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

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 , 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. resource systems and analyze plies and availability diminish criterion for the release of bet­ program that allows parents to send fruit baskets to "The Water 2000 Plan looks how water use can be more ef- in the future. ween 75 and 100 residents from ficient. Officials will also ex- "The DRBC approval," he their contracts, according to students before finals week. to establish a long-range 'bTt f said, "opens the way for con- R b A t · CAS ) R · The fruit baskets will be strategy for a low-cost, high­ p 1ore th e poss1 1 1 y o tinuing actions that will be o n onucc1 87 , est- distributed Dec. 8. quality water supply for New developing new resources, dent Student Association Dworsky explained. necessary to further develop representative for Housing "We want to give all the Castle residents," according money raised [from the fruit to Bernard L. Dworsky, ad­ the projects so they may be and Residence Life. "There is no immediate · available when needed." Residents.in extended hous- baskets] to the hall govern­ ministrator of the Water ments," said Scott Garrison Resources Agency. crisis," he continued, "but Possible plans include the ing will be given the first water availibility is becoming establishment of Churchman's chance to be released from (AS 88), program director of If every aspect of the plan is more tenuous. Reservoir and Thqm~on Sta- their housing contracts. RSA .. implemented, costs could run "The situation has altered tion Reservoir Within New Among other students to be ''Last year we gave $2,500 to as high as $75 million, Dwor­ dramatically over the past 10 Casf~ County. -· ' ; selected, upperclassmen will the hall governments,'' added sky said. years with growth that has in- Forty-million more gallons have priority over residents·in RSA Vice President Mike "We've kind of lived in a lux­ creased demand and increas- of water could be added to the a lower year. Cradler CAS 88). ury here in the East," he said. ed erosion of the supply county's water supply through The secondary age criterion In residence hall news, "We've used water with a through pollution," he said. these two plans concerned may only be in effect for the Terry McNatt CAS 88), of reckless abandon, using twice with water supply develop- current academic year, said Sussex Hall, was chosen as RA as much per person as Water 2000, according to ment, according to Dworsky. · Antonucci, at RSA's weekly of the month for October. Ac­ ,------....-.------.. meeting, adding that Housing cording to Antonucci, McNatt and Residence Life made the was selected on the "strength decision promptly. of her programming and TAKE A DAY OFF FROM SMOKING In other matters, Antonucci general hall opinion." said, Housing and Residence Laura Antal CAS 1J9) of NOVEMBER 20, 1986 Life will install new elevators Gilbert Hall F, recei'ved in the Christiana Towers in the honorable mention for RA of next few years. the month. AVANTI RESTAURANT OFFICE OF HOUSING AND RESIDENCE LIFE Homemade Italian Food made on premises announces Also serving Chicken, Veal, and MID-YEAR OOM CHANGES Shr~mp December 1st through December 5th Open 738-0774 4-10 p.m. 13 Polly Drummond Tuesday-Saturday Shopping Center The week after Thanksgiving the paperwork will be processed for THE FACT IS •••• In 1984 year-round, full-time women mid-year room changes. Actual workers who had graduated from college e~rne~ $19,855 on average; men workers moves take place between w1th h1gh school diplomas earned $22,312. January 19, 1987, and February 8, COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN Source: National Commission on Working 1987. Women, 1986 Watch for information posted in your residence hall or ask your Hall Director. Don't forget that a room change also involves a change in telephone service.

... - .... ~------November ll, 1986 • The Review • Page 5

Review phone T. MAC'S numbers:

News ...... 451-1398 University Police kitchen, where they found the BALLOON BUNCHES BLUE HEN BALLOON stove smoldering. Creative Deliveries to A Unique Silver arrest eight at game The blaze was extinguished Sports ...... 451-1397 Businesses, Homes, Helium Filled and no damages were Dorms, Hospitals, Balloon For Any University Police arrested reported, police said. & Restaurants Occasion. eight tailgaters for underage Apparantly someone had Advertising ... 451-2772 Serving Newark and Elkton Area drinking at Saturday's home left the stove turned on with 301-398-5873 (Call Collect) football game against the paper towels inside, which University of Connecticut. police stated, was the probable Business ...... 451-1395 Seven of the tailgaters were cause of the fire. university students, police Classified ...... 451-2771 said, and one was a Universi­ $420 in property stolen ty of Connecticut student. from Pencader dorm Executive ...... 451-277 4 Small fire reported About $420 in property was ------.....J in library kitchen removed from a room in Pen- cader E residence hall Friday University Police reported a night, University Police JOIN THE small fire in the first-floor kit­ reported. chen of the Morris Library Residents sponsored a par­ GREAT shortly after closing Saturday ty in the room that night, AMERICAN night. police said, and the property Responding to alarms about was reported missing Satur­ SMOKEOUT

10:20 p.m., police entered the day morning. I NOV. 20 The Airport Transportation Alternative DELAWARE .J:XPHESS7 Wanna get personal? SHUTTLE 1QrH ANNIVERSARY . Door to Door Serv-ice • 24 Hours • 1 Days aWeek Use Review classifieds Express Service Available tE" (302) 454-7634 or 1-800-648-LIMO 356 East Main St. Page 6 • The Review • November 11, 1986

Bedtime for Bonzo

When little kids do it, you send them to their rooms. When your mate does it, you rmd a new mate. But what do you do when your president does it? appears to have lied again. Reagan has continuously told Americans ~nd the rest of ihe world that he would never negotiate with terrorists. ' 1be media bas reported that "weD-informed government sources" said that a secret shipment of U.S. arms and spare parts was sent to Iran last week as payment for the Nov. 2 rel.ease of American David Jacobsen, who was bemg held hoStage in Beirut. Government sources have also said that the Reagan administration started shipping arms to Iran last September, four montbs after tbe release of 39 Americans seized aboard a hijacked TWA jettiner in Beirut. . . l'AN No wonder Americans keep geUmg yanked In by pro-Iranian Shiite Muslims an~ tbe like. ~ee Americans have been kidnapped m Lebanon smce Sept. 9 of this year. Reagan bims«:lf ~as st~ted in his policy on terrorism that negotiating With ter­ rorist groups could lead to m-:e bostage-t~gs. 'lbe president should have listened to himself. Now Reagan has reaDy dug himself a deep hole. Even if negotiations with hostage-holders didn't Bad Taste in My Mouth lead to more cases of kidnapping, the administra­ tion's decision to send arms to Iran is inexcusable. I'm an animal, I know it, I nity. This way I can behave accept it. But the human side While one American beeomes free, a much Don Gordon like an animal and not worry of me resents it and hates it. about realizing it. higher number of Iraqis die. _The idea of the physical, the I wouldn't have to take care anUnatistic,Ifindit~ts bably, baHway through a bite Secretary of State George _ultz aJ¥1 Defe e of muskrat, awareness would of myself, either, I mean if so­ and nauseates me. meone did something to offend Secretary Caspar Weinberger say the)' disa wash over me and drown me. Maybe I'm too aware of It's best not to know what my tasteful ethic, a whole with a poliey of trading arms for hostages. But p­ 'these things - eating, you're eating. troop of clones could come parently it doesn't maUer what those two think. breathing, sleeping, sneezing, I'm losing focus, my eyes · quick to my defense. A con­ It makes you wonder just who was involved in sweating, burping, defecating, are going bad, my muscles are federacy of dunces. Almost urinating, copulating, dying - sore, I have trouble breathing, like having the National Guard the decisions, and who was even told about them. but I can't help it. Revulsion is I guess I'm dying. I need some on campus, to eliminate hard to dispute. meaning in my life. Maybe I'll anybody threatening to take It makes you wonder what else tbe Reagan ad­ It's really sickening and · ministration is doing behind tbe American public's get a tattoo. As my body an honest look. stupid how we try to pretend decays, my eyes get sunken, back. we're not animals. I guess I'd be a man, though: · my face droops, my skin sags, Hooray for the Phi Kappa Psi Maybe there are no easy solutions to dealing that's why we wear suits and I can watch a picture on my ties, eat processed crap, live in brothers at University of with terrorists and kidnappers, but that doesn't bicep stay young. Oh goody! Texas who · initiated Mark condominiums, laugh at stupid On my death bed, even at my mean tbe Reagan administration should r~ort to things, and trick ourselves in­ Seeburger by making him funeral, the damn thing will drink over half a bottle of rwn. negoUations. · to thinking we are something still be there, a pathetic more. We devour the flesh of The 18-year-old woke up dead. 1be consequences aren't worth it. reminder of my imagined You guys are too cool. And other animals, but package it, youth. Born to raise Hell. grind it, and disguise it, so by how about those frat brothers Mom. U.S. Marines. Boy, am at Johns Hopkins who fir~­ the time it gets to the mouth of I going to be a man! I'll kiss Jolin Martilt, --in cW someone like me, it's plastic. bombed an anti-apartheid Mar. lticri, ...... -- my momma goodbye and At- Brv.bley, ...... W. ecllor lyt~~~e Bums, busiMu manager Actually, I wouldn't mind shanty. While there were peo­ Ridt Dale, edilorial editor Lauro ~. od¥ertising director splatter a few commie skulls! being an animal, hunting other ple in it. Way to go, guys. M.ilaa ..loa1bs, --editor All in the cause of democracy, Mile "'--'. sports ecllcw Always on the alert, ready to animals, biting into the flesh, mind you. Anything for a buck. News Edilus ...... •...... Dcrwe thbansli. Tony Varrato, fresh blood trickling down my keep someone from speaking Just so long as I stay off drugs. their mind. Su.Wnge face. U only I didn't have to Stuff kills. Gosh, I know every FeaMM felton ...... To. Capodanno, Bruce Heuser think about it. U I can think, I f'hato Editcw .•...... ••...... ••...... •..•..•...... •...... •...... •...... ••..•...... •...•..... lloyd Fox time I get high I go into a At least 39 students have Assistant News Editors ...... ••...•....•...... •...... •...•Chudr Anlold, c-ile Moon.-y don't want to be limited by murderous rage. I'm so afraid been killed since 1!178 in hazing Assistant Phato EclitoJ ····················--·--·-·······································-·-···K- Mancinelli physical imperfection - I it might keep me from joining activities. Congratulations, don't want to be encumbered boys. You're men now. E::~~:~:.::.::::::.:::::::::::::'?~?-?:~~?:~5$ by this rattling, rotting, aging, the system. I'm addicted, too. But I'll quit soon, though. My Murderers, but men. What a ~.-y T!Miday-t Fridayct.n..g ..CIIIIIIII.ic,- by ...... t.ody Glthe U.W.­ dying, instinctual body. Limbo concept. Iily ol o.law.e, ...... ,.___ sure is a drag. country needs me. I just can't to Eclkwiol-ct ....._ olims a1 w.. w-.. s....t.t C..... ,._ ..SI-2771, ..SI-2772, I. The naturalist Annie Dillard wait murder for profit. We'll ..S 1-2714. ...._ ~tows: 10 a..a.. eo 3 p..a.. Ma.day ..,._.... fri~~Dy . teach those pesky Russians to lived off road kills for a while . Don Gordon is a copy editor of I i{Uess coul~ ~ i~, bqt pro- put fluoride in our water. L------...1 I . . Better yet, I'll join a frater- The Review. November 11, 1986 • The Review • Page 7 ------Celtics, not New York's last Remembering Tom Letters place Knicks. For the record Philly's "second rate sport I just wanted to take the teams" have all had winning time to commend you on your that we disagree with, but One hundred residents from were just too naive expecting there is one in particular we'd Lane Hall stood in unison with you to pay any attention to our records over the last 10 years. coverage of the death of Tom

HEADACHE, SQUINTING, FATIGUE ... ASTIGMATISM

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ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA PLEDGES: super BUY YOUR FANTASY at SIGMA NU' 2ND Jennif r : study for tho c exams! - job at the gong show, we're all so proud!-HAP­ ANNUAL MALE SALE 11 / 20 . py ALPHA WEEK! Love in ASA, The Sisters. DEAR WENDY, HAPPY 2 YEAR ANNIVER­ Dave Canagan & Tom Leick - why do they SARY! THE E LAST 2 YEAHS HAVE BEE To the brothers of Phi Kappa Tau and Delta call you WACK -MEN? THE GREATEST! I LOVE YO ! LOVE , continued from page 16 ANDREA R. - have a great time during Tau Delta: we had a blast mixing with you KEITH. Monday Night! The Sisters of AOII. MICHELE - hope you feel belt r ! I love yo u Jolten, although I may not always show it, I ALPHA WEEK, Get psyched for Thursday - .Love , Your Secret Sis. - SEAN . Lewi - ·ould this be the personnl you w •r love you as my big bro. Thanx for all your help GO CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING WITH THE looking for? Who say · \ 'r not whipped'' & support. Love, Your Iii' sis. Don't worry, if you didn't sign up you can still OUTING CLUB OYER WINTER SESSION. Hi hris! are for a game of racquetball - Thank for making this past month incn•dt · give blood at the APO/ GSS Blood Drive on Jan. 16-19. A great break from work! Or would you like more PRACTI E '?! Guess blc. May there b many mort>. ou make me Sammy - you've been waiting for one, and 11, 3 Nov. 12, 13 - 10 :30 a.m . to p.m . who? f•l'l sooo ICE 1 Ta kt> ·a rcofthatp1p(•! Lo • now it's here. I'm not the ecret admirer NEED A MAN - buy a SIGMA NU at 2ND Bag e. you've been waiting for , but that time will Record Convention - Nov. 16 , 10a.m .-6 p.m . ANNUAL MALE SALE 1 t/ 20. AT H: I offer you my affe ·li on without come soon. Thanx for a ll of our great Limes Sheraton Inn - Newark, Del. Exit 3 off 195 . TAINT. You have awakened a new mentality Hom . \ lid woman wiUt grc n c•lashcs! l;l'l - MALONEYS!, the summer, parties, etc. Admission $2. If you ee CYNTHIA GRUPE today make in me and thank you for helping m wi th the psyched for pledging. W<•'r gnnna have a Love ya, Lani . sure you give her a big hug because she is now Witch of Pencader. If you n ed love. you hav blast ! Alpha lo e. Lynlc. Do you know what afe sex is? If you are be­ the 1986 JEOPARDY HAMPI ON . Love and it from me. If this i a ll a dream, don 't wak Keith, you are the greatest thing that ever ing sexual with your partner, call the Sex In­ kis es. Alex Trabeck. me up! 4-T. \; in $500 m IGMA KAPP 'S raffl<· get happened to me! Happy 2 years! I LOVE formation Hotline (451 -8731 ) for more infor­ your tickets now ! YOU! Always, Wendy. mation. Sex. Ed. Task Force. SUSAN MURPHY: AOII loves you! You're Wanted 1 or 2 femal roommates to s h

• • • university seeks DESIRING TO MOVE OFF CAMPUS?? continued to page 1 The final funding request president. However, not until will be presented to the Joint June 1987 - the end of the pre­ THIS MAY BE YOUR OPPORTUNITY! Finance Committee of the sent fiscal year - will the State General Assembly in state budget, including the February, according to the university request, be passed. The Office of Housing and Residence Life is offering the chance to be released from the Residence Hall Agreement to 100 students who may wish to move off campus for reasons other than the cir­ 1986-87 Short Stories cumstances listed in the Residence Hall Handbook. Student This. opportunity is being offered due to increased demand for and Poems ... on-campus housing in the Spring. Keeping the buildings full is still CAESURA, the University of Delaware's a priority, and spaces vacated will be filled by students in extend­ Literary Magazine, is now taking submissions ed housing, new applications, and students who could not be Rules: housed in the Fall. 1. Any registered undergraduate or graduate student is If more than 100 students apply for release, priority will be bas­ eligible to submit. ed on class seniority as recommended by the RSA and the Stu­ 2 All entries must be typed. 3: Each poem must be submitted on a separate sheet of dent Advisory Committee to the Office of Housing and Residence paper. . h) · 1 Life. Within a class, birth dates will be used to prioritize if 4. Submit entries (as many as you w1s 1n an enve ope necessary. Students whose requests are not approved will be with your name address, and phone number on the out­ side of the en~elope. All entries must be your own, kept on a waiting list. original work. . 5. Do not put your name on the entnes themselves. Request for release forms are available at the office 6. No entries will be returned. Keep a copy for yourself. 7. Submit entries to: Dr. Fled a Jackson . of Housing and Residence Life, 5 Courtney Street un­ Department of Enghsh til Friday, November 21, 1986. 026 Memorial Hall Notification of approval will be mailed Wednesday, November 26, 1986. Approved cancellations are bin­ DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS: FEBRUARY 13 ding. Students may reapply for on-campus housing No work will be accepted after this date. but are not guaranteed an assignment. Poems and stories accepted for publication .in Caesura become eligible for several substantial cash prizes. CAESURA ALSO NEEDS 8/W PHOTOS AND ARTWORK Write to The Review Page 10 • The Review • November ll, 1986

Meeting - Off Ca.~pus Student Friday, Nov. 14 Tuesday Nov. 11 Film - Latin American Studies Pro­ Seminar - "Novel Structure and Func­ Association. 4 p.m., Williamson Room , gram, "Improper Conduct," 7 p.m. in tion of the Fe-S Core in Aconitase,'' Student Center. 206 Ewing. with Mark Emptage, E . I. duPont de Jugglers - We are not just hanging Join the International Relations aub - Nemours & Co. Inc. 203 Drake Hall, 4 Colloquium - "Literacy Aquisitio~ in 4:00p.m. in 2

Theatre - " Harvey " presented by the Information for Campus Calendar Performing Arts Department of John must be submitted to The Review by Dickinson High School. 8 p.m. in the 3 p.m. Tuesday for publication in school auditorium. Tickets are $3 and obtainable at the door. For more infor­ Friday's paper. For a Tuesday mation call 992-5500. ext. 40. paper, information must be submit­ ted by 3 p.m. Friday.

. THETA CHI ALL MALE REVUE

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QUIGLEY'S FARM . •••Hayrides••• Bonfire included for: Clubs Private Parties Sororities Dormitories Social Groups Fraternities Celebrations of all kinds! 20 minutes drive from campus in New Castle, Delaware PRESSED FOR TIME?? (302) 328-7732 For Reservations There is something you can do! Giving blood only takes a short while, and your donation will make a difference! PSYCHOLOGY MAJORS- The Bloodmobile will be at the Student Center on Confused About Graduate School? November 11th, 12th, and 13th, from 1 0:30a.m. to 3:00p.m. PSI CHI Can Helpl Please give - you might save a life! Join us at our Graduate School Forum to hear Sponsored by APO & Gamma Sigma Sigma professors and graduate students speak about careers and graduate school in Psychology. BLOOD BANK OF DELAWARE, INC. Tuesday, Nov. 11th 7:30PM- 205 Wolf November 11, 1986 • The Review • Page 11

by Michael Reagan left to try t · dentify the murderer of their slain col­ Staff Reporter leagues, whom they conclude "Who would have thought must be one of the group. Indians the old man to have had so The individual perfor­ Dead much blood in him." mances are all quite good ­ And like the elderly victim several are excellent. in "Macbeth," Agatha Kristin Judge as Theater Arts Company, still William Blore. He plays the proves to be an engaging piece bungling CIA agent like Sgt. in HTAC's play of theater. Joe Friday on amphetamines Director Scott Mason

There is no evidence that Jesus Christ rose from the dead. If this statement is true, there is no evidence for the most central Christian belief next to the ex· istence of God. As the Aoostle Paul wrote to one of thP first Christian churches ... If Christ has not been raised, our preach ins is useless, and $0 lJ your faith" (I Corinthians 15: 1.4). But a thinking/erson needs evidence. It is common historical knowledge that Jesus died on a Roman cross an was buried. And the biblical records indicate both that his tomb was found empty shortly afterwards and that a large number of people claimed to have spoken, walked and eaten with him after his death. These claims are startling. They need to be explained. We must decide whether there is a better explanation than actual resurrection. Alternate explantations are: 1) that thieves stole the body of Jesus; 2) that the Roman or Jewish authorities stole it; 3) that Jesus' disciples stole it; and 4) that Jesus was not acutally dead when buried and left the tomb on his own. Let us deal with each. 1) We are told (for example in Matthew 27:62-28:4) that the authorities placed a guard at the tomb to prevent the body from being stolen. And when the body was discovered to be missing, it was noted that the grave clothes - loaded with spices to preserve the body - were still present. They would be strange grave robbers who would fight Roman soldiers to steal a naked corpse, when the only thing of value in the tomb would have been the spice-laden grave clothes. 2) The authorities oosted the guard to keep the body buried. We must ask why they would subse­ quently remove it. When Christianitv was first_ oroClaimP.d it was seen as a threat to the powers of the day. Because the new teaching was explicitly based upon beliet in the resurrection, it would have been a simple matter for the authorities to quash it be producing the body of Jesus. The fact that they did not do so indicates that they did not have the body. 3) Because Roman discipline provided punishments ranging from beatings to death for sleeping on duty, we may assume that the soldiers were alert. This means that the disciples (a discouraged, frightened group of fishermen, tax collectors, and one political activist) would have had to fight the soldiers to get the body - a fight they stood a poor chance of winning. But it wu not just the disciples who claimed to have seen Jesus alive again. They would, in other words, have had to con­ vince others to join them in their deception - a deception these other would have no motive for THE REVIEW/ Tim Butler maintaining. Furthermore, 11 out of the original 12 disciples were martyred for their belief that Dagmar Zschocke Jesus rose from the dead. Now people might die for what they believe to be true, even if they are wron~. But few will die for a known lie. That fact that the discioles died saying that Jesus was ·alive, continued from page 12 the United States amazed her, and tnerefore Lord and God, means that they certainly did not have his body. One basic difference bet- since sporting events do not 4) If no one stole the body, then perhaps Jesus did not quite die on the cross, but was buried alive ween higher education in the play as big a role in West Ger­ and revived in the tomb. This may be. However, this position reduces to absurdity when we are ask­ ed to believe that. half dead due to blood loss. a beating and no medical attention after his crucifix­ two countries is that in West -man life. ion, Jesus struggled free from his shroud, pushed aside a stone that three healthy women were not Germany the government Soccer is the most popular sure they could move (see Mark 16:3), and walked several miles on wounded feet. Then he met his pays for the tuition. West German sport, she said, disciples, claimed to be risen. victorious over the power of death, and was so convincing that "That makes it more of a although its popularity is not Thomas called him .. My Lord and my God" (John 20:28). After about a month he wandered off and relaxed atmosphere," as extensive as football or died in solitude. No one ever found his bodv. This is a theory of last resort . .A supernatural resurrection is certainly not less probable than this, Zschocke said, adding that baseball is in America. unless we reject it from the outset. free tuition allows students to Hiking in the Black Forest In conclusion, there is considerable weight behind the claim that Jesus rose from the dead. If this take six or seven years to com- or in the German Alps is one is true, it is tremendously significant. We must then ask why it happened. And we must deal with the plete their education instead of of her favorite pastimes, the Christian claim that this is the supreme act of God intervening in history to restore the world to cramming it mto four to save German student said. himself. money. Zschocke, who still has three THE MYTH BREAKERS Students usually have only or four years of college left, A series of ten myths about Christianity explained as a thought provoker for the Unvlenlty Community In each Tuesday one exam per course, so there said she enjoys the variety of Review. Sponsored by Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship (IVCF). and Interdenominational Christian student group holding to the historical accuracy of the Bible and uniquess of Jesus. the God-man who gave his life to provide is more time to socialize, she things to do in this country. forgiveness of sins for any who repent and put their trust In him . Meetings every Friday nlte at 7 p.m .. Student Center, added. She plans to go to Mexico in Ewing Room. All welcome. According to Zschocke. search of sun over Winter Ses­ popular forms of relaxation in- sion and then return to West elude having cake and coffee Germany after the spring in the afternoons at a local semester, Zschocke said. cafe or having a cold one at the '· I guess I miss the [more "stammkneipe... the West sociallv-orientedl wa y of life This holiday seasDn, German version of the in Germany the most,.. he ··c heers''-style pub. remarked. :.1 mi ss th e cham- Zschocke said the impor- pagne breakfast ~ on Sun­ tance of sports in daily life in days ... get the' 'Write Stuff' New Castle County at the right price. Crisis Pregnancy Ceriter, Inc. LOCATED IN THE NEWARK MEDICAL BUILDING 325 E. MAIN STREET, SUITE 303 NEWARK. DELAWARE 19711 366-0285

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• Pregnancy Testing • Aid In Finding a Place To Live • Aid In Finding a Job • Medical Care Referral • Social Services Referral • Legal Assistance Referral •Clothing And Household Items MICROCOMPUTING RESOURCE CENTER •Childbirth Instructions And Assistance 152 Newark Hall 451 -6782 •Counseling Hours: Mon., Tues. , Thurs., Fri. 1 PM-3:30PM, Wed . 7 PM•-9 PM Page 14 • The Review • November 11, 1986 -~------

LONDON SEMESTER- SPRING 1987 .. . laughter in lust · Feb.9-May18 continued from page 11 The play will run through preview perform.ance on Nov. that weekend and again Nov . 13 in the Hartshorn Gym at 20 through Nov. 22. A few places still available 8:15 p.m. Tickets will cost Tickets are available at the $1.50. The official OPf'i!lng is door or through the Universi­ COURSE OFFERINGS: scheduled for Nov. 14. ty Theatre Box Office. ARH 367 - Western Painting; COM 360- Oral Interpretation; of Dramatic and Non-dramatic Literature. E 367 - London Theatre Seminar (All students elect this course.); E 424 .. . 10 Little Indians -Studies in Shakespeare's Histories and Plays set in England; continued from page 11 PSC 367- Recent Political and Soc. Dev. in Britain and XXX -events encompassing them. "Ten Little Indians" will be 366 - Special problem (must convince favorite professor to Considering the talent of the playing Thursday, Nov. 13 actors involved, however, this through Saturday, Nov. 15 at direct). Usual course load- 4 courses. Cla·sses meet Mon. thru flaw will probably be cor- 8:15 p.m. in 100 Wolf Hall. Thurs. rected in subsequent performanc~s. ADDED ADVANTAGES: Final twelve days in Stratford-upon-Avon for season's new Shakespeare productions; bus trips to Hampton Court, Wind­ THE GREAT AMERICAN SMOKEOUT sor Castle, Canterbu,ry, Cambridge, Oxford, and possibly York; Spring recess on the continent or in Scotland, Ireland, 101H ANNIVERSARY Wales, as you please; chance to visit the La.ke Di~trict when that host of daffodils bloom or to go down ·to .. K'ew in lilac time. ~ Cut .Ahpt!e Contact. Prof. Newman 211 Memorial, for application and further +lai~'DeS.!!fnsw information. 92 E. Main St., Newark (above Abbotts Shoe Repair) A limited number of scholarships are available. Awards are $400 Let Us Create Long, Lustrous Nails each. Apply through Honors Office. Deadline for applications - For The Holidays: Nov. 15. Special$ 28.00 STUDENT DISCOUNT DAILY

OFFICE OF HOUSING & RESIDENCE LIFE PSYCHOLOGY MAJORS- REMINDS RESIDENT STUDENTS OF THE Confused About Graduate School? FOLLOWING: PSI CHI Can Helpl Join us at our Graduate School Forum to hear professors and graduate students speak about A student who is not returning to University residence careers and graduate school in Psychology. halls after fall semester or Winter Session must submit a ~ ) . 1Tues:day, Nov. 11th "Request for Release from the Residence Hall Agree~·. · ~ ·· 7:30PM- 205 Wolf ment" form and a "Mid-Year Room Cancellation" form. ·· to the Assistant Director of Housing/ Room Assignments .. by the requested deadline of Friday, November 21, 1986. ~· Forms and specific instructions are available at the Offic~; ·.!'.. · .. • .,.... ~ of Housing .and Residence Life, 5 Courtney Street. By·.. following the cancellation procedures defined in the Residence Halls Handbook, students will avoid being bill­ ed for an additional $100. Don't forget to confirm telephone disconnection if you have service. This policy applies to any student who is not returning, whether he/ she is graduating, travelling abroad, transfer­ ring, etc.

Final deadline- January 4th or January 16th (See details in the Residence Halls Handbook)

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Send us your ad to us with payment. For the first The Review Classified 10 words. $5.00 minimum for non-students. St.M B-1 Student Center for students with ID. Then 10 cents for every word Newark, DE 19716 Classifieds thereafter. PLANNED PARENTHOOD offers: birth con­ LOOKING FOR A GOOD USED CAR? WE Three room apt. for one or two females. Non­ Travel field position immediately available. trol, FREE pregnancy testing, NON­ announcements SELL CLEAN, LATE MODEL FUEL EFFI­ smokers preferred. Completely furnished. No Good commissions, valuable work ex­ JUDGEMENTAL pregnancy counseling, CIENT CARS. ALL MODELS COME WITH pets. $325/month. Along bus route. Call after perience, travel and other benefits. CaJJ Bill reproductive medical services, and VD NEW YORK BUS TRIP: SUNDAY, A WARRANTY! SPECIALIZING IN DAT­ 3 p .m . 368-o839. Ryan CtoJJ free> 1-800-433-7747 for a complete testing and treatment. 140 E . Delaware Ave., DECEMBER 7; SPONSORED BY UDPST. SUN 280ZS & ZXS. MENTION THIS AD AND information mailer. Newark, 731-7801. Always CONFIDENTIAL $12 per person. Leaves 8a.m.; returns 11 p.m . GET $100 OFF THE PRICE OF THE CAR. Mature, responsible, neat roommate wanted, and AFFORDABLE. Contact Elaine Ahern (ice arena - 451-2868) . UNITED AUTO SALES 999-1456. preferably female, non-smoker, $16.'l/mo. plus 2 guitars looking for BASS, KEYBOARDS, utilities, 10 minutes from campus. Available DRUMMER, and SINGER to form band. GYN Department at Student Health Service LISTEN to SPORTS CAGE on WXDR 91 .3 on GIBSON 6/12-string doubleneck electric January. Goldie 834-2388. Must have have reasonable technical abilities. offers pregnancy testing with option counsel­ FRIDAY afternoons at 2:30 p .m .!!! guitar. Color: black. W/wonderbar & case. Originals, Boston, Journey, Kansas, Skynyrd ing, routine gyn~ogic care, and contracep­ $1 ,000or may trade ... SHOLZ "soloist"guitar SHARE 2 bedroom townhouse on rural edge and others. CaJJ 738-8005. tion. Call 451-8035 Mon. - Fri., for appoint­ COME X-COUNTRY SKIING WITH THE headphone amp $125. Call Jim. 731 -ll58. of Newark with mature vegetarian grad stu­ ment Visits are covered by Student Health 1 OUTING CLUB! We have a house, a hot tub, dent. No heavy TV. $225/mo. plus f.! util. CAMPUS REPS NEEDED - TRAVEL ' fee. CONFIDENTIALITY assured. and skis. Jan. 16-19. Find out about it. 451 -2606. 26" Huffy bike brand new $60. 2 love seat 368-4854 leave message. FREE: position involves marketing and seJJ­ sofas, very good condition $25 each. Brown ing quality ski and beach trips on campus. Women's Adult Children of Alcoholics Group Special Interest Housing - semi-formal I chair, 0~ condition $15. Mirror beer signs, One bedroom apartment available January 1. Earn free trips and high commissions. Call with Nancy Nichol Wednesdays, 5:30-7 p.m . tickets on sale now! $ll.50 per person. Dec. Bud & Mtch. $10 each. Take over lease until May 31 . $340 monthly in­ John Eldredge at Great Destinations at the Student Health Service. For more info 5. Call 738-1346 or 733-1344 . cludes heat and water, fully equipped kitchen l-800-258-9191 . call Nancy at 451-2226. ; Suzuki 125, 5spd. Under l,OOOmi . - like new. including microwave. Two miles from cam­ Come see the hottest show on campus. TEN 100 mpg. Call After 6:00. 836-1756. pus, on bus route. Call 731 -7472 . SPRING BREAK 'lr/: Campus Rep. organize FREE pregnancy testing service with results LITTLE INDIANS. Thurs., Fri., Sat. 8:15 - sailing charters. Ft. Lauderdale to Bahamas. while you wait. Accurate information in a con­ 100 Wolf. 1 FOR SALE CHEAP. '79 Honda Civic. 2 dr., 4 Room for rent in good location - just off Main Commission & free cruise. Call Captain fidential atmosphere. Call Crisis Pregnancy speed, tagged, new exhaust system. $450 ask St. $135/month plus 1!4 utilities. caJJ 453-0467 . Williams, 1650 SW 23rd Terrace, Ft. Lauder­ Center - 366-0285. We are located in the GO CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING WITH THE for Mike. dale 33312. (305)583-()202 Anytime. Newark Medical Building, Suite 303, 325 E . OUTING CLUB OVER WINTER SESSION. For family of four : elegant, gorgeous, and Main Street, Newark, DE 19711 . Jan. 16-19. A great break from work! SHARPVIDEOCASSETIERECORDER$95 sun-drenched condo. Pool, tennis. Bayfront. OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, yr. round. - records great, plays fair - Call Brian, Walk to ocean. Available weekly or monthly Europe, S. Amer., Australia, Asia. AU fields. LISTEN to SPORTS CAGE on WXDR 91.3 on MICRO COMPUTER WIZARDS - sharp 368-5298. June, August 1987. WriteR. Cormier, Wilson $900-$2,000 mo. Sightseeing. Free info. Write FRIDAYS at 2:30p.m .!! students wanted to program on IBM PC in at CoJJege, Chambers-burg, PI\ 17201. IJC, PO BX 52-DE, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. least one of the following languages: COBOL, ! Modern dining room set in excellent condition 1 BALLOON BOUQUETS DEUVERED FOR BASIC, or PASCAL. Flexible hours, on cam- with glass table top. Was $1,400 - Asking $650. SUBLET NEEDED WINTER SESSION for Wanted school representative for collegiate ANY OCCASION. 10 PERCENT DISCOUNT pus. $3.50 and hour, 20 hours a week. For an 1239-8560 Between 5 and 8 p.m. visiting professor. CaJJ Marci at 451-2202 or sporting company. Great pay. CaJJ collect 737..()922. TO STUDENTS. BALLOON BONANZA application, call 451-6070. 1-813-346-2009. c•>836-3033. PLEASE LEAVE MESSAGE. · Pair of Ts-X7 Pioneer car stereo box GRAD STUDENTS - EngJ.~h majors ~- speakers. 5 mos. old, black, 60W max, asking One or two female roommates needed to share Needed: partner to play CONTRACT $12 HAIRSTYLE NOW $6. FLATTOPS SAME . ed for proofreading and editing of technical $45, caJJ Shawn at 737-1351. 2 Bedroom Apt. in PAPER MILL apartments. BRIDGE. If interested, call Wang at 451-2799 documents. flexible hours, on campus. $3.50 PRICE. WE CUT, WET, DRYER..STYLE. CaJJ 453-1434. No pets. Washer/Dryer. $275 month 737-5001. $110/mo. plus util. CaJJ Lainie 368-9662. plus utilities . Leaving Delaware last Monday night. If found, call 731 -3885 MICRO COMPUTER WIZARDS - sharp evenings. 737-1273. USHERS NEEDED for WHAT THE sometime after 3 p.m. on Friday (11/14) and students wanted to program on IBM PC in at BUTLER SAW - see the show for free. Sign leaving NJ Sunday evening. Call 738-1808 if Help wanted. Delivery 6-8 per hour. Flexible least one of the foJJowing languages: COBOL, up in the MitcheJJ Hall Box Office between 12-5 interested. hours for college students. Call Valle Pizza BASIC or PASCAL. Flexible hours, on cam­ p.m . by this Friday. rent/sublet 737-4545 or 994-4425 . pus. $3 .50 an hour, 20 hours a week. For an ap­ Typing - fast, accurate, $1.25/pg. Call Mari­ plication, call 45Hi070. If you see Steve Lomax Thursday, give him ly bet. 6-10 p.m., 368-1233. Available immed. Big private room on a big bear hug - it 's his birthday! Madison Drive. Female preferred. Call Steph Cashiers & attendants. Part-time service sta- GRAD STUDENTS _ English majors need- Excellent quality TYPING for less. Only 368-71r/2 . lion. 896 Texaco. 1005 South College Ave., ed for proofreading and editing of technical Newark. Apply 9-5 Mon.-Fri. documents. Flexible hours, on campus. $3.50 Don t forget to donate at APO/GSS Blood $1.00/ page. Call Lisa 738-1053 . Drive Nov. 11 , 12, 13 at the Student Center Col­ AWESOME, AWESOME OPPORTUNI­ Babysitter - for infant, 3 days/week, part- I an hour, 20 hours a week. For an application, lins Room. TY! !!!! TOWNE COURT APARTMENT, 2 time evenings. References required. Pike call 451-607°. for sale· BEDROO.MS & A DEN, 6 MONTH LEASE! ! DESPERATELY NEED TO SUBLET FOR Creek area. Call MaryAnn at 239-6921. personals Congratulations ALPHA CHI pledges! You're 1980 CHEVY MALIBU CLASSIC. PS, new PB, SPRING SEMESTER. PLEASE HELP halfway there. Keep 1.1p the good work. new trans, exc. body & int., AM/ FM cassette. Help wanted. Sandwich person or pizza maker US!!! ! A/C, HEAT, HOT WATER. FOR IN­ - will train. Flexible hours for college $2,800. CaU Jeff 453-8258. FO CALL ROB - 368-3424. Jim, take me to bed or lose me forever. Love, continued to page 9 students. Call Valle Pizza 737-4545 or 994-4425. C. HoJo.

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•• • champs TICKETS ON SALE NOW continued from page 20 SPECTRUM impressively and dominated Nov. 18- Steve Winwood the first half. Nov. 30- Peter Gabriel Lehigh scored an the goals Dec. 30- Cindi Lauper they had to with 18 minutes left in the game. The entire second TOWER half was closely contested and Nov. 15- O.M.D. could have gone either way. Dec. 12- Alice Cooper VALLEY FORGE Afterward, Hitchens sa.id , "We certainly made the effort, Nov. 26- Whispers had our opportunities. It's a Dec. 4- Crosby & Nash game of inches." When the game ended, so did the careers of the seven senior Hens. The close of the game was met with some well­ earned tears. ""' " When we look back on it," Schonour said, " it was a real-· . THE REVIEW/ Evan Reiff : ly special team." Hitchens said, " To these B-Ballls back - Taurence Chisholm, who averaged 8.3 assists per game last season for the Hens, seniors, the game meant a lot, looks down court in an exhibition game against the Maryland All-Stars Saturday. The Hens lost 87-80. 'team' meant a lot, and they meant a lot to Delaware."

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"We just Attention You Will Get At The The Delaware soccer team battled the Temple University played a gutsy game his frrst never seemed to get the Schilling Douglas School" Owls to a 1-1 tie Saturday in time back after missing three break." their final game of the season. starts with a hamstring injury Coach Loren Kline, And what a game it was. The that was obviously still bother- however, noted what is pro­ SPECIAL: ing him. , Hens' (2-5 in the East Coast bably the most important Sculptured Nails and But it was the third and final benefit ,of this season as he KlllieL -ef Manicure At LOVV Conference, 6-10-1 overall) season may have come in like senior, defensman Pete Aries, looks toward next year. .IIAIII .•111m Clinic Prtces who made the difference in the " We've had the opportunity I a lamb, but it sure went out game. to play all the freshmen,'' said . .. LOW I LOW PRICES" like a lion. Nine yellow cards and two With about 20 minutes left in Kline. "I've been very pleased 70 Amstel Ave., .. All services performed what was looking like another with their performance." Newark • 737-5100 by students in training" overtimes Ia ter, no difference could be found ·between the all-too-familiar close loss, The kiddie corp grew up two teams. freshman forward Ron Sandell quickly this season. Sandell The final regular season was fouled just outside the was the team's second leading London School of Economics game is usually a tune-up penalty box. Junior forward scorer, behind Grzenda. Mike Dwayne Robinson's free kick and Political Science around here for the upcoming Kandra, John Daniello and playoffs, but there will be no found Sandell, who fed Aries Jimmy DeGeorge also A chance to study and live in London playoffs for this year's team. for the tying goal. became important cogs in the From there the game offense. Junior-year programs, Postgraduate Diplomas, One­ So it was now or never for the Hens Saturday. degenerated, as the two teams The biggest freshmen con­ Year Master's Degrees and Research Opportunities in appeared more interested in tribution, though, came from · the Social Sciences. Early on, it appeared it would be never. Just 15 snapping bones than in snapp­ Ormsby. Taking over as star­ The wide range of subjects includes:- minutes into the game, Tem­ ing their two-game losing ting goalkeeper in the third Accounting and Finance • Actuarial Science • Busi­ ple (11-4-2) worked the ball streaks. game of the season, he spark­ ness Studies • Economics • Econometrics • Screaming matches and ed the team to a three-game Economic History • European Studies • Geography • down the field with some great passing. fights broke out on the field - win streak and kept the Hens Government • Health Planning • Housing • Industrial and in the stands - in what in many games throughout the ~elations • International History • International Rela­ Then freshman forward tions • Law • Management Science • Operational Matt Mannino's across-the­ was a wild scene to end the year that had 'blowout' written Research • Philosophy, Logic & Scientific Method • box pass found the Owls' year. all over them. Population Studies • Politics • Regional and Urban The season was far from "Dave's a take-charge Planning • Sea-Use Poticy • Social Administration • leading scorer, freshman mid­ fielder Kennedy Torres, for a spectacular by normal guy," said Kline. "The team Social :Anthropo.logy • Social Planning in Developing Delaware standards, but there really seems to respond to Countnes ~ ~octal Work • Sociology • Social Psychol­ wide open shot past ogy • Stattsttcal and Mathematical Sciences • goalkeeper Dave Ormsby to are some good things to be him." Systems Analysis • give Temple a 1-0 lead. said about the team. Losing only three players, "We knew it was going to the Hens should be back Application forms from: It was the last game, though. take awhile to adjust with all stronger next year as the Admissions Registrar, Room 10. L.S.E., And Delaware's seniors were the new people," said Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, England, not about to go down without a younger player.s gain stating whether undergraduate or postgraduate. fight. Robinson. experience. Defenseman Tom Brackin "I'm happy with the way the And maybe next year the LSE------.. tightened up the Hen defense team has pulled together late- breaks will fall their way. Mother Nature. eat to your heart's contenU Our menu would make you proud - low PART-TIME fal no sail whole grains. fresh Mother fruits and vegetables! HELP Bul serving healthy food isn't Nature PARKPlAC~APARTM~NTS enough. We think food can be more than just good for you. It TELEMARKETING can be tasty. reasonably would be priced.... and even a lltUe daring Ten peffions needed Large, spacious apart­ tool Come meet our new menu. proud of to work four hours in We've got all your favorites, plus the morning or four ments with many closets a few surprises.. . like moosewood enchiladas. ourfoodl hours evenings - 20 humus tahlni. and Kennett including . walk-in size. r:ggs. And, now we have $3, $4 hours per week. Ap­ and $5 lunch specials. plicants must have Open for breakfast and lunch Rent includes heat and seven days a week. Dinner good telephone voice served Fridays and Saturdays. to work from hot water. Conveniently Plenty of free parking in the rear. telephone promotion located near Cam pus office. Guaranteed hourly pay as well as (within 6 blocks). 1 and 2 bonuses and bedroom apartments comissions. 177 f . Main Street Newa"' ~7755 StlldlntsMd HOWietnlkers Welcome Open !Tom 7 a.m . ~o~ee kdays wsrs. VISA. available. and 9 a.m . weekends Masl.ercaTd Contact M r Rizzo 170 E. Main St . . or Call 3&6-0429 Between 3:30-6:00 650 Lehigh Road, Apt. 1-1 For Interview Newark, DE 19711 • (302) 368-5670 M 9 to 5; T-F 9 to 7; Sat. 10 to 4 Review sports 451 -1397 ... connect Write to the Review's sports section continued from page 20

Delaware halfback Fred Singleton tore up the turf, WINTER SESSION TRAVEL TO rushing for 94 yards in 13 at­ ENGLAND/SCOTLAND tempts, scoring one touchdown. He went over the EDS 461 EDS 258 EDS 367 1,000-yard mark with a 47-yard touchdown sprint in which Lott *Openings Still Available made the key block. *Non-Education Majors Encouraged to Register Hen tight end Jeff Modesitt, who had the catch which set up *Non-Education Independent Studies Possible Delaware's second score late in the first half, burned the Faculty: Dr. James Crouse (x2955) ·Huskie secondary for 54 yards Dr. Victor Martuza (x1637) on four catches. Delaware's pass defense, which has been maligned in re­ cent weeks, picked off two of See .OurNew Huskie quarterback Peter Lane's passes. Lane com­ 1090 Xerox C.opier pleted 62 percent of his tosses in Connecticut's last three wins. Against the Hens, he was 66 17-30 for 243 yards and one UP TO 100'' Free Copies touchdown. . Delaware's win, combined Wednesday, Thursday, Friday with New Hampshire's 14-13 loss to Maine, puts the Hens in 11/12 11/13 11/14 first place in the conference. ONLY · Delaware needs to beat Boston Uni versi ty ( 2-4 in the con­ ference), who they play in two weeks, to clilleh the con­ Main Street Stationers Inc. ference championship and an THE REVIEW/ Evan Reiff/ automatic playoff spot. t, 90 East Main Street 1:: . ,.. - - . So keep looking for - the ~~~ 368-4032 .,~~ Delaware's Todd Lott and Fred Singleton celebrate in the endzone. connection.

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by Kevin Donahue Joe Clancy Staff Reporter Staff Reporter The roller coaster took its The women's cross country last ride of 1986. team sloshed through the mud And when it finally rolled to t Carpenter State Park Satur­ a stop, the Delaware field Y to finish second to hockey team (14-5-1 overall, Bucknell in the East Coast 7-1-1 in the East Coast Con­ Conference finals. ference) found itself in Bucknell finished with 22 Lewisburg, Pa., down by 'a points. Delaware was second goal to Lehigh University in with 66 and Lehigh was right the ECC championship game. behind with 67. But what a ride it was. Nori Wilson finished second "Right now [the team] feels overall to pace the Hens. Col­ as if the season were a loss,'' leen O'Connor was 11th while Delaware coach Mary Ann Cheryl Amin was 15th. Hitchens said, after the cham­ Hens coach Susan McGrath pionship game Sunday. •'But expected Bucknell to be when they have a chance to sit strong. back and look at it, they'll "We needed super races recognize it for what it was." from everyone to beat What was it'? Bucknell," she said. "But Well, look at the playoffs everyone ran as hard as they alone and you'll get a feeling could. for how the season has gone. On Saturday, Delaware and "The conditions," McGrath Hofstra played what looked explained, "hampered the like combination of mud runners greatly. Overall I was wrestling/field hockey. With very pleased with the team." 52 seconds left in the game,. Hofstra went up 2-1. Bye-bye The men's cross country Hens, right'? team also negotiated the mud Wrong! The Hens, looking and rain at Carpenter State as if they were late for a bus, converged on the Hofstra goal, Park Saturday, and finished A mud covered Dan Brodeur, Delaware's left guard, takes a break during Saturday's game. third to Bucknell and Rider. with Moe Scalley doing the Bucknell had 15 points, honors with only 29 seconds Rider was second with 70, left. The two teams then flop­ while Delaware had 92. ped through three overtimes before Nari Bush converted on "The winners," according to A Connecting·Win a penalty stroke, sending coach Jim Fischer, ''were Hofstra back to Long Island devastating in taking the first Delaware. "-After a while, though, it was like and Delaware to the laundry by Mike Freeman throwing a shotput." eight positions. Sports Editor room. "They are a great team as The conditions were horrible, and the play­ After the game, the team far as the region goes." On a day when the mud was thicker than a ing at times was just as sloppy. There were two was as happy as one would be Fischer was ''surprised at Long Island accent, and running in Delaware . fumble~, two interceptions and a blocked field after 100 minutes of field the strength of Rider, who Stadium was like running in a Louisiana goal (courtesy of Delaware defensive tackle hockey in the twilight zone. came out with smoking guns." swamp, it was hard to believe that the connec­ Joe McGrail) in the first quarter alone. "We showed what a team we Rob Rainey finished lOth tion was still taking place. But Delaware committed less of the tur­ are," said senior Jen Coyne, overall to lead the Hens, Marc The 35-7 spanking of the University of Con­ novers, and the sloppiness disease didn't seem one of four Hens named to the Weisburg was 20th, and John necticut (now 6-3 overall, 3-2 in the Yankee Con­ to infect the fired-up Lott. All-ECC team. "Losing never Gray finished 21st. ference) Saturday was highlighted by the con­ "I think we have a lot of confidence in each entered our minds." nection. It helped the Hens move into first place other,'' he said about the connection. "We talk Or, as senior and fellow AJI ­ Despite the poor conditions, in the Yankee Conference, with a 5-l division a lot. Gray ran a personal best for ECC pick Lorrie Schonour record (7-2 overall). It wasn't AT&T, or a call­ "We go out on Thursdays and Fridays [to said, " You 're never done for the course, according to ing card. practice]," Lott explained. "He tells me 'go out Fischer. 'til the last buzzer goes." It was Gannon to Lott. there and beat them deep.' On Sunday, Delaware Both the men's and women's Delaware quarterback Rich Gannon ( 18-24 "And I know he'll get the ball to me." teams travel to Lehigh Nov. 15 played second-seed Lehigh for 192 yards, and three rushing TD's) hit the ''I think Lott has probably improved more University (8-1 in the ECC>. for the national qualifier sure-handed receiver five times for 80 yards. than any other player [on the team]," said meets. Yeah, the predictions last During one series they managed to find each Delaware coach Tubby Raymond. "He has week had Lafayette in the other three consecutive times. worked himself into an exceptional receiver. finals. The crystal ball was STRIDERS NOTES : R-e-a-c-h out, reach out and touch someone ... ''He has the ability to hook up with Galmon Bucknell, in both the men's sent out for repairs. "I was happy we could throw the ball as anyplace." Lehigh, thoug~ , came out and women's divisions, is the much as we could," said Gannon, one of 19 defending champion. seniors who played in their last home me at contin~!d to page 19 continued to page 17