from their own districts, determined by the Agency has upset political and ments, often in opposition to Panel-member, John Gard­ SGA Elections Committee with the approval of the Senate, and academic appleca rts. administration policy in such ner, Secretary of Health, Ed­ men senators elected from their own districts, determined by The expose of the CIA's $3 - areas as foreign relations ucation and Welfare, stated that the SGA Elections Committee with the approval of the Senate. million subsidies to the NSA and the House Un-American "it was a mistake tor the CIA During their entire term of office, these district representa­ was published in the March Activities Committee, the CIA ever to entangle itself in covert tives must reside in the district from which th.ey are elected. issue of 11 Ramparts" maga­ purportedly supplemented the activities close to the field of zine. fees of overseas staffers in education or scholarship or the B. All men living in fraternity houses shall elect their own dis­ Since, 1952, the NSA received return for detailed reports on universities." trict senator (s). The size of the district is to approximate as much as $400,000 a year student leaders inforeigncoun­ Editorial comment from the size of the residence hall districts. The districts shall be from various front organiza­ tries. campus newspapers was dis­ determined by the SGA Elections Committee. tions of the CIA. The ties were The reaction to the CIA tinctly dis111usioned. Bob almost broken in 1965 by the involvement was general con­ Ewegen, editor of the "Color­ C. There shall be 2 menand 2 women commuter senators. All then-president, Philip Sher­ sternation both on Capitol H111 ado Dally," termed ours the female commuters shall elect the women commuter senators • . burne. and on campuses across the "Betrayed Generation," and ·All male commuters shall elect the men commuter senators. NSA got itself involved in country. President Johnson im- (Continued to Page 15) 1952 when, in order to finance D. Senators - at-Large better programs in competi­ There shall also be 3 women senators elected at-large and 3 tion with Communist student men senators elected at-large. All women shall vote for the groups at World Youth Festi­ women senators-at-large. All men shall vote for the men sen­ vals, it applied for government Sex Charges. • • ators-at-large. aid, The aid was forthcoming Section 18 -- The President of the Com muter Association shall from the CIA, with presiden­ stables include grand lar- tial and State Department ap­ (Continued from Page 1) be a member of the Senate and Executive Council. centes, stolen cars, traffic Constitution proval. relayed to us. If anything accidents on public streets, ARTICLE IV - Section l. Now will read; The ne}V source of income happens on campus that re­ what is described as "a pos­ was cloaked in secrecy; only quires police attention we are sible homicide," and an at­ The Senate shall consist of the following members elected notified.'' tempted rape case.'' in accordance with the By-Laws: The Weekly further charged Since security officials ask Pres. of the SGA Editor-in-Chief of Review that crimes were "investigat- - reporters of grand larcenies v. Pres. of the SGA Presidents of the 4 classes / Summer Service ed" by the campus con­ and stolen cars to also inform Recording Se c. of SGA Dormitory Senators stables in a way that exceeds the Newark Police, it is not Treasurer of SGA Greek Senators the powers delegated to s pe­ necessary for the security Presidents of: AWS Commuter Senators Discussed Today cial constables.'' University force to contact the police. IFC Senators-at-large Vice-president Randolph Meade The "possible homicide" turn­ MRHA Summer service jobs will says that security does in­ ed out to be a very "prob­ sec be iEScJ :;:>ed ·by Charles C. vestigate reported minor thefts. able accident" and the attempt­ Com. Asso. Walker, the college secretary because about 80% of them turn ed rape case referred to a This organizational arrangement is to supercede all sections for the American Friends out to be only lost. articles :. molest complaint investigated of the Constitution and By-Laws referring to Senate member­ Service Committee, tonight at which are recovered by the by Newark Police that oc­ ship. Thus, the Vice-Presidents of the classes will no longer 9:30 p.m. in the Phoenix. guards, It is also security curred during the summer. be Senate members, but will still hold their class offices. Walker will be in the Student policy to advise anyone re­ Center lobby today to dis­ porting a major theft to cuss the various summer also inform the Newark Po­ service jobs with interest­ lice since the police generally ed students. want to question the person. Student Conference ·condemn·s Summer programs indude Security head Norman Sey":' work camps in depressed mour also said that when a areas, international student case is being investigated by American Policy li1 Viet Nom seminars, peace caravans, ~n­ the Newark Police, the $-am­ from the outset by charges from as far away as Michi­ te rnships in hospitals, pri­ pus force only enters the (CPS)-- American policy in that it was unrepresentative of gan and California. sons or social service investigation if they are ask­ Viet Nam was condemned here student opinion. Confer­ The walkout by ten dele­ agencies, and voter registra­ ed by the police to assist in this week when representatives ence officials indicated, how- gates included part of all ofthe tion drives. some way. of 45 colleges met for a Na­ ever, that they invited 100 Fordham, Mass·. Inst. of Tech­ Walker is a national at:th­ The Weekly article also tional StudP.nt Conference on the schools at random from nology, St. Johns (Brooklyn), ority on the non-violent move­ claimed that "criminal cas-es war. throughout the county, although and st. Johns (Jamaica) repre­ ment and methods, and has not reported to the Newark Amidst a walk-out by the Eastern seaboard was sentatives. They had supported, written a booklet, "Or- Police by the campus con- supporters of the Johnson Ad­ most heavily represented. A in a -straw vote, a resolution ganizing For Nonviolent ministration's VietNam activi­ few delegates were present (Continued to Page 14) · Direct Action. " · ties, the delegates adopted Walker is on the Exe- majority and minority state­ cutive con1mittee for Non­ SCC Activities ments which differed only in the violent Action, a founding degree of denunciation of cur- meml>er of the World Peace Sprightly .Spring Fashions s d rent foreign Brigade, a member of the Friends Peace Committee, To Be urveye .po~~:· students also passed a and is on the Executive Board A survey to aid in program .. resolution urging that the gov­ of the Pennsylvania Council it,'3 Create Special Highlight ming student center activities ernment reconsider policy to Abolish the Penalty of toward Thailand before it "un­ will be handed out Thursday~ De ath. thinkingly. becomes involved in in the dining halls at · dinner another land war in Asia." Casual wear in spring fash­ sisters~ The survey is being conduct­ Adopted as a minority re­ ions was the theme for the IWAS Moderators and co-ordina­ ed in the Student Center Court­ port, supported by 31 dele­ Fashion Show, Saturday after­ tors of the fashion show were cit to determine what recrea• gates, was a resolution calling noon in the Rodney Room. Jean MacAUster, HE7; and tional activites students on compulsory conscription "in­ The clothes were provided Betys Blackburn, HE7. campus favor. The sheet in­ compatible with a free so­ by the East Lynne Shop in University co-eds modeling cludes questions concerning ciety" and demanding that Wllmington. Proprietor Mr. the fashions were Manna Four­ pop, jazz, and folk concert "the entire selective service Paul Chichi was present to nier, ED9; Christine McMll­ artists• and speakers that system be abolished and alter­ accept orders. The East Lynne lan, HE7; Nancy D111on, BE7; students want to hear on cam• native systems be consider­ Shop otters Delawareans some Susie Hal man, ED8; Cindy pus. Questions leading to com• ed." of the high fashions common Nigro, HE9; and Kasempsri ments in general about student The confe renee, sponsored to metropolitan areas, at Aksornsukalak, AS graduate center activities and facil• by the executive board of the moderate prices. It spec­ student. ities are also included,. Cornell Student Government, ializes in the .,total' look'' The surveys are to be left was intended "to provide a with an emphasis on basic in cartons provided in dining forum for il;ttelligent criticism fashions that survive more The March 18 performances of 11Skln of Our Teeth" have halls, in dormitories, or at of the United States foreign than one season. been changed to 2;30 and 8115. the main desk in the student policy of Viet Nam , " accord­ The Fashion Show gave the March 16 and 17 performances center. Deadline for handing in ing to the chairman Mark Pel­ "Pure Hens" an opportunity will be held as scheduled at 4:15. the survey is Monday, March nick of Cornell. to show that they were no less CHARLES C. WALKER 13, at 7 p.m. The meeting was plagued hip than theirmorehighlyrateci ..••••••••••••• PAGE 4 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967

Pure n ·ross

Once upon a time there was a New York editor, who, for lack of anything better to print one day, drummed a minor news article into a full-blown international incident, at the same time starting· a war, and coining a new phrase for the Eng-lish lang-uag·e. For the uninformed or forgetful, the jour­ nalist was William Randolph Hearst. the ·w

What is the purpose behind this history lesson?, you might ask. The answer is quite simple. Noth­ ing - except the fact that journalists are always vaunting their high principles to the skies, espec­ ially where unslanted, unbiased news resources are up for question. Having been involved in the pro­ fession for the past four years, we have noticed that newsmen and reporters tend to take a dim view of accu~ations made against their "sacred office." It has been repeatedly proclaimed that said principles are above question, and without a blemish.

After such intensive indoctrination, we were mildy surprised to learn this week that a local editor courageously defended the right of the press to print stories with "lurid and sensational overtones." His .~ reason being beyond reproach, - the necessity of printing "the news which the public has a right to know about " - he released facts about enough campus incidents to make the dear old town of Newark blush with embarassment, not to mention the purple and mauve hues which such news would THE CLASS OF 007 create on university faces.

Far from defending the university's position in this matter, or for that matter the town's concern over su~h occurences, we merely wonder just how much leeway any journalist has to manipulate the ommandments news, even if it is for the public good. Does the end justify _,the means'?; or to put it more simply, how much right does a newsman have to use the facts at his disposal for sensational headlines. Some of Become Mr. Rockwell's information was valid, as far as facts go; . we feel that his handling of it, however, was rather weakly done. Contemporary

by BOB L>ARDEN thee any graven image, unless may as well be honest about Regardless of what one might it is a statue of a war hero or the whole thing. assume, his environment hav­ politician, or something along ing been the university, times that line. do indeed change. Some of Thou shalt not take the name these changes are for the of the Lord thy God in vain, Speaking of heresy, it seems better; some aren't. except when referring to en­ we have a new heretic on the It is well known that some emies of a God-fearing society, scene. His name is Albert Editor-in-<:hio..C of the world's major powers Remember the Sabbath day Ellis, he is a Doctor of Psychol­ Cathleen J. llujnnek have rewritten the sixth and keep it holy, unl~:Jss, of ogy, and he seems to be more Mana~Cing f:ditor As~ndah• Editors llu~in~ss Managl'r l•" t·ank Moore Syd At·ak, bulJelle Manwiller Wayne :::;bu~art. commandment. It now reads, course, you have to fight, work, than anybody can handle right Assistant to tht> Editor Senior Ad,·isor Jim Kran.: .Jane Antkrsun "Thou shalt not kill unl~ss •• '; or play golf, now. News Editor .Feature Editor !;port.. J.:ditor (At this point I would refer Thou shalt not kill, unless ••• 'l'vm Davies Bub Durden l{ uy GoldLuchet' A11si11tant News J.:ditor Assistant Featurt• t<;ditnr the reader to Mark Twain's Thou shalt not commit adul­ Ellis ·is on a o~e-man cam­ Erich :::;mith l!ru<·c Hog-crs brilliant comment on the tery, unless such action would paign to set up a brand-new As~:~istanl Spurts Editor ·=···· Lyle Pue ···::: major accomplishment of lead to a better understanding moral code for the United NewM Staff: 1'etet· Bun·uws, Vet·onh-a C t·uwlcy. l!at"lnt ra C luna n. Ann Haldeman, .Jue Laird, Naney Lynch, Mal"ilyn :::;ueha . Christianity in "The Myster­ of marital responsibtl1ty, States--and to say it is lib­ IJonna Thomas. I.any Levy. ious Stranger.") Thou shalt not steal, unless eral would be like saying Feature Staff: Dick Cmlur, Debbie Culha ne. Mat·k Goldfus. Susan Grcuturex, Duruyne Heyler, Bill Horwit z, HoLe t·t Put·vis, ·There is little need to take the person from whom you that Jayne Mansfield is a girl. Lynn Willo11 , Jane Wilcox. Sport11 Staff: Rm's Fischer. Shaun Mullen. Andy, Stern. Diek a moral stand here, but, since steal does not need the item El.l.1's ratherunusual approach Beck, Dan Lenin!!"er, Steve Kufflet·, J ohn U'Uunnt'll. one of these commandments which you steal. to the subject and his extreme­ Staff Writer11: Mary K. Albert. Barbara Apsley, Mat · ~uel"ite Baker. Sandra Busha, t:ary Collier, Ed Ezrailsun, Co11nie has been so drastically re­ Thou shalt not bear false ly blunt language (he's also Francis, Gladys Hamm. Jane Mash. Elaine Smith, .Mar!!"aret written to allow for such pro­ witness against thy neighbor, on a "r~markably unsuccess­ Hughe>:~, Juan Kelley, Leland Mackey, Barbara Madden, Marge Marino, Elizabeth Moloney, Carol Ruehre nbeck, gressive ideas as war, capital unless, of course, it is to the ful" campaign to make .Margaret Rowland, Sandra Studley, Kathi Trepper . Photography Editor Circulation Manager punishment, etc., why not go advantage of the society to have Berkeley's most famous four- Fred Binter Be tte Lanning :·:·:·:: all the way? Why leave the this person discredited, letter world clean.) have Photography Staff: Cliff Stirba. I< en Schwartz, Uon Schmick. Circulation Staff: Deena Shur, Janet Hu ~e tt a, Harriet Keil, other nine commandments in Thou shalt not covet they alienated him from several Joe deCourcelle. Jo'aculty Advisor their archaic form? After all, neighbor's (possessions), un­ major publications, including ltube~o n Bailey the guy who supposedly wrote less, of course, your neigh­ Esquire. Local Ads National Ad" GeurJ!e Chamberlain Steve Hitnet• them hasn't come out with a bor's name happens to be He has written several Classified Ads Editor Seaetary new book in thousands of years, Jones, in which case you books, most of which are avail­ lri~ Gold~tein '· Uee Uee Ingram PubliHhed every Friday during the academic yeu.r by the They must be outdated, must "keep up with him," able in paperback, which really un.lel'l!raduu.te ~tudent body of the U niver"ity of Delaware, Newark. Del. Eolitol"inl and lw ~ in es:; offices are located on The new list would read : lest the entire economy col­ "lay it on the line." You may rhe thir~l flout· of the :::;tuolent Center. !'hone: olay - :J tiX-lltill Thou shalt have no other lapse. not agree with everything Ellts Ext. 254-:!25: "nig-ht - l :ll·!l!l-1!1 . 0)1iniuns CXJII"essed are nut nece~~arily those uf the univers ity. Advertising and sub:;o:riptiotL gnds before me, unless it Does that sound more fit­ has to say, but he provides ru.te>:~ un reottu.. >s t. becomes necessary to deify ting? If it works, we could hours of interesting, and lively Entered a:c< ~econd •·Ia" ~ matter. lle<·e rnhet· 1:1. I !t -15, at the .;:·:·:· Newark Pn5t Uffke, Newou·k. IJe lawat·e, mulet· the A<·t uf someone in order to preserve get some of our public of­ reading, and plenty of bull­ Marrh 3, ll:''i\1, social harmony. ficials to work on the Sermon slinging material for dorm Thou shalt not make unto on the Mount. Either way, we ragchewing sessions, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARC~ 3, 1967 PAGE 5 Intelligent Lifel 'The Aliens Leave Unconvinced By ED EZRAILSON· up and tell them that we're "I am Dwardj, this is Fey- Hot Line SCENE 1-Russell Dining Hall sick." · 1gb. She is Frannie and that By ANDY STERN "They call them hambur­ (At the same time) "F~ylgh­ is Fanny." gers, Dwardj." what do you say. It will be a "Gentlemen.. I wonder if Q. WHY MUST S~NIORS WAIT UNTIL THEIR LAST SE­ "Looks like pig food re­ great to see how these human­ you'd mind giving me you MESTER TO SEE MISS MCNEAL (UNIVERSITY RECORDER) jects to me!" oid parties are.'' last names, your fathers CONCERNING GRADUATION? It-S TOO LATE TO REMEDY "Dwardj, take a few bacic: to {Aside) "I'm game Dwardj. occupation, your total family THE SITUATION IF SHE DOESN'T APPROVE YOUR COUR­ the ship for analysis. How they Let's go back to the ship assets, your projected oc­ SES. M.M. get them to look green puzzles ·to change. It says here that cupation, and your genealogy m·e." they wear white jackets to big back to the fifth generation... A. Students do not have to •Walt until the second RemeRter ''Look at how· the people en­ social events." just for the register." of their senior year to "see Miss McNeal," M.M., perhaps joy this shrek!" "Well-friends... we ac.cept "As for the last names - you have just been avoiding the issue. Accordtni to w.F. "They really have to be . your invitation. We shall re­ . we haven't any." Faucett, assistant registrar, seniors may come to see Miss stupid to put up with that. turn in · a short time - we "You mean you're both ••. McNeal In the fall, however most don't, thus causing the Why don't they rebel?" must go back to change." (Aside) Stonewall, is there contusion and tleup In the spring. Faucett pointed out that it "But they are. Over there ''We'll be waiting outside, anything in the National Char­ is the student's responslbllity to know the requirements tor they're throwing round pieces guys. Ye don't have to come ter about pledging b*st*rds?" graduation.'' He advises students not to see Miss McNeal of bread at each other," in again. BYE," (Aside) "I'm afraid Rob- until they have consulted with their faculty advisor, .though. "That's strange; accord­ SCENE 111 - In front of a ert E. that it would offend ing to the book, bread is still frat house our brothers down in Miss­ scarce on this planet. (Reads) "Dwardj, look at that flag. issippi. You know what they'd Q. WHY DO STUDENTS ONLY RECEIVE SIX CREDITS FOR 'Three million still die annually It's red, white and blue, has say!" STUDENT TEACHING? IT'S A FULL COURSE LOAD IN IT- of hunger and malnutrition~ •• " "I'm sorry, gentlemen but SELF--WHY CAN'T ALL STUDENT TEACHERS RECEIVE stars, but it does not look NINE OR TWELVE CREDITS. P.H. "Make a note of this; they'll like the flag I saw in the we won't be able to pledge want to study this back on you. Not that we have any­ book for this country." A. Sorry, P .H., but the Hot Line begs to differ with your Gnjek II.'' "Maybe it's a mutation of thing against you personally observation that student teaching is a full course load. Dr. Roy "How's this ••• In Newark they the other... Let's go in, but we are very particular M. Hall, Dean of the College of Education, tells us that room fight WITH bread, in New Fannie." whom we choose for our broth­ erhood." is left In the student teacher's schedule so that three courses Delhi they fight for bread." (Aside) "Hey, Robert E., (Aside) "Dwardj, they have a may be taken, thus raising the semester load to 15 credit "Poetic, Dwardj, poetic. check out those fell as in those different definition of broth­ hours. Hall admits that although some schools do give more Now, let's get out of here." white coats and beards. They erhood on this planet.'' credit for the teaching It is university policy to give the six (Outside the dining hall) "It must be from the deep (Aside) "Frannie, these credits for the "practice" course. seems that a great number of south .... and rich! Hi there, bums you picked up are gettin' _ people live in the buildings ladies and gentlemen. (Bows the boot from the best frat Q. IN THE STORY ON THE FRONT PAGE OF THE FEB­ around th1s place. LeCs go gracefully) I welcome y'all. on campus ... lets dump em." RUARY 17, 1967 REVIEW, IN THE HOT LINE STORY YOU into one of them." I wonder if I might ask your "There's a party at the ape SAID THAT THE HOT LINE WOULD ANSWER QUESTIONS · SCENE 11 - Inside** a hallway, names." house,why don't y'all go1there ?'' Jt RANGING FROM THE BASKETBALL TEAM'S RECORD "Let's knock on one of "Feylgh, that does it they IN 1905 TO QUERIES ON UNIVERSITY POLICY.'' I WOULD these doors, Dwardj," 6 think we're no better than ••• LIKE TO KNOW THE BASKETBALL TEAM'S RECORD IN. "Here, .:. someone is talking e4#Hfl-" 9ttd let's get out of here Where's 1905, G.A.H. behind this one." Fanny and Frannie?'' "Let's listen before we go in By LYNI\4 WILLON "They left us, I guess, A. There's a comedian In every university! In 1905-06, to see if they're friendly." This week's flick playing Dwardj. Ah, let's go home - the University of Delaware Blue Hens combined a record of (From behind the door) at the Student Center is This planet is a total loss - 3-4-1 under coach Samuel Saunders. How does that grab ya? "Well, Fannie, you got a date "Shane" and stars Alan I don't think we'll be taking for the rush parties, tonight?" Ladd, anyone with us either." (Eel. note) The Hot Line will answer questions on most (Overly modest) "I'm-going­ The moving picture, made "But Feylgh, · we have to any ~ubject: Just bring .or sencl the signed question to The with-a-Nu-Sigma','' in 1953, contains the typical have someone for our damn Revtew offtce on the thtrcl floor of the Student Center. Only "You are? Well, I'm going initials will be usecl.) western plot-the good guy, assembly lines." with an Ape." Shane, versus the badman. "My god, Dwardj, she's Shane, Alan Ladd, befriends really hard up! Going with a two turn-of-the-century Wy.;. tellers To The Ed if or humanoid is one thing, but an oming homesteaders with a ape! That's evolutionary re­ gression!" nine-year-old son and helps "This is phenomenal ... let's them fight off the "baddies" who are trying to confiscate More Liberal Housing Proposed knock.'' "Hello-friends.'' their land. Shane then disap­ TO THE EDITOR: had been given. They have oper­ removal crews. They zip into (Girls' voices in a si- pears into the mountains to I would like the take this ated without the slightest dif­ action no sooner than three or multaneous wail) "What on fight battles with bigger and opportunity to elaborate on one ficulty and can therefore be four days after the snow stops earth? Don't you know that men meaner "baddies.'' possible change in univer­ used as a legitimate example of and then manage to block four aren't allowed in a women's Although the plot is fam illar sity on-campus housing policy. a functioning, liberal campus or five parking spaces with hall... come in before someone and hackneyed, the movie has If a junior or senior coed housing policy. five -foot piles of the white stuff. sees you!" great momentum due to the un­ at the l:Tniversity of Ro­ Lynne Savchak,. GR Congratulations for a job well (Aside) "Dwardj, we must conventional turning techniques chester (Rochester- New York) done, men, andthanksforONLY have passed a time zone some­ employed by director George is given written permission Parking Rules! charging us $9 for the luxury stevens. Als~, the movie,fllm­ from her parents to take un­ of using the fine facilities where. They're still in the mid­ TO THE EDITOR: dle ages." ed on location at Jackson hole, limited overnights, then the you have provided! I would like to use this Wyoming, abounds in · actual university allows hertoelectto Richard J. Collins, AS9 "Ye · look kinda like strang­ space to congratulate the de­ sights and sounds. "Time" live in the Towers. A. Joseph Atz, BE9 ers. You from out-of-town." signers and the rule-makers (4/13/53) describes the (commuters) "Fannie, don't be so The- Towers are two ad­ of our great parking lot nosey ... You guys belong to a photography-" From the open­ jacent nine-story dormitories· syste~. These men have a fraternity?" ing shot, in which buckskin-clad with alternating floors of male talent that is only equalled by Congratulations ''We do •. the largest." Shane, a sort of blond Apollo and female residents. Each the designers of the "efficient" "My, Fanny, that means they of the plains, rides into view floor consists of a small vesti­ exists in Sharp Lab. TO THE EDITOR: have a big house and cool Last weekend an Inter­ on a roan horse, the film is . bule, one kitchen area, a large Keeping the students in mind parties - What's the name of marked by the kind of distinc­ bathroom and four suites made at all times, these men have collegiate Association of Woin­ your frat?" tive, richly detailed picture­ up of four single rooms and placed our student parking lots en · Students Cooference was "The Universal Brotherhood making that is scarsely ever one double room. Kitchen near nothing. The staff has a held here at the university. of Gnjek. '' lavished on the most high-tone~ lounge, hall and bathroo~ parking lot near the library; An innumerable number of "That's strange; I never movie drama, let alone a areas are public at all times· do the students? The staff has women students worked dllt• heard of that one." western; .....Without recourse only bedrooms are not ope~ a parking lot near Old Col­ gently to make this conference "That is because your to tricky 3-D photography and to members of the opposite lege;- do the students? The IX>ssible. As chairman of the people are so.... . provincial. Polaroid glasses, Stevens, sex. answer to both of these ques­ event_ I would like to heartily When you travel beyond this with ordinary Technicolor The Towers are left open tions is NO! thank everYc>ne who helped. small sphere you--will find that camera and sound track. has at all times, as are all mens' A real stroke of genius By the number of people you are but a part of a given his flat old story a real residence halls, with the only by the rulemakers is the rule· who showed a strong willing. great brotherhood." third dimension of believabil­ access being a main entrance that permits the "staff" to park ness to work and the extent (Aside) "I like the way the ity.'' opening into a foyer on the ln our lots ·(which they always of their efforts, I feel that big one talks, Fanny. He looks Alan Ladd commendably por­ first floor. All other floors choose to do) and keep us this conference is Indicative like a real snower. (ToDwardj) trays the traditional burly and are reached by elevators run­ out of their lots, which al­ that apathy on this cam pus cap How would you like to go to a ning from their vestibules to terse westernhero,"feared by ~ays seem tobe nearlyempty. be alleviated. Aws has bee·n few parties here ... with me and the bad and loved by the good.'' this foyer. It took a really creative per­ striving to involve more women Fanny. I know they won't be Van Heflin, Jean Arthur, and The Towers were opened for son to dream up that rule, and_ what you're · used · to, but •• in its activities and hopes that young Brandon de Wilde also residence four and one half it took a determined faculty the interest which was demon­ (Aside) "Frannie, we al- make the most of their roles years ago, after careful con­ to fill our lots with their cars. re.ady have dates.'' ·Strated wlll not only continue as the frontier family. sideration as to the pros and other persons who deserve but also increase. (Aside) "Ah•. we'll, ~ all em . • ' 'I l co~s of coed dormi~ory living congratulations are the snow Karen Parsons, HE7 ALPHA EPSILON PI Special Forces. Those funny Entertatnment will again be ulO\JS Swinging Parlor String This week the brothers take The brothers of Alpha Ep.. looking kids in those silly attempt~d. Quartet. a needed rest after pulling a silon Pi wish to express their blue berets are our pledges: ALPHA TAU OMEGA We would like to take this tremendous borrow show appreciation to those among Shelly Burstein, Howard Co­ opportunity to express our Here's the big lisfw girls. last Saturday night at the us who have unselfishly · as­ hen. Richard Comly, Garth disbelief in the rumor that a Paul Banker, EGO; Ken annual Hell's Angels party. sumed the responsibillties of Harding, Steve Kottler, Sandy certain fraternity was guilty Carmine, ASOJ Stan Glowiak, SIGMA NU our fraternity: Jerold Gold, KoufS.X. Dave Kreitzer, Dave of "dirty rush" practices. ASO• Dick Jolly ASO~ Mick The new pledges ot Sigma: . Master; Howard Gosttn, Lt. Mace, Steve Maisel, Pete 1 We don't feel that the fra­ Leo, ASO•' Ken McDaniel, Nu are: Greer Firestone. Ke- · Master; Steve Benson, Ex­ Newttt, Terry Newttt, Marc ternity in question was any BEo; Howie Meyers, BEOi vin Elrod, James Montgom- chequer; Sam Kursh:, Scribe; Samonisky, Steve Sass, Ken dirtier this year than usual. and Bryan Gordon, Social Doug Mitten. EGo; Bob erya David Baker, Charles Schwartz, Paul Spiller, Ray Congratulations to pledges~ Chairman. Also to Bruce Nowaczyk, BE9; Dave Owen, Beauchamp, Richard Beyer, Stellenberg1 Alan Trachten, John Anselmi, George Broom• Sheiker, Assistant Pledgemas­ EGOJ Ron Pearia BEO;· Bob Charles Bertun, Lee Emmons, and Steve Stunkle. el~ Mike Boyle~ Bill Engle• ter. Tomorrow evening, our Pitts, AG9,' Chris Spicer,ASOt John Fulop, Lawrence Hopkins, Barney Toyama, Aso; Bruce harta Don Farrelt. Pat Dickey, Those dashing young men that second semester social sea­ Dick Franklin, Walt Graham, Christopher Kieffer• David you've seen wearing smart Ulmer, EGo,cwayne VonStet­ Klinger, Bruce Lucera. Doug­ son will open with a bang as Dick "boy wonder'' Grayso~ berets are members of the 1 ten, ASOj and Dan Whitaker, las Merchant, Jeffrey Miller, AEPi presents Beatniks 67. Jon "Ramar" Hall, stan ~'Doc' ASO. John Newcomb• David Verner, Halliday, Lee Hanna, Dave Tomorrow night these young James Weil,JetfreyWilkinso~ gentlemen, the brothers, and Larson. Dave Lindemers Tom Norris, -Clift Quisfe Al Paul, Robert Campbella James John­ Roving Reporter dates will be enjoying some Rick Schmidt, Bob Starr,Mlke son, Brooks McCal~ Robert of the finer things in lite at Poulson, Thomas Wheat, Gar­ Wals~ Mitch Wilson. the Kent Manor Inn. The oc• rett Youlden, and Robert PI KAPPA ALPHA Freshmen Voice Opinions easton: ATO Founders Day. Wright. Two days. hence, the dedica­ The brothers of Pi Kappa TtiETA CHI tion ceremonies for the ad• Alpha are proud to announce Congratulations go to the is not as good as I expected. dition will be honored by the the pledging of the following By JOAN KELLEY 25 discerning young men who The teachers I've had so far presence of ATO national men: Chester ·Javorsky, Andy Question - Freshmen im­ have chosen to pledge Theta have been excellenf." president Stewart D. Daniels Hastings, Dusty Dornbrook, pressions after one semester •• Chi. Don't worry, tellas, it Jane Wilcox , ASO: "It hasn't and various university of­ George Leedom, · Steve Rich­ Frances Babiarz, ASO: "It's won't be too long before pledge left any big ·impressions on ficials. ardson.· Tom Runnels, Gene hard to say. I didn't have any season is overl I Sharp, Bill Stites, John Tall· great expectations. I expect­ me, Previously went to a DELTA TAU DELTA boarding school so I find dorm· man, Mark Vogel, Dave Wang For any fashion..m inded per­ ed to get an education and by Rumors have been seeping sons interestoo_ it might be and large thats the way it's life and the academic life very through the hallowed halls of and last but not least Ron similar. Academically the Warden. well to note that Brother working out. In other respects our campus that a giant has Neiger displayed the newest the university doesn't elicit sciiOOl is just what you make fallen in the Delt House-it The coveted "Blue Marks" of it." was presented to brother AI idea in ID (actually JD) brac.. much of a · response from is true--the whale of Delta elets last Saturday - evening. me." Hayden Wednesday evening for Tau has been HOOKED! And The bracelet is sort of dingy Linda Marshall ,EDO; "The mercilessly drug from the sea his unprecedented heroi'cs beyond the call of duty. Broth... silver and is worn on both academic part is a lot harder of eligible bachelorhood into wrists at once. than I thought it would be. er Hayden selnessly totaled the arms of a captivating sir­ LAMBDA CHI ALPHA I didn't really know what to en. Congratulations are extend• his entire body in a noble expect. •. high school tells you effort to save Herma~ the in- Just ed from the brotherhood. Winter, when to bt:'.•!a re of essay tests By SANDRA BUSHA This weekend the brother­ Wonder Dog, from the wheels and I find true-false objec­ of a run away garbage puddlewonde rfulpledge s GEOOOE WASHINGTON UNI.. hood will be slinking through tive tests here.'' truck. AI, the brothers of PiKA RAID! VERSITY the dense undergrowth of our Phil Sanderson BEO (com­ salute you.. the house WASHINGTON, D.c. party room at the annual Viet and Brothers come R~ muter): "I think 'the campus Cong party. Who knows what SIGMA PHI EPSILON is really nice. It's lived up to Curfews will disappear Congratulations to our from (the) the Delts will uncoverf - (ing) what I've heard. I guess there sometime in March for sen­ thirty new pledges who begin Salutations go to our new is a lot .,,J 've missed being a iors and girls over 21 living a momentous twelve weeks of k pledges who are eagerly await... commuter." in G.w .. dormitories. Ten .no _Things su-re have changed r ing the trials and tribulations a George Broom ell >BUO; "As curfew nights per semester since Rushf of their pledge period. The I p a commu!er I don't have will be alloted to juniors. • Also, congrats go out to brotherhood feels certain that and many impressions about the Freshmen now have upper­ our intra-mural volleyball the men chosen to eventually Larry (how could you!) university. The consensus of classmen curfews .... m idnight team for their early sea­ become members of Delta Tau goes and gets my com muter friends is that on weeknights, 2 AM on son victories. It looks as if Delta are of the best possible pinn they really don't feel a part Friday and Saturday nights. their hard work and prac­ quality and ;stature. ed, of the university. There i~n't The purpose is to ,..,give jun• tice could rate an undefeated l3pledges? much intellectual climate in the iors and seniors the freedom PHI KAPPA TAU season as the net result[ S.C. lounge." to deter'\line their own .CEL E - BRATE !!! hours. Contrary to rumor the an... Kay Davison ASO: "I think nual Phi Tau "school spirit" it's puritanical here. It's a HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY party will be held tomorrow good school but the attitude HEMPSTEAD, N.Y.. TAPE RECORDERS - TAPE is that a student should only night as scheduled. Young Bomb scares reached a ladies are ·required to wear want to study and never have peak when the cam pus was Many Items HI FI COMPONENTS any fun ••. too Victorian." high-buttoned sl}oes only. Ar· hit by four of them in the past rangements t"br oustles can be at Latest Dave DeMauro ,ASO: ''I like Wholesale SHEET MUSIC 45's month. Unidentified callers made by contacting brother the English depa t tment. It's Pric-as notified the university that the Preston. Naturally, no hems $.75 helped me develop my writing. PHONOGRAPH RECORDS bombs were placed either under 34 inches wi11 be per.. Social life here is relatively somewhere on the main campus MAGNOVOX TV & STEREO active. You have to look for mitted, and each couple is ex.. or in the residence halls. In something to do but you can pected to provide their own each -case the buildings were find it." chaperones. Milk and cookies DELAWARE MUSIC HOUSE evacuated. Tom Roberts , EGO: "Def­ will be served at 9~5. Music t:J2 E. Main Street :368-3258 by the university's own fab-· initely not liberal enough.· I UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA can't go along with the uni­ GAINSVILLE~ FLORIDA versity's policies on contro­ Students protested a coed's versial speakers••• Social life probation for posing in the here is strictly from the Pur­ nude for an off-campus maga­ itan age." zine by a "sleep..in'' in the Henry Daum ,ASO: "Social :,:~dm inistration building.. They life here is · better than I pledge to keep their vigil un­ heard. The intellectual climate til the probation is lifted. Members of the classes of '67, '68 and '69 Cl' e cordially in vi ted to order their .official class tings Ol Monday, Marth 6th. - Factory representatives wi II be present from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. They RENO'S PIZZA will be happy to answB' all possible questions m this subject. FREE DELIVERY UNIVERSITY 737-9705 BOOKSTORE UNIVERSITY OF D.ELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGI 7 'fuzz' Perform For Class

By JANE WILCOX hustle him out the door. the floor and posed for pic­ Two Newark detectives As Bailey had predicted, tures. a rrested university student everything was straightened Robert Darden, AS7, Tues­ Bailey and Wilson stressed out, but much s ooner than the day night, charging him with the importance of observa­ astonished journalism class possession and use of mar­ tion in a situation such as had expected. Just as the trio ijtma·. . the class had just witnessed. was leaving the classroom, Indeed, if the students had The detectives, Brierly and Ray Wilson, Bailey's assis­ Herald, interrupted a news been able to observe the war-. tant, called them back and wr iting and editing class, r ant more closely they might thanked Brierly, Herald, and have been clued - in to the presented Professor Bailey Darden for their performances. with a wa rrant for Darden's hoax sooner because of the Wilson then explained that it arrest, and efficiently pinned obviously intentional (?) mis­ had been his idea to stage spelling of the word Feb­ the protesting student against an a rrest to give the class a wall. rua ry ("Febuary" ) in three practice in news reporting, places. While one detective frisked and that after Darden had been him, the other retrieved Dar­ hauled through the scene once den 's jacket which the .21- more to give photographers a ye a r-old English major had chance to take pictures, the hastily stuffed under a desk, entire class would be given and removed from it a small -Keep The Faith, Baby- 10 minutes to write a news package of what might have story on what had happened. been marijuana. At this point, Darden whipped A short struggle ensued, the loss. Sandwiched between off his shirt to display a L.S.A. The Wesley vesper service during which time Bailey tried 6 a.m. hikes and 8:30 vesper T-shirt ac ross which was will be held this Sunday at 5 to c alm Darden down by assur­ services, we heard stimulat­ written, "Support your local Sleep might .have suffer~, p.m. Following the service wil!' ing him that everything would ing-lectures and discussions on but the 16 L.S.A. me mbers be the regular home -cooked be straightened out. The fuzz," The detectives, still the topic of morality in the who spent the week-end at the dinner, which we recommend detectives finally succeeded in grinning broadly at his joke, modern world. regional conference at Buckhill to all true Delaware gourmets subduing Darden enough to obligingly slammed Darden to Falls didn't seem to mind who are . hungry for fellowship The lectures, presented by and tasty food! · a biology professor at Cornell and a professor at Right after dinner we're Kroyt, Smit Give Concert Gettysburg Theological Sem­ running a car over to Christ Neath inary, dealt with the current Church for a discussion on research in genetics and the T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the church's responsibility to Cathedral" led by Dr. Ar­ Fifth Of Artists Series thur McGill from Princeton. modern science and to the The By BOB PURVIS. Major, ' for piano, was handled · Dr. McGill is well worth hear­ people who would be affected A small audience viewed in fine style by Mr. Srntt, by this research. ing. Call 368-4974 for details. the fifth Artists . Se ries, whose precise playing caught Arches presenting Boris Kroyt, viola, well the Bach spirit. Of and Leo Smit, piano, in Mit­ seven sections, the "Cor ­ Not only did Delaware have ALPHA TAU OMEGA chell Hall Wednesday night. _rente " was one of the ·faster the largest number of repre­ PINNED: Brahms' "Sonata No. 1 in a nd more · enjoyable parts . sentatives at the conference, Brother Maury Lappinen. F minor, Op. 120" fo r viola A gigue finished the piece but one of our members, Robin AS9, to Miss Delphine Vannini, and piano, opened the pr o­ with an elaborate flourish. · Mattison ED9, was elected as Trenton State., g ram, the first viola -pia no This third of the p r ogram, i'egional me mber-at-la rge. NO~¥ TH RU T.HU RS Brother Ro n Putt, AS9, to performance the unive rsity howe ver, was quite tedious, Miss Chris White. AS9. has s een in quite a while . owing to the extreme length of WESLEY FOUNDATION ••You ARE the Bach. Two s horte r num­ Delta Tau Delta The first move ment, " alle­ bers woul d have r etained This week's Living Room GOING TO Pinned: gro appassionato, ' ' re vealed the viola as too oft e n ove r ­ interest mur. h better. Di alogue will be held in the Brother Donald F., Bowlby ENJOY whelmed by the piano. Wh at Wesley House on South College VIII AS 9 Miss Karen to was audible s uffered some ­ Quite but powerful in its Ave nue opposite the Hugh 'ALFIE' Lee VanHook AS9 p. what fr om bow noise and ope ning, Hi,ndemith 's "Sonata Morris Library. Discussion VERY Lambd::: Chi Al pha a lack of clarity in the fast Op. ll, "No. 4," for viola will begin at 3 p. m. 'JfJ_UFE MUCH.Magazin Pinned: passages. and piano , concluded the For those who missed the Brother Larr y Manlove.­ program. Although containing " Andante un poco adagio, " ., fi rst meeting, Living Hoom BE9, to Miss Susan Livings .. s econd , showed the violaist some dissonance and many ke y Dialogues is a series of dis­ MICHAEL CAINE ton, Madis on College, Virgin.. changes, this har dly labels in a much bette r light, Mr. cussions between protestant, · ia. it an extre mely " contempor­ Kroyt 's tone sounded much Catholic, and Orthodox stu- . richer and more expressive. ary" wo rk. It was ve r y well Phi Kappa Tau performed. de nts whose aim is to achi e ve Afte r a third move ment, the Pinned~ a deeper understanding about vivace s howed Mr. Smit mas­ Brother Jim Moore ASS .to The program, fairly good on wh at the other person be­ te rfully ha ndling the piano part; AlFiE Miss Mary Spangler, Moore the whole, was definitely ma r­ lieves, and about the bar­ RECOMMENDED FOR ·the viola, too, ca me through College of Art. red by its faults, to the l'>xtent riers separating the major MATURE AUDIENCES much better. It closed to Sigma Nu that the viewer left with 3 de nominations. Everyone is shouts of ' 'Bravo!" from rathe r unsatisfied feeling. invited to come. Engagements: the balcony. fo. PARAMOUNT PICTURE· TECHNICOLOR"" Brother JoeBenjamin,BE-7, Bach 's "Partita No.4 in D to Miss Jill Kordtll ED-.7. HELD OVER 2nd Shows 7 & ~ Theta Chi WED. THRU Week Pinned: Deluxe Candy TUES" MARCH 1-l Sat Matinee 1 p.m. Brother/ Al Unione, EG7 to Eve. Shows At 7 & 9:30-Sat. & Sun. Matinee 2 p.m. March 4th over at i3 Miss Cathryn Hendrickson, ED7. Shop, Inc .. ALSO ON CAMPUS PARAMOUNT PICTURES ··****HIGHEST RATING!" 41 E. MAIN ST. SEVEN ARTS I RAY STARK N.Y DAllY NEWS ENGAGED: Open 7:30 a.m.Ciose 8:00 p.m •. presenl Mr. FrederickJ·.Breme AS7; / to Miss Nancy Brightwell.AS9. Breakfast & I.uncheons Miss Christine Elasic, HE8, Platters to Mr. Charles Allen, Sigma Nu, Gettysburg College, '69. Sodas Cigarettes Mr. Kenneth W. Collier, AS7, • to Miss Marnie Hatchard. STARTS FRI MAR laTtl NEWARK CLEANERS AND DYERS WITH AN .INTERNATIONAL ALL-STAR CAST· PANAVISION "Il Kirk Douglas - Glenn Ford - ,Gert Frobe­ 176 E. ~.• AIN STREET Leslie Caron - Alain Delon - DRY CLEAN!NG - SHIRT SERVICE Jean Paul B~lmondo- Charles Boyer Store Hours: 7:30 A.M. To 6:00 P.M. SPECIAL REDUCED SnJDENT ADMISSION 90C Shows 7 & 9 /

PAGE 8 UNI.YERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 Local Whip Wins 'Dirty Old Man' Award By WOODY WATERSKI ladies who are very easily saplings in Burnt Swamp and ·'' Winner of the annual "Dirty slurred out. telling cruddy jokes to every Old Man Of The Year" Award "#*@o/o$@#$%," chuckled person, plant, and animal in is Reginald Whiptov, a local Whiptov, "I didn't even sight. citizen. In order to win the have to %11~11$&#@ try!" His When as ked what he thought award, Mr. Whiptov had to famous "sit down on the of the university, Whiptov overcome competition from bench with one, tell slimy joke, replied that he liked it very some of the grossest old men and grab the knee" routine won much and would like to attend. in the state. · him the most points. It's just the place for rrie, he All of the contestants agreed · Mr. Whiptov has been in the chuckled obscenely. He ex­ that the university campus business all his life. ·Born plained that the women's hours was the ideal place to hold the in Gumboro, he spent the made it easy for dirty old contest, since the school greater part of his life de­ men, because "we get tired boasts an abundance of young veloping his skill by grabbing .after a while. As long as them girls have them hours, it's great. Those young fellows. don't have a chance." Is Food Waste Necessaryt He claimed to be very Although it may not always Nutrition standards call for confident that the university seem so, the Dining Hall man­ a variety of foods; some of will attract more and more agers do have concern for the which are disliked by many dirty old men in the future, students. students. When such an item is and "that'll make the contest more exciting." One of the problems to be offered, there is generally R. M. WHIPTOV met, which does not always a more favorable alterna­ please the managers, as well tive. Some schools offer no as the students, is budget. such choice. Margarine is now being offer­ ed to help cut down on expenses Another problem facing the The Air Force doesn't want caused by discarded butter, students and the dining hall other un-eaten food, and the staff is the length of the lines. high cost of food. Because "Our dining halls cannot open for dinnner until 5, to waste your college education students wasted an exorbitant amount of food when offered so why do the students come Sunday evening buffets, they so early?" asked one of the have been eliminated. managers. "There are usually any more than you do. In order for the Food Ser­ no lines at 5:45." vice to provide extras and Are you afraid of becoming part Instead of sending nasty Suppose, just for example, you You'll enjoy good pay, promo­ Grade A food, the students notes and excessively messy of the woodwork on a job? Your wanted to be involved in Elec­ are sometimes faced with career stunted by boredom? Few tions, chance to travel, active social trays into the dishroom, the tronics. This area alone includes life, fine retirement benefits. And less expensive but salubrious promotions in sight? managers would appreciate Communications-Electronics, Mis­ you 'll be serving your country, too . You didn 't go to college for that. food. For example, a non­ criticism and constructive sile Electronics, Avionics, and Or maybe you want to fly? That's sugar sweetener has re­ relief for the problems. They And it needn't happen, either. others. And these, in turn, involve great. The Air Force is certainly the Because you can pick the United cently been added in an effort would like to talk personally to administrative, research, and other place to do it. to do the most possible with States Air Force as your employer. technical aspects. As a college graduate you want the students about the prob­ Career opportunities are so vast ... the money allotted. lems. That's just a tiny part of the something extra out of life-to aim you'll get a better chance to spe­ whole Air Force picture. Just at an exciting goal. So send in cialize where you want . .. in the one brilliant opportunity area this coupon. forefront of ;nodern science and among many. Make sure you don 't get stuck Around Campus technology. where nothing much is happening. by BILL HORWITZ The a most cyclical purge of I have recently had the potential Air Force officers at displeasure of moving. As a the Air Force Academy again senior, I have amassed quite stirred - up controversy re­ a collection of things, includ­ cently over the m~rits of an ing numerous books. During the honor system. · course of carrying all ofthese We here at the university objects, I made a rather simple can be proud tha~ our honor observation which .,.J feel is system, for tt1e most part, has worth passing on. not been breached for over a A little fore thought in buying month. I am of course re­ unneeded supplies and books ferring to the little red box, during spring semester at marked "honor system," lo­ bargain prices might stretch cated in the student-faculty the academic dollar next cafeteria of Agicultural Hall. fall. Instead of moving all your For those up-campus students saleable junk, why not sell it, unaware of this little device, benefit both seller and buyer. it is an honor system by which A twenty-five cent invest­ coffee and tea are offered at ment in a classified ad in a nominal charge of five cents this paper could do the trick. and doughnuts and pastries (This comment was un­ between five and ten cents. The solicited!) idea is to pay for what you take ***** "on your honor." In a Morning News editorial In talking with both the Prof. Joh1! J. O'Mara: maintenance man who supplies who teaches transport safety the doughnuts and the secre­ in the University of Iowa en­ tary who handles the money, gineering school, cites sta­ the system has operated for a tistics (two of every 100 ve­ long while, providing students hicles are cycles; but at least and faculty with a much en­ three of every 100 persons­ joyed food service. Surpris­ killed on the highways are ingly enough, on occasion, more cylists) which tends to make money is deposited than goods cycles "the deadliest vehicles sold. )Someone is either phil­ on the road." He states that anthropic or is suffering from a "on a per-mile oasis, a guilt complex!) motorcyclist's chances ofbe­ UNIT.ED STATES AIR FORCE Although the system is still ing killed are 20 times those Box A, Dept. SCP·72 in operation, a sad incident of an automobile driver." Randolph Air Force 8Jsc. TcxJs 78148 has marred this "home style" He goes on to state that the honor system. About a month vehicles are "inherently un­ Narnc ____--;(::-: o ,::-ca::s~c::-P,:-,n::-:1)----- ago someone stole the little stable." As a motorscooter Collcge. ______Ciass ____ red honor system box along with operator of seven years, I have contents of approximately ten to agree with Mr. O'Mara in Address ______dollars. Ironi~ally now the box part, but the only thing which marked "honor system" must I find "dangerous" about cyc­ be chained down! les are the drivers! ***** UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGE ·9

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Copy by Photos by Art by Continuity by DONNA THOMAS SINTER & SCHMICK DICK CODOR Layout b_y Censored by JANE WILCOX _ BOB DARDEN S. P. & S.P.

____,

Delaware males can be found doing virtually anything. Some study. • •

• • • Some just go get p last ere d.·

••

But, whatever they do, you can be sure they are men of the world.

• • "Cornerposts, ''If you will. PAGE 10 UN·IVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 Coed Comeback Concerning Males Following The Review special feature on "The Del­ ·aware Coed," it was decided See the graduate assistAnt. that the women should be given He is intelligent. a opportunity to express their Doesn't he look intelligent? His appl"ication must not have required a photo. opinions about men on the He is responsible for many of your low grades. university campus. Fink, fink, fink. ~ Presented with the question, He is God in your quiz section, and out too. "What do you think of the Just ask him. males on the University campus?", the girLs were stimulated to these replies: Suzanne · Clevenger, cause the girls go home on HE9 - "That whole article weekends to look for cool guys. (about ·the Coed) made me Sometimes there are reasons mad. It seems to me they're to stay, however." saying we're a bunch of Colette Kelly, AS9 prudes, and we're not. I have "Groovy, man, groovy. yet to see a cute boy • .• of (Right.)" course, there's my boyfriend!" Barbara Staulcup, ED8 - Paula Whisenante, ASO - "They're fine!" "If you could see past the Barbara Field, AS9 - "I white socks, there might be a think the males are too criti­ few good-looking ones." cal of the females. They Cathy McCaughan, ED9- should do less criticizing and not very frie_dly . unless you 11The reason men at Delaware· make more effort themselves. know them. They dress sloppy can't find cool girls is be- Some of them don't look so -- the same blue jeans for a great walking into class! They week or two. I think that's hor­ have their drawbacks the rible!" same as the girls, but for the Nancy Dillon, BE7 - "I think most part, they're a decent the guys who say that we're group.' ' immature here are equally Ellen Alewitz, AS7 - "Im­ immature. I don't care for mature with few exceptions. the guys here on the whole.' Uncultured. Uncouth. Pathe­ I've had many good times OFF' tically unaware of what's go­ campus. This is a defense, ing on around them anywhere.'' we say they're immature, Diana Gore, GSB - "They're they say we are." Sally Powers, ASO - "I don't think they're bad at all. I don't like their opinion of the girls down here!" Sandy Sniderhorn, GR - "I out for football and develop think that most of the boys at some true character. We Delaware are really hurting. need less intP.llect and more About two out of 10 are all fun.'' right. Most of them are either Toy Hrones, ED9 - "The longhaired, pimple-faced, or freshman boys this year are fat pigs. They all need to go better looking than any of the other years!" Janeen Wyatt, AS7 - "I don't think about them.'' u Susan Rash, AS9 - "They 0 should take a little bit closer look at themselves before they 0 criticize. Most of the ones I've met are great, but in general, they criticize too quickly.'' Gail Ghristie, Hb.;9 - "They're a little bit rtght·(in the Coed article). More branching out is needed ••• we really are stagnant down "For the most part, they are here. If the girls are prudes, clean cut and friendly. There strange that _the boys keep are a lot of opposites who give taking them out and don't seem a bad impression though. They too unhappy! I sm~ll a rat." look like real jerks." Mary Alice Maxwell, EDO- Cynthia Nigro, HEO·- "The boys here are easier to be friends with than to get ro­ mantic over. They don't take as much care of their appear­ ance as the girls do, I think with a diffe-rent environ­ ment and more things to do, they'd have a better See the U. of D. students. opinion of the girls.'' One of them fs a fraternity man. Many of the women were Fraternity men describe themselves as well dressed, poised, suave, campus leaders. reluctant to disclose their Image, Image, Image. honest feelings either way Independents describe fraternity men ·as Insecure, unable when they realized that pub­ to face reality. lication was involved. Some of Insecure, Insecure, insecure. the varied and anonymous com­ The man on the right Is the independent. ments included. The man o_n the left is the fraternity man. The man In the middle never went to Delaware. • .. "Blah." • •• "They certainly aren't ivy league." •. "Manners -- where are they"? •.• "I think they're very nice." These, gentlemen, are the results. Now that we've criti­ cized each other about equally, perhaps we can stop for awhile. UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGE 11

It's Like This, Girls. • •

The Delaware male's main objective here is to nail himself a queen.

Some girls see Delaware men as. cave men With clubs.

Delaware men reflect the ·dignity of their position in life through dress, action, and appearance. "Any sport in a dorm. 'f':·. .l 2

·' ' u \ '-:! .., ..: y

-~ ,, .. ~ ..

I :' \1/

1 : : 1

Some Delaware men I ike to conform, ie, to dress alike. • ~ • • •• some don't. PAGE 12 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 The Bottle Of The Sexes

If you look carefully, you'll see why we could print this picture.

Who needs women? Delaware male d t II h · figures. ecora es wa s wit pictures of his favorite sports

As o.. 9 i r- I of Dela.wa.Y"e you ra.nk with fhe IoweY" order d simians. lJfu;..f do you ha.ve fo Yoa 1Y'e fYUdish bor/sh irnmatu y-e 5 1 1 o.y o.bouf fhaf? Huh? HuM not too 9ood looking . c?..~-td have 1 btAcl /Jveafh. You Go+ No Co()th !If , -- ;'By George, Melvin wasn't lying - that IS Lindo he's with. \ ·If;

Your fly is open. ;-

)\

"You gott a look past the sox, babe!" UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, D.ELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGI 13 CLASSIFIED ADS LosT? • fv\A'Y 6R T~E CL-ASS,F\ED. C/1N HELP~

MISCELLANEOUS for 25 ce.nts a cubic centi­ parts of his nose so that he experience. Remember "vice AUTOMOBILES meter. First come first can see to catch a football. _if nice •• " Love, H.B. lll. APARTMENTS- College served. Supply unlimited. Call 3rd floor Harrington A. CHEVROLET- 1956, black Towne Club, 163 Elkton Road­ MEGAN- Happy birthday Only 24 cents a cubic centi­ TYPING-Desire to do typing and "white convertible. · V-8, only 3 blocks from univer­ from the third floor Russell meter. (reports, etc.) in my home. auto., radio and heater. w.w. sity. 1 and 2 bedrooms, air­ ' D. Have extensive technical typing Best offer. Contact B111 An­ conditioned, free swim­ SURFBOARD-Duke Kahana ... experience. Price depends on non, 117 Harrington E, 737- ·· ming pool, all modern conven­ LOST-double linked scarab moku semi-custom. In tlmefor . complexity of work. Phone 9703. iences. Rent from $100. Spec­ bracelet. Somwhere between the spring swells. Fine, new evenings and weekends, 328- ial consideration given to uni­ West B and 2nd Floor of gloss coats. $90. Contact Carl 0827; or 994-4401, EXT. 641 CONSUL CAPRI- 1962 limit­ versity students. Resident Sharp Lab on February 27. Jacboson. 366-8856. weekdays. ed production English Ford. agent on duty, 366-8544. Reward! Contact Barbara THIRD FL0,9R HARRING­ Good condition. Best offer. Smith, 115 West, 737-9899. WORD FOR THE WEEK­ Contact Bob Hartrim, 200West TON A-personalized maidser­ anachronism-a crediting of APARTMENT- Male grad vice of matchless caliber guar­ a person or thing to a time A, 737-9308 or 762-2539. student or senior desired to LOST-Thomas Jefferson anteed if fringe benefits merit other, esp. earlier, than the share comfortable modern High School ring~ 1962 with PONTIAC-1964 Grand Prix. our incomparable beauty and actual period. apartment in country, 15 min. a red stone. Please contact PS and PB, ww plus snow from university. All util­ Jean Kassees, ll3 Gilbert F. tires. Luxurious red with white I ities included for $45 monthly. Thank-you! leather interior. $1750. Ex­ Contact Dave Bauereis, 27 4- REVIEW CLASSIFIED AD EDITOR cellent condition. ContactJack, 8272 evenin!!s. LOST- brown pocketbook WY 4-6713 after 6 p.m. termed my "suitcase.'' Lett REVIEW MAIL st.OT CONGRATULATIONS- B111 at the south College . Street I STUDENT CENTER DESK VOL KSWAGON- 1956. Sun Drescher in getting an A for entrance to Sharp Lab on · roof, 3 new tires, recent effort in his performance last Tuesday. Contains several ' valve grind. Make good dally AD: Saturday night. He was far transportation. $195. Call 737- tt~ms. of personal value, for example, my car keys and 117 4, Steve. above the competition in "pull­ . ing off'' a good show. glasses. Contact, WY 4-3259 •

EMPLOYMENT EXPLOSIVES- Reasonable rate a vail able on high quality P HINTING- Qual1ty offset I STUDENTS-Make commis-, explosives work. Contact your printing specializing in print­ sions-Be an agent for Jensen campus demolitions center, Ing theses. Reasonable rates. Income Tax Service by refer­ Russell A. Knock twice; but Fast service. Call 998- ring prospective clients to not too hard. We also work on 7137 or 368-7451 after 5 p.m. the Service's exchange number, Sundays. 658-4138. If interested, call 737-9971, Allen or Harry. HAM RADIO-complete sta­ PROFESSIONAL TAILOJ:<­ RIDES tlon-SX-140 rcyr., T-150trans. ING- I make and alter dress­ and acces. $100. Contact Mike es, coats, curtains, etc. Wed­ FLORIDA-rider wanted for otley. 115 West F. ding gowns are my specialty. spring vacation. Contact Dick Very reasonable rates. Call Bailey, 737-5795 or carrell Ana, 368-5864. MALE STUDENTS- F .T #'70 in the library. .w. is coming!!! Ill For information ROOM AVAILABLE- 1•·ive contact c. Hall, 208 Russell miles outside of town. Rent is P.M. duPONT HIGH E. from $25-$35 a month (utlllttes SC.HOOL- ride needed on Ad Should Met Be Over 30 ·won~ •• 0.. included). Need fifth person. G-arter ShoUld h EnclosM In ·E~t"'" March ll at 8 a.m. to P .S. Call 737-1174, Steve. Draft Test. Please contact MANASQUAN MAN- selling lope With Ald • .PI• .. Type. Jeff Keown, 103 Gilbert E. parts of his enormous nose SPAS TIC END- w111 sell DetNtllne Tueaday PAGE 14· UN·IVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 Students Hit School Ties Students Protest War representative," he said, the high goals which Cornell With Union Of S. Africa (Continued from Page 3) The delegates responded originally set.' ' which opposed withdrawal of with a statement that the Answering charges of bias, (CPS)--The University of and the apartheid policy," Del- walkout group "was an element the statement concluded, "we Minnesota Student Associa­ t roops from Viet Nam. in said. · In their resolution they call­ of American students, admit­ feel that the views express­ tion (MSA) wlll soon ask the University officials have tedly, but they were neither the ed by the majority at this con­ university administration to ed the war "the latest mani­ not denied that the institu­ festation" of Communism's most eloquent or most ra­ ference show a rapidly chang­ withdraw almost $10 mtllton tion may have investments in "great threat to world peace" tional of men in a conference ing atmosphere in this na­ in Invested endowment funds firms dealin'g with South and stated that "once war is which they alleged drifted from tion.'' from about 24 U.S, corpora­ Africa. MSA leaders are ex­ forced upon us, there is no tions with interests in South pected this week to meet with other alternative than to apply Africa. Vice-President of Business every available means .... to ATO J.o Dedicaterecreation .... room, eight new Two graduate students, Administration Laurence Lun- bring it to a swift and with­ (Continued from Page 1) Gregory Delin and Steve Par­ den to discuss the unlver- study rooms, a patio, and tele­ out prolonged indecision.·· sity will be given by George liament, have compiled a sity's investment policy, phone service available in After obtaining unanimous Worrilow, vice-president of each room. Also, facilities list of the corporations and Delin said he hopes the permission tu address the the university, and an ATO for a housemother were pro­ plan to send a letter to Pres­ MSA investigation wil1 have assembly, the group's spokes­ alumni. Pratt will dedicate vided, and ATO installed Char­ ident o. Meredith Wilson this a "snowball effect" and that man, Roy Latham of M.I. T., the dining room and present a lotte Carlson, housemother. week asking him and the Board other student governments will complained that the conference plaque to Daniels. The ban­ Most of the project was fi­ of Regents to consider the study their schools' investment "never was a debate on foreign quet wlll take place from 5-7 ethical implications of the endowments. This would policy." nanced by the National Frater­ p.m., in the chapter house. investments. "provide a way for the Latham disagreed with nity Organization, with some 1 The new addition, which was The MSA investigation lets American student to identify charges that the sponsors support given by alumni. · completed on October 22, the academic community know with the problem in South Af­ "stacked" the conference, but Presently 57 men reside that "probably through an rica," he said, "the way it came out it wasn't 1966, includes a dining hall, in the ATO House. oversight universities are at least passively giving eco­ nomic support to south Africa Free Univ .... One thing you can .1 (Continued from Page 2) sumption on the part of the student body and, incidentally, the administration that student interest or student apathy rt­ ume at Fairchild garding current issues is not necessarily proportional to the students aversion to haircuts. It is of further interes t ••• responsibility that virtually the entire group regardless of their political affiliations wa s .s omewhat violently opposed to the uni­ versity's decision to prohibit the Free University from us­ ing university facilities. The class is te mporarily meeting in tile Phoenix, at 8 p.m. Monday evening·s. Surprisingly e nough, the or­ ga ni zation of the class itself w<.~s not cunspicuouslydifferent from the normal uni ver­ s ity sponsored classes. Stu­ Th e quicker the better. And the tim e Instrumentation Division, Mountain View, Winston Research Corporation, Los An­ has never been better for fast individu a l Cali fornia 94040, (415) 962-2011 geles, California 90045, (213) 670-3305 dent s sat in chairs, arranged growth. Th e demand for our products Automatic semiconductor test systems; Research, development and manufacture in two slightly crooked rows. has never been higher (111 new prod­ digital voltmeters; curve tracers; bench of laboratory and portable wideband in­ The· insfructor sat in front of ucts and product famili es introduced by model semiconductor test and measure­ strumentation magnetic tape recorder/ the class and led the dis­ our divisions last year) . And company ment equipment; solid state amplifier~>. reproducer systems. Research and de­ cussion. Both students and sponsored R & D amounts to over 11 mil­ Controls Division, Hicksville, New York velopment in areas of audio, narrowband, instructor were neatly attir­ li on do ll a rs yea rly . 11802, (516) WE 8-5600 and video recording systems. • ed, a.nd appeared to be reason­ We mak e it as easy as possibl {jl for the Potentiom eters ; pressure sensors; solid Precision Metal Products Division, El ;l!Jly respectable members of creative individual to assume responsi­ state relays ; solid state pressure trans­ Cajor:, California 92022, (714) 448-2711 the hulll an race. bility and move up. (Freedom to follow ducers; rate gyros ; accelerometers; si g­ CEFF® high velocity forging machine; ideas through. Minimum of red tape. Lots na l conditioning equipment. CEFF products; cryogenic lines; high of technical support and cross-fertiliza­ pressure ducting systems; metal bellows ; tion of ideas.) And we have ma ny young Space & Defense Systems Division, Sy­ gas generators; high exchangers, etc. Gilbert D Fire executives to prove it. osset, New York 11791 , (516) WE 1-4500 Each one of the 12 operating divisions Photographic and electronic imaging Instrumentation Division, Clifton. New functions autonomously, enabling each systems for aerospace reconnaissance Jersey 07015, (201) 733-2000 Fakes Out Coeds one to concentrate on its own product and mapping ; closed-circuit television; Oscilloscopes; oscilloscope cameras; "Man in the hall" and development and research. We've found counter-measures; fuzing , programming, pulsE;: -and signal generators. "fire" were the sounds the it reduces conflict usually found in large timing, safety and arming devices ; pre­ Davidson Division, Commack, New York girls of Gilbert D responded centralized corporations in which many cision optical systems; basic research 11725, (516) AN 6-5200 products- and men- compete for man­ in photographic chemistry; aerospace Printing, duplicating and paper handling to Monday night by evacuating environmental testing. the dorm shortly before mid­ agement attention and action. equipment including offset duplicators, Openings in most locations for all Graphic Equipment Division, Plainview, collators, folding machines, offset plates night, degrees:in market research, design and New York 11803, (516) WE 8-9600 and supplies. A small electrical fire in a industrial engineering, sales manage­ Web perfecting offset presses; elec­ motor was found in the third ment, marketing, chemistry, field sales, tronic color separation equipment. Elec­ CAMPUS INTERVIEWS floor custodian's closet. It production engineering, accounting, sys­ tronic halftone engraving equipment; (Monday) February 13, 1967 was discovered when girls tems engineering, finance, manufactur­ Teletypesetter Systems for automatic For convenient appointment, please on the floor walked by the ing engineering, and R & D. linecasting devices; Photo Typesetting make arrangements in advance through closet and smelled smoke. Our representative will be on your cam­ machines. your Placement Office. They opened the door and pus soon to give you all the details about Cable Division, Joplin, Missouri 64801, · openings with any one of these 12 oper­ found the room filled with (417) MA 3-1775 ating divisions across the country: Multiconductorcables; wiring harnesses; smoke. Semiconductor Division, Mountain View, junctions, breakouts and terminations. F=~IRCHIL.C Aetna Fire Company was California 94040, (415) 962-5011 lndustriai 'Products Division, Plainview, at the dorm in minutes, ex­ Diffused silicon Planar transistors, di­ New York 11803, (516) WE 8-9600 tinquished the blaze and odes; integrated circuits-digital (Micro­ CAMERA _AND INSTRUMENT 8mm sound film projectors for teaching, c:= <:=> - F=" <:=> - , _.-.. ""T'"" I <:=> """'J cleared the floor of smoke logic) , linear and custom monolithic and training and display. 8mm single system by using a portable exhaust hybrid ; special semiconductor products sound recording film cameras and pro­ 300 Robbins Lane, Syosset, L.l., N.Y. fan set up in a window of one -duals, differential amplifiers, memory jectors. High speed motion analysis and An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/ F) of the rooms. The g1rls watch­ products and microwave products. oscilloscope recording cameras. Aircraft ed from the lounge below cockpit voice recorder; flight data re­ corder units. where they were sentbecause of the sleet which was falling Dumont Electron Tubes Division, Clifton, New Jersey 07015 , (201) 773-2000 at the time. Cathode-ray tubes ; photomultiplier The firemen received a tubes ; image devices ; storage tubes ; round of applause as they power tubes ; scan-converter tubes; tipped their helmets good­ ionization gauges. "llCISfUlDflltADl M.M• bye to the girls, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGI 15 SDS Submits Petition To University Asks Elimination Of Compulsory ROTC

In an effort to convince within this time period.'' would benefit the program 1! the administration to accept The petition submitted car­ it were made . voluntary since a non-compulsory ROTC pol­ ried the signatures of 794 "the interest and morale of icy, the unive,rsity Students students favoring a change of the participating cadets would AFRICAN LECTURE :- Dr. sed at the model United Na­ for a Democratic Societychap­ the ROTC policy to a volun­ be much higher." I. Kopytoff from the Univer­ tions program tonight at 7 ~0 te r sent a petition and cov­ tary program. The letter stat­ sity of Pennsylvania w111 speak p.m. in the Kirkwood Room, Fourth, "other students ering letter to the univer­ ed, "the circulation of the Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Wolf sc. were disturbed because com­ sity Committee on Courses and attached petition is continuing pulsory ROTC adds an extra two Hall. MODERN DANC~ CLUB-A Ciricula last Sunday. as our efforts will continue years to their m111tary obliga­ ART EXHIBITION- Through modern dance workshop w111 The letter was timed to until Reserve Officer Train­ tion.'' Students interested in March 15 a collection of Jap­ be held at the new Field preceed the next meeting of the ing Corps is a voluntary other branches than the Army anese Children's Prints, cir­ House tomorrow from 10 a.m. curicula committee which is program.'' feel their time is wasted. culated by the Delaware Art to noon. Dancing wlll be led by scheduled for Tuesday. In The letter, began by stat­ While concluding that "We Center, may be seen in the Daniel Nagrin. Admission wlll the words of the letter, "We ing that compulsory ROTC have heard these objec­ student Center. be 50 cents. feel that a two- week period e "has become a major student tions again and again, yet ART EXHIBITIONf-Begtn­ ORGANIC CHEMISTRY is sufficient time for ground issue on many college cam- nothing has been done to rec­ ning this Sunday, a one"'!'man SEMINAR Dr. Robert Bly, work to begin in the re-evalua­ . puses across the United e tify the situation," the let­ art show by Mr. Domenico professor from the University tion of this important issue. We States." In support of that, the ter stresses that the ac­ Mortellito, design adviser of South Carolina, wlll speak therefore request that you letter cites Department of tions of SDS to "affect a of the DuPont Company, may · on "Some Aspects of Non­ make public your willingness to Defense '" statistics that "in change is do,ne not with nega­ be seen in the Student Center. bornyl Carbonium Ion Chem­ take specific, direct action the last ten years revis­ tive feeling; but with true This exhibit is sponsored by istry'' Wednesday at 4 p.m. towards this re-evaluation ed their curriculum by in­ concern for all parties in the the University Arts Projects in 229 Brown Lab. stituting a program of a vol­ spirit of Satyagrahi." Satya­ Committee. untary nature." The letter grahl is an Indian term for ART LECTURE- Lamar stressed, however, that "It a policy of resistance without Dodd, a painter from Georgia PLAYHOUSE· A bus tour is not the trend with which to tne w Urn ington Play­ CIA .... violence as practiced by Gan­ will speak Tuesday at 7:15 we are concerned but the dhi. house wlll take place this (Continued from Page 3) p.m. in 130 Sharp Lab. principles. Monday at 7 p.m., to see "The called the llason "our greatest BRASS ENSEMBLE- The Victor Borge Show." Student diplomatic catastrophe of the Peabody Brass Ensemble wlll tickets are $2 and $2.25 and post-war period." While Stating that "In the course play Wednesday at 7 p.m. Res­ SHEAFFER'S are on sale at the Main Of­ Ewegen emphasized the neces­ of discussion, we have dis­ idence hall to be announced. flee, Room 100, SC. Bus ex­ sity to co-operate fully in re­ covered that a majority of the This is the second in a series W ALLPAPE'R - PAINTS cursions are sponsored by building the NSA into a cred­ students exhibited a strong of musical programs from the the 1966 Alumni Fund. ible arm of student action, desire for a voluntary pro­ ART SUPPLIES Peabody Conservatory of gram," the letter cited the SK 1 TRIP - The Recreation David Knoke, editor of the PICTURE FRAMING Music. The programs are following four reasons: Committee of the Student Cen­ Michigan Daily, called for a sponsored by the 1966 Alumni ter Council is sponsoring an disbanding of the present or­ Fund. First, concern was express­ . 77 Main St., Newark, Del. evening ski trip to "Pine ganization and the formation ed that compulsory ROTC CHINA SERIES -"Amer­ Forge," Schwenksville, Pa., of a "student union ••• with the forces a student ''to assume 368-0507 ican Policy Toward China" on Friday, March 10. The power base resting in the stu­ two conflicting roles." On the will be the topic Monday at Park In Rear cost of the trip is $8.65 and dent bodies of the membercol­ one hand, the student is en­ 8 p.m. in t.he Rodney Room, includes transportation, equiP­ leges and universities." cour..aged to develop a- critical sc. Donald Zagoria, Assoc. ment rentals, and lift rates. An interesting dissenting attitude in his studies while Professor of Govt., Russian The trip is limited to 43 opinion appeared in the" Xavier on the other hand, ROTC and East Asian Institutes, people. Sign up and pay the Deus" editorial. Tony Lane rewards "mechanical res­ Columbia University, wlll be full cost at the SC Main pointed out that the basic prob­ ponses to orders. thP speaker. Desk by Wednesday. lem was "not the fact that the Second, "It was· felt that COMMUTER ASSOC . .-There CIA used the NSA in its war· the decision to include compul­ will be a meeting of the Com­ SPANISH CLUB·- TheSpan­ against Communism, but that sory ROTC in the curriculum muter Association on Tuesday ish Club will present at its the CIA even exists.'' Lane was not subject to the opinions in the Blue and Gold Room, March program, 11 An Evening sees the CIA as an effective of the students 'and faculty," SC, at 4 p.m. in Mexioc," on Wednesday, at force which is justified in using but that it "has been arbit­ CONCERT-. The University 8 p.m. in the Kirkbride almost any means to build up rarily handed down by the Concert Choir w111 present a>om, sc. The Mexican an effective espionage system. administration.'' The letter their program Thursday at Embassy in Washington has "The crime lies," he con- · states that "this decision is 8:15 p.m. in Mitchell Hall. loaned the Club two films eludes, "not in what the CIA in violation of the democratic -DORM Dl RECTORS Hall entitled "Magia de Mexico" did, but in being so stupid as process, and as such is un­ desirable." director or floor adviser po­ and "Cavalcade." L.~'3rature to entrust the knowledge of its sitions for 1967-8 should be on Mexico w111 be available. operation to a sophisticated Third, the letter states that applied for now in 100 Brown Spanish Club members and intellectual who has no idea some students who enjoy the ROTC P.rogram feel that it Hall. Appointments will be their friends are invited to of reality." made soon after March 15. attend. FOLK MUSIC- Gordon Bok SOLID ,STATE SEMINAR,. Smart Girls Buy Their Smart Fashions will appear in the Student "Low Temperature Lumi­ Center Sunday evening in a nescence and Tunnel After.. AT program of folk music at 9 ~0 glow of ZnS", by Dr. p.m. Peter Thoma, Munich, Ger­ LEROYS STYLE SHOP INTERNATIONAIL FILM­ many, wlll be the topic of Presentation of"NobodyWaved Wednesday's meeting in 225 ,\'ilmington & Newark Goodbye" will be this Sunday Sharp Lab at 4 p.m. at 8 p.m. in Wolf Hall. The WEEKEND FLICK- Tonight 1945 Italian movie was writ­ and tomorrow night ·"Shane'' ten, directed, and produced by wm be shown at '1 p.m. in the SORITA 1100 TO 2100 CELEBRITY II 1350 TO 1975 Don Owen. Rodney Room, SC. This 1953 ANTIQUES McWILLIAMS SPEECH- American fllm stars Alan REG I STEREO "Stimulating Speech and Ladd. COUNTRY PINE FURNITURE ~psa.~e· Language Development in DIAMOND RINGS ' Chlldren from Deprived En­ ACCESSORIES- ORIGINAL LAMPS An eternal treasure ... flaw­ vironments" w111 be the topic less, pure white, precisely cut of the second of three col­ RHODES DRUG ... guaranteed perfect by loquia sponsored by the Col­ STORE Keepsake (or replacement lege of Education, Monday at THE PINE SHOP aSSUred) • Rinos -;::~~~::·~:: . do•t" il . 2~0 p.m. in Alison Hall. The c. Emerson Johnson, Prop, speaker wlll be Betty Jane Opposite State Theatre Conveniently Nearby at McWllliams, Assoc. Profes­ 19 West Third Street MERVIN S. DALE sor of Speech Pathology and DRUGS, COSMETICS NEW CASTLE. DELAWARE Clinical Director of the Cleft COLLEGE SUPPLIES JEWELER Palate Research Center at the EA 8 - . ~ ·;62 University of Pittsburgh. Supplying College Students 59 E. Main Street Coffee and cookies wlll be for 110 Years Hours: Weds .• Thru .• Sun. Till 5:00 served at 2 p.m. Fri. Till 9 :00 Newark Delaware 'MODEL UN -Vital issues of the moment wlll be discus- PAGE 16 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE. NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 Funds For Books SGA Amendments •.•

Opportunity For Federal Grant (Continued from Page 1) sider the entire .system of bach, ASS. Their proposal was representation. The proposal During the next two months• strips are kept in the Ma.-. the guidelines for the grants. to elect senators from dis­ which was finally adopted was more than 3,000 colleges and terials Center of the · Li• , The grants require the In­ tricts closely resemb~ing the arrived at during this meet­ universities will be given an brary. Dawson says he doesl stitution to maintain their own residence hall complex group­ ing. opportunity to apply for Fed· not know how much money expenditure for library resour­ ings. It was felt that district eral grants to purchase 15ooks the library. will get this year ces, while using federal funds senator representation would CHANGES and other library. materials• as he h~ not yet received for additional purchases. make the election more mean­ The proposal makes five according to the u. s. Of· ingful and ensure better com­ changes in the Senate's or­ fice of Education. munication between senators ganization. The purpose of the grants and their constituency. This 1. Senators representing dor­ is to strengthen library· re­ year, senators . were assigned mitories will be elected from sources in institutions of dormitories to represent with these districts · one senator higher learning by assisting Sororities. • • only limited success. from each district. Men's di~­ in the purchase of additional (Continued from Page 1) tricts: 1--Russell A, c, E; 11- The local group must have . books, periodicals, magnetic SENATORS-AT-LARGE Gilbert A, C, E; III -- Har­ fall, but "What we are doing autonomy in the selection of tapes, phonograph records, and In an attempt to ensure that rington A, E, and Colburn; row is undergoing a period of its members." audio-visual materials. needed talent would not be lost IV- Sypherd, Sharp, Harter and communication." If a national sorority will. The program, now in its in districts having many inter­ Brown; V--West A, F and Bel­ Vice-president for student waive its alumni recommen­ second year• provides more, ested candidates, the commit­ mont and temporary dorms. affairs, John E. Hocutt, point­ dations in favor of local auton­ than $24.5 m11lion, which is tee also recommenced that a Women's districts: !--Russell ed to the many problems in the omy, the university wfll accept three times as much as was limited number of senators­ B, D and Thompson; 11--Gilbert establishment of sororities: it. available last year• when 1$830 at-large continue to be elect­ B, D, F; III-Harrington B, C, "The most difticult criteria In view of such problems, colleges and universities re­ ed by dormitory residents in D ~ IV--West B, E, and the is the stipulation that the group Hocutt believes that it is ceived grants. addition to the district sen­ French House; V --Cannon, New must be able to have housing "highly unlikely" that there ators. These funds are provided Castle, Kent, Sussex, Warner; acceptable to the university wlll be sororities by next When this proposal came up under Title n... A of the Higl). VI-.-Smyth and Squire. within four years of the date fall. for a vote at the regular er Education Act of 1965. Up 2. Me n living in fraternity of charter.'' The present emphasis ofthe SGA meeting on Monday night, to $18.4 m HUon may be used houses will be considered as Hocutt claimed that avafl­ sorority committee is the con­ opposition to the election of for basic grants, which have a one district and elect one sen­ abfl1ty of adequate housing sideration of all national chap­ senators-at-large by dorm ce111ng of $5 000., $3.7 mil­ ator. 1 and payment of such facfl1tfes ters. Another concern is the residents only developed. A lion will be used for special 3. The president of the Com­ are a major part of this selection of a National Pan­ motion to extend the voting for purpose grants. The remaind• muter Association will be a dilemma. The sorority com­ hellenic colonizing procedure. senators-at-large to all stu­ er will be set aside for sup.. member of the Senate and the mittee suggested that increas­ If sororities are establish­ dents was defeated but the dis­ plemental grants, which pro• · executive committee and com­ ing the number of worn en in a ed, it is felt that a minimum agreement over whethercom­ muters will elect two women vide up to $10 for each full• chapter would make mortgage of three is the best beginning. muters and fraternity men ' and two men senators. time student. and living expenses easter to Ths number depends upon the should or should not be includ­ 4. Three women senators­ According to John Dawson. meet. type of colonizing procedure ed prevented the passage qf at-large will be elected by Director of Libraries, the Alumni recommendations used. the entire proposal. The vote all men. university received the basic may prove to be another stop­ Ultimately, the initiative on the whole proposal was 13 for 5. Class vice-presidents will grant of $5 000 last year. The 1 per for sororities. Hocutt to form sororities rests with 14 against. no longer be members of the money was used to purchase stated~ "We will not have so- the students. Hocutt empha­ Discussion was continued in Senate. This was done to pre­ film strips for the elementary rorities on campus that insist sized that, "first we need an an effort to get the proposal vent the senate from becom­ education students. The film on alumni recommendations. interested group of students through but had the ironic ef­ ing too large. that really understands what fect of creating even more it's doing and how difficult the opposition. A motion to re­ task is." consider the proposal was de­ W. H. COOK· A YR Delegates feated with a vote of 6 for and Barbara Gray, AS9, speak­ ing for the sorority commit­ 21 against. GROCERIES tee, reinforced this need. "I On Tuesday a meeting ofthe senate as a committee of the Visit Washington definitely feel that progress 150 E. MAl~ _ ST. has been made. We've come a whole washeldtotrytoironout Four student delegates Representative William long way. Comments from the disagreements and recon- formed the Delaware delega­ Roth, congressman from worn en students seem to be· tion that attended the Young Delaware, joined the Dela­ favorable. Any overt interest Republican Leadership ware delegation for one of the will be greatly appreciated, THE BEE HIVE CO. Training School held in Wash­ luncheons. · for participation is essential 39 E. MAIN ST. ington February 14-19. The Delaware Delegation to the success of this pro­ Speakers at the conference consisted of Tom Smith, gram.'' NEWARK, DEL 19711 included Ray Bliss, Republi­ Chairman of the university's can Party Chairman; for..; College Young Republicans; Bing's Bakery mer-Senator Barry Goldwa­ Andrew Stern, John Trager, KAYWOODIE ter, General Curtis Lemay, state College Chairman of the A Cake ~ PIPE-PEN Rlymond Shaler, governor of · College Young Republicans; For Any Occasion Pennsylvania and Senator and Daniel Thorton, a Dela­ $6.95 John Tower of Texas. warean attending Wesleyan 253 E. MAIN ST. ~~..z::::r=n The speakers tended to College In Connecticutt. PHONE EN 8-2226 • REPLACEABLE CLEANS rely upon Viet Nam as the INK CARTRIDGE TAMPS :::~~~~~: SHANK TOBACCO subject of most of their dis­ SHELL cussions and an. underscored the need for an honorable TAYLOR AUTO SUPPLY victory in VietNam. ·.-l According to John Trager, Here's the traditional church-war­ Senator Tower, who recently Del•w•r•'• Lai'•A•t den in a beautiful lustrous black sand­ SANDBLAST blast finish . This is a full size returned from a trip to churchwarden, - Over 12 inches long CHURCHWARDEN South Viet Nam, told about the A•thorl•ed Ho•d• De•l• with a high grade vulcanite bit. insincerety of the North 5.00 Vietnamese. He made the Specializing an Henda anology that the communist SaJes, Service, Parts & Accessories supply line into the south ' 1201 French St., Wilminqton ·ijjfJ· I during the Lunar New Year truce looked like the New ~.... - ~= - -.·~··:~:~!..~'~::i::' Jersey Turnpike. He felt OL 8-7525 5.50 that the Viet Cong had sneak-, Open I • 6 Dally ed in enough supplies to keep The perfect reamer! Completely adjustabTe to fit pipe bowls from the largest to the smallest. themselves going for over ·a.l Saturd.,. a year. "Do these people act like they want a real peace?" FRII PIPE COVER he concluded. During the conference the 1 Day Shuttle del lverr for all Now Featuring delegates had the opportun­ Hon.ta S.r•lce to ancl from our Wll•lntten 1tore •= ity to hear Senator Dirksen Complete Film Developing Service speak in the Senate Chamber, defending his committee on 409 E Cl•••l•d A•• 24 Hour Service on· Black & White Film National holidays, Memorials Newark 361-2548 3 Days on color film and Charters from abolition. UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGE 17 Brandywine Junior College ...

Brandywine's _president Sidney R. Peters discusses the new school. (Photo by FreCJ Sinter)

(Continued from Page 1) A certain sophistication is maintained on campus., Coat and tie are reqUired for the men; skirts are necessary for the women. Peters sees his students as coming from the "slight.. ly higher socio-economic grouping." Personal contacts by the administration are important. "We know our people here by their first names," Peters said., ·Not all students are able to live on campus,. Some of the men live at the Tally-Ho; some of the women live in a new building called Brandywine Hall on Route 202. Transportation to the campus is no problem for these students. A shuttle runs every ' 15 minutes from the campus. Peters said this method seemed most efficient for the present. Lights are out at 11 p~. week nights" Brandywine educators feel it is important that their students get eight hours sleep each night. There are no Saturday sessions and most classes are finished by 2 p.m. . Classes seldom exceed 40 and the tutorial system is used. One. ~ · one and a half hours of outside preparation is expect.. Last year, thousands ed for every hour of class., Each professor uses his own discretion in marking» based ultimately on the 4,.0 system. Approximately 20% of the student body is on the honors list of lawyers, bankers,

which begins at 39 09 A student must achieve a 2.0 to be eligi• ble to continue,. In the inaugural yeart a student will be given accountants, engineers, two semesters to prove himself,. Commenting on the terminal aspects of a two year college• Peters sai~ "a great percentage are using this as a stepping doctors and businessmen stone.," The large number of applicants for September., 1967 has necessitated the rejection of many students already. Ask... ed why so many would be applying for admission at such a went back to college. new school~ Peters replied that much screening is being done at the high school level and meetings with guidance counselors are held,. Also the academic Vice President _ Polishook is a wellooknown figure in education. · And not just for the These factors can be only to Brandywine Junior College's advantage. Determination and the desire to make the school an outstanding junior college are evident• both in the physical football games. and academic sense. Brandywine may be judged on its found­ We'd like to clear up what appears to be a Center in Princeton, ·N. J. Selected ing philosophy which states, in part, "We believe that our first responsibility is to prepare students according to their misunderstanding. It is somewhat popular employees are sent there from all separate ·qualities, interests, and aptitudes to fulfill their on campus to decry a business career on over the country for a year's concen­ highest pot ~ ntial development." the grounds that you stop learning once trated study leading to a master's you start working for Cliche Nuts & Bolts. degree. Dr. Marcus Bloch L-Hy That idea is groundless. You get the idea. We're for more learn­ The We can't speak for Cliche, but we can ing in our business. After all, Western PRESIDENT Card Center for ourselves-Western Electric, the man­ Electric doesn't make buggy whips. We · - Eastern Magical Society ~5 East Main St. ufacturing and supply unit of the Bell Sys­ make advanced communications equip­

920 E. 6TH ST. CARDS - GIFTS tem. 6 out of 10 college graduates who have ment. And the Bell telephone network will NEW YORK 9, N . Y. PARTY SUPPLIES joined us over the past 10 years, for exam­ need even more sophisticated devices by ple, have continued their higher education. the time your fifth reunion rolls around. How're these for openers: The state of the art, never static, is where W .E.'s Tuition Refund Plan lets em­ the action is. MONARCH NOTES ployees pursue degrees while work­ At Western Electric, what's happening ing for us ..Over 6 thousand have at­ is the excitement and satisfaction of con­ PENS, PENCILS, 3-RING NOTEBOOKS tended schools in 41 states under tinued doing and learning. If this happens & OTHER STUDENT SUPPLIES this plan. We refund more than $1 to appeal to you, no matter what ·degree million in tuition costs to employees you're aiming for, check us out. And grab a year. a piece of the action. Newark Stationers To na·me another program: advanced Main Street engineering study, under the direc­ lA\ Western Electric Opposite State Theatrt' Jion of Lehigh University, is con­ ~ MANUF~TURING &SUPPLY UNIT Of THE BELL SYSTEM ducted at our Engineering Research PAGE 18 UNIVERSITY OF DE·LAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 Harnum Returns; Top Two Events Guides · Freshmen Delaware Wins Seven ACU Awards For the third straight year ley University in Peoria, DU­ By STEVE KOFFLER Delaware's representa- the university produced the nois, for compilation, and win­ tives . to the Association of tournament's top individual ners will not be announced Freshman Basketball coach Don Harnum is not a newcomer College Unions Regional girl bowler as Heather Stut­ until next month. Delaware fail­ to Delaware basketball. This winter marked the second time Tournament at LaSalle Col- tard finished with the highest ed to place in the fifth event ..... that Harnum 1 has coached a Delaware team. During this lege February 24-25 made a ;average in the nine games season, he guided his stellar frosh team to an outstanding entered, table tennis. fine showing, earning tour rolled. The victory earn~ her Although otttcials at La­ 15-3 record. individual trophies and three a trip to the national tourna­ Harnum received his B,A, at the University of Maine where Salle were disappointed when plaques for the university while ment at Rochester. New York. he lettered for three years in both football and basketball. several schools which announc­ He came to Delaware in the fall of 1962 for graduate study and taking first place In two of Miss stuttard teamed with ed plans of competing failed filled in that year as assistant varsity basketball coach. the five events entered. Mary Jane Keller' to win the to show, twenty schools were The next year he took over the reigns of frosh mentor. For the first time in re- girls' double competition. represented in at least some After receiving his Masters degree in Guidance and Eauca­ cent years, Delaware won Both women were awarded events. Delaware's 19-member tion at the university, Harnum was drafted and served at the men's bllliards com- trophies and a plaque . was delegation was the largest. For t Benning, Georgia for two years. There, in the dual role of petition as Joe Dannenberg given to the university. The player-coach, Harnum led his battalion team to the Post Cham­ placed first overall In the five-member girls' bowling N·EWARK LUMBER pionships and a second place in the Third Army Tournament. single elimination competition. team had to settle for a third Now Don Harnum is back at Delaware again, regaining con­ Region Three competition bll- place finish in overall com­ co. trol of freshman basketball from interim coach Mickey Heinec­ llards is considered strong petition, while the men's team 221 E. Main St. ken. Harnum is also a member of Tubby Raymond's football since the district Includes all finished fourth. 731-5502 ·staff in the role of end coach. member colleges In New Jer- Results of the bridge compe­ Headquarters For Harnum rates this present freshman team as one of the best sey, Delaware, · metropoll- tltlon have been sent to Brad- BUILDING PRODUCTS that he has ever coached. He stated that there is no comparison tan New York, and eastern r------..1:=====::::::::::!. between this frosh team and the one he coached three years Pennsylvania. By winning ago, of which only Bill Morley remains active in Delaware the event, Dannenberg wi11 CENTER BARBER SHOP basketball. receive an all-expense paid According to Harnum, the secret to the success of this trip ·to Corvallis, Oregon 10 EXPERT BARBERS - NO WAITING edition of the freshman team was the consistency of Loren to com pete In the national LADIES' & MEN'S HAIRCUTS Pratt and Ed Roth, as well as the ability of the remainder of tournament at Oregon state the team to do a good job when called upon. Yet, much credit University. Newark Shopping Center- 737-9853 should be given to Don Harnum who was able to blend his team into a harmonious, winning combination. Examining prouuce in an· open-air marketplace in Lishon is one way to hmaden one·s know·l­ oti the ways of the Portuguese people. These girls found c\plorin!,! the markets of cities amunJ the woriJ a rda\ing change frl1m stuJics unJertaken during a -;emester at sea (ln Chapman Cnlkl!c's floating campus- now called World Campus Atloat. - Misfits Sweep Bowling League A lzada Knickerbocker of Kno\ville.Tenncssce.-in the plaid dress - returned frnm , thc study­ travel semester to con.1plctc her senior year in English at Radcliffe College. . Jan Kn1pp~rs ot Lawrenceburg. Tennessee. a graduate_nf the University of Tennessee. and a former . Peace (orr,s \'nlunteer. first pursued graduate studies in lnternatiunal Relation-; and rc­ Gilbert E Leads Do-rmitories turneJ a secon~l ::;emcstcr as a teaching assistant in Spanish nn the world-circling c.ampus. , · s .tudents l1~e and ~tttcnu regular classes :~hoar~ the s.s. RYNDAM. owned hy the ECI. Shipping ~o. ot Bremen tor wh1ch the Hollanu-Amenca Lme acts as general passenger agent. In-port activi- DAN LEININGER By Frate rnitv League with a 5-0 ties arc arranged to supplement courses taught ahoan.l ship. · Moving one step closer to record, following closely by Sig As you rcau this. the sp6ng semester voyage of discoyery is carrying 450 undergraduate and winning the Athletic Depart­ Ep, also undefeated after four graduate students through the Panama Canal to call at ports in Venezuela. Brazil. Arl!entina. Nil!cria. ment's Intra-mural Sports matches. KA, ATO, and Phi Senegal. Morocco, Spain. Portugal. The Netherlanus. Denmark and (ireat Britain. r"Cturninl! to-New Trophy, the Misffts wrapped Tau all had three victories York May 25 . - up the bowling championship balanced against one loss to N~xt fall World Campus Afloat -Ch:.tpman College will take another 500 students arnund the in the Fratern.ity League by deadlock for third place. world from New York to Los Angeles anti in the spring. a new student hndy will journey frC'm posting an outstanding 24-4 Colburn, Harter, and Los Angeles to ports on both west am.l cast coasts of South America. in \\·estern and 1wrthcrn record. Tied for second place Sypherd have all dropped out Europe and as far cast as Leningrad before returning to New York. with 18-10 slates were Phi of the Dormitory League, re­ . For a catal~g uesc .ri~ing ho.w you can in~luuc a semester ahoard the RYNDAM in your educa- tional plans. fil11n the mtormat1on below and mail. Kappa Tau and Pi Kappa Alpha, sulting in three forfeit victor­ which will meet in a roll-off ies for the remaining nine to determine sole possession teams. Gilbert ~ leads the of second pface and the win­ .pack with a perfect 7-0 record ner of the IFC bowling trophy. with Sharp (5-0), Harrington In an earlier meeting, Phi A (6-1), and Gilbert C (4-1) Tau topped the Pikes, 3-1. all very much in the running. However, against the league- Russell· C and Gilbert A round leading Misfits the Pikes out the first division with scored a 3-1 victory while 4-2 records. Phi Tau was. shut out, 4-0. The Independent - Farm ATO, the only other team in League has nine teams com­ the league with a better than peting after Sig Ep "B" .500 record, held fourth place forfeited its full slate of in the standings with a 15- games. The Misfits and 13 tally. Sig Ep and Delta Tau the Centurions· are the only Delta tied for fifth with 13- two teams remaining unbeaten 15 records, KA was seventh in the league, with the Mis­ at 10-18, while Sigma Nuended fits having a slight advantage up in the cellar with a 1-27 because they have had more log. matches. KA 'B" and ATO The tempo will be picking "B", are both 4-1, each up in the Dormitory League of the two teams, having during the next few days .dropped a decision to the with all matches to be complet­ Centurions. ed by the middle of next League play will continue un­ week. As of Wednesday, til March ll. Gilbert E led the ten-team circuit with a 12-4 recorrL INDOOR TRACK : . ·. .:. . But some tough matches still RESCHEDULED r------~-----~~~~-~-, remain on Gilbert E's sched­ The on-again off-again in­ ... World Campus Afloat, Director of AdmissiQns ule, Russell E (14-10), Gil­ door track meet is· on ·-:.$· Chapman College bert C (11-9), West A (9-7), again, according to Director Oron#le. c;o/ifornio 92666 and Sypherd (4-4) all have good of Intra-murals William Bres­ shots at a share of the honors. Name Present StatUs lin. Although practice ses­ (Last) (First) Inter-league playoffs are Freshman 0 sions will be limited to 7-8:30 Campu~ address Tel. scheduled for Wednesday and ~.m. on March 7, 13, and 14, Sophomore 0 Thursday at the conclusion of the meet will definitely be held Citf _State Zip __ Junior 0 league competition. at the new field house on Senior 0 ~NET TEAMS UNBEATEN March 14 at Taylor Gym, with Permanent address Tel. Graduate 0 Intra-mu·ral volleyball en­ wrestling slated for March 16 City State ______Zip __ M __F __ tered its fourth week of play at the new field house. Wrest­ with six teams still among the lers will be able to practice ______Name of School Age __~- J ranks of the unbeaten. After last at the field house the same L The'Ryndam is of West German registry. week's action, Sigma Nu was dates as listed for track prac­ perched in first place of the tice. 'DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 PAGE 19 s Hens Win Relay Records .Fall In All-East ·Meet By SHAUN -MULLEN by sophomores, again empha­ tlfth in their events. ~ sizing the second-year strength The Hens took only one ~INE RECORDS FALL of this year's squad. first place, but 11 of 13 field­ The barrage on fieldhouse The Hens took four second bouse records fell in Sat­ records was led by William places, led by an outstanding urday's first annual Delaware and Mary. Their 1966 u.s. performance by the Freshman AU-Eastern Indoor Track and Track and Field Federation Medley Relay team. Other sec­ Field Meet at the South Cam­ mile champion, Terry Don­ onds were taken by sophomore pus athletic complex. nelly, took his specialty in Ed Swartz in the Division n 2- The Blue Hen 2-mtle relay 4:11.0 while Marshall Stone mtle, junior Mike Carroll (Div team was victorious in the Di­ soared to 15 feet, 3/4 inches high hurdles), and the varsity vision II race. Sophomores Jim n in the pole vault to highlight an mile-relay in the Divsion n Smith, Bob Woerner, Paul afternoon of outstanding col­ Heal, and junior anchor-man race. legiate performances. Greg Walther (Divlhighhur­ Randy Jernigan led Delaware Other record performances dles), Bob Johnson (Div ll to a winning time of 8:10.7. were: No meet score was kept, but 600 yd. run), and Scott Camp­ Conway (W &M) 6' 3"- high bell (shot) took thirds. while among the shower of recorqs, jump. John Mahler (pole vault) and William and Mary of Wil­ Newberger (Mt. St.M) 23' Jim Smith (Div 1000- yd. liamsburg, Va. and the Uni­ n 13/4" -long jump. run) grabbed fourths. Paul vesity of Pittsburgh clearly Barnes (Lafayette) 2:11.3- Heal (Div I 1000) and Bob dominated the meet with five 1000-yrd. run. Woerner (Div I mile) were firsts each in Division I and n Griffith (st. Joe's) f1.6- events. 60-yd. h.h. st. Joseph's and Temple, Rifle Team Wins, Mahoney (Temple) 9:13.5- both of Ph1ladelphi41 landed 2 mile run. four firsts apiece, Lafayette Walsh (Mt. st. M) 46-73/4- College two, with P .M .c. and Record Now At 6-3 triple jump. host Del a ware with one each. With five team members pro­ st. Joseph's 7:45.5 - 2 How High The· Moon SOPHS EXCEL ducing outstanding individual mi. relay. INTRA·MURAL ACTION abounds as league races ma'.fe . Of the ll Delaware places, St. Joseph's 3:20.7- mile re­ down the stretch. Here a West a vol.leyballer stretches high scores the university rifle to return a Gilbe_rt E shot, his teammates react accordingly. nine were taken either direct­ team stopped Loyola of Balti­ lay. Photo by Don Schmick. ly or indirectly (relay events) more 1249-1224 last Saturday. IC4' S TOMMORROW ty- Captain Brian King, shoot­ The Hens will travel to New ing a leading 264, remarked York City this weekend for a 11 Saturday's lnte rcollegiate ·c- that This score was the high­ Wrestlers To Compete In Championship; est ever shot by the university Amateur Athletic Association of America Indoor Track and ng team on these · international \' I · targets." The international Field Championships at targets are somewhat small­ Madison Square Gardens. A ml Nine To Grapple In Meet At Moravian er and more difficult than the freshman relay team and ·ia. usual National Rifle Associa­ selected varsity athletes will Nine University of Dela­ pins and lost only one decis­ won six matches and drew · l!\\' tion targets. compete. ware wrestlers traveled to ion, as the P .M .c. squad two others as Gettysburg fell Bob Craven followed . King Moravian College at Bethle­ forfeited the remaining six 26-7. in the scoring with a 249. hem, Pa. today for the open­ matches. THIS WEEK IN SPORTS Once again 152 pounder Pete .Edmund Laird, 246, Wayne ing of the Middle Atlantic Con­ The first Delaware pin was Krape, · who finished with a Shugart, 246, and Mike Eltz ference wrestling champion­ recorded by 152 pounder, Pete TODAY AND TOMORROW 4-1 mark as as a late season finished the Delaware shoot­ ca- Krape. He was followed by SWIMMING (v~ M.A.C. ships. starter, chalked up a pin for a similar effort by Russ ing. Championships at Johns Lecj by captain Dave Nicoll the . Hens. Tony Colodonato, Meredith in the 167 weight The 6-3 marksmen will com­ Hopkins, in the 1'77 pound class, the competing in the heavy­ pete at the Eastern National Hens are banking on 160 pound­ division. WRESTLING (v) M.A.C. BULLETS FALL weight division recorded the Rifle Association match at the Championships at Mora- der Skip Jones and Mike other pin. Naval Academy in Annapolis. McGlinchey in the 167 divis­ In an earlier meet the Hens vian College, Bethlehem, ion, in addition to Nicoll, Pa. for points. The meet will TRACK- (f & v)~ IC4A; last through the finals to­ A A A. Championships morrow afternoon. Fros h Close With 3 Wins Macli son Square Gardens, The Paul Billy-coached New York grapplers, 10-2 in dual meet Ed Roth's 22 points and Center Ed Roth led all consistent shooting of Pratt competition, are expecting the Loren Pratt's 23 points led scorers with 11 goals and six and Roth, the Hens pulled toughest competition to come the frosh to a 77-74 victory of seven foul shots for 29 to_ a 43-34 halftime advant­ from Temple, Wilkes, and West against Albright last Wednes­ points while team-mate Loren age. Chester. day night. The frosh thus Pratt bucketed 28. Dave Yates The Blue Chicks sealed the "We will be doing very close with 15 victories and . followed with eight while game in the earlier minufes well to finish in the top five only three losses in a very Glenn Walker and Bob Young of the second half, pulling a way teams," said Billy. Temple des­ successful season. contributed six. Doug Mer­ to a 20 point advantage. SOCIAL STATIONERY troyed the Hens in a dual meet Last Saturday night the chant with five and John All frosh saw action in a lop­ Fine.J)apers designed on January 21. freshman cagers won a one Stinson with two rounded out sided second half (41- fll good ta~te for point decision over Gettys­ Vic Sadot, Dick Rathmell, the scoring. 28) as Don Harnum's cagers correspond~ burg, avenging an earlier your own Gayton Finch, Pete Heuberg­ The game was close - for went on to their 12th seasonal ~nee or for thOL!ght .. shellacing at the hands of the five mi-nutes. Then, with the win. er, Pete Cap, and Tony ful gifts. ~eo Colodonato are also compet­ Bullets~ The Chicks had a ing. modest lead, but almost blew ~ur complete SMASH PMC it as they were able to stay in s~I~ctrcn ·tod,~ y. In racking up their tenth win front to thP. fin::Jl hii7.7.Pr. · SCHWINN BICYCLES .:·:. - Agamst .t< ·ranklin and Mar- of ·the season the matm en rack­ shall last Thursday, the ed up the P .M ,C. .- college, frosh again impressed offen­ 40-3. The Hens recorded two sively, netting an 84-62 victory. <;,SWIM SHO!. "..,; Twenty-four members Largest Selection of the Women's Aquatic Club of are in final rehearsals for their six presentations of . a Fabrics Anywhere .. S. ll. KIRK "West Side Story'' swimming DRESS MATERIALS & so~ show this month. NOTIONS Performances are sched­ DECORATIVE FABRICS uled March 16, 17, and 18 in the Women'sGymnasium Pool with two shows each night, : \?:,~ \.~j starting at 7 and 8:15 o'clock. All six shows are open to the 136 E. MAIN ST. iCoLLEG~~~TB public without charge. PAGE 20 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 196?' Swim Streak Halted Cagers End Winning Year,

"It's tough to have to lose Steve Stockwell, and Locke, when you have won 20 in a row, won in 3:31.6. but I guess you can't go on Today and- tomorrow the Transfers · Pcice Hen Attack forever." The words ofCoach Hens compete in the Mid­ Harry Rawstrdm expressed the dle Atlantic Conference cham- The surprising Blue Hen many, many players in the son to move Wagaman into his sentiments of the university pionships at Johns Hopkins. cagers closed with a 15-9 slate, short interim since he took place and change his team swimming team after dropping While defending champion La­ best since 1962-63. This despite over as coach for lrv Wisniew­ strategy accordingly. Then their first meet of eleven Salle is favored to retain the loss of Kenn Barnett, at the ski. It is no easy task to go Barnett and Bruce Dowd were this season. the title, Bucknell is the time the 12th best scorer in the out and persuade good basket­ declared ineligible, and Waga­ Last Saturday Monmouth top contender, and American nation, Mark Wagaman, a con­ ball talent to come to a school man got mononucleosis, reduc­ College emerged from Tay­ University, Delaware, and sistent E.c.A.c. weekly selec­ with a reputation for a losing ing Peterson's roster to eight lor Pool a 53-42 victor Temple cannot be discounted. tion, and Bruce Dowd. basketball team. and thinning his talent dras­ in a closely contested meet. With Barnett and Wagaman But Peterson did the job. ticallv. Throughout the contest it was Locke (freestyle sprints)~ gone the burden of carrying He wEmt out and got thre_e bas­ VALIANT BID Delaware's depth which kept Fenton·, Carey (individual med­ the riddled team went to Char­ ketball players who played jun­ Again Delaware got up off the margin to a minimum. · ley), and Bob Rocheleau (500 ley Parnell. Performing tre­ ior college ball in the Rocky of the floor and made a valiant Delaware managed only to yd freestyle) are top can­ mendously under the pressure bid for a position in the MAC capture two firsts in their didates for individual honors. mountains-Barnett, Wagaman, the quick, 6-1 guard became playofts. They fell short, but dual-meet season's finale. The latter two veterans, along and Parnell. He got one of the big scorer, and at times Wesley's best players in not because they didn't win. Bob Locke captured the lOOyd with seniors Gary Chanko, Tom the top rebounder, while main­ free -style with a time of :52.8 .Beatty to come here. He got With the lack of scoring punch Paxson, Steve Stockwell, and taining his superb defense.- He and the 400 yd freestyle Jim Couch, a promising boy the Hens turned to defense and Robin Wilson will be· there averaged 18.5 points in relay team, consisting ofGary competing in their last uni­ from the midwest who wtll :00 were still able to pull out 24 games in his first year at Henderson, Dave Ehrenfeld, versity meet. eligible next year. Finally, he three late victories. Peter­ Delaware. He also averaged helped bulld the talent laden son must have played a .big over seven rebounds a game. freshmen team which wlll pay part in keeping the team to­ Beatty, who was moved into dividends next year. gether with so many discour­ the lineup, first as a for­ FINALLY JELLED aging setbacks and so little ward, then to the post posi­ With this assortment of talent material. to work with. tion, also came through in the Peterson bullt an amazingly The fact that Delaware did clutch for the Hens. The 6-6 effective team which finally not get chosen for the MAC Delawarian averaged in the jelled after a rocky start. playoffs is no reason for double figures for the last six He stuck to simple, fundamen­ discouragement. The four games and pulled in many re­ tal basketball, depending on teams that did get chosen were bounds. good defense and his height fully qualified, and Delaware Veterans Vic Orth and Ricky advantage. Once into the sea­ was probably not capable of Wright teamed up again in son they learned to play well winning in the touranment the backcourt during the time together, making the most of anyway. of crisis and worked their their talentsJand winning. Walt 'til next year. If wizardry of ball-handling rem­ Peterson's job was not nearly things break right our big­ iniscent of last year. Walt over however. First, star Kenn gest problem could be too Cloud, originally the "sixth Barnett got hurt, forcing Peter- easy a schedule. man," moved into his start­ ing fore-court role and played many taller opponents to a standstill. SPORTS SLANTS REBUILDING YEAR Considering that this year was a rebuilding year for the basketball team, Coach Dan New Peterson and everyone in­ volved did a tremendous job. Despite the loss of all of Season their height and much of their scoring power from last year, By RAY GOLDBACHER this year's addition won six Whether · we like it or not, winter sports are drawing to a more games, won a - holiday close and spring, at least insofar as sports are concerned, tournament and turned into a will soon be hard upon us. With a little bit of luck the weather­ winning basketball team. man will see fit to come through with the required warm Peterson deserves all of the breezes and the accompanying balmy, study-interrupting credit in the world for what afternoons. he has done for Delaware bas­ Like as not, however, we will see a re_turn of the annual ketball. Firs.t he went out and monsoon which sweeps in from the west to inundate the campus· got good basketball players to for the first two weeks of April. If you think you hate rain, come here from all over the talk to the coaches; or, better yet, go down to-the fieldhouse some country. This accomplish­ COME TO ME Arms strain for the ball under the Delaware rainy afternoon and watch the milers and shotputte:rs field fly basket during the Delaware-Gettysburg game. The fight is ment required endless travel­ balls while the outfielders run high hurdles going after pop­ between Blue Hen Bill Beatty (center) and Bullet Steve ing and scouting of players in ups. Satir (21). Charley Parnell (44) and Walter Cloud (24) look on. addition to a great deal of The days will come, however, when the ground dries out (Photo by Don Schnick) salesmanship. Peterson must sufficiently and everyone can devote himself entirely to his have talked to and watched chosen sport full time. The days get longer, and the slap of horsehide hitting leather becomes a familiar sound again. As Parnell Shi.nes we bid goodbye to basketball. swimming, and wrestling for another year, our attention turns· to tennis, golf, lacrosse, track, and baseball. _ Albright Upsets Cagers In Finale Contrary to _popular opinion at this institution, the above mentioned are spectator sports and sports of a· high calibre Small college opponents, At the two minute marl< 22 points as Walt Cloud fol­ at Delaware. If, on a warm, sunny day in April, you are looking Albright, ended the 1966-67 of the first half the Hens, lowed with 14. for an excuse to lay down the books and loaf, take a walk to the basketball season for the leading 37-331 attempted to SMASH F·M south campus athletic area, It won't cost anything, and it University of Delaware Blue freeze the ball and the inter-· Against Franklin and beats T.V. Hens on a dismal note Wed­ mission score was 41-39 in Marshall last Thursday, the *************************** nesday night as the Lions favor of Delaware. Hens pulled away to an 81- Delaware freshman Barbara Sowden was victorious in the dumped their guests, 80-77. Albright tled the game_im­ 58 win at Mayser Fieldhouse women's 60-yd. dash at Saturday's Sunpaper's AU-Eastern The loss to Albright follow­ mediately after the second half in Lancaster, Pa. meet in Baltimore. ed on the heels of the announce­ started and the game ran nip­ Five Delaware players The Blue Hen coed, running for Delaware Track and Field ment that .the Hens missed and-tuck for 15 minutes with scored in double figures, led Club, was timed in :7 .0. She also ran the first leg of the making the four team MAC neither squad gaining over a by Vtc Orth. The junior guard DT&FC's winning 640-yard relay team. playoff at the Palestra this two point bluge. bucketed nine fieldgoals and' Miss Sowden also won the women's 60-yd. dash earlier this weekend. With two minutes showing on hit five for five from the free month before an eastern television audience at the Inquirer Charley Parnell opened the the clock Albright moved into throw line for his season high Games in Philadelphia. game with a jumper as a slow­ "-· 'r 4-69 lead and they held on of 23 points. ****************************** down game developed. Mter to record the 80-77 upset Running ott 14 straight Freshman lacrosse candidates are invited to attend a meet- five minutes the Hens were win despite Parnell's three­ points before Gettysburg could ing Monday, March 13th in the classroom of the South ahead 9-5 over the 16-9 Read­ quarter court bncket at the get on the scoreboard, Dela- Campus Fieldhouse at 4:30p.m. ing, Pa. team. Five minutes buzzer. ware coasted to their third Coach A-lickey Heinecken has also announced that anyone later the score was tled up Parnell and B111 Beatty led victory since losing to interested in being varsity manager should contact him at the · at 20-all. 'the Delaware scoring with attgers and Temple, 77-67. South Campus Fieldhouse.