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 newrealityinthearmsr about 28 but homes have not been at the location for many were primarily responsible for maintaining order hours , according to Bruce. · years. and redirecting traffic, Bruce said. Although no injuries were reported and evacuation Service lines no longer in use are not normally The team, along with the media, especially radio was not necessary, state officials closed the road at removed because the cost is high, he said. In some personnel, "helped direct people away so 9:30a.m. Tuesday as they began searching for the cases deterioration of the line creates a hazard and there was no major disaster," Bruce explained. source of the leak, Bruce said. ' . removal is necessary. "They showed good solid expertise [in handling the Delmarva Power & Light located and repaired the The road closing forced buses to detour, according situation]." . . service line where the leak originated. to Bruce. DART had changed a few bus routes in ad- SERT wa~ ~eveloped about five years ago_. he ,,_aid, "The long search [for the source] ended at 5:30 dition to the university's bus system being affected. t~ protect Citizens and handle emergency Situatwns a.m. [Wednesday] when Delmarva found the service "Only one bus route, loop five, was affected, but h~~ the g_a~ l_eak. . line," Bruce said. "[Delmarva] removed the service [the detour] takes the bus quite a ways off route," . Th_e DIVISIOn of Emergency Plan~mg and Opera­ line, the main line was thoroughly resealed, and th~ Judy New, UD Transit transportation manager·said. ~~ons IS the q':larterback o_f SERT, he explamed. road was black-topped and reopened at about 1:30 Tuesday afternoon was the worst back up, New ex- We plan, tram and exercise response to disasters p.m. " plained, especially with rush-hour traffic. continued to page 11 Sbarro 's granted license to serve beer and wine Giansanti & Sons, who are Miller, assistant professor of by Kevin Bixby working on the interior con- economics. Staff Reporter struction, the renovations will Miller participated in a six­ Main Street's Cafe Sbarro not be complete until the end month university fellowship customers will soon be able to of next · week. program which allowed him to enjoy a glass of wine or a cold Paul Gilbert, · who lives study the economic state of draft beer with thetr pasta and directly above Cafe Sbarro in Main Street. pizza, according to General the Opera House Apartments, "The laws [at the time of the Manager Fran Gonzon. commented on the new alcohol study] restricted natural . The restaurant was granted license. · businesses to locate a temporary alcohol license "!think it stinks- there are downtown," said Miller. from the state last Thursday, enough people hanging out on He stated that there is a said Gonzon. Main Street," Gilberf said. trend of more people eating "We do not want to promote Sbarro will have a full hear- outside the home. Therefore, a tavern or bar atmosphere," ing with the three member restaurants would attract peo­ stressed Gonzon. -state Alcohlic Beverage Con- ple to Main Street. The Italian eatery will offer trol Board in hopes of acquir­ The enlargement of Cafe ten selected draft beers along ing a regular license within the Sbarro, made possible by the with an assortment of wines. trial period. closing of Hillary's, has caus­ The alcoholic beverages will Sbarro is eligible for a ed has some discontent among be served with food selections license due to a Newark city students who frequented the only. ordinance passed last spring. gourment ice cream and Sbarro plans.to open a new The ordinance allows specialty coffee shop. section of the store and begin restaurants on Main Street to " I was sorry to see · serving alcohol this weekend. apply for a alcoholic beverage [Hillary's] leave. Their The restaurant needed room license, according to Betty special brewing process for occupancy and took over Hutchinson, Newark assured the best cup of coffee THE REVIEW/ Seve Raskin Hillary's Ice Cream. Hillary's council woman. in town,"said Bob Koontz (AS Main Street Cafe Sbarro just received a temporary liquor was located on Main Street for The new ordinance was 89). license and is undergoing major renovations. just O":er two years. passed due primarily to a However, according to L.P. study conduc'ted by Jeff continued~ v_age 17 w~~c~I~es ~j~Y.~,l!.~r~r!!!~ntA!t!I:d§f~itteChnology st ff R t member to be on the university's board " If all the trade barners of other a epor er . . of trustees. countries came down, and ours still 0 . "'!"e no':¥ haye a trade deficit of_$143 In his lecture, Woo indicated he does sto?d_, " Woo sa~d, "it would affect th~ _ ,.. ~llhon :Which, m terms of companson, . not share the conventional wisdom for deficit by only five to twenty percent. "' .. I .. IS 143 times the an~ual revenue of the the causes of the trade deficit. He. explained that, contrary to ,. . "'" s_tate of Delaware, warned S.B. Woo, After much research and a fact- popular belief, Japanese workers are - heuten0:nt gpvernor of,D~la~are. finding mission, Woo gave evidence to paid ~t a rate comparab_le. to that of In his speec~l _Wipmng the contradict the theories commonly held Amencans. The wage ratiO IS actually Te~~nology Battle, delivered Wednes- by many politicians and the Reagan 1-to-1.2, h_e_a~ded. . . . .,... da) m Sharp Laborat?ry, Wo? spoke of administration for our current Woo cnticized some pohticwns for the. d~mgers of the .mcreasmg trade economic state. introducting bills that cut business deficit , and outlined t~e steps The Delaware official revealed to a taxes because they are ineffective in necessary for what he believes will 5o-member audience comprised main- stimulating the economy. reverse. the trend. ly of faculty memb~rs, the myth that _He compared ~he conventional The heu_tenant gover~or taught at the tariffs and trade barriers of foreign w1sdom of devaluatmg the dollar to the the unversity as ~n associate professor mark-ets, the overpaid American medieval practice of bloodletting, call and _was _pres~d~nt of Delaware's worker, and the strong U.S. dollar are continued to page 19 S. B. Woo Amencan Association of Professors. In Page 4 • The Review • September 25, l:JlH Police say no rise in local violence Students still feel unsafe in Main Street vicinity by Mark Schlegel "we have a large body of peo­ Staff Reporter ple in a place that has a reputation as a party area. University administrators There's just a greater pro­ and police do not believe bability of offenses like students contribute disorderly conduct, alcohol significantly to violence on violations and loitering." Main Street, and they say the Widdoes said one group ar­ situation there has not grown rested for an alcohol violation worse of late. last summer had come all the But many students still feel way from Philadelphia uneasy in the Main Street because they "heard this was area. the place to be." Anne Beall (AS 88) , a three­ Heather Gibson

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Free body fat measurements or diet analysis in exchange for participation in a food perception study. Women and men needed starting September 21. Four 15-minute sessions required. Call Nutrition-Dietetics Dept., 451-8978, for more information or to schedul~ an appointment.

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Stolen auto found and Monday morning, Univer­ She was able to flee by hit­ police said. Brown Hall lounge sometime sity police said. ting the man near his left eye An Olympus 35mm camera between last Friday night and in car dealership lot The incident caused $50 with a bag of shoes she was and a mini FM/AM stereo Tuesday morning, University damage to the machine. carrying, police said. valued at $409 were stolen, police said. Acar that had been reported University Police said. stolen was recovered by an employee who noticed the Student attacked Shoes stolen from Intruder arrested $150 damage to car vehicle at Porter Chevrolet on walking to dorm Main Street store vandalized in lot East Cleveland Avenue, A male non-student was ar­ Newark Police said. rested for trespassing in a The employee notified police A female university student Thirteen pairs of shoes were Gilbert residence hall on Tues­ A 1979 Oldsmobile Cutlass Tuesday after she noticed that was attacked on Delaware stolen from Pilnick's shoe day night, University police was vamUized while parked in the car had been parked in the Avenue while walking from store on Main Street Tuesday. said. the fire lane near the Players dealership's lot by unknown the College Square Shopping afternoon, Newark Police The trespasser was Saloon in College Square Shop­ persons. Center to her dorm at 4:30 said. previously warned by police ping Center late Monday The ignition had been pulled p.m. Monday, Newark Police The lone employee on duty not to return to campus, said night, causing $150 in damage, out of the car, and there was said. said three black women police. Newark Police said. damage to all sides of the vehi­ The woman was not injured, entered the store at 4:30p.m. The right front fender was cle. The total damage police said. carrying large cloth bags, struck with an unknown in­ estimate is about $3,500. Police said the student was police said. Bicycle stolen strument and a number of There are no suspects walking alone when she was They were in the store about footprint marks appeared on presently in the case, police grabbed by her neck from 20 minutes and the employee A Schwinn bicycle was the hood, as if someone had said. behind by an unknown did not notice the missing stolen from the main entrance walked on it, police said. assailant. shoes until they had left, police of the Morris Library between The victim told police that The suspect was described said. Saturday night and Monday the vandal may have been a as a muscular white male in afternoon, University police male who argued with him his late teens with short curly said. earlier in the bar. Cash, candy swiped hair. $409 in goods stolen Police have made no According to police, the stu­ arrests. Three-hundred dollars in dent shoved both of her elbows The Taylor Gym basement $400 sofa stolen cash and candy was stolen into the assailant's stomach, studio was burglarized bet­ from a Smith Hall vending causing him to lose his hold on ween last Friday morning and A blue-grey, two-seat sofa - Kia Balodemas Sandra machine between last Friday her. Monday afternoon, University worth $400 was stolen from the Wakemen Two great ways to cruise through the semester.

The hand on the left is poised on what could be the most essential part of your education. AMacintosh'" computer. And the hand on the right is gripping pure, simple, unadulter­ ated fun. AHonda Scooter. One we're giving away. All you have to do for a chance to drive it away is visit your campus computer center and fill out an entry form. While you're there, take a Macintosh for a test drive. Because Macintosh can help you write term papers, categorize elements of the periodic table, plot the rise and fall of pork-belly prices, compile computer code, and talk to other computers. And the first 250 people on campus who get behind a mouse, so to speak, will receive a free Apple"' memo board. So head over to your campus computer center today. And ask about our Student Financing Program. Who knows? You may soon find yourself cruising a little farther than you expected. • ~

*®Test drive a Macintosh. You may ride away on a Honda Scooter. HONDA- Enter September 14- October 23 Microcomputing Resource Center Hours: M, T, Th, F, 9-Noon 1-3:30 152 Newark Hall W 7 p.m. - 9 p.m. 451--6782

Certain restrictions appl)~ vi~il yoor campu~ mmputer cemer for mmplete pn~noli.1~ !I.'!(L'o(t'fl'l.l !radenttrk' '>f .\pple u xnpu1er. Inc. ~ladnu>Sh b a 1r.tdemark ,.,. Apple ullnpuit!r,lnc. Elite is a !r.Kiem:u'k of Honda. .. . profs say Biden did not have a chance in race continued from page I sincere, but he knew he had party," Oliver said. "Biden Biden's withdrawalfrom the when he declared his can- been badly damaged, and this and Hart couldn't be called 1988 campaign had one thing in didacy that he was jumping in- University Law School days makes him look better- it's front-runners, no one had common with Hart's - the to a fishbowl," Miller said. April 3, at a meeting of convenient," Miller said. broken out ofthe pack yet. We press. "While he was the object of democratic activists in New Biden's withdrawal came will have to wait for early "Biden did what Gary Hart that much attention, he had to Hampshire, received great while many people were still spring and the first primaries did," Pauly said. "He play by the rules, and he lost." public criticism after absorbing the loss of Gary to see what will happen," he said,'follow me around,' and Despite the various analyses Newsweek published them. Hart as a presidential can- added. they did. At that level, there is of Biden's past, no one seems "By his pulling out, there is didate, and Biden's announce- "What Biden had going for intense scrutiny of the can- to know for sure what is in his an implication that many of ment further reduced the line him was his appeal from didates." future. the charges are justified," up of democratic presidential southern Democrats, the "The press will go after any "He indicated in his Pika explained Wednesday contenders. generation of '68 Vietnam candidate. That is the nature withdrawal speech that he after Biden's withdrawal. "I think his withdrawal will veterans, [and] blue-collar of the present-day press,'' would run again. If he will be "Biden's future is a very big have very little effect on the Catholics in the north," Miller Oliver said. successful, I have no idea," question, but it is hard to say what it will be. He has pro­ bably been somewhat hurt here in Delaware, but at the Sen. Eiden claimSidBOfkw·he·arings same time there is a lot of sympathy for him," said Dr. Mark Miller, an associate pro­ fessor in the political science are main cause for withdrawal investigating whether former department. by Michael Andres awKwaro suuation, but he campaign was attributed to a In his withdrawal speech said, "Be that as it may, I video tape by network televi­ Dean Craig Christensen broke Biden spoke about how much and Karen Ascrb;zf have concluded that I will stop sion newscast, showing Biden federal privacy laws and time and effort it would take to News Editors being a candidate for the juxaposed on a split screen university policy when he overcome the effect of the The following story contains presidency of the United with Neil Kinnock, the British released information from charges against him, if he information from Newsweek States. Prime Labor Party Leader. Biden's private record. could do so at all. He noted magazine and The Associated "I've been here long enough Biden essentially repeated Christensen was said to have that his time is completely oc­ Press. to know that when the tide Kinnock's family story, in­ talked publically about a 1965 cupied now by the Senate con­ U.S. Senator Joe Biden, D­ begins to roll, when things cluding hand and body incident at a dinner earlier in firmation hearings for Federal Del, announced his official start to move, when things like gestures. September. Judge Robert Bork. withdrawal from the 1988 this begin to happen,'' Biden According toThe New York "In my zeal to rekindle that "His withdrawal was predic­ presidential race in a press explained, "it takes all ones Times, Biden also used parts idealism," Bid en said in table," said Dr. James Oliver, conference during a break time, energy and concentra­ of Robert F. Kennedy's reference to his belief that chairman of the political from the Bork hearings in tion to put it back on track.'' speech~s. compassion still existes, "I science department. "His Washington Wednesday. Biden said he believes he "I wal) the outstsanding stu­ made some mistakes - but money was going to dry up, Biden has been under must choose between his dent in the political science now, the exaggerated shadow and he would have to spend all scrutiny since sources disclos­ presidential candidacy and his department [at college]. .. I of those mistakes has begun to of his time answering ques­ ed evidence of plagiarism and job of keeping the Supreme graduated with three degrees obsure the essence of my can­ tions about his past," Oliver exaggerated university Court from "moving in a from college," Biden said, ac­ didacy and the essence of Joe continued. achievements. direction,'' he said, "I believe cording to a Newsweek article. Biden." "On a .certain level, I'm sure Biden said he was angry for to be harmful." Chuck Arnold, managing Biden said, all of his time his withdrawal speech was having put himself in a A serious blow to Biden's editor for The Review, provid­ and his committment in the ed the magazine with critcal coming weeks would have had information regarding Biden's to have been devoted to put­ academic degree record at the ting his campaign back on university. Newsweek con­ track. cluded Biden was not the "Coincidently at the same outstanding student in the time," he continued, "all of political science department. my energy and skill is re­ He did not graduate from quired to deal with president I Reagan's effort to reshape the the university with three degrees, but with one degree Supreme Court in a way that in political science and I truly believe will be harmful • to this country." history. Another discredit to Eiden's A possible candidate, con­ campaign came with his claim gresswoman Patricia that he went on a full scholar­ Schroeder, of Colorado, said ;hip to Syracuse University Biden's decision is "one more I Law School and finished in the down note" to the presidential top half of his graduating campaign. :!lass. Gov. Michael Dukakis of • Biden attended law school Massachusettes said after the withdraw!, " We are all the You Can Make A Difference on a finacial-need-based half losers.'' scholarship and finished 76th No public officials had out of 85 students. withdrawn their support, said In The Room Assignment/Lottery Systems. Though the accusations Biden. "Most of all, I want to against Biden are substan­ thank my Delaware for stan­ LET HOUSING AND RESIDENCE LIFE tiated, Syracuse University is ding with me." KNOW WHAT YOU THINK!

FILL OUT YOUR ROOM Read Nation/World News Analysis for ASSIGNMENT/LOTTERY SURVEY AND thought-provoking DROP IT IN THE LABELED BOX IN YOUR news commentary RESIDENCE HALL LOBBY BY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. ------September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 7

16-unit complex offers ryf.~t "seP {

Dead Head With more than a year to go before the 1988 presidential elections, a second Democratic can­ didate has dropped out of the race amidst another political scandal. This time, however, it hits much closer to home as Delaware's own Joseph Biden withdrew from the race Wednesday due to charges of plagiarism and falsification of credentials. Truly, Biden is a political moron who, like Gary Hart, allowed poor judgement and a big mouth to ruin his presidential aspirations. The blame for Riden's political quagmire lies squarely on the senator's shoulders. In 1987, every presidential candidate should realize that dishonesty is not only detested by the American people but also easily detected by the American media. Land Lords It didn't take long. President Jones' "Project Vi­ · ~ion has become "Project Action," as the univer­ sity has hired an outside firm to develop a modern plan for the utilization of undeveloped university It's as easy as rhetoric to use your credit sity. The war is on the streets, but we hardly lands. cards as your reason for existence. notice the increase in violence and the rampant The dollars are the bottom line. That's why hostilities leaking out into the streets. Ideas already suggested by students, faculty the minority rich will maintain their control Expanding the power means decreasing the and administrators for development of the lands with security guards and tuition bills, milking unpaying population. our middle- class desires for their own expan- If you take a good look at Newark, the black include more dormitories, classrooms and park­ sion of power. population in town is slowly being pushed onto ing spaces - things long awaited and badly need­ Most of the University of Delaware ad- the outskirts of town, while appearing in only ed on this campus. ministration seems to be concerned with Presi- 3.8 percent of the university population. dent Jones' "Project Vision"- an ironic name Profit is power, and the pawns move where for the closed-eye view that's been a trademark the money drives them. We urge the university to consider a variety of of the controlling classes since time began. I watch the helicopters fly in and out of the viewpoints concerning the development of univer­ It's time for a "Project Feed the Poor in university grounds, maneuvering and swallow­ sity property. Newark," or maybe a "Project Arts" to rebuild ing up the students who need a little financial --~~---the crumbling imaginations boost to li~t them into the middle cla_sses. We don't need anymore dormitory disasters like of otJr generation. The umforme~ stu~en~ blend mto the the Chrisitana Towers and extravagan~ wastes of Only a minority with cor- background of umversity life, _but stand front 1 porate intentions benefit and cent~r when the power decides that a show · money like the virtually unused Smith Overpass. from the "Project Lets of force IS necessary. . Take Over the Whole City" Every so often you can see them mar;chmg What we do need is-careful planning on the part and "Project Let's Make en masse through town or down side. !ftreets, of the administration so that these lands are not Mo~ Money." h!lt-hut-ing all over the place while le1lrning to overdeveloped nor developed foolishly. ..,When the power extends kill. . it's grasp, the only place for ~t only seems st~ange whe~_,y~ur friends or the powerless to go is away. children start commg home.tti big, black gar- Mike Freemon, editor in chief 1 Chuck Arnold, managing editor • "' The original intention of bage bags. Dove Urbanski, executive editor Jonathan Redgrave, business manager chriS "school" was to educate When they start shooting each other on Main Tom Capodanno, editorial editor Taro Borakos, advertising director and promote higher learn- Street or the highways, the war is right in your Cammille Moonsommy, executive editor Lauer Kevin Donahue, senior sports editor ing, eventually contributing face. , _ Jeff James and Jon Springer, sports editors -'---..;;....;;;.;~.;;;_--to insight and ideas At least the community leaders offer us a

News Ed~ors ...... Michael Andres, Karen AKrizzi, Amy Byrnes, Cathleen Fromm, The real world __ through examples c-arved pacifyingly ironic "Project Vision" to k-eep our Don Gordon, Lori Poliski, Dale Rife, Marge Schellh11rdt in the land with computer centers and com- eyes closed for a few more years. Fe~~tures Editon ...... Chris Lauer, Meghan McGuire Photo Editor ...... Dan Della Piazza posite laboratories_ tells us now that we are E?'cuse ~e! Dr. Jones, could you take a look Assistant News Editors ...... Ke~~n Burenga, MicheUe Wall here primarily to increase the profits of the ?,e~I~d Shnsbana Towers ~nd u~e ~OJ?e of t~at Assistant Photo Editor ...... :: ..... Eric Russell Assistant Sports Ed~or ...... Ke~h Flamer multi-national corporations in which the in- VIsion to s~ all of the ~Ivers~ty s mdustr!al Assistant Features Editor ...... Corey Ullman vestments of the University of E h waste and decide how you ~e ~omg to reclaim Copy Ed~ors ...... Scott Graham, Lisa Moorhe~~d, Robin Petrucci, Amy Trefsger rest veryw ere that land before you start fmdmg other places Assistant Advertising Diredor ...... , ...... Michele BarKe Assistant Business Manager ...... •...... •.Seva Raskin G

Published every Tuesday and Friday during the academic year, Fridays during Winter Ses­ University of Delaware to develop such useful sion, by the student body of the University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware. tools as napalm and plutonium for nuclear Editorial and business offices at West Wing, Student Center. Phone 451-2n1, 451-2n2, warheads. .oi.Sl-2n4. Business hours: Monday: 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 10 p.m., Tuesday through Fri~y= 10 a .m. to 3 p.m. "Project Vision" seems to be along the lines Chris Lauer is a features editor of The of a military takeover of Newark by the univer- Review. September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 9 lT.S. Bluf•s Letter As people storm through the streets, slapping me hard Plagiarism damaged Sen. Biden's character and credibility across the face and screaming about how great the Constitu­ To the editor: This not only calls his credibility into · tion is and what a fantastic democracy we live in, I'd like The issue raised by the press about question, but also casts doubts on, as one to take a brief moment to mention a few things: Senator Eiden's credibility is legitimate. political analyst has noted, the legitimacy • When the Constitution was signed, only white, male lan­ At this point, early in the race, the one and believability of the senator's downers could vote. That number represented less than 5 per­ thing that sets the senat~r al?art from. his emotions. cent of the population. Democratic opponents IS his oratorical Perhaps this incident points to other • Until1865, our country had slavery. That's right, we're ability. problems of leadership that Senator Eiden talking about legal ownership of other human beings. When the now infamous "Why am I the has, much like the revelations that came • When we came to this land, we slaughtered hundreds of first Eiden in 1,000 generations ... " speech from staffers who worked for then thousands of native Indians. We have since herded them all was given, it was reported that the crowd Senator Hart in 1984 after the Donna Rice to patches of desert, where they sell jewelry by the roadside. was hushed. Apparently they were scandal. • Along the lines of herding, in 1942 we herded 115,000 impressed. Be that as it may, the one thing we Japanese, Germans and Italians to concentration camps (we The problem is that the senator prefac­ Americans need from our president is called them Assembly Centers and War ed that section with a phrase like "As I credibility and believability. Relocation Centers) . was driving here today I was thinKing ... " Joe Eiden has lost his. Seventy thousand of those people were Not only was it a very carefully planned U.S. citizens. About 30,000 were children speech, but, by the senator's own admis­ Heinz E. Roth under the age of 15. sion. untrue. BE 88 • Women were not given the right to vote until1920, almost 150 years after the "'I. ~tl\ NOT ~ CflO~ signing of the Constitution. f\AG\~~~t.\- f Two hundred years later, in 1987, the \.~1 Me: St\'f 1\\\S ~~OUT 1\\1\T document still lacks the Equal Rights Amendment, a simple statement that equality "shall not be abridged by the \ - Don United States or by any state on account of sex." ERA is a dead issue. Gordon • Blacks received the right to vote in 1870, nearly 100 years after the signing of the Constitution. Until 1964's Voting Rights Act, many were prevented from voting by subversion tactics such as poll taxes and literacy tests. That meant until1964, many people had to pay to vote. Incidentally, Judge Robert Bork, who will probably join the Supreme Court shortly, was vigorously opposed to the Voting Rights Act. . Also, in the early 1960s nowChief Justice William Rehnquist intimidated blacks at various polling locations to keep them l. 'Nl\.L NEVER L\E To 'IOU! from voting. • The Constitution's Fourteenth Amendment, which pro­ tects people against being deprived "life, liberty, or proper­ ty, without due process of law," meant virtually nothing for 170 years because states could still deny people that right. \ As a result, many states prevented people from practicing cer~in religions. In 1960, the Supreme Court's "Substantive Due Process" decision forbade states from denying those basic rights. 't\\~Nt.c: YOU Judge Bork wants to see that decision overturned. MU> 60® M16\iT • Urged by our own Senator Joseph Eiden, last year Con­ gress passed the Omnibus Crime Control Act, which legaliz­ ed the practice of preventive detention. Preventive detention means that people who are considered a danger or threat to society (not defined) can be held without ------~- bail for an indefinite amount of time without trial. As a result, several Puerto Ricans who advocate in­ dependence from the United States have been jailed in U.S. ~E.tt-.{2- ! 1"\N~ OUR SON \S A \\e DoESN'i ~EM), \-\~S ~ STUDY prisons for over two years, without bail. CA~U~lTY Of 11\E tDUc.A.TION Gel\ SIS "~8\'tS ANV \S \{1NoQANT Of 1HE As an aside, the Miami Herald uncovered American Hero CONS'f\iUTIOtl Oliver North's plan to impose martial law and suspend the Constitution. The plan was to be implemented during war­ I time or in the case of widespread civil unrest. What we're talking about is being tossed in jail for disagree­ I ing with the government, which is all the Puerto Rican in­ dependence fighters did. We're talking about people losing all Constitutional rights. Remember, this is an idea kicked around by high-ranking government officials. Meanwhile, we still herd thousands upon thousands of - minorities into concentration camps, only they are now known as ghettos and slums. In most cases, there is no escape. Bill Cosby escaped from the ghetto, and now earns more than $50 million a year working for corporate America. But H£ COULD BtCOM~ in the meantime, masses live below poverty level and will VflES\t>E.NT for the rest of their lives. Sure, the Constitution was a step in the right direction. The document at least embodied some basic principles for which to strive, equality and liberty. Our forefathers wanted to extend basic freedoms to only a tiny minority. We've come a long way since then, perhaps, but the Borks, Bidens, Rehnquists and Norths of the nation present a dire threat. We are not completely democratic, because we are selec­ tive in ·doling out freedoms. Let's stop patting ourselves on the back. We still have a long way to go. Don Gordon is an administrative editor of The Review. Page 10 • The Review • September 25, 1987 ------....:.______.:.,_ __,:...;_ __ _ Fair 'exposes' job possibilities 82 companies participate by Laura Schmit "You can't beat hands on ex­ Staff Reporter perience," said Tyrone J. Eighty-two local organiza­ Jones, a representative of the tions participated in Experien­ Delaware Council on Crime tial Expo '87, an annual event a~d Justice and a 1987 sponsored by Career Planning Delaware graduate. "You can 'and Placement, which was learn as much as possible held in the Student Center from a book, but if you don't Tuesday. An awards banquet have the experience in what to honor three of the groups you want to do, then you preceded the expo. haven't done anything for "The purpose of this event is yourself." to expose students to organiza­ During the banquet, Stuart tions that offer internships and Sharkey, vice president for field experience each school student affairs, presented year," according to Deborah awards to The Delaware Blood M. Wailes, assistant director Bank, The Newark Emergen­ of Career Planning and cy Center and Congressman Placement. Tom Carper's office for their Internships provide an op­ outstanding services in the ex­ portunity for the student to ob­ periential learning program. tain experience in their field of These awards were based on interest, according to Frank superiority in the types and Kurzeknabe, representative of. quality of internships and field the probation and parole office experience the organizations of Delaware. have offered in the past, accor­ There was a wide variety of ding to Wailes. groups represented at the ex­ In a brief speech before the po including health, com­ awards, Sharkey stressed the munications, social services importance of the experiential and governmental learning program for the organizations. continued to page 12

THE REVIEW/ Dan Della Piazza An inquiring student looks into internship possibilities at the Experiential Exposition Tuesday in the Rodney Room.

MENU HOT LINE FOR A RECORDING OF THE DAYS HOT STUFF FOR EACH DINING HALL. CALL 451-1111 (UPDATED DAILY) ------September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page J.1 Commuter fair encourages involvement by Beth De Llsi • Special Sessions - Inter- J Staff Reporter national Relations. ~ Increased awareness of .E.ach group occupied an in- resources available to com- dividual ~able, . where muting students was the goal representative~ mfor~ed of the second annual Com- stud~nts of their .res~echve muter Fair, held ' outside of s.erv1ces and d1stnbuted Daugherty Hall on Tuesday. ht~rature. . . "We want to get commuters We try to provide serv1c~s involved with what is going on, that. we know c?m,~ut~rs will on campus," Julie Demgen, be mterest.ed n;t, sa1d. Jeff assistant Dean of Students and Scott, presidential candidate coordinator of the Commuter for the OCSA. "We wan~ the~ Fair said to feel a part of the umversi- Ac~ordi~g to Demgen, there ty ·". . are over 5,600 commuting Many commuters Simply at- students at the university. tend cl~sses and then go home, Any student not living in accordmg ~o Chuck Tarver, university residence halls or r~~r~sentatlve ~or Student Ac­ university owned property is bv1bes and station manager of considered a commuter, W?fDR. . Demgen added. We are trymg to show The Commuter Fair spon- [commuters] what campus sored by the Off camp~s Stu- life is all about," Tarver dent Association and added. the Contemporary Programs Ann Rossa!lder (:(\lU 88), a Association, featured nearly a representative .from the dozen university offices and Center for Counseling and Stu- ~ student groups. dent Development, said, "We ... Among the organizations want to reach everybody. We~ represented were: want c.ommuters to know that -··~ ~~ &~.._..., • Cultural Programm1·ng there IS a resource out there -'!....- . .,..- ...... --"!.: f th " ~;;-. ..._-~ Advisory Board; or em. • . ~ ~ ~-~ • WXDR· ' . ;- * "' ' . . . Troy Banks (AG 90) com- ...,. · ~.... "" """'"' • Student Activities; mented that students who live •:·..., •~ ...,.. .: • Wellspring; off campus are at • Center for Counseling and disadvantage. Student Development; • Public Safety; "Th THE REVIEW/ Cindy Walters • Air Force ROTC; ey are missing out on Troy Banks

THE REVIEW/ Seva Raskin Pit-stop-Brad Emmi (AS 87) and Hope Hillman (AS 89) take Read sports plus Tuesday. Beca-use a sunny break to chat between classes. the plus, man, is the only way to O~K read your sports. Omicron Delta Kappa Honor Society Mandatory meeting: Sunday, Sept. 27 DOll.,. GET LEFT Room 218 Smith Hall@ 6:00pm BEHIND•· Contact Mike @ 738-3698 If Unable tG Attend. CATCH A It IDE! EVERY HOME FOOTBALL GAME Away from home? Don't get away from God.

- assembly STOPS TO THE GAME Meeting a~ - START Student Cente r 11 :20 11 :3511 :50 12:05 12:20 12:35 12:50 1:05 1:20 1:35 1:50 698 Old Baltimore Pike, Christiana Commons 11 :3011 :45 12:001 2:1512:3012:45 1:00 1:15 1:30 1:45 2:00 Rodney/ Dickinson 11 :35 11 :50 12:05 12:20 12:35 12:50 1:05 1:20 1:35 1:50 2:05 Newark Stadium 11 :4512:001 2:1512:3012:45 1:00 1:15 1:30 1:45 2:00 2: 15 (U.A.W. Local1183) STOPS FROM THE GAME Stadium 3:00 3:30 stablish the power necessary Board on Economic Services. Staff Reporter for improvement, she said. "Half of the people in the this time. Grading policy There is a need for women to "We need to get into [ posi- world who could be exter­ assume a prophetic stance in tionsl that have the power to minated by nuclear weapons will be discussed. cities, states and the world, ehang<>." nrP women," she stated. str<>ssed Sister Jeanne A('('ording to Cashman, a Cashman of Wilmington's Ur- member of the Government "We are not only the vic­ suline Convent. Health Care Committee. tims. but the best people to do "If anyone is going to edueating children to "hate somt'thing about it," she chang<' the world, it is going to war and Jove peace," is Pxplained. h<' wom<'n." she said to about ess<:>nt ial. "Women of all ages need to 50 p<•ople. mostly females. in "W<' end up putting the pt the challenge to create thl' Studl'nt Center Wednesday light nut of darkness and aft<>rnoon. ehaos." Cashman added. Come join in the In hN speech titled "The major role of "Woman: Called To Be Pro- women today is the Concerningtheissueofmar- Shaping of this ph<>t." sponsored by the riag<' within the priesthood womm's studies department, call to be prophets." and ordination of female University's Future Cashman urged women to get pri<>sts. Cashman took a Jess involvC'd in changing the ------<'Xa('ting stance. aspt>cts of the world which ear<>s of the world into other with they find imperfect. p<>opl<''s hands instead of tak- "It would be a long time Sh<' described the role of ing steps ourselves," she hl'fore a change would occur Project Vision proph<>t as a catalyst for notC'd . along those lines," she said. ehang". "rWomenl, who are the Delaware Undergraduate Student ''ThP maJ·or role of women poorC'st o f t h e poor, , s h e con- d. Deborah f Foxh Nai, coor- todav is the call to be pro- ed d · mator o t e Women's Congress Meeting with Guest J t inul'd, "ne to speak out an Ph<'ts," she said. fight for whatthey be Jieve in.' , Studies Research on Women speaker: Dr. Russel Jones, DirC'ct service, such as program said, "Sister volunteer work, is only the Two-thirds of those im- Cashman is doing a terrific job President, University of Delaware first step to change, Cashman povC'rished worldwide are in overcoming the stereotype l'Xplained. women, according to of being a nun- and being a Women must enter the Cashman, also a member of woman." Day: Monday Date: 9/ 28/ 87 Time: 3:30 p.m. Place: Bacchus Student Center DUSC ... get involved .. .together we can make the difference.

THE WRITING CENTER IS OFFERING FREE WORKSHOPS ON A VARIETY OF TOPICS. ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS ARE WELCOME. WOMEN WORKSHOP SCHEDULE All workshops will be held in Room 019, Memorial Hall, 3-4 p.m. BRADUATESTUDENTS OCTOBER If you are Thurs., Oct.1 Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Essay Exams Mon., Oct. 5 How to Write Letters to Influence People • feeling the stress of juggling Mon., Oct. 12 Writing About Literature multiple roles Wed., Oct. 21 The Least You Should Know About Punctuation • wanting to connect more with Tues., Oct. 27 Understanding the English Verb peers

NOVEMBER • wondering bow to survive the Thurs., Nov. 5 Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Essay Exams graduate experience Mon., Nov. 9 Writing About Literature • wishing for an environment more Wed., Nov. 11 The Least You should Know About Punctuation supportive of women Mon., Nov. 16 How to Put Research into Your Paper Wed., Nov. 18 How to Write Letters to Influence People Consider joining a support group on Thursdays, beginning Tues., Nov. 24 Understanding the English Verb September 17. from 2:00-3:15 p.m. at the Center for Counseling Mon., Nov. 30 How to Put Research into Your Paper and Student Development.

DECEMBER For more informatioa call Cyathia Allen Thurs., Dec. 4 Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Essay Exams (451-2141) or Don.. Taites (451-8063)...... -..lty : Ce•terJer C~a-St~t •wea..-at • Olfic:e .. w-··· Allain Page 14 • The Review • September 25, 19871------~~ ------IT sponsors local bands for monthly performances see local bands play unless place on Saturday night at by Diane Moore they used fake identification, Daugherty Hall, where the Staff Reporter Borgaonkar explained. band "Mustard Trucks" will open up for the reggae band IT is a student organization Each month, IT hosts two that provides university bands in a show that runs from "One." 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Borgaonkar The executive board, that students with affordable, non­ also consists of Maisie Pad­ alcoholic, live entertainment said. Julie Ardis (AS 89), publici­ more (AS 88), talent search once a month in Daugherty chairperson and Kim Rosen­ Hall, according to Sonya ty chairperson for IT, explain­ ed that they concentrate on thal (AS 89), funding chairper­ Borgaonkar (AS 88), public son, arranges fundraisers to relations chairperson for IT. local talent, having a less recognized band open up for keep the admission fee at The group, that attained the headline band. $1.50, according to organization status in Winter Borgaonkar. Session, 1987, was formed "We're helping them and She said that being a univer­ because of a concern that they're helping us," Ardis sity student, she understnds there was nowhere that said. that students do not want to students under 21 could go to This month's event will take spend a lot on entertainment. There is a 308 meeting on Tuesday at 3:30. AttendaJJ,ce is a neccessity. If you're etting married then you ar excused. .Otherwise ....

" ' ·,

Clowning around - A juggling joker entertains the crowd THE PHOENIX COMMUNITY! with circus-worthy tricks at the commuter fair. oF· THE UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY Body En&rgy 20 ORCHARD RD.. chnoe your wa.y lo frl,.•u .•• NEWARK, DELAWARE AEROBIC~ CLA$W Penca.der Commom I WlUi N : TUESDA! :~0·· ~~3~RSDAYS BJ! Gl NS: TUESDAY. SEPT. 29, 1!187 PRESENTS "SOUTH AFRICA P'Of'HOU D81"AU.I,C:ALL JAekiS 73g-f6g4 lllti!JII JHl"ROOVCTORl' CLASS ~ SPEAKER: REV. JEAN7FRANCOIS BILL of Switzerland and South Africa (He was recently released from a South African prison ALL CYCLISTS sentence imposed for his work against apartheid.) The Cycling Club is holding a meeting on PLEASE JOIN US Thursday, October 1st. 1987, in The William­ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 4:00 P.M. son Room, Student Center at 8:00. Everyone is welcome. We will be taking orders for THE REV. ROBERT W. ANDREWS. UNIVERSITY PASTOR A PROGRAM or THI:. UNITEO CAMPUS MINISTRY AT THI:. UNIVERSI I"Y or DELAWARE. THE PRESBYl ERIAN CHURCH 1U.S A 1 shorts & shirts at this meeting. IN ECUMENICAL MINISTRY SINCE J%1 20 ORCHARD ROAD • NEWARK. DELAWARE 19711 • (302) 368 3643 ------~,September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 15 UD prof studies state wetlands with new device Remote sensor detects danger to ecosystem by Deborah O'Cannell ing the material over time and Sroff Reporter then weighing it. In an effort to conserve and This techni~ue was "very evaluate the state's salt mar­ cumbersome,' Klemas said, shes, which comprise about 18 adding he hopes to "expand percent of Delaware's land, a remote sensoring to other university professor of marine parts of the East Coast." This studies is employing a non­ hope may soon become a destructive, time-efficient reality. method -remote sensoring - South Carolina, New Jersey to study the precious land. and Maine, states that first Dr. Vic Klemas uses a showed an interest in remote radiometer which measures sensoring, are now buying the light reflecting from equipment instead of borrow­ marsh vegetation without ing the university's, Klemas destroying any of the surroun­ said. ding habitat or its wildlife. Although a radiometer is "On the one hand, as a con­ costly, about $5,000, he said, servationist, you want to ''previous methods cost near­ monitor how much area was ly five times as much." lost and if the area is still pro­ By placing the radiometer in ducing," Klemas said. an aircraft, large areas of He hopes state's wetlands Delaware's wetlands can now managers will use remote sen­ be evaluated, Klemas soring to make development explained. permits tougher to receive. He said that sensoring is "They might be more strict done from the early spring to with permits for high­ the late fall. • ...... a cau.. - Anti-contra aid supporters rallied for support of their cause during producing wetlands," Klemas The basic research for the "We the People" celebration in Philadelphia last week. said. remote sensoring occurred in The health and productivity Delaware with additional of a salt marsh can be deter­ testing on the coast from mined by the amount of light Canada to Georgia. reflected from the radiometer, Costa Rica and Ecuador are which can be held by hand. now using remote sensoring to The reflected light deter­ view the changing population mines the chlorophyll content of mangrove forests. of each plant, which can then In Ecuador, these forests be translated into how much are being threatened by the in­ biomass is produced, Klemas creasing production of shrimp added. pools, which are mainly own­ Previous biomass evalua­ ed by corporations with a tion efforts involved cutting financial interest, Klemas down sections of marshes, dry- said. THE PHOENIX COMMUNITY! QUIGLEYS FARM OF HayR~ THE UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY Bonfire Included for: 20 ORCHARD RD. Clubs • Dorms • Private Parties • Social Groups • Sorority • Fraternity NEWARK, DELAWARE Celebrations of all kinds. 20 Min. Drive from Campus. Newcastle, Del. Invites you to hear (302) 328-7732 for reservations a REPORT ON CENTRAL AMERICA SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 RACHEL SMITH - Presbyterian church worker in Guatemala who met recently YO, Mountainbikers! with President Reagan and his foreign policy staff to protest the character of U.S. Is your bike clean? If it is, then it shouldn't be. behavior in Central America. Do something about it -- Meet at the Christi­ COVERED DISH SUPPER 6:00 P.M. ana Commons on Sundays at 12:30 p.m. Ride Bring Food To Share

the dirt trails in and around Newark, and get THE REV. ROBERT W. ANDREWS, UNIVERSITY PASTOR your bike DIRTY. A PROGRAM OF THE UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE. THE PRESBYTERIAN CHUF.CH !U.S.A. I IN ECUMENICAL MINISTRY SINCE 1954. 20 ORCHARD ROAD • NEWARK, DELAWARE 19711 • (302) 368-3643 Page 16 • The Review • September 25, 1987------~Jones student !Deals praised by DUSC students between 5:30 and 6:30 President's efforts. · ..... ,.. by June Horsey Friday evening in the Student "He's been a very open and Staff Reporter ' Center dining hall, Cradler ex­ visible president," Crossland President Russel C. Jones plained. He plans to attend said. "I think that even those will make a concrete attempt every dining hall by the end of students without titles should to encourage the student body the semester. · feel comfortable coming up to to get involved in "Project Vi­ Following dinner Friday, the president to voice their opi­ sion," according to Resident Jones will speak with students nions." Student Association President on a more personal level in Jones will also address Mark Cradler, who addressed Brown lounge until 7:30, DUSC to discuss his ideas and Monday's meeting of the Cradler said. expectations of "Project Vi­ Delaware Undergraduate Stu­ After the meeting, DUSC sion" at their next meeting, to dent Congress. president Rick Crossland be held in the Bacchus Room Jones will be dining with discussed his feelings on the of the Student Center at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, September 28. The meeting is open to all interested students. Rob Pennell, faculty senator, told DUSC he thinks the number of students on the Faculty Senate should be Nature A[[air Day raised. "It's common sense " he Delaware Museum of said. "If we have more student faculty senators at the Rick Crossland Natural History meetings, maybe other facul­ approved the registration of ty senators would be more are: two new university organiza­ • Dean of Students Timothy likely to respect our opinion''. tions, the Billiards and Rugby Brooks; Pennell said he was check­ clubs. ing the DUSC constitution for • Vice President for Student RSA will sponsor nine or ten Affairs Stewart Sharkey; Sunday, September 27 guidelines concerning the bus loops for students atten­ senate. ding this weekend's football • Vice President of University 9 DUSC and the IFC have put game, Cradler said. Advancement and University a.m. to 5 p.m. together a task force with With the exception of next Secretary G. Arno Loessne~ ; hopes of improving campus week, DUSC meetings will be -v- safety, Crossland said. held every Monday at 3:30 • Assistant Director for Hous­ Members of the force will be p.m. in the Collins Room of the ing and Residence Life Linda walking around campus this Student Center. Carey; Friday between 8 p.m. and 10 Several other ad- p.m. to check potentially ministrators will be discussing • Treasurer Robert Harrison; da~gerous areas for bad topics of their choice at future • Provost and Vice President lighting. DUSC meetings throughout for Academic Affairs Leon During the meeting, DUSC the semester. Among them Cambell. SUNDAY'S AT ----~-!ll!lm-~fmi\l-ll\$!il~fmi\l----f@ll!ml"~ 1 Mile Fun Walk ~ Run 9 a.m.;(ribbons for all entrants!) • 3 Mile Run 9:15; (over 50 unique trophies!) • Pony Rides • Zoo on Wheels e Gymboree U,_..U~I2 Link~ Crash~the~Clown Uf)W,_.. ... •UDComputer Home Up • The Banjo Dusters • Movies • Apple Pie and Cider • Jaguar XJ6 Sedan Raffle • Palmer's Taxidermy • THE RETURN OF Displays from over 10 Nature Organizations • Greek Pastries • Games • Auction ( 1 :OO) • Brandywine JOHN PLUMLEY! Zoo • Nautilus Shop • Hamburgers and Hot Dogs • Jack Briggs~History Teller • Diamond State Tae Yes, John is Back. K won~ Do • Used Book Sale • Carousel Farms Petting Zoo • Scavenger Hunt (3:30) • Pumpkin & Gourd Welcome Back Party. Sale • Caricatures by Wayne Parmenter • TheWor ld Famous Hermit Crab Races! • Arts and Crafts for sale by 13 of the Area's Best Craftspeople • Discovery Come in and welcome back Roo m • Omar~the~Camel Raffle• Fine Art Demo's John and Party with by Joyce Stark and Louise Brevoort • And More! ~~· · ·I! .ill! ' l ~~~... 1$!!~. :.-:~"!!·.·fJ!kf.t}~:.•.. :::~y~:·:·: S'.:~~- JOHN, DAVE & LINDA

The Delaware Museum ofNatural History appearing every Sunday is located 5 miles NW of Wilmington on Route 52 (the Kennett Pike) [)()W~ U~()~l2 Rain or Shine • Free Admission 60 N. College Ave. Parking $2.00 Jf3f3·S4-~J ------September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 17 .. . police Say Main Street violence not on the rise continued from page 4 · · t " h hostility towards the officers But according to Beall, "It's Vice President of Student gressive socie y, e con- pedestrians loitering on the tinued, "and a gun is just a sidewalks, Widdoes said, from the Main Street not right that I should be Affairs Stewart Sharkey said very extreme form of the yell­ which is one reason police 'regulars.' " afraid to go somewhere physical violence rarely oc- ing and pushing." have begun the patrols. The Investigator Jim Flatley alone." curs on Main Street. According to Sharkey, the patrols also ensure that traffic said University Police occa­ Mike Cuff

Applicants for grant-in-aid and material stipends are due October 1. Awards will be announced by October 22. Grants of $25- $150 will be awarded. Senior thesis students may receive up to $250. -Eligibility: Research may be for a course, thesis, apprenticeship or independent study. -Types of expenses include: purchase of expendable materials, photocopying costs, transportation to libraries, and professional conferences, etc. -Faculty sponsor must submit a Letter of Support for Y

RUSH PHI KAPPA PSI! !! Chris: To the most beautiful person in my life - I've cherished every moment we've spent "Come and find what you're looking for!" The together the past months. Love, Michelle. St. Thomas More Oratory Catholic Communi­ ty on campus welcomes everyone to join us in our special masses on both Sept. 26 and 'n. Can you feel IT? · Experience the togetherness that the Oratory has •n offer. Catch a ride to all the home football games Live IT to the limit! - ride the R.S.A. buses, $.25 with l.D. Buses every 15 minutes from Rodney underpass, Christiana Commons, or the Student Center. OMIRON DELTA KAPPA - Mandatory Don't get left behind! See ad in today's paper meeting on Sunday, September 'n in 218 Smith for schedule of buses. at 6 p.m. Members who cannot attend - con­ tact Mike at 738-3698. RUSH Pffi KAPPA PSI! !! Dave - Happy Birthday to the most impor­ tant person in my life! Thanx for making the times we've had so special. I love you always! Don't miss IT: tomorrow night at 9 p.m. in Dawn. Daughery - ONE with MUSTARD TRUCKS. IT presents reggae band ONE with MUSTARD TRUCKS on Saturday, September RUSH ZBT!!! 26 at 9 p.m. in Daugherty Hall. Admission $1.50 with student l.D. ZETA BETA TAU Fraternity: strict non­ ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA congratulates all hazing policy, good times, brotherhood, and new Greeks - Get psyched! friends. Rush ZBT- Go for it!

THE REVIEW/ Fletcher Chambers Maldii!J traclu - An imposing locomotive chugs through Newark rail territory bound for destinations unknown.

First Assembly of God Church

129 Lovett Ave., Newark, Delaware Thomas Lazar, Pastor (Home) 368-4276 • (Church) 731-8231

Sunday Services: Bible Study for all ages 9:30 AM. Worship 10:30 AM. and 7:00P.M.

Welcome U of D Students to our Services! Special Student Services and Programs by Christians in Action ------September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 19

I e e Woo urges U.S. involvement in foreign market continued from page 3 technology with competitors, our technology must be one technological battle. tinued, "hopefully it will catch ing it "temporarily effective­ therefore prematurely losing generation ahead of foreign In the industrial sector, he on with the graduate students but not a cure." whatever edge it may ·have competitors. suggested royalties instead of and so on." - One_reason Woo cited for the had. This is possible, according to bonuses, and in academic United States losing the "Technology is everything, Woo, because the U.S. is ahead circles, an additional tenure The lieutenant governor con- technology battle is that and before 1970 the United in science, stronger overall track for professors. eluded the U.S. has lost its States had it made," he economically and an open and sense of farsightedness in American scientists are not free country which spawns Woo noted the incentive to economic policies. He urged motivated to combine science declared. "But now things have changed." creativity. advance technological pur- quick-fix-it legislators with and money-making products. Woo recommended a new suits could initiate a pattern. reelection on their minds to Furthermore, the U.S. Woo called technology "a hybrid of science and reward system encouraging "When professors start consider more sound, long- shares its U.S. scientists to prevail in the thinking this way," he con- - range plans. economics" and advised that ------. .Page 2·will make your day. Wake up with a fresh pers ective o the world around ou.

"Are you going out Saturday night?" she said. "No, I wish I could. I just don't have the Your Own money," he said. "You should have worked for FOOD SER­ VICE like I did. It's a great way to earn money and meet friends," she said. "You are right, I, never thought of that," he said.

Student employees are needed to work in the food service dining halls. NEW PAY SCALE Starting rate s4.0Q-S4.50 per hour. Flexible hours Apply F~od Service Department 177 Graham Hall

. MAKE EXTRA CASH & ADD TO YOUR RESUME!

Become an advertising sales representative for THE REVIEW. Come'Dy OUr New'ID Nacho Salad Bar. ~~ AD-Yttu~-Eat,Just $1.99 with-coupon . . you 6m help yourself to all the tacos, nachos, and salad you want -just the way you want them. Choose from over a dozen delicious fixings, everything from spicy ground CONTACT: beef to zesty nacho sauce. And help yourself to our All-You-Can-Eat Soup, Salad, and Fruit TARA BORAKOS or Bar, too. All for just $3.99 ($2. 99 for kids under 12) with these coupons. MICHELE BARSCE at 451-1396 • A car is necessary · $100 Off All-You..f.an-Eat $L• Off All-You..f.an-Eat I 1 1D Nacho Salad Bar 1D Nacho Salad Bar ! . I One coupon per person per visit Not good with other offers. No One coupon per person per visit. Not good with other offers. No I I C

Expand your horizons. Read the expanded features section every Tuesday.

STUDENTS, HOMEMAKERS, RETIREES Nationally recognized marketing research organization is planning to establish a telephone data collection facility on or near campus. Flexible hours; day, evening, weekend. Minimum 10 hours per week. .Subscribe to Univer~ity Theatre No experience necessary, just an inquisitive mind, and have a night at THE TA VERf\! reading ability and good speaking voice. 1-800-222-8886. Call 451-2204 for details! After 5:30 p.m. September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page !l

Holly - I apologize for being your friend. continued from page 31 TKE RUSH: Monday - pizza and football. To my favorite R.A. - Thanks for that Rub elbows with President Jones- Friday ;at Wednesday- Cheesesteaks plus! 9-11 p.m. at L.C. wonderful evening that I'll never forget. If 5: 30 in the Student Center Dining Hall after the House. you're ever feeling lonely, my offer still dinner at6:30! Let him know what you think.! To ALL of my Sigma Kappa friends stands. And if not, I had fun anyway. Sponsored by R.S.A. and the Office of the VJCr Although it took me l 1 2 years, I am so psych­ President of Student Affairs. Suzanne - Think clearly and don't be so ed that I finally did it! Love you, Marni. Thank you SIGMA NU for the fantastic mix­ see IT? mysterious that you forget that you're bowl­ er! Love, the Sisters and Pledges of SIGMA The answer is: Yes! Tony will be back ;again ing tonight. Yes, you do eat french fries KAPPA! impressively. What is a TKE? Come and find out at Rush next week, so rush TKE on Monday aDII Wednesday nights from 9-11. 111@1 H. - Happy 21st! Live it up. - Dane. next week. Jean- Well, they are finally here! And what a great group of pledges they are! Good luck! Happy 21st Birthday to Coy's peluneesje. Donna G. -Congratulations on becoming a IIGMA KAPPA PLEDGES- STARTING Your sisters of Sigma Kappa. member of the Gamma Pledge Class 1:1 OFF WITH A BANG! (Qr was that just the Love, Marves.and Claudia. DOLLY- Hi! Here is your first personal. Have a fun week with Carlos! - Seva. SIGMA KAPPA. You are the best! LIS, yow !llampagne?> GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS! Kristin, we will miss guardian angel. your calm, smiling face every day! You did HIRSCH - No, it's not our anniversary and RUSH PHI PSI! ! ! a fantastic job and we love you! -The Sisters Pnsident Russel Jones will be eating in the it's not your birthday. It's just another day Look for ASA 's jewelry sale in the Student ~t Center dining hall today at 5:30 p.m. of Sigma Kappa. that I'm so happy to be YLG. Love is pizza and Jen Cross- Congratulations on pledging the Center on Monday, September 28. ~and rub elbows with the President and champagne, lobsters and beer, hugs and best sorority on campus -Alpha Chi Omega! Laura - Congratulations! You are the Ill bim what you think. He will be going to kisses, and of course, motorcycles! I fell Get psyched for an amazing semester! Love, greatest - GOOD LUCK pledging! LIS IMm Hall after dinner to listen more. Let asleep late last night . . Elisa. continued to page 18 Iiiii know what you think! Sponsored by the Beth. Karen. llllldent Student Association and the office of Ill Vice President of Student Affairs.

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Screen Printing Elkton Rd. New{lrk 738-6824 • Master Card and • Visa Accepted Meeting- International Coffee Hour. Mass - 11 a .m., St. Thomas More Friday, Sept. 25 4:3(H):30 p.m., International Center. Oratory, Saturday and Sunday. Discussion- 7 p.m., Wiliamson Room, Tuesday, Sept. 29 Cosmopolitan Club. Student Center. Gay and Lesbian Stu- Catholic Community on Campus. dent Union. Bible Study - 7-9 p.m., Center For Black Culture, 192 S. College Ave. Con­ Christian Gatherings - 7 p.m., two tact Michelle Brown 731-3630. Sunday, Sept. 27 Meeting - 6 p.m., 218 Smith Hall. Bible Study - Monday-Thursday locations: Ewing Room, Student Omicron Delta Kappa. nights. Call for list of 24 groups, Center and Dickinson E/F lounge. Art Exbibit - "On the Half Shell." 368-5050. Inter-Varsity Christian Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Fellowship

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Door dye Multi-colored clothing corners looks and lifestyles in Newark - r- by Fran Battaglia Outer Limits exports tie-dyes all over the na­ Staff Reporter tion and beyond - including Switze~land, Canada and the entire Caribbean, according to If you happen to see Spuds Mackenzie in tie­ owner Don DelCollo. He also estimates that, out dyed garb on his next commer<:ial, don'.t be_ sur­ of approximately $100,000 prised. Tie-dye has finally hit the big time. worth of his recent orders, about half were for No more Dead-head innuendos to worry tie-dyed clothes. . about. Wearing tie-dyes is for everyone now. "I don't think it has much to do with the So, go ahead and send one home to mom for Grateful Dead. I think it's got a lot to do with Christmas . fashion " DelCollo commented. "A couple of Well, maybe not, but rumor has it that_Sears years ago, neon colors were in - remember? and Roebuck is recruiting talented tie-dye makers to start a new summer line. Things got so bright you need~d sunglas~es to Tie-dye sales have been on the rise for about see your friends. Then ~verythm~ was pmsle~; a year in many places, including many of the This year has been ~Ike ~he t~e-dye year. Even the lifeguards m Bngantme, N.~. were beach shops up and down the East Coast. They in rare form this summer when they tie-dyed can be found hanging right next to the "Oliver their uniforms from head to toe and went to see North for President" T-shirts. the Grateful Dead, complete with tye-dyed "The tie-dye industry is really peaking,_" ~c­ beach hats and sneakers. . cording to Dean DelCollo, from Outer Limits "There's such a lack of fresh, creative ori Main Street. ideas " Jim Mervine CAS 88) explained. The · "Big deal " Scott Garthwait

Take ~ S/ ... Belushi fails ~ a test as star of 'Principal' not a place to show up with a you wish he would. Belushi by Kevin Donahue "Hello, my name is ... " really does have the complete Senior Sports Editor badge stuck to your chest. package- the serious name, Let's start by saying it is not Enter Belushi as Rick the serious face. Now all he all James Belushi's fault. Not Latimer, the new principal at needs is some serious all of it- just a lot. Brandel. Like Belushi 's dramatic talent. John's younger brother is character in About Last Night, Latimer comes to Brandel not very good in The Principal Latimer is not too likeable. He with a mission: to prove he's , but the script - yikes! - is is a slob. His marriage has not a complete screw-up. He's horrible. fallen apart because of his going to turn Brandel, the The movie is supposedly drinking problem. He blew an watershed of Chicago delin­ about a new principal at easy job in a cushy suburban quenc::y, into a place of learn­ Brandel High, an inner-city high school, leading to his new, ing - a place where the Chicago high school. It isn't rather unpleasant job. teachers teach, the students your ordinary run-down inner- Unfortunately, Belushi has learn and the principal makes city school, either. Instead, it's lost the sense of humor that a decent cup of hot chocolate. inhabited by the worst crew of made him so effective in About If it works, Latimer's next cutthroat, bloodthirsty, anti- Last Night. The best clue to task will be to convert Charles social, rotten-to-the-core where his humor went is to Manson to Judaism. characters I've ever seen off look at his name. Until The Main Street. Principal, he was Jim Belushi. Things are a bit rough, Just kidding. Now, in his first leading though. The student body, The script is so unreal that "serious" role, he has somehow, is not amenable to Brandel never exists as an ac- mysteriously become James becoming learned. Especially James Belushi toughens up in The Principal. tual place. The school is Belushi. intractable is a wayward bursting at the seams with Along with the new name youth named Victor Duncan ·make an R-rated picture, it ing, some in a sad way. The psychotics in residence. Guys came a new expression - the (Michael Wright), the friend­ would probably sound like The script, though, has more loose with knives. Guys with guns. grim face. He wears it most of ly high school drug kingpin. Principal, but with merchan- ends than Marilyn Monroe and Guys with glares. Defini the movie; when he doesn't, Duncan and Latimer dising. And sex. John F. Kennnedy's deaths become embroiled in a battle Somehow nothing goes right combined. It's almost as if the ...... L""""'.....- for control of the school - in with this picture. Director screenwriters sat. down and effect vying for the souls of the Christopher Cain even wastes started shooting off students. If that sounds a bit high-minded for this film, Louis Gossett Jr. as Jake suggestions. . you're right. Then again, a Phillips, head of security at "Lots of thugs," one yells. grammatically correct Brandel. Gossett turns in a "We need lots of thugs." sentence without profanity is a good performance, but with "A rape, let's have a rape,"· bit high-minded for The Prin­ this script, there is no way for another yelps. cipal. Even Rae Dawn Chong, him to shine since he is used "Drugs, drugs, drugs," the as a kindly teacher doing her far too infrequently. Chong is first throws in. "We need fine also, though one must d · " best to impart some d h · · ll"k h rugs. · · knowledge on her pupils, uses won er ow a mce g1r ' e er After two hours of this film, the "f-word." Is nothing ended up in a dreary place like so do 1. sacred? this, both in the movie and her So, in case you had any acting career. doubts, I tallied up the quiz The dialogue at times ap­ proaches sub-Stallone, if there The movie is not all horrible. scores and, surprise, The Prin· is such a thing. Should Sly Some parts are almost amus- cipal fails. Louis Gosset, Jr. discusses security with The Principal. ' Pink Floyd electrifies JFK stadium Roger Waters. strange apparatus, an occa­ conscious musical meditation. by Chris Lauer After 15 years away from sional video segment, Following the first set, when Features Editor the area, the band returned scrambled laser beams or the band played primarily PHILADELPHIA with the same psychological spiralling lighting effects were material from its new album, Spotlights, airplanes, laser energy it abundantly displays projected to enhance the A Momentary Lapse in beams and scramblers; it on any of its cosmically in­ psychedelic experience, which Reason, the r:emainder of the sounds more like a war zone fluenced records, searing into radiated from the fluid texture show was highlighted by the than a concert, but Pink Floyd the brains of the mesmerized of the music into the crowd. Gilmour classics. used an arsenal of power and audience. High-powered floodlights One of the most memorable atmosphere to accent the in­ A major percentage of the shot into the clouded night sky songs of the evening included, tensity of its unique crowd of 120,000 was sardined and dazzling colored lasers, "Welcome to the Machine," experience. against the guardrail at the which moved with the tunes with its horrific video images JFK Stadium bubbled over foot of the stage to get a closer and the mood, changed with of mutating mechanical with respectful enthusiasm look at its idols. every new sequence of syn- growth and decay. Another ~nd long-awaited applause The only spectators who thesized sound. . memorable number was Saturday night as the geniuses could have left unsatisfied David Gilmour Although many of the state­ "Time," with its sing-along of David Gilmour, Nick were the uncompromising and cheers, the attention of the of-the-art props seemed to be lyrics visually powered with Mason, Richard Wright and a diehards of the old school of diverse crowd of both old and more than necessary to add to the classically warped video . few back-up musicians, crank­ Pink Floyd, a.k.a. Syd Barrett, young, of which only small the sounds, Pink Floyd as an from a Dark Side of the Moon ed up their electronic rock and who expected to hear exten­ pockets danced, was closely experience continually drew era, where synchronized roll amid a breaking rainfall sive improvisations rather drawn to a circular light fix­ the collective minds of the au­ and the absence of Pink than recorded favorites. ture suspended behind the dience into a common dream­ continued to page Z8 Floyd's former front man, Judging by sporadic hoots band. In the middle of this state, mingled with an un- 1------September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 25

~~~~------ellencamp's --~~------"' lonely, jubilant tribute to 'life by Chuck Arnold enough reason to like this cut. Managing Editor The celebratory, flames- . If it were up to John Cougar fuel-life theme of "Paper in Mellencamp, everyone would Fire" is, to differing degrees, shack up in a and carried over to almost all the stay there until the last cow tracks on The Lonesome was milked (or the town got Jubilee. Mellencamp has a too big, whichever came first). wonderful way of conveying Consequently, Mellencamp's the sense of "we-ness" that inspiring new LP, The bonds the plain folk of , does for Midwest. Oddly enough, you small towns what Tina Turner don't have to be from that does for miniskirts -it makes region of the country to get them look good. caught up in it. Mter enjoying a tremendous "We Are the People," with commercial and critical suc­ its socially-oriented lyrics, cess with 1985's Scarecrow, recalls the patriotic feel of Mellencamp has scaled down "" and features his approach to meat-and­ Mellencamp in his best growl. potatoes rock on The The chorus drums like a down­ Lonesome Jubilee. The new home Star Spangeled Banner: album, produced by Mellen­ "We are the people/ And we camp and Don Gehman (who live forever/We are the peo­ also shared in the production ple/And our future's written of Mellencamp's Scarecrow on the wind." and ), does not Mellencamp slows the pace have the lofty intentions of its down on "Cherry Bomb," a predecessor, which spawned nostalgic and bittersweet look the hits "Lonely 01' Night," at youthful romance. This "R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A." and, song, which is no less irresisti­ appropriately, "Small Town." ble than "Jack and Diane," is The result is an amazingly the finest example of Mellen­ John Cougar MeUencamp's new LP, The Lonesome Jubilee, celebrates small-town dreams. consistent and satisfying col­ camp's narrative talents and dent" from representative a more somber, straightfor- got to choose between right lection of 10 songs about the acoustical prowess on the members of the pseudo- ward composition, during and wrong." struggles and triumphs of album. Paradise: a laid-off father which the music takes a It's not exactly mind- rural life. The single fault of When the music on The with "four mouths to feed " a baekseat to the message. bending, but there's enough of The Lonesome Jubilee, albeit Lonesome Jubilee gets slight­ dancer-turned-secret~ry What is most refreshing that going on in pop music a minor one, is it doesn't have ly repetitious;"" Mellencamp whose husband ran out on her, about The Lonesome Jubilee is nowadays. any surprises. wisely opts to raise the con­ a fourth-grade kid who hates its ability to reduce life and Since the Boss is firmly "," the sciousness of the listener. the Russians "cause I hear music to their lowest common established in his own album's first single, is the kind "Down and Out in Paradise" they hate me." denominators. Everything is superstar league, Mellencamp of no-frills rocker that has and "Empty Hands" are Through it all, the song's en- clear-cut for Mellencamp, as won't have to be the poor come to be expected from musical petitions to the thusiastic banjo-picking and he shows in "Hot Dogs and man's Bruce Springsteen any Mellencamp. Its strong coun­ powers-that-be, emotionally biting bass serve as a foot- Hamburgers": "Now longer. Now, with the release try flavor and soulful lead and pleading the case of the op­ stomping counterpoint to its everybody has got the choice of The Lonesome Jubilee, he background vocals are pas­ pressed working class. satirical refrain. "Empty between hot dogs and ham- can simply be the poor man's sionate yet predictable. Still, "Down and Out" is an angry Hands," on the other hand, is burgers/Every one of us has John Cougar Mellencamp. the sizzling fiddle part alone is series ofletters to "Mr. Presi- Jagger takes the long road on new LP by Chuck Arnold and grind to. "War Baby" reveals a serious On first listen, Jagger's se­ Managing Editor side of rock's best pouter cond solo LP, Primitive Cool, (male or female). Elsewhere, When an artist reaches a sounds a lot worse than it real­ Jagger proves he can still certain point in his career, ly is. "Let's Work," the new come up with a good hook on there is no where to go but single, is the primary reason "Say You Will." ~ down. That is the problem for this; it's a senseless dance Jeff Beck, the album's lead Mick Jagger has been facing, track with a bossa nova beat guitarist, and Eurhythmic with and without the Rolling that should get most of its D.ave Stewart, co-producer of Stones, in the 1980s. airplay in aerobics classes. four cuts, lend their support The Rolling Stones are There are other cuts on and star appeal to Primitive already living legends, a group Primitive Cool that might be Cool. Only the gritty "Peace whose music and attitude have underrated because of the for the Wicked," however, rewritten pop music history. spillover effect from "Let's really gets the juices flowing; Should they just roll over and Work," which is almost sure­ it emerges as the standout play dead like pebbles kicked ly the worst single of Jagger's tune on the album. in the sand? No. career. His first solo LP, She's The first thing that goes with Jagger and company have the Boss, was hampered musical age is the consistency, made and will probably con­ similarly by its first single, the as exemplified by this highly tinue to make worthwile music sub-par "Just Another Night." uneven album. Sure, Jagger is in this decade. Maybe not "Throwaway" and "Kow on the way down, but he con­ another "Brown Sugar," Tow" are highlighted by Jag­ tinues to shine occasionally. "Under My Thumb" or "(I ger's irrepressible voice, It's worth watching - and Can't Get No) Satisfaction," which is in fine form listening to -a falling star. Mick Jagger's second solo LP, Primitive Cool, could be cooler. but still good music to bump throughout the album, while Page 26 • The Review • September 25, 1987------Chapel Street Players 27 N. Chapel St., 772-2770. Fri. and Sat, 8:15 p.m,"Damn Yankees." University Theatre The Stone Balloon Mitchell Hall, 451-2202. 115 E. Main St. Fri., Surrender. Sat., The Bullets. Sun., Season. The Play House 368-2000. - Du Pont Bdlg., lOth and Market streets, Wilmington. 656-4401. Deer Park Tavern Ambler Cabaret Main St. 731-5315. Walnut Street Theatre Fri., The Daves and Go-Man-Go. Chestnut Cabaret Sat., Dina Groove. 43 E. Butler 9th & Walnut streets, Philadelphia. Ave., Ambler. (215) 646-8117. ' 215 ) 574-3586. 38th and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia. Fri., Dave Alvin and Pulsations Delaware Theatre the All-Nigbters. Sat., The Pogues. ( 215) 382-1201. Fri., Va1 Young. Route 1, Glen Company Mills, Pa. (215) 459-4140. Water Street and Avenue of the 23 East Cabaret Arts, Wilmington. 594-1100. Grand Opera House Fri. and Sat., Tommy Conwell and 818 Market Street Mall, Wilm­ the Young Rumblers. 23 E. Lan­ ington. 652-5577. caster Ave., Ardmore. (215) 896-6420. -~iJD} ' Daugherty Hall Comedy Cabaret West Main Street, Newark. Sat., 9 The Trocadero p.m., One and Mustard Trucks. Fri. and Sat., Mike Saccione, Pat Fri., Hawaiian Shirt Gonzo Fri­ Godwin, Mike Green. 408 Market day, WMMR - 93.3 FM. Sat., Bacchus Theatre St., Wilmington. 65-A-M-U-S-E. Power 99 Dance Night. Student Center. Sat., 8 p.m., lOth and Arch streets, Volcano Suns, Membranes, Big Comedy Factory Outlet Philadelphia. (215) 592-8762. Dipper, and Great Plains. 31 Bank St., Philadelphia. (215) FUNNY-11. Tower Theatre Sun., Warren Zevon. 69th and Comedy Works Ludlow streets, Upper Darby. 126 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. (215) 352~313. \ Fri., 8:30-11 p.m. Sat., 8 and 11 Jerry Pinkney's art is on display in the University Gallery. p.m. (215) 922-5997.

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Import Beer $1.00 Per Bucket Additional Welcome Includes • Special on bftr by Parents! the pitcber, tool , .. SOUP and SALAD BAR BUFFET 100 Elkton Road, Newark, DE 737-2222 In Delaware you must be 21 to drink alcoholic beverages) ....------~~------.'ieptember 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 27 ••• a nightshirt with The Snap

continued from page Z3 can call in sick for," he sniff­ ed. "Contracts are binding, barriag an act of God." truck from LeRoy recalled doing a gig -"'M'\TUiin<> Z . Electronics, Ltd. for some high school kids dur­ <'\..... ••n~v~>s at the Stone Balloon ing a lightning storm which time for the band to caused a power failure. The band thought it was a problem in its system, so Beck started ~ -· ·1 . - ~ a drum solo to keep the crowd rocking. "Mter about a five-minute / solo, we realized it wasn't us," LeRoy explained. "We did .I _Q,/ ,..~.... some wild things with the '' drum beat ~nd started sing­ alongs. There were about 100 kids there and they still wanted to be entertained. "I guess that was an act of God that still didn't keep us back." The Snap prepares for the first set of the night. With a few seconds to spare, each LeRoy brothers join in member scribbles a tentative rhythm and lead guitar, first-set list. "Spontaneity is as Johnston survival," according to slides the keyboards. Johnston. (from left) Members of The Snap; Craig Price, Greg "Aussie" Johnston, Ben LeRoy, Pete LeRoy Mter over four hours of At about 10 p.m. the and Steve Beck. The group performs regularly in Newark. preparation, the band and spotlights go up and the band crew go their separate ways to starts to play. between sets. "The band is their jobs, Price explained, floor is a swarm of people get their "costumes" ready for "Just Like You," an upbeat more than most people think it "In our band we're breaking while the lights dim and The the show. Spandex is not Snap. dance song, is included in the is. It's a job and it's a that mold. We're doing what Snap bids the crowd good T-shirts and shorts make up second set. The crowd lifestyle." we want to do and we're mak­ night. the band's casual wardrobe. responds to it with enthusiasm We are living in a nine-to­ ing a living off it. After a short rest and a Back at Ben LeRoy's apart­ as it echoes through the bar: five world, Price said, and "In all reality we're doing quick discussion about "the ment, he calculates the "We're just like you/We're people don't· take musicians what everyone wants to do. gig," band and crew are back dosa -hour of cold just like you . . . " seriously. "In all reality, it's We're living our ,dream." on stage packing up the day's lmedic:ine he'll need for the Price takes a break from very serious," he stressed. As last call approaches, this events. night. studying to comment on his Contrary to a world where "dream" continues with an ex­ "It's not the kind of job you song as he crams for an exam many people are unhappy with plosive third set. The dance "We're just like you."

~~ ::~':'!,~ ~~ TAPES-CDs 54 E. Main St. OPEN DAILY Newark Mon.-Sat. 10-9 368-7738 Sun. 12-7 =~~:~:~~URE! THESE THIS THESE ALBUMS WEEKEND COMPACT & TAPES 699 ONLY DISCS 1499 PINK FLOYD New! REM No.5 Document! RUSH Hold Your Fire! KISS Crazy Nights! SQUEEZE Babylon & On! LL COOL J Bad! WASP Live! 10,000 MANIACS In My Tribe! BEATLES CD Magical Mystery Tour 5 14.99 -.rr~er the game. Yellow Submarine •12.99 us for Happy Hour and dinner ~lliilli~~ FRI- SAT- SUN ONLY always delicious daily specials! SMITHS -JETHRO TULL- Mmc:weU Sullivan's ••• a Restaurant . . AEROSMITH- DIRTY DANCING- 100 Elkton Road, Newark 1..1 Ew· LA BAMBA -JOHN COUGAR MELLENCAMP- 737~2222 .... 1/ t BILLY IDOL - L YNYRD SKYNYRD- _,. 0 c~· ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN- CURE- WATANABE- IN S I KITARO- PIL- BEEGEES- CULT- ABC- U2- MICHAEL JACKSON- JESUS & MARY CHAIN­ PET SHOP BOYS- BANANARAMA - METALLICA - DIO . ... do or dye. continued from page 23 like them or, as one :.Luuen• want to relate to," Hooper said, "because I saw them said. "It's about people who around and - it's so cool just want to go out and have it really doesn't matter. ' fun and be a good person. I Who knows how popular don't think it's much of a tem­ dye will get, and whether porary rage." be casual, radical, neo-Nazi Tie-dyes have always been just plain comfortable worn by some people and re­ wear? jected by others, and they will Whentheladiesinthe always be around, regardless hall start of current trends and fashions. just remember Whether some are wearing no-nonsense philosophy: ' tie-dyes because they really just a shirt." ... P ink Floyd THE REVIEW/ Dan Della Piazza continued from page 24 p1eces. , , , G"l1 mour ,s gm.ta r Owen Thorne, of Rainbow Records, displays some psychedelic apparel in the store. pocket watches whirled, spinn- mained true to Meddle's ed and dropped to the tick-tock perfection. rhythm of the song. Other Gilmour favorites Other songs like "Money," peared in rapid su

The C'Ullt T'UlfJ • Dancing Friday and • OFFICE SUPPLIES and FURNITURE Saturday nights with • COMPUTE~ ACCESSORIES • COPIES_, •ART & DRAFTING MATERIALS D.J. • Every Tuesday, - ~- uOF D STUDENTS I Wedne.sday, and 20°/o OFF ~~~HASE Call Thursday- Stroh's With AD 7SS- Beer 16 oz. for $1.00 OPEn 0 •6 00 E. mAin ST. 08SO SAT 0 •I nEWARH 57 Elkton Rd. ~ss Ao11 sbvro's Newark, Del. 19711 11!------September 25 , 1987 • The Review • Page 29 Comics COUNTY by Berke Breathed ~------~~ Movie HIJH ? WHA - .t­ WHY, 7H£ Ii'r1 FMCK WHO/..£ THIN& Wat.. llJM£ IN TH€ WAS ti(IST 71fPPf7r M€11/?0W / II {Jf(!AM /! I Listings I CASTLE MALL TWIN CINEMA •" La Bamba," (PG-13) 7:15, 9:30p.m. •"Beverly Hills Cop II," (R) 7:30, 9:30p.m. 738-7222. CINEMA CENTER-NEWARK SAY ... SORRY. NO. TTN 1HAT. •"The Big Town," (R) WOIJU? YOV . WOf//.1? YOU, OH NaT TlM€ YOf/ Tli/NK 8Y CHIINC€. 8Y CHANce . SORRY. W€t.L . YOIJ &OT PR08t.€M5, •"Dirty Dancing," (PG-13) HIIVf A ca.o HAVe NO. !MA&tN€ M££T7N& .JOHN •"The Principal," (R) t..eMONA/?6 ? tf 80 Mlt.LION . CONNAUY. Call Theater for Times I I FE&L MICH ~f? 737-3866 CHRISTIANA MALL •"The Pick-Up Artist,"

"listen. I've tried to communicate with Darren's heart quickened: Once inside him, but he's like a broken record: 'None the home, and once the demonstration of your bee's wcix, none of your bee's wax.' " was in full swing, a sale was inevitable. Page 30 • The Review • September 25, 1987 ---~-----...... ______,

~.

Academic OPEN a:::::~::::J Computing Services Parents' Day! Announces The Microcomputing Resource Center your resource for computer purchases on campus, will be open Saturday, September 26, 1987 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for Parents' Day

152 Newark Hall • 451-6782 September 25, 1987 • The Review • Page 31

11M' Review Classified Classified deadlines are Tuesday at 3 p.m. for Friday B-1 Student Center issues and Friday at 3 p.m. for Tuesday issues. For the first 10 words, $5 minimum for non-students. $1 for lewark, DE 19716 Classifieds students with ID. Then 10 cents for every word therearter.

Don't pay bookstore prices for FLOPPY STUDENT SECURITY AIDES- $5 per hour. ATTENTION ALL INTERESTED ICE No place to work on your group project? RSA HOCKEY PLAYERS! There are open cap­ sponsors group study rooms in 109 and 116 DISKS! AFROTC is selling double-sided, For more information, call Mr. Dean at 1 tain's practices on Saturdays at 11 a.m. for Sharp Lab, From 7 p.m . to midnight, Sunday double-density 5 /.-inch disks for just$.75. Stop 451-2682. anyone with experience. Come with equip­ DEAD HEADS: SPYRAL through Thursday. by 503 Academy St. to purchase disks. the GRATEFUL DEAD! Phone $10-$660 weekly /up mailing circulars! Rush ment or call 453-o432 or 453-8917 for info. to get on mailing list. Did your refrigerator arrive on time? RSA '85 Ninja 600R, low mileage, barnett clutch, self-addressed, smmped envelope to: Oppor­ NEEDED: A DATE. Bored? Lonely? Have wants to hear anything you may have to say K&N filter charger kit, 4-into-1 exhaust. $2300 tunity, 9016 Wilshire Blvd., Box 226, Dept. DA, •rdconv·ent:ion- Wilmington - Sunday, or b.o. Call Kurt at 366-9125 or 454-8426. Beverly Hills, CA 90211 . nothing to do on Friday nights? Why not try about our refrig~rator rental program. Call a dating service? We'll send you an interest %1, 10 a.m.~ p.m. Wilmington Lions us today at 451-2773, or stop by the Student survey to fill out and return •vith only two Rt.13, one mile north of Wilmington Air­ Center CRSA Office, room 211) . Fender Bullet electric guitar. Strat body, WAITERS/WAITRESSES: Part-time lunch Buy, sell and trade new, used and old telecaster neck. $225 or best offer. Call Kevin hours and/or evenings with or without ex­ dollars, and we'll find someone with your same interests. You can trust us - we're CDs, posters, buttons, etc. More in­ Positions available as inventory auditors. from 6-10 p.m . 23!Hll57. perience. 5 minutes from college. Call : psych majors! Call 731-3023. Stop s~ying in ) 636-5783 or Record Show Inc., P .O. Smrt $5.25, paid training, no experience VALLE PIZZA, 737-4545. your room weekends! 11625, Brooklyn Park, MD 21225. necessary. Call for interview. C215) 358-5022. '83 Toyom 4WD Truck. Red. 3-inch suspension lift, 33-inch mags, chrome wheels, AM/FM DELIVERY PERSONNEL: Part-time flexi­ Rush - Kappa Del~ Rho in the Student Any gripes about your rented refrigerator? equalizer stereo. 51K. Call Scott at 738-1140. ble hours. 5 minutes from college. $5-$8 per Center! Security Aides needed. $5 per hour. Late, dirty, dented, or just scratched? Call hour. Call Valle Pizza, 737-4545. information, call Mr. Dean at RSA at 451-2773 or stop by 211 Student Center SPEAKERS - pair of Advent Prodigies. On­ ROSES! ROSES! ROSES! Show a special per­ to LET US KNOW! ly 6 months old. 10-year warranty included. MARKETING: Individuals with college-level $275 for pair, dues. Call 453-8065 and ask for background in business, marketing, or adver­ son that you care. Send them one dozen roses for $17 or a half-dozen roses for $10. Delivery IU:FR:IGE:RA'fOR RENTERS - did your Top Fortune-500 Company is seeking a Cam­ Dale. tising to help implement network marketing available. Call Chris at 454-8407. on time? Was it dirty, dented or pus Manager to supervise ongoing projects concept. Call 328~95 . RSA and let us know. All com­ throughout the school year. Excellent week­ Laser 128 personal computer w/ Apple Rush Kappa Delta Rho - meet a real -•. crmco•rns or gripes are welcome. Call ly salary. If interested, call or send resume monochrome monitor and built-in disk drive. Earn $hundreds$ weekly in your spare time. brotherhood! or stop by 211 Student Center. to : Campus Dimensions, 2000 Market St., 11th Fully Apple Ue compatible. Asking $400. Call United Services of America is looking for Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19103, Attn: Nancy 731-3063. homeworkers to perform mail services. In­ CONGRATULATIONS SIGMA KAPPA Law. HI00-592-2121. centive programs available. For information, Two orange low-back swivel living room send large self-addressed, s~mped envelope PLEDGES! You made it! Love, The Sisters. chairs. $20 each. Very good. condition. 368-«l70 to U.S.A., 24307 Magic Moun~ln Pkwy., Suite after 4 p.m. 306, Valencia, CA 91355. IT presents Reggae band ONE with opening band MUSTARD TRUCKS Saturday, Sept. 26 to work on your group project? RSA for sale '76 Pontiac Gran Le Mans - 4-drive, auto, air, WANTED: Serious nude model (female> for at Daugherty Hall, 9 p .m . GROUP STUDY ROOMS in 109 and AM/FM, V8, str. eng. Must sell- $625 Cwill photo-project. $15/hr., 2hr. min. Con~ct John Lab, from 7 p.m. to midnight, Sun- neg.L 994-7257. at 454-7652 after 5. Welcome to ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA'S fall Thursday. ROSES! ROSES! ROSES! Show that special 1987 pledge class! person you care. Send them one dozen roses T AMA drumset: 4-piece set with Yamaha and Childcare for good-natured one-year-old, in STUDENTS BIBLE STUDY - for $17 or a half-dozen roses for $10. Please Ludwig snare drums, 3 cowbells and smnds your home. Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 9-5 SIGMA KAPPA pledges- Get psyched for an at noon, at the Fellowship call Chris at 454-8407. 24-hour notice needed. included. $800. James, 737-3627. thru Feb. Prefer parent with young children, AWESOME semester! _,, "'""""''"College Ave. Cblue house op- near university. Call 454-7690. to library parking lot). Just 1982 Toyom Corolla Tercel. Very good condi­ Don't leave home without IT. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship tion, low mileage, automatic, hatch-back. Non·smoking male looking for room near College Pro Balloons has balloons for all oc­ 368-5050. $3,200. Call 737~83 evenings. campus. Call 4~ •tid leave messages. lost and found casions - birthdays, sorority little sis, con­ Will pay f<" llook to Anton's 2nd gratulations - you name it! Call us at '83 Nighthawk 650, black, 10,500 miles. $1,000. LOST: A pair of prescription glasses with a $25 calculus text. · AI Lloyd at 992-9426. 451-2773. Call 366-9125. Ask for Lee; leave number. chip on left lens. If found please call73lHi362. Used CD's bought. Call Bill at 368-9994. IT's almost here! Chevrolet Malibu station wagon, 1981, LOST : Black and white kitty with red leather automatic, air-eonditioning, PB/PS, AM/FM, collar. Vic. Madison Drive. Answers to stereo cassette player, mgged until March Math tutor needed to teach Individual or small Don't miss IT-Reggae band ONE with open­ Ashley. Very missed. Please call 368-2936 if ing band MUSTARD TRUCKS. 1988, excellent condition, very dependable, found. groups. Must like to work with children. Part­ lOOk miles. $t,600. Call 453-()859 or 45t-1598 time. For more information, call Linda Fer­ nandez at the Latin American Community Congratulations to the new ALPHA SIGMA CRobert Teti). LOST: Ladies watch with black leather band Center at 655-7338. ALPHA pledge class! We're psyched to have and Roman numerals. Great sentimenml you! Love, The Sisters. '81 Buick Skylark. V6, PB/PS, AM/FM value. Please call 738-1350. cruiser. Very good condition. $2,500. Call after Reading tutor needed to teach small groups of children. Must have experience teaching SIGMA KAPPA welcomes the Gamma pledge 6 p.m. at 453-o827. MARY JESSICA JONES - I have your reading or be student teacher. Part-time. For class! wallet! Please call 738-1726 to claim! CARS FOR SALE: '74 Chevrolet Vega GT hat­ more information, call Linda Fernandez at the Latin American Community Center at IT's not just a job, IT's an adventure! chback. 4-speed, AM/FM cassette. Runs well. FOUND: Prescription glasses at Smith Over­ $400. '71 Dodge Colt 4-door automatic. Runs pass. Call 454-1466. 655-7338. well. $350. Call 695-4124 M-F, 7 a.m.-5 p.m. Congratulations to Alpha Chi Omega's Recreational Leader: Female with athletic fabulous 16th pledge class! FOUND: Ladies watch outside Smith Hall. background to help coordinate recreational 85', Ford Escort, 27,000 miles, smndard Call738-2468 to identify and it will be returned. transmission, two new radials, rear defroster, activities. Must be bilingual STUDENTS: Put your telephone marketing rustproof, one-year warranty. $3,800/B.O. Call Spanish/English. Part-time, from 4:30-8:30 skills to use! Callers are needed for ALUM­ Governments- Please send your R.S.A. Tanmay at 451-1846CWl , 368-8943CHL p.m . For more information, call Ricky NI PHONATHON. Evening calling sessions, ""l'eS

financial community and their impact on employment THE REVIEW/ Don Della Piazza opportunities. Gil Knight looks to wrap up a starting spot in Hens' backfield.

Thursday, October 1 • • • Knight's day continued from page 35 Delaware's defense will JOB JAMBOREE have to key on Richmond's 1:00-4:00 pm 101 A&B Clayton Hall going to start." running virtouso, tailback Er­ Meet employers from over 70 companies. (Watch for Whether or not Knight start& win Matthews, who scored six against Richmond this Satur­ touchdowns in last week's university Job Jamboree Bus) . day, the Hens· will have to get 54-51, four-overtime victory some good running from one of over UMass. their backs: Establishing a Unfortunately, stopping FROM SENIOR TO ENGINEER: HOW TO TURN running game would open up Matthews may be harder than INTERVIEWS INTO JOB OFFERS more passing oportunities getting political candidates to against Richmond's ex­ tell the truth. 7:00-9:00 pm 140 DuPont Hall perienced secondary. If the defense can't stop Learn what a panel of experienced recruiters are looking Easier said than done. Matthews, the offense will for in job candidates. have to do much more scoring The Spiders' (2-1 overall, 2-{) than it's used to. in the Yankee Conference) defense has been shaky in its That's where Knight could SUCCESSFUL INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES first three games, allowing help out. 7:00-9:00 pm 115 Purnell Hall 'Xl.3 points-per game including He's had his chance - and 51 last week against succeeded. Now all that's left Examine typical campus interviews through mock Massachusetts. to do is sit back and watch. interviews depicting frequently asked questions and potential "problem·· areas. Presented by employer representatives from Coopers & Lybrand.

Monday, October 5 CAREER.JIGSAW: PUTTING THE PIECES TOGETHER 2:30-3:30 pm Ewing Room-Student Center Explore self-assessment strategies for the first step in BREAD & CO. is a unique bakery/cafe specializing in heavenly made croissants. breads of full grain, all natural ·career planning. pastries and gourmet entrees ~-sREAo&co.~rn5coumco~oN-i I Limited Time Of/er STUDENT DISCOUNT 1 DOES YOUR RESUME WEAR BLUE JEANS? I Free Soda or Your ID Entitles 1 Coffee with you to a 10".. Discount I 3:30-5:00 pm Ewing Room-Student Center Purchase For all Bakery Products I of any Bakery and Entrees. Between the I Learn to market your education and work experience Product. Hours of 10 to 11:30 am through a resume and cover letter. Bring Coupon. and 2:30 pm to 5:30 pm daily l We------~ are international in Oavor, natural in ingredients, and wholesome all the time. Try us! Featuring The 19th Now open on 90 East Main Street, Newark, DE DAILY 8 AM to 9 PM Annual Job Jamboree! • • • field hockey LeRoy continued from page 36 "Ange keeps everything in Princeton had an excellent the proper perspective," said sets opportunity to score, on a Hitchens. "She knows that one breakaway, but Ange Bradley player doesn't get credit for a made a kamikaze save. "It shutout, the team does." record was a one-on-one situation," Well. the team has already said Bradley. "I went out to posted three goose eggs and Laura LeRoy became the the top of the circle and put a have earned themselves a na­ winningest singles player in block slide on her. By then, my tional ranking. Delaware is Delaware women's tennis defense had recovered behind ranked 17th according to the history with a 6-3, 6-0 victory me and it turned out the way first weekly Division I-A Wednesday against Rutgers it was supposed to." Coaches Poll. University. Delaware held on for the vic­ But there is a tough task LeRoy, a junior, now has 41 tory. In the process, Bradley ahead. The Hens face No. 6 career victories, one ahead of recorded her 20th shutout. Stanford on Saturday and No. former standouts Carol Ren­ That leaves her just one shy of 2 West Chester on Tuesday. frew and Margie Dukakis. tying the all-time Delaware If they can pull off a couple The junior's win was one of mark of 21. of upsets, their ranking will the few bright spots for On this team however, not jump considerably. Delaware, who lost, 7-2, to the just the goalie records a They're in control of their Scarlet Knights. The Hens are shutout. own destiny. 4-2 on the season. K PLACE APARTMENTS NAVY HIRING PILOTS FOR 1988-90 • Large, Spacious apartments with many closets including walk-in size. • Conveniently located near campus (within 6 blocks) • Heat & hot water included. One and Two Bedroom Apartments NAVY OFFICER REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE CONDUCTING EXCLUSIVE Available from $388.00 TESTING SESSIONS IN THE DELAWARE VALLEY REGION IN THE NEAR FUTURE. All INTERESTED STUDENTS WHO ARE WITHIN THREE YEARS OF GRADUATION ARE ENCOURAGED TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS OPPORTUNITY. A TESTING APPOINTMENT MAY BE OBTAINED BY CAlliNG TOll FREE. 650 Lehigh Rd., Apt. 1·1 PA 1-800-322-9595 NJ/DE 1-800-327-0931 Newar~ DE 1 9711 M·F 9 -to 7 SAT. 1 0·4 COMPLETE TRAINING PROVIDED FOR All POSITIONS PILOTS-$21 ,200 start, 20/20 uncorrected vision, all majors, 19-26 years old. FLIGHT OFFICERS-$21 ,000 start, 20/20 corrected vision, all majors, 19-26 years old. THE MEMBRANES MANAGERS-$19, 127 start, Ship handling and ship management, strong emphasis in personnel management, all majors, 19-27 years old. BUSINESS MANAGERS-$19, 127 start, Finance, Retail Sales, logistics, Inventory VOLCANO SUNS - Control. Business majors preferred. 19-28 years old. NUCLEAR ENGINEERS-$25,361 start. Physics, Math, Chemistry, Engineering p students with 3.0+ GPA. Scholarships Available. B I G D I p E R ****SOPHOMORES/JUNIORS**** Ne...; Naval Aviation Programs with GUARANTEED flight training. NAVCAD: .{Naval Aviation Cadet Program) Have Associates Degree or 6(J G R E A T. P L A I N S semester hours, 20/20 uncorrected vision, 19-24 y~ars old may qualify for immediate pilot training. - AVROC: {Aviation Reserve Officer Candidate) Pilot/Flight Officer training RECORDS BY HOMESTEAD conducted during junior year summer break and upon comple!ion of BAIBS Degree. LIVE S H 0 W BY w·x D R Navy representatives will be on campus for Career Day on October 1, 1987. For immediate information please call SATURDAY SEPT 26 8:00 P.M. 1-800-322-9595 (PA) or 1-800-327-0931 (NJ/DE). BACCHUS THEATRE U OF D

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INFORMA T/ON AVAILABL:E: 302 1451-2701 Page 34 • The Review • September 25, 1981_...- .;.· .;.· .:.· .:.· .:.· .:.· .:.· ---~-----.....;.....;..._,;_,__...-..-..-.._...;....;...._____ ...... _.;.... ____ .....,__...... ,__._.....,....,_ Delaware levels -...J. Leopards by Heidi Shurak Staff Reporter The Delaware volleyball team opened its East Coast Conference season with a close win over Lafayette, 3-2, Tues­ day at Carpenter Sports Building. The match featured outstan­ ding play on both sides of the net as the teams split the first four games. According to captain Betsy Cullings, the team's only weakness through . the first four sets had been blocking. "In the last game, we came through with three key blocks," said head coach Barb Viera. With Delaware leading, 13-6. in the rubber .game, the Leopards <1-2 overall, 0-1 in the ECC) reeled off three points before Viera called timeout. With clenched fists and · EW/lloyd Fox stomping feet, Viera watched Hens' Debbie Delaney and Jill Simpson look to block a Leopard return Tuesday at Carpenter Sports Building. Delaware won, 3-2. her squad finish off the Leopards. "It all came together in the "Last year at this time we Junior Jill Simpson, a DIGS: Viera will coach her Sophomore Ingrid end," Cullings said. were losing. transfer from Georgetown · 600th career match this Loewrigkeit "killed" a The victory raised the Hens' "This was the best overall University, continued her tear weekend as the Hens compete Lafayette return, putting the ~ecord to a respectable 5-2. 1-o match in terms of the girls with the Hens. Her 53 kills are in the Towson State Invita­ Hens within one point of en­ m the ECC. playing together as a team a team-high. tional. .. The Hens have won ding the marathon match. The "We've gotten off to a good from beginning to end," Viera four straight and 16 of their Hens held on to win. 15-9. beginning," Viera said. added. "There's no problem fitting last 21 matches at Carpenter in with the team," Simpson Sports Building ... The Hens said. "I've played with some of are now 8-0 lifetime against these people before, and I had the Leopards in a series that coach Viera in high school." dates back to 1981. OPPORTUNITY PT / FT Companion/Homemaker • No Training Necessary • Provide Companionship • Cooking/ Light Housekeeping • Run Errands • Up to ss.OO/ hour Nurse Assistant • Training Necessary , • Private Duty Assignments Dependable Transportation and Phone Necessary, up to s9.00/hour 1111 1111 EUIIaR( ELDERCARE 479-5200 night waits for his da)' by JeH James chewing out of his life - if he Sports Editor was lucky. But head coach Tubby Raymond didn't say a Halfback Gil Knight would word to Knight. gt'f his chance to show what he "I thought I'd never play rould do in last Saturday's another down of Delaware game at Delaware Stadium. football," Knight said. He knew it. "Because it was like I had my But he didn't think it would shot and blew it. rome as early as it did. "[Raymond] didn't say When quarterback David anything to me when I got Sirrer stuck his head into the hack to the sideline, he just sat huddle on the first play from me down and I didn't play for srrimmage and called a good long while." Knight's number, the chance Knight had plenty of time to was there. think about the fumble during The 5-foot-9, 170-pound his exile to the bench. He ran !'nphomore took Sierer's han­ the ball only one other time in clnff and sprinted right, getting the half, gaining three yards. quickly into the open. But - like a fine wine - Being flattened underneath Knight got better with time. n stack of defensive linemen The sophomore gained 37 il'n't Knight's idea of a fun more yards in the second half Saturday afternoon. and caught two passes for 24 Stepping on the throttle - yards, including a six-yard intn that gear all great running touchdown reception. ha<'ks seem to have - he ate Not a bad day for the up the sloppy Delaware Newark, N.J. native who led Stadium turf. "This isn't so the freshman team in rushing THE REVIEW/ Don Della Piazza hard." Knight probably last season with 269 yards and Delaware running back Gil Knight bursts through a hole Saturday in the Hens' 28--21 victory. thought. three touchdowns in five He passed the 40, midfield, games. and was well into Ram ter­ Knight hasn't been rewriting ritnry before he met up with a the record books in his first n'ry unhappy West Chester two games - he hasn't even 11 Uahlas St. lnvark sPcondary. . put much distance between (302) 717.5379 Twenty-three yards from himself and the other thC' line of scrimmage, Knight halfbacks. But his perfor­ lnwered his head and plowed mances have given the Hens a into the group of tacklers. He decent running threat. clid everything he was suppos­ Something they weren't sup­ C'd to do. posed to have this season. Except hold onto the ball. "No one has locked down a West Chester's Dean DiPas­ starting position in the quale recovered the fumble, backfield," he said. "There is while Knight wondered what a lot of competition. No one would become of him. knows until Saturday who is He jogged back to the sideline expecting to get the continued to page 32

"Featuring the widest selection of beer in the Delaware area." STATELINE LIQUORS me.m AT ASHBY's OYSTER HOUSE 1610 Elkton • Newark Road Elkton, Maryland 21921 Every Sunday we offer a full menu of eggs, omelettes, 1-800-446-9463 and pancakes. Plus Eggs Wellington, Benedict, Impe­ rial and Florentine. A smoked fish platter, steak & eggs, Featuring This Week: and our_full lunch and dinner menu is also available. Peter's Brand Brunch served every Sunday 10-3. Holland Beer All brunch selections include breakfast potatoes, 12 oz. nr bottle bagels or blueberry muffins and choice of juice. -9.99 case SPECIAL BRUNCH DRINKS $1°0 Domestic & Imported Kegs Available Bloody Marys, Mimosas, Screwdrivers, Glass of Cham­ OPEN 7 DAYS pagne, Cape Codder, Sea Breeze. No Deposit/ No Return Bottles Page 36 • The Review • September 25; 1987------1

Hens dOuse Tigers on Scally's goal by Keith Flamer Statistics don't lie. Delaware Assistant Sports Editor has only given up one goal this If it's possible for there to be season - playing good defense rain and a drought at the same in all their games. time, the Delaware field And that continued into the hockey team experienced it on second half against Prihceton Tuesday. (Q-3). However, the Hens of­ Once again, the Hens had to fense still struggled. contend with factors other "We were out of position a than the opposing team. few times," said Scally, "and And again they edged out we can't afford to do that. another win in a highly con­ We'd better correct it very tested game, this time over soon." Ivy League opponent Mental errors were also Princeton University, 1-0. Delaware's heartache in The game was briefly Saturday's game against delayed midway through the Hofstra. "We made mental er­ first half as lightning and the rors today," said head coach threat of rain passed over. Mary Ann Hitchens, "but not Play was already slowed con­ as many as in the Hofstra siderably by a wet field. game." That took away a Delaware Although Princeton was advantage because they winless, they gave the Hens weren't able to use their speed trouble. "It was a different effectively. kind of game," said Hitchens. "We got off to a slow start to­ "They frustrated us by playing day," said sophomore Moe beyond the 25 yard line and we Scally. "After the delay, we would get called for offsides played a little better." penalties. Princeton does that Although they may have very well." played better - they still The dark clouds that had couldn't score. stopped play in the first half The first half ended in a 0-0 passed over and a little sun tie. began to peek through. The offense did not appear to . The Hens saw daylight. be a problem at the start of the The scoring drought was season. Through four games, broken when Moe Scally slap­ Del a ware ( 3-0-1), has scored ped in a goal off a rebound only one goal in the first half, with 19 minutes left in the but has managed to win games game. "Lynn flannotta] at­ with second half surges. tempted a shot," said Scally, On the contrary, the defense "and when the goalie made an was seen as a major area of attempt to clear it, I flipped it concern in pre-season. So far, in." the defensive unit has kept the From there, the Hens THE REVIEW/lloyd Fox Hens in each game until the of­ defense took control. Delaware's Moe Scalley and Laura Domnick celebrate the lone goal in Hens' 1-0 win Tuesday. fense has come around. continued to page 33 Offense sputters zn• loss to Fords by Jon Springer team. And Wednesday's game the Hens' fourth of the season hard to be enthusiastic,-" said tunities." was supposed to be a tune-up - at the 8:45 mark of the first The game ended a forget­ Sports Editor Kline. "It's hard to work hard for the Division I-AA Hens. half. Robinson was assisted by and run hard when you're not table four-game road swing HAVERFORD, PA. - To The kind of game that can in­ midfielder Alex Redfield and winning." for the Hens, who lost three win a soccer game, a team flate some stats and boost forward Ron Sandell. The statistics continue to tell and managed to score only needs _to score goals. some confidence for a team In the second half, the Fords the story of tfie Hens' season. four goals. Fortunately, the No brilliant deduction there, that's had a couple of hard continued their long passes Again the offense outshot the Hens have faced only one but scoring continues to be a overtime games. and created breakaways, as opponent's, 11-9. Again they ference opponent. mystery for the anemic Forget the tune-up. With Kelly, on an assist from Doug trailed in goals scored. So returning home to Delaware offense. ' tougher challenges ahead, this Donsky, beat Ormsby for the And again the Hens' are do­ Delaware Field may be the The closest thing to a team may need an overhaul. second time in the game to put ing their job defensively. Orm­ best solution for the ongoing Sherlock Holmes for the Hens But the Fords, on the other them up, 2-1. sby and counterpart Tom scoring mystery. The Hens is senior forward Dwayne hand, seemed to be fueled with "After that it was all us," Boogard both recorded six will be at home to face East Robinson, who managed to upsetoline as David Kelly put said Kline. But Kline's team saves. Coast Conference rivals score Delaware's only goal in the first of his two goals past knew it was losing, and "Haverford is a well­ Lehigh Saturday, and will host a disappionting 2-1 loss to the Hens' Dave Ormsby after couldn't capitalize on its op­ disciplined, well-coached Rider Wednesday. Haverford College (6-2) . only three minutes of play. portunities for the remaining team," said Kline. "They "[Lehigh] looks like a Adding insult to the injury, Robinson struck back with 15 minutes. worked hard, and took advan­ mismatch now," Kline said. Haverford is a Division III his third goal of the season - "When you're losing, it's tage of their few oppur- "But we have to success in our conference." ODYssEus POLlJTRopos ~f;:'l:ctt-JQI Reac1~ Q:) tn .. ocr~ v i;Jr).;j ·~ f! Od

. , ote from the exec.•. The university administration - a collec- ·ve term that tends to mask the individual. order to reveal the people behind. the a combination of our initiative their ~ssistance was imperative in pro­ ducing the finished product - an inside look. Much thanks to Russel C. Jones, Ray mond Peters III, Staurt J. Sharkey, ward Nolan and Harvey Stone for us into their homes and sharing their time. We regret that L. Leon Campbell ed to cooperate in this endeavor. next time.

- Camille Moonsam

do outside of their universi- With the cooperation of the editorial ty jobs? Should 1•t rnatt er t o admi"n•"strators and former Several weeks ago my ex- students that President Editor-in-Chief John Martin, executive editor, Camille Russel Jones has a toy former Executive Editor Moonsammy, came to me train? Or that Ray Peters Alice Brumbley, and Review with an idea. has two brand new, beautiful editors, this is a unique peek She wanted to do a special babies? at the personal lives of your section about some of our top Of course it should. administration. administrators. She wanted It's sometimes hard to It has been quite a project. to focus on their personal believe, but administrators An idea I thought was com­ lives. She wanted that inside aren't just voices on the pletely silly -is completely look. other side of the telephone legitimate and one of the She's so vogue. (but they do dodge a few best special sections to ap- "But seriously," she yell- calls here and there); they pear in The Review. ed, "I think this would be a aren't people to distrust The scary thought is that good idea.'' (unless L. Leon Campbell's these special sections will I thought the idea was nam~ pops up); and for the probably get better. crazy. most part, they're fairly nice Even without the coopera- 1 mean, really, who (unless L. Leon Campbell's tion of L. Leon Campbell. caresabout what these people name pops up). - Mike Freeman Page B-2 • The Review • Sept. 25, OR.;__ :__~~::.J~~..':!:.:: ______::_:_;__;______--:----;-----' inally, the family could be together. There were no meetings to attend. No appointments F to keep. His '------..J schedule may be booked until December, but · tonight was their night. Dinner was served. The main course? Take your pick: chicken or ham salad sandwiches. Cute. This was your typical Walton-like meal. The food was appetizing and the conversation warm. Everything was fine. Then, someone blew it. Russel C. Jones was reminded of a nasty incident from his past. Which, in turn, gave the univer­ sity's 23rd president some nasty flashbacks. His usual smiling face turned stoic and solemn. A cheery personality became melancholy. His cheeks were flushed. He was irritated. He looked to his left, glared at his 11-year-old daughter, Kim, then took a chunk out of his sandwich. That past crisis should not have been resurfaced. It should have been forgotten, left alone, erased from the minds of the family. But it wasn't. THE REVIEW/ Eric Russell What was causing such bably be wrong. How many have any trouble introducing into BU's then sagging engineer­ turmoil? fathers are the president of a myself to people. Not really. Most ing program, and Silber would large university? Or mothers Someone, oh my God, had people I meet are interesting. " make him a president. almost wrecked the president's division manager's of one of the "We try to do as many family "I interviewed with several toy train. largest software companies in things as possible," Russel said schools. I remember coming "The boys from [his eight­ the world? Not many families between bites. "Recently we back to my hotel from one inter­ year-old daughter, Tammie's} would be willing to entertain over went for a picnic to Tower Hill {in view and the message light on the class got a little rough with my 3,000 freshman students in their Wilmington]. We had fun despite phone was flashing. It was our home, but the Joneses did just · electric train," said daddy with a the massiv.,e mosquitos." housekeeper back in Boston. The smirk on his face. that, earlier this year during . • • • call was urgent. I figured one of "His beautiful electric freshman orientation. the kids must be sick. Russel C. Jones knew he would train, "said Kim mocking her But to say the Joneses aren't "I called her and she said it be a university president some­ father. normal people would also be was [Delaware's Hon. G. Burton day, it was just a matter of when "He's really sensitive about his wrong. Very wrong. They go Pearson} and that he must talk and where. train," said his wife, Sharon. through the same trials and with me tonight. No matter what The 51-year-old Jones, born in "But it's really a gorgeous tribulations as most any other time it is. Call him at home. I Tarentum, Pa., graduated from train." family. They laugh and argue at called him and he said I was the the Carnegie Institute of Now the explanation. the dinner table; the kids still top candidate and that the sear~h Technology in 1957 with a "He (a student} kept running complain when it's time for bed; committee wanted my aecep­ bachelor's degree in civil the train the wrong way," ex­ grandma comes over to visit and tance before they went beforte the plained Tammie, occasionaly take care of the children when the engineering. He later earned his entire board of trustees. He said master's and doctoral degrees peeping at her father. "I kept tell­ parents are away. There time the committe would meet that from the same institution. ing him to stop but he wouldn't." spent together is sometimes Saturday. After teaching at the Welcome to the Jones family. short, but that makes it all the "I sat by the telephone and Massachussetts Institute of more priceless. waited. Sharon was in Europe Technology and after a brief stint • • • "We were at the second recep­ [after he found out he got the as a department chairman at tion after [last Saturday's} foot- job]. We were scheduled for Ohio State University, Jones President Jones spends 15 ball game," said the president. another interview the next day. minutes a day on an "excercy- "{Tammie] wanted to borrow became dean of the school of We flew to Denver ... then got cle." Kim plays soccer at school my pen so she could write presi­ engineering at the University of another airplane at 8 a.m. We had and said the first day of practice dent's daughter on her name Massachussetts. to get up at five in the morning to was "harder than 15 minutes on tag." He became vice president for catch that plane. the exercycle." Sharon is the pro- "You have to enjoy what you're academic affairs at Boston "Then I said to myself, 'why totype of the housewife/working doing," Sharon said about being University in 1981. are we going to this interview, woman. She is the manager of mother/professional/president's Why Jones went to BU is no we've got a job?' " software engineering for Digital wife. "If you enjoy what you're secret. The controversial Corp. and makes excellent doing then I think it's an oppor­ John Silber; president of Boston • • • spinach salad. Tammie is tunity. If you don't enjoy what University, was quoted as saying His job, for this night, was be­ unbearably cute and looks as if you're doing then [being the Jones came to BU because, "his ing a father. Something Russel C. she belongs on Sesame Street· president's wife] could become ambition was to be a college Jones is balancing with another chitchatting with Big Bird. an i_ntrusion into your personal president." Jones would use his job - college president. fund-raising skills, the same way To say the Joneses are a nor- life. -Mike Freeman mal, nuclear family would pro- "Somebody asked me if I ever he did at UMASS, to bring money Page B-3 • The Review • Sept. 25, !9/l •

t

'•

SPECIAL TO THE REVIEW/ Lloyd Fox

Page B-4 o The Review o Sept. 25. 1981------J , t 5:50 p.m., Ray plained Stuart Sharkey, who a.s vice presi­ ed such a move would be difficult without a Peters walked through dent for student affairs strongly supported doctorate. the door of his Newark the promotion. And understandably, time poses the big­ home. Sons Sam and Ironically, the Peters had twice as much gest barrier for Ray. "I just don't see myself A Tom were enjoying a reason to celebrate when the search was getting that block of time," he said. leisurely dinner in the over - Sam and Tom were bom the night kitchen, face-to-face in before the Jan. 24 announcement. with Sam • • • * * .______,their highchairs, while capturing the oldest son honors_ Another thing stands between Ray and a Susan Peters surveyed the inevitable • • • • cleanup job that lay ahead. * third degree - his desire to write. "I think if I had that block of time," he The eight-month-old twins appeared in­ Back at home, the twins joined the activi­ trigued by the two unfamiliar visitors, said, "I'd write another novel." ty in the livingroom_ Their playpen in the The first novel, untitled, sits on a shelf especially the one holding the camera. middle of the room guaranteed them a "Sam loves to have his picture taken," his somewhere in the Peters' home. Based on healthy portion of the attention_ Sam laugh­ the author's experiences as an investigator mother explained. ed and danced to the jazz music flowing from Ten minutes later, Ray had replaced his for the state Bureau fo_r Disease Contr?l, the speaker a few feet away_ Tom bouneed Ray believes it was a ltttle too true-to-hfe suit with a pair of jeans, a red-striped oxford around too, not to be bested by his brother. and some leather Reebok sneaks. After mak­ and its publication might unnecessarily hurt "They laugh at each other a lot. •• Susan some people. . ing a selection from the numerous albums, Peters had remarked earlier_ ..They think tapes and compact discs that lined the far But it's not a lack of topics that is keeping they're really funny_" bookstores waiting for a Ray Peters novel. wall of the livingroom (jazz and the Rolling A stranger to the Peters family would un­ Stones being the household favorites), Ray "I've got a notebook full of dozens of ideas," doubtably have difficulty differentiating bet­ he explained. . settled comfortably into a rocking chair. ween the rambunctious twins_ In the begin­ Unfortunately, it was only, a temporary The family is not limited to one wnter, ning, it wasn't so easy for the parents either, however. Susan graduated from William and respite from his job as executive assistant Susan admitted. to the president- he had only a few hours Mary University with a double major in Some blue toenail polish on Tom proved to English and anthropology before she earn­ before he had to return to his office. be a fashionable savior for an early identity Not unlike many of the officials in Russel ed her master's degree in English at crisis between the twins and ongoing confu­ Delaware. Jones' administration, Raymond I. Peters sion for the parents_ Now it's not so hard. III can summarize his new position in a few She then worked locally at Writers Inc. as words: "Very busy, very demanding." (Sam's the camera ham, remember?) a technical writer, a profession to which she Sam laughed and danced to the jazz music flowing from the Speaker a

~ few feet away. Tom bounced around too, not to be bested by his brother.

And finding time for his wife aT!d sons is For now the Peters, married almost three would like to return someday, she said. years, are quite comfortable in Newark.. Bet­ becoming increasingly difficult, he said. "I * • • don't see them as much as I like." But, he ween raising the boys and Ray's new job, * * joked, "I think th~y still remember me when there's not a lot of time to think about much Ray looks forward to working with his new I come home." · else. boss, Russel Jones, and being involved in "Project Vision," the new president's plan * * * * • • * • • * for the university. He foresees a lot of positive ch~mges, Aside from all the time he devotes to the Ray, like his wife, grew up in Wilmington especially after Jones' restructunng of university, Ray said he enjoys his job. It's and has spent most of his life in the First budget responsibilities. "That has all sorts been quite a successful climb for the 37-year- State, as his father was employed by the Du of ramifications," Ray said. "f!he pre11~: old Delaware native. Only seven years ago, Pont Co. dent] is going to be much more mvolved. he received his bachelor's degree in English Paying for his own undergraduate educa- But Ray understands that the success of from the university. tion, he held a variety of jobs including a the program depends on total universi!Y par­ He followed that with a master's degree position as a seafood salesman and a factory ticipation and echoed a common sentiment. in the same subject, during which he met a job as a machinist- "and that's the worst." "I'd like to see students get more involved." fellow T.A., Susan Jolly, later to become "You'veneverhadalousyjobuntilyou've Mrs. Ray Peters. had to work in a factory and drill the same • • * * Ray spent a few years teaching English, hole over and over and over for eight and a * a position to which he has no desire to return. half hours when it's 110 degrees." he said. The album on the stereo winded down, the "I don't think I could stand teaching another "I'll take being busy and workin' hard to do- pizza had served its usefulness, Tom was out E 110 class." ing something boring." of sight and Sam, a lad in blue overalls, ":'as In 1985, Ray was appointed assistant to the Ray says he is "committed" to higher starting to tire of his monotonous bouncmg vice president for student affairs, a position education, and his job as right-hand man to in the blue jumper. Soon, Ray would return he held for two years. President Jones will give him an opportuni- to his office. On Aug. 15 of this year, Ray was named ty to demonstrate that commitment. Although Ray said he had a week off dur- to his present position in an announcement "My job is basically to do a lot of the nuts ing the summer, remembering his last vaca- that he and his wife both admitted was a sur- and bolts work for the president." he e.x- tion was not an easy task, looking to the next prise. "It happened very quickly," his wife plained, "and to implement a lot of the things one was much easier. said. But after his work as secretary of the he wants done." "I'd like to be away from it all," he ex- presidential search committee, many felt He said he is pleased to be working in plained. "Up in the mountains, reading ... the appointment was well deserved. higher education and would eventually like and writing." _ John Martin "It was the [new] president's idea," ex- a more supervisory position, but he conced­ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-PageB~ • TheRev~w•Sep~ 2~ 1~7 '

Page B-6 • The Review • Sept. 25. 1987 tuart J. Sharkey's Cutting "red tape" is Sharkey's specialty, Sharkey grew up in rural Peekskill, NY, mother and one of her according to Rick A. Hauge, Resident Stu­ near White Plains, with his parents and closest friends arranged dent Association president in the mid-70s. younger sister. a blind date for him From dealing with Sharkey, Hauge learn­ ' ' W-e had a large house which was the around Christmas 1960. ed, "You've got to know not just the system, center of things," because his family had one He married that date, but each person in the system and what of the first TVs in the area, in addition to ping Hirttla Ashman, one year makes them tick." pong and billiard tables. " My friends would later following a long­ Past student leaders herald Sharkey as come and watch the baseball games. It was s distance courtship. one of the administrators who takes time to the time of Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Man­ ______.. After teaching hil!h help students. tle." school history all week, he "He enjoys his job. It's obvious in the ways His family spent the weekends entertain­ would leave New York at 3:30 p.m. on he talks to you," said Yolanda D. Jones, last ing New York City relatives who came " up Fridays and drive fast enough "to beat out year's BSU president and a present member to the country" to visit. " The country" isn't all the Greyhounds" for a weekend visit with of the university board of trustees. what it used to be, though. his honey in Baltimore. "He doesn't act like you're bothering " It's ·a bit like what Newark is going It was during that pre-I-95 era that him," she said. "No matter what ad­ through and I feel sad when I see all of this. Sharkey managed to clock the 200-mile trip ministrative work-or papers he's working on, Now it's bumper-to-bumper cars ... it's like a at five-and-a-half hours, eventually burning he always dropped it if a student came into. piece of Kirkwood Highway," Sharkey said. out his car's motor. his office." Hinda Sharkey knew her husband was Sharkey was able to advance to the vice • * • • * unhappy teaching high school and influenc­ president position without a Ph.D., but he ed him to look for another kind of job. "does a lot of the things that a person holding His daughter Karen is a sophomore at the "I went to teach four years, got tenure, a Ph.D. would do," he said. university and is involved in ROTC arid the was the advisor of the school paper and said, He writes and presents papers at regional Rangers, instructs rapelling and is fluent in 'I do not like working with high school and national conferences and his interest in the history and statistics of the Blue Hens youth.' " academics is evidenced by his co-founding from her years of watching football with her To re-enter the college administration the university's Honors Program. He also father. _ field, he became a Russell Hall director and teaches two courses: an undergraduate His son Jeff, a pianist and noted composer, complex coordinator at the university in course titled Leadership Skills and a is in his second year of his master's degree 1963. graduate course called Issues in Higher at Yale. That experience taught him much of what Education. Hinda, Sharkey's wife, was formerly a he needed to know for his present position as teacher and is now a legal assistant in vice president for Student Affairs, which he • • • • • Wilmington . It was during that pre-I-95 era that Sharkey managed to clock the 200-mile trip at five-and-a-half hours, eventually burning out his car motor.

has held since 1980. As an undergraduate, Sharkey started as The three facets of Sharkey's job are ad­ "No vice president should be vice presi­ a pre-law student at St. Lawrence Universi­ ministering seven major university depart­ dent unless he has been a hall director and ty. He could have gotten a 4.0 or a 3.8 but ments plus the Perkins Student Center, ad­ has lived with students in the residence " made a conscious decision not _to," he said. vising the president on university-wide pro­ halls," he explained. jects and meeting with students and student " You cannot learn about students from a He was a serious student but wanted to live a balanced life including his interest in stu­ groups. The duty Sharkey prefers to talk textbook or from talking with students for a about is dealing with students. half-hour across a desk." Living with dent activities. Since he no longer lives in a residence hall, students around-the-clock taught him how "I decided to get involved. But I was at he keeps in touch with student life through students relax, interact and deal with the least smart enough to limit it," he said. "And informal get-togethers with campus leaders stresses of college life. boy, was that hard!" at his Newark home. Sharkey, the first administrator in the ear­ On a more formal level, he is an advisor ly 70s to sport a goatee, had his finger on the • • to Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity and pulse of the college youth· and led major • • * a co-advisor to the Black Student Union. He reforms in residence halls during his tenure appoints members to his Undergraduate Stu­ as director of Housing and Residence Life. At St. Lawrence, Sharkey was the founder dent Cabinet and meets regularly with stu­ Under his leadership the women's and and .first president of the chapter of Phi Kap- dent government leaders. men's resident student associations were pa Sigma. He was also captain of the debate "One thing I could devote time to is work­ desegregated to form the present Resident ing with the president and working with Student Association. He pushed for visitation team. "The debating and the fraternity ex- staff, but I enjoy working with students. I rights, coed residence halls and eliminating like it. " curfews for women. perience probably have helped me more Primarily, he works with leaders of stu­ "I've always believed in women's equity. than absolutely anything else in my future dent organizations who need help starting I guess that's the way I was brought up. major projects. He also sees individual "It took time to convince the administra­ career," he said. "I wouldn't be where I am today if I was a superb historian, or students who are "thoroughly frustrated tion," because his ideology was "directly the with the bureaucracy because they have opposite" of the other administrators, scholar." He decided he didn't like studying law and such a unique problem they don't fit in any Sharkey said. other channels." It was also his insistence that combined switched to a history and government major. Sharkey doesn't think he'll ever leave UD. Residence Life with the housing department, He continued graduate studies at St. "I think this is it. I've been here too long." formerly a part of Food Service. Lawrence for a master's degree in counsel­ ing while simultaneously serving as the - Alice Bnunbley • • • • • aniversity's first assistant dean of men. I ------Page B-7 • The Review • Sept. 25, 1987

uthor, pianist, He has .been enjoying life in Delaware a way of thinking about reality." associate professor to because "there are some very spooky and Nolan said his idea came from "an ex­ English and comparitive dark parts to the confrontations of reality, traordinary and haunting phrase of St. literature, Dr. Edward just as there are dangerous times when the Paul's, 'now we see in a glass darkly, then Nolan is the new special land meets the sea." we shall see face to face' ". assistant to the president "This is the reason I love the coasts." "[The book] is about Roman and Medieval for communications He believes this kind of conflict is poetry - the poetry of Virgil and Ovid as a under President Jones. necessary. "I think when all conflict is over, kind of base for the poetry of the Middle A He left his wife Leise!, we have death." Ages," he said. whom he calls every night, Nolan, who had "a nice, comfortable mid- .______his 12-year-old daughter dle class upbringing in Bronxville, N.Y." ad- • • • • • and his Univers'ity of Colorado at Boulder mitted, "There's part of me that wants the teaching position of 20 years to work with street world as well as the comfortable "I need a certain austerity," Nolan stated, Jones for one year at "a very exciting time." world.'' but he said he has only made a conscious Jones has an interesting assignment, ex­ decision to not do something twice. plained the Yale graduate, because if he • • • • • Though Nolan was offered a job in Hawaii, wants to make a big difference, he needs to he decided not to go because "I felt I would work quickly. ''One needs vacations from reality but one not become who I wanted to become, but I "I will do the first work of getting the scaf­ does not spend his life away from reality," would be so seduced by the pleasures of the folding prose together," he said, adding that he said. flesh- to put it in a nice Nineteenth century he will write 75 to 80 percent of the Nolan is not afraid to take vacations. He Quaker way - just the raw physical documents Jones needs. The writing will spent a summer in a farmhouse he rented in pleasure of the life there, that I would let my then be actively and collectively revised with Mallo rca, Spain. He also met his wife, Leisel, mind rot." the help of the constituency. in Spain. Nolan said he will write drafts for Jones At this time he quit his Fortune magazine The other decision was not to ski. Though to look at but stressed he will not write publishing job and lived with his wife's fami­ he believes he could be a good skiier, he communiques. ly in Germany for a year before returning never invested the time in it. to the University of Indiana to get his doc­ "I've skied maybe 12 times in the 20 years Nolan is directly involved in the planning torate in comparitive literature. I've been [in Colorado] . In a way it's an process for the university as a member of "It was sure nice to be able to get away abominable admission to make," he said, the Project Vision group. "I have to know for a year and not have to worry where the "but the thing was that everytime I did it I what's going on in order to talk about it next meal was coming from - to do some got such an extraordinary high, it was well." thinking about our lives." almost out of control." "There are Some very spooky and dark parts· to t"fte confrontations of reality, just. as there are dangerous times when the land meets the sea.''

Discovering what society needs from the Though he loves Germany and speaks Nolan said he is "a pretty good pianist" university by sifting through the criticism is fluent German, among his eight or so other because he studied from age 12 to 18 with another of Nolan's purposes this year. languages which include Latin, Classical. Robert Owen "one of the best professional "What is it people are not getting from Greek, Old French, and Old English, his organists in the country." here that they want from here," he asked. favorite' place is Assissi in Italy. "I love words and I love working with "Some [criticism] is just bitterness," said "One magic place in the world," he said, them," he said. "My selection for nonverbal Nolan, "some is orneriness. But at the base "I mean I shouldn't really talk about it- I activity is music performance." is some disappointment that the university should say. this off the record, because if too When Nolan gathers with friends to play isn't doing something that someone thinks it many people find out about it they'll all want music, verbal silence is the rule. "We'll should be doing. to go - it's Assissi. Monks are skipping spend two or three hours simply talking "What the uni\4ersity, it seems to me, can along the streets and singing and having a through the music and the instruments," he do is to find ways where these conflicts can little wine for dinner. explained. be creative," he explained. "There is something wonderful. It's as if "Those are relationships that are done ''I'm not always sure that the point about somehow the spirit of St. Francis is still rather than talked about," he said, "so that conflict is to resolve it, but sometimes to there," he explained. the music offers an opportunity for the en­ celebrate it and let it happen." "It's light and airy. It's like having a glass tire soul to shut up the mouth." of wine except you're just there. "Words are always meaning something • • • • • "When the world gets to much with me," else other than themselves, but the music is he added, "I will find a way to go to Assissi. " it... Geographical conflict is precisely why Nolan said he does not speak fluent Italian, Nolan's musical taste consists of mostly , Nolan enjoys Colorado. but a mixture "sort of Dante, Puccini and classical, focusing on Baoh and Scarlatti in "Colorado is wonderful," he said. "I live restaurant menu." Baroque, the key romantics Brahms and right in a place where two orders meet, Chopin and the modern Ravel. where the Great Plains come to a stop and * • • • • the mountains start. " • • • • • For Nolan, it is exciting "to be constantly Nolan believes Jones has asked him to in the presence of two really radically dif­ come to Delaware at a good time because he "With the sun going down," said Nolan ferent orders of reality." has just finished writing a book, which is not looking out over the Elk River in Maryland A major function of a university, he stress­ yet published, called " The Cracked Looking and leaning against the railing of his back ed, is the mediation of bearing orders of Glass." porch, "if I follow it far enough, I'll be reality, so being in Colorado, natural images home." "force the very kind of thing you're trying "[The book] is about mirrors and mirror­ to do ." ing, both as a way of seeing reality and as THE REVIEW/ Fletcher Chambers

Page B -10 • The Review • Sept. 25. 1987------...... ::'------' hen President-elect Under Stone's direction, three studio he recalled. "I said, 'Sure enough, let's do Russel C. Jones asked .classrooms are being constructed on the it.'" his valued colleague Dr. third floor of Newark Hall. Together, Stone and Jones had three studio Harvey Stone to leave his Stone admitted that construction of the classrooms built and offered 40 engineering position at the Universi­ studios is "not cheap," but does not yet know courses a semester on videotape. ty of Massachusetts and what the construction costs will total. "It was a lot of work because we had three W follow him to the Univer­ "It's a cost-effective teaching method," he studios going from 9 to 5," he said, "but it sity of Delaware, Stone added. was a lot of fun. " was a little hesitant. He will develop a similar program at the After all, Stone had • • • • • university beginning with engineering and spent all of his 41 years in later adding business, agriculture and Massachusetts, 18 of them at UMASSS. Designing course programs on videotape education courses to the curriculum. After a few seconds of contemplation, for universities may seem an unusual pro- Stone replied, "When do you want to leave?" fession for Stone, who has an undergraduate Stone did not have to be tempted to leave So on Aug. 30, Stone and his wife loaded and master's degree in political science. UMASS because he knew working for the their two kids, two cats and dog into their '85 "It's the whole issue of what do you get out university would be a "fantastic opportuni­ Plymouth Voyager van and made the eight­ of a college education? Are you trained to be ty." hour journey to Newark. a political scientist? You're trained to think • "It's something you may not recognize or Because mostoftheir furniture, exceptfor - it's a process," he said. think, but if you went elsewhere you'd see two small couches, had not yet left their After graduating from UMASS in 1967, how good [the university] is," he said. "The home in North Hampton, Mass., Stone and Stone went through basic training in the Ar- University of Delaware is that well regard­ his family spent the first night, in their_new my Reserves for a year and returned to ed by people in the field of higher education. home, in sleeping bags. UMASS to complete his master's degree. It's that good a place." · "Since there were four of us and two From there, Stone began teaching police Although he enjoyed his 18 years at couches, we couldn't decide who would sleep courses in law and the practice of civfl UMASS, the city of Newark is more of a on the couches. So, we all slept on the floor," liberties. "balanced community" compared to the Stone explained. "And the dog slept on the After becoming interested in training and rural town of Amherst. manpower, Stone returned to UMASS where couch." he became a program developer, designing "Amherst was the university and that's it. evening college courses and the summer So we were caught in a time warp. We were • • • • • school program. back in the 60s and never left. And as .a result, things just stopped and there we Stone, who is the president's speCial assis- After moving up the ranks of higher educa- were," he said. "But here there are people So on August 30th, Stone and his wife loaded their two kids, two cats and dog iilto their '85 Plymouth Voyager van and made the eight-hour journey to Newark.

tantfor technological outreach, has come to tion, Stone was asked to direct a grant for in touch with reality. There's a balance the university to launch a program in which the National Institute of Mental Health in here." courses will be filmed on videotape and sent 1974. While visiting the university over the sum­ to other campuses of the university. According to Stone, mental helath was a mer, Stone said he and his wife looked for With Stone's video program, students at hot issue. things that were familiar to them like the the university's campuses will be able to sit "At that time, there was a whole thrust of yogurt shops and the used clothing stores in regular classrooms and watch television people leaving state hospitals and putting which are part of every college town. monitors placed between every two people. them into the community," he explained. "We felt real comfortable here." According to Stone, the university has an "To do that, you also have to retrain the staff Stone sensed several things about the obligation to make courses accessible to becduse often the doctors and nurses are as university during his visit over the summer. other parts of the state. institutionalized as the patients." "Two things were evident. One, that the "It is both a mission and a charge, " he To direct the grant, Stone wanted to resign place was special to begin with, " he said. said. from his postion at UMASS. "And I think, secondly, how much more Stone's work here will mirror his previous " It was really funny because I wanted to special it's gonna be. work at UMASS, where he developed a resign from the university and they wouldn't "Every place has a tradition and Dr. Tra­ similar program in the college of engineer­ let me," he recalled. "They said, 'Why don't bant gave 19 years of tradition," Stone con­ ing. The UMASS program was one of the you take a leave of absence.' So I did." tinued. "It's a new age." first to be developed. Stone's work at the Institute of Mental The eight-hour journey to the University According to Stone, the problem at Health involved developing training courses of Delaware is not the farthest distance UMASS and across the country is that there in the management and prevention of Stone has traveled to share his knowledge. are rarely enough faculty to teach all the violence for the state of Massachusetts. Last September, he was asked by the courses, complete research and assist "We developed mechanisms so that if Under-Secretary of State for Indian Educa­ students in classes. somebody had a problem, they didn't always tion to lecture about providing courses on "So, what we looked at was a mechanism go into the hospital," he said. "We trained videotape at Indian universities. using technology," he said, "but a simple use staff in developing treatment programs." As a result of his two-week visit, India of technology that could, in effect, allow the After four years in mental health, Stone adopted a videotape program similar to the faculty to be in more than one place at one was asked to return to UMASS and assist one at UMASS. time. Russel C. Jones,. then the dean of engineer­ "We put cameras in the classroom and we ing, in developing a new extension off the col­ "It's really different there," Stone said, told the faculty, 'You're not going to be TV lege of engineering using video and "but that's the subject of a second inter­ stars. We don't want you to. What we want technology." view." you to do is that which you do best and that "It was something I didn't know very - Cathhen Fromm. is teach. ' " · much about, but it sounded very exciting," ~------Page B-JI • The Review • Sept. 26, 1987 en nneoacKer \...Ua W'-Va 9 \..1.1'-' aaao,.u.-'-' v•- &&A&"'-".) J'-' '"'-'A .I. ,J U"-VA '-'• Assistant Features Editor ~t the Delaware He explained that of the 6,000 mineral gems Much of the material from dent h f. Delaware's and carvings owned by the collection, "The his readings was available in Drop/ Add and dining hall Festiv 1agged the ball, beautiful and unusual are on display; those us­ his self-published, limited-run food do not a happy freshman Alth ended up on the ed for study, research and teaching are stored pamphlet magazines with make. organi ing the cobwebs in cabinets beneath, the clisola~· eas<'s ." !;u<·h dPlir:ious titles as Fortunately, there is a pro­ gettin~ d. J gram·which helps to alleviate a "st tpitalized on the the anxiety such college. ex­ motiv: ring 62 yards in periences can produce. stated .h Sierer scoring The Student Connection, Eac to knot the sponsored by the Student percla Alumni Association and the proxir Office of Housing and freshrr ~~~~~~r;-=-=:;~==~~~L Residence Life, helps with a ...- make the difficult Fox s:: from high school to from p life. to soci students have a " Mo enabling them ones tt of school than but an: halls is else," : ined flinger

.acked 1 witht S88l. also a he door explained Good n:~~~~~~-i~~~~~~~~~~~.-~~.-~~~~ji.:~----- ed, ''[thE tsive line forced e bunch erback to throw utt\-••~ and we )n fourth and 10 ing." are 21 with 57 mhelps y . netry, ling -thing for nd said, "was ~ in there and e in the fourth 1t win them all, oming and we r personality to­ opportunity to .ersonality was important than

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nazing Siamese Coercive Crea­ :tinted Chains." :>ook called Red with about 125 short stories," lined. "I only 1pies. The whole n put out in pro­ housand copies, 1ys in pamphlet- three or four r pamphlets and ;ized them into a 1ere identity re­ wn more often 1ghi's logic is a e mediocrity of lia . · pamphlet "Aw ains, "It's not te a thousand n associate professor in the tough . to say the least,'' hits harder gets a couple lment, said the purpose of the col­ Borkowski said. "We hit, we breaks along the way." ~ ational as well as aesthetic." hit, we hit. There was a lack of technical underpinmng," he ex­ hitting last week. Nobody had On this Saturday. 1t was ~ external shape of the crystal any hardness ... Borkowski and company who internal atomic arrangement, hit harder and, especially, we study." "This week we hit all week . longer. As West Chester wan­ the collection offers geology We hit Monday. We hit Tues­ ed, the Hens surged. opportunity to view natural day. We hit Wednesday. We ~growth developments they have made sure to hit this week. And at the heart of that ard to visualize in 3-D what we "We weren't overly concern­ resurgence, just to the right of eo logy major Teresa Blauch