UD Officials Seek $67.2 Million For

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UD Officials Seek $67.2 Million For Today' s Our secpnd · w ather: century of excellence loudy and ool :c .with light rain, high n a r 50. Vol. 112 No. 20-= Student Center, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716 Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1986 UD officials seek $67.2 million for '87 by John Martin • $275,000 in planning funds for a new Editor in Chief laboratatory building for the Computer and In­ With the belief that education represents "the formation Sciences and Mathematical Scienc best investment you can make with state departments, which would be built by 1991 for funds," President E. A. Trabant and other an estimated $10.1 million~ university officials are requesting $67.2 million • $1.9 million to replace deficient laboratory · in state funding for the 1987-88 fiscal year. equipment in the Colleges of Arts and Science The request, made Friday before the gover­ Education, Agricultural Science, Engineering nor's budget staff in Wilmington, equals a $4.1 and Human Resources~ million increase from the $63.1 million in state • $2.3 million for building renewal projects funds the university received for the current including the physical improvement of certain fiscal year. facilities and major maintenance tasks. Trabant stressed that the funds are needed For the present fiscal year, state funding ac­ to maintain the quality of education the univer­ counts for $56.9 million, or 26.5 percent, of the sity now offers and to remain competitive with university's $215.1 million budget. similar institutions. Although Trabant has already confirmed that "When anyone studies at the University of a tuition increase for students will occur next Delaware," he told the committee, "they are year, the size of that increase will depend on being exposed to one of the finest education pro-. several factors other than state funds, he said, grams and environments in the country." including university income from gifts, en­ Trabant announced a list of priority projects dowments, contracts and grants. at the university for which state funding is All of these factors are predicted to increase desired. The requests include: for the 1987-88 fiscal year, the president said. • $2.5 million to begin construction on a 25,000 But, he continued, "if nothing falls together, gross square foot addition to Alison Hall, which we'll have to maximize tuition." is used by the College of Human Resources; If the university did not receive the total • $1.3 million to expand the university's amount requested from the state, he said, Chiller Plant system, as the East and West budget cuts would occur "in areas of less im­ Campus plants are presently both working at portance to the academic program." . maximum capacity; These areas would include "services to . • • • THE REVIEW/ T•m Butler • $300,000 to begin planning a new building for students, faculty and professionals," as well as Body language- Two participants m the Great P~ace M~rch, • the chemistry department, a development pro­ the maintenance and groundskeeping of the who paraded through Newark Thursday, express their solution to jected to be completed after 1990 at an campus and university buildings. war <see related article p.3). estimated cost of $13.5 million; continued to page 9 State Rep. wants Wilmington mayor out by Don Gordon gotten rid of. " Frawley explained that his According to Evo Dom­ Dominguez asserted that the Copy Editor Plant said the main reason "thrust has been to get vacant inguez, who resigned from the commission, which couJd hav houses back into the market.'' commission, the mayor "had Wilmington Mayor Daniel S. Frawley should be impeached been a valuable r source, wa is because he "looks at one He cited the Eastside Hous­ very little trust for us. He told never utilized. Frawley is doing a "piss-poor'' ing Initiative, a group of 90 va­ us he couldn't trust us with job and should be impeached, class of people one way and " Not once did the mayor caJJ serves another one another cant units that have been · ensitive issues." us,' he said, "which makes no according to State Represen­ renovated in a " predominant­ In addition, Dominguez said, tative AI Plant, D-2nd District. way. sense.'' "If AI Plant makes it clear ly black" neighborhood, as an "When we requested informa­ When the commission asked When the Delaware House of he's not going to represent example of improved housing tion, we were told it was too Representatives reconvenes in for a breakdown of city whites or the poor - I'm black conditions in Wilmington. sensitive, or it arrived too late o nlinued to pag; 8 January, Plant said, he will in­ - my ass should be impeach­ Other strides in housing to be of any use." troduce an amendment to the ed," Plant continued. ~evelopment, Frawley said, Frawley asserted that "a Wilmington City Charter mak­ But, Frawley said, " I'm do­ mclude a 114-unit rental apart­ diverse group," including gays ing it possible to impeach the ing the best job I can despite ment complex being built by and lesbians, was appointed to mayor. some detractors interested in Community Housing Inc. the commission to repre ent Frawley fired Plant after he their own political agenda and According to Frawley, 33 of different interest groups. was elected mayor in 1984. not the job I'm doing." the 114 units will be low­ Plant had served as a com­ However, according to income housing. However, many of the com­ munity affairs aide under the Plant, Frawley is dealing in­ mission members said they previous mayor, William Plant said another example weren't being taken seriously. McLa.ughlin. adequately with housing pro­ blems in Wilmington. of Frawley's inadequacy is the Frawley argued that ''The fact that he was fired, '' mayor's "insensitivity and ar­ "several of the people who Frawley said, ''has everything ''All the homes coming into rogance" in dealing with pro­ resigned had their own to do with [the impeachment Wilmington are not for the blems concerning the poor and political agenda. It was an at­ campaign]." low-income person," Plant ex­ minorities in Wilmington. teml?t to embarrass me in the Plant said that while he was plained. "I would think with all While a 14-member Civil media. working for the city, "there 'the homeless, he would do Rights Commission was ap­ ''The group never seemed to was another representative, of something about it." pointed in the spring of 1985 to get its act together," the Polish descent, who supported But, Frawley said, "The bot­ d~al with these problems, mayor continued, because the opposition to Mayor tom line is it's expensive to erght of the members resigned their responsibilities "overlap­ REVIEW file photo Frawley. He was kept, I was generate housing." this fall . ped those of other groups.'' Daniel Frawley Page 2 • The Review • November 11, 1986 ----------------------------------------------November ll, 1986 • The Review •Page 3 Peace of mind Nationwide march hits Newark by Dave Dietz Newark. Signs in storefronts featured and Tim Butler messages like "Welcome Peace Mar­ chers," greeting the long line as it Staff Reporters passed down Main Street en route to Three thousand miles, four pairs of Fair Hill Racetrack in Maryland, its shoes, 13 states and a hell of a lot of campsite for the night. steps later, Marty Stickler is almost "Tbe Great Peace March is compris- there. of a lot of people who care about peo­ Stickler has walked every step of the ple and care about the Earth,'' said way in The Great Peace March For Diane Clark of California, the honorary Nuclear Disarmament. mayor of Peace City, the traveling The March, which began in Los home-away-from-home for the Angeles nine months ago, wound its marchers. way through Newark Thursday, just "The only thing we're into is global nine days from its destination in disarmament." Washington, D.C., where it will stage "It's been a wonderful adventure," three days of events Nov. 15-17. said Loretta Shall, who has been mar­ "My God, it's an army for peace,' ching since LDs Angeles. "Some people said an onlooker, as the estimated 900 say that I've wasted nine months of my marchers made their way through continued to page 8 (From right) Fair Hill houses Peace City Thursday night. Loretta Shall, who march­ ed from California, rests in a tent. Two 12-year-olds from the Newark Center for Progressive Learning carry the peace banner. Dale Outhouse marches out of Newark. Photos by Tim Butler County announces·' ·.. ·. Housing announces increases in room program designed· .·contract breaks by Chuck Arnold "It won't affect your room to conserve water Assistant News Editor rates," he stressed to about 40 members of the RSA by Michael P. Regan anywhere else in the world. It will be a case of age before luck for university residents assembly. Staff Reporter "We may have to get used to who want to break their hous- In upcoming weeks, RSA Looking to safeguard local a more conservative approach · Rita Justice ing contracts next semester. will sponsor bus trips home for "liquid assets" for the next to.water use in the {uture," he The Office of Housing and Thanksgiving for students. century, the Delaware River warned. Dworsky, will also establish a Residence Life has designated Ticket information will be Basin Commission last month Under the plan, officials will strategy for developing new a student's age, instead of ran­ available later this week. approved a water supply plan review the county's water- resources if local water sup- dom selection, as the second Also, RSA is sponsoring a for New Castle County.
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