UD Land to Be Assessed by Firm

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UD Land to Be Assessed by Firm Ow '<'cond Today's weather: Partly sunny, lt'lllll'i. NON PROFIT ORG US POSTAGE high in the mid 70s. ot t '\1 t•tlence PAID May the bird of Newark Del paradise always Perm•t No 26 ny over your head. Vol. 113 No. 37 Student Center, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716 Friday, September 25, 1987 UD land to be assessed by firm by Kean Burenga university's facilities in con- December and be complet~d dorms," explained Harrison, Assistant News Editor junction with "Project Vi- by the end of the academic "we want to be able to tell him . sion." year, Team Four Research the best place to put them." . Preside~t Russel C. Jones In the first phase of the will be working with the land New dormitories are one signed a $1~,000 contract study, the firm will be inter- committee to determine t~e aspect of expansion that the ~ednestay W~~h zea~bFoud viewing people and studying best use of university la~d In land committee will consider, esearc • a · ows ase data, according to Robert Har- the future, Harnson Harrison said. Other aspects rison, university treasurer and explained. include new classrooms, office see editorial p. 8 chairman of the University The research firm and land space, a student center, a Land Use Planning committee wilJ hold hearings multipurpose auditorium and firm, to begin a two-month Committee. during the sprmg semester to additional parking. study of how the university is He added that the land com- get input from students, facul- Harrison said he wants to using its land. mitteewasformedlastspring ty, and city, county and state keep central campus The completed study, Jones by E.A. Trabant. officials, he said. dedicated to academic pur- Robert Harrison said, will provide detailed In the second phase of the "When the president comes · plans for expanding the study, expected to begin in to us and says we need new continued to page 12 Dining hall wage boosted to draw student workers Waiters and waitresses for by Amy Trefsger Special Events, he continued, Copy Editor will receive $4.50 for those with The recent twenty-five cent board contracts and $4.25 for wage increase for student din­ all others. ing hall workers will keep jobs . These increases are in addi­ competitive and hopefully at­ tion to the twenty-five cent in­ tract new workers, according creases last June. to Ray Becker, acting director For continuous employ­ of Food Service. ment, students receive a The wage increase, which twenty-five cent per hour in­ was effective Sept. 19, raises crease each year for up to the student hourly rate to $4.25 $1.00, Becker added. THE REVIEW/ Lloyd Fox for students holding standard "I've gotten a lot of good The wave - A member of Delaware's swim team takes some laps at swim practice behind board contracts and $4.00 for feedback from [student the skating rink. other student employees, worker_s],'' according to Becker said. continued to page 20 annon arreste Professors say Biden n DWI charges would not have won race Rich Gannon, former Blue cording to Dan Endy, c. Hen quarterback, now a rookie spokesman for the National by Tim Dineen about his academic career. quarterback for the Minnesota Footbal League team. Staff Reporter "In my opinion, he does not Vikings, was arrested early The team handles such mat have a chance of winning the When U.S. Sen. Joseph R. election. This incident will dog Tuesday morning in Eden ters "on a case by case basis " Biden Jr., a university alum­ Prarie, Minn., and charged he said. ' his campaign, which will nus, stepped down as distract him and his with operating a motor vehicle "This definitely seems to b Delaware's democratic while intoxicated, police said. an isolated incident," Endy assistants," said Dr. Joseph presidential candidate Pika, assistant professor of "This is an embarassment said. "I don't think [Gannon] Wednesday, he caused much to me and to the organization," is going to be a problem." political science, in an inter­ G_annon s~id in a phone inter- Delaware coach Tubby Ray­ view before Biden withdrew. view with The Review mondsaidhewassurprisedby see editorial p. 8 "It is very reasonable that he Wednesday morning. "I'm the incident, but declined fur­ would pull out," Pika added. looking to get it squared ther comment. speculation about his future Biden drew unfavorable at­ away." Gannon is scheduled to ap- and the 1988 presidential tention to his political cam­ Police said Gannon was pear in a Minnesota court Oc­ campaign. paign after failing to attribute driving recklessly when they tober 21 to face charges of Biden announced his quotations which he made in pulled him over on the Ander- driving while intoxicated and withdraw! at a press con­ campaign speeches. son Parkway in Eden Prarie reckless driving, police said. ference that was the culmina­ Then, misstatements which at 1:50 a.m. tion of a campaign in which he Biden made about his The Minnesota Vikings are was accused of plagiarism and undergraduate and Syracuse Sen. Joe Blden investigating the incident, ac- Kean Burenga making distorted statements continued to page 6 ' PaJ!e 2 • The Review • Septemb·er 25, 1987 ----.;.....:..:...:..;...;..;_....;..;..:..:..;...;.;;_.....;..:..,.....;.....;_..;.;:...;..;:...;..;~;...;.;;..;;.;...;;.~...--....o.....o.-...-""'"'...... ~..:._:;;..;..::.;:,;;:..,:~ ·Nation/World News Analysis Arms deal Should reduce strtitegic weapons newrealityinthearms<Ontrol complete ban on testing but include a promise that West If and when the lNJ<' treaty by Karen Ascrlzzl process. the Reagan administration Germany would destroy its 72 is signed, it will include the Student Affairs Editor It would also be the first believed testing is still needed american controlled right to inspect only agreed Last week, after three days · time in postwar history an en- to devise new weapons and to warheads. upon nuclear sites. of thorough negotiations bet­ ~ire ~r~uping of nuclear arms confirm the reliability of old Several flaws which must be ween Secretary of State ts ehmmated. ones. Washington insisted that corrcted before treaty ratiflca- George P. Shultz and Soviet One-thousand mtSSiles m the ~a~mentpro~ th,~ Soviet arsenals could not be in- tion hopefully are: foreign minister Eduard A. INF category are only part of ehmmation of both IDISSile and eluded in the treaty because • a timetable for dismantl- Shevardnadze, the United the bigger challenge of reduc- warheads, specifica1ly the U.S. officials were suspicious ing weapons· States and the Soviet Union ing approximately 24,000 . nuclear bomb and gui~a1_1ce of the warheads' whereabouts. • safe methods for destroy- produced an agreement in warheads. system fro~ . each m1ssde. ing the solid-fuel missile; principle banning medium and Formerly the Strategtc After the mtsstles are remov- A separate guaranteed • strict anti-cheating Defense Initiative, "Star ed, they will be returned to of- statement will provide that the provisions. shorter-range missiles. Wars" is Reagan's plan to ficial agencies in both warheads are destroyed after Together with their ad­ reduce these longer-range countries. the Pershings. An INF treaty can onJy oe visers, the secretary and strategic arsenals. The The second concern evolved signed after a summit meeting forgeign minister examined a Double-zero "proposal" in- into the chief obstacle of the Shultz and Shevardnadze between Reagan and General broad spectrum of questions vo Ive d m· the INF t reaty will nego t·ta t'wns Soviet- a 1so d.1scuss ed h uman rights SecretaryThe exact Mikhaildates will Gorbachev. be deter- regarding nuclear arms con­ eliminate only INF weapons American disagreement on and regional issues trol resulting in an agreement on each side. the existing 72 Pershing 1-A Afghanistan and the Iran-Iraq mined during October talks in - the United States would The climax of the dealings missiles in West Germany. war . but found no Moscow between Shultz and disarm 332 missiles while the between Shultz and Shevard- The missile refers to the compromise. Shevardnadze. Soviets would scrap roughly nadze occured during the final long cylindrical base of the The upcoming summit 683 missiles, most of which session when they reached weapon used for guiding and- For years, the U.S. struggl- would mark the third meeting have three warheads. compromises on two propelling, and the warhead is ed for proposals concerning between Reagan and Gor- If final details of this controversies. the tip containing the nuclear on-site inspection of nuclear bachev, ironically finishing Intermediate-range Nuclear The first dealt with nuclear device. missile sites. The Soviets the President's final16 montru Forces (INF) Treaty are resolved, it would reflect a testing. Moscow wanted a Moscow wanted the treaty to objected. in office. ATTE 0 Varsity Ice ockey Tryouts Thursday, ct. 1 5 7 ·p.m. at the U of D Ice arena ALL WELCOME Contact captains: Charles "Tiger" Stafford ' OR Pete "Nails" Bovankovich for info I 453-8917 Bring full equipment! September .25, 1987'. • The Review • Page 3 Gas leak closes Rt. 273 for 28 hours Bruce said the Department of Natural Resources The delay put loop five, which serves areas such by Lisa Moorhead and Environmental Control used instruments to as the Christiana Hospital and Harbor Club Apart­ Copy Editor measure vapor concentrations in the air. ments, one-half hour to thirty-five minutes behind A minor natural gas leak from a service line on They determined the mixture of vapors posed a schedule. Delaware 273, which caused two days of traffic pro­ minor hazard. However, none of the designated stops along the blems for local motorists and UD Transit was "The potentially explosive mixture was never route were eliminated, although a one-fourth mile repaired early Wednesday.
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