In Sports In Section 2 An Associated Collegiate Press Four-Star All-American Newspaper Hens lose to and a National Pacemaker Shatner offers a Marshall for look at the second year Captain's log page B4 page Bl

FREE TUESDAY Forced busing ARA budgets order modified annual dining After 15 years, deseg plan service options MARIA C. CENTENERA Sraff Reporter deemed unsuccessful The end of the semester has becorne more BY OiLJQ< CREEKMUR needs. complicated for students in recent years due to the advent !italfrepottEr The Jdicy of desegregalioo via busing of points and flexible dining plans. After fifteen years of deb:ue, Delaware has been scrutinized for not adequately Students can now add having too many points or is m the verge a a map~ in the improving the achievement among running out of points to their list of finals-time worries. New Castle Crotty educarimal Syslml. SIUiblts in New Castle C00111y, ~y But the question still remains, what does the H a proposed desegregation plan is · tlnle with socicrecooomic and learning university's dining services contractor, ARA, do with all . ratified, it wruldeliminale the cxnrovasial disiKMlnlages. the money students spend on food each semester? 1978 New Castle County coun order Carper said the agreement will "I ran out of points, and [dining services] won't let me whidl rewired in the busing a SIUdenls in "improve the learning of weU-behave Officials at Dining Services said the payment policy three in city schools. Under the new out, or even worse proceed to a life of was changed about four weeks ago. Students may no agreement, forced busing will be ailne.'' longer put meal plans on their account with the eliminaed cni the sepmue !rltxll distticts The agreement will be different by university. They must pay at the lime of purchase, or will govern themselves oo a local level by focusing more on students' academic already have the money in their account. imperrelling nue personal tyOgl3l1l'i lOOt penIs the ~ Marshall place kicker David Merrick Tubby Raymond. "We were hurt by have strict miooity CJlOiliS ~es cootrol ''The intentim of the State and local agreed this is a problem for oo kicked a 38-yard field goal with three some turnovers, but we came a long distri:ts," he said, "is~ 10 'tum the dock some students. the locallevcl. seconds left to give the Thundering way this season. We were alot better "To Slay within this highly ):I'Ccise r.rial "We recently sent a Herd a 34-31 victory over the Hens. today than when we started the 'The State Boord of &lucatioo is not letter to students on the all­ balance," he said, "districts must often Delaware (9-4) ended their season season." make year-to-year adjustrne21ls in school going to allow fcr the re~gatioo in the points plan reminding them against Marshall (10-3) for the second Marshall advances to the semifinals feeder patterns, and disrupt the lives of New Cmtle County Sctool District," Fux: how much they should be straight year. The Hens lost to Marshall next Saturday to play Troy State. said. budgeting each week," SIUdenls am~·" 28-7 last year in the semifinals. The agreement allows schools to Sills said the programs administered Kreppel said. Delaware fullback Daryl Brown -By Ron Porter resttu:ture the sys1ern to rove funding roc She said students BUSING page A3 rmre tyOgl3l1l'i to sezve studfnts' specific see sometimes forget to spend CLAY all of their points by the end of the semester, and that the university will not refund the cash equivalent. Area abortion clinics probed for illegal disposal "When you buy points as a meal plan, those points are not penny for penny cash," Kreppel said. BY BRIAN HICKEY into the disposal, unless otherwise decision has been stated in the case. When the waste is disposed of, it must "Overhead costs, the cost of being open, are factored City News Editor insuucted. Rinse the top and boule before Both clinics are managed by Eric C. be put in bags and then placed into boxes in," she said. "Just like meals, if you only eai 12 meals Two area abortion clinics have come placing in soapy water." Harrah, who refused to comment on the clearly labeled as hazardous, which also each week:, not 14, then you don't get two meals back." under fire because of accusations by The investigation, which was headed allegations and wouldn't verify if he had must meet strength regulations, according Randle Clay, head of Dining Services for the former employees that fetal tissue was by the state's Department of Natural been contacted in an investigation. to Joe Walent of Waste Management of university and ARA 's main representative on campus, illegally disposed, according to court Resources and Environmental Control The court records said Harrah told Delaware Valley. said these costs have been high in recent years due to expansions demanded by students. records. (DNREC), has been forwarded to the state employees in November to stop the The refrigcrl)ted truck the boxes of are The clinics in question are the Attorney General's Office, according to practice and to freeze the fetuses instead. removed in must also be clearly labeled as "Our customer tells us what they want," Clay said. Brandywine Valley Women's Center at David Small of the DNREC. Dover lawyer Melvin E. Soli, owner of a vehicle containing these wastes. "We are just responding and reacting to customer needs." Penny Hill, located at 207 Philadelphia While Small would not comment on the Wilmington and Dover clinics, was The waste is eventually incinerated by Clay said Dining Services is trying to "achieve total Pike in Wilmington, and the Delta specifics of the probe, he verified that unavailable for comment on the claims. area waste management organizations, community" in several areas on campus by installing Women's Center at 1050 S. DuPont there is an on-going investigation into the Delaware state law requires abortion Walent said. dining hall, snack bar and convenience store facilities so Highway in Dover. charges. clinics to treat remains as infectious waste Waste Management of Delaware students can choose how to spend their points. The Wilmington News Journal gave The investigation is looking into and provides a book of regulations for Valley said the waste must be incinerated "We wish to become a part of the fabric of the this account of the court records in charges that former employees of the groups to follow . at degrees higher thanr 1,400 university," he said. "We're always experimenting and Friday's edition: clinics claimed "garbage disposals were The state requires that all infectious Fahrenheight, and is burned twice to trying something." The Dover clinic's manual stated its used regularly to grind abortion remains wastes, including those from the clinics in ensure safety. The total budget for Dining Services is approximately procedure for disposal of fetal tissue was into the sewer system below the clinics," question, must be disposed of in a manner While no charges have been brought $19.9 million for 1993-94, Kreppel said. to put it down the garbage disposal. records said. which keeps it away from other humans against either of the abortion clinics, the Documents provided by Clay showed 76.2 percent of The manual said, "Remove the top Deputy Attorney General Keith A. to make sure no harmful organisms Attorney General's Office is actively Dining Services' revenues come from meal contracts, from the bottle. Discard boule contents Trostle refused comment because no remain. probing the claims of improper disposal. see BUDGET page A3 Endeavor begins Hubble repairs professor of physics and astronomy. give scientists a crystal clear view of Solving education's problems Error-prone NASA relies on support from distant stars and galaxies on the edge taxpayers for its million dollar of the universe that could not be seen Schools must focus on more than the basics. telescope soon programs. from telescopes on earth due to the "If this mission is a failure," inability of ultraviolet rays to Some names have been changed to protect identities. And it could take years before someone solves it. Shipman said, "I'll have to do penetrate the atmosp~ere. Education is slipping away from a generation of to be fixed something other than science." Instead, the telescope can only see BY ROBYN FURMAN kids in need of someone to understand - and to Shipman, who is known as the things up close (in space terms that is Managing Editor listen. BY NATASHA SCHLEGEL man who can bring astronomy down four to five billion light years away Marc Pacilio, associate executive director for the Staff Reporter If a young boy leaves his house at 7:30 a.m., to earth for science and non-science instead of the projected I 0 to 14 passes two crack houses and wimesses a drive-by Delaware Council on Crime and Justice Center, The seven astronauts of the space students, participates in one of the billion) as a result of a spherical believes the enormous pressures children face make shuttle Endeavor captured the shooting, will he be able to succeed in school? 150 general observer programs that not the most traditional word it difficult for them to concentrate in school. damaged Hubble Space Telescope have had access to Hubble since it See related story p.3 Pacilio thinks many kids don't come to school Saturday and are ready for the was first launched into space in aberration, said Randee Exler, news prepared to learn because their concentration upcoming week of scheduled space 1990. chief at the Goddard Space Flight remains focused on probh;ms taken from home. walks to repair the near-sighted In the Sunday and Monday Center in Greenbelt, Md. How can children concentrate on long division if telescope as well as NASA's failing morning walks that lasted A spherical aberration means the they are worried about the fight their parents had reputation. approximately six-and-a half hours telescope's mirror is off one-fiftieth that morning? The space shuttle's 50-foot each, the astronauts repaired the of the width of a human hair, which A child's behavior in school wil l often reflect mechanical arm retrieved the failing gyroscopes that orient the is what the astronauts will repair. real problems he or she is trying to process and orbiting telescope in the first step of telescope as part of the its "The mirror was perfectly ground n f ~t '\ ' \ ' 11 work through. Pacilio says the educational system NASA's $251 million mission. navigational systems and solar arrays to the wrong degree," Shipman said needs to deal with the problems kids arc having, not The success of the mission is found on the math part the SA that supply the telescope's electrical of the mirror's contractors, Perkin­ figures into the lives of many children. see EDUCATION page A8 crucial to science and the future of power. Elmer Corporation. "It is a very NASA, said Harry L. Shipman, The telescope was designed to see SH UTILE page A3

UD HISTORY CONTENTS INSIDE REVIEW On this date in 1971, Campus Flash.A2 Section 2 ...... B1 Three years ago, five friends According to the controversial Police Reports.A2 Feature gathered in the hallway of the Sun, Perry the \ women's-ri~hts Freshman Forum ...... B2 Perkins Student Center to sing a Parrot saved his ~~ activist Wilham B. Daze ...... A2 The few songs a cappella. On AS. owners' house by ....,_.. Baird spoke about News Question ...... B2 calling 9-1-1 when Analysis ...... A2 Sports ...... B4 Following the weekend's torrential a fire broke out in ~ .. abortion and ~irth downpours, today will be mostly control before an How it works.A4 Hens lose ...... B4 Questions. Who are Rosencrantz the home. "It was sunny, with highs in the upper-40s and Guildenstern? What does it the weirdest call audience of about 70 In Review & Opinion .. . and lows in the 30s. Wednesday p~ple ~t the • Neary on impressing women matter? What does it mean? I've ever received," . untverstty. • Hickey on gays in the FBI will be partly couldy, with highs in Which one is which? Didn't I ask an emergency • Garber on morality the mid-40s again. Thursday will you first? On 81. operator said. BAIRD bring a chance of more rain. A2 inHE REVIEW• December 7,1993

Freshman Daze A look at UD. Hey U ofD! Are you CAMPUS FLASH happenings ready for a revolution? To make a long story short, my prrespondent _tQ mother had to eventually call and ISCUSS the Mid By argue (how embarrassing) for them ~ast to reactivate the service before Meredith Monday. National Public Radio's I just didn't want to be trapped in foreign correspondent Linda Cohen Newark without a phone. Is that too ·Grandstein will discuss much to ask? It wasn't even my fault :"Covering the Middle East: -I didn't even get a bill. And isn't' :From the Gulf War to the Let's take a stroll down memory lane. - my arguing threatening enough ? 'Peace Talks" Where are my rights? Is there no Grandstein, who has been I'm your host Meredith Smiley (haven't I been smiley all justice? :covering the Middle East since However, that is minor compared semester?), U of D this is your life. · 1990, is based in Jerusalem, to the other incident that involves us Recall , if you will freshmen, the •has lived in Cairo and speaks all. I'm referring to the incident :nuent Hebrew and Arabic. opening ceremony of orientation. You remember, we all sat in the heat where the DUSC rep. was barred Trained in both journalism from entering the administrative and listened to the pleasant :and foreign affairs, she earned meeting concerning the Christiana ; a master's degree from the inspirational speeches. I seem to remember a speaker emphasizing Tower incident. ;School of Foreign Service at Wait a second, were not the -;.Georgetown University, our role as students to question things (around which time I began to students directly involved? Is this specializing in Arab studies another U of D conspiracy? What and international affairs. She question why the hell I was sitting in the heat and then I remembered oh worries me is not only the initial act, : has also studied at the but the more serious implications of : American University of Cairo yeah, free food). Regardless, the message was the act. Is the student body supposed and at the Hebrew University to settle for this, excuse my of Jerusalem. sound, rather obvious I should hope, but valuable nonetheless. blatancy, crap? After her talk, a reception A university is a place where THE REVIEW {Kelly Bennett As the days waxed on I started vwill be held in honor of Yetta students receive information and are and Sonny Chaiken, who have . President David P. Roselle addresses prospective students at "An Evening With the University of wondering why the hell I was in Newark. This was confounded by an prepared for a profitable life. Are we been active in promoting Delaware" Thursday in Clayton Hall. suppose to enter into society blindly Jewish life and Culture at the increasing amount of friends and acquaintances departing the school. accepting this sort of treatment? · university campus. The Guitar Duo and a soprano Hall. But, learning is learning, .so I got The university, by the act of • Chaikens' commitment to the Marie Robinson. The program, in which local Faculty artists from the over it, sort of. neglecting student entrance, was · university and to Jewish Tickets are '$8 .00 for the high school seniors could university's Department of Recently a couple of incidents reinforcing the kind of behavior that - scholarship has been Music will present a festive general public, $5.00 for attend information sessions for has led our government down the · instrumental in the university faculty and staff and various areas of study, was have occurred to reignite my salute to the holiday season at frustration. I am left with the general political sewer. This is the sort of development of the university's 8 p.m., Monday and Tuesday, $2.00 for students. highlighted by remarks by separatism and censorship that Jewish Studies Program. Proceeds benefit the university President David P. notion that revolution is the only Dec. 13 and !4, in the Lo!!dis hope for the future of America. fusltas imliffo::n::m;c: auu •guuiiUIL:t:. The talk is on Tuesday, Dec. Department of Music Roselle. Recital Hall of the Amy E. One bad ordeal with the U of D Isn't this slightly hypocritical, 7, at 7:30p.m., in room 115 of scholarship fund. For more "The university is an DuPont Music Building. phone services. It seems they had a counterproductive and downright Purnell Hall. information or to reserve uncommonly residential A special feature of the bit of trouble keeping my address frightening? Ladies and gentlemen Her free public talk is the program will be the Nutcracker tickets, call831-2204. institution," Roselle said, "So - the American Educational first in the new Yetta and when you are sitting in class at straight and because of this I did not Suite, performed on two pianos receive my bill or any proper Institution? Give it a big round of ·Sonny Chaiken Jewish Culture by Julie Nishimura, faculty niversity H.osts the university, it is likely that applause! Take into no account all Lecture series. the person sitting next to you is warning that I was over my limit. I accompanist, and Michael rospect1ve was then a bit distraught when I those infinitely interesting The talk is co-sponsored by one you will see around Steinberg, professor of music. ~tudents tried to return the call of a friend in inspirational speeches we have the Jewish Studies Program campus." Also featured will be the Pittsburgh who left a hysterical see FRESHMAN page A4 . and the English department at Mendelssohn String Quartet, The university hosted the In a brief video titled "Why _the university. program, "An Evening With Delaware," prospective message on my voice mail. the Del' Arte Woodwind Really, I didn't ask for much. I the University of Delaware," students were introduced to the Quartet, Delaware Brass, the only wanted my service back on :Faculty to Perform Thursday night in Clayton see BRIEFS page A4 Taggart-Grycky Flute and after I raced to their office at nine in the morning to pay my bill in cash An Associated Collegiate Press after arguing a little at eight. Four-Star All-American Newspaper

Jeff Pearlman Unprecedented AIDS cases cause scare Editor in Dlief Adrienne Mand BY MELISSA HUNT because the strains of HIV were through casual contact." sooner." sexual intercourse or contaminated Exerutive Editor Staff Reporter identical. While broken skin is very rarely Already, before official reports needles, a few parents are bound to Jason Garber Brandon Jamison Scarcely, if ever, have there been Transmission in both occurrences involved in contraction of the AIDS are released next week, questions worry unnecessarily about their Editorial Editor Managing Edilor resulted from the blood of one child virus, the exchange of blood has do.cumented cases of someone children. Laura Fasbach Robyn Furman contracting the AIDS virus as the contacting that of the other as a long since been identified to cause In a worst-case scenario, parents Rebe<;ca Tollen result of a nosebleed or a shared result of broken skin. infection. "The media who do not fully understand the Mat>afjing Special Projects Editors razor. Meanwhile, health officials Nosebleeds and shared razors are negligible implications of the two hut two recent cases of maintain that the two cases do not culprits that are bound to show up really needs to incidents might convince Walter M. Eberz previously undocumented pose any public health threat or with the increase of thoroughly­ themselves that their kids are at risk M•naging Photo/Pf'hy Editor transmissions of the HIV virus are represent any new pattern of investigated HIV cases. alert people that by attending school. expected to cause a wave of panic transmission. In addition, once an infectious That belief could lead to Kyle M. Madden among parents. ·"What is most important is that agent is established, the virus will this is nothing increased discrimination against Advertising Di,.,c;tor One New Jersey case concerns not change its method of children who have the virus and two unrelated boys, ages two and transmission. new." further misconceptions about how Eric Volker fiv,e, who share a foster home. That means that a virus like HIV, HIV is spread. Mlvernsing Production Supervisor !fhe older one, infected with known to spread through bodily -Anne Lomax or Student Health Services The only effects official reports Gary Cox HI:V, had frequent nosebleeds, and I News Analysis I fluids and blood, cannot change into should have are perhaps an Computer Netwatlang Administrator the younger suffered from a virus contracted through the air. are being raised about current public increased awareness of how the de(matitis, a disease that breaks the Therefore, experts believe there policies of admitting infected disease is spread. Sedric Toney sulface of the skin. the information has not changed, is no reason for parents, or anyone children to schools and day care "The media really needs to alert Publidl)l DirN:tor )'he other instance involves two that these cases represent the same else, to be alarmed. centers. people that this is nothing new," he~ophiliac teenage brothers, one information we were aware of "I think parents are level-headed However, AIDS experts say Lomax said. Alicia Olesinski lynn of;whom had been tested positive before," said Anne Lomax, assistant enough not to jump to conclusions," casual contact was not the cause of Taking more universal Schoenbeck for HIV in 1985. director at Student Health Services Lomax said. the two recent cases. The boys did precautions against exposure to BusinessM•~rs !They had always been careful for health education. "Hopefully they will wait until not contract the virus simply as a blood in schools or day care centers, Mvenising Representiltive ...... ab~ut using their own injection Olivia Giorgi of the AIDS the information is released before result of being in the same house. as well as in dorms or aparunents, is Jeanine O'Donnell equipment to prevent uncontrolled Division of Public Health said, they make any judgments. "In both cases, there was simply common sense. Copy Editors ...... bl~eding, but they once used the "There is no new development that A representative from the definitely standard blood-to-blood Protecting open wounds, washing Christine Galasso s~e razor after bleeding. HIV could be contracted a different Delaware AIDS Hotline said, contact, not simply casual contact," hands frequently and cleaning Tracy Largay ;In both cases, the boys lived in way." "There was really nothing new to Giorgi said. surfaces properly should be re­ Traci Manza tha same house, and doctors knew "These two cases don't change learn from the cases, which is why Because neither infection was emphasized to prevent blood-to­ Sandy Onnsbee thjt one child infected the other anything about it not being spread the reports were not released spread through the usual methods, blood transmission of the virus. Melissa Tyrrell Jennifer Valese Entertainment Editor...... Glenn Slavin Features Editor...... Liz Lardaro WINTER SESSION Graphics Editors ...... Jennifer Mills Police Reports John Ottinger News Editors ...... Indecent exposure on Four black males, no further parking lot sometime between Stacey Bernstein Presents a Special Section of description available, entered the 9:25p.m. and 10:05 p.m. Friday. Mary Desmond North College Avenue store and when two went to the Police gave this account of the lisa Goodman Brian Hickey PHIL-201-011: A female university student counter to purchase Mad Dog incident: 20/20, the other two left the store. The suspects entered the Laura Jefferson Social and Political Philosophy reported when she was walking E. Janene Nolan down North College Avenue The clerk at the store then vehicle and removed a bookbag, checked the shelves and noticed Jennifer Post "Slavery and Philosophy": What does a reading of towards Ray Street, around 3:20 textbook and a jacket; totalling Graham Segroves p.m. Thursday, an unknown three bottles were missing. $85. the narratives of slaves tell us about the nature of subject indecently exposed Police caught the suspects, Sports Editors ...... justice? That question wiH be the focus of this himself to her, Newark Police recovered $75 worth of property Megan McDermott Ron Porter course. said. $23,000 car stolen and charged the suspects with The victim said the subject was underage consumption, theft and Assistant Entertainment Editors ...... sitting in a small silver station from Courtney Street possession of stolen property. Rachel Cericola wagon, unknown make, and when A visit to Colonial Williamsburg, (VA) and A 1991 grey Acura Legend was M. TyeComer she walked by the vehicle, she interpretations of the lives, living conditions, and stolen from the 200 block of noticed his blue pants were down Courtney St. sometime between Christmas tree stolen; Assistant Features Editors ...... social status of slaves in colonial America will be to his ankles, police said. Ashwani Chowdary The victim got no description 2:30a.m. and 12 p.m. Saturday, the grinch: prime featured in this course. Newark Police said. M. Victoria Kemp of the subject and police have no suspect Assistant News Editor ...... suspects. Police estimated the value of the stolen vehicle at $23,000. Sean Neary I• Newark Police reponed an Assistant Photography Editor ...... Last call! unknown subject or subjects Room Reservations must be con.finned Mad Dog stolen from removed a six foot Alberta Spruce J. Hollada t:I University Police arrest evergreen tree from the front lawn by Tuesday, December 7. liquor store of a residence on the 200 block of Assistilnt Spotts Editors ...... suspected vandals Kells Ave. sometime between 8 Meredith Glazar Newark Police reported three Sara Hauff Univer~ity Police Capt. Jim p.m. Wednesday and 8:30a.m. bottles of Mad Dog 20/20, valued Thursday. at $8.50, were stolen from Flatley srud two non-university For additional details call the Philosophy Department students were arrested in Police said the tree was valued Off'M:e and mailing addrese: Peddlers Liquors at 110 College Student Center B-1 831-2359. To register for this course go to the connection with vandalizing and at$200. Square around 11 p.m. Saturday. Newark, DE 19 716 Philosophy Dept., 24 Kent Way. burglanzmg a vehicle, unknown Police gave this repon of the - Compiled by Brian Hickey incident: model, parked in the Newark Hall Busine55 ...... ,...... (302) 831-1397 Advertislng ...... (302) 831-1398 Nt!W!/Editorial ...... (302) 831-2771 December 7, 1993. THE REVIEW. A3 World l)D professor works with NASA News Harry Shipman helps the Hubble telescope see new galaxies. Summary BY RUNCIE TATNALL bright but mysterious white nature." SlaH Reportf!r dwarf star, is one of abo ut The Hubble telescope is Helping to fix a NASA 1,500 in the known universe. the bigges t and has the IRAN CONTRA REPORT DISCUSSES telescope has brought To find the star, "look at ability to observe the REACAN AND BUSH physics and astronomy Orion and tum left," he said. widest range of Professor Harry Shipman "If you held a handful of wavelengths of Iran-contra prosecutors have into a different world. The mauer from a white dwarf, it electromagnetic radiation. concluded that former President world of television media. would weigh 10 tons," he " There's nothing quite Ronald Reagan created an atmosphere After his Black Holes, said. "Our sun will turn into like the Hubble," he said, that allowed the arms-for-hostages Quasars and lhe Universe a white dwarf in about fiv e adding that maintaining the scandal to flourish and that former class, Shipman was billion years. satellite, as well as the space President George Bush was not interviewed by a WKYW­ Shipman said he has shuttle, is a very expensive uninformed about the affair while Philadelphia television received 15 images of mission. serving as vice-president, sources said station crew Thursday at Procyon B and three "It's a lot harder than Saturday. 1:45 p.m. about his computer tapes, equal to pulling up to a gas station Independent Counsel Lawrence E. involvement with the latest about 15 books worth of and refueling," he said, Walsh's final report on his NASA mission to repair the data from the Hubble estimating about a cost of investigation, which stretched over faulty Hubble Space telescope. approKimately $1 million for seven years and cost $35 million, Telescope. "Finding out about white each shuttle flight. blames Reagan's top aides for The interview, which dwarf stars is a way of Shipman said his engineering a successful cover-up of aired Thursday evening, was putting humans into involvement with the the 1986 scandal, according to sources used to give a "local spin" perspective," Shipman told telescope dates back to who have seen the document. on an important national Victoria Lim, a channe l 2 1984, when he attended an The report, expected to be made . issue, Robin Macintosh, the First State News reporter astronomy convention in public later this month, alleges Reagan WKYW reponer, said. who also interviewed him Kie.J, Germany. He and a set the stage for top aides, principally The space shuttle Thursday afternoon in the group of about 20 colleagues then Attorney General Edwin Meese, Endeavor was launched Dec. Smith Laboratory decided to form a to compose a false account of events 2 to work with the telescope classroom. "consonion team" to receive that shielded high-ranking officials and fix an optical defect, He said his team hopes to research time on the "highly from accountability in the scandal. among other impairments. decipher all of the collected competitive" Hubble Bush, according to these sources, Shipman said he has used data to grasp a better telescope. Tfte RMEW /File photo lied when he repeatedly claimed he the Hubble Space Telescope knowledge of the life cycle "Like so many things in was "out of the loop" as Reagan vice­ for researching Procyon B, a of stars. the scientific world, it PROFESSOR HARRY SHIPMAN president in top-level deliberations white dwarf star discovered "If you want to know happened over a glass of NASA decided to cancel his plans observing time. about the deal, in which U.S. arms 150 years ago by a German why we do these things, go beer at a bar," he said. for a consolidated team. Shipman said the most were shipped to Iran to free American scientist. out at night and look at the Later that year, the space Currently, Shipman said, his eKciting discovery he expects hostages in the Middle East. The repon White dwarf stars are stars," Shipman said. "For shuttle Challenger blew up team is much smaller than the Hubble telescope could describes him as fully aware of the dense stars in the later stages millions of years, or as long and the launch date for the originally planned, but has make after its repair would be initiative, the sources said. of their life cycle. as we've been human, telescope was pushed back been given 25 hours or about finding the existence of other Reagan always insisted there was no Procyon B, he said, a we've had curiosity about to 1986. Shipman said one percent of Hubble' s planets around stars. connection between Iranian arms sales and the later release of some American hostages in Lebanon, and that he never knew about any diversion of funds to Students design playground Shuttle the contras. continued from page A 1 "The project objective is to Horton said many details have NEW QUESTIONS ABOUT THE Seniors create redesign and construct an gone into the design of the frustrating error that was just dumb." AIDS VIRUS innovative play area within design playground because of the mobility The main objectives of the remaining five days of the II handicap­ constraints, while making it problems of physically impaired day mission are to correct the mirror and service the on­ In two cases, the· AIDS virus was accessible to physically impaired children and toddlers. board computers, explained Jim Elliott, special assistant passed from one infected child to and toddler age children with their One feature of the playground for public affairs at the Goddard Space Flight Center. another, apparently by the rare route of accessible safety in mind," she said. will be an elevated sandboK with a "We believe [the mission] will demonstrate our capacity external contact with blood, news The project has been funded tunnel which channels water called for orbit servicing reality for the future," Elliott said, who reports say. equipment. $3,200 by the Preschool, the a water sluice. feels very confident about the project. The cases involve two unrelated National Science Foundation and "We are going to build a sandbox The seven astronauts have undergone eKtensive training boys Jiving in a New Jersey foster BY K.C. DEUMATER the university 's Human Resources into a two-foot hill so the children at the Goddard Space Flight Center. They have spent 400 home and a pair of hemophiliac Staff Report~ department. who are in a wheelchairs can hours training under water, the closest simulation to actual brothers, whose whereabouts were not Senior engineering students will However, the engineers said they integrate with the other children space, as well as ISO hours using vinual reality training, disclosed to protect their identities, return to the playground at the will rely mostly on volunteers, because they can position Elliott said, in preparation for their five to seven space The New York Times said Saturday. Alison Hall Early Childhood donated construction equipment and themselves under the hill," Moak walks. Scientists said they weren't sure Education Laboratory Preschool to materials. said. Virtual reality is an experimental technology the .: how the virus was passed, but suspect renovate the playground for greater Dennis Moak (EG SR) said he She said the seniors divided the astronauts used in addition to the buoyancy tanks to: the infected foster child bled on the accessibility by the disabled. was concerned about the logistics. construction of the playground into simulate Space, explained Elliott. The astronauts wore other, whose dermatitis causes broken The project is a collaboration "My big thing is th e constructi on three areas. helmets and suits that enabled them to perceive what the . skin. They speculate the two brothers among four students and two aspects; to ge t volunteers, to "The first area will be creativity actual space walks would be like. exchanged the virus by sharing a razor. professional advisors. acquisition materials and finally, the world, which will target toddler EKier explained that the Hubble project was planned to The work will begin in January, actual building of the playground," aged children," Horton said. "Area be an observatory to be maintained and improved for more THOUSANDS MOURN THE DEATH and the expected completion date is Moak said. two will consist of the playhouse than 15 years. She added that the astronauts have 200 · OF ESCOBAR May 1994. Parents of the 66 Preschool and sandbox, and area three will specialized tools with them to correct the telescope. Leslie Horton (EG SR) said the students will provide most of the have climbing equipment for older "The telescope has produced some very good science, The $6.2 million bounty on drug lord project will require special labor, but Moak said he hopes children." despite its flaws," Shipman said. "But the most exciting Pablo Escobar's head will be shared by considerations. others will volunteer. The preschool enrolls children things can't be done without the repairs." the widows and orphans of his victims "Our goal is to integrate the play "We would be elated to get 100 with various levels of impairment, "The first two of the projected five space walks were · and the men who hunted him down, of the toddlers and the handicapped students, but 10 to IS would be he said. very successful," said Lisa Malone, Spokeswoman for NASA. Columbian President Cesar Gaviria children," Horton said. nice," he said. see PLAYGROUND page A9 said Saturday. "We will use the reward money to ease the anguish of the families of those who fell in the fight," he said. Escobar, 44, was shot and killed by security forces Thursday. The head of UD departm.ent the Medellin cartel had been accused of ordering the assassinations of presidential candidates, judges, journalists and police. only one in nation Escobar and his gang were blamed for the deaths of at least 500 police BY RUNC(E TATNALL Messenger magazine: "The officers here since 1989. Staff Reporter blending of the two fields really Despite his cartel's violence, Works of an, like people, are happened when I was at the Escobar, who had financed urban subject to the ravages of University of Delaware. I don't renewal projec.ts in Columbia and had deterioration. But just .as a think it would have happened if many fans among the poor. plastic surgeon or a good make­ I'd done it any other way." After Escobar died, "there were a Jot up artist can help reverse the According to Messenger, of tears, a lot of desperation because effects of age on humans, so can Wolbers' internationally known for us it was like loosing a father," said an art conservator on a cleaning proce4ures are being Marcela Jaramillo, 26, a housewife Rembrandt. utilized by adjunct professor who lives in a neighborhood the drug The university, in Wendy Samet, who recently trafficker built for the poor. cooperation with the Winterthur completed the restoration of Thousands of people attended THE REVIEW Kelly Bennett museum in Wilmington, is one James McNeill Whistler's Escobar's funeral Friday at a cemetery Senior forward Rom Forcino and sophomore forward Dave johnson skate away after of the few institutions in the "Peacock Room." on the outskirts of Medellin. making the hit on a Rhode Island player Sunday afternoon. See story page 85. world that trains these face­ The room at the Freer Gallery Bramywine, rre Orristina. rre Colooial. al¥1 rre Red lifters of an. in Washington was painted an FBI STINCS ASTRONAUT Oay Consolidated school districts, the U.S. District Hilton Brown, HarrietT. iridescent green-gold color in Busing coons al¥1 tre State Boon! of Education must &Jbmit a Baily professor of art 1977 as a store room for a The FBI unsuccessfully used a f onnalllj:p'

( A4 • THE RMEW • December 7, 1993

Freshman How It Works .continued from page A2

fo~ you to hear! This being my final article of the ·semester, I leave you with this to So, you want to come to UD? ·mllll over a bit. I bid you a fond :farewell , best of luck on fmals and a ·pleasant holiday season. My next Extracurricular activities may help, but grades are the key to becoming accepted. :arLicle will be written in Spain ·where I am spending my winter BY IENN YALESE semester. Thanks for letting a Copy edilor r Mr. jones: ·freshman have her say! The sound of a ripping envelope : • So, what should we ask for from rings in the ears of a nervous high Thank you for applying to our ·Saata or Harry the Hanukkah fairy, school senior. Shaky hands unsteadily !":iR~,- university, but after realizing your ;biQody revolution, or what? remove the white stationary with Delaware's letterhead. application was not a joke, we regret to Then, the big answer to the big question: "Did I get in?" u ... For the most part, if she had good ~ Briefs grades throughout her high school career, the answer would be "yes." :COntinued from page A2 Louis Hirsh, senior assistant for honors admissions, says the "heart" of ,campus, residential life and class the decision is based on grades. .settings. Because the focus of the · Roselle, who called Delaware university's education is liberal arts :"one of the more beautiful college courses, the applicant's :C1lmpuses in America," performance in high school liberal arts encouraged the local students to courses is an indicator of how well take pride in the university. they will do in college, he says. Non­ The students were also given academic courses, such as art and the opportunity to ask questions woodshop, are not considered. of a student/faculty panel. However, the overall grade point ~ -...... Associate Provost for average [GPA] of the applicant is not - ...... __----.. Admissions and Student a solid determining factor. He says the : - Financial Aid Bruce Walker said way a student's grades progressed ------­ the program was "an opportunity throughout high school is a major - to demonstrate what we (the factor. university) have to offer." "Someone who did poorly her =~ Roselle agreed and said, "It is freshman year in high-school, but then extracurricular activities are also regard how well he/she did in art and references are always considered. important for these students to did progressively better over the next considered, but not very heavily. classes, Hirsh says. If the applicant Some applicants rely heavily on the come and talk to students and the few years is so.meone I ' d really " It carries a lot less weight than wanted an engineering major, though, hope that the university will look at a fa culty and we encourage them consider," he says. students think," he says. "It helps only the performance in math classes would person's creative side, Hirsh says. to come back during the day and But, ultimately, he says, " good at the margin, for the kind of student be weighted heavily. "We've gotten everything from take a tour t? see the campus." grades really have a lot of clout." who's borderline, at the B-/C level." Schmidt says she was under the v!deo to cassette tapes, to novels, art Holly Weidenaar [EO FR]. who Visual arts major Jennifer Schmidt impression that Delaware was a work and full plays," he says. l\1enorah Lighting holds a weighted. high-school GPA of [AS FR] had a GPA of 3.0 out of difficult school to get in to because None of these work, Hirsh says. 4 .3, says she had no fears about high-school and her SAT scores were of the process of reviewing What does work, in addition to grades, A lighting of the menorah, getting accepted to Delaware. 980. Schmidt doubted she would be applications. is when students writes about a celebrating the first night of "I didn't think it would be hard to accepted, but she says she thinks When she came to visit she attended passion or something that is gravely H.anukkah, will begin at 6:30 get accepted," she recalls. "The attending a specialized school for a seminar where she learned grades important to them. p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 8, in the application was easy. They didn' t visual arts a few days a week gave were the most important element, not There have been special cases Ewing Room of the Perkins even ask for an essay, unless you were her an edge. interviews, essays or other activities. where a rejected applicant will Student Center. an honors student, and then it was In general, students are regarded by "It didn ' t look like they put a lot of actually call Hirsh and issue a plea for Hanukkah is a holiday only one. Princeton wanted four. That a profile of their high-school GPA, time into reviewing you as a person," a second chance. celebrating religious tolerance was a real pain." SAT scores, and class rank, Hirsh Schmidt says. "In that case, I'll cut a deal with the and freedom, and the university In addition to being an honors said. Then the choice of major is According to David P. Roselle, student: If you can get these grades by community i'S invited to attend student, Weidenaar, who was accepted considered in relation to how well the president of the university, interviews the end of this semester, then O.K.," the event, sponsored by the to the ivy league university, also ran student did in classes related to the will be granted upon special request. he says. Ch.abad House. track in high-school. major they want. He advocates that "Delaware is very " But it's always when the student Hirsh, who reviews about 16,000 If a student is applying to be an art good about not reducing applicants to calls me himself. That's when I'll "'"':' .compiled by Seiln Neilry applications per year, says major, then the university would a number," and that activities, honors overturn the decision." Center counsels Fireman to be sentenced for child molesting BY KRISTEN LIVOLSI will be sentenced next month in bargain still had its desired the assault: Sraff Reporter Superior Court. result. The boy, whose name has students with A former Wilmington Edward C. Pankowski Jr., "This plea will result in his not been released, was firefighter, arrested in October Rondon's attorney, said his [Rondon's) incarceration and walking home when Rondon for raping a 12-year-old boy, client accepted the reduced will protect other children," she approached him and got the pleaded guilty last Wednesday charges since he had already said. boy to get in the car by t:ating disorders to a single count of third-degree confessed to having intercourse Purcell said the plea was offering him cash. unlawful sexual intercourse. with the boy. offered to spare the boy from Rondon drove the boy to BY SANDY ORMSBEE this is not the case. Roberto Rondon, 25 , " He admitted the crimes to more trauma. Brandywine Park and assaulted Copy Ediror "It's actually been known for a originally faced two counts of city police. If he was convicted She said since the attack, him. .. Forcing yourself to vomit after long time that eating disorders and first-degree unlawful sexual on the original charges, Rondon the boy has been in denial by A patrolling officer noticed eVery meal. Starving yourself emotional disorders tend to go intercourse, which is could have been sentenced to refusing to admit the assault the man and the boy in the car although your weight has dropped hand in hand," she said. Delaware's technical charge for two life terms ," Pankowski took place, and that "was the and questioned Rondon. b~low 100 pounds. Hinging on Ireland explained, "The rape. said. determining factor in offering Rondon reacted nervously and c~ips , cookies and sweets to ease individual may be trying to Rondon faces up to 10 years Deputy Attorney General the plea to reduced charges." eventually admitted to having anxiety about school. temporarily block out painful in prison for the charges and Susan Bair Purcell said the plea Purcell gave this account of intercourse with the child. . All of these scenarios are signs feelings, take care of tension, deal associated with eating disorders, with stress or treat depression by W.hich, according to the eating." Ul!iversity's Center for Counseling Some factors which contribute ru:td Student Development, affected to eating disorders include family one-fifth of all female college dynamics and internal dynamics, students nationally in 1992. Every such as self-concept, body image year, 150,00 American women die and bio-chemical pre-disposition. ~OWN ~OWN because of complications "It is these issues that need to be a~ sociated with anorexia and addressed by the individual in -'i.JNDER bulimia. order to begin to establish a -'i.JNDER : "Eating disorders are recovery process for themselves," piQBressive, chronic, relapse-prone she said. d i seases.~ Dr. Marsh~t Speller a Speller said that's where her job p~ ychiatrist who specializes in comes in. "My role is to uncover eating disorders, said Thursday at the existence of any other a :Seminar titled "How to Fall out comordid conditions and treat ot Love with Food." The speech them as indicated," she said. Monday December 13th w)s sponsored by Newark's These other emotional A~ t e ring Disordered Eating (ADE) conditions range from depression p1ogram, located at the Omega and anxiety disorders to (the perfect psych for tuesday studies) Pioressional Park. personality disorders and :"They exist on a continuum substance abuse. f(.om anorexia to bulimia to According to Speller, another cqmpulsive overeating," Speller factor contributing to eating S!!id . "They all have in common disorders may be four food addi ctions to foods or behaviors components, sugar, caffeine, wheat Live Entertainment 10 to close tliat are physically, mentally and and alcohol, that are thought to spiritually destructive." trigger cravings in food addicts the Martha Ireland, president of same way alcohol triggers cravings AD E, said: "Individuals, both men in alcoholics. and women, often focus on things "On a biochemical basis, we Friday Happy Hour on Monday 4-8 PM outside of themselves in a search think (these substances) disturb to feel a sense of well-being. and distort brain chemistry," People frequently will look to Speller said. fo od, hopin g it will provide that "These substances significantly sense of being nurtured. · disturb the amount of [adrenalin­ Christmas Gifts- All Night However, she said, "Food does like substances) in the brain and not have that kind of power and that sets up a whole series of people frequently get disappointed symptoms which really are out of and can suffer severe the control of the patient." consequences in their quest to get Speller said that through r~ ~ation -/.9.93_, !lftl tit~ pott and ptih% tl!e pt/fd; fo od and , ultimately, a particular counselling she encourages o/ wei ght or body size to meet their individuals to believe in emotional needs." themselves. Y?~c£- & Ireland, also a recovering "We're trying to empower S1af bul imic who received her master's people to say 'look, you have degree in counseling from the everything you need, on the inside university, said needing something of you, to start decisior.-making outside of yourself to define your and problem-solving and handling self-worth and self-esteem is some very painful issues in yo ur called co-dependency with food . life,"' she said. •*MERR' t) "In the beg inning , they ' re all "Where we start," Speller sai d, hoping that if we could just fix this "is with the eating di sorder to kind CHRISTMAS! eating disorder, all the other of prove our point, and th en we [proble ms ! would go away," help people branch out from th ere Speller sai d. and start dealing with other issues Speller pointed out,however, that are imponant in their lives." :>:::: :X s .e... lliirrit..-..~>:: ...... ;:1!~-==-. December 7, 1993 • THE REVIEW • AS Red tape keeps prisoner behind bars Even with a governor's pardon, Donald Loper remains in jail.

BY K.C. DELIMATER • 1988, during a multi-agency drug release have not yet been arranged, nurse." S~ff Reporrer sweep, to an undercover Dover although officials expect to have Loper has been in a state work - Besides bars, locks and barbed police officer. him released in some capacity release program which has helped wire, the strongest thing keeping On December 2, Gov. Thomas before the holidays. him turn his life around by Donald Loper imprisoned is the Carper made a decision to reduce "I think that the Board was working at the Delaware Veterans state's delay in processing Loper's sentence, but he will impressed with the genuineness of Cemetery since early 1992. paperwork. · remain in a work-release program Mr. Loper's appeal," said Killen. "Working at the cemetery gave Loper is being held at the until he appears before the Parole The case was cited as an Mr. Loper a lot of self-esteem Plummer Work-Release center Board. example of how foolish mandatory because he had responsibility and located near Wilmington. The wait, however, is not sentencing has become. something to get up for in the On October 28, the Delaware unusual because of the time it Furthermore, the Board said Loper morning," Killen said. State Pardons Board decided Loper takes to process the paperwork, a had more than paid his debt to Bob Sullivan of the Delaware would be released as soon as spokeswoman for the governor society in their initial report in Veterans Cemetery said, "I know possible. said. October. Loper has had a couple of job Since the unanimous "It generally takes a month for "With the good time Mr. Loper offers, but everything is contingent recommendation for commutation, the Board's recommendation to has earned, I hope that he will be on his release from Plummer the Board decided that the 36-year­ reach the governor's office," said released Friday." Center." old Dover man could be released Sheri L. Woodruff, the governor's In support of the commutation, While Loper has been promised in some capacity before the end of press secretary. "But when we Killen said Loper has used his time a job with the State Transportation his mandatory prison term. received the paperwork, we turned in prison to benefit his life. Department as a highway toll "The guy did five years for two it around in 12 hours." Killen said that Loper has collector after his release, he will bags of dope worth $5 a piece," A date for the new hearing has regained control of his life by be unable to start until he attains a THE REVIEW /Walter M. Eberz said public defender William M. not been set due to the seasonally giving up alcohol, tobacco, and driver's license. Daryl Brown runs for a couple of his 120 yards in Saturday's Killen. "This is what happens to high demand on the Board. drugs. Motions have been started in rainy 34-31 loss to Marshall. you when you are poor, and in the Woodruff said that everyone in "Going to jail forced Mr. Loper Superior Court to obtain one for wrong place at the wrong time," prison at this time of year is to reassess his whole life," said Loper by the state. said Killen. attempting to gain an appeal so Killen. "I think he is the greatest, Loper would not have been Loper has served more than five that they will be home for the he has a lot of self-discipline, he eligible for release until Aug. 24 years of his six-year sentence for holidays. has been active in the church, and 1994, unless his sentence was selling two bags of marijuana in The conditions of Loper's is now engaged to be married to a commuted. Singin' in the stairwell University a cappella group "The Deltones" records first album BY M.VICTORIA KEMP sessions. Sharps. so those who come after will offer their· Assistant Features Editor For three consecutive Sundays, the "The album contains most of our own style," he said. Three years ago, five friends gathered group met at 8 a.m. to secure songs such older songs," Alick said. "It's special to Karen Friday (AS JR), founding in the hallway of the Perkins Student as "Paperback Writer" by the Beatles us because in the spring, six members member and past musical director, said Center to sing a few songs a cappella. and "Secure Yourself' by the Indigo will be graduating, including myself." working on this project helped bring the· Because they liked w.hat they heard Girls. Alick and Strang designed the cover group together. then, The Deltones-now nine members Meredith Strang (AS JR), music of the cassette, took the pictures and "It was a definite group effort," strong-recorded a new album: "The director for this semester, said everyone created the graphics. Friday said. "I hope that the fact that we · Deltones-Singin' in the Stairwell." was excited about recording but that "We finally handed everything in to love to entertain and are always ready ro· Tom Gray (AS SR), the group's having the sessions so early in the the Graphics Department at 5 p.m. the perform is projected through the design · treasurer and former music director, morning was rough. Wednesday before Thanksgiving," Alick and the sound of the recordings." • contacted Target Studios of Newark to "It was a real push to have everyone said. "It was the absolute latest deadline Alick said the addition of new record the singers in Amy E. duPont ready to sing their hearts out," Strang we could get, so seeing the final product members keeps the group fresh with new, Hall. said. "The basses loved it because their is a relief." ideas and talents. "It was great to record these songs voices were low in the morning, but for Strang said the album is special for "A cappella is such a different before I graduated because most of the everyone else it was tough, but well everyone in the group, especially for sound, and I think that's why it's so' songs we recorded were my worth the efforts." those who are graduating. popular on campus," he said. "It's arrangements from when I was the Dave Alick (AS SR), president and "This project was such a huge part of something we can create rather than just music director," Gray said. founding member, said the group all our lives, we'll never forget it," she imitate." "It was great to have them decided last spring to record an album said. The Deltones will perform Dec. 12 at immortalized," he said. because they were inspired by previous Gray said the album seems to signify 8 p.m. at Dover Air Force Base. Their THE DELTONES The first weeks of November marked recordings of other university groups an end of an era for The Del tones. cassette can be purchased from Alick for the beginning of The Del tones recording like The Golden Blues and The D- "Half of the group will be graduating, $8. ..

UD OU1DOOR RECREATION CENTER SPRING BREAK BACKPACKING TRIP CANYONLANDS NATIONAL PARK, UTAH March 26 - April 1 AFRICAN STUDIES PROGRAM Why read anylhinS. else? $625 - incls. air & ground, food, & equip - LAST IN SERIES- ReseiVatlons & $100 dep. accepted beg. Dec. 13 AFRICAN FILM SERIES, FALL 1993 Register in CSB 101 -A Information Call 8611 or 4118 Film: CHOCOLAT A young woman's return to Cameroon, her native land. She reflects upon her growing up in a l Further Your Career with traditional society. I Location: 100 Kirkbride Hall AtBN" One of the Country's Largest Date: Tuesday, December 7. 1993 Credit Card Companies Time : 7:00 p.m. All are welcome. Bring a friend. Films are join the nearly 8,200 people who have made MBNA America the leading free and open to the public. issuer of the prestigious Gold MasterCard ~ We're seeking qualified full-time Customer Satisfaction Representatives to work a fixed monthly schedule including some evening and weekend hours. New,..., pn:scnts We are also seeking part-time Customer Satisfaction GArk "• A Childlike Christmas Representatives to work the following schedule : conducted by Chorale Michael Larkin -Saturday and Sunday, 10 am-6 pm -Monday, 6 pm-10 pm Saturday December II, 1993 at 7:30p.m. Successful candidates for these positions must have a genuine interest Newark United Methodist Church. 69 East Main Street Tickets $8 ($7 in advance). $5 students & seniors in helping other people and possess: For information call 368-4946 ~ •excellent communication skills •the ability to solve problems quickly and effi ci ently •a flexible schedule UDPHONE REGISTRATION FOR • the capacity to work effectively in a fast-p aced environment SPRING '94 STARTS JAN. 24. MBNA rewards a commitment to excellent service with superior professional opportunities, competitive salaries, and incentive pro­ grams. The working environment is exceptionally attractive, providing many innovative conveniences and amenities . To apply for a position, please submit a resume or application to: Erin Rybaltowski MBNA America 400 Christiana Road Newark, DE 19713 1-800-63 7-2070 Mon .-Thurs.: 8 am-6 pm, Fri. : 8 am-5 pm ) MONA Ame rica is an E4ual Employmcnl Opponunilr/Affirma li \'c Auion Empl o)•Cr. I (!) 1993 MO NA Am mca Bank, N.A. CLAD 9·3 2.1 -93 REMEMBER YOUR PIN! A6 •THE REVIEW• December 7,1993 Faculty, administrators feel finals crunch With exams, papers and projects to grade, professors stress, too.

BY LAUREN MURPHY this, the voyage is over."' scheduling and advisement. there is no such thing anymore as SUtrReponw However, he also said the "I get very discouraged when ' what do you want to be when you As be sits with a pile of papers feeling of accomplishment comes students come in unprepared and grow up?'," Fisher said. spread across his desk, empty cups along with some difficulties. say, 'Help me . What should I "That question should be 'what of coffee and a half-eaten bag of " The stressful part is wanting take?"' Renee Fisher, assistant to do you like, what interests you, chips, he leans back and sighs. students to get as much as they the chairperson of English, said. what do you care about," she said. He realizes he will be up until possibly can from the course," Fisher said that while she does Assistant Professor for Chemistry the sun rises. Hoffman said, "and not to permit get frustrated with course selection and Biochemistry Fredric Askharn As final exam week approaches, extraneous aspects like grading and problems, she feels mixed said he finds the grading process is everyone on campus begins to have evaluation to obscure the basic emotions during . the last few what makes finals week tedious for worries, doubts and general stress. values of learning and education the faculty. Many students will have big that are really important." "The stressful part "I think students have a different exams that will be the determining He said he also feels pressure to kind of stress than the faculty, factor in their course grade. Some make himself more available to his is wanting because when the exam is over, a - have even procrastinated all students during this time of year, lot of grading goes on and there's semester and need to put in a panicularly to freshmen. students to get as pressure to get things submitted on serious final effort. "I'm sensitive to the fact that time," Askham said. However, students are not the college is a big transition for much as they Many professors do not only ones who feel this pressure. freshmen, and personal! y and necessarily feel the pressure of Most university professors and emotionally there's a lot going on possibly can from final exams, but are burdened with administrators say their lives are in not related to education," he said. the course." tedious bookwork. disarray at the semester's close as Professors of other departments "I only feel stress if my finals -Professor Eric Hoffman well. feel varying degrees and types of come at the very end of the test Professors of various stress during finals week. weeks. week," said Judy Mcinnis, departments face different types of Economics professor Moore "I feel really good when I can associate professor for foreign THE REVIEW !Kelly Bennett pressures and demands. Dr. Eric McDowell, feels that while it is a steer a student away from a bad language and literatures. Hoffman, Executive Director of tough time for students, the faculty schedule or put a student back on The problem with finals week, 'TIS THE SEASON! Santa Claus makes an early stop in Newark American Philosophical also has many responsibilities. track, assuring them that they're Mcinnis said, is that sometimes she this year at the Christiana Mall. Association, said he experiences "I think it's a pretty stressful normal and not alone," she said. gets bored grading so many exams. both feelings of accomplishment week for us as well because office One problem she said she deals "It's a lot of drudgery, but not and tension during finals week. hours get crowded and we have the with during finals week is students much stress," she said. "I feel some .relief at the end task of putting together a fair who come to her feeling pressure Fisher said even though State to receive money when we get the ship back into the exam," McDowell said. about future career plans. everyone experiences stress during harbor," Hoffman said. "It's that Administrators also have a lot to "Something that kids lose sight the end of a semester, "the stresses sense that 'yeah, we got through deal with in terms of student of at the end of the semester is that are more on an individual basis." for prisoner programs

BY !SARfN SAL.MANSOHN officr.; Stalf/l.epolter The applied skills segment of the The U.S. Department of Education program will also teach foreign will award the Delaware Department of speaking inmateS English as a second Correction up to $879,000 for the language. expansion of !he Life Skills for State Academics will use self-paced and Local Prisoners Program over the insttuction in order to teach literacy and next three years. prepare prisoners for the Graduate The announcement, made by Equivalency Degree (OED) test. Governor Thomas Carper Friday, The grant is the first in which all designated Delaware as one of two three componertts of !he program will dozen state and local governments to be brought together and funded receive the federal funding for the anywhere. program started in 1991. "This program is an excellent one, The Department of Correction will and I am pleased that !he Department receive a $293,000 grant for !he fiscal of Education has given us the year of 1994 enabling !he state's four opportunity to expand it in Delaware's major prisons to have the program prison system," Carper .said. improved within !he next year. In order to have the program run The prisons to benefit from the efficiently, the state will hire a program funds are !he Multi-Purpose Criminal director and six tea:hers, including one Justice Facility and the Women's to teach bilingually. "By teaching Correctional Facility in Wiimington, essential life skills to our inmates, we the Delaware Correctional Facility near will be accomplishing two goals," Smyrna and the Sussex Correctional Carper said. Institution near Georgetown. "First, by teaching prisoners to The main focus of the Life Skills resolve their disputes in a non-violent Program is to give inmates !he ability marmer, we will help reduce incidences to effectively reenter society through of violent crime and possibly ease lessons in a classroom aiJilosphere. overcrowding in our prisons. In !he program. the classrooms will "Second, by expanding serve as control groups in a scientific opportunities for inmates to learn, we 6:30 P.M. - WEDNESDAY ,DECEMBER 8 study, said Steven Holland, principal of give them the ski lis necessary to EH'I.NG ROOM- PERAJl\'S STUDEl\11' CENTER the Education Department of the become productive citizens after !heir Delaware Correctional Center. release from prison." WITH TilE PARTICiPATION OF The program will have three Prisoners who are to be released IJN . IJ:11 "JD P. ROSElLE. UNIVERSITY PRESIDE/\T components: within !he next two years are eligible to The violence reduction section will enroll in the prognim. lf'ITH LATALS. ME/\'ORAHS & CAADLES DREJDELS f:. CI/A.\LI\A/1 GfLT teach inmates several methods to Several prison officials have reduce anger and solve disputes in a expressed !he need for these types of COME ..1 :\D SIGN THE GIAAf' CHA:\LI\...:HI CARD 7lfAT WILL HE SE. \'T non-violent manner. programs, and are happy about their Another portion of the program, implementation. To the Children of Chernobyl- sponsored by Chabad House applied skills, will teach things such as "This is the stuff your mom is interpersonal relations, supposed to teach you," said Holland, communications and job and fmancial "and we (the prison system) haven't planning, according to !he governor's been very good morns" so far.

•/ A'LA ALA ALA A'LA A'LA A'LA ALA ALA A'LA A'LA ALA ALA ~ > I····---~-~~---················ ··.. .f· ' ; :<: ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA ~ ~ Proudly Welcomes Their Newest Initiates ! > ~ ~ !J -r;iJ~ ;~~f ~he I ~ > ~ Rachel Ferro Danielle Orenstein M I ~ I "rf - ~ (_: .. · .__* . * f"R 'cJ' li'l[)\ Marnie Fierstein Kristi Peterson > I ·.. __/ ) .·' ___,. ~ \W L!::1.!..!:V I > I _.. ,., ... ·~. '"'b '"""~·~~ - ;s M I ~ Pam Guers Sara Qualls > I > I ~ Lisa Lotkin Rachel Sohn M r -IW~t ~~)tSESSIO I I< > Meghan McCormack Lisa Wiseman I ~ > : at -~(U:~s 'ez~ . County College I !cl: Alissa McNabb Liz Yelagotes ~ I ~ : 3 We~"s d'f. Concentrated Learning s..J > I 1 January 3, 1994 - January 20, 1994 I ~ ~ 1 Monday through Friday > I ~ CONGRATU.LATIONS M I plus Saturday, January 15, 1994 I : A'LA ALA ALA A'LA A'LA A'LA A'LA ALA A'LA A'LA A'LA ALA > : (no classes Monday, January 17) I .~~------~~==~=-~==~~--~~------~~ I I I Three weeks of immersion ln more than 50 courses, such as: Accounting, Algebra, Art History. Business Organization. Computer Applications. I I Economics, English Composition, Flnance. Freshman Math. Introduction to Poetry. I Marketing. Psychology, Racquetball, Skiing, Sociology. Spanish. I Introduction to Theater, Wrl~ing Sk111s for College ..... I I All this and more at MCC's WINTERSESSION I I I Put your winter break I to work for you! I lif\l Registration: now through December 11, I MIDDLESEX by or in person. I COUNTY COLLEGE man I 155 Mill Road Late registration: December 13 through the first class. Edison, New JerMy on space-available basis ($15 late fee assessed) I 08818-3050 I (908) 906-2509 I I The WIN'IERSESSION work load Is heavy. For a single course. you should expect to spend 1 about as much tlme In and out of the classroom on a weekly basts as you would I carrying a full-time load In a normall4- week semester. I If you baYe the time to lnn•t, WINI'ERSESSION could be perfect for you. I •...... ••...... ~ December 7, 1993 • THE REVIEW • A7 ~ What's in a name? (left) The Morris Library UD 's buildings take their titles was named for Hugh from contributors to professors. Martin Morris, a judge who -:: also served on the ~~CMONJ"E!O and Wolf Halls throughout his lifetime. university's Board of Perkins, Pencader, Warner, "Sharp was very loyal and was Sypherd, Rodney, Morris, Brown concerned about the looks of the Trustees. and Carpenter. campus," he said. When he donated Most students are familiar with funds for Mitchell Hall, Munroe said these names only as buildings across Sharp had the option to name the the university. building after himself, but preferred However, before they were titles to name it after former university to a building, they were the names president Samuel Chiles Mitchell. (below) Brown Hall, as well as ~, ~ . of former university presidents, Munroe also said Fletcher H. major contributors, trustees and even Brown, a major but modest Brown Lab, was named for : ~ ,: Delaware historical locations. contributor. provided the university Fletcher H. Brown, president of- ' As Judge George Bunon Pearson. with the chemical laboratory built in Jr., a trustee for 42 years, said, "If 1937. the state Board of Education in :· you lmew them, you would applaud Brown, president of the State the 1940s. He also contributed · '" them." Board of Education during the ..• , Among the 50 or more buildings 1940s, dedicated much of his time to money to the university r :!J. scattered across campus, most monitoring the growth of the ' - ( ~ reflect university history, not only university. Only after his death did for their departments and programs, the building become Brown cared for the university's education named after historical figures or but for the names of the people they Laboratory, which was originally with an intense interest," Pearson places in Delaware' s history. honor. called the Chemical Laboratory, said said. "He did an amazing amount for Rodney and Dickinson complexes A name of a building is Munroe. the university." are named for such people. traditionally decided by the Board of Munroe said the Perkins Student Both Morris and Pearson were in Locations are also used to name Trustees, Pearson said. Center was another building the law profession and served on the buildings, Munroe said. Walter S. "People come and want their renamed to honor a memorable Board of Trustees, Pearson said. Carpenter, Jr., brother of Robert names on buildings, but the names person. Morris had provided numerous large R.M. Carpenter, donated money for are not only based on money, they Perkins, who was 36 at the time, funds and recruited reputable faculty Laurel Hall and named the building are based on people who have given was one of the youngest university such as President Perkins, he said. after his wife 's home town. their time and interest," he said. presidents and held the position for "It was a great privilege to know The Bob Carpenter Convocation Since 1986, trustees have based 17 years, Munroe said. Students in a him and to emulate him," Pearson Center reflects one person's interest their decisions on guidelines such as 1952 yearbook described him: said. "Everyone [the board] wanted in athletics because of its their importance to the university, "'His conscientious spirit has to honor him. The library was the recreational function. related interests and the state. been felt throughout the campus, most important building," he said. "R.R.M. Carpenter, Jr. was a According to John A. Munroe, H. giving us a new awareness of our Men are not the only ones who wonderful benefactor of the R. Sharp Professor Emeritus for responsibilities and ambitions for have been honored in the naming of athletics," Clayton said . He History and author of The University the university." some university buildings. contributed money to increase the of Delaware: A History, many of In 1984, John A. Perkin's name John Clayton Jr., who worked in coaching and teaching staff of the ~ifts was added to the Student Center, these buildings were from the University Archives for over 19 athletics oro~ram . alumni who centered their lives which opened in 1958. the school. Professor Wolf,' the former student years, said Warner Hall, originally Carpenter was on the Board of Munroe recalled when a graduate said. around the growth of the university. Munroe said the names are named Residence Hall, was named Trustees when the new convocation In some cases, the donor usually added later, when the person came to visit the university in the Theodore R. Wolf, a after Emalea Pusey Warner, the key center was being built. Because he 1950s to offer funds. distinguished professor of chemistry suggested a name for the building, becomes old. This is done to avoid organizer of womens college was elderly and dying at this time, Munroe said. favoritism, he said. As he walked around campus in the early 1900s, had failed the development. Clayton said the Bob Carpenter with a young professor, the former former student, Munroe said. H. Rodney Sharp was considered Much recognition is given to Robinson Hall was named after Center was named in his honor. one of the university's biggest Judge Hugh Martin Morris, Pearson student, who was now the owner of The graduate then told the Winifred J. Robinson, the Many alumni continue to hold a chemical company, commented on young professor it was '" the best contributors, he said. Sharp, a 1898 said, who shared many years with university's first woman dean, he interest in the university's growth graduate, donated money to Morris. the name of Wolf Hall. thing that ever happened to said. for several years after they graduate, '"That must be named after him.'" buildings such as Mitchell, Harter "Morris saw no limitations and Clayton said buildings are also contributing time and money toward Expert discusses impact of PLO/Israel peace agreement BY TARA ANN MCHUGH chosen as one of the 3,000 people allowed communication and cooperation, prior to The audience at the event, which was Shaer also said he felt the prime SUlffReporter at the monumental signing. any formal agreement. sponsored by Delaware Israel Publi c ministers of both countries have shown "Peace in the Middle East is no longer "It's kind of amazing there was room "[The plan] is probably way ahead of Affairs and Hillel, was split between their expertise as leaders by inconceivable, but it is far from for anyone who didn't have 10 titles," where anyone expected after a couple of supporters of Israel and supporters of compromise, weighing risks and inevitable," said John Kessler, a political Kessler said jokingly. years," he said. Palestine. However, both sides agreed the prioritizing. analyst, in a speech about the Middle East He praised the United States for getting The negotiations were about land, answer to the problem will be reached He said the decision made by Rabin to Peace Agreement at Purnell Hall the ball rolling in the process to improve . peace and security for both sides, Kessler with understanding on the part of both allow Palestinian fl ags to be placed in Thursday. ties between Israel and Palestine. explained, and how the countries are countries. certain areas and in return prohibit tanks Kessler, who is an expen on the events Kessler said the catalyst behind the learning to cooperate as a region "Let's stop demonizing everyone and from the areas was a good example of in the Middle East and the signing of the improved relations was American economically. let's undermine fundamentalists and his ab il ity to prioritize and to make peace accord, spoke to a crowd of about diplomatic activism. "The negotiations are not about a radicals on both sides," said George Shaer compromise. 50 people about the state of the two "Without America, the forces will not marriage," he said. "They are about a (AS GR). Kessler concluded his speech by urging nations before and after the agreement for remain engaged," he said. divorce." "Although he is of Israeli descent, " the audience to re-examine everything peace was made three months ago. The process of improving relations He said the peace agreement had no Shaer said, "Kessl er remained unbiased they know about both sides. "The alternative to peace in the Middle between Palestinian Prime Minister guarantees, but said he thought former throughout the speech and seemed "As w e move from an era of total East is war," he said. Yassar Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister methods were ineffective. optimistic that the negotiations and further conflict to re solution, we have to Kessler, who was present at the signing Yitzhak Rabin began two years ago in "We've given war a chance," he said. agreements would be successful. know a lot more," Kess ler said. "Lt of the agreement on Sept. 13 on the White Madrid, Spain, Kessler said. "It hasn't stopped the violence [so] let's "I ' m not convinced Arabs and Jews ·is time to get to know our neighbor_s House lawn, said he was surprised he was He added the plan was for contact, give something else a chance." cannot live together," he said. and leave be hind our be liefs. "

Margheritas - .' : ~ PIZZA ' 134 EAST MAIN STREET • 368-4611 ' ' It's just around ' : Monday &: Tuesday Wednesday Speciai.! ~ · the corner ... Special 2 Large 1; . our annual Large Pie Cheese Pies ii· : $6.00 $9.99 1.1: : Margheritas is now proud to serve you ,: DECEMBER Bud and Bud Light on Tap Extra Toppings- $1.50 Pick- up or Delivery BOOKBUY! . . , .,._, ··~ ·,·,-.-.•,..,, .,~,• .,.,,.,.,._._....._._..,._,,...... ,...,.,, ...... -.v.•,•.-...-.-.• .•...._•,•,.,.._._._,• .,. ..,,,.,.,..,....,, ,.....-_.,...... ,...... ,._.,.,.,.....,,_,._,, ...... ,._...... , •...., • ...... ,.....w ___.,...... ,.. : WALK TO U OF D Join· us in the new TOWNE COURT APARTMENTS Student Center Gallery *Balconies* Wall to Wall Carpet* Air Conditioned *Masonry Construction* Heat and Hot Water Included* Newly renovated See you soon! Apartments, Hallways and Laundry Rooms* Shuttle Bus Service to U of D* Quiet areas available by request, Ideal for students* On- site security* Apartments have study areas and 9:30-5:30 Dec. 18 · 10:00-5:00 Dec. 10 eat in kitchens* Outdoor tennis courts, basketbfill courts, pic­ Dec. 11 11:00-3:00 Dec. 20, 21 9:30-5:30 Dec. 13-17 9:30-5:30 Dec. 22 9:30-8:00 nic areas, and playground* Conveniently located within walk- ing distance to shopping center, banks, and restaurants. University Bookstore EFFICIENCIES. ONE. TWO AND THREE BEDROOM APARTMENTS PERKINS STUDENT CENTER GALLERY 9 MONTH LEASES AVAILABLE Mon.-Fri. 9-6 * Sat. 10-4 * Sun. 12-4 368-7000 Off Elkton Rd. Rt. 2 From$348 ~8. THE REVIEW. December 7, 1993 ~~~~~~!?n an.~.,.~~~~P,!iE.~ thmk of them as the problem. !herr ki~s nght from wrong. It is important for children to . "I think, though •." s~e says, "that Art learn the difference , between tf you are not Jearrung tt at home, at ac~pt_ed and unaccepted behaviors, least the schools can ~ork so as an but IllS equally essential to find out everybody graduates w1th the why a child may be acting out knowledge they are supposed to." picking fights or using inappropri~ As he.lpful and impona~t as Exploration language. preventauve measures are, children · . ' A child whose parents use don't alway~ do what. is ~xpected- profanities at home or is a victim of and appr~pnate attenu~n ~~ n~ed . of the Self • physical punishment hasn' t been Ferran suggests pwus~ung kui~ at t aught that abusive behavior is an early age 10 teach soc1al moral1ty, unacceptable. but Pac_ilio thinks that can be the and as a Political Act • This is only pan of a chain wo,?t thing to do: . , reaction that appears 10 have no end We must bu1ld competencies, "We overuse the formal system,;, Pacilio says, "so kids will_ ha;,e Pacilio says. "We need programs to better tools to ~e bett~r chmces. teach kids how to deal with He emphastzes teachmg students A lecture by conflict." that rules exist to ensure law and 006 Kirkbride Hall Schools need to take initiative in order, not to punish people who Prof. Hilton Brown teaching kids what they may not be challenge them. Harriet Baily Professor of Art, 7:00p.m. Thursday, 9 December ~ earning at home. Stude~ IS w~o com.e to sch?ol Sponsored by With0ut these programs, society pre<><:cupied with outside conflicts Art Conservation and Art History 'Sees increasing trends of children, mvanably cause teachers ~ro~lems the Campus Diversity Unit some as young as five, getting that are not al-:vays dealt w1th m the arrested. most construcuve way . · The increase in violence in the "[Kids) are on pins and needles," last 10 years, Pacilio says, has made Pacilio _says. "So if one .kid says h more difficult to view a simple somethm~ to a~other k1d --:- he school-yard fight as just that. meant nothmg by 1t but he says It- · : So, he says. the police are called the other ~id turns around and and kids get thrown into the judicial ~hacks him because he's so system too early. dts,t;essed. . . . "We have no diversion Now he gets dtsctphned and he programs," Pacilio says. "A kid gets didn't mean to do it." arrested and processed. He . stresses the need for THE I994 CALENDARS ·.• "Kids get lost in the system." prevenuve programs_that teach kids · If positive influences don't pay how 10 resolve confltcts before they SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY attention to what children are not escala~e: saying, the negative influences will Pactho sugg_e~ts the develoJ?ffient FEBRUARY win their energies. of a set of postuve ru~e.s for kids to 123456 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "I always get in trouble," says folio~, an~ to condttlon them to 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Todd, a 17-year-old student who is apprectate hfe. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 'still in the ninth grade. lns~ of putting ~ e~p~is on 23 . · He now Jives at Ferris a negauve phrases hke don t do .maximum security school 'for that," "that's bad" and "if you do 'adolescent males. that y~u will be in trouble," he says No one ever told Todd he could teachmg and disciplining in the 9 •accomplish anything. "I had a talent affrrmative_ will gain beuer resuliS. ·in football," he says as his eyes .A chtld needs positive dance with excitement. reinforcement. If a task is not done ' His voice begins to trail. " If 1 pr~rly, Pacilio says reasoning out didn't get in trouble, I could've been why tt. w.as done the way it was, and ·successful." explammg what can be done to Children need a desire to Jearn improve it, is more appropriate than Pacilio says. Encouragement is vitai punishment or discipline. for kids to really believe they can He says more time is needed to accomplish what they set out to. eltplore why kids do the things they How? do. When discipline is needed, "If you keep a kid focused," Todd thoug.h, it shou~d be made a true says with authority. "If you keep l~ar!lmg expenence, where the 'em positive and don't tell 'em 'you vtcttm and the offender ain't nothing."' c?mmu.nica_te their feelings about a · Pacilio agrees this helps raise self given s .n~uon . esteem and improve social and Pactho says, for instance, behavioral skills. "punishments like suspension are Achieving a daily goal is stupi~" for disruptive class behavior. something Melissa Stevens tr ies to "Ftrst, a cooling-off period is implement in her students' lives. necessary for both parties to think • · The teacher at the Rockford about the incident," he explains. Center psychiatric hospital fmds that The teacher should then explain 'l:: hildren become better students why it is necessary to be courteous -'When they learn that they can to the other students, who want to 'accomplish different tasks. learn. ' If they don't achieve what they After explaining why he or she set out to, she says, children should acted out, the student and teacher be encouraged to discuss why and can, togeth~r. come up with some bow they can do better the next type of soluuon for reconciliation. time. Tamarra thinks teachers must Are Available -,1 University ' Dr. Michael Ferrari, associate remember that they are not just there ptofe.ssor f~r Individual and Family to teach, but also to li~ten. Stud1es, thmks there is too much ~us~ and Peter Mitchell, parents Now From pr:essure on schools. acuve m state education, agree that II Bookstore · · "The educational system," Ferrari communication is imperative. says, "has been asked to provide an . Peter says teachers must relate to University of Delaware awful lot- food, discipline, etc." ktds what they are doing and what • He feels concentration needs to the real goals of education are. be placed on fmding a societal value _"The f';J'St is reading, writing and system. anthmeuc," he explains. "The ' "I disagree that we need to teach second is knowing right and wrong. ~ · MindTrap is a game that is played by values," Pacilio says. Susan also emphasizes defining It is unfair to judge whether or goals and sending clear messages on two individuals or teams in a question not individual families are instilling bow tn achieve them. and answer format. The questions the "right" values in their children "The educational system is not require logical deduction, reasoning but, he says it is the place of th~ training ·kids early enough in school to teach respect and provide dec~sio,? making and problem and the occasional leap of logic. There an environment where kids feel solvmg, Peter says. are three types of questions that you romfonable. • will encounter; first there is the type • He thinks the school system can If a girl is taught while she is still be used as a vehicle to give children a child that school is positive and that look so easy you jump at the what they may be missing out on in she has potential, what can she answer. But you will probably be learn? other aspects of their lives. wrong. The second kind of question Tamarra Morris, a senior at Pacilio believes all children Tatnall High School in Wilmington, should have the opportunity to appears to be impossible to solve. It feels school administrations need to reason out this problem. seems as though there just isn't enough "Then they will realize they can take a look at the students' needs. information to go on. But when you The 17-year·old thinks parents shoot for the stars." hear the answer, you realize you overlooked the obvious and that it was ''Iwmtfrom easy after all. The third type of question is the kind that appears house to house, difficult and is in fact difficult. This iDlY type may require keen questioning put gettine food or to the reader of the card, by the other clothes they participants in a lively give and take. MindTrap is a broad collection The enjoyment of MindTrap's of over 500 classic puzzles, murder mysteries, conundrums questions stems from the fact that they and trick questions that are do not require a lot of background ~~'till intellectually stimulating knowledge. At the same time they are without being serious. The not childish riddles. Rather, the ~mlft concept of puzzles and riddles questions, are fun and challenging and have been around since the are guaranteed to teach you something neigliborhood.,, ancient Greek philosophers, about the way you think. And -JodPcweU but never put into a board ironically the questions you get wrong SoJ,,buf,.Mo game format... until now! usually bring about the most Jock Powell is one ol the liffle answers lo enjoyment. the bigproblems focingevery communi~ in America. And because there ore more peo· pie than problems, things will gel done. All Available Now -,1 University you hove to do is something. Do anything. At The... Bookstore n P~!~T~ ?! .L.I<:J:!T II Do -"ol,. goool. ,_loomethl,. ,...,, University of Delaware ~ December 7, 1993 • THE REVIEW • A?

A Hannukah Happening At Hillel! Castle discusses . ' Celebration with Kiruv from Yeshiva University!! health care issues·· •Friday, December lOth at town meeting Services at 6:00 PM BY SHANNON C PERRINE Also on the minds of the StMI ~"' audience was long term care. 1 A lower-cost, more efficient, Castle addressed the topic aqd high-quality, universal health care said, "I think if we're going to deal Dinner and program following package for this nation was what with long term care, we need to also about 140 people asked for at a develop alternatives to long term town meeting in Wilmington with care." * Congressman Michael Castle (R­ One woman in the audie~ce Del.). asked if there could possibly·l>e RSVP AT Hillel 453 0479 Castle led a panel discussion, incentives or disincentives fpr held at the Medical Center of people who have, "risky lifestyles, Delaware at Wilmington Hospital, like those who smoke or don't wear with three health insurers and three their seat belts, or do drugs." . physicians who addressed senior Castle said he advocates those citizens, small business owners and types of incentives. HILLEL STUDENT CENTER - 4 7 WEST DEL. AVE. handicapped people who voiced Castle said he thinks people need their fears and ideas. to be less panisan about the issue of Bob Piach, former president of health care. . Handicap Advocacy Network of "I think we need to be a little bit Delaware Inc. (HANDi) talked one slower about saying, 'Well gee, I'm on one with the congressman about for the Clinton plan or I'm for the the need for advances in assistive Republican Task Force plan. . technology and equal access for "It's fine to have those as starting disabled people. points, but I worry about the abil,ity He asked if Castle "would of Congress to resolve this issue in support a plan that provides for the next year." access to all aspects of services for Castle said he thinks Congress people with disabilities?" will vote on some package soon. . . Castle answered, "Ideally, I "I cannot imagine that Congress would like to see a plan that would is going to go home without voting UD II FINANCIAL GRADUATE" DIPLOrv'lAS embrace those kinds of concepts. on health care and face the "Obviously, we have a cost electorate in the next election," ·he Custom printed with the For all that your parents factor." said. "I'm not, sure if that's good or Parents put you "The question becomes are you bad." names of your parents, or did for your education, the caring for some one with Castle said he is not sure what disabilities, or are you actually exactly will be voted on. "J think anybody that you would like thrqugh college? Financial Graduate Diploma is going to go in and actively make basically it will be something with them better somehow," Castle said. the Clinton name on it. be it Bill to thank. Framed, multi- an original way to show your But Castle agreed the nation does Clinton or Hillary Clinton or both Give them need to expand the coverage for the their names. colored, and printed on the appreciation. Add your official physically disabled, but the cost has "I don' t think it'll be the pl,an to be considered. which we are seeing today. It'll pe finest quality 28 lb. parchment something on signature for a personal touch. The congressman was asked by a something with less federal member of the audience if any of involvement and probably not quite paper, this diploma has a look See the bookstore display for the seven health care packages as sweeping in terms of the costs. graduation day ... being proposed, besides the Clinton "I think the president is package, address bias for people somewhat flexible and will go for of true authenticity. samples and information. with pre-existing conditions. that." Castle said the proposed plans do The congressman is a member of address pre-existing conditions and the Republican Health Care Task said he feels as though the bias Force and a member of the House should be eliminated. Committee on Labor and Education. Area post offices hold (})ffu, ~ ~«m, tk4 ~ ol/idal'¥ ~(hal holiday toy drives · Robert & Phyllis Smith BY lEN DORAN The price range of the gi(ts -~ UUJ e-ll~ llomn o{ Staff Rq>orter donated is decided entirely by the Financial Graduate The Newark Postal Service is gift giver, Dilorio said. . playing Sanla's Helper this holiday "You know gifts today, it's tougp 1!1!16 season by accepting new, unwrapped to buy a gift for under $20. But there toys at both Newark post office is no price limit on the gifts, as lo1;1g ~~ locations until December 20, post as they are new and unwrapped," office supervisor Anthony Dilorio, Dilorio said. Jr. said. Dennis Creese, the statio~ "The toys go to less fortunate manager of the Newark Post Offic~ children [in the Newark area] whose branch on Main Street agreed. parents can't afford to buy gifts for "It doesn't make any difference as the holidays," Dilorio said. far as value [of the toys] just as long "Wee Deliver for Kids Too", a as they are in their original packing,',' program sponsored by the Newark Creese said. . -.£University Post Office, is a new program this Newark's post offices are not the SAY TffAIVKS II Bookstore A UIYIQUE GIFT year, Dilorio said. only branches participating in tile ·University of Delaware "So far we only have a few gifts program. New Castle, Hockessin and here [at the Ogletown Road Newpon post offices are also having location], but it'll pick up," Dilorio a "Wee Deliver for Kids Too'', said. Creese said. " Although the toys are collected at Hockessin Posunaster Hugh Hem the post office, Newark's social said participation was less than services center, the Hudson Center, a expected so far. branch of the slate's social services "We haven't really had that much department, will be responsible for response in the Hockessin area,·; actually delivering the gifts, Dilorio Hemsaid. • said. Creese said it was a very easy According to Andrew Miles, process to drop off the gifts. manager of the Hudson Social "We just got a small gurney right Services Center, the gifts are not inside the door [of the lobby]. You actually delivered. don't have to wait on line or bring~ii "We don't deliver the gifts. The to a window, just leave it in tile staff wraps the gifts, but we notify lobby," Creese said. · The College of Arts & the family that their gifts are here, Toys can be dropped off in the and they come and pick them up," lobby of the post office at II 0 E; Science Dean's Office and Miles said. Main St. from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m; The Hudson Center makes the weekdays and 8 a.m. through 12 p.m, Advisement Center final decision as to which families Saturdays, Dilorio said. receive the gifts, Miles said. The Newark branch at 401 "We have cliems and we screen Ogletown Road will accept are them [to evaluate their needs], and donations from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. they are usually low income weekdays and 9 a.m. through I p.m. moving to Elliott Hall families," Miles said. Saturdays, he said. · Dec. 14, 1993. area, and a new little red playhouse that all children can enjoy," slie Playground said. · No change in telephone "The playground should help continued from page A3 children acquire creativity, flexible numbers listed in the "At any given time, there will be approaches to problem solvin~ . one or two children in a wheelchair, better social skills and physical Campus Directory. but the preschool could have many health," Horton said. children with mobility problems," She said preschool director Ali¢e Moak said. Eyman and engineering professQr All areas of the playground will Dick Wilkins helped identify WE'RE MOVING UP THE MALL!!! have equipment that is accessible to priorities for the group. children with mobility problems, "Dr. Wilkins teaches us how io Honon said. solve the problems," Horton said. "The playground will have easel "He gives us an idea of where ro boards, a sandboll and water play Start." A1 0. THE REVIEW • December 7, 1993

Drinking and riding can lead to a Joss of license, a conviction, or THE REVIEW /l(elly Bennett even worse. When you drink, get I Larry Beuchel's work was one of many pieces displayed at the a ride with a friend . It's Hollingsworth Building last Thursday and Friday nights. w, the best call you can make. ,f.J ' IICITOIICYCLf SAFETY FOUIDAnOII ~ ~ BEFORE FINALS, Art dept. BEFORE CHRISTMAS BREAK, continued from page A 1 Call ICT Group and make$$$ for over the holidays, Brown said some artworks have been around since the Renaissance next semester or SPRING BREAK!! We have open­ with very little deterioration, but ings in our Newark office on all shifts. other more recent works are less fonunate. FLEXIBLE AFTERNOON /EVENING SHIFTS Eva Hesse, a sculptor during the SATURDAY HOURS! 1950s and ' 60s, used plastic foam for one piece that was worth several GUAR. $6.25/HR. hundred thousand dollars, he said. UP TO $8/HR. - BASED ON EXP. The piece of artwork was in a collection at Oberlin College in $50 BONUS Ohio, where it began deteriorating because of ultraviolet radiation. Bring ad to interview by 12/10 for details on bonus. Within 20 years it became "just a No experience necessary, paid training provided. Call pile of dust in a box," Brown said. The same problem plagued Carl at 456-1811 for more info. Leonardo DaVinci 's fabled "Last ICf GROUP, INC. Supper" painting. "DaVinci was very inventive," College Square Shopping Center Brown said. "The real 'Last Supper' (Next to K-Mart) was painted in fresco with oil paint EOE and egg tempera," he said. "It began to fall apart at the time of the painting and was never fmished. Brown said there are three goals of the art conservationists. The first is to stabilize the environment, including controlling even minute changes in temperature. "We don' t think we' re contaminating," he said. "We're releasing heat and bacteria every time we breath." The prehistoric cave paintings at LesCaux in France had to be closed to the public after serious damage occurred caused by people breathing on the works, he said. The second goal is to remove the grime from the artwork. Whenever possible the work is restored to original condi Lion "without replacing anything if put there by the hand of the artist." Conservators add paint to a work of art where there has been a complete loss, he said, but it is frequently done with watercolors, for easy removal. "We never do anything to change the intent of the artist," Brown said.

Lenny Kravitz's mom was Mrs. Willis from The Looks like a Jeffersons. Vivarin night. The big one's only 12 hours away. You could have paid more attention in The Review. class, but tonight you've gotta cram. First, you better keep So much information. those eyes from closing. Revive with Vivarin. you won't even care. Safe as coffee, it helps keep you awake and mentally alert for hours. So when your most Bverything you need difficult problem to solve is how to to close down a crackhouse. stay awake ... make it You aren't helpless when crime down license numbers of strange cars. Invades your n eighborhood. You're They noted the times of odd behavior. a Vivarin night! fully capabl ~ of helping pollee and They worked wtth each other. They they're ready to sh ow you how. worked w1th the pollee. Armed w1th The Case of The Stanton Park fi eld glasses. note pads and telephones, Stand-off. folks kept track of the neighborhood. When crack moved Into a row With In one month, enough house on a quiet block of Stanton evidence had been gathered. Park In Washington. D.C.. folks Pollee moved ln. Crack decided to serve a.n eviction moved out. notice. Citizen participation beat They met with pollee to find crime In D.C. It can do the out what they could do to same for you For more · keep drugs out of their success stories, write The - ~ neighborhood. Mc.GruffJ'Uea, l Preven­ The cops told them to tion Way, Washington, D.C. keep an eye out- to let 208311-0001. pollee know whenever Pollee become even more something suspicious responsive when heir happened. They began to people are their partners. nottce faces. Together we They wrote can help

U..onty .. - . c...--~to2cupeolcolloe . December 7, 1993. THE REVIEW. A11. ~

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. I Ul-.1. ..• ~:Q? W'E:~RE: Ju~T QE:CtiYiNG IMQG£:5 of: OaANV5 n~ol'\ THE: J.4uQgL( Review & Opinion TE:LE~coP£. U/"\ ••• 0~ ••• I Tt-4iNJ< TuesdayDecernber7, 1993 PageA12 Wt~Dt GoNNR . ~V~ To ,:-;x IT f Education is not all academic In the fall of 1978, New Castle even distri bution of blacks and County first started practicing what whites in city and suburban became known as busing schools. desegregation. However, there is a highlight that Busing d e segregation was has been v irtually ignored in employed in order to make ratios comparison w ith these other between blacks and whites balanced factors. in Wilmington and in Wilmington's The exposure of white students suburbs, such as Newark. to black culture and the exposure of From kindergarten until the third black students to white culture has grade, Wilmington students would enabled white and black to become go to suburban schools. friends and understand the Then from the fourth grade until d ifferences be tween the two si xth g rade, suburban students cultures. would be sh ipped to Wilmington If desegregation did not exist, schools. blacks and whites would have Finally, for the seventh grade m issed the opportunity to get to until the 12th, Wilmington students know one another and would be sent to suburban schools, subsequently, most likely. would depende nt upon what region of have gone ignorant of the other's Wilmington they lived in. life. However, after 15 years, the Morality should not govern laws in society It is this ignorance which propels busing desegregation plan looks as and carries on s tereotypes, if it will be scrapped. prejudice and racism . These Why is prostitution illegal? than so be it. It seems after 15 years of children are receiving a benefit in Why are certain types of drugs illegal? Commentary This is still another reminder of how shipping students around New that they are learning to eschew this Why is drinking more accepted in women had to live in a role of purity, Castle County, the goal of creating type of behavior by confronting the society? By jason sanctity and chastity; women were not to a more balanced education for inner problem at it sroots - a lack of Why can't women go topless? eltpose any pan of their skin. It is only in city children was never reali zed. knowedge and experience. Why are certain acts of sex, such as Sean more recent times has certain liberations Statist ical educational levels In this way, busing desegregation sodomy. fellatio, underage and Garber been allowed and in the mainstream. s uch as SAT scores, graduation has been a success, despite not homosexual, banned in several states in These acts and questions submitted rates and the li ke, it seems never f ulfi lling the creator's original the United States? above are individual behaviors, not equalized or increased enough to goals. The answer to all these questions: well, morally bankrupt society of the societal. the extent the busing desegregation This program can only help Remnants of Victorian age morality till Renaissance and second, to the The choice to perform these acts should creators originally had hoped. promote racial diversity and in a holds influence over today's ~aws and intellectual freedom and carefree nature be individually decided; if one chooses to While controversial from the time where racial healing is needed. societal behavior. of the. Enli2htenment and of the 0 not beginning and a seemingly busing desegregation needs to be Think about it. Romantics. dqfg~~thA~~t a~g iAiA~~PtcR%P

question of whether free speech allows amendment that the KKK can march in should their personal life be taken into because of a difference in ideology or skin this man to stay a practicing educator or any city or town. consideration? color, sex never carne into the discussion. Commentary should he be fired due to obvious conflicts Free speech, one of America's greatest Everybody has the right to their Everyone, regardless of their beliefs, of interest. founding principles. privacy, but when Melzer went on record would probably not want an admitted By Rob Lining up on opposites sides are Peter But do you think our founding fathers he opened himself up to all kinds of pedophile teaching them any subject. Melzer, the teacher, the ACLU, and even were thinking about sex with young boys speculation. But doesn't a male teacher present the Wherry the New York Times, with angry parents when they made their decision? For instance, he was the subject of a same problem to a female student? and the New York City School Board on I don't think so . series of clips on a local TV station, wrote I would hope that if a teacher openly the other. In fact, I would guess they were articles for NAMBLA 's newsletter and admitted to that scenario, he would be If you happen to pick up a copy of the "All my activities have been purely probably referring to religion or performs fundraising for the group among instantly fired also. latest issue of the NAMBLA Bulletin, intellectual," said Melzer in a Philadelphia statements against the government, not a other duties. Ground zero, the act of having sex with don't be surprised to see black-and-white Inquirer interview. "I think what is at desire to see teenage boys parade around When Philadelphian Edward I. Savitz minors is highly illegal, and to think about glossies of a young boy clad in little more stake is the right of anyone to associate with no clothes on. was convicted of paying young boys for that thought is kind of mental than the oolor of his skin. freely, to have a right to think and to have The parents have a right to be outraged their soiled undergarments, NAMBLA pornography. While the later is not illegal That's right, full-blown seductive a right to speak freely." with a system that would allow a teacher was there to do a story on the man. and never wi II be, you just never know pictures of the boy next door. Naturally, every parent in New York to enter a classroom knowing that he I just don't think that this Melzer can when the thought becomes an action. NAMBLA, which stands for the North City was upset and threw their arms up in might be attracted to Johnny in the fifth hide under the umbrella of the First Just a thought to leave you with, maybe American Man/Boy Love Association, has protest. row. Amendment. Even his own ar,gument this guy should be teaching admitted been the recipient of a lot of media "Where are the rights of the parents to If it were my kid, I would have to take doesn' t present a strong case with which homosexuals, that way his beliefs attention lately because one of the protect the children?" asked Joan him, or her for that matter, out of the to argue in a court of law. wouldn' t effect his students because they members happens to be a teacher at the Levenson, president of the Parent's environment and place them in another " .. . It is the same kind of response that feel the same way about him. Bronx High School of Science. Association of the Bronx High School of school. 50 years ago people had about a black Oh yeah , I know that every homosexual The teacher, besides writing articles for Science. Yes, I would feel that the slightest teacher in a white school. They have said man or pedophile is not attracted to every the newsletter, has also openly expressed It's a tough argument to agree with chance my child would be the beneficiary the same thing about communists, person they see, but all it takes is one his interests in young boys-especially either side of the fence, because at the of one of Melzer's advances merits me Catholics, Jews, any number of people." time. those under the age of 16-but contends heart of the issue is a person's right to free yanking him/her out of the class. Come on. You can't be serious. that he never acted on his beliefs. speech, an idea embedded in the First Should a teacher's ability be based only When the prejudices regarding African Rob Wherry's editorial columns appears So, of course, the situation raises the Amendment. It is because of this same on their achievements in the classroom or Americans and others came about it was Tuesdays in The Review.

Where are the activists now? Abortion clinics in need of regulation weeks." Life News. say this sexual preference had screams of inequality and pleas · Twenty weeks. Five months. These abortions are perfectly legal nothing to do with his for justice that echoed the halls Commentary That's halfway through pregnancy, under Roe v. Wade and its folks. Commentary dismissal, but the reason of government buildings Babies have been known to companion case, Doe v. Bolton. Buttino lied is because, if he nationwide? By Rich live outside the womb at that age. Yet While Roe said the state may limit had told the truth, he would I guess one good protest per here in Delaware, "garbage disposals third-trimester aboniorrs except in the By Brian have been fired anyway. year is good enough to get Campbell were used regularly to grind abortion case of threat to the mother's health, Hickey The FBI clearly in the wrong some publicity for the cause. remains and flush them into the Doe defined health as mental and here with it's homophobic If these people were truly sewer system below the clinics." emotional as well as physical . policy, which inherently says serious in their fight for Last year The Review office was Of course, many people on both In other words, the killing of full­ homosexuals can not be agents justice, wouldn't they be aghast when an overzealous, out-of­ sides of the abortion issue are term babies in the womb by sucking In Silence of the Lambs, because they are a risk to the banging on the door of this line reporter took it upon herself to outraged at this reckless disregard for out their brains is legal under current Clarice Starling was a hard­ bureau. courtroom demanded equal call up an abortion clinic in Dover established biomedical disposal laws. abortion law. nosed, intelligent Federal What could be the reasoning rights again? and demand it tell her why they were For all the talk of rights, this Do you still suppon Roe v. Wooe? Bureau of Investigation agent, behind this? Gay rights groups across the chopping up babies and flushing incident underscores two important In a related matter, Theresa Burke, who tangled with Hannibal Perhaps homosexuals are nation should be ashamed of them down the drain. points: a psychologist of suburban Lector, and eventually, busted much more talkative and would themselves if they don't band I agreed the reporter was out of 1. For many, abortion is simply a Philadelphia, described the a serial killer. spill his/her guts if asked about together to fight for Frank line, but otherwise kept my mouth profit-motive industry. phenomenon of post-abortion But in reality, all the any internal national secrets. Buttino to get his job back, or shut. Her assertions sounded 2. The abortion industry as such is syndrome in Saturday's Philadelphia intelligence and guts in the Maybe the FBI fears that at least some compensation. exaggerated but, unlike my one of the most unregulated medical Inquirer. world wouldn't have made a other countries will find out Protest groups can't just colleagues, I thought something like fields in the country. "As a therapist, I see that there is difference if she was a lesbian that the agents are gay. and pick and choose photo that could be happening. I am used A third point should be made as definitely emotional grief and because the FBI considers will send homosexual agents opportunities where they will to the truth about abortion being well. Other grisly abortion-related mourning following an abortion. homosexuals a security risk. into the field to seduce them get some good publicity to help covered up. tales are not that uncommon. Nor are There is no question in my that we When the military and and then kill them. there cause. Apparently that reporter must have they all illegal. are disturbing a life process," Burke government debated the When confronted with the If they ever want to get known something we didn't. The Earlier this year. a "technique" for writes. legality of gays in the armed issue, the bureau said it banned anywhere with their cause, state of Delaware has begun an late-term abortions used by Drs. Burke says in general lhere is a forces, everyone in the country gays until 1979, but that policy they will hop on a plane to San investigation into claims of several Martin Haskell of Ohio and Dr. 10-ye ar period of denial about the jumped on one side of the is gone now. Being Francisco and picket outside of employees at two state abortion James McMahon of Los Angeles :abortion experience. Unfortunately, Burke says there is issue. homosexual just makes it the U.S. District Court. clinics that chopping and flushing were described in American Medical The controversy was all over News, the official newspaper of the little social support for women to harder to get hired. Sure, they won their fight to was pretty close to the truth. the news day in and day out, Why is that? get gays into the military but According to the Friday, Dec. 3, American Medical Association. deal with the traumatic experience. and it would not go away. I am somewhat homophobic there are a lot of battles in the News Journal front page, "The Using the "D&X" method, the Abortion-rights groups tell them it Thus, it is odd why there is no myself. My mentality is let war that they are trying to win. investigation began July after a baby is pulled almost entirely out of was just a clump of tissue, there is no • fire burning over this ban. them do what they want, I just Armies cannot pick and former employee of the Penny Hill the womb, a whole is cut in the skull reason to feel bad. The U.S. District Court in don't want to have to be aware choose which battles they want clinic approached the department and the brains sucked out using a While pro-life groups often come across as self-righteous and uncaring San Francisco is hearing the of it. to fight in a war if they want be (Del. Department of Natural suction catheter. Haskell and McMahon both said toward women who have had case brought against the FBI While that is a somewhat victorious. Resources and Environmental by former agent Frank Buttino. politically incorrect viewpoint Gay activists will not get Control) with claims that fetuses most of the babies are alive until abortions, many pro-life pregnancy Buttino's lawyer said the to hold, I am not blind and I anywhere with their protests if were being poured into the sink and stabbed in the skull. McMahon centers offer post-abortion only reason that the agent was can see that blatant this keeps up. the disposal turned on." admitted using the D&X method to counseling to women . I regret that many pro-lifers have dismissed was because of his discrimination like this should It is a shame that Frank The story is corroborated by 40 weeks-a full-term pregnancy. given the impression of hatred. sexual preference. not occur to any group in this Buttino is fighting a war on his others, including a plumber "hired to Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop in estimated If you or someone you know is When the agency found out nation. own right now, and if he is install an 'industrial gauge' disposal 1984 4,000 third trimester abortions a year, dealing with the after effects of an he was gay, his security Another question I have, is waiting for the reinforcements at the Penny Hill clinic." clearance was taken away and where are the gay rights to come to his aid, it seems like I wish I could tell you this was a of which "less than five percent" abortion, please call your local pro­ was eventually fired for "being activist groups who were so he will be waiting for a while. scene from a nightmarish futuristic were due to fetal defects. Keeping life pregnancy center. I guarantee repeatedly deceptive during the vocal during the debate over sci-fi flick. It is not. It is reality right in mind Haskell performs these they will listen and offer compassion "abortions," Haskell said Koop's as well as any practical help you investigation." allowing homosexuals in the Brian Hickey's editorial here in our own backyard. figures of 4,000 were "more correct" need . In firing him under that service? columns appear Tuesdays in According to affidavits gathered premise, the FBI now has an What happened to the The Review. from the nine current and former than the National Abortion escape hatch which they could employees, "the fetuses ranged in Federation numbers of 300-500 per Rich Campbell is an editorial development from 8 weeks to 20 year, according to National Right to columnist ofThe Review.

What other newspapers are saying .. '. ,_.

On desegregation settlement ••• good for our children benefits us all . ... " period of denial which women will repress trading game and others as a cynical be nominated. The only question ... should -Thomas R, Carper, The Wilmington thoughts and feelings about their sharpie who would sell his soul to the the Dallas Cowboys' errant defensive News Journal, Dec. 5, 1993 abortions. Memories are often triggered Devil if the Devil would deliver an aye. lineman be depicted styling in his famed " ... First, if adopted by the with the birth or pregnancies of "wanled" "But some abortion rights ball-extended pose just before Buffalo's courts after approval ITy the local boards On Colin Powell ••• children or another life stressing event. advocates saw the shape of things to Don Beebe relieved him of it? Or should it of education and the General Assembly, "For other1, the trauma may sink come. Someday soon, they fear, Mr. be the sprawling Icicle sa ve seen 'round the the settlement will result in an immediate deep into the unconscious and may never Clinton, pragmatist oar excellence, will world? If Leon wins a Leon, does Lett declaration of IUiitary staJus for the four " Colin Powell, ex-general, surface ina woman's lifetime but most wheel and deal on a health care reform show up at Rita Ma cNeil's Tea Room in school districts under court supervision. handled the Delaware crowd like a women will often pay a heavy rice - package, and one of the cards he will Bog Pond? Or does he feu his acceptance At that time , all existing orders of the veteran campaigner Wednesday night, his physically, emotionally, and spiritually. trade away will be the inclusion of speech? ... " court will be dissolved, the case will be voice as smooth as whipped butter. The Something happens on the deeper levels of a abortion coverage. -Bill Conlin, The Philadelphia Daily dismissed, and the court's jurisdiction will crowd loved him, cackling at his jokes, woman's consciousness when she terminates "If those fears turn out to be true News, Dec. 6, 1993 be limited to enforcing the sert/ement. interrupting him with applause, nesting up a pregnancy .. , it will truly be a shame. For in providing " ... A second, and perhaps most at his Desert Storm stories, jumping to its " ... Many women do not connect a standard benefit package that includes On Michael Jackson ... important, benefit of the agreement is the feet at the beginning and end of his the emotional difficulties they suffer with the access for a/Ito abortion, the Clinton speech. It was a tour de force. "The Michael Jackson educational programs it contains. These trauma of abortion . Repressed feelings can Administration has a unique opportunity phenomenon continues. No day passes programs are good for all children. They " .. . Powell was a big catch for result in psychological and behavioral to move beyond cheap rhetoric and into the Walmll Street YMCA Black Achievers without some fresh excitement about him are focused on the educational goals set difficulties which exhibit themselves in other the reality of public funding ... " or some new episode concerning his shy by our state through new Directions and banquet. He clearly is on the brink of areas. Many women struggling with post· - AMa Quindlen, The New York Times, something big - a brilliant second career and eccentric behavior. Delaware 2000. While I will not cover abortive trauma may find an outlet through Dec.2,1993 " ... The world's appetite for each valuable educational program for the choosing .in the corporate, public eating disorders, alcoholism, self-destructive service, academic or political worlds. Jackson is insatiable. Radio talk shows contained in the agreement, a few behaviors, workaholism, promiscuity, buzz about him daily. Television's uomples demonstrate whaJ I mean. He's hot and he knows it. difficulty with interpersonal relationships, " .. . The third benefit is thai the " ... The idea that you have to be On Leon Lett ... irrepressible gossip shows blurt out his suual dysfunctions, anxiety and panic " ... And with 1993 just 26 days name no matter how inconsequential the four local school districts wil~ ~~iately smarter, tougher,faster and hiUigrier than anybody else in sight in your area of disorders, clinical and post-pardem from history and begging to be snippet. When there's nothing new , some gain more control and flexibility '" the depressions,flashback.s and nightmares new fiction is created to provide the public area of student assignment. Under the endeavor has long been a bone of unplugged from life support, some of its " ... The fierce battle for abortion fumblers and bumblers deserve to be with the Jackson fix it obviously craves. proposed agreemeflt, the current "9-3" conlention among African·americans who rights blindly dismisses the many women requirement that city kids spend nine scoff at it as the super·nigger'' approach. nominated for a new award, the Leon. It " ... Few cultures have been able whose lives are being destroyed by their is named, of course, for Leon Lett, the to resist the Jackson mystique. Being half years in suburban sc~ol~ and subu~ban Why, they ask, should we have to be berter abortion 110/ution to an unplanned than everybody else to get what everybody Dallas Cowboy who has become to man and half woman, neither black nor kids spend three years 1n c1ty schools 1s no pregnancy . Such an attitude displays an white, with a personality that is shrewdly longer a legal mandate, and our ~chof!l else gets? sports what Wrong Way Corrigan was UIICaring abandonmenl of reason in favor of to aviation. adult when it comes to business .-. districts no longer have to mamtam " .. . I hope he practices what he ideology." preaches by trying to achieve the "The only requirement for a arrangements and incredibly child·like adherence to racial balances within 10 -Theresa Karminski Burke, The percent of the district's minority presidency. Not because he's black, Leon nominations is a demo,JStrated when it comes to living, he may be truly be Philadelphia l"''uirer, Dec. 4, 1993 the world's first designer celebrity. enrollment. because he's better than anybody else in affinity for screwing up. Good intentions " ... The final benefit of this sight." don't count ... " ... While Jackson seems settlement is that it creaJes no "losers." If -Norman A. Lockman, The Wilmington On Clinton and health care ... "The Leons will be awarded somewhat preoccupied with his groin during public performances, we accept he this litigation were settled in court, one News JourNJI, Dec. 3, 1993 Jan.4 in Rita'a Tea room , Bog Pond, sides would win; the other would lose. Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. If the was disinterested in his genitals in "When President Clinton was ferry is ruMing ... private relationships ... " There are M losers under this settlement. On after-abortion trauma .•• working the COngress, marshaling the Every Delawarean, in every community, " .. .Leon Lell .- You can't have -Claude Lewis, The Philadelphia votes he Mtdedfor NAFTA, some saw him Inquirer, Dec. 6, 1993 should feel like a wi~~~ttr becawe what is a statue named in your dishonor and not H .. 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Take Route 13 to 273w to first light. ' Inside Sports Inside Section 2

Football loses to Marshaii ...... B4 Feature Forum ...... 82 Men's basketball wins ...... 84 Question of the Day ...... 82 Sports in Review ...... 84 Profile of j . Malanga ...... 83 Ice hockey loses ...... BS Star Trek book...... 83 Women's basketball win ...... BS Classifieds ...... 86

Arts I Entertainment I Trends People I Lifestyles FEELING ALL BOXED IND Metallica exercises in overindulgence with ''Binge and Purge'' BY M TYE COMER AND As an ideal accompaniment to GLENN SLAVIN the CD, Metallica includes three Enrerr•inmenr Edirors videos from live shows. There is none in metal mightier The only real problem is than Metallica. whether to watch the guys rage on Need proof? Check out Live stage while listening to the disc on Shit: Binge and Purge. stereo, or just to rely on the music The three CD, three video set from the video. showcases over nine hours of But it doesn't really matter. Metallica in their native habitat; Either way, seeing these guys thrashing it up on stage surrounded jump with fury, bang their heads by thousands of sweaty, spastic and play their instruments with headbangers. insane intensity is exhausting. In a large box shaped and The set contains three videos designed like a foot locker, there from two concerts. are also some other forms of The first and second video Metallica fun, starting with a large feature a recent show from San booklet featuring pictures and Diego. There is a 20 minute actual band members notes to each documentary, rockumentary, if you other. will, about the band called The set also comes with a "Metallimovie." "Scary-guy" stencil (so you too This segment, which was shown can defame public propeny) and a before every concert on the tour, is faux backstage pass to their famed done exactly like This is Spinal Snake Pit. Tap, and Metallica wants to know It's every parents worst just how much more black they can nightmare and every headbanger's be. wet dream: The video cuts right to their concert, which is pretty much like The Music watching a three and a half hour Over three hours of pure, MTV video, with quick cuts and live, uncompromised, frequent pans into the crowd, all of unadulterated Metallica. whom give the camera the finger. Recorded over a five night Here they do songs mostly off stretch at Mexico City's Sports their latest album, like The Palace, the three CD set gives you Unforgiven and Enter Sandman. all the metal pioneers have to offer. The standout, however, is the From the very first chords, you're unbelievable 10 minute bass solo. bombarded with every squeal, But if you're longing for an thump, screech, growl and shreik actual concert video, you can tum on the third video, the Justice tour the almighty headbangers have at THE REVIEW /Walter M. Eberz their disposal. from Seatlle in 1989. Now you too c~n pay homage to m~tal gods Metallica ";Yith this comp!ete, ultimate collection. The mantlepiece-ready chest is Sure, Binge & Purge has got all They obviously had a lower of the recent hits: One , Sad But compl~te w1th three compad d1scs, three concert v1deos, Snake P1t pass and scary guy stencil. It's a headbanger's dream. production budget back then, but True, The Unforgiven .. . but heed only the music that mattered and it collection at all, it comes from the worked so hard on. The occasional there.) Metallica 's thrashing and intensity this warning: this isn't a collection shows. · fact that you are not there to explosion and wild audience Nevertheless. Binge & Purge is breaks all levels. for novice metal heads. The disc dips way. way back witness the concert firsthand. response only gives you glimpse as what live metal is all about. It's These three tapes, five hours You see, unlike many successful into the groups history to conjure Metallica not only sounds good to what you're actually missing. addictive. It 's uncontrollable. It's and and 40 minutes of pure, metal outfits, Metallica sold tons of tunes like Am I Evil?, Creeping live, but they put on a great show. (I'd also feel a bit silly chanting painful. And it really doesn't get sweaty, unadulterated Metallica, is of records without ever Death, Master of Puppets, Fade to With only the audio portion of the "die, die, die ..." during Creeping any better than this. the perfect treat for any fanatic. And Metallica proves the compromising their style for the Black ...they're all here. show as your guide, you miss all of Death if I was just sitting in my sake of the mainstream or MTV. If there is any drawback to the the cool pyrotechnics the group bedroom pretending I was actually The Videos answer most certainly is none, They began banging when it was none more black. The Review picks their top five boxed favorites It seems obligatOry these days f- 12 CDs, 285 songs, 144 groups you really like. Song taken from his last concen ever Pink Floyd has ever recorded , all cost Kill if you must. page clothbound book . All digitally But here it is. will bring you to tears. remastered for your audio pleasure. S. Madonna: The Royal Box- Okay, remastered Frank. You can have all The Entertainment Desk's Guide To 2. Bob Dylan: The Bootleg Series - Plus, if you turn up Great Gig in the Sky it's only the singles, you only get one cd Frank, all thc time. For two hundred Oloosing The Best Box Set. Obscure songs and obscure versions of from Dark Side of the Moon real loud, arxl video, and flem of Dead is a hilarious performance. But E-52 Student Theater group does a melancholy. this perfoonance arises. Cllly when the two talented actor.i work wmderful job rec:realng this type of fast­ Rosenaanlz is basically the confused In essence, the plays calls for the together. pieed winy dialogue in their version of character, at least slightly more than his ability to perform Shakespeare, which is a An:1 the play is a little over three OOur's Tom Steward's play ROiiellcranlz and coi!1JIIIlion wOOie tolcr.nce of his friend compieteJ y differmt skill than !XrlO!lJlinB long, with two intermissions which is GuDdemtem Are Dead. is always wearing thin. Again, the title modern thealer. And E-52 hasn't quite quite some time to suffer through Or at least when this exchange occurs roles were dcfily played with coofiden:e. rnaste:red the classical awoorn to thea!er. excerpts of Hamlet screamed in your between the two title chln:ter.i. The play also develops the character llan Avin, who played Hamlet, wa<~ f~. 01risUJpher Mmissey as R

I think I've got it!!! a depressed person living in Delaware you ask? vent a litUe pent-up frustration and also Every December I get a little wishing for better weather. Well, ·here's my proposition, the big an excuse to drink a lot of tequila (but it depressed, mostly because of the I think this is just the thing students at plan, which WILL happen, provided doesn't just have to be tequila, you know, weather. Especially living in Delaware Feature Forum this school need, and I, as your friend, everyone cooperates and participates. Southern Comfort or rum works well, where you can expect it to be, without am willing to sponsor and organize the I suggest that on the first snowfall of too). fail, 40 degrees and raining 360 days of By Glenn Slavin entire thing. Winter Session, we all put on Bermuda So be there, the first snowfall of the year. Admit it, there is nothing like the shorts, take a beach chair and sit in the Winter Session. And there are never any pure white Caribbean atmosphere. Even if you've sand of one of those volleyball courts on It'll give us a chance to make the best sno:w coverings - just more mud than never been there you've certainly seen Harrington Beach. of a bad situation. I'm absolutely you would expect to fmd in most Third and page through the magazine in awe of movies like Cocktail or Club Paradise. It's a celebration of Life, a celebration convinced Newark, Delaware is the World countries. the people sitting pool side under a And I'm sure you've seen a Giligan' s of Mud and a celebration of not being Armpit of The Western Hemisphere. So every year about this time, I leave coconut tree sipping a daiquiri out of a Island episode. Lame in Delaware. I promise I will be there. my room and if I see my shadow, there pineapple. And if you have been in a temperate I '11 be there, the first snowfall of And I think you should. No, I think will be six more weeks of winter. So I started thinking about my climate zone, you know there is pothing Winter Session. you need to. No, that's not it. Every year I go to the situation. Stuck in Newark with no like listening to sounds of the steel I'll be there sitting on a beach chair in I'll bring the tequila. Newark Newsstand and purchase a Skin pineapples or pool or beach to sit next to. drums, especially when they cover such inappropriate clothing listening to Oh, yeah, I'll also bring the little Diver magazine. You may have seen this I've resoned to putting little umbrellas happy songs as Hang on Sloopy and Reggae music and drinking tequila. umbrellas for the drinks. particular periodical. It's the one with a into various beverages, including my Sweet Caroline. And I figure after enough tequila, the black glossy cover, a glowing picture of coffee, which is hardly festive and There is nothing else in the world like mud infested beach will begin to look Glenn Slavin is feeling irie right now and a yellow fluorescent-type tropical fish in depresses me even more . drinking strawberry margheritas out of a like the soothing blue Caribbean Sea. promises to be present on the Beach the the middle and a headline in Day-Glo But I think I've come up with a good tall glass with a bouquet of tropical And I'll jump in with no remorse. first snowfall ready to rage . Feature pink reading: Dive South Dakota. idea. One which which involves You, as flowers sticking out of them. I really think this is exactly what we Forum appears every other Tuesday in I go home, put on Bob Marley music But what does this have to do with me, need at this school. A perfect e"cuse to The Review.

A ( 994- 5:00, 7:45, 10:15 . 7075) The Nutcracker- Showtlmes: Showtimes for Tues. • Thur. Cool Runnings- Showtimes: 6:00. 1:40,4:50, 7:50, 10:10. PROFESSIONAL THEATRE TRAINING PROG RAM We're Back! A Dinosaur's Man's Best Friend- Showtimes: Story- Showtimes: 1:05, 3:00, The Fugitive- Showtimes: 4:55, 7:00, 9:00. 8:15, 10:00. 1:00,4:00, 7:00, 10:00 .. P·T·T·P Re~al Cinemas 1 0-Peoples Malice· Showtimes: 9:40. UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE 1 Josh and S.A.M.- Showtimes: Plaza 1:00,3:05,5:10,7:20,9:35. Christjana Mall Cjnema Showtimes for Tues. - Thur. The Nutcracker- Showtlmes: Showtimes for Tues. • Thur. I 1:10, 3:15. 5:20,7:35, 9:45. The Nutcracker- Showtimes: t""l 1:30, 4:35, 7:25. The Nightmare Qefore ~ A Perfect World- Showtimes: Christmas- Showtimes: 1:30, 1:05, 3:15,5:15,7:40, 10:10 . Mrs. Doubtfire- Showtimes: 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30. 1:10,4:10, 7:10, 10:00. Presents .E Three Musketeers­ Addams Family Values­ ~ Showtimes: 1:55, 4:30, 7:10, A Perfect World- Showtimes: Showtimes: 1:00, 1:30, 3:30, 9:40. 1:00, 4:00, 7:00. 10:00. 4:00, 6:45, 7:00, 9:00, 9:30. ~ ..... My Life- Show times: 1:50, We're Back! A Dinosaur's Mrs. Doubtfire- Showtimes: ;::.. 4:25, 7:20, 9:55. Story:- Showtimes: 1:00, 4:00, 1:45,2:30,4:30, 5:30, 7:15, 8:30, 7:00, 10:00. Carlito's Way - Showtimes: 10:00. 1:00.4:00, 7:00, 10:00. Carillo's Way­ ~ Showtimes: 1:00, 4:05, 7 :00, Remains the Day - Showtimes: 9:55. 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00. My Life-Showtimes: 1:05, -M. Tye Comer The Joy Luck Club- 4:20,7:15, 10:00. ; I Showtimes: 1:05, 9:50. Three Musketeers- Showtimes: Man's Best Friend­ 1:35,4:30,7:10,9:45. Showtimes: 1: 15, 3: 15, 5:15, 7:40, 10:10. Man's Best Friend­ Showtimes: 1:20, 4:45, 7:45, Cool Runnings-Showtimes: 9:45. ·' 4:10, 7:35. Addams Family Values­ Newark Cinema Center Showtlmes: 1:30, 4:40, 7:30, Newark Shopping Center (737· 3720) 10:05. Showtimes for Tues.-Thur. Gettysburg- Showtimes: 1;30, ., The Three Musketeers- 7:00. Showtimes: 5:45, 8:00, 10:00. The Nightmare Before

Question for the day: If you De_cember 3-11 could get a box set of any For tickets, call or stop by the ? music group, what would it be ? • and why? Hartshorn Box Office • (302) 831-2204

WHAT DO YOU NEED TO REGISTER FOR Freshman David Saladino Freshman Pam Parkins Freshman John Cox SPRING SEMESTER? The Doors if I I would get Pink Floyd I would get 1. A plan. See your advisers. could because The Police if Tracy without a 2. The Spring Registration I am a Doors it were I Chapman • doubt. love booklet. fanatic. available. them a lot. because she's They are the cool to 3. A phone! Let your fingers Ikea of music. mellow out do the talking with to. UDPHONE. 4. Your PIN!-A secret, 4-digit number stashed away in HURRY, TIME'S A WASTIN'! GET your head. YOUR RECIPES IN FOR THE REVIEW RECIPE CONTEST! IF YOU PASS THIS UP, YOU'RE PASSING UP YOUR LIFE! December 7,1993. THE REVIEW. 83 Live music, Zen and the art of Kunstwollen BY RACHEL CERlCOLA In between acts, there was mesmerized. towards the band to hear the,m Assistant Entertainment Ediror always the art show. The At one point, the singer rubbed thrash out a dose of insanity. Taylor Hall was the cultural phenomenal work was displayed powder over his shirtless body and Caterpillar graced the stage to center of Newark Saturday night. around the room to keep everyone's bicep-length hair, only to release it captivate the stragglers that As the rain came out, The mind spinning. with one mighty toss. remained for the end of the Refinery was the location for an art Amber Bainbridge's "Oh My The band was convulsing and evening's events. show and tons of great live music. Head" resembled a wreath of jamming to warm up the crowd for Even though the crowd had Kuntswollen, an undergraduate organs with five adjoining blood the ultimate freak-out that was soon thinned out, the band strained to student art group, continued their transfusions to nurse the large orb. to come. perfectly play their set. weekend exhibit while four local With the roof of the building Zen Guerrilla hit the stage with Ev.en after he broke a string, acts played to a small, but leaking by its side was "Reliable," their usual stupefying performance. singer/guitarist Mike Lenert appreciative crowd. Michael Dill's homage to the old They emerged like four demons tweeked his guitar out, standing on The first band, Zonic Shockum, shoe. with the sole purpose of feeding his toes to strain the chords to their kept the crowd seated on the cold The masses of paintings, distortion to your already straining highest level. floor, while the lead singer rang out sculptures and photographs were and warped brain. For such a small sized crowd, melodic, powerful vocals. like a freaky sideshow to the The white backdrop was the they applauded and cheered for the She had vocals reminiscent of carnival of music going on in the scene for a festival of movies, group as if the room had been Lone Justice's Maria McKee, but main area. including an episode of Twilight overflowing with Caterpillar the style was a little harder to keep As the smoke emerged in the Zone and the some Anthony Quinn fanatics. with the tone of the evening. dimly lit room, The Absurd took gladiator flick. The films were a Kuntswollen has sponsored They rang out with enough the stage 10 put the crowd in virtual point to zone out on while the band events like this in the past, which intensity to fill an otherwise somber awe . rushed the room with distortion and are funded by admission costs and a room and provided a good They put on a very strange show, Marcus Durant's maniacal vocals . student entry fee to exhibit their foundation for what atmosphere one worthy of their name. When the The audience livened up and work in the art show . was yet to come. lights were flicked on (accidently), became more curious, but never Hopefully, more people will take But the evening was not just it revealed their puzzled, white, rushed the stage to form the advantage of these events, not just about hanging around a large, downlike faces to the audience. traditional, standard mosh pit. for the mind expanding music, but THE REVIEW /Kelly Bennett darkened room, waiting for the As the guitar player picked at his While images of rotted teeth and to get exposed to the art, which The Absurd mesmerizes the crowd with their obscure antics bands to take stage and hypnotize wailing instrument and the singer red, flowing liquids crossed the explodes with psychotic and and painted faces at Saturday's art and music extravaganza. the crowd. moaned, the crowd was singer's face, the crowd edged thought-provoking talent. Malanga entertains with scandalous footage .... BY MELISSA JYRRELL and Miller rushed in and out of the emotionally by the second movie. years old with shorter, thinner, Copy Ediror media rooms, IJ)'ing to get "Vision," "I liked the way he matched the peppered hair, stood before the Gerard Malanga sat casually in the a film collaboration between music to what was going on silently audience. Left hand stuffed in the back right comer of 100 Kirkbride Malanga and Andy Warhol, to take on the screen," he says. "I don't tight pocket of his jeans, he stood Hall, enjoying his own presentation. form on the screen. know if what I got out of it is what he with his right hand confidently The crackle and flash of a film After a brief period in the intended, but I definitely was holding pages of manuscript, projector transported him and a darkness, the audience was assaulted affected." reflecting the rooms dim light in his crowd of about 70 people back to by loud static noises and a bright Both films, with some scenes of wire frame glasses. 1967 - 1970, greener years for vision of Malanga, 30 years younger women masturbating or manually And he spoke. With clarity and Malanga, an artist and poet for four with plump lips and a longish stimulating naked men, warranted the energy, he spent 40 minutes decades. pompadour hair style. "viewer discretion advised" warning divulging his feelings, dreams and The films were only one half of Two screens flashed on publicity flyers and even significant experiences. this "special cultural event" simultaneously. The young man on prompted some viewers to get up and Poem selections ranged from sponsored by the Master of Arts in the left spoke with a slight New York leave before the poetry reading natural themes of his woody Liberal Studies Program and the accent as his thick eye lashes brushed began. environment to finding dried up departments of an and an history. and fluttered downward, reading a Senior Karin Willner says she left condoms in a drawer to love poems In , Malanga also read fictional journal. early not because she was upset or written for strangers. manuscript poems, many In black and white, he tells the offendoo by the film, but because she During the concluding question concentrating on his recent life in the audience a story of several people wasn't interested enough. period, Malanga answers an old man Berkshires of Massachusetts. named "Bufferin", one with whom he "I was surprised at how visible smiling in a beret about the Since the presentation was on Dec. is in love, as on the right screen everything was and I guess I can see differences in poetry and 1, which is AIDS Awareness Day, colorful pictures project silent scenes how some people would think it was photography for himself. the evening began with a minute of depicting boat yards, naked women an," Willner says. "But even if those He says his poetry and silence honoring those who died from in their bedrooms, and ducks in women were clothed, I still wouldn't photography are not related and the disease. Adding to the impact, Central Park, New York City. have found it interesting." borrowing the philosophy of artist Professor Debra Miller named many The scenes are all soothing, Most nudity scenes were not Man Ray, claims he writes what he victims within the art profession, natural situations, however, the story dramatic and the bodies of both the cannot photograph and photographs mentioning that Robert of "Bufferin" on the left becomes Gerard Malanga spoke to a large group of students and faculty in inen and women were not glamorized what he cannot write. Mapplethorpe, Keith Herring and increasingly agitating as the camera Kirkbride Friday about the lack of good poetry in our generation. molds of perfection. From flat Malanga explains that an overall several others were friends with wanders and the story becomes more ever give you a headache." Malanga freezes in celluloid a chested women to men carpeted with is a reaction to an "emptying of the Malanga. confusing. Without delay, April Diary, a film weekend homage with his girlfriend hair, the subjects were relaxed and selr' which occurs in life. Malanga remained in the back of Senior Steve O'Neill says, "You journal made by Malanga in 1970, to writer Charles Olson's grave. posed like models for an an study. "When you create, you fulfill the room as Professor Hilton Brown never thought that Bufferin would followed Vision. In this film, O'Neill says he was really struck Finally, the 1993 Malanga, 50 yourself and its exhausting," he says.

poetic generation emerging from voices in poeiJ)', only to finally listen the world," he says. poems inspired by particular people, BY MELISSA TYRRELL or "muses" to him, Maianga focused colleges right now are not positive. CopyEdiror to his warm. strong voice Wednesday "I say it's 'for myself,' and what I mean by that is that if you have an on the beauty of strangers and beauty He says he blames the abundance Quick spankings of laughter just night. of grants and scholarships and the Malanga's biographies, slapped in experience so extraordinary, there is in general. kept repeating on the telephone. Malanga is touted most often as focus professors are taking as Gerard Malanga, friend to an icon the back of his many poeiJ)' volumes, an emptying of oneself, of one's soul and an inner need to fill the empty one of the closest confidants of detrimental to the progress of Andy Warhol, archivist, insist his life is so much more than literature. hispoeiJ)'. spaces. Warhol. The two worked together in photographer, film maker, world Warhol's Factory in the 60s and "PoeiJ)' is being brought down to a traveler, poet prolific in four decades In Three Diamonds, his 1991 "What fulfillment there is from writing poeiJ)' has nothing to do with cofounded INTERVIEW magazine in level of mediocrity because the stakes was on the line. He says, "I'm a no publication of erotic poetry written are so low," he says. between 1980 and 1990, Malanga making the world a better place," he 1969. nonsense kind of guy." Still, Malanga has very frank and "Because poetry has become so After a brief silence of says in the afterword, "There are says. That Malanga considers poeiJ)' an surprising thoughts on the white­ politically correct, teachers are partial contemplation, he delivers another many ways to justify these poems and to certain poets," he says. "There is a I can't feel any one to be sufficient." avocation and personal does not haired wonderboy. spank of laughter. "Andy is a genius in what he did, sameness in the poetry being written Trying to put a finger on who or Although everything Malanga and dilute the amount of effort and thought he puts into his work. but he's not my favorite artist," he by young poets. what an artist actually is can be very his bios say about the man is elusive, "Poetry will become a very old Malanga has very definite ideas about Malanga says Three Diamonds, says. "His early work was great, but difficult. The work says one thing, from ' 71 or '72 until his death his fashioned medium in the 21st the poet another and the human poetry, art in general and its written while he was in his forties, required a lot of "tenacious energy" work became superficial. century. All other forms of an have something completely different. direction. advanced and will continue to do so, On his business card, Malanga to capture the topics. "He became a stargazer, and it was No one wants to be defmed - and like 'gimme a break,"' he says. but I don't find that in the poetry especially not an artist. lists himself as a photographer, and 10 In this work, Malanga redefined his writing style and speaker's voice '"Stop patronizing people and get world ." This reporter heard first his the idea of considering poetry a To be a good poet, Malanga says it career he says, ''That's pretentious. into something he calls "anonymous serious.'" impressively alienating track record, Malanga's feelings about the is necessary not to be "afraid to then read his confusing breadth of "Poetry doesn't do anything for immortality." No longer writing Bands get ready to duke it Shatner gives an enlightening look into life at the helm of the Enterpris~ out in Pencader dining hall SCIVes him, and all Trek fans, well. "Star "Scotty" Doohan refuses to ;be Trek Memories" boldly goes where no inteNiewed for those very reasons.) ; in their original music and include alternative to dance music. other Trek book has gone before, Shatner also chronicles his distance BY RACHEL CERlCOLA from Rodenberry, and his close Assistant Entertainment Editor a few cover tunes, which they twist They've played everywhere providing personal glimpses, rich detail and the truth behiOO many Trek myths friendship with Nimoy is evident At this very moment, four local to their own sound. from high school parties to They're getting ready to record Pulsations in Pennsylvania. and facts. throughout. occasionally bubbling over bands are getting ready to go to Wrinen in an action-packed, fun and into irtside jokes. : war in a battle of the bands in a demo in Philadelphia, but They've also just completed Dewhiu says they're at their best recording a three song demo tape. rarely plodding style (what you might Disappointingly, re spends liule tiple Pencader Dining Hall tonight. discussing DeForest Kelley or his live. The final band will be Plow. expect from Kirk), "Memories" mainly Let the games begin. proceeds chronologically, starting with character, Dr. Leooard "Bones" McCoy. After the screening of 10 bands Next will be The Verge, also Although the band has members creator and producer Gene Of course, Shatner tells us how he Dec 1, four were singled out for a hailing from the Newark area. from both Delaware and Roddenberry's childhood escape into played his own leading man: " ... At his shot at the $700 grand prize. At first listen, the band has a Pennsylvania, they like to be poppy sound, comparable to The known as a Delaware band science fiction and ending with the third core, Kirk was, for the most pan, me," The Black Hills will kick off the season 's cancellation (no movie lore he writes, which is why reading show about 9:30 as the opening, Smiths. The second time, they "It's a pretty state," says break out a, little harder. Their drummer Sean Rule. here). "Memories" often has the uncanny expedition band. Central to most of the story is feeling of reading Capl James T. Kil'k's Hailing from Ne,w Jersey, they album, Heaven and Hell, is a They describe their sound as Roddenberry and his "unshakably personal log. Shatner is just the sori of combine a little bit of funk with literal and demonstrative example "happycore," which is a mixture of perfectionist nature," without which manyou'dexpectJimKirktobe. : hard edged alternative to create of how diverse their sound can get. happy sounds and themes with the Drummer Damon Howard says fast pace of hardcore. With their Star Trek Memories "Star Trek" as we know it would never lf the honest and sometimes paii)ful their own original sound. have come into eJlistence. side of the show comes out, so does the They will be working on a demo the music is more "underground" theme song Let's Get Stupid, William Shatner with Kreski Shatner quotes extensively humor and downright fun. Shatner over Christmas break, but for now (a term that seems to be making a they're a band with a sense of HarperCollins Publishers throughout from Leonard "Spock" describes several practical jokes played they're interested in breaking into big comeback) than "alternative." humor. Grade: A Nimoy, Majel Barrett (the late by Rodenberry and himself. the Delaware area. Hopefully, this They're also looking forward to They have two tapes available, Rodenberry's second wife and "Nurse One humorous anecdote is about ;the appearance will give them the competing tonight as a change of including Farm (from 1992) and BY RICH CAMPBELL pace from gigs at the Barn Door, Old Country Church Broadcast Conl!ibuting £d•tor Chapel" on the show) as well as other pitfalls of mics picking up the sourxl of exposure they need. Trek regulars, both actors and behind­ flushing toilets at the studio:"Quite · The first band to take the battle Del Haven Cafe and Logan House (released earlier this year). It took William Shamer a quarter of a the-scenes production personnel, obviously, these sounds would seem out arena will be Newark's Horizontal in Wilmington. They've also just completed a century, not until his probable final stint The third band in tonight's seven-inch single, which will as Capt. James T. Kirk , to fully heightening the book's believability. of place aboard the Enterprise .. where Groove. Through it all, one begins to feel the did we go to the bathroom, anyway?'! Lead vocalist/guitarist Dave musical cavalcade is Fushion hopefully include their anthem appreciate the source of his farn e. sense of family Shatner claims, and Throughout, Shatner gives eno\)gh De whitt describes the band as "five Child. The band is based Stupid Jock Rock. "Somehow, only as it's lx:gun to slip most hard-core Trekkies would agree, quirks to look for in differetU episodes very white guys trying to do funk." somewhere between the boundaries The event is scheduled from away, am I able to view it in the all­ as the secret of Trek's success. to send avid Trekkies immediatel:y to So far the band has been of Delaware (mainly Wilmington) 9:30p.m. 10 12:30 a.m. Admission encompassing and appreciative light it As with roost families, there arc rifts, their VCRs (as if they need any concentrating on the bar scene, and Pennsylvania. is $3 in advance and $5 at the door. deserves,'' writes Shatncr of his tensions and criticisms. To Shatner's prom!Xing). • including the Stone Balloon, Guitarist Jon Booker says the It's sponsored by Halls (the cough thoughts during the lasl stages of band has been called heavy metal, drop king) and all proceeds go to filming "Star Trek VI : The credit, he prints some of the harsher "Memories" serves the Trek Shooters and the Logan House. contingency well. Now if they cauld They're not a very serious b_and, but that's the furthest thing from the American Littoral Society, Undiscovered Cour.ry." words from Nichelle "Uhuru" Nichols their minds. They are a medley of which protects the nation's coasts Whether thi s is straight truth or about his own insensitive behavior somehow get out of that '60s time but just out to have a good ume. warp ... They do a mixture offunk and rock sounds, ranging from funky and waterways. hyperbole, Shatner's late arrival to fame during the show. (Apparently James "They eald It" ON DliCK "When I got hurt I didn't Today have any interest in anything. •Women's basketball at Lafayette 5:45 I didn't even go to class for W~nesday some time." ·•Men's basketball vs. Widener 7:30p.m. - Delaware senior quarterback Dale Fry. Thurday · •Women's basketball at Towson 7 p.m. Tuesday

Sports in Review By Meredith Hens' season ends in 34-31loss Glazar Now FG shatters Delaware's he's comeback goneI hopes. · I'm burning my Phillies hat. BY RON PORTER 5fxxts Editor That's it. Period. ' The baseball team I've followed Delaware Coach Tubby sioce early childhood has disappointed Raymond sat passively in front of IDle for the fmal time. the lights and microphones and Thursday the Phillies traded Mitch exclaimed that he was tired. _ "'fhe Wild Thing" Williams. After three weeks of trips to My favorite player, the man who Boston, Montana and finally this makes baseball exciting after several weekend to West Virginia, the imings of watching Astroturf bake in Delaware football caravan had the sun, is gone. been brought to a screeching halt GONE. Raymood's Hens banled to the • (That was just for emphasis, to give last three seconds Saturday at ~u ~e to let the shock and horror Marshall Stadium, only to have sil\mJn Williams 'is in Houston, and Doug Jones and Jeff Juden are wearing the red and white pinstripes. , I'm personally devastated by the their national championship hopes loss, but most of all, I'm extremely kicked away by Thuroering Herd disappointed in the Phillies' placekicker David Merrick. management. Delaware tied the game at 31 · They gave away a star for nothing. with an 11-yard pass from senior . Sure it would have been tough for quarterback Dale Fry, ft.lling in for Mitch to come back and pitch in the starter Leo Hamlett, to senior fair-weather fan City of Brotherly THE REVIEW / spread end Keita Malloy in the Love, but he liked being here. He back of the end zone. would have dealt with it. Running back Chris Parker goes over the top early in the fourth quarter to put Marshall up 31·17. Parker had 144 yards for the day and four touchdowns. Then, on the ensuing kickoff, , After all, he dealt with all those senior kicker Steve Leo booted the dciath threats. ball to wide receiver Tim Martin, I'm sure it's some consolation to who ran it to the 39 before h¢1 that the management thinks he's Fry left asking, fumbling it. worth two men and that he's been Hen free safety Mike Sye was traded to his favorite state. But for a the first to jump on the ball, but man who said in Friday's USA Today, Marshall linebacker Brian Stump "i wanted to return to Philadelphia. I ''What if ... ?'' would be the hero. love the place," it can 't be enough. "I had [the ball] but it was so ,.To make matters worse, former BY RON PORTER his first five games, and began to sliwery that it got away," said Sye. te,ammate Lenny Dykstra publicly Sports Editor hear from the fans that he was now "I got it back but me and the other criticized him. It all seemed so perfect for Dale accepted. guy [Stump] both had conlrol of it I don't care what Dykstra thinks to Fry. " In the beginning of the season They started clearing players away hi,insetr, but when you're a member of He'd waited three years to there were a lot of skeptics," Fry and when I got up I had the ball, a ~ earn, you keep your mouth shut become the leader of the Delaware said. "They didn' t know if I was but [lh! officials] said that [Stump] about internal feelings. football team and now it was his twn good. Then they began to say , had recovered the ball. How could Dykstra say, "In reality, 1 to step in behind the center and call ' Maybe he's as good, if not better, "I kiOO of blame myself for the we did win four games. The problem out the cadence. than Bill.' whole thing." is~ we just didn't close four games," He would show the critics that, ''Then they began telling me that I Marshall then bel!an its attack: to and consider himself pan of Mitch's yes, he could be at least as good as was doing a good job and that made win the game 34 ·c 31. baseball family? the previous All-American me feel real nice," Fry said. Tailback Chris Parker, who he that .,I guess thinks now Mitch is quarterback Bill Vergantino. Fry had done what he had set out scored four touchdowns and rushed gQne, he can jump on the Williams­ And yes, he would prove to to do - become a leader and win for 144 yards, canied the ball four bashing bandwagon. THE REVIEW I Walter M. Eberz himself that he belonged here as the games. times for a total of 19 yards to get ' Maybe Mitch will remember In summer workouts Dale Fry was throwing with the leader. Then darkness filled Fry's blue D¥kstra's words and one day Lenny confidence of a seasoned veteran. Fry led the Hens to a 4-1 record in see FRY'S page B5 see FOOTBALL page 85 will face him from the plate to the mound and get a beanball right on the chin. Or maybe Mitch is a better person than that. "Baseball is a team sport. That means winning and losing is done as a team. Responsibility is shared. In the F1yers' locker room, there is Delaware wins two over DelState a ~ign that says, "Play for the logo on th~ front of your jersey, not the name on the back." "I think Mitch Williams knows this. Women Men struggle as a But maybe if Dykstra can't remember it._be should be the next to go. On top of thal, General Manager glide to Lee Thomas said he's doing what's Garner jumper lx!>t for Mitch. How does he know? Who is he to say what's best for someone else? easy He only cares about selling tickets, keys the 73-72 win cmd now he thinks Mitch won't draw a crowd anymore. victory BY BRIAN HICKEY win with nine seconds remaining. I don't know why he thinks Doug City News Editor Before the ball got through the Jones will attract people. He cenainly BY MICHAEL LEWIS The war for bragging rights to net, the crowd erupted into StAff Reporter dqesn't have Williams' personality. hoops supremacy in the state of mayhem, completely drowning I'll admit Doug Jon.es isn't bad. Or It had the makings of a good Delaware was fought on the floor out announcer Greg Burton's wasn't bad anyway. matchup. of the Bob Carpenter Convocation words. • Maybe it 's just me, but I see a huge The Delaware women 's basketball Center, in front of 4,217 " It really feels good to be out disparity between what they gave and team took on down-state rival basketball hungry fans Saturday, there in the middle of things," wlJat they got. Delaware State at the Bob Carpenter and the final battle was not won Gamer said. :Doug Jones is 36. (Read: almost Center Saturday. There was only one until very late in the game. "I can only thank God for problem: the Hens never let DelState d~ as far as sports are concerned.) With 23 seconds remaining and allowing me to be out there and ·"Prospect" Jeff Juden is some into the game. Jumping out to a huge the game on the line, the ball went the coaching staff for having the sdunucky unproven rookie. lead and never looking back, Delaware to junior guard Brian Pearl. confidence in me." :What does "prospect" mean, (1-1) defeated the Hornets 75·38 to The Hornets were up 72-71 as Hornet guard Andrew Miles got a4 yway? Anyone can be called a win its third straight home opener. Pearl, who shot four for 18 from one last shot off after Garner's, p t one game. and was instrumental in Delaware's opportunity as the ball bounced could have made him the game's l Of course it was an important 22-6 run !hal began the game. from Sabree back toward him, and goat instead of the hero. game, but one team had to lose. It's a From the start. the Hens outplayed the clock wound down to single With 50 seconds remaining, stlame it was the Phil lies, but oh well. the Hornets in every aspect of the digits. and the Hens up 71 -70, Delaware : I'd say, "Better luck next year," but game. They outrebounded Delaware "I was going back on defense, tried to slow the pace of the game. I guarantee the Phillies won ' t be State 49-39, and had a whopping 18-4 gelling ready for the fast break But Gamer slipped and turned the fi{lishing anywhere close to where edge in assists. because I thought they had the ball over to Miles, the game's Solid as usual for the Hens was the thf:Y did this season. ball," Garner said. "Then I saw leading scorer with 23 points. ·Williams' 46 saves were no starting backcoun of junior Bev Santee the ball coming and four seconds After Garner's turnover, acCident. and sophomore Denise Wojcicch, who left on the [shot] clock." Delaware's lead evaporated with : l 'm asking for a Houston Astros hat combined to frustrate and stifle the Gamer, who scored a team-high an Artis Preston layup to put the f

Perry was able to empty her bench in the fortunate that we won but I feel yards and finally hit Malloy with the Not only did the field goal end the J second half. bad for Delaware State because tying touchdown pass. Hens' season, but it ended Fry's "It was reai nice to be able to get everybody they played a heck of a basketball Malloy gave his analysis of Marshall. career. · into the game," Perry said. "We've got three game." "I wam't that imJn!SSOO with them," "I feel I went out a winner," Fry · road games coming up this week, so I felt it The game was the third meeting said Malloy. "We were definitely the said after the game. better team. I have no doubt about that. THE REVIEW I Mark Schaffer was important to rest our starters a little bit." between the two teams, with "It's like my father used to say, ' Junior guard Bev Santee fights to hang onto the ball in the The Hens' next game is tonight at Lafayette Delaware now taking a 2-1 series In fact. I don't think they were the best 'grin and bear it,"' Fry said. "So I ' lead. team we've played this season." Hens' 75-38 victory over Delaware State Saturday. at5:45 p.m. grinned and I'm bearing it." •·football '93 - ~ . eason in review from Lehigh·to M!lrshall ·.·. ~ ) :: Delaware 62, Lehigh 21- The. j-wjhing 116yardSforthreemore. kickerTomDOOmunmissed what would tunled into a'fwnble recovered by Hen ~ Chiefs win big 1 · ~ens opened their season ,with an easy .· · · Delaware 38, James Madison 42 ~ have been a game-winning 30-yard fteld senior defensive efK1 Doolenic Botto. Fry BY MEREDITH GI.AZAR defenseman Dave Hassinger 'VictDry over the Fngineers at Delaware The Dukes handed the Hens their flTSt goal with five seconds remaining, threw for 92 yards in his first major Assistant Sports Editor contributed with two goals .Field So(ilomore hal.fbock Pat Williams ( los:rof the season in James Madison's Delaware 30, .Towson 32 - appeamncesincehis injury. · The Delaware Chiefs and one assist each. •' led the scoring with four touchdowns. •i).t season low-and a struggling Delaware grure, completed with a one-yard nm by Hens won a grure very few thoo8tt they University Saturday in the Goaltender Pat Diossi • Delaware 42, William and Mary 35 • de.feilse keyed the JMU win. Vinson, to leave a disappointed could, as a Jate..game scoring flurry' and a Blue Arena, 12-0. backed up the Chiefs between ...::... The Tribe staged a late-game \. '' Delaware19,VIIlanova7-Brown Parents' Day crowd of 20,709 at missedextrapointbyGrizzlykicker Five minutes into the the pipes, recording a shutout comeback lit Delaware Field, but it . was back in full force for the win over Delaware Field. Andy Larson put Delaware ahead. game, left wing Scott Weil and tallying 12 saves. wam't enough to beat the Hens. Junior: ./ ihe Wildcats m; he became the founh Delaware 48, Richmond 10-The Montana w~ stunned by the Wing·T as started the goal-fest for the The Chiefs' ne1tt game is fullback Daryl arown rushed for his Hen ever to run fa more than 200 yards Delaware defense came.to life, holding the Hens rushed fQr 474 yards in the Chiefs (2-0) by slamming in a Sunday, Jan. 2, against 2,000th career yard, the first of many · . in a game. with 203 yards at Delaware the Spiders to 2A5 total yards while the offensive battle. Brown hit yet anOther shot from the left of the net. Chester County. milestones he hit this season. William · •· Field His 71 ~yard touchdown nm m the Hen offense racked up 522 oo a cold and big milestone as his 188 yards rushing From there, the Chiefs ,and Mary, Boston University ·and . ·:• Hens' opening drive gave Delaware a1 rainy day at Delaware Field. Brown on a frozen Grizzly field made him bombarded Salisbury State Chiefs Cheeks: Delaware were the only Yankee ·. early jump. Fry broke his clavicle, reached another milestone with I .000 Delaware's all-time leading rusher with with 73 shots on goal in the Goaltender Lew Hines Conference teams to advance to the k .keeping him sidelined for four weeks, yards rushing in a season, for the second 3,286 career yards. Freshman game. recently returned from his AA playoffs. · . · . .. Delaware 29, Massachusetts 4J - time in his three years as a Hen. The quarterback Leo Hamlett played the The Chiefs came on strong tryout with the minor league . Delaware 34, Rhode Island .11 ~ ·· · ·Seven Hen fumbles cost Delaware the garde marked a brief return for Fry - entire second half, where he threw the in the second period to score Jacksonville (Fla.) Bullets. The Hens' defense led them to a victaj . game at McGuirlt Alwmi Stadium. Jre the fli'St since his broken clavicle. game-winning 32-yard touchdown piSS six goals, four of them short­ He earned an on-call position :intheirf111taway game of !IE season. ·:<;. game marked sophomore quarterback Delaware 28, Northeastern 23- toseniorspreadei'Ki KeitaMalloy. handed. to join the Bullets' regular Delaware 56, West Chester 41 ~ ·· · Kehh Langan's starting debut. The Hello, Montana! The victory at Panons Delaware 31, Manhall34- The Center Paul Gerlitz led the goaltending staff in case of $hadows of last year's 21-'20 loss to . Minutemen held !he Hens to 116 yards Field in the last regular-season game Hens' season was brought to a halt In Chiefs in scoring with three injury or release and was West Chester were quickly erased bY' rUshing, while peking up476. made a trip to the Division 1-AA West Varginia. by the 1llunderln8 Herd goals and two assists. Right invited to tryout again next ibis year's Hen victory on Delaware Delaware 21, Maine 19- The playoffs possible for the Hens. The for the secood year In a row, as a field wing Dan Blevins and season. Field. Fry ignited tiE offen&e, dlrowina . •Hens escaped with a vicwry In their Delawaredden1e held Na1beastem on a goal ldck by Marshall kicker David 2S9 yards for three rouchdoWIII ~ ·;,ltomecomlng game, as B1 ack Bear last-minute Huskies' p-lioo stnJ that Merrick 9C81ed the Hen:l's viaory. ,. 86. ntE REVIEW .December 7, 1993 REVIEW SPORTS BY THE NUMBERS Chiefs 'Ice Ho~key

~ £u.nd.u;. Salisbury State 0 0 0- 0 Marshall 34 Delaware 31 Lehigh 2 3 1-6 Rhode Island 1 1 3 - 5 Delaware Chiefs 3 6 3- 12 Delaware 4 3 1-8 Delaware 1 0 2-3 Marshall 7 7 10 10-34 First period - 1 DC Delaware 10 7 0 14-31 Ftrst period- 1 UD First period - 1 RI Weil (Palmer, Bouchard) 4:33. 2 Wezczynski (Bergey, Buell) 3:54.2 Myette (Centracchio) 8:28 DC Gerlitz (Lough, Pens) 5:55. 3 DELAWARE STATE (72) MU - Parker 3 run (Merrick kick) UD Bellino 7:28. 3 UD Bellino (pp). 2 UD Johnson 12:52. DC Morris (Lyles) 10:45. Musgrove 6-9 2-6 14, Del. - Brown 31 run (Leo kick) (Forcioo, livermcre) 8:00.4 LU Penalties - Dumas UD Penalties- Markey SS (holding) Sabree 4-10 1-1 9, Preston Del.- FG Leo 36 Goldberg (Gilka, Orben) 8:52 (W). 5 (holding) 2:33. Bergey UD 3:25. 6-8 0-0 12, Miles 7-21 6-6 UD Livennore (F

Th e ~:;,,.,, is hut One Co unuy, ;ind A/:11J/..im/ Ir s c:i 1i zcns. University of Delaware ··'!Joliti 'u '{fiilz World Unity: IInpossiblc or NCBITeam lncvilablc? To ll'arn mon• about the Baha'i Faith, dll indqwndcJll presents world n•liJ~ilm, join us for informal discuss ion llH'<'ting\ . l1l'ltl hiwedd);·· CallliS-lSS-SHI4 (lo,·;l) ,·all) e{coming 'Diversity" EWING ROOM PERKINS STUDENT CENTER Saturday, January 8 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.rn.

Open to all members of the University community. Pre-registration is required. To register, please call Gloria Davis at 831-8735. Classi ieds December 7,1993. THE REVIEW. 87

ANNOUNCEMENT DO YOU WANT A GOOD JOB? SPINET-CONSOLE PIANO. Wanted, Hall for Winter Session and/or Spring EARN CASH AND FREE TRIPS. CALL THEN GET A GOOD RESUMF.I The responsible party to make low Semester. $200 /month plus 1/3 TODAY: 1-800-SUNCHASE. BEACH Springbreak Promoter. Small Writer's Block - (302)427-3113. For monthly payments on piano. See utilities. Leave message! 738-2596. Need Free Legal Advice? Call DUSC. or larger groups. Your's FREE, Professional Resumes, Letters, Editing, locally. Call: 1-800-327-3345. Telemarketers. National company 831 -2648. discoi.M'lted or CASH. Call CMI1- Proofreading. Female, non-smoker needed to fill looking for Experienced 800-423-5264. 1985 Honda Scooter, only 300 miles lease @ Ivy Hall Apts. Feb 1. Telemarketers to set Appts. for H20 Lose or gain in the ten pound SPRING BREAK '94••• Cancun, - has never been off-campus - $149.50 /month + 1/4 utilities. Call Technicians. We offer the following : range .... Time to get your diaphragm Horizontal Groove, the Verge, Flow, Jamaica, Bahamas, South Padre Island $300.00 or Best Offer, 731-1780. Louise 738-8476. $7 .00 hrly salary; Bonus Program; 25 changed . Sex Ecf. Task force. and Fusion Child -see them rock the from $329 ppl Daytona, Panama to 40 hrs. wkly.; Fun working house tonight at the 1993 "Rockin' City from $109 ppl Deposits due by 1973 VW Beetle, Yellow. Asking 1 or 2 female roommates needed to · Environment. Call today for Interview AEPHI thanks everyone for making the Planet with the Halls" Battle of December 151 Guaranteed Lowest $450. Call 366-8506. share School Lane Apt. for spring 655-2112 ask for Suzy the semi-formal so much fun ! the Bands Contest in the Pencader Prices! Call Breakaway Travel & Semester. Call Rebecca at 837-6230. Looking forward to the next. Dining Hall. Show starts at 9:30 P.M. Tours at 1-800-214 -8687 or 1-908- 1990 Navy jeep Wrangler. Hard and ATTENTION : Earn Spending Money Tidcets $5 at the door and $3 with 828-4688. Soft Top. Only 30,000 miles. - Roommates Wanted: 2 Bdrms avail. Now. Work around class schedule. ATTENTION STUDENT WORKERS! !! this announcement! Kathleen 57 5-5821. All house priv. $250/mo. plus deposit Many jobs available. Earn $200 a Did you know you can have your SKI - Intercollegiate Ski Weeks, ONLY + share utilities. Kimberton . Avail week. Call joe for Interview@ 324- University pay check direct deposited AVAILABLE $209. Includes: 5 DAY LIFT TICKET/ 1979 DATSUN 510 Station Wagon. NOW - thru Summer. Call 366- 9659. to your bank account? For 5 NIGHTS LODGING (LUXURY Runs well. FM/Cass. Good tires. 1057. information, contact the Payroll DAYTONA BEACH - SPRING BREAK. CONDO! /5 DAYS IN $800 negotiable. E-mail emallen Telephone order clerks. Full or PT Office at 831 -21 78. First Class, oceanfront hotel directly INTERCOLLEGIATE ACTIVITIES @brahms.UDel.edu. or call at WANTED Hrs . Students. Flexible Hrs. Great on the beach, parties, pool deck fun, (Drinking Age- 18), Sponsor Include 999-7298. Pay. Day or Night. Downtown Everyone wish Margaret Reilly a nlli!tclubs, sunshine, DO NOT MISS Molson andMt Orford, CANADA PARTY IN THE SUN SPRING BREAK! Newark Office 452-0315. Happy 22nd Birth

collegiate crossword

Blood Drive Wednesday & Thursday December 8 & 9 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Perkins Student Center BLOOD BANK Sponsors: Impact Service Community, Sigma Chi Fratemity, Farmhouse Community OF DELAWARE, INC. WINTER COMMENCEMENT ACROSS 45 - antique 14 Biological classes 46 Makes the first bid 16 Points opposite to 1 Reef 46 Half of movie team the zenith 6 Ancient Ita 1 ian 49 Mr . Whitney 17 "Best Actor" of WHEN: Saturday, January 8, 1994 - 2:00 p.m. 12 We 11-ba 1anced 50 Part of a carpentry 1936 13- grounds joint 22 Payment 15 Notorious queen 51 Suffix for real 24 Marine mollusks (2 wds.) 52 Well-known general 29 Suffix for simple WHERE: The Bob Carpenter Center- olB Sma 11 demon (3 wds . ) 30 Likely 19 Mends 57 Having floors 31 College in L.A . , 20 Japanese money 58 Those beyond he 1p Southern - 21 Spanish rivers 59 Sweet 32 College major Route 896-Newark • 23 Proverb 60 A great number of 34 Sift, as grain 24 Sneaker part 35 Greg louganis, 25 Speed unit DOWN et al. 26 Slangy diamonds 36 Spotted cats 27 Roman road 1 Endurance 37 North American deer WHO: Augue;t and December 1993 Graduatee 28 Hygienic 2 Barbed spear 38 Wicked person 31 Tourist accessory 3 Part of a kimono 39 laid a new floor 33 Boston - 4 Fermented drink 40 Pencil parts 34 Distort 5 You can - 41 - "1nferno" 35 College lecturer horse . . . 43 - Gonzales 38 Free from im- 6- cake 46 Fine fur ELIGIBILITY purities 7 Get up 47 Becomes tangled 42 Words of de­ B- vi vant 53 Work unit termin~tion 9 Suffi~ for attract 54 lnlet 43 Trigonometry 10 Potassium - 55 Bird of Mythology abbreviation 11 One who allures 56 Watson and Crick Students who have completed their requirements in August and December, 1993, are eligible to attend 44 Japanese monastery 12 Certain smiles d i scove'l'y Winter Commencement. Students completing their requirements at the end of Winter Session are NOT eli­ gible to attend. Exception~ to this policy will be determined by your Dean's Office. Graduate students should II check eligibility with the Graduate Office, if you have not received the preliminary bulletin on commencement. TICKETS Each graduate is entitled to a maximum

I II of seven tickets for guests. Ticketa will be available at The Student Servicea Building from December 13 to 17 88. THE RMEW • December 7, 1993

THEAMBER 0 E s LANTERN 5:30 T Nightly Specials

~ 8" Meatball Sub and Fries ONLY $3.29!

Enjoy assorted fruit juices, fresh fruit, fruited yogurt, french toast, pancakes, waffles, scrambled 2 Large Pizzas with 2 toppings eggs, fried eggs made~to~order, omelettes made~to~ ~ ONLY $11.99! order, sausage, bacon, breakfast potatoes, assort~ ed cold cereals, whole/low~fat/even chocolate milk, toast, English muffins, bagels (with cream ~ FREE Pitcher of Soda with Large Pizza purchase! . cheese and other assorted toppings), fresh muffins and more for only $2.89! * ~ FREE toppings on Cheesesteaks! What are you doing for ~ l/ R d Ch· k & 2 S'd .DarkMeatONLY$3.29! lunch? ~ 4 oaste lC en 1 es.Light Meat ONLY $4.29! DO --8" Turkey Sub and Fries ONLY $3.29! BODRBY. --Large Pizza with 3 toppings ONLY $9.89!

Enjoy vegetable beef soup, pasta with two unique sauces, stir fry, deli sandwiches, chicken and his~ cuits, quiche, pita sandwiches, fresh fruits and l IIIElT·SELECTiON Of DlliNIS EVERY liOIITI vegetables, a salad bar loaded with unique top~ pings, fresh~baked pies and cakes, frozen yogurt, On Tap** cookies and more for only $3.89!* Budweiser • Coors Light • Michelob What are you doing for In Bottles** dinner? Corona • Miller Lite • Michelob • Budweiser • O'Douls Non.. alcoholic Brew Also available: A wide selection of Mock tails (non ... alcoholic cocktails) Ice Cream Milkshakes • Iced Tea • Flavored Seltzer Water Wine & Wine Coolers** • Coke • Diet Coke • Sprite • and more!

Enjoy hot soup, delicious entrees like beef pot pie or seafood fried rice, deli subs and sandwiches, Specials available through Friday, December 17. Specials not valid with any other offer. cheeseburgers, vegetarian entrees like ratatouille *"'Alcoholic beverages are only se rved to customers of legal drinking age (21) with proper identification and must be paid for in cash when ordered. PLEASE, DON'T DRINK AND DRIVE. Monterey, pasta with two unique sauces, fresh vegetables and fruits, a loaded salad bar, fresh~ baked pies and cakes, frozen yogurt, ice cream, cookies and more for only $4.8 9! * Quick Bites 10 1: Final Exam r------, What are you doing for Part I: Multiple Choice r------,Part U: True or I'alae You're on campus and need a quick snack. Which of 1. T F You're hungry. brunch? the following would you choose? 2. T F You like pizza. a) a fresh muffin at the Ice Arena for only 69¢. 3. T F You can find the Scrounge. DO b) a bagel & cream cheese at the Round House for only 69¢ . 4. T F You have 99¢.

'r.U.D.D.B. c) a cheeseburger at the Scrounge for only 99¢. If you answered TRUE to all four questions, take this (~he Upper ~eck ~ining Room) coupon to the Scrounge and get a slice of hot, deli­ d) a regular milkshake at Ba kin-Robbins (n the cious pizza for only 99¢. Scrounge for only $l.l9. Enjoy assorted fruit juices, fresh fruit, fruited EX'l'B.A CBEDIT yogurt, french toast, pancakes, waffles, scrambled Circle your answer and take this coupon to that loca ­ Bring this coupon in between 2:30 and 5:00p.m., eggs, fried eggs made~to~order, omelettes made~to~ tion to receive the discount indicated . Monday to Friday, and get a medium soda with your order, sausage, bacon, breakfast potatoes, assort~ slice of pizza for only 29¢ more. ed cold cereals, whole/low~fat/even chocolate Valid with coupon through 12/ 17/93 . Not va lid with any other offer. Valid with coupon through 12/17/93. Not valid with any other offer. milk, toast, English muffins, bagels (with cream Only one coupon per order. cheese and other assorted toppings), doughnuts ~------~ L~2:~~:~~~~------~ and more for only $3.89!* 1r------~------, Part m: Fill in the Blanks 1 : 1. I need a blue book for my exam and a #2 pencil for my exam. : : Complete this sentence and bring this coupon with you to the Board Room Restaurant, where this coupon and any : • Item shown .trc cxomplcs of fooJ served dunng thar meal - not all nems are avai l· 1 entree purchase gets you one free blue book and one free #2 pencil. 1 able at all meJII .• r.ned r rr cc Jre m effect at all four Jinmg halls, but only through Valid with coupon through 12/17/93. Nor valid with any other offer. O nly one coupon per order. the end of the semc

Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson

'{(').) ~CIW . E.~ER\'ffi\t{G - I: P.t-\ ... !#.'{ \JNIQ\.lE SPIRIT ~il ~~UTi ,.. E'JER'l ­ lt\IN\3 ~\ Mt>.l{£'.5 ME ME ...

"TilE'{ S/>.i 11\E. WCRl.D \':> ~ .. STII..GE . \

THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON ·. • . ~~m===r------~

The questions were getting harder, and Ted could "Oh, good heavens, no, Gladys - not for me ... feel Lucky's watchful glare from across the room. I ate my young just an hour ago." He had been warned, he recalled, that this was a breed that would sometimes test him.

Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU

Ct\AI'TER )0(1\1: ~TORMENTING L.OVE. QUESTIONS 810. THE REVIEW• December 7, 1993 :IF YOUR PARENTS SENT YOU A

·FINALS · SUPPORT OR FRUIT. BASKET

- l then be sure to bring the colored card that was sent to you in campus mail and your student i.d. to... .

· ·The Russell D/E Lounge Thursday, December 9th. · from 7:00-9:00 pm

(these baskets are for on-campus residents only excluding Pencader & Christiana)