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EVIEWA FOUR-STAR A _LL-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER TUESDAY Students fight to save Wolf Hall stage

By Jennifer McCann Campus groups say Newark Hall theater not an adequate alternative Wolf Hall is in poor condition. and Sharon O'Neal "It's not a good lecture hall. It's not a StaH Reporters without removing its stage. prod uce for fa ll semester. coordinator, said, "If we don't have Wolf good performance space," Hollowe ll said. DUSC President Jeff Thomas (BE 90) Dav id E. Hollowell , senior vice president Hall to perfonn in, then I don't think there "The issue is whether we can usc Wolf Hall The Delaware Undergraduate Student said the groups plan to examine classroom­ for Administration, said th e administration will be anymore student theater on for both purposes." Congress (DUSC) and two student theater theater spaces at other schools to show I 00 has seen enough student concern that it is campus." E-52 and HTAC are two of the most groups will launch a campaign today, "Save Wolf Hall can be used for both purposes. "worth taking another look at. If we can get active student organizations, Thomas said. Wolf Stage," to prevent planned They also plan to advertise the cause to th e double space out of Wolf Ha ll , we'll see editorial page 6 He said 12,609 people attended 22 shows renovations which would remove the stage campus community, send concern letters to certainly try to do that. " during the past three and a half years. from 100 Wolf Hall, a DUSC spokesman alumni and circulate petitions to garner The two student theater groups are the Almost 1,000 students have been involved said. support. only organizations using 100 Wolf Hall "We've called it home for so long it with the two groups. DUSC, E-52 Student Theater and Barry Dubin, president of E-52, said th e now, according to Marilyn Prime, director would be hard to leave it now," said Emily "We have worked so hard and now we Harrington Theater Arts Company (JITAC) groups need to know the future of Wolf of Perkins Student Center, and they think of Sutton-Smith (AS 91), HTAC publicity feel like the university doesn't care about will meet with administrators March 19 to Hall soon because they will hold "show it as their "home." coordinator. present a proposal for improving the room elections" in May to decide which shows to Kathy Robb (ED 91), HTAC meetings Students and administrators agree 100 see WOLF HALL page 10 Oberly .details University hosts annual event By Christina Gimbel covered topics such as stres s Staff Reporter management, career counseling, assault interpersonal relationships, By 8 a.m. Saturday, more than health and a variety of hobbies. I ,000 women had gathered at Choices ranged from Clayton Hall for the seventh discrimination in the workplace cases annual Delaware Women's to how to dress for success. Conference. Clayton Hall was filled with By 8:30 a.m., about 30, all of 22 information booths sponsored Attorney general different ages, sizes and dress by groups such as the YWCA, explains process styles were stretching to a Planned Parenthood, Caldwell Jazzercise warmup to prepare for Temporary Se rvices a nd of investigation a day of workshops, speakers, Wilmington Trust Company. exhibits and networking. Barnett s aid confere nce "The goal of the conference is By Trlcla Bates planners tried to widen the to. provide something for Staff Reporter event's appeal by re ma ining everyone so that we can appeal neutral in contro versial issues, The attorney general met with to a ll women," said Marsha such as reproductive freedom. university leaders Wednesday to Barnett, conference chairwoman. Exhibitors distributed explain how the state investigates Each conference participant pamphlets, buttons, stickers and sexual-assault cases and to answer was scheduled to attend four questions about the investigation of workshops during the day, which see CONFERENCE page 9 an alleged sexual assault at the Kappa Alpha fraternity house in NBC anchor explains media September. In a meeting with the Solutions to By Christina Gimbel Vietnam controversies, Williams Sexual Violence Task Force, and Jennifer Shaffer said, and th e public recognizes Attorney General Charles M. Oberly Staff Reporters th e power of televi sion. III said many people did not She said, "We need to be allies understa'nd why four months was The news media serve to with the government and work spent investigating the September define societal challenges, but together." incident and why every sexual­ citizens must be the agents of Some of the power comes assault case does not receive such change, Mary Alice Williams, from gove rnme nt, and some scrutiny. NBC network news comes from television. "But the After the decision was made not correspondent and anchor, said at money, the will and the ideas, to press charges against Kappa the 1990 Delaware Women's they have to come from us." Alpha, Oberly said his offiee did not Conference Saturday afternoon in Advances in receive cooperation from members Clayton Hall. te lecommunications have of the campus community, which "Marshall McCiuhan said the changed the television industry delayed the decision process. next war we fight will be on and affec ted world issues, she Liane Sorenson, director of the television," Williams said. "And said. Office of Women's Affairs, said, as baby boomers, the bulk of the When films of revolution in "Persons not involved in eases don't population, we are the troops in Poland, Romania a nd Eas t unders tand the long process of this war." Germany were smuggled from investigating a case." Many wars have been fought on television from civil rights to see SPEAKER page 9 see OBERLY page 8 Federal funding cuts might affect students

Fund reduction Ken Mclnery, assistant director see editorial page 6 for Gove rnment Affai rs at the will lead to fewer National Assistance of Financial Aid Administnttion in Washington, D.C., university grants government. The federally-funded said a request has been issued to portion might be reduced, Corrozi Congress, but no thing has been By Suzanne Conway said. fin ali zed. The cut's effects will not .: . Staff Reporter . . ' . Both the grant and the loan arc be felt until a year after the decision federally funded, according to has been made, he said. .... uu"''!l'~. "' . Kitty and President George Bush's proposed Carruthers' when ·they won Mi chael Lee, director of Financial Students receive between $250 financial aid cuts might affect !ii~ver niedalin 'Skating at Leslie D. Barbaro Aid. and $2,300 per year from Pel! Grant. paks university students through the . 1984 Olympics. · : ,. '·. · Coach Ron Ludington gives James Holloway, ass is tant The grant request in Bush's budget Stafford Loan Program, the Pell · .The Carnitliers often · train in pointers to Janie Bousch director of Financial Aid, said: "We actu ally shows a n increase. The Grant and Delaware Postsecondary Newark with Ludington dming the during a practice session. don't know how many students will number of potentia l recipients is Education Commission scholarships, suinrner, Ludington 'said. · be affected. It's a little early to know enough red uce th e avai labil ity of the . Luding to n's most recent officials said Friday. .· iwo-time U.S. Ice Dancing what the full impact will be." grants and decrease awards. cliampionship team.is April Sargent John Corrozi, executive director ..:·'Champion and 1984 and 1988 Corrozi said the scholarship fund Mclnery said the Stafford Loan and Rusty Witherby, who will of the Postsecondary Education • 6)ympic competitor Scott Gregory · reduction wiU result in fewer grants Program, fonncrl y the Guaranteed compe te in the Wo rl d Figure Commission, said the only state­ · also li'iliried under Ludington. tte to the university and less fede ral Student Loan Program, reducti o n Skating Championships from financed aid to the university which now is a member of Ludington's money for the work study program. was caused by decreased interest March 5 to Marc h It in Nova might be affected arc the ~ac~g ~ iaff. State aid to the university is not rates, the red uction's impa ·ts and commission scholarships, 20 percent being decreased, Lee said. Only changes related to th banks whi ch see LUDINGTON page 9 or which are funded by the federal federal loans are now being cuL make loans. ,. 2 • THE REVIEW • March 6, 1990 Lawmaker plans music rating labels

By Debbie Brenner companies to citizens' concerns. Resource Center (PMRC) lobbied Congress and violent crimes. Staff Reporter Carey said he hopes the bill will not have several years ago. Dee said a 1988 study of teen-age boys Program offers to be passed. ''I'd love to see the record Thorne said he believes passage of Carey's showed high correlations between those who 'Real World' tips A state representative said he will companies do it themselves." bill would iead to further restrictions on liked heavy metal music and those who introduce a bill in Legislature this month Bob Altshuler, senior vice president of freedom of speech. "[Warnings advocates] showed violent tendencies, committed theft A program called "The Real which would require record companies to corporate infonnation for CBS Records Inc., will never be happy until everything is out of and abused drugs. World" is offering students place warning labels on tapes and records said the company began self regulation more the public sector that they don't like," he said. Dee said the proposed labeling, a system valuable information for their which promote drugs, alcohol, suicide, incest than two years ago at the request of the "The PMRC holds the ultimate goal of similar 10 that used for rating television and futures. or sodomy. Recording Industry Association of America. pulling certain music off the market," Thome movies, is not censorship. Held in Christiana Towers and Rep. V. George Carey, R-Milford, said Carey said, "I don't see why we spend said. "We have thousands of X-rated movies sponsored by Housing and Thursday the label would provide a warning millions of dollars to end drug and alcohol "The bill is a big waste of time and being made and no censorship," she said. Residence Life, guest speakers to parents about the content of the music to abuse and yet allow 9- and 10-year-olds have money." Sevillesdote, a disc jockey for university tell students how to prepare for which their children might listen. [musicians who promote drugs and alcohol] However, Dr. Juliet Dee, assistant radio station WXDR, said the warnings life after graduation, according to Carey said the bill is not a form of as heroes." professor of communication, said, "There's a would help the station avoid Federal Karin Cloud (HR 90) and Stacey censorship. "I'm not saying what people Owen Thorne, manager of Rainbow lot of music that glorifies violence." Communications Commision fines for Shalaway (AS 91), Towers should listen to, and I'm making no Records, said most major recording Although there is no proven cause-and­ playing obscene music. resident assistants in charge of restrictions on purchasing." companies voluntarily began placing effect relationship, she said there is a Sevillesdote said, however, the labeling the program. He said the bill's purpose is to alert record warnings on music after the Parents Music correlation between certain types of music process is extremely subjectiv~. "The Real World" series began Feb. 28 and will run every Monday and Wednesday until March 14. ..: m.. ·.:. :..•...... •..e ....: ,.·.·····'.,:.•.·...... ···:······· c~: m • ~> ::·:::::-:::_.:>·::-:.;-:-·---:.·:~ •:~ t:::::· ~! l:~~ · ~s:~ : - - :-:..•a.·.•· ···.··.· · ··.··_···.•.·.: .:.~· f.!:~ · s :••:·i. ~ .~w. :. ~eveJs . "We think the program is beneficial 10 students because it tells them important infonnation Outdoor recreation center offers equipment rentals besides what they learn in their classes," Shalaway said. By Allison Wolfe outdoor equipment. It's so an outdoor instructional institution Cloud said the programs, Staff Reporter convenient now and really · will be teaching a rope-climbing which last an hour 10 an hour and inexpensive," Bill Loue (AS 90) course at Alpine Tower in Worton, a half, address topics such as The Outdoor Recreation said. Md., an hour's-drive away. managing finances, filing income Resource Center (ORRC), which Rental items are separated into "The ropes course is one of my tax forms, buying a car and will rent outdoor equipment and bicycle equipment, camping gear, favorites. It's a lesson in trust and purchasing insurance. provide instruction about outdoor stoves and cooking sets, she said. can really build self-confidence," "It deals with things they programs, opened Thursday in Bicycle equipment includes Watson said. really need 10 know," she said. Carpenter Sports Building. handle bags, panniers or baskets, Other instructors are professors The center, sponsored by the and helmets. Camping gear includes within the department and also Fraternity cleanup department of recreation and two- to six-person tents, backpacks students, Rapposelli said. intramurals, is an equipment rental and foam pads. The equipment rental center will helps homeless facility for students and faculty, Deposit costs range from $5 to be open from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. ORRC spokeswoman Maryann $15. Rental rates range from 25 Mondays and Thursdays and from 2 Rapposelli said. cents to $35 depending on the item p.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays. About 25 Delta Tau Delta ORRC also offers educational and length of rental, Rapposelli Most instruction is free and . brothers cleaned the Emmaus clinics and trips, she said . said. covered by the Student House storage area Saturday to Instructional training in rock "Basically the fee covers wear Comprehensive Fee, Rapposelli aid Newark's homeless climbing, canoeing, bicycling, and tear of equipment," she said. said. community, a fraternity back-country travel, camping and "We're not looking for a profit" A rock-climbing clinic will be spokesman said. hiking will be offered during the A rock wall for climbing practice held March 16, followed by a rock­ "We wanted to get involved in semester and will be listed in the has been constructed in the indoor climbing trip 10 Stover, Pa., March the community," said Chris intramural calendar. gym where most of the clinics will 17. A Spring Break trip to the DeFillipis (BE 90), former "I think it's great the [physical be held, she said. Grand Canyon is planned for March president of Delta Tau Delta. education] department is offering George Watson, instructor from 23,she said. "We usually do things in the campus community, but I thought this was a real worthwhile cause Fitness facility opens to students and we could really help out" By Christina Rinaldi said. The Emmaus House, Assistant Features Editor Supercircuit is equipped with sponsored by the Newark Universal single-station weight Housing Ministry, Inc., is for The Student Fitness Center at machines, bicycles and mini homeless families willing to take Carpenter Sports Building held its joggers and allows up to 20 people steps 10 become self-sufficient grand opening Thursday. to work out simultaneously, she A storage garage filled with The fitness center consists of a said. It is designed for a old and damaged furniture, main facility and a supercircuit comprehensive strength and mattresses and other belongings room. The main facility is equipped endurance workout while left by prior residents was with aerobic machines such as alternating between weights and cleaned up, he said. Lifecycles, Stairmasters, aerobic machines every 30 seconds. "We wanted to show the Liferowers, and treadmills. Loreto Jackson, university Newark area that we care," The two rooms of exercise fitness specialist, designed the DeFillipis said. "I was convinced Photos by John Schneider equipment will be open 10 students center's program. She said she this cause would show that Delta Eric Marcheese (AS 90) drives his partner Jim Rels (AS 92) during certain hours of the day, said chose aerobic equipment for the does have a purpose and we do up the wall In the new Recreation Resource Center. Veronica Pick, fitness specialist for center because she wanted to contribute to the community." the center. promote a heath-related DeFillipis said the fraternity center's grand opening. facility. "It's one of the best things Students must have evaluations atmosphere. will continue communication "Technology has changed so the university has done to help with to detennine their fitness capacity "We did not want to intimidate much," said Ronald Whittington, health. with Emmaus House and hopes before they can use the facility, she people who have never been assistant to the president. "It's "It is really beneficial. And the to get involved with the house said. After the test, a fitness again. exposed to fitness before," she said. going 10 be much more fun to work fitness center is in an educating specialist will prescribe individual People who are unfamiliar with Marlene Batson, an Emmaus out now." Whittington said he atmosphere." Center workers are programs for students. exercising are sometimes House superviser, said Delta is comes from the days of trained and they can help people After they are oriented to the intimidated by free weights, but helping simply by recognizing calisthenics, not computerized get started on a program. equipment and become center Jackson said she plans to develop a Newark's homelessness problem. machines. Kevin Ryan (BE 90) said he members, students can reserve free weight program. "It is a problem almost Jacqueline Wolfson (PE 90), a plans to take advantage of the machines 24 hours in advance for President E.A. Trabant and other everywhere now and anything student fitness instructor for the up to two 15 minute slots, Pick administrators attended the fitness see FITNESS page 10 that can be done is always center, is optimistic about the new helpful," Batson said. Field House to hold Special Olympics Taped Reagan testimony

The Alpha Sigma Alpha reveals his hands-off style sorority and Special Olympics will sponsor track and field By Brook Williams Professor Joseph Pika said events for Delaware's mentally Staff Reporter Poindexter's testimony at the June and physically handicapped at 1987 Iran-Contra hearings hinted the Delaware Field House March Former President Ronald that he acted in line with the 16 and 17, a sorority Reagan's inability to recall Iran­ spokeswoman said. president's wants. Contra affair details during a The jury's reaction to Reagan's Cortney Nathanson (AS 92), videotaped testimony for John M. philanthropic chairwoman for videotaped testimony will be Poindexter's trial reflects his "hands Gordon Hoxie, director of the Center Alpha Sigma Alpha, said there different from their reaction if they off" administrative style, several for the Study of the Presidency in will be a basketball game and read it, Pika said. "Reagan looks experts said. Washin10n, D.C. track and field events such as better on television than when his "Reagan was removed from major The Iran-Contra affair became relay races, long jumping and words are read." decisions," political science public in 1986 when it was revealed shotputting. Presidents have testified in past professor James A. Nathan said. that the United States had sold arms trials, but electronics have changed Contestants will be both Snint Louis University's Poindexter had good reason to to Iran to help release American things, Hoxie said. children and adults, said Brooke Academic Year In Madrid believe he was doing what Reagan hostages. Sale profits were diverted Turner (ED 92), secretary for In 1805. Jefferson was wanted. to the Nicaraguan Contra rebels. COMPLETE CURRICULUM: English. Alpha Sigma Alpha. "We will subpoenaed for a conspiracy trial. "Reagan had a responsibility to be "Reagan wanted to help the Spanish. Liberal Arts, Business & cheer on the contestants, help Jefferson testified in writing, Hoxie Admlnlslrollon, TESOL. Sciences, involved and see to it that laws were Contras and free the hostages in Hispanic Studies present ribbons and register said. A president testifying in a trial faithfully executed," he said. "If Iran," Hoxie said, "but Congress of this importance, however, is contestants for the different SLU In Madrid Is a member of AAIEOE [following orders] is a good defense tried to micro-manage the activities," Turner said. unprecedented, Pika said. or not remains 10 be seen." relationship with the Contras" Graduate Courses olfared during Turner said Special Olympics Reagan's diary might also be used Many perceived Reagan's through the Boland Amendments, Summer Session j is the sorority's national as evidence. "The diary will be more testimony as neither hurting nor which put conditions on Conlrn aid. Apply NOW for Spring, Summer and Fall ' philanthropic activity. accurate than Reagan's testimony," helping former National Security "Congress should. help make Pika said. "It is more likely to be More than 1,000 students In the Program. I "Special Olympics is an Director Pointdcxtcr, who is being foreign policy, not micro-manage it," damaging." Contact: experience," she said. "Just Saint Louis University In Madrid tried for his role in the scandal. Hoxie added. He quoted Thomas Saint Louis University "If it's relevant, it will be Bravo Murillo, 38 scuing up the events makes the "I don't sec anything earth Study Abroad Coordinator Jefferson, "The conduct of foreign subpoenaed," Nathan said. Edlflclo Gonzaga, Planta Baja sisters feel closer to the Admissions OHice shattering, but Reagan's testimony policy is executive all the way." Nathan said a president is not Madrid 28015 Spain contestants." doesn't help Poindexter," said Tel: 593·3783 221 North Grand Blvd. University political science St. Louis. MO 631 03 • see REAGAN page 10 ToJI.free tel: I -800·325-6666 March 6, 1990 • THE REVIEW • 3

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Compiled from the College for interest houses Press Service.

By Adam B. Greenfield question, Culver said. Students protest Staff Reporter "[Fraternities and sororities] senator's remarks would, without question, definitely University administrators are not be allowed to use those houses," Almost 50 Vassar College uncertain about the future of the nine Culver said. students took over an houses that will be left vacant after Culver said this stance stemmed administration building on the special-interest housing students from concern for the upkeep of the Poughkeepsie, N.Y., campus in move into the new North Campus houses and the need for February, angry that school dorms in falll991. undergraduate housing. officials had failed to "We are considering many Butler said, "I just don't think it's a reprimand Sen. Daniel possibilities, but we've made no good idea" to put a Greek Moynihan, D-N.Y., for making decisions yet," said David Butler, organization in one of the houses. an allegedly racist remark while director of Housing and Residence The increasing demand for visiting the campus. Life. undergraduate housing would Moynihan supposedly made Among the possibilities Butler probably force the university to the comment at a reception listed were ideas for a house for make several of the homes available after a lecture he gave about the visiting and relocating faculty to undergraduate students, he said. ethnic makeup in the United members. "If we decide to put States. A local Jamaican Making one house a residence l\ll(lergraduates in there, then we will woman challenged the senator's hall for graduate students is another assign a task force to determine how comments. possibility, he said. the rooms within the houses will be The woman claims Suzan Culver, area coordinator in assigned to students," Butler said. Moynihan told her if she does charge of special-interest housing, Butler said a local contractor was not like it in the United States, said turning some of the houses into hired to conduct a study of the she should pack her bags and office space for the university has renovations and improvements go back to her homeland. also been discussed. needed to maintain the houses over Current renovations include a new special-interest SRAs to receive him that undergraduates would An aid at the senator's office "This would only happen if the next eight years. $58,000 roof for the French House, input from them. probably not be put in the houses said Moynihan was merely [Housing and Residence Life] can't "We are not going to fix Butler said. "[Butler] told us what the goal because of staffing responsibilities. promoting his new book about put them to use," Butler said. everything he tells us to. We just Chad W. Puis (BE 91), senior was and asked us what we thought David E. Hollowell, senior vice ethnicity, and could not recall The chance for fraternities and want to know what to pay attention resident assistant (SRA) of the and what our suggestions were," president for Administration, said all saying anything that could be sororities to move into any of the to." Butler said he did not know the Music House, said Housing and Puis said. the decisions on the future of the construed as insulting. houses appears to be out of the cost of the consultation. Residence Life had briefed all the Puis said housing officials told houses will be made by fall. The students, however, quickly compiled a list of demands which included hiring 'Delaware joins pact to fight air pollution a rabbi for the campus, making buildings wheelchair accessible, building a minority By Michael P. Williams governments to develop local and Officials from Delaware, "As a region, we may be JVlOre the region, he said. students center and creating Staff Reporter regional pl ans to combat air Maryland, Pennsylvania, New stringent than the federal Pollution emiued from one area procedures to deal with racial poll uti on a nd exchange ideas, Jersey, Virginia, North Carolina, government," she said. effects other areas. misconduct. Gov. Michael N. Castle signed a information and data in developing a Washington D.C., and Philadelphia Robert R. French, program Pennsylvania Gov. Robert P. regional agreement which aims to regional air pollution strntegy. and Allegheny County in coordinator for the Department of Casey said in his weekly radio Four-year degree help state and local governments The agreement was signed by six Pennsylvania signed the agreement. Natural Resources and address, "We're taking tough, new improve air quality in six local state and three local officials at the Susan St. Laurent, policy analyst Environmental Control, said, "It measures to continue improving the is rare, study says states. National Governors' Association for Castle, said Congress is having makes good sense for the states in quality of our air." He cited efforts The Mid-Atlantic Regional Air meeting in Washington, D.C., Feb. difficulty achieving standard the region to get together to fight the directed at improving the ozone About 15.5 percent of Management Agreement allows 26. national pollution policies. air pollution problems." problem, which he said is a major students who entered college in French said, "The Environmental concern. 1980 earned their degree in the Protection Agency can't regulate French said officials want to traditional four years, according everything nationally and shouldn't." create consistent state pollution to a report released in February Vegetable prices rise; Curt Matthews, assistant press requirements to prevent industries by a private college association. secretary for Maryland Gov. William from evading restrictions by locating Graduating within four years Schaefer, said, "The agreement in a more lenient state. is "a thing of the past," said acknowledges that pollution does not French said officials are Oscar Porter of the National dining halls serve less honor political boundaries." discussing the adopting emissions Institute of Independent French said some of the plan's controls simi Jar to California Colleges and Universities, measures include "limiting the vapor requirements. which studied the academic Lewandowski, administrative per case on Feb. 23 to $25.50 on By Laura Reisinger pressure of gasoline in the summer The actions would significantly progress of 28,000 students Staff Reporter dietician for Dining Services. "The Friday. Green peppers dropped from months [and] eliminating gasoline reduce the amount of volatile who were freshmen in 1980. only item I've had to change is $37 to $30, she said. fumes from escaping at the pump." organic chemicals released into the By 1986, 40.7 percent of the Unusually high vegetable prices [bacon, lettuce and tomato Klein said she would "play it by Toxic air contaminants and acid atmosphere, he said. students had graduated, 4.5 have caused a shortage of some sandwiches]," she said. BLTs have ear," but suppliers have told her they rain are other problems which face Delaware will extend vehicle- percent were enrolled for their fresh produce in dining halls since a temporarily been removed from expect prices to normalize soon. sixth straight year and 10.4 December crop freeze, but prices dining hall menus. Cantaloupe, cucumbers and are percent were back in college now decreasing, a Dining Services Miller-Lewandowski said she has cabbage were also damaged in the after taking time off. official said Thursday. also cut back on the green peppers frost, but it has not affected the Vitamins should Jeanette Collins, associate and tomatoes she puts in Mexican dining halls significantly, Collins director for Dining Services, said condiments. Fresh tomatoes have said. Gaining weight Florida and Texas tomato and green been replaced by canned tomatoes, Klein said because fresh tomatoes supplement, not top student worry pepper crops were almost destroyed and both vegetables have been cut are included in prepared deli by the freeze. Mexican crops have from salad bars, she said. sandwich prices, such as those in In an era of warnings of how helped to support the demand, but Ann Louise Klein, coordinator for The Scrounge, tomatoes are still substitute meals drugs can ruin health, could not stop the price increase. purchasing for Dining Services, said ii•cluded on the sandwiches. University of Kansas students Patricia Whittington, manager of tomatoes were se:Jing for $55 per Leigh Destefano, manager of By Jay Cooke apparently are more worried the Dining Services commissary, case, but usually cost $8 to $11 per Russell Dining Hall, said the lack of Assistant News Editor about the threat of becoming fat said the price increase has caused case at this time of year. Green tomatoes was most noticed by junk-food junkies. the purchasing department to "cut peppers' price peaked at $40 per students who look for them in the A typical student hears his tummy In a two-year survey of back significantly" on the number of case. The average price is usually salad, deli and taco bars. grumbling and decides to get neatly 300 students enrolled in tomatoes and green peppers it buys. $7.83 per case, she said. She said green peppers arc still something to quell his bellowing his introductory health course, Dining Services has tried to buy Prices began to drop at the used in dishes such as fajitas, but insides. University of Kansas health extra supplies when prices are down. beginning of last week because the dining hall staff has reduced the So what does he or she eat? For professor Michael Adeyanju situations," Smith says. "Very few The cutback on green peppers and next domestic crop of tomatoes and number of green peppers the dish many the decision is simple: pizza, a found most of his students said people need them every day." tomatoes has not been drastic, green peppers has ripened, Klein requires, such as using I 0 pounds of cheesesteak or a burger and fries, their greatest health concern is Smith says the recommended according to Debra Miller- said. Tomatoes dropped from $50 peppers in fajitas instead of 20 rarely anything more complex than becoming overweight. dietary allowance of vitamins and pounds, she said. tried-and-true, all-purpose, Seventy percent of the minerals provided by multivitamins · Destefano said students have not convenient fast food. students thought their health exceeds the amount most people complained much about the lack of Students often have poor eating behavior was "very poor." need. tomatoes and green peppers. habits. Some, however, think they Fewer than 3 percent judged it "As a normal dietary supplement, Some students asked for can balance their diets by taking "good." No one called their they aren't so important," Smith tomatoes when they were first large quantities of vitamins. health behavior "very good" or says. excluded from the salad bar, she But health experts agree that "excellent." Jesse Cugini, pharmacist and 18- said. "The student said, 'I'm paying although vitamins can supplement a Adeyanju said the stresses of year owner of Nature's Way Health my money and I should be able to balanced diet, they should not be being a student are factors in Food Store in Newark Shopping have my tomatoes,' " she said. But considered a sufficient substitute for students' health behavior. He Center, says substituting vitamins for after the dining hall staff explained poor eating habits. speculated his results would be proper food is "never suggested." the shortage, students understood. "The average person, if they eat nearly the same at any college "A good vitamin program won't Charles E. Porter, manager of right, should not need any vitamin or university. help a bad diet," he says. "They Kent Dining Hall, said the supplements," says Dr. Alexander R. Students cited poor time supplement a good diet. They don't vegetarian selection was not affected Doberenz, dean of the College of management, too much stress, supplement a crummy diet." by the shortage any more than the Human Resources. homework and money Cugini says nutrition needs must other dining halls because most Many students do not eat as well problems as some of the causes be evaluated relative to the recipes call for canned tomatoes. as they should, Dobcrenz said. They of their poor mental health. individual, but a multivitamin is He said, "Everyone likes to have should not, however, load up on Students who pull helpful for most students. fresh tomato on salad, burgers and large quantities of vitamins to allnighters, skip meals and "I look at vitamins in some cases deli sandwiches, but I have not compensate for a deficiency because drink a lot of coffee so they can personally heard any complaints." as an insurance plan to make sure all "anything in excess can cause st.ay up late, combined with the "We'll be glad when [tomatoes) problems." nutrients arc getting a balance,'' he stress of college life, are prime back on the menu," Porter said, says. are "There is no reason, other than a candidates for heart disease The first step that students who "This time of year students eat more medical reason, to take anything in later in life, Adeyanju said. want to improve thei r diets should salad-type things instead of heavy large doses," Doberenze says. "Most students don't sleep as take, he adds, is getting a nutrition things." Dr. Jack L. Smith, chairman of much or eat well. This, Collins said, "We are constantly book and educating themselves the nutrttlon and dietetics combined with the stresses of about proper eating habits. monitoring prices and when they department, says that though student life, doesn't do much Cugini said, "It's an educational become a liule more reasonable everyone needs vitamins, most are for good health ," Adeyanju we'll put them back on dining hall provided in a typical diet. process." said. menus." "They have their place in certain 4 · THE REVIEW· March 6, 1990 Theatre program gives students free entrance

By Chris Cronls Thomas said PTTP Director "Every seat will be a good seat," Copy Editor Sanford Robbins asked him to help Eichler said. find a fair way to distribute tickets. Although the PTTP is new to this Imagine viewing a play presented Eichler said, "[Students] won't campus, the program thrived at the by an internationally-acclaimed often get the ticket information as University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee director which showcases some of quickly as [faculty and staff], and for 12 years under Robbins' America's most talented young stage they don't normally act immediately. direction. actors and contains props crafted by "The faculty and staff and the He was invited to bring the PTTP one of the prop makers of general public, as a rule, usually to Delaware in 1988 because the Broadway's "The Phantom of the jump on these things." university wanted to establish a Opera" and "Les Miserables." As of Sunday, only student strong theater program. The Imagine seeing this production at tickets for all shows remained, university's location near New York. Mitchell Hall for free. Then wake Eichler said. Philadelphia, Ballimore and up, yawn and embrace reality. Thomas, a member of the PTTP Washington D.C., appealed to But for university students, the advisory council, said, "We thought Robbins, Eichler said. stirring dream will become a reality it was im)X>rtant that everyone get a She said the change from the this spring. chance [to see the plays]. university's old theater program to The university's Professional "Its not every day that you can the PTTP is revolutionary. Theatre Training Program (PTTP), a see productions of this quality." "It's as if all of a sudden the master's degree program for Student tickets for the free basketball team was replaced by Jen Podos America's young acting elite, is performances, which will include Georgetown's basketball team," she Gobert Tyree practices at a Professional Theatre Training Program (PTTP) rehearsal in Newark reserving 30 percent of its three Shakespeare's "Love's Labour's said. Hall. PTIP chairman Sanford Robbins watches. upcoming productions' tickets for Lost" and Alexander Chekov's "The Many of~ program's students students, according to Elizabeth Cherry Orchard," could become have enjoyed scting soccess outside with world-renowned acting "We arc giving them the tools to p.m. There will be 7 p.m. shows Eichler, director of public relations scarce very quickly, Eichler said. the{IOgmm. instructor Tadashi Suzuki, whose be the leaders of the Am erican March 16 and 17. "The Cherry and marketing for the PTTP. The PTI'P will build an interim P1TP student Kelly Dunn danced acting mythod stresses the body's theater." Orchard" and "Love's Labour's Eichler said it was Delaware theater consisting of only 100 seats in step with Msd nna in a Pepsi visual presentation in an actor's The PTTP's first production, Lost" will run April 26 to May 13. Undergraduate Student Congress inside Mitchell Hall. The seats will commercial and had a small role in performance. Athol Fugard's "Blood Knot," a play For details and reservations, call (DUSC) President Jeff Thomas' idea be raised and the slope, or "rake" of television's "The FaciS of Life." 'TWo Eichler said the program's goal is which explores racial tensions 451-2204 or stop by the Mitchell to allot a fixed number of seats to the seating, steepened so all theater other studeniS will ~:ravel to Japan for 100 percent of its graduates to between brothers in South Africa, Hall box office. students. goers can see clearly. this summer to study intensively enter careers in professional theater. will run March 16 to March 18 at 2 Gilbert A/8, New Castle to become coed next semester

(ED GM), hall director of New Castle will probably be a more women's dorm, and it seems a "Everyone .on my floor seems Housing and Residence Life office Castle/Cannon. popular choice for housing next shame to make it coed," Chianese happy about the change. I don't responds to students' requests "Hopefully this will increase the year." said. "I hope the men will take know anyone who has complaints interaction between the two Kim Chianese (AS 92), a New good care of the lounge and the about it, " Wolcott said. By Jill Laurlnaltls Butler said most students who buildings," Brumbley said. Castle resident, is disappointed kitchen like we do." In the fall 1990, the university Staff Reporter request on-campus housing are New Castle will be coed by because the women's dorm Jeremy Wolcott (BE 93), a will have 28 coed dorms, six women. Of 2,099 sophomores who alternate floors because there is tradition will be broken. Gilbert A resident, said he is glad women's dorms and one men's New Castle Hall and Gilbert AlB requested on-campus housing for only one bathroom on each floor, "New Castle has always been a Gilbert AlB is becoming coed. dorm. will be coed dormitories in the fall fall, 1,310 were women, Carey she said. to meet student demand for more said. Gilbert A/B will be coed by coed housing, a university official "All residence halls cannot be alternate rooms, Brumbley said. said. coed because of the uneven ratio of Presently, Gilbert A is a men's David G. Butler, director of men to women," Butler said. dorm. Gilbert B is a women's dorm. Housing and Residence Life, said South Central Campus dorms Lisa Ellison (AS 91), a New the university does not have have remained all-female because Castle resident assistant, said enough coed dormitories to the buildings' lounges contain bringing men to New Castle will be accommodate student requests for fragile furniture. Butler said the a change of tradition, but it will be Models coed housing. furniture "may not survive due to JX>Sitive. Fall housing applications male behaviors seen in the past." "Next year the halls will showed 481 sophomores listed Butler said the university probably be louder and we may Russell Hall, a coed building, as decided to make New Castle coed have to introduce some stricter their first choice, according to Wanted because it is connected to Cannon policies," Ellison said. "But I Linda Carey, assistant director for Hall, which is a coed building. support the change because the Housing and Residence Life. Only "Males from Cannon have full university is accommodating two sophomores listed New Castle, access to New Castle now student demand. Interaction a women's dorm, as their first anyway," Butler said. "They share between floors will probably choice. the same facilities such as the increase also." The university wants to add coed lounges, and there have been no Jennifer Gliwa (HR 92), a housing gradually, Butler said, and serious problems." resident of New Castle, said: ''I'm will refrain from making some New Castle, as a coed building, tired of people referring to New single-sex buildings coed to meet will give New Castle and Cannon a Castle as 'the nunnery.' I think the requests of students who prefer greater sense of community and making it coed will create a more single-sex dormitories. commonality, said Alice Brumbley lively social atmosphere. New 15, 307 Alison Hall Some students must file 4:30 to 7:30pm Reguired 'Dress: Delaware tax returns Casual Attire, High heels Men: Casual Attire (No Jeans!) ByKlm Nilsen working in Delaware can apply the federal income taxes withheld in Staff Reporter offset to the highest state tax. 1989, Reeder said. Fashion Show On April 25. A student would never pay state Newcomer also suggested \ University students filing 1989 taxes twice, Newcomer said, but the claiming at least one exemption in come tax returns will face highest of the two would be paid. when filling out the W-4 form for a confusing federal and state laws For example, a student who owes Delaware employer. wi th special restrictions applied to Delaware $200 and Pennsylvania By claiming a tax exemption, a full -time students, according to $100 would pay $100 to each state, student may not have Delaware tax experts. which equals the original highest withheld and can avoid filing a Dr. Lester W. Chadwick of the state tax, he explained. return for this state, Newcomer said. "GET THE REAL FACTS accounting department said students Students must also report Reeder recommended Publication most commonly ask what to do scholarship money when filing a tax 17, a guide to income tax when they work in Delaware but return, according to Dr. Janis R. preparation available at the Elkton, ABOUT DRUGS"... reside in another state. Reeder, associate accounting Md., Internal Revenue Service In this case, a student who earned professor. (IRS) Bureau. Come and see Public Safety's at least $3 ,100 must file three "Scholarships are taxable, but The step-by-step guide assumes return s: a federal return , a Delaware there is an exclusion that allows for the reader has lillie knowledge of "Drug Paraphenalia Display" return and a home-state return, part of the sum to be non-taxable," the income tax-filing process, he at Wellspring's Drug Information Chadwick said. A student who earns she said. said. at least $1,300 must file a Delaware "The part of the scholarship that The IRS-sponsored Volunteer Table on March 7 from 11-3 p.m. return. pays for tuition, books and fees is Income Tax Assistance [VITA] in the Student Center. Students filing a Delaware return excluded," Reeder said. "The program is a free resource available will receive an oiTset, or balancing remainder of the scholarship money, to students. Trained VITA cred it, Chadwick said, which varies which pays for room and board, will volunteers will assist in filling out We welcome your questions accord ing to the state of residence. be taxable." tax forms every Monday and and comments about drugs. John H. Newcomer, president of Students whose parents claim Wednesday from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., National Incom e Tax Service in them as dependents should file a and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. SUPPORT NATIONAL COLLEGIATE Newark, said a non-resident federal return to get a refund for any at the Newark Free Public Library. DRUG AWARENESS WEEK ... THINK TWICE!!

For more Information, cal/451·8992

'• March 6, 1990 • THE REVIEW· 5 Increased cost of journals forces library to cut back University asks General Assembly for more money By Doug Miller at the usage of journals, which is Staff Reporter not as great as it has been in the past," Russell said. Morris Library might not be able "We have to come up with some to purchase several scholastic - creative means at fighting back," he journals because of skyrocketing ~i added. "The price increases have price increases, a library official just been appalling." said Friday. I · I About 50 percent of the library's Susan Brynteson, director of II budget pays for the journals, which libraries, said that in many cases the j:_ I I . leaves the amount of money library might have to cancel some available for books relatively small, subscriptions and will not purchase Brynteson said. The library's 1989- new ones. ~ ~ 90 operating budget was slightly "Commercial publishers are now more than $4 million. producing journals formerly In February, President E.A. handled by non-profit Trabant asked the General organizations, introducing the profit "There has been a 40 I percent Assembly for $342,900 to cover the · motive," she said. increase in the number of titles over high costs of periodicals. For example, the price of the the past few years," Brynteson said. "We are hopeful that the state European Journal of Political Most new titles appear in the will go along with Trabant's Science has risen 121 percent since sciences, which leaves less financial recommendation for more funds," 1982, while the Journal of Plant support for the humanities and said Susan Davi, head of the Molecular Biology has increased social sciences, Brynteson said. library's collection development 325 percent, from $73 to $310 per Dr. T. W. Fraser Russell, department. year, according to Brynteson. chairman of the chemical "We are extremely conscious of Many science-related engineering department, said he the increasing cost of journals an r:! publications have become more agreed the rising costs are a have had to think closely about r.~w specialized, causing the total problem, but "since there are so items," Davi said. number of journals to increase. many [journals], there must be The collection development Specialization has prompted the some that you could drop without a department deals with the library to purchase more titles to major effect." "intellectual side" of deciding what cover the same subject areas. "We should also take a close look the library purchases, Davi said.

SPA to get The Kinks 24 Hours A Day out to Field House show

Depend on Kinko's. By Suzanne Conway want seniors to be able to come," he students, not. the public," she said. Staff Reporter said. "We won't deny them the SPA members expect the show t.o • Macintosh® Rental • Binding opportunity to be able to see The sell out the first. clay the tickets arc The Kinks will perform at the Kinks." on sale, McDowell said. • Emergencies • Full & Self Serve Copies Delaware Field House April 21, and McDowell said this is the last big The Studen t Comprehensive Fcc part-time seniors graduating in May concert of the year and the last SPA has been in effect for two years and • Color Copies • Fax Service will be eligible for tickets for the concert seniors may attend. has enabled SPA to bring nationally­ first time, a spokesman from the "We felt so bad when we had to renowned bands to the university, • Collating • Stationery Student Program Association (SPA) turn away [part-time] seniors from Demgen said. said. the Meat Loaf concert," said Julie Before the fee, SPA was only able Usually only full-time students Demgen, SPA adviser and assistant to sponsor sma ll e r, less popular who have paid the Student dean of students. bands, she said. Comprehensive Fee may purchase McDowell said he is unsure if the The music coordinator for SPA kinko·s· tickets, according to Michael practice of selling tickets to part­ and The Kinks' agent arranged for McDowell (BE 90), SPA president. time seniors will continue. th e group's performance in April. the copy center Tickets will be sold to full-time SPA members do not want the Tickets will go on sa le March 13 undergraduates for $5 and to part­ public to buy tickets and deny at 10 a.m . in the Rodney Room of time seniors for $10, he said students the opportunity to sec th e the Perkins Student Center. Each 132 ELKTON RD. NEWARK Saturday. show, Demgen said. student may purchase no more than 368-5080 "This is a special time and we "We want to do the shows for two tickets.

Services may vary by location. Next to Newark Sporting Goods Speaker advises fraternities about risk-management plans

We'd like to show you a path By VIvian Ferrlola the fraternities so they may better and drinking habits, and he told Staff Reporter manage their activities." them to take responsibility for their that often holds tfie greatest reward. A risk-management program actions. If you consumed alcohol and should include written guidelines Gary Solomon (AS 90), IFC were under the age of 21, you for sponsoring and monitoring new-member ed ucation chairman, committed a criminal act. social events, McGehee said. It said, "This seminar not only gave That was the bottom line of a should also include a process to me the tools to educate our risk-management seminar educate all members about risk fraternities, it taught me how to sponsored by the Inter-Fraternity management and the program's present the program." Council Saturday. inherent responsibilities, McGehee As McGehee related examples of Daniel F. McGehee, legal said. incidents from fraternities across · ' counsel for international Pi Kappa Dave Hemingway (BE 91), the nation, he prefaced each story Alpha, shocked a group of 45 president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, with, "This sounds like a event that fraternity members when he said: said, "Right now most of this could happen at your hou se." "The press we are receiving across responsibility falls to the president Dave Csatari (AS 91), judicial the nation we probably deserve. of the fraternities ." coordinator for the IFC, said, "The Rewarding careers for people una pan-time a.'i well as fu ll -time Special Education We need to change the nature we McGehee approached risk notion that something like this can't who care. basis. combining classroom theory Teacher Preparation portray and the way people management with blunt, personal happen to us has definitely been Down the road a few years from \\i th pra('t ica l hands-un t'X pt' ril'nce. Call (6 17 ) 437·2708, or write Grad· nuw, you"re going tu he glad yuu chuse Courses meet in the late afternoon uate Sc hool, Bostnn·Bouve College perceive us. The way to do this is questions about sexual practices erased." a career path today 1h at's right in the and earl}: evening, so students can of Human Development Professions. through education." heart uf l:loston. lfs Northeast em ('Untinue to work. 107 Dod

.Campus Calenda~ ,

Tuesday, March 6 Role of Housework in the Wednesday, March 7 Student Center, 7:30p.m. Right and Wrong?" Sponsored Ministry. 69 E. Main St., 7:30 Transition to Industrialization." by the department of criminal p.m. Colloquium: "Perceptual justice. 140 Smith Hall , 4 p.m. Speaker: J. Hwang, Stanford With Jeanne Boydston, Dynamics Seminar: "Examples University, title of talk to be University of Wisconsin. 436 of Maps on Prime Ends with Significance Hierarchy: Thursday, March 8 Computer Vision Algorithms • "Government Intervention in announced. Sponsored by the Ewing Hall, noon. Irratio nal Rotation Number." ' department of mathematical With R. Walker, National Based on Biological Vision China's Agriculture." 116 Meeting: Sponsored by the : sciences. Ewing Hall 536, 12:15 Workshop: "Nonviolent Scie nce Foundation. Sponsored Systems." By Deborah Walters, Townsend Hall, 1 :30 p.m. College Democrats. Everyone Personal Safety for Women." State University of New York at ~ p.m . by the department of Research on Racism: "Racism welcome. 102 Purnell, 6:30 p.m. Memorial Lounge of the Newark mathematical sciences . 536 Buffalo . 100 Kirkbride Hall, 3:35 ~. Film: "The Search for the United Methodist Church, 69 E. Ewing Hall, 12:30 p.m. p.m. and the Media," by Edward Meeting: Sponsored by the ·.' Disappeared." Part of the Main St., 7 p.m. Guerrero, department of English. cycling club. 116 Purnell Hall, 9 Women's History Month film General Meeting: Sponsored by Colloquium: "Process Modeling Ewing Room, Student Center, p.m. series. 204 Kirkbride Hall, 7 p.m. Meeting : Paul Ferguson the Student Environmental and Process Control Using 12:20 p.m. speaking on sexual off(, ·se and Action Coalition. 004 Willard Neural Networks." By Dr. Aaron Statistical Laboratory: Any Bible Study: Sponsored by the awareness. Sponsored by Off­ Hall, 7:30p.m. J. Owens. 131 Sharp Lab, 4 Meeting: Sponsored by the questions, call 451 -8067. 536 lntervarsity Christian Fellowship. Campus Student Association . p.m. Equestrian team. Collins Room, Ewing Hall, noon. Student Center, 5 p.m. Call 368-5050 for location. 8 Ewing Room, Studen t Center, Earth Day Committee Meeting: p.m. 4:30p.m. Sponsored by the Student Legal Studies Colloquium: Meeting: Sponsored by the Environmental Action "Should the Law be Determined Bible Study: Sponsored by the Toastmasters Club. 116 Purnell Hot Lunch Colloquium: "The Committee. Rodney Room , by Costs and Benefits or by Wesley Foundation Campus Ha, 11 5 :45 p.m.

The University of Delaware PARK PLAME ~PARTMINTS • Large. spaCIOUS apamens wnn many Poseis InClud­ Friends of the Performing Arts ing walk-in size. present • Conveniently located near campus (within 6 blocks) • Heat & hot water included ...... ~_ ...... The Daedalus National Touring Company One and Two Bedroom Apartments Production of Available from $398. Charles Fuller's Pulitzer Prize Winning 368-5670 650 Lehigh Rd., Apt. 1-1, Newark, DE 19711 M-F, 9 to 7 Sat. 1Q-4 Delivery Drivers Wanted $7-$10/lir. Starting Immediately at GANELLO'S PIZZA KITCHEN HELP WANTED 337 Elkton Rd .

A SOLDIER'S PLAY 454-9999 Saturday & Sunday, March 10 & 11 - 8:00p.m. Mitchell Hall Food Bonanza Call 451-2204 for Tickets at the STUDENT RUSH STARTS AT 7:00P.M.­ FOOD WAGONS ALL AVAILABLE SEATS $5 WITH STUDENT I.D.

MENUS INCLUDE: ALPHA EPSILON PHI Italian sausage, hot dogs, soft pretzels, pastries, plus many other snack items. FOOD WAGON LOCATIONS: CONGRATULATES OUR NEWEST SISTERS! Smith Hall and the "Round House" between Newark and Graham Hall. Open daily from 8:00a.m. to 2:00p.m. Monigue Avedissan Lori Goldberg Merrie Miller Kara Berkowitz Julie Hariton Jodi Mosgkowicz Jill Herzog Jennifer Moskowitz UNIVERSITY OF DELA WAllE DINING SERVICES 's Allyson Borer e Kim Boilen Jennifer Hockberg Dayna Robbins d Kerrie Kaufman Debbie Sandelli Ronni Brecher The Interdisciplinary honor society Michelle Campbell Jodi Klein Natasha Schlegel it Hillary Cohen Lisa Laudob Julie Schneider Jackie Cohen Seona Leskowitz Melissa Skoletsky Shari Comechero Stacey Levin Jennifer Stashin PHI KAPPA PHI e, Jami Dash Rona Levine Donna Taub Dawn Delmastro Michelle Lupow Tracy Urbaitel announces Usa Edelstin Alison Markowitz JoJo Wang the eighth annual University of Delaware Suzie West UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH Jenny Ettinger Jennifer Matla ESSAY COMPETITION Michele Fein Robyn Mauskops Carni Weinberg one $500 PRIZE, plus PUBLICATION of Usa Feinstein Collette McLaughlin Barbara Zemble the prize-winning essay. Amy Ginsberg Carla Menaquale open to undergraduates in all fields. research results must be reported in an Melissa Gitter essay written for a general educated audience. "Many hearts, one purpose." - submission deadline is April 26, 1990 Award announced May 8, 1990.

For mo,.INFOAMATION, cont8Ct .ny f.culty In your field or Dr. Joan BenneH, University Honon Program (Room 204 at 188 South College Ave.) 9 8 · THE REVIEW· March 6, 1990 Professor creates engineering design master's program

By Racquel Corpus degree program to be incorporated national search to implement the committee. fund the program, he said, "which is mostly analysis," Kerr said. iscertainlyapartoftheproblem." Not many other universities Staff Reporter next fall. program. Dolan is the only professor in Dr. Charles W. Dolan, who has "Dr. Dolan was the top choice the civil engineering department Dolan said th e department has have an engineering design A new faculty member in the design experience in industry and and we are fortunate to get him," implementing the program. not requested program funding program. "What we are trying to civil engineering department will recently received his doctorate said Dr. Arnold D . Kerr, a The program's purpose is to because installing the program is . do is emphasize that there are spearhead preparations for a new from Cornell University, was professor of civil engineering and allow students to apply their the department's highest priority engineering science programs and civil engineering design master's chosen after a 64-candidate chairman of the design search analytical skil ls through a design right now. there are engineering design project, Dolan said. The department is looking for a programs and there should be a "This program will turn out new faculty member to balance between them," Kerr said. students that have a higher level of complement the existing faculty "The base that you need to be WXDR radiothon seeks expertise than undergraduate and help the program operate competent over a wide area students," Dolan said, "and a smoothly. becomes almost intolerable to get wider, more adaptable design basis The new master's program will in a four-year program," he said. than students that go through not require a thesis like other "We could do with the existing sound of listener support master's programs. Instead, it will faculty," Dolan said, "but it would conventional masters of science degrees. consist "in a general sense, of all mean a significant dislocation of The fund-raiser will consist of The second concert will feature "The object [of the program] is course work and a portion of it what professors teach and what Event features on-air requests and related station­ the music department's Lake of the to put packages of classes together would include an extensive design they are used to teaching. races, concerts planned activities, Tarver said. Silver Bear gamelan music group, in a way that allows the student to problem," Dolan said. "Part of what I try to teach the The ftrst major event will be the which plays Indonesian music, he do far more in-depth work than The projects would run through students is it isn't just getting the to raise $28,000 seventh annual St. Patrick's 5K said. they would ever be able to do in a a full year so the students would right answer on a piece of paper. Run and Walk on Saturday, Tarver "Reggae Soundsplash" will be highly-concentrated short-term have an extended amount of time It's understanding the process," he By Susan Coulby said. The race has been a the final concert on March 17, course," he said. to work with it, Dolan said. said. "Design-oriented courses will "It's difficult to predict what will Staff Reporter community activity for the past Tarver said. Three local reggae One obstacle of creating the seven years. In 1985, WXDR bands will perform. program is th e civil engineering have homework [that is] actual happen once it starts, but this is the WXDR, the university's non­ became involved with it and turned Most bands will perform free, department's lack of faculty. designs, whereas in the current right thing to do. We should have commercial radio station, plays a it into a station fund-raising event, he said. All proceeds will benefit The university has not started to masters program th eir homework had programs like this a few variety of music to please nearly he said. WXDR. every listener. But now it is time The race is co-sponsored by Tarver said this year's goal is to for the audience to tum the tables Domino's Pizza and Delaware raise $28,000. Last year the station and please WXDR during the Sporting Goods. It will begin at 11 surpassed its $25,000 target, he station's annual pledge drive from a.m. Domino's will also supply said. The average pledge amount is Saturday to March 18. post-race pizza for panicipants. $25, he said, but the station ~'TI'l]l IID&W Jl ®®® "The radiothon is going to be 10 The radiothon also includes accepts donations of any size. e days of fun and fury," station three concens. Each will feature a The radiothon costs about GROUPS & INDIVIDUALS INTERESTED IN HELPING manager Chuck Tarver said. different music style, he said. $3,000 to produce, Tarver said. WXDR, 91.3 FM, is Delaware's Tarver said three area bands, Planning is a year-long activity. TOORGANIZE EARTHFEST.90 ,ENVIRONMENTAL only listener-supported radio Sinister Attraction, Zen Guerilla Tarver said ple dges from pa st AWARENESS FAIR, SHOULD ATTEND A MEETING IN station and relies solely on and Cirrus Faction, will perform at years have been used to purchase THE RODNEY RM. OF PERKINS STUDENT CENTER donations, he said. the Saturday show, which will new station eq ui pment and AT 7:30PM ON WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7 "What we're going to do is turn feature progressive alternative upgrade studio facilities. on the old microphone and beg for music similar to that aired on money," Tarver said. WXDR's "Cutting Edge" program. Oberly details process

continued from page 1 concerned alcohol involvement is ANTHONY STOREY focused on more than the larger Sorenson said Oberly reinforced issue of sexual assault. how seriously his office took the Tuites said there was some debate DISTINGUISHED VISITING PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH September case. among audience members about Questions about case specifics whether sexual assaults result from and were posed but could be answered men being socialized to be more WRITER IN RESIDENCE--SPRING 1990 only to a limited extent because of aggressive and view women as the confidentiality, Oberly said. weaker sex and as conquests. Deputy Attorney General Peter Thomas Lundy (AG 91), Inter­ Letang said, "People wanted to Fraternity Council programming The Department of English is pleased to announced the The fiction to be discussed must be delivered to the English know how the attorney general's coordinator, said the meeting was appointment of Anthony Storey in the spring semester 1990 as Department office (204 Memorial Hall) by Tuesday noon before the office handles campus incidents and very informative and was surprised Dist inguished Visiting Professor of English and Writer in Residence. Thursday appointment so that Professor Storey will be able to read and problems of investigating them." to learn many women view men as consider it before the Thursday afternoon conference. Letang said the questions socialized that way. A member of the faculty of King 's College, Cambridge (England) centered on campus concerns about He said some comments were University and the author of ten novels, a biography, television and film scripts, For further information, ple ase ca ll the Department of English, the role of drugs, alcohol and directed toward fraternities, but most Professor Storey will be available on THURSDAY AFTERNOONS 451-2361 . fraternities in sexual assault cases. discussion centered on male Many expressed concern about involvement in general. to faculty, graduate students, and staff who wish to discuss their writing unreported sexual assaults on Tuites said, "There was some with him. Those interested may telephone 451·2228 any morning campuses. debate, but the overall atmosphere of between 8 and 12 noon to make an appointment on THURSDAYS Oberly said he wanted to stress the meeting was one of both sides BETWEEN 2:00 AND 5:00 PM. that no matter what the outcomes of trying to understand what happens in other cases might be, they should not sexual assault cases and discussing deter anyone from reporting what to do to prevent sexual incidents. assault" "One report to police could be She said the group appreciated the beneficial in preventing or attorney general's speech. Many of investigating an assault incident." his responses, however, were not Donna T uites, program what some wanted to hear, she said, coordinator for the Office of and seemed to show the system does Women's Affairs, said many were not always work for the victim. Photography? ·.· The Review invite's the campus community to a focus meeting March 13 in the Kirkwood Room Journalism? of the Student Center. If yC,~·ve got a gripe or want to learn 'about This is your chance for h~w the newspaper works, · · ·please attend~ ..· Experience Accepting Applications for Summer College The Blue Hen Yearbook Resident Assistants June 20 - July 28, 1990 OPEN OFFICE Summer College is a Residential Program for Academically Advanced High School Juniors Room, Board + $),000 Contact: Wednesday, March 7th International Programs & Special Sessions 325 Hullihen Hall 451 ·2852 8 p.m.-10 p.m. for Application and Job Description Deadline: March 20, 1990 March 6, 1990 • THE REVIEW • 9

Overall, Luding10n said, he has Coaching became his full-time skaters from the United States and Ludington produced 36 U.S. champions during career. worldwide. Conference educates his coaching career. Ludington moved to Delaware in "He is the most renowned pairs continued from page 1 Ludington is al so a four-time 1970 when he shifted his training and dance coach in the country," continued from page 1 university, said Donna Tuites, national champion in pairs skating center from Detroit, Mich., to said Elizabeth McLean, a Ludington program coordinator for the Office : Scotia. Sargent and Witherby and the 1960 Olympic bronze Wilmington. He said his program studenL McLean and her partner Ari pens while a group of Jazzercise of Women's Affairs. qualified for world competition medalist in pairs skating. was "very active" and grew while it Lieb placed sixth in this year's U.S. instructors gave demonstrations. The Delaware Women's when they placed second in ice After winning his medal, operated in Wilmington. The growth Figure Skating Championships. The YWCA offered free blood Conference is organized yearly by dancing at the U.S. National Figure Ludington said he left skating for a led him to seek better facilities for She said the pair moved from pressure screening and weight a committee of volunteers from the Skating Championships in Utah short time to pursue a career in his athletes. Boston in June to work with evaluations. Junior League of Women, the earlier this month. mechanical engineering. He earned Ludington said he met with Jack Ludington and his staff. McLean At lunch, keynote speaker Mary YWCA, Wilmington Women in Ludington also coaches the his degree from Northeastern O'Neill in 1985 to discuss said working with a coach of Alice Williams, NBC network Business, the Delaware country's third-ranked ice dancing University in Boston. He returned to constructing an arena at the Ludington's caliber is usually news correspondent and anchor, Commission for Women and other team and the fourth-, sixth-, seventh­ coaching and eventually developed university for his program. O'Neill extremely expensive. spoke about the news media's role organizations Barnett said. : and eighth-ranked pairs teams. his own center of elite skaters. said LudingtOn was very concerned But Ludington said he has kept and her role in encouraging social More than 100 speakers about his athletes' education. He costs relatively low. He reduces change. As a new mother, as an volunteered for the event, Barnett wanted the skating facility to be costs by operating summer programs anchor and as a woman, Williams said. "APARTME!'ITS AVAILABLE FOR WIMCR SESSIOI"f" located near an educational and charging fees to the public to shared her views. She was "Our problem is our success," Towne Court ents institution to make it convenient for use the rink recreationally. inundated with audience questions. Barnett said. "While we want to athletes to continue their education Ludington said it takes more than During the conference's seven make the conference available to Walk to U ofD while training. knowledge of a spon to be a good years, keynote speakers have everyone, the facility can only. • Balconies • Wall to Wall Carpet Ludington helped raise money to coach. "I understand children. I included former vice presidential handle 1,000 people, and so we are • Air Conditioned • Masonry Consbuctlon Heat and Hot Water lnduded build the arena, which contains two understand athletes and I understand candidate Geraldine Ferraro and forced to turn people away." EFFICIENCIES, ONE AND TWO BEDROOM • ice surfaces, a music studio, a ballet my sport. women's rights advocates Shirley Barnett said that although 9 /W\ONTli LEASES AVAILABLE room and a human performance "We've developed into ·a team Chisolm and Gloria Steinem. student involvement has been /W\ON.·FRI. ~6; SAT. lG-4 368-7000 No Pets From $398.00 laboratory. concept," he said, crediting his staff This year several distinguished limited, the conference committee Off Bkton Rd., Rt. 2 Ludington's status as an and team. "It doesn't just hinge on visitors attended the conference currently reserves 60 of the 1,000 Ask About Graduation Clause extremely successful coach draws me." such as the university's 25th spaces for students. president, David P. Roselle, and his The university plays a crucial wife; Rep. Thomas R. Carper, D­ role in the Delaware Women's Del.; Lt. Gov. Dale E. Wolf; and Conference's organization, Barnett Sen. Joseph R. Biden's wife, Jill. said. The Student Connection The university donated money to "Clayton Hall is fantastic," underwrite the $25 registration fee Barnett said, "not only because of Sponsored by the Undergraduate Student Alumni Association for 100 random women who could the large number of people which not otherwise afford to attend the can be facilitated, but also because ""\ conference, Barnett said. the students who [cater the event rWh(Jt!~ the Stude.,f Connection Program all Aggli~gligc fo[ Uggg[~la&&mgc The Office of Women's Mfairs and help direct the conference abc)ut? · · ~~~ga gr:Jolltialblx served as liaison between the participants] are as helpful and The Student Connection is a Big conference committee and the polite and friendly as they can be." Brother/Big Sister Program for Incoming fresh- Name Sex 0 M 0 F nien who live in the Dickinson Complex. Co- Home address srreer ordlna.ted by ·,he Und~rgrac;:iuote Student Williams speaks Alumni Association, lrtcooperatlon with the ciTy state ZIP continued from page 1 freed and a drug summit was going Offlce·ofHousing and Residence Life, this Home phone < } on in Cartegena, Colombia, the progr:om allows ·rieiw stqdEmts to· become their borders, the technology newspapers featured the divorce of familiar with campus life inJhelr first weeks at Campus address (present) available gave the world a chance Donald and Ivana Trump. D(31aware. · · ·· to witness the tyrannies at work. "We can't just satisfy the public's Campus phone The government-controlled need for voyeurism with big issues television stations began airing their like AIDS, organ donors and Howd~$ · the pr6grarriwofk? Major (Area of Interest) revolutions, and for political selective abortions of multiple . Onceyol) hove applied, you wm ·re- . reasons, started the turn toward fetuses," Williams said. "These are ceive defallsabout our Spring Orientation, on Minor Classification (e.g. AS91) democracy. abuses of the public's bUSt" April25tti.Overthe summer, upperclassmen "We are living in extraordinary Williams said she thinks the are matched by major with interested fresh- How did you find out about the Program? times," Williams said. New public has a right to demand and men. Before the sc:hool yeor begins, you will technology in the media, such as expect neutrality and objectivity home video cameras, not only from the network news. receive notice about your little brother(s)/ released the oppressed, but also "[The networks] are no longer sister(s). At that time,you are expected to Did you participate in the Program last year? 0 Yes 0 No assist in terrorist extortion. the exclusive arbiters of what goes contact your ·sibling," ·.ond keep In touch With a new form of sending on our nightly news programs. through the early weeks of the semester If so. were you an 0 upperclassman or a 0 freshman pictures through telephone lines, People have influence," she said. the media was able to continue She said she thinks the reporters Please return through campl,ls mail to: reporting the student demonstration and the networks are "ideologically How do I get Involved? and revolt in Tiananmen Square, and politically neutral." Just fill out this application and return it Student Connection Prograrp China, after the government closed "The thing to remember is that to the Alumni Office bY April 611\ You will SAA/ Alumni Office the media's transportation of film we, as reporters, do a difficult job receive a confirmation from us shortly there- and coverage. imperfectly. But we do it after. We.hope to heaf.from you soon! Williams said tabloids have led individually," she said. (Off campus add "Newark, DE 19716") the public to distrust the realities Williams suggested rather than '•:':, ~ ./ presented by the news media by criticize the reporters as a .. · ,.·. '/ Additional applications are available at: "providing semi-fiction as fact "monolithic organization," the recreations," but Williams gives the public should criticize the methods Student Center Information Desk, Christiana Towers Commons public credit for being able to see used. Williams admitted that Morris Ubrary Commons, and Alumni Hall through this. language is often unclear or "Tell me Geraldo [Rivera] wasn't descriptions are one-sided. "We ' right Tell me that heads don't have grant status to the things we to be cracked to get people to watch describe." and care about issues,"she said. Williams said, in a world filled The audience questions what is with such globally threatening real in television. Williams used issues as dying rain forests, former Speaker of the House Tip sensationalistic or "yellow" O'Neill as an example. Although at journalism only betrays the public, one time second in line for the which needs to actively choose the Do you: presidency of the United States, he class of topics investigated. is now seen endorsing a hotel chain "What people need to remember by popping out of suitcases in though, is that all of what we do is • have difficulty with intimate relationships? commercials, she said. situation ethics. You just call it as The television explosion has you see it," she said. • feel you are different from other people? brought "conflicting points of She said although in a high­ • have difficulty having fun? views" and "a clash of ideas," intensity situation, the goal is not to Williams said. A free flow of exploit the victim, the public • constantly seek approval and affirmation? information is a mark of a free doesn't benefit from "sanitizing the society, but the media must draw a news." • find that you are impulsive? line between gossip and news. Unlike newspapers, which can Williams encourages the give the reader a vivid recreation of American public to be the story, television must be careful conscientious consumers of to show re-enactments without network news. She mentioned that giving any distortions or opinions Are you a chlld while Nelson Mandela was being to the story, she said. of an alcoholic? • Adult Children of Alcoholics Group LOUIS J. CAPANO, SR. SCHOlARSHIP

Several tuition scholarships are available to STUDENT CENTER, READ ROOM Delaware residents. Selection is based on financial need, academic promise, and an affiliation with the building industry. Contact Wednesdays, 5:30-7:00 p.m. the Office of Scholarships and Student with Nancy Nichol Financial Aid, 220E Hullihen Hall for additional information or to obtain the scholarship application. Call Nancy at 451-2226 for information Application deadline Is March 31, 1990. 1 0 · THE REVIEW· March 6, 1990 DUSC, theater groups organi7e to fight removal of Wolf Hall stage

continued from page 1 Brooks said the Student When student gro ups reserve experience away from production's costs wi ll not be established until New equipment costs would be Programming Association, the Bacchus , th ey are required to use tC"c hnical aspects. the eq ui pment is purchased. $30 ,000 LO $ 50,000 or mo re, us," Robb said. "It's sad because Cultural Programming Advisory university technicians for lighting "The student groups build their Brooks said the un iversi ty's plan Brooks said. Funds will come either what we do is for students." Board and the music department and stage setup. Average fees for own sets and they try to cover every is to implement some o f th e from the Student Comprehensive Hollowell said renovation plans will also use Newark Hall for the service cost the groups $300 to aspect of theate r without a ny equipment needs the students have Fee or the Student Center reserve call for' painting and new seating concerts or lectures. $400 per show, Thomas said. professional help," Robb said. "It's requested "on a piecemeal basis" in fund. with desktops. The stage would be Prime said the Professional Student production budge ts more of a learning expe rie nce Ne wark Hall. "It's going to be a Brooks said the administration removed. He said he hopes some Theater Training Program (P'ITP) typically allot between $500 and because it's student run ." long time" before everything is has not approved the changes to improvements can be made this is currently practicing in Newark $600 for non-musicals and $ 1,500 Prime said student theater groups included, he said. Newark Hall. summer. Hall because construction delays and $2,000 for musicals. will probably have to pay fees to "Whether th at will satisfy the Sharkey said the un i,versity is "We do need good classrooms, ~ have prevented the1!'ildilate Robb said using professional mai nta in th e eq uipment which will students or not, I don't know," he trying 10 locate funding for new he said. students from moving into technicians takes students' hands-on be installed in Newark Ha ll, but said. lighting. Stuart Sharkey, vice president Hartshorn Gym. She said she hopes for Student Affairs, said E-52 and Hartshorn will be complete by mid HTAC have been asked to use the March and P1TP will move from newly-renovated auditorium in Newark Hall. Newark Hall as a replacement for E-52 and HTAC usually need the Wolf Hall space. about three to four weeks to The groups can still use 100 rehearse and perform a show, Wolf Hall for the remainder of this Thomas said. academic year. Prime said she foresees a PEERS AGAINST Dean of Students Timothy F. problem with theater groups Brooks said the groups agreed one reserving Newark Hall for several year ago to swap Newark for Wolf. weeks at a time. STUDENT SUICIDE. He said it was clear to him that the She said student groups might Newark Hall auditorium would be need to cut their time to about two the new performance facility. weeks to use Newark Hall. "I think "I think the students are very it will be a high-demand facility," General Interest Meeting upset with how Newark Hall she said turned out," he said. "I think they Brooks said he hopes Bacchus Wednesday, March 7 - 4:00 p.m. just feel more comfortable with Theater in Perkins Student Center Wolf Hall." and the Newark Hall auditorium Call Jodi at 738-8243 or Melissa at 731-3360 Thomas said that before will accommodate all the events, renovations to Newark Hall began, including student performances. for Details. the student groups submitted a list Booking shows in Bacchus and of recommendations for the Newark Hall also presents student All Welcome. auditorium. theater groups with financial "We were asked to develop what problems, Thomas said. we thought was necessary to develop that [theater]," he said, but construction did not include any student requests. Hollowell said equipment costs for students' requests exceeded the · renovations budget .and could not be implemented. "We've done as much there as the budget will allow." Renovations to Newark Hall auditorium, which seats 600, were fini shed in January and it "is to be scheduled like any other room in the Student Center," Sharkey said. The auditorium is inadequate for student theater needs, Thomas said. In order to adapt Newark Hall to student theater use, the drop ceiling would have to be removed, a curtain installed and better lighting provided, he said. Because the existing lighting cannot be manipulated, it is now better suited to lectures. "It's a nice looking room, but it really serves no purpose," Thomas said. Besides the room's physical limitations, reserving the auditorium for large blocks of time for rehearsals and performances would be difficult because many groups will use it for their events, Thomas said. Fitness

continued from page 2

facility by working out at least three times per week. He said he was disappointed about facility hours. "I hope the hours of operation will be expanded in the future." The main facility will be open Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.; Friday 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.; Saturday 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; and Sunday 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Supercircuit will be in operation in one hour increments Monday, Wednesday and Friday at noon, 1 p.m., 6 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Tuesday and Thursday 11 a.m., 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. ; Saturday at noon and 1 p.m.; and Sunday 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. Youtllike your roommates Reagan a whole lot better if they didn't continued from page 2

immune from testifying if his show up on your phone bill. testimony might bear on the trial. Pika said Reagan's historic john called Chicago. Andy called L.A. Or was that Pete? perception will not change because the Iran-Contra affair occured later Don't s~ea ~ .it. Sorting out roommates is .easy when you get AT&T Call 1\1anager Service. in his presidency. "I don't think his Because wtth tt , you can all get your I on~ dtstance charges listed separate!)~ even though leg acy will hinge on this one you share the same phone numbe r. And 1t costs you nothing. incident," he said "You have to look To find out more about the free AT&TCailManaget Service, diall800 222-0300 ext Goo at the Iran-Contra affair as a whole." Reagan's administration has been It'll make both your bills and your roommates much easier to live with. ' · · inaccurately compared to Dwight D. Eisenhower's, Hoxie said "Eisenhower was so detailed and on top of everything," said Hoxie, who worked in the Eisenhower adm inistration. "He presided at ~AT&T every meeting. Reagan was not like 1Cl 1990AT&T Eisenhower." The right choice. March 6, 1990 • THE REVIEW· 11

As Part of Sexual Assault Awareness Week Southgate Apts.

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Vienna-based fall and spring semester programs taught In English offer European, East European, and Southeast European studies courses with escorted field trips to the countries considered in each concentration.

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For further information, please call or write to: Beaver College Center for Education Abroad GLENSIDE. PENNSYLVANIA 19038 (215) 572-2901 (BOO) 767-()029

Learn German Tliis Summer

June 24- August 3, 1990

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UNIVERSITY of DElAWARE

Legal Assistant Certificate March 5, 6, 7 Program 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. • Approved by the American Bar Bookstore Concourse Association • Convenient Wilmington Campus location • Evening classes • Can be completed in 18 months • Taught by members of the Delaware State Bar Association University Call for a program brochure: 302/573-4435 Bookstore· c•NTINUING EDUCATION Payment Plans Available. .. vivant Ma rc h 6 1990 ·THE REVIEW • 13 .. !.Late-night 'Sev' shift serves up madness

reg ulars from all walks of life. problems for the guud-11aturcd al l­ Drunks, however, are probably nightcrew. the most amusing customers. Anncnc loves th e stud cms who • It's 1:30 a.m. Sunday. A mass of Weaving through the aisles, vi sit the s tore, but aclr11it s she ' students, hungry for bodily occasionally knocking into the watches th em like a hawk. ' he 1 salvation, gather at the doors. In an Hostess display, they are too soused despises attempted th efls. ~ intoxicated haze, they stumble inside to cope with the realities of early­ "We really don't need that here," I. a few at a time and shuftle toward morning shopping. adds Mike. ' the counter. But the late shift provides a Dennis Sherman, 12-ycar owner . They are greeted by a smiling number of comforting services to the of 7-Eleven, agrees. "They put up i elderly woman with a New York intoxicated, such as pointing them in with a lot of crap," he s<~ y s , "but we ' accent who, for 99 cents, has the the direction in which they can prosecute all shoplifters th at arc , most popular remedy for late-night satisfy their needs and tastes, apprehended." Sh erman adds th at I drunken hunger: nachos. counting their money for them when Annette and her coworkers allow ; From every social crevice in they are unable, and reminding them only 12 or 13 people in at a time. , Newark, hordes of bodies they purchased something and "If you let 150 drunks in ,

1 sporadically arrive at the Elkton should leave the store with their shoplifting would be a big problem, " Road 7-Eieven convenience store. edible possessions. he says. All of them place their inebriated John Schneider As ambrosia is considered the As the night winds do wu , ; lives in the hands of some familiar 'Newark's own late night 'celebrities,' Annette Trotto, Doug Rawling and Mike Marshall can dish It food of the gods, nachos are the customers become more intcrcstiug, ' faces, the htte-shift workers who, out to all types of people at the 7-Eieven on Elkton Road. · ambrosia of the impaired. About but the late night "Sev" shift never : like vampires, stay awake all night. seven pounds of nachos flow from loses its energy. "We are the night life of Newark," can always be found behind the look-alike with long black hair who The three know how deal with the the "Sev" on a Saturday night, Annette laughs and s laps the says Annette Trotto, a nine-year 7 - counter. She says she lives a life of 3 has worked at the store for three many different, often unusual, quelling drunken hunger for hours. counter as she recalls one of her Eleven veteran who considers a.m. dinners, nachos, hot dogs and years. Doug Rawling, no rookie to customers who ritually flock to the Although they are glad to lend the craziest 7-Eleven nights. herself an all-night baby sitter. drunken students. the 7 -Eleven scene, also stands store for late-night relief. On a tipsy, confused students a hand, "We had this one lady wh o A short, stout woman with a Next to Annette stands coworker, behind the counter serving and Saturday night, they deal with some customers are harmful. .:Sylvester Stallone-ish smile, Annette Mike Marshall, a tall Frank Zappa purging late-night souls. drunks, shoplifters, weirdos and Shoplifting always presents see LATE NIGHT page 14 Meat loafs in his paradise; iewers fly like bats out of Hell

forgo/len metropolis of Earth front or a sell-out crowd of 1,200 album's cover art fittingly served Unredeemed." were Meat Loaf and support act the as the stage backdrop in Carpenter, -Thomas Pynchon , 39 Steps in a concert sponsored by if only as the manner in which " ...So, over time, Hell became a Vineland the Student Programming many in attendance wished to ed place of sin and penitence, Association (SPA). leave. we forgot that its original Earth and Hell moved a little bit For the uninitiated, Meat Loaf Meat Loaf's oeuvre is best was never punishment but closer Saturday night at Carpenter enjoyed one multiplatinum hit LP, exemplified by the famous song union, with the true, long- Sports Building. Performing in 1977's "Bat Out of Hell." The from his lone hit album, the epic "Paradise By the Dashboard Light." From that zenith, things have gone downhill for the 260- Albee gives rif'}gsiQe §eats pound vocalist. . , The·''song is a paean 'io· bygone day's when most cars! were to -'Virginia Wo"Oif's' battleS equipped with front bench seats on which teen-agers performed By Sharon O'Neal play takes place during a three­ various unmentionables. Administrative News Editor hour period of the characters' This, however, paints Meat lives, it is not totally without Loafs work in a kinder light than "Who's · Afraid of Virginia action. George and Martha prove it merits. All in all, it evinces the Woolr?" is a tense play. once and for all that words wit of a four-'year-old and the Despite the comfortable New masquerading as daggers and sexual sophistication of a donkey. England college town setting and plenty of liquor provide enough Somewhat surprisingly, the audience appeared to consist its leather easy chair atmosphere, trivial matters and progressing to fuel to go to the world's end and almost entirely of normal­ a great deal of anger and intense personal conflicts. back. appearing university students. resentment reside in Martha and Martha and George invite Nick Despite one playgoer's remark, The 3 1/2-hour ordeal could George, the not-so-happily­ and Honey to their house for "I wish something would happen," married couple whom playwright drinks after a party at th e home of plenty goes on within the have made anyone wish to be at a Edward Albee has housed in his Martha's father, the college Wilmington Playhouse's walls. Joey Chitwood' thrill show, home domestic tragedy. president. Martha continually berates clipping his toenails or listening to George, a 46-year-old history Instead of relaxing and George for being a "flop." He all of his ex-mates tell him what a professor at the college, and wife enjoying themselves, Nick and does not fulfill her expectations of total idiot he is. Martha, 52, need to air out an Honey get caught in the middle of rising to the top of the hi story The show started promptly at abundance of dirty laundry. They Martha and George's daily war, department or becoming the 8p.m. with a short set by the 39 seem to do it best in front an which centers on their college's president. After all, Steps, a third-rate West Coast-style audience. Their unfortunate inadequacies. that's why she married him. hard rock/metal band with some audience is their unassuming Hurled insults and flung In return, George aims at what slight Motor City (Stooges/lggy guests, Nick and Honey, epithets colored with scathing he considers Martha's shabby Pop) leanings. newlyweds new to the college and sarcasm are the mainstays of treatment of their only son, who is It probably would have sounded faculty politics. George's and Martha's dialogue. never present in the play but is a as if they were playing toy Nick is a rising academic who Bruce Gray and Carol Ma yo sore subject for them. instruments if their effects pedals Jen Podos Although the shOw sold out, Meat Loaf's two-hour performance has just started teaching in the Jenkins play their roles to the hilt Mayo and Gray play off each were taken away. at Carpenter Spons Building proved less than entertaining. college's biology department. in this concise production, other, covering miles of emotional They connected with the Honey is a vaporous blond wisp directed by Albee himself. ground with a vengeance that audience only in the sense that the depths of banality. proficient on their instruments, and whose only job is wifehood. Watching "Who's Afraid of gives the play the energy and band and audience were in the His backing band is a testament a pair of nearly-identical blonde Martha and George do not Virginia Woolf?" is perhaps the vigor that are its hallmarks, venue at the same time. to what money '"ID and can't buy, backup vocalists named Elaine mirror these traditional-roles. saddest way to spend three despite the fa c t that all the Compared to the two-hour-plus and a prime cause of the wearing 12-inch miniskirts. Instead, after a 23-year marriage, comically-written hours on a characters do is wlk in a journey across the river of performance's tiresomeness. What it can't buy is any sense of they are the banes of each other's Friday night, although it is some livingroom from 2 a.m. to 5 a.m. forgetfulness to come, however, 39 What it can purchase is a quartet subtlety, honesty or even good, existences. From the play's first of the best drama within a 40-mile Martha and Georg e serve each Steps' set was divinely inspired. of session dudes with nicknames clean rock 'n' roll fun . lines, they argue and attack each radius of Newark. Meat Loafs set, based on one of such as "The Snake" and "Machine other continuously, starting with Although the dialogue-only see WOOLF page 14 rock's shakiest repertoires, plumbed what might well be new Gun" who were undeniably see MEATLOAF page 14 Nintendo addiction squashes sanity, soul

When the small plastic box arrived in my ascertaining that everyone was asleep, I crept I sat in front o f the set, spellbound, Hammer Brothe rs, a.k.a. Ninja Tunics, ur apartment shonly after Christmas, I swore I to the set and clicked it on. I fumbled for a awestruck, and watched as he destroyed all tried to scurry past Buzzy Beetl es. wouldn't go near it. "It's evil," I warned my few minutes while I tried to figure out how obstacles between him and the fair princess. The mates, except for the sympalhcti c hapless rocmies. "It'll ruin your lives." to spark that blasted plastic box. I memorized every move. I familiarized Mario master, began to openly ridicule nr c. "Are you kidding me?'' the fellas chimed I don't know how, but magically the Super myself with the controls. They laughed in my face. They hall, you sec, as one of them attached it to the VCR. Mario Bros. screen came to life. Tragically, it My immunity to the odious box was become bored by the selection of game "Nintendo's great." marked the beginning of the end. dashed to pieces each Lime I miscalculated a tapes. "Go ahead and ruin your lives," I told There were a few hurdles to overcome. leap and plunged from the top of a "I swear it," I said. "I can quit any time." them. "I'm not going near that thing." My efforts were repeatedly thwarted by mushroom to death in an avaricious frenzy to "You've lost it," they said with a superior For two weeks, every time I entered the Little Goombas, Koopa Troopas or some monger as many of the life-giving gold coins tone. "And after all the grief you ga e us ... " domocile, I found my mates and five to 10 Mark Nardone other annoying little pests. I was frustrated as I could. "But honesUy .. ." I was grovell ing. Deep friends huddled near the boob tube, battling and angry. I quit, resolved to learn how to Early-morning practice became an down I new they were righL But how cou ld I with a bloody passion for the Blades of Steel squash those little buggers. obsession, one to three times each day. I admit it? I needed help. Stanley Cup. "Cmon, Mark. Check it out," The scene was repeated each day for Later that morning, I cornered a staned to achieve fair proficiency. I'm here to today because, uh, I'm, uh , they enjoined. I shook my head, repeated my weeks. My curiosity began to pique. roommate, a veritable Mario master and the And with improved skills came larger umm, a, N-N-N-Nintendo-holic. My argument and fled to the sanctuary of my Then one day, having arrived home at 4 only one at home, and surrepititiously goals. The obsession with that pernicious roomates don't know I'm here, so .. . bedroom where I listened to the ensuing a.m., not in the least bit tired, I discovered pleaded with him to guide me along the road box soared. Soon, I made no attempt to hide Mark Nardone is the executive editor of expletives fly. I wasn't impressed or tempted. that I was at a Joss for amusement. After to Nintendo greatness. from my roommates as I engaged the The Review. 14 · THE REVIEW • March 6, 1990

the song to assert, rather had already thinned substantially. Meatloaf apocryphally, that he was "the The song everyone came to hear Late night f-ing sex god." did not even grab the crowd's full continued from page 13 Yes, the guitarist did briefly play auention. A leng thy break before continued from page 13 his instrument with his tongue the "Let Me Sleep On h" segment With the average song clocking during the song. lost the undivided attention Meat escaped from [Delaware State in at about 15 minutes , dazzling The first older tune, "You Took Loaf had finally won. Hospital]. She ran into the store and but soulless instrumental wanking the Words Right Out of My Then Meat Loaf and Elaine told us that her mother was was abundant. Meat Loafs own Mouth" (1977), exhibited fewer of acted out a mock courtship and Pocahontas and her father was Elvis · perfonnance was equally bad, as if the band's studio extravagances make- out session, the Iauer of Presley," Ann ette says, giggling. 1974 had never passed. and marginally less evidence of which was realistic enough to "Boy, was she a loony tune. We had "Out of the Frying Pan" opened hackish songwriting. indicate that the backup singers are to call the cops from the back room the show with a flurry of activity Amazingly enough, it still fell either very well paid or stark while she threw coffee pots around from the session guys. It then completely flat. raving mad, and got it back. the store." settled down some, intenninable, Audience underperformance They could, of course, have shut Mike adds that all the crazy but not more so than the others, during the sing-along part elicited up and shagged early in the song, episodes seem to blend into one and modem and excessive in all a string of Meat Loaf pejoratives but that's another matter. strange story. the wrong ways. aimed at the attendant "rich college Dispersions which might be cast Shennan recalls a night when he Some adolescent hijinks kids." The threat of being sat upon on SPA's choice of performers asked a young girl for proof that she between Meat Loaf, already then forced a rousing chorus from must, of course, be viewed in light was 18, old enough to buy metamorphosed into a great mound nearly everyone. Jen of the event's sell-out crowd. cigarettes. "She lifted her shirt and of sweating blubber, and the The song ultimately rolled into a Still big after all these years, Meat Loaf failed to prove his Still, Meat Loafs performance exposed her breasts and asked, 'Is backup singers kicked off more '80s mode which seemed to mettle as he behed hackneyed tunes based on one major hit. can only be considered an aesthetic that ID enough?' " "Masculine," an overwrought hard­ make the band much happier. and "Two Out of Thr~ Ain't Bad," punk movement supposedly disaster from any standpoint and, Shennan believes Mike, Annette rock anthem with the stone-age As the set progressed to a boredom bordering on agitation overthrew, finally brought the from another, arguably the worst and Doug are true Newark chorus, "When it's time to get medley of early material including clearly began to grip the less­ audience to something like life. rock concert ever staged at this celebrities. Students say the late­ tough, I'm masculine." the unsalvageable "Midnight at the fanatic members of the crowd. But by the time "Paradise By the university. night crew may be a little different. As if that wasn't enough, Meat Lost and Found" ( 1983), "All "Bat Out of Hell's" galaxy of Dashboard Light" finally came Try again, folks. This one scores but it is always humorous. Loaf interrupted the lame break in Revved Up With No Place to Go" lame '70s rock tricks, which the about in the encore, the audience a zero.

Woolf his past September, the Universi­ The PTTP faculty is composed of production, 6 stage managers, continued from page 13 ty of Delaware inaugurated its recognized experts in theatre and 12 in technical production) T:new Professional Theatre Training training. They are also practicing were selected from over·BSO ap­ other more cruel punishment than Program (PTTP) and, in one bold professionals whose recent credits plicants who auditioned and in­ affection for their life's events, but stroke, established in Delaware include Broadway, regional the­ terviewed in cities throughout the their relationship is not without one of the finest theatre conserva­ atre, film, and television. The United States. Their average age pleasures. Although each rues their tories in the United States. core of our faculty is comprised of is 26 and most had extensive pro­ wedding day, they give the the leadership and teaching staff fessional experience before enter­ impression that each is the only MEET By providing carefully-selected, that created and constituted the ing this Program. person the other has. gifted students with rigorous, internationally renowned PTTP at Because they are younger, John YOUR highly specialized and intense the University of Wisconsin-Mil­ This March we begin our public Ottavino as Nick and Cynthia • training leading to waukee. This proven team has presentations with one profes­ Bassham as Honey bring less stage employmentinthe been expanded and strengthened sional production-the riveting experience to their perfonnances. Professional professional theatre, by the addition of accomplished drama BLOOD KNOT ~nd two Nevertheless, it turns out to be an theatre professionals from across presentations featuring the PTTP advantage which suits their • Theatre Trai.ning ~~~~~~~~!ty the nation, as well as guest artists company- Shakespeare's de­ characters' fewer life experiences. PTTP also and adjunct faculty from major lightful LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST, Their naivete is appropriate and ~.-:--~~ : · '"f ., ':. Program benefitsthecommunity theatres around the world. and Chekhov's immortal THE they make a convincing pair. by making the world's The only drawback to "Who's __ 'C'..,,..,.L..._ CHERRY ORCHARD. gr~ates~ plays available at bar­ The 62 graduate students (35 Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" is the gam pnces. production's length. The audience in acting, 9 in costume must concentrate for a full three I hours, but Albee offers the viewer .~tCJ.GI.l'l~n>~ no comfort or solutions at the The University of Delaware PTTP also * 4. ~ Aua -tf,.~ . play's end. But the effort is well ..ot;"~- worth its goods; it is sharp, benefits the community by making the world's great­ 4 toiQ:'c~ ~otOI!~ professional theater which doesn't 4 t.CI<.V:..S ·~· (~ IL-~"'11"-) lull the audience into a false sense est plays available at bargain prices. of security, while forcing watchers to examine their own decision making. Free Tickets we'll offer a subscription series, you get first choice of seats! Because we want you to get to know us, we are making an irresistible of­ • Receptions follow all perfor­ fer: free tickets to our presentations mances. Meet the PTTP over re­ this year, on a first-come, first­ freshments immediately after the served basis. We ask you to reserve final bows! your seat in advance, using the at­ • Easy to order. Easy to exchange. tached form or by calling or stop­ Just call our friendly Box Office ping in our Box Office. staff at (302) 451-2204, Monday • Enjoy our new, intimate per­ through Friday, noon to 5 p.m. or forming space. We have created send in the order form attached. a 100-seat interim theatre in We urge you to contact our Box Mitchell Hall in which every seat Office in the event you need to is excellent. cancel your reservation, allowing us to distribute your tickets to • Enjoy first priority seating for other patrons. the future. Next season, when

PROFESSIONAL PRODUCTION PROFESSIONAL THEATRE TRAINING PROGRAM YEAR-END. (FEATURING MEMBERS OF ACTORS' PERFORMANCE PROJECTS~ ~ EQUITY ASSOCIATION)~ Will iam Shakespeare's Athol Fugard's LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST BLOOD KNOT April 26, 28*, May 4, 6, 11, 13 From the award-winning author of Thursday through Saturday at Master Harold... And the Boys, two 8:00 p.m.; Sunday at 2:00 p.m. brothers-one dark-skinned, one light-skinned-<:onfront the ten­ The young and romantic King of sions between themselves which Navarre and his three earnest English. PR, Communication, resonate far beyond their native Marlteting and other schoolmates publicly renounce the n:lau:d majors: South Africa. Featuring professional "shallow worldly pleasures" of Chekhov's heartwarming comic rROFESSglNAI IHEATRE tRAINING PROGRAM (Actors' Equity) actors LeWan women, good food, and recreation masterpiece depicts the poignant Alexander and Mark Corkins. for the morally uplifting academic foibles of an aristocratic family who life of pure study and contempla­ live graciously and ridiculously in March 16 and 17 tion. When the beautiful Princess of the face of the coming Russian revo­ TAKE THE CHANCE 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. France and her three lovely ladies lution. Each of the delightful char­ UNIVERsiTyP·T·T·P OF DEI AWARE THIS SUMMER ••• Mitchell Hall, Newark arrive on a diplomatic mission, the acters in thjs bittersweet comedy The Un_iver.slty of Delaware Is co m m itt~ to emurtng tquol op­ portumty lo all ptrson.s and does not dlscrtmlnate on the basis of ADDED PERFORMANCE: men's well-meaning idealism col­ can see the foolishness (as well as race, color, sex, religion, ancestry, nallonal origin, agt, handicap lides with basic human nature. beauty) in others, but is blind to his or veteran status in Its educational programs, actlviHes, admls· ... The T. Elbert Chance March 18 at 2:00 p.m. slons or flmployment practices as tequlrt'd by Title IX, of the Edu­ own endearing folly. cational Amendments of 1972, Seaton 504 of thl" Rehablllt1otlon Paid Internship! Act of 1973, Title VI of the Civi l Rights Act of 19M, and other ap­ Co-Sponsored by the PTIP, the Center for plicable Ualutts. Inquiries concemlng Tille IX, Section 504 com­ • Saturday Performances at 2:00p.m. and 8:00 pliance and lnfomotion regarding campus acceul.blllty and Title Black Culture and the Cultural Program­ p.m. IV should ~ referred to the Affirmative Action Offtct, 307 Hulli­ Earn $1900 while you obtain ming Advisory Boord h•n Hall. (302) 451 -2835. 4 6316MI12-891M knowledge and experience working in the Office of Alumni Relations! To Reserve Your I I. To reserve your seats 2. Pick up your tickets at 3. We will honor your 4. Please call the Box Of. 5. General seating. The­ Seats to the PTTP: call451-2204 or stop Mitchell Hall during reservation until 30 fice in the event you atre Doors open 30 by the Mitchell Hall Box Office hours or on minutes before the per· need to exchange or minutes before perfor­ Candidates must submit: Box Office anytime the day of your perfor­ formance, at that time, cancel your reserva­ mance. Monday through Fri · mance, but at least 30 any unclaimed reserva­ tion. day. noon to 5 p.m. minutes before perfor- tions will be released. • a completed application I monee. • a letter of interest I • two samples of work • a letter of recommendation 30% of our tickets

AppUclllion DeiUIUne is 0 are reserved for U.D. students ONLY! March 23, 1990 GOING FAST!

For more information, contact the Alumni Office at 451-2341. Call 451-2204 & reserve yours today! STODENTS MOST PRESENT I.D. - 2 TICKETS PER I.D. revolutionsMarch 6. 1990 ·THE REVIEW • 15 :Burned out miners? Bazo~ Tracks 1. Baslro: Qiab/o Guapo · (Homestecld) : · ·.· · F-rom land down under, Midnight Oil . 2. Renag~d, _ ~ound ,Wave i · · Soundcl~sh (Mu\~ f=leporcls) .· ··· 'gushes messages which drill to soul 3.The Cynics !Jo_cl<. 'n' RolF (~kyclad/Get Hip . ~~rds) By William C. HitchCock near disco and all sorts of weird, 4 ~ 14 Jce.Ci Be~rs . 14 Iced Entertainment Editor peculiar and unique sounds lurking aears crh(Jhderban) in the Oils' past. t s ~ . ,..agnollas .Dime Store f.. 1 It would be easy to pan this "Blue Sky Mining" builds on the album. various sounds found on their other In no way is this the same "new albums - aboriginal sound effects, artist" which was played to death and even samples of city traffic. by MTV and many Top 40 radio As for the music, it's thick. Real t~J~~~f:iff!izarro (RCA ~~·.i stations a few summers ago. thick. But there is the trifling matter of his Records) . Midnight Oil has slowed down The Oils follow Phil Spector's voice. There arc only two schools · tiHappy Mondays'' . ... , with "Blue Sky Mining" but dictum. Why use two guitars when of thought- hate it or love it. Hallelujah.j2" (EI~tfa) ... , . certainly hasn't burned out. This you can use three? Like "Diesel and With more slow material on this 9, Pale Saints The Con forts ; new album is low key but is also Dust," each track usually displays album, the sc hools are split farther o(Madne$$ (4AD Records) ·more focused than their last effort two acoustic rhythm guitars and a apart with many complaining that · 10. The Cramps Stay Sic!< , '"Diesel and Dust" lead guitar. On top of that, they Garreu just can't sing the slow stuff. (EnigmaRecords) ·:/ ' The Oils have been stirring throw in a bass, some drums, And most of the album is slow The fust track, "Blue Sky Mine," and poppy on "Diesel and Dust" . ,,:::·: things up in Australia since the late maybe a trombone, some backup stuff. Instead of frantically sprinting and the sixth, "King of the was trained this time on their lyrics ~kJr~~~~;;a~ 90~piled Mareh 4 rggo troin wxDRs . ·'70s. They had to their credit no less vocals and, for that special touch, through each track, this time the Mountain," are about as upbeat and and further sharpening their sound. ;:r :than nine albums pressed before Peter Garrett's lead vocals. band seems to saunter along, moving as the album gets. Neither For the most part they succeed in :. ~gr;;].?1#,~ : r~~~P !ir T011,J, .. )}; their American hit "Diesel and Garrett merits mention simply looking at the scenery more often. is anywhere near being a Top 40 honing the edge of their music. The Dust." because of his appearance, hair by Nowhere on this album is a pop type-dance track. album ends up being an epic view ··, f6e :~i : [p _:~ ·· · Digging further back into their Yul Brynner, and for the ideas he anthem in the vein of "Beds are It is as if all the energy they of the land which gave us Midnight discography, there are surf punk, espouses, politics by the Greens. Burning." spent making their music listenable Oil. ) .. S~rap Metal" iS a. nice Ia~ : ; .: buniioi:e s,iibstance is needed for · local metal outfit Deadlyiie's ' :Throwing Muses pitches its new music firSt reteaset ·· I :Chesnut Cabaret concert shows alternative crowd fruits of changes, growth and maturity :By Chin-a Panaccione ridden teenagers into comfortable adults who working with th e Pixies' Kim Deal, Perfect them ," Abong says. ; Staff Reporter want to play music with happier themes. Disaster's Josephine Wiggs and Shannon Unlike Langston, Donnel ly has no "Eighty percent of the songs we're playing Daughton. Known as The Breeders, their just­ intentions of leaving Throwing Muses. In fact, IpSll#io-oecultii#.~~~ Jyrical gibbersh~ · Standing no more than 5 feet 2 inches tall, are new material and we don't know how the completed debut LP "Pod" was produced by she said the band will soon record in Los ,typidiJof many 'metar bands. rts .. ·the baby-faced lead vocalist of Throwing audience is going to receive it," Hersh said Steve Albini, guitarist and vocalist for the Angeles. . s~villg grace is a rampaging •: :Muses appears too small for the red guitar after a concert at the Chestnut Cabaret in now-defunct Big Black. Even with the changes in the members' Metallica)sh riffs and tigti'C . strapped around her shoulders. Philadelphia. "Kim and I were sitting in our living rooms lives and their growth, the Muses seem 4rummingP+ · ·· . "'\ On stage, however, Kristen Hersh changes "This is sort of our goofy tour," said Hersh, playing guitar and we decided to put out a excited, but afraid, to face the public with :into a wailing banshee as she belts out a smile lighting up her face. record," Donnelly said. their new music. At one point during the :psychological, metaphor-laced lyrics. By the She described the new material as mid­ How does the album sound? Chestnut performance, Hersh told the cheering :next song, she becomes an introverted, tragic tempo, a far cry from the driving, manic sound "Uh, I don't know," Donnelly puzzles. "It audience, "I'm sorry you had to pay $8 for a ;figure, reflecting on past insecurities and which propelled them to critical success. sounds like The Breeders." rehearsal." The crowd applauded more !fears. Not only has the Providence, R.I.,-based The Muse's original bassist, Leslie loudly. I Since the mid-'80s, Throwing Muses has quartet's sound been changing and growing, Langston, has left the band. She said she With this litmus test, Throwing Muses :been touted as one of the most original new .but the band members have also been wanted to play and write her own music. showed the Philadelphia crowd that although :bands to crack college radio. There is change pursuing outside projects. David Abond has replaced her. "I taped a its music has grown, it still remains the band :with the new decade, however. In tune with Kersh's stepsister Tanya Donnelly, the video for them one night, and [drummer] which wanted to create something original in !times, the Muses have grown from angst- band's other guitarist and vocalist, has been David Narcizo asked me to play bass for their parents' houses' basement years ago. :- Quick Spins

: Low Profile to sampling an overused Eric B. more news, good and bad. ; We're in This Together beat. The good news is, with the : Priority Records The song "Pay Ya Dues" is a exception of two songs, the poor ; i}i} warning to new rappers that respect vocals are present in only the fast­ on the rap scene is not easily tempo songs. The bad news is most ' lilii&S,,UkeHails ona . b~klx>ard : : Will rappers ever learn? earned, a lesson it seems the duo of the songs have a quick tempo. ; Sampling, the process of removing themselves must also learn. If you can endure the mediocre :sounds and re-recording them in The album's best track is "How fast songs, the slower songs should 1songs, is something very few Ya Livin'," a call for the end of drug be a treat. No matter how bad the : artsists can do well. Not every abuse and violence, increasingly up tempo songs' lyrics are, the i ~~~~~ ; : M.C., DJ. or cutmaster can do it present on today's urban landscape. Raindogs should be given credit for or : a · greaibust~ yer -eardrums ~ a ni6re' · Simply put, sampling is an art Aladdin and Profile also try to writing original bad lyrics. · biffid. Only time and few De La Soul ranks among the inject Teddy Riley's new jack swing -W.S. · bB&i~ wiil tell. · ·most-adept practictioners. Many as a danceable back beat into their OHO Public Enemy have tried to duplicate their debut music on several cuts. Audition Usa Stansfield Welcome to the Terrordome album's, "3 Ft. High and Rising," Low Profile seems as though 0 HO Music Affection 12-inch Single · SUCcess. they come from a formulaic school *~~~ Arista Records Def Jam/Columbia Records This time, Ice T. proteges Low of rap which has been used before. ~~~~ ~'Cti} ' Profile sample sampling with mixed But in today's competitive scene, An album whose fundraiser was ,results. such tactics just won't work. held in a local Veterans of Foreign is the most recent At the beginning of Public On this, their debut album, Low Low Profile should stop trying to Wars Hall doesn't have to be bad. arrival from the new wave of Enemy's newest single "Welcome Profile samples everything from copy others' work and take their British dance artists to invade to the Terrordome," Chuck D. Yet there is no indication from Forever Your : .Eric B. to Special Ed. own talents to the forefront. "Audition's" cover that this is stateside airwaves. declares, "I got so much trouble on ~ ~-; ~~ Ia ~ul On "Aladdin's on a Rampage," -R.J. anything more than an average Stansfield arrives on the heels of my mind," and condenses the ' atri lv~rgln) ·2.' Phltcomns ..; .But D.J. Aladdin and Low Profile stoop and A.U. local band's first album. such artists as Soul II Soul, Mica fallout from Professor Griffs recent Their sound can range from Paris and Neneh Cherry. controversial comments into one of .... ~4!~~~~ . (Ailantic) ..... :3. Jfinet Jackson .Janet country-ish to contemporary She keeps impressive company, the funkiest five minutes and 27 R.E.M.-type jangly guitars. but Stansfield holds her own with seconds available. ::'viffi.$.9fr$}~11ythm Nation , . But the music's quality is what the best on either side of the D., Flavor Flav, Terminator X 1::: t~t1J~Mt :; ..... Coldcut's hit "People Hold On," and 1989's "Fight the Powe r," the ']Cbliitfbtaf: . . Stansfield delivers her own hit, the anthem of Spike Lee's film "Do the $. MllliVarilili ·Girl You Know (Arista) Ralndogs album's first single, "Around the Right Thing." It~ T~e Lost Souls World." Though this song lacks "Fight ;. 7~ Tont'~etty Full Moon Warner Brothers On that cut and other debut the Power's" punch, it is still better '. Fever (MCA) : ·· .. ·Myles Alannah 'Cti} album tracks such as "The Love in than much of the rap music heard 8; ~iannah Me," Stansfield uses a harmonious on the radio today. .: Myie$ :(Atlantic) :$ ; BacK This album would have worked merging of jazz, reggae, pop and The guys in black and si lv er Quincy Jones on ·· tfi~ Eiioi;k' (QWesiiWamer better as a purely instrumental classic rhythm and blues. punch out coherent lyrics and cut a . Bros,) :: .. piece. Title track "Affection," with its groove which makes ya wanna say, 10. Kenny G. (Arista) From the LP's start, The catchy chorus and slow groove, is "Yeah Boyce!!" Li'le Raindogs show a keen sense of perhaps the best representation of The 12-inch maxi-single features From Billboard March 4, their instruments, especially on the Stansfield's moods. three other versions of the song, copyright 1990 by BPI including a vicious in strumental, first two songs, ''I'm Not Scared" Stansfield shows her versatility Communications, Inc. Used with and "May Your Heart Keep and hits the dance noor on cuts like "Terrorbeat," and a short, self. permission of BHiboa!d Beating." "Poison," which is the most named Flavor Flav vocal. Magazine. But the group's innovative commercial of the album's songs, The single, a track from thei r background music, which includes but still retains the album's jazzy forthcoming album "Fear of a Black a smooth blend of harmonica, feel. Planet." follows the rap rebels' Ratings accordion, fiddle, keyboard and With a style reminiscent of summer fall and re-ri sc and ~ ...... just say no guitar, is marred by mediocre Chaka Khan and Quincy Jones, anticipates what is s ure to be ~~ ...... average vocals and lyrics. Stansfield begins what should be a another bcst·sclling P.E. LP. ~*~ ...... good Most of the songs are sung with wonderful career. - R.J. ~i}~fl ...... great a monotonous tone which cuts each -K.R. ~i}i}flfl ...... classiC song's last lyric short. But there is Clulllillda deadtw- •• TUMdaya at 3 p.m. lor Friday luuaa and Frklan at The Review 3 p.m.lorTuaaday 111-. Fl,.tiO word& are S21or atudenta with 10 and 30 canto B-1 Student Center per word thoreatter. Fl,.t10 wordl are $5 lor noo-atudenla and 30 centa per Newark, DE 19716 CLASSIFIEDS wora thereatter. 16 • THE REVIEW • t.LH( l1 6 1990

ANNOUNCEMENT WANTED 366-0285 . We are located in the Newark PLEDGES. Have a great semester and Fraternity. TONIGHT Student Center dining hall MODELS NEEDED lor Sunaatlonal Mexico Wanted: Main Slreet Apartment or duplex. Can Medical Building, Suite 303, 325 E. Main welcome to GREEK LIFE I . 9:00PM 3/8 Cale Sbarro, Main Street 7:00PM fashion show. Tryout.s-Match 13 , 5-8 PM. 310 Allison Add l ~on . Bring shorls, heels (lemales). RESUMES THAT GET RESULTS! 'Proven move In June. will take over leue. 738-9073, Street, Newark and also 911 Washington FASHIOIII MERCHANDISING CLUB will De MICHELE • Here it is. Thanks lor the past two Stteet, Wilm .- 575-0309 years- they've tleen great. Love, BILL bathing suit (if interested In mode li ng them). eHectlve· Resume conaunatlon, co- lertanl . leave message. sponsoring DARLING CREATIONS JEWELRY Reasonable rates. 571 -8089 on 316 • 317 at the Student Center. APPLY NOW - Swimming pool managers, SHINE SOME LIGHT ON SOMEONE'S DAY. Have you seen Turner and Hooch, Uncle Buck, PHI SIG SISTERS : A mixer from us to you . Be & at ATO, 10:30 pm, Thursday, March 8th . Wear '00 THE RIGHT THANG', check out Delta assistant coaches, lifeguards. Many outdoor Give Dlood at the Dlood drive Match 6 7 in PHI SIGMA PI ... LEADERSHIP, New York Stories or Indiana Jonas? Then call SERVICE. a plain colored T-shirt, Dring a permanent Chi. All Interested men welcome. Interest community pools In the New Castle county the Student Center. SCHOLARSHIP, and VIDEO GUY 454-n19 meeting March 6, Dickinson C/0 lounge, 7- area. Phone lor application. Progressive Pool FELLOWSHIP. marker. Get psyched . Nu Pledges On the eighth day GOO aeated Pi lambda Phi SPRING BREAK IN THE FLORIDA KEYS - 10pm. Managers 798-5144 Fraternity. lnt-11 Group Oates: TONIGHT at The American Matketing Association presents $200 - Miami, Key West, snorkeling, fun In the JENNIFER FLACH - Happy 21st Birthday! 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Interest meeting Accountin g/Bookkeeping Majors - local Area pool supervisors needed to oversee Center Dining Hall 316 9:00PM Cafe SDarro on thanks lor coming out b see us - you're a great Tuesday, March 6th, Dickinson CID lounge, 7- business needs accounting/bookkeeping approx. 10 pools located in New Castle county PLANNED PARENTHOOD offers: llirth control Main Street318 7:00PM dancer. -The Dall8s. 10pm assistant. 14-16 hours per week. flexiDie hours area. Phone lor application : Progressive Pool lor MEN AND WOMEN. Pregnancy tests. Non­ (some Monday hours preferred) . $7 .00 per Managers 798-5144 judgemental pregnancy counseling . ADortion. Friday, March 9, 6:30 - II pm at Carpenter Support the OUSC , HTAC and E-52 campaign Go Greek Dec&use everyone's doing it. Go Pi hour (net). 738·3021 Tests and treatment lor sexually lt'ansmitted Sports Building - lamDda Chi Alpha, Accent to save Woll Stage. Put your name on a lam t>ecause only the t>est succeed. 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LOST: Gold rope Dracelet on 2-23 . Reward Male stripper-girls birthdays, etc- 292-2150 offered . Sentimental value. Call BarD 731 - 3229. FREE pregnancy screening test/results while BASEBALL DOUBLEHEADERS you wait. Accurate Information In a confidential atmosphere. Call Crisis Pregnancy Center - Saturday, March 10 vs. Howard - 12 Noon Sunday, March 11 vs. Wilmington College - 12 Noon WOMEN'S lACROSSE Thursday, March 15 vs. Maryland 3 p.m. WOMEN'S SOFfBALL DOUBLEHEADER Saturday, March 17 vs. Pennsylvania 1 p.m. MEN'S lACROSSE Sunday, March 18 vs. Army 2 p.m. SPO TS Marc tl G 1990 • THE REVIEW • 17 Tigers end Delaware's season By David Blenckstone Towson guard Sports Editor Lee shakes past, TOWSON, Md. - For the Delaware men's basketball team, sees bright future Mitchell Powitz this year's East Coast Conference tournament turned out to be a By Josh Puttennan microcosm of the whole season. Sports Editor The Hens (16-13 overall) Team$ $eek accomplished the unusual, breaking TOWSON, Md. - Although it's a 10-game losing streak in the not listed in any media guide or $ucce$$, but tounament with a 57-54, double game program, Kurk Lee doubles as overtime win over Lafayette a travel agent when he's on the court. Saturday. The Towson State senior guard lack fund$ It was Delaware's first win in the pumped in 32 points Saturday and tournament since 1980. 29 Sunday to send Rider and CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - The Hens also played uninspired Delaware packing after the Tigers' When you play with the big boys, basketball in Sunday's 85-71 loss to wins in the East Coast Conference sometimes you lose, big. host Towson State (17-12), which quarterfinal and semifinal games, The Delaware men's lacrosse will face Lehigh tonight in the ECC respectively. And he's already reserved himself L team lost 20-2 Saturday to the final. s University of Virginia, the fifth­ In a roller coaster season when a spot in the Towson record books as I ranked team in the country. the Hens set a home-winning streak the school's leading scorer in the The University of Delaware at 18 games, yet won only once on Tiger's I I years of Division I men's needs to open its eyes and give the road, the ECC tournament was basketball. better support to its athletic very typical of Delaware's play this With all of his feats, one would programs. year. wonder if Lee has any horror stories The Hens cannot expect to After Delaware led most of the of past journeys. compete nationally while not afternoon Saturday, Lafayette sent He lists one. supporting their athletic programs the game into overtime with 13 "I always go back to last year, the the way their opponents do. seconds left in regulation when second round of the tournament," Let's look at some facts. Hens' forward Alexander Coles was Lee said of Towson's 80-79 overtime st • Delaware and Virginia are whistled for goal tending. loss to Lafayette in 1989. "I only had similar in size. About 14,000 Delaware jumped out to leads in four points. undergraduates attend both each overtime period, but Lafayette "It hung with me all during the schools. bounced back. summer. People were telling me, 'If ·c • Virginia gives 14 men's In the second overtime, however, you want to be a great player, you've Cl e· lacrosse scholarships, the NCAA Coles scored six of his game-high got to light.' Last year, arter the loss limit, to the Hens' none. 17 points. in the second round, I just wanted to • About 450 student-athletes in With 0:02 left, he gathered an come back and start the season all 23 sports receive financial aid at inbounds pass from the sideline, over." Virginia, and Delaware only gives rose above three Leopards' The nightmare almost came back financial aid in five sports. defenders and sunk a three-point Sunday as he had only two poinL<> in • The Cavaliers have the 42,000- prayer as time ran off the clock. the first 14 minutes against the Hens. seat Scott Stadium, an AstroTurf All heck broke loose as a pile of Fortunately for Towson, the situmion multi-purpose arena, and the Hens players and cheerleaders formed 10 was rectified as Lee scored 12 of the have the 23,000-seat Delaware feet in front of the Delaware bench. Tigers' last 16 points of the half. Stadium. It was a shot to remember, even He's booked himself in first class • The Virginia lacrosse team more so after Sunday's performance. as one of the greatest players in ECC actually gets to play in its stadium, "We didn't play very well today," history, winning the conference's and the Hens have a nice view of said Hens' Head Coach Steve Mark Haughton and Lafayette forward Richard Soto (left) chase after a loose ball during the Player of the Year award twice. Only Delaware Stadium from their mud Steinwedel after th e loss to Towson, Hens' 57-54, double overtime win Saturday in the East Coast Conference quarterfinals. two others, LaSalle's Michael slick which also doubles as a which missed only four shots in the Brooks and Drexel's M ichacl parking lot. (Oh, I'm sorry, the · second half (15 of 19) and built an Mark Haughton hit a jump shot in "We took advantage of easy baskets was Tigers' guard Kurk Anderson , have won the award Hens do get to play one or two 82-63 lead at one poinL the lane with 13:15left in the game. Delaware's pressure defense," said Lee, the ECC Player of the Year the twice. games in the stadium, but they "To beat Towson, you have to do But the Hens did not score Towson Head Coach Terry Truax. past two seasons. In just two years at Towson, he don't have priority use of it as they a good job on their guards and another field goal for the next seven "Our kids did an excellent job of Lee scored 29, hitting 11 of 18 has accumulated 1,489 points, an should.) rebound better than we did." minutes as the Tigers went on a 17-5 executing and got a lot of easy from the floor. At the end of the first average of 25.7 per game, after Delaware needs to put more Delaware kept the game close run, widening the margin to 69-53 at baskets because of iL" money into its athletic department early and trailed just 52-48 when the 6:03 mark. The recipient of many of those see TIGERS page 18 see KURK LEE page 18 and give more privileges to sports other than football and basketball if it wishes to have a successful NCAA Division I athletic program Women hit 20 wins in the 1990s. "If we had scholarships and decent playing fields, we'd be in the top four in the country," said for 2nd straight year Delaware men's lacrosse Head Coach Bob Shillinglaw after the the field in missing her career high game. By Josh Puttennan first half," senior forward Debbie Although that sounds like sour Sports Editor Eaves said. "We came down to the by one point, set Feb. 26 against grapes, the desire for improvements locker room [at the half] and Hofstra in the Hens' regular-season in the athletic program, such as TOWSON, Md.- After building everybody was feeling intense.'' finale. scholarships, seems to be shared by a 38-20 halftime lead, the Delaware The win gave defending ECC­ Aiding Riley were Eaves' 13 other coaches. women's basketball team survived an champion Delaware its second points, lO rebounds and four blocked Swimming Head Coach John elongated Lehigh scoring run to beat straight20-win season and its second shots and senior center Sharon Hayman also would like to have the Engineers 69-63 Sunday in an straight appearince in the ECC Wisler (16 points and a game-higlt some money to lure prospective East Coast Conference semifinal championship game, played last 16 rebounds). The eight offensive collegiate swimmers to the game. night against Drexel, the No. 1 seed, rebounds Wisler collected were one The third-seeded Hens (20-9, not more than the entire Lehigh team. university. at the Towson Center. "Other teams in the conference including last night's game) were "We talked about ... not having to Sandy Hume, Jeanne Mooney and give scholarships, and we don't," outscored 36-19 in the final 14 play catch-up against Lehigh," ECC Player of the Year Sherie Hayman said prior to the ECC minutes of the game, but the frrst­ Delaware Head Coach Joyce Perry Androlewicz, the Engineers' top men's and women's swimming half Delaware dominance, paced by said. "They're a good free-throw three scorers this season, 11 of sophomore guard Jennifer respectively totaled 17 points; 15 championships. shooting team, and we didn't want to ''I'm not crying, but it sometimes Riley's game-high 18 points, was be in a position where we were points, eight rebounds and five enough to hold off the second-seed assists; and 17 points and six steals. helps," he said. putting them on the foul line at the John Schneider Drexel University, who won both Engineers (21-8) and snap their nine­ end of the game." Lehigh's poor shooting in the first Jennifer Riley goes over Lehigh forward Sandy Hume as the the men and women's game winning streak. Riley, who also pulled down 10 No. 3 Hens beat the No. 2 Engineers in Sunday's semifinal. championships, gives scholarships "Everybody was clicking in the rebounds, hit eight of 11 shots from see LEHIGH page 18 to its swimmers. Even without the money, Delaware teams have done well, Virginia demolishes lacrosse in opener, 20-2 but they could do better. This year, the women's indoor track squad was very explosive." but Shillinglaw was not disappointed with his "Delaware will stay in there and scrap with won the ECC Championships by By Scott Tarpley The Cavaliers didn't take very long to start team's effort. anyone," Adams said. "They're just young defeating schools that do give Assistant Sports Editor the scoring, getting a goal from first-year "Our guys played hard the whole time," he right now, but they'll get better." scholarships. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - Filled with attackman Kevin Pehlke just 21 seconds into said. "I was pleased with the way everybody In last year's meeting between the two Investing in a sports program is hope, the Delaware men's lacrosse team the game. played tough for all four quarters." teams at Delaware Field, the Cavaliers an excellent move. Universities can opened its season with a four-hour trek to the From there, Virginia never looked back, Shillinglaw said the squad's youth may escaped with a one-point overtime victory. increase their marketability with University of Vrrginia Saturday. scoring nine more goals before Delaware have hurt the team. Roe said the Cavaliers "kind of wanted successful sports programs. But the fifth-ranked Cavaliers were finally got on the board. "We're making mistakes and not getting to some revenge for last year, since we felt it was The Bob Carpenter anything but hospitable hosts, greeting the Hens' junior Jon Guth delivered an certain spots," he said. "We've just got to keep a lot closer than we wanted it to be. Sports/Convocation Center is a step Hens with a blizzard of shots which left their unassisted score, with 1: 11 left in the second working and getting better at what we need to "We came out and wanted to get a quick in the right direction for Delaware's guests dizzy. quarter. do.'' start and put them out of the game," he said. sports program, but the university Vuginia (2-0) outshot Delaware (0-l) 68-29 Delaware struck again with only 1:01 left in Senior Erik Lig6 agreed with Shillinglaw. Despite the lopsided score, Shillinglaw is should use it for a lot more than while cruising to a crushing 20-2 victory the contest, when freshman John Wunder "We're pretty young and inexperienced, and optimistic about the Hens' season. just basketball. before a crowd of 500 at Scott Stadium. scored. Virginia is a top-five team. "We'll bounce back, and we'll keep working , Schools which reach the national "This was the best Virginia team I've seen," The Cavaliers were led by third-year "It's a long season, and I'm confident that to get better," he said. "The guys have a good championship level of competition said Hens' Head Coach Bob Shillinglaw. midfielder Gabby Roe, who scored live goals, we'll come back and the young guys will feel attitude and they're working hard. It'll come." have increases in their applicant "They are very aggressive and they've got and Pehlke, who had three goals and three stronger and will improve every game." Delaware's next test will come when it pool, thereby increasing their some great athletes. assists. Virginia Head Coach Jim Adams said he travels to Hofstra University Saturday to take "I lmew coming into this game that Virginia Delaware had few highlights in the contest, was surprised the game was so one-sided. on Yale University at 1:30 p.m. see SUCCESS page 18 1 8 · THE REVIEW· March 6, 1990 Kurk· Lee

ATHLETE OF THE continued from page 17

transferring from Western Kentucky University in the summer of 1987. WEEK Lee sat out the 1987-88 season, In three games last watching his team lose to Lehigh in week, the senior center the ECC final. Along with fellow averaged 14 points and seniors Kennell Jones and Kelly 12.3 rebounds In three Williamson, who also sat out two Delaware victories, seasons ago after transferring, Lee Including two In the and the Tigers have the chance East Coast Conference tonight to avenge the 1988loss. Tournament. "I had my goals ... when I first She pulled down a came to Towson," Lee said. "Our season-high 16 boards goal was the NCAA [tournament Sunday's semifinal win two] years in a row. over Lehigh, 69-63. "It was squashed last year, but I've er : got one mdre year tO go. I think this (l to R) Forward Alexander Coles, guard Renard Johnson, Head Coach Steve Stelnwedel and : Sharon Wisler year's going to be the one." center Denard Montgomery meet the press In the Towson Center after Saturday's win. · Lee has led Towson in scoring in all but one game this season. He .hit would want." In the three Delaware-Towson defensive players I ever played the 40-point mark twice with a On Sunday he had everything that games, Mark Haughton was the one against," Lee said. "He makes you · career-high 44 against the University Towson wanted. Along with his in Lee's way. Naturally, Haughton hit some great shots. I kind or: Sheppard of Maryland-Baltimore County, who first-half binge, he scored 13 points could not do it all himself. relaxed when Haughton was off me. · will be entering the ECC in 1990. during a 16-9 run that put the Tigers "We realize that we have to help "I like when teams throw straight­ makes NCAA As the conference's premier up 63-52 with eight minutes and 48 out on Kurk Lee," Hens' senior up [man-to-man] defenses at me .: player, nothing but complements are seconds left in the game. guard Renard Johnson after his last They give me things. I create s hoL~ · thrown his way. Defending Lee is not easy. Last collegiate game. "He's going to get for myself and create some things meet in 400 "He presents a lot of different season he set a Delaware Field his points. for my teammates." problems for you," Delaware Head House record with 39 points in a "I haven't seen a game this year So when you turn on ESPN at Delaware senior David Sheppard Coach Steve Steinwedel said. losing effon. Earlier this season, the where anyone totally stopped him, 7:30 tonight to watch the ECC set a school record and qualified for "He's strong and he's got good Hens "held" him to 22, a key in the but as far as emotionally, I think we championship game, you may sec the NCAA Division I men's size for a guard [6 feet, 3 inches tall]. 89-77 Delaware victory Jan. 24 in get up for a challenge like that." Kurk Lee book a spot for Towson in provisional meet in the 400-meter He's got just about everything you the Field House. "Haughton is one of the best the NCAA Tournament. dash at the IC4A meet this weekend at Harvard University. Sheppard placed ninth with a time of 47.98 ECC Semifinals Tigers stop Hens, 85-71 Sunday, March 4 at Towson Center Success seconds. Towson State 85, Delaware 71 Instead, he found Tow son Other top finishers for the Hens continued from page 17 Delot'o':~~ ~~~lo 1-3 17, Murray 2-6 0-0 4 , continued from page 17 were freshman Randy Lamben, who forward Kennell Jones in his hip Monl~omery 5-8 1· 2 11, Johnson 2·5 0-0 4, ~~~~h~~~~ t~ 6~ - 6!~~~ t~ ~:~ took ninth in the long jump with a half, Lee scored 10 of the Tigers' pocket. tt Z: notoriety. rf~~~ 1~~~4 - 6 14, Long (>.0 (>.0 0. Totals 28- distance of 22 feet, 4 3/4 inches, and last 12 points. He scored nine Jones stripped Coles of th e ball Villanova University, which won To~~a~~ ~:~l7 - 9 15, Jones 3-6 3-4 9, senior Jim Supple, who took twelfth consecutive points midway through and was fouled as he made an easy the 1985 NCAA Division 1 men's ~~r'£g~ ·::~~. ~~(>.~~.f>-~al, ;; ;~ J.ii1. in the triple jump with a leap of 46-9. John Schneider the second half. layup. He converted the free throw Valon1 ine 0-0 0-1 0, Griffin 0-0 0-0 0, basketball tournament, found the Delaware did not score any team Alexander Coles shoots while "He can drive, he's a good and the Tigers extended their lead to ~h~~&i&gT~;~~i:~'2~~~~g _ o - o o, Brown number of applicants to its school_ Halftime-Towson St., 36-33. Three-point points in the meet Towson's Mike Morin watches. penatrator, an excellent three-point six. goals-Delaware 3-1 1 (Johnson 0-1. triple after it won the title. shooter and he's good in the post "It was a gamble on my part with Hau~h t on 1· 3, Haddock 2-3, Blackhurst (>.2, ~Y?J~2 . \~.w2~~~ ~~/!'.;"cf.Tin r;,·uf~~ Championship-level sports because of his strength," Steinwedel three fouls," Jones said. "You can't out-Cotos. Robounds-Oolawaro 34 (Cot ... programs generate extra revenues ECC Semifinals 5 29 0 Lehigh Sunday, March 4 at Towson Center said about Lee, who hit two of four hesitate. I got it cleanly. 1~s io t~~~aro J ·( Ha ton M.fc!:.on ~l that go back into the school s. {!,~~~t ~: To1al fo~-Dolaware 26, Delaware 69, Lehigh 63 three-pointers. "We needed something to give us Besides more people wanting to go 1 A-2,600 (oot). continued from page 17 DWI= :'/3 1-4 13, Stoffel2·9 o-o 4, Wi&ler Haughton had the unenviable task an edge. We were trading baskets at to school there, Villanova also ia:~~/1~16 ~~-&::r.,~~ ~~ ~ : 2Rr~ , ~ ~:~ of following Lee around the court the time," he said. ECC Quarterfinals 0-0 2, Lipinski (>.1 0-0 0, Larl.1 0-0 0. To1als Saturday, March 3 at Towson Center received a ton of money for its half (six of 28, 21 percent), 29-671(>.16 69. for 40 minutes, but managed to "The Coles steal turned the game Delaware 57, Lafayette 54 (2 OT) 1985 victory. 131 combined with Delaware's relatively Lahl~~~ a ~ -1 2 4-4 15, Gould 1-3 0-0 2, score 13 points and grab six around," Delaware guard Renard Delo~~ ~-~)2 2-8 17, Murray 6-16 0-0 12. Slemaozka 2-9 2-2 6, Androlewlcz 6-22 3-3 17, Monl~omoj 7-10 0-2 14 Johnson 0-4 2-2 2, Administrators know the turnover-free play, gave the Hens an ~~~~ ta~~1 !J,"oVo~~~~,.2i~ -~~ ~~~~g . 1 - rebounds despite this punishment. Johnson said. w:~~~·r~ a! no~~~ ~~tsh&~n ~7~ (>.O o, university must make investments early 12-4 lead. Halluma-oelaware. 38·20. Three-point "Haughton is one of the best Steinwedel did not want to make goalo-Oelaware 1-5 (McCanhy 0-2, Cyborskl 1- l.afo~~?t':, ~~~ 0-4 B. Solo 6-15 3-4 15. to obtain the grants and money ln the ftrsl half, Riley hit all five 2, Lipinski 0-1). Lehigh 5· 19 (Hume 3-6, defensive players I've ever played excuses for his team's play Sunday, Robo~s 2-3 (>.0 4, Slankavago 5-14 5-6 15, Androlewicz 2-7. Mooney 0-3. Lyncl\ 0-3). Fouled needed to better the school and its out-Mooney. Techn ical fouls-none. 'f".:So~l~~~~~2~: ~":~~ ~2 o-o 4, Bishop of her field goal attempts, Wisler Robounda---Delaware 56 (Wialer 18), Lehigh 31 against," Lee said. but Johnson thought playing two Halftime-Delaware, 29· 18. reputation. (Huma 8). Aulsts-Delaware 11 (Riley 5) , Regulation-Tied at 43 . First over1i~Tied pulled down 10 rebounds and lehigh 14 (Hun-e 5). Total foui&-Delaware 15, The turning point in the game games in less than 24 hours may a1 47. Throe-point goals-Delaware 3-9 Why can't they be convinced to 2 Delaware had a 28-12 advantage on Leh l~k (081). came with under 14 minutes left in have hurt the Hens. L~r~~:~~~· ,. _ tf~l\~~~/o.~·l!l'eh•l:. i~J: invest in sports to better the school the boards. the second half and the Hens down "Obviously we had to be Bis hop 0-3). Fouled ou1-Nono. ECC Rebounds-Dalawaro 43 (Coles 11) , even more? Quarterfinals Lafayette 34lSolo 11). Assists-Delaware 17 The Hens took a 50-27 lead with Thur1iday. Marcil 1 at Delaware Field House 49-46. drained," he said. "We wore down If the Hens plan to compete with. Delaware 83, Bucknell 66 ~~~[l~s"2:o.'l!'!!a~~~4~ u_,~~~~·;;g• ~) . 14:08 to go after scoring six Bucknell (156) Coles came down with a rebound emotionally and physically as the A-1,800 (est). the best in any sport, they have to" unanswered points. From there, Ellison 6-14 4-6 16, Bachman 9-18 3·3 21 . and looked for an outlet pass. game wore on." do more than just buy th e ~~~r;2~f ~~ - ~~ io~~:nd~o g_- ~2.,Jl,;2 ~i Lehigh hit four three-pointers and (>.0 0, Smolsklo 1-4 1-2 3. Totals 27-72 12-26 66. equipment. They should usc the: used full-court pressure the rest of DWI5;~:J'el~~12 3·6 17. Eaves 6-17 3-4 15 , best facilities available and recruit the way to come as close as five, 68- fo•~:39-,i. ~-~ ~:: '~-~ ~; r:n~nMo"_<6•g ~J ~~ the best talent. 63 , with 0:21left Cyborslcl 2-<1 (>.~ 4, Bieber 0-1 0· 1 0. Albrinaln (>. Fqr at:l ::'qf ,_, D.elawar.e~s spring sports 0 0-2 0, Llplnakl (>.2 0-0 0, Larkin (>.0 (>.0 0, Buying the best doesn'l ensure Prnchard 1-1 (>.02. To1al5 34-7115-26. FREE THROWS - In the three Halftlmo-Dolaware, 39-27 , Threa-po ln1 success, but Delaware will only get Is- Bucknell 0-3 (Bachman), Delaware (>.1 Delaware-Lehigh games played this cCarthy). Fouled out-None. Technical out of its athletics what it puts into ~ui-Bucknell Coach Howard . ~ -ct.iQp , ; ~, :~:~~ :g :, --~h~ ;;: fle _t~iew to ge~ ·- the season, the Engineers hit 47 of 57 Rebounds-Bucknell 37 (Bachman 1 2) , them. free throws (82.5 percent), compared Delaware 54 (Wisler 14). AsSists - Bucknell 10 f!~~~u~~n~r\n~a~~r~~~canhy a) . Total late~t -li_m.. = • ~··· ~. : ~ ~:~on , yo .ur.:· favor:i.te ::, teams. to the Hens 22-of-40 performance ...... 362. . ·- ·.- .;::.:;; __ -;::··· . · Mitchell Powitz is an assistant (55 percent). sports editor ofThe Review ...... IMPORTANT INFORMATION RELATED ISPA FILM TO FRATERNITY AND SORORITY RUSH · During the past weeks students have seen advertisements in The Review and on signs posted about the campus advertising the Spring Semester, 1990 Rush efforts of fraternities and sororities. The Office of Greek Affairs feels that it is important for students to know Thursday, March 8 which fraternities and sororities have a formal relationship with the University. Any fraternity or sorority not on the list below does not have a formal relationship and the University is And Now For Something not responsible for the activities/actions of such groups. Cornplet ly List of National fraternities and sororities having affiliation with the University of Delaware

DWeRenT Fraternities Sororities Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Phi Alpha Alpha Epsilon Phi -100 Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Kappa Alpha Kirkbride Delta Tau Delta Alpha Omicron Pi -7 p.m. Kappa Alpha Order Alpha Phi Kappa Alpha Psi Alpha Sigma Alpha -50~ Kappa Delta Rho Alpha Xi Delta Lambda Chi Alpha Chi Omega Omega Psi Phi Delta Sigma Theta Phi Kappa Psi Phi Sigma Sigma Phi Kappa Tau Sigma Gamma Rho Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma Kappa - Sigma Chi Lambda Zeta Phi Beta Sigma Nu MONTY Sigma Phi Epsilon PYTHON Tau Kappa Epsilon Zeta Beta Tau (Made Possible by the Comprehensive Student Fee) Sponsored by the Office of Greek Affairs ...... 401 Academy Street, 451-2631 March 6, 1990 • THE REVIEW· 19 ----· ~~------L-~------:calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson GARFIELD® by Jim Davis

11\IS lo\OR~I~G I 1-\~0 A. ~RRIL DRUt<\ . B'i 1.\0\..0\I'.R\\JSIMG OOHN W.,RO , I FO\l\'-10 1 COULD S \ISI'£~0 \<1.'{5£.\..F ~Ft.\'\ It£\ "-~'It "ffi~ G~~O . l Flt>..P?£0 ~r>.ROt.R . f>.\'10 9:m 1 'flft..S ' I :c.\RI~G EI'VOI(TLE.§l'{ Ol£R ~£. iru.S ~D ~\£1'1\00£. ~.I 1. COJ\.0 FlY! l Rl\.0£0 11\'i M~II\.S e/IC'l t>N.D ZOO!'II£0 LOY\ CIJE.R it\£. ~£.~~~~000 . £:'4~~£. Wt>.S A.~t>;l.£D, ll.f\\0 1\\ti ~ A\0\'IG \li\Dt.R 1.1.£: t6 1 5\\CT S'i . 1\\t~ t ~~D llP ~Fil-S\ 1\\t>..T t-l.'i t.'iE.S WI>.TtRtD ~ 1\\t. Wlt-\0. I. I.J..\lGI\tO A.l'ID LA\lG\\£.0, \TIW. C\1\ CIF ~0 ; .20 "'11'<\l\tS Lf>.~ , \£'WE r MA. . STt>.\'-10\\'oiG It-( n\£ CCLI) RAM , Wlo.IT\f'.(G lO 00 TO OCI.\OOL, lo."D I J\lS\ RE"'Etl\ll'C.~£1> I I=OROOI ~~~~ LUIKI.\ .

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THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON

d to hool with. c to th e th e ruit Although it lasted only 2 million years, the The rooster stared back at me, his power and "Just look at those stars tonight ... makes sure Awkward Age was considered a hazardous time confidence almost overwhelming. Down below, a you feel sort of small and insignlflcont." get tor most species. female paused warily at the coop's entrance. I kept TODAY'S into the camera running. They were beautiful, these "Chickens in the Mist." CROSSWORD PUZZLE tant ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED

1 Egyptian RA NT A F 5 At any- •D T• L I MAS 9 A chemical AR lA .A LO E. AD 0 BE 14 Long river DU CT .M I R AC U L ous Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU 15 Unlv. subj. AB E T .E AT .A GE NT S 16 Whittle RA P E s• S H I S H • 17 Chest sound ED E S .E ••• 18 Submarine RE •s PAD gear ••AS o• WA S T E. BO R N E ReAVYf' THIS IS NPR, S T PA U L Ml NN ES OTA ANO YOU'RE: TUN&O 20 Does well p. 22 Ancestor TU L I EM E E R. P I N 70 ... "/..ffe'N'eASY 23 Deposll AB E L L E E T A •• li:OCI

ICAN'T weu '5JAN[) HAVe IT. .. MRE 0 5aJTHING () FM - 1..17C AFTE!i:. THIS ... 20 ·THE REVIEW· March 6, 1990

Center for Counseling and Student Development

STUDENT DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANTS Applications Are Now Available: • earn a $1 ,000 Stipend for the 1990-91 school year • staff the Career Library • present programs to residence halls, student organi­ zations, sororiti es and fra ternities • work a flexible 10 hours a week schedule APPLICANTS MUST CURRENTLY BE IN 11-IEIR SOPHOMORE OR JUN IOR YFAR AND MAINTAIN A 2.5 G.P.A Applications available: Thursday, March 1 to Friday, March 16 from the Center for Counseling and Student Development (above the bookstore) Applications due: Frida}, March 23

ATTENTION: Summer Sexual Assault Awareness Week Employment +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ MONDAY MARCH 5 TUE S DAY, MARCH 6 (Coni I WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7 (Cont I FRIDAY MARCH 9

12:00 NOON - 2:00 P.M. 2 :30P.M.· 4:30P.M. Office of Women 's Affnirs 10:00 A.M. · 11 :30 A.M. .. Protection frum Sexua l Assault' 1 Ul...egal Aspects or Sexual ()fTenses11 Donna Tunes. M.A .. Program "Child Sexual Abuse: Issues in Coon.Jinawr. Office of Wurncn's • Collin11 Room. Perkins S t ud~nl Ctnltr • Coll•n .. R HO IU. Pcrkm ~ S!lldenl c~nter Prevention and Treatment" The Office of Scholarships Affair> Kim Clod ius. B.A .. Direc1or, Rape Polcr ,N . Lcwng. Depumall' Power and Male aud ience is encouraged to examine preventable. What strategies can Gelling Bi1ten" Dominance and Frati•rnity Gang the decisions mnde by th e men and men usc to reach these goals'! • Rod~y Room , Perkin$ Studc-nl c~nle.r Rapr (fonhcoming): wi nner of 1983 women ponrayed. Liane Sorenson. M.S .• Director, the College Work-Study Humanitarian Award given by the THURSDAY, MARCH 8 Office of Women's Affairs, Los Angelos Commission on 7 :00 P.M.• 10:00 P.M. Universily of Delaware Violt!ncc Against \Vomen "Community Workshop on 10:00 A.M. • 4:00 P.M. Donna Tuiles. M.A .. Program Nonviolent Personal Safely fur Resource/Information Table ­ Coordinator, Office of Women's Office at 451-2873 by March A'\ practiced in our culture. is male Affairs. University of Delaware sexuali ty nnru mll)' coercive or is ir \ Vomen!t Supporl Group for Viclims/Sunivors !he resu l! of the power !hal men hold • Nc.,..ark Umtct.l Mcthudisl Church (lounge) of Sexual Offense (SOS) Sexual harrassmem on the job is one 15th, 1990. in our socicry '! Professor Sanday Donnamarie Mazzola. Educati on • Perk • n~ Sludrnt Cenlcr ConcourK of the most explosive issues facing will address this and other questions. Speciali st. Women Organized our workplaces today. As many as Against Rape (WOAR) 12:15 P.M.· 2:45P.M. 70% of women have been sexually 7:00P.M. - 9:00P.M. WOAR serves the Phi ladelphia area uT he Accused" hurrussed in some way. Men can also be victims. What is sexual "Sex and Brotherhood on Campus" offering suppon to victims/survivors Film and discussion harras men!? Wh at forms docs il • 1191\lhn C!ayJVn Hall of rape and sexual assnult si nce I 973. • Ev.·1ng Koom, Perkm' Studcut C'enlcr Pe ggy Sanday. Ph .D. (See above) The worhhop wi ll focus on This award winning fictionalized take? What can we do 10 prevent it, and whal can you do if il happens lo Based on the rcscart·h for her work able strategies to avoid sexual account of the New Bedford . you? fonhcoming book Fmu•rniry Gang assault. Massachu setts barroom gung mpe RaJ11! , Professor Sanday will explore sensitive ly demonstrates both the 6 :30P.M. the connections between fratemity Note: For Information and to register call violence of rape and it 's traumatic liic and violence against women. 656-2721 (child care available). aflennualing al l>elaware: Bow to Get • RcarorPcrtinsStudcm Ccnter (March route will be clearly of Se•uul OffenseiSOS) plays in violence against women. Whal You Want But No l More Than ide mificd and anended by marshals.) • Perkins Student Cc:m.:r Cum:oor!IC Whal docs pornography mean 10 !he You Bargained For" people who view il and the people • Ew.n~ Room . Perkins Studenl Cen1er " Take Back the Night!" is our COUNSELING 12 NOON· 1 :00 P.M. who make their living from il ? Andrea Parrot. Ph.D .. Professor. public outcry against incidents of • Community Counseling ''Beyond Rape: Seeking an End to Dcpanmenr of Human Service sexual assault at the University of Se•ual Assault" \o / f.OfJ ESDA'r' MARCH 7 Studies. Cornell University De laware and in !he surrounding • Addictions Counseling* Film and discussion community. Join us in demonslraling 10:00 A.M .- 4:00P.M. Dr. Parrot. authorofCcping Willi • College Counseling • Co l\111., Room . Pc rlr.ms Studc/11 Ccnlcr Dtm• Rape and Ac:quaintanu Rape the strenglh of our commitment to Resource/Information Table­ action. We need 10 make public our Fear of sexual <~s s ault is pan of our and the fonhcoming book Hidden daily existence. All of us cm1 do Supporl Group for Victims/Survivors unity in protecting the rights of • Elementary School Counseling Rape: s~. nw l Assault Between Sexual Assault Awareness Week something to stop sexual violence. of Se•ual Offense (S OSJ women and all citizens 10 be safe. Ac:quaintalf£'es. Friend.t, and has been supported by funding from the • Secondary School Counseling • Perkms Sn•.knl Center Concoo~ lntimmt.t, is nationall y recognized lo lk>wlng units of the Unl'tle rsity: Office 12:00 NOON· 2:00P.M. of the President, Commission on Racial for her work in this area. Her talk • Please bring flashlighlS, drums. and *Ceriified Addictions Counselor (CAC) Approved Program 12 NOON · 1:15 P.M. signs identifying your suppon. and Cullural Diversity, Commission on uworkshop on No nviolent Personal will hcigh of wo rncn in behavior pattems lead to forced sex . Union. the Offlce of Greek AHalrs and Summer classes a re available. 3:30 P.ll. • 5:00 P.M. popular culture. mo~o,tl y in and how we can stop it on personal Special Programs, Pa nheHenic Coundl, :n.lvenismg. How do the' e unagcs "A Muller of Res pect: Slopping and sociciU IIevcls. Inter-Fraternity Council, th o Off · Campus Student Association. Universi ty rcinfurce and ~ uppo n myths o.Jbout Se ~u a l Horrass m~nf• 1 1 student representatives and r-----VILLANOVA------"·------, UNIVERSITY "urn en an I Yloh:n.:c '! 1 Counseling and Human Relallons Program Alln: James F. Duffy PhD/Director 1 • olhn' Room. ~rlr.m~ Studc:nl Ce nter representat ives of the N ewark and L1ane Sorenson. M .S .. Direcror. Wilming ton commumtJes. 1 Department ol Educallon and Human Services VIllanova. PA 19085 1 I I I Please m21l me lnlorm"llon on your IllS Degree Program In Counseling I

I Name I I I Address I 1 City/Slate/Zip ------1 1 Phone Number .1 L••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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