Special Sports An Associated Collegiate Press Four-Star All-American Newspaper FRIDAY February 28, 1997 Section Volume 123 • THE • Number 36 1997

America East Non-Profit Org. Men's U.S. Postage Paid Newark, DE Basetball Pennit No. 26 Tournament 250 Student Center• University of • Newark, DE 19716 Warrant for victim rescinded • A retaliatory complaint was filed last week in the Pearson Hall sexual assault case

BY ROBERT ARMENGOL AND and finger prints in what has been a "very earlier. But Best returned to Delaware Feb. 21 KELLY BROSNAHA bizarre" situation, she told The Review. identified her assai lants to and filed a complaint with University Nl!lt:'i Editors ·'J feel like if I hadn't been fighting the University Police officers who were Police, accusing Spica of hitting him during Being arre ted wa the last thing system.'' she said of her recent ordeals with patrolling the Zeta Phi Beta-hosted sorority the party, Shipman said . Tamikko . Spica expected to happen to law enforcement party, lead investigator Vincent N. Shipman That day, Best convinced the same judge her when she filed a report with University agencies. ''I would have said. According to Spica's complaint, the who signed arrest warrants for Lee and him Police last month alleging that two men editorial been run over by it." men bit, molested and verbally abu ed her. just days earlier to also sign a warrant for sexually assaulted her at a late-night page AS Spica. the 22--old Court documents show Michael Best, Spica's arrest. charging her with offensive campus party. w ife of a university 21 . a nd Joseph B. Lee, 26. of Rowan touching not resulting in injury. But early this week, before state sophomore. filed a College in Glassboro, N.J., were arrested Spica said Shipman informed her on prosecutors threw out a warrant issued Ia t complaint with University Police Jan. 18 and charged with unlawful sex ual contact in Monday that she would have to ·ender to THE REVIEW I John Chabalko Friday for her arrest. Spica was convinced sayin g she was sexuall y assau lted twice the third degree and released on Feb. 18 - Tamikko N. Spica, 22, shown with her husband he'd have to tum herself in for mug shots during a dance at Pearson Hall a few hours one month after the assault. see COMPLAINTS page A 7 Jon, told police she was sexually assaulted twice

So what're you doing Friday night? Parking problems hit Stonegate apts. • Students living in the Maryland complex are required to buy a permit

BY JAIME TAORMI A heard about it last year so I was Staff Reporter expecting it.'' Students living in Stonegate The permit also allows a law Apartments in Elkton. Md., just enforcement officer to check if a over the Delaware border. received person is staying a short term in a notice last week that they must get Maryland and benefits a students a non-res ident permit for their because they do not have to register vehicles in order to use Maryland's their car. said Agent R obert roads and highways. Anderson for the specia l "At first I didn't know what it investigation unit of Maryland. was,'' sa id senior Rebecca If a student decides not to get a Rottkamp. a resident of the permit. Lang . aid. they can be ·apartment complex located off of ticketed or cited for a mi demeanor. Elkton Road in Maryland. ·'At first I A police officer will not pull a thought it was a ticket but it was non-resident over if they do not just a warning." pos~ess a permit, Anderson said. The students received the They have no specification of who registration violation notice on Feb. is pa5,ing through on Maryla nd 21. said senior Denise Shetzler. a highway' and who is actually resident of Stone Gate Apartments. staying in Maryland for a . hort The notice stated that non-residents period of time. unless they have a of Maryland were in violation of non-resident permit. he said. Maryland vehicle laws. However. once the warning was Maryland vehicle laws state that issued to the 150 non-residents at if a non-resident stays in Maryland Stonegate. a Maryland officer for more than 30 days. that person checks to see if the vehicle is sti ll must obtain a non-resident's permit located on Maryland ground three of from the Motor Vehicle four more times at night. The officer Association. said James P. Lang, will give the students 40-45 days to public information officer for MVA. acquire a permit. before ticketing The permit for non-residents in the vehicle. Anderson said. Maryland costs $20 and allow~ a But Delaware does not require a student to use Maryland facili ti es. non-resident to buy a permit. said THE REVIEW I John Chabalko such as roads or highways. Law Lorraine Angelini. information At first glance it looks as if this sign, which faces Delaware Ave., has been placed as a prank. "The Worst High enforcement agencies also use the operator for the Delaware Division School Play In The World" is actually a student play being performed at Newark High School. permit for identification purposes of Motor Vehicles. and accountability. Lang said. The law does state. howe er. that " It's the law so I can't do after a person li ves in Delaware for anything about it," Shetzler said. " ] see STUDENTS page A4 New RNC chair City endorses calls for unity at race workshop

BY JENNIFER PHREANER notably broad cross-section of the Staff Reporter population, she said. Delaware dinner The city of Newark recently Currently, the university is endorsed the Study Circles Program, an considering adding the progrd!TI to its action-oriented racial diversity seminar battery of diversity projects. joining the seri es sponsored by the YWCA of 90 communities aero s the country that • Jim Nicholson spoke to prominent Delaware. have already participated in the Study "We don't communicate enough Circles Program. state Republicans at Mondays feast with each other in general today." Mayor Ronald Gardner said of his see YWCA page A3 BY ELIZABETH BREALEY said. Delaware's next gubernatori al I John 1.-na.oaum planned partici pation in the program, Nmionni/Statt! Nt!w.'f Etlitor election is in 2000. ''It's a great time to be a Republican," said Jim Nicholson, who "and in this communication age that's ..------INDEX -----, DOVER - The Grand Old Party "We will set the stage for great was elected National Republican Committee Chairman Jan. 17. pretty ironic." is whole-heartedly dedicated to achievements in 1998," Nicholson amendment. on the sixth ballot. Cynthia Cummings, director of Campus Calendar ...... A2 facing the challenge of becoming said, "all leading up to winning the "A ll 55 Republican senators But Thomas Jefferson had to get Residence Life, will lead a university Police Reports ...... A2 the stronger political party in 2000 White House in the year 2000." support it, [the balanced budget 38 ballots to win the presidency, task force made up of other university World News ...... A3 by starting now- three early. Nicholson, Colorado's National amendment] and you have a key Nicholson said. department heads to explore the on­ Editorial ...... A I 0 At the Republican State Committeeman for the past I 0 voter,'' he said, referring to Senate Majority Leader Trent campus po sibility of the Study Circles Comics ...... B5 Committee Dinner held Monday. years. also called for unification. "If Delaware's junior Sen. Joseph R. Lott, R-Miss., after congratulating Program. Clas ified ...... B6 Republicans througho ut the state, we don ' t hang together we' II fall Biden Jr. who has flip-flopped Nicholson on his election, cited the Although Cummings is optimistic Sports ...... B 10 including Sen. William V. Roth. R­ apart." many times on the issue of the $10 million debt of the RNC and about the on-campus future of the Del.. and Rep. Michael N. Castle. He called on the balanced budget amendment, but said, "there's your lawyer and good program, she aid she questions the ---Also inside: --- D-Del., gathered to hear Republic ans to currently supports it. lu ck." logistic feasibility of its instatement this inspirational words from their build a better " We can re-shape America," Nicholson said he is prepared. semester. GOP committee dinner ...... A2 newly elected National Committee stronger coalition Nicholson said, citing the He grew up in a poor fami ly in Gardner said, ''This is an excellent Papa John 's ...... A3 Chairman. with a set agenda. "breakdown in the moral fabric of rural Iowa. "My mom always said, project. I'd like to see it expand. I've Caper talks about sex ...... AS " It's a great time to be a " We need to America" as the biggest concern 'If you kids will study hard. work been impressed with the success of past Hoops tournament...... B I0 Republican,'' said Jim Nicholson bring in more Americans had during the 1996 hard and play hard you will have a YWCA projects, so I expect thi s will Ph ill y Art Museum ...... B I who was elected chairman Jan. 17 , women. more minorities and more elections. better life, because America affords be a success, as well.'' after 20 loyal years of ervice to the young people," Nicholson said. "by In an attempt to a lleviate this that opportunity to people who The program is a seminar series on GOP. Nicholson replaced chairman articulating who we are and what concern. Nicholson called upon the prepare themselves for it."' race relations that leads racially diverse Haley Barbour, who stepped down we stand for." ~epublican Party to stop the United Nicholson, who is also the owner groups of 10-15 people in open-forum last year. Nicholson, who served on the States from leading other countries of a small business, said his interest discussions of race-related issues, Nicholson predicted Republicans RNC's Budget Committee while he in pessimistic statistics like the rates in politics was sparked when he according to New Castle County will prevail in this year's governor was Colorado's RNC chair, said of incarceration and teen pregnancy. "began to feel the intrusive arm of YWCA executive director Ruth races in New Jersey and Virginia. "I Republicans need to dedicate Nicholson, nicknamed government." He began by raising Sokowlowski. Through corporate, want to help you elect a Republican themselves to relieving taxes and " Landslide Nicholson, " worked funds for and advising dozens of non-profit, and grass roots upport, the governor in '98," he mistakenly pushing for the balanced budget hard for his position, being elected campaigns over the past 20 years. program draws participants from a

J :A2. THE REVIEW. February 28, 1997 State GOP figure Castle wants• pnmary• keeps system revamped heat on '. Clinton ·• Brandywine Region Republican chair11JQn /an C. Ting made the proposal last week • The issue of campaign finance BY RYAN CORMIER primaries a more refined process and focuses Natiotwi/Swre Nt: \\"S Editor on those who are truly the mainstream reform angers the DOVER - The Republican State candidates, then I don' t have great concerns Committee dinner was buzzing Monday with it," he said. night with discussion about the party's The disagreement of some Democrats representative proposal to revamp the current primary with the possible change is "not a very 's'ystcm in state-wide elections. compelling argument'' according to Castle. BY RY A CORMIER THE RE VIEW I John Chabalko · The proposal was submitted by Jan C. " I don' t think it is one of those things Natimwi/Swtc: Nt:w'i Edirm Ting, the chairman of a five-member where you should say, 'Oh, th ey are taking Jan C. Ting's proposal to overhaul Delaware's primary system was the buzz DOVER -R e p . Mi c h a el N. Republican committee which looked into away the rights of the voters,"' he said. '·Just of Monday's Republican State Committee Dinner. Castl e . R-Oe !.. is keeping the heat state primaries. remember that in the general primary. only and even if it was up to I ,000. I do n· t think simply having a lot of mo ney ... he said. '· It o n President Bi II Clinton over the :: Among the changes proposed include the 20 percent of those registered voters turn it would get rid or the prima ri es.'' would strengthen parti es and that is probably c hi e f e xecuti ve's " hy pocrit ical" ~suscitation of the old nominating process, out. They don' t try to vote anyway. The reasoning behind the proposal may be a good thing.'' stand on campaign finance reform. :which would meld the current primary and ''It ' s not as if. gee whiz , everybody IS the poss ibi lit y that the Re public an s are In N ove mber's e lec tio ns. Re publican Castl e vented hi s fru stra tion over ~he past convention systems together. The falling over themselves to vote in a anti cipating future events . So les said. Raymond Clat worthy lost to Sen. Joseph R. C lint o n 's " lip-se rv ice" on ~rop os ed system will be debated by the pnmary." "I have a feeling th at peo pl e are looking B id c n Jr. , 0-Del .. b y a litt le ove r 20 re fo rming the c urrent campaign !Republicans at their convention in May. The congress man also noted that the ahea d and see so me h a rd-ba ll prim ari es percentage points. fin ance system Monday, prior to his ,; Acco rding to the proposa l. potential amount of party support often mirrors the coming up. This incl udes a seri ous primary Clatworth y said the pro posal "has a lot o f speec h be fo re membe rs of th e i-'andidates would be required to collect at support of the public. fo r governo r in fo ur years ." merit." though there should be at least some Republican State Co mmittee. ~~ast 500 signatures or receive at least 20 "If you do not have enough strength to get Les li e G o ld s tein , p o li tica l sc ie nce minimal requirements to run fo r offi ce. When asked ho w the cam paign ~erc ent of the votes from the delegates at the 20 percent of the party delegates to support pro fe ssor. said the majo rity o r the pro posal "There s ho uld be some q ual ificati o n s f in a nce refo rm bill he is co­ !;-tate convention. is a good idea. o the r tha n j u st be ing ab le to w ri te o ut a sponsoring is do ing in Congress. ,; In order for the proposal to be enacted , "I think it is better for the part y to have check to get in to a primary.'' he said . Castl e an swered ·· not well '' ~oth Democrats and Republicans must pass more control because they can pi ck people A ltho ug h said req ui re me nts are a good "As I speak. Bill C linto n is at a ,! through the legislature. "It's not as if, gee whiz, that are mo re loyal to th e parties beli e fs ... idea. he doesn·t be li eve a c ha nge i n the fund-rai ser with corpo rate interests : . " I ' m hopeful that Republi c an s will everybody is falling over Goldstein said. ''When the pub li c has more sys te m wi ll direc t ly effect hi pa rt y ' s ra is ing $500.000 in soft mo ney. :{upport it by a large measure,'' s aid Ting. themselves to vote in the contro l. they c an pi c k a ny ri c h pe rson or success in future e lections. Yo u te ll me how the fundraising who is al s o the chairman o f the GOP's celebrity." ''Whe n you have a bad campaign cyc le bill is go in g,'' he said. "You have a l!irandywine Regio n. primary." She cited the 1994 Se na toria l race In like we di d in 1996 . yo u can look fo r a president who gives lip-service to it •: "The real challenge will be getting it Califo rn ia between Republican m illi o naire w ho le lo t of as in ine reasons w h y ." and th en he goes o ut and violates it }~rough the legis lature ... that is the big - Rep. Michael N. Castle Michael Huffingto n a nd De mocrat Dianne Clatworthy said . "I' m not sure that if any of o n a weekl y basis ... iquestion. Democra ts are basically in the Feinstein. Huffington spent more than $25 th ese t hings were in place. it wo ul d have W o uld the co ngressm an ;same position we are in and they o ught to millio n of hi s o wn money in a losin g cause. made a d ifference in th e o utcome. c ha rac te ri ze the pres ide nt's ;;:Upport us." y ou , you will probably not ge t public but lo st by o nl y one percent. ·'In 1994. th e same rul es were in pl ace beh av io r as worse th an I• Ting said he was espec ially co ncerned support either,.. he said. So les recogni ze s the po int. b ut said a ll and the Republicans had a wonderful year.'· hypocritical '? ~bout the appearance of mo ney buy ing a James R. Soles. a political sci ence alumni rich candidates do not always do th at well . Terry R . Spe nce. th e state Speaker of the " Hypocriticarr he asked. 'That ~~pot in a primary. distinguished professor, said the old system ·'The most recent Republican presidenti al Ho use, said the pro posal w ill save eac h is no t the wo rd for what thi s is. · " It is peculiar that we now all o w a was a " mess.,. prin'lary w o uld indi cat e so m e th i n g part y a large amount of mo ney and grief. This is terrible, just terrible.·· ~lecti o n challenger with filin g fee in hand to The o ld s y s tem " was not very party ­ different." he said. " Steve Fo rbes put in a lot '·Yo u have well meaning peopl e who want Castl e was not shy in di splayin g ~orc e the state to condu c t a primary c o ntro lled and it amounted to a s ort of o f hi s own fortune and didn ' t do very we ll." to run but they get less th an five percent at his di s appointment in Clinto n 's election: · he said. ··we do this even if that Mickey Mouse primary," So le s said. A s soc ia te po liti cal sc ie nce pro fesso r the convention. still hang in there. put th ere h a ndling o f c a mpaign fin a nce challenger has n o t a s ingle s uppo rt e r He said he does not believe the proposal Daniel Green said the proposed changes to name on the ba ll ot and then while it is in th e refo rm . -anywhere in the state.'' will be effective because if the candidate the system may strengthen political acti vism primary. it costs us mo ney.·· Spence said. '·In fact. of all the issues I have ,. Altho ugh bo th sides o f the debate have cannot get the 20 percent at the convention. and di scipline. "If you a re j ust th ere as a n ind iv idual ever dealt with the pres ident o n. ~ood points, Re p. Michael N. Ca ti e, R-Oe!., the y can opt for the 500 signatures and "Thi s would mea n th a t b e in g a good running, th en it j ust throws everyth ing o ut o f thi s is the one in which he has ;;aid he is indifferent to it. •·anybody can do that.·· member of the part y and known in th e party whack ." s hown the least veracit y and has i '·If this is a way o f jus t makin g the He said it '·o nly requires 500 signatures, would be m o re impo rtant as o pposed to been th e most hypocritical. .. .•~ Roth, Castle flex GOP muscles at state dinner • -The senator and representative were angry at a lack ofprogress, however

BY ELIZABETH BREALEY first I 00 days than any other " Every American family should federal governme nt should no t do Ncllirmai!Swte Neu·s Editor Congress in history . be able to save $2,000 - tax free ... the same. . DOVER- Rep . Mi c hael N . D espite thi s. Castle said both Roth said. Money could the n be "It is going to be a very. ve ry ~a s tle , R-Del.. and Sen. William V. Clinton and Congress have enjoyed use d to save for children' s hard vote.'' Castle said. He the n Roth , R-Del. attempted to update higher a ppro val ratings from the education . retirement o r the first entreated the audience to ask Sen. the Republican Party on the latest American public. '·Maybe there is a fami ly home . Joseph R. Biden, 0 -Dcl .. to vote for workings of Congress, but had little lesson to learn in that. if you don' t Roth a lso attacked the Internal the balanced budget amendment. (o say. do much, people seem to like you Revenue Service. "We need to make '·I think he is. but we might want ''The House o f Rep,rescntati ves better. sure [IRS] knows it's the servant of to make sure that is taking place.'· has not done enough to tell you "This makes me nervous about the people- it 's not the lord." he said , refe rring to Biden ' s abo ut.'' Cas tle s~ id at the what we are doing down there." He did not. ho wever. approach inability to make up hi s mind on the Republican State Co\Timittee Dinner Castle said. referring to Congress's the controversial balanced budget balanced budget amendment. Monday. " It 's a /wait and see work in Washington. D.C. amendment. Castl e and Roth both spoke o f the approach - we wait to see what the Roth . who is also chairman of the Castle did. strength of th e Republican Part y. president will do and then we will finance committee, echoed the view " I fundamentally disagree with " We are a pa rt y whi ch beli eves in react to it." of newly elec ted Republican all those individual s a nd the efficiency. a part y which believes in Roth . fre s h from a trip to National Committee Chairman. Jim economists o ut th e re who say w..: less governme nt interfe re nce and Sevastopol. a Ukrainian port and Nicholson. of the necessity of relief don·t need it." Castle said regarding s pending less mo ney but letting military base on the Black Sea , from taxes. "Taxes do not bode well the balanced budget amendment. peopl e go the ir o wn way.'' C as tl e spoke about many issues, but had with American familie ."Nicholson ''They have no sense about public said. nothing new to report abo ut the THE REVIEW /John Chabalko said. financing whatsoever.'' " Next elec ti o n.'' Roth s aid , Fresh from a trip to the Ukraine, Sen. William V. Roth spoke Senate. Roth agreed. " Something is Castle said state governments are " we · 11 have 60 republican senators, This is unlike the Co n!!ress two wrong when the typical American balancing their budgets. managing so the Democrats can ' t filibu ster our at the Republican State Comittee Dinner Monday. "Something y ears ago. he s aid. The 103rd family is paying more in taxes than their finances and reducing taxes. legi slati on." is wrong when the typical American family is paying more in Congress passed more bills in the spending on clothes and food. yet people continue to s a y the taxes than spending on clothes and food," Roth said.

~ CAMPUS CALENDAR

I( s getting warm a I itt I e Lesbian , Gay and Bisexual e a rly. You could use the St udent Union will be hosting Police Reports opportunity to go out and enjoy an alternative dance at Club 814 the weather, or you could enjoy in Wilmington. a few indovr activites around The film "Do the Right campus. Thi n g" will be s hown at ROAD RAGE IN NEWARK BAGEL SIGN STOLEN Newark Po li ce said. Today is the last day for midnight in the TUC tonight. It An unidentified Mmyland man kicked Two males stole the wooden Newark student recipients to sign can also be seen on Saturday at According to po li ce. the woman and her the door of a 24-year-old Newark woman's Ba!!el sign from the front of the business boyfri end were walking on Elkton Road at Perkins/ nursing loan 8 p.m. in the TUC. car Wednesday morning after the woman early Wednesday morning. Newark Police the East Park Place intersection when a promissory notes for spring On Saturday. the m e n 's cut him off. Newark Police said. said. four-door maroon sedan pulled up behind semester. basketball America East Police !!ave the followin!! account of the Police gave the following account of the them with the headlights off. It is also the dead! ine for quarterfinals can be see n at incident: - - incident: An unidenti fled occupant of the vehicle filing applicati ons for graduate noon, 2, 7 , and 9 p.m. at the Bob ll1e woman was traveling eastbound on Newark Police officers observed two threw two eggs at the woman and then assistantships, fellowships a nd Carpenter Center. Elkton Road. approaching· Delaware men standing behind the Newark Bagel drove otT, police said. traineeships. In orde r to help ewark Avenue. when she mer!!ed into the left sign on Main Street at I :23 a.m. The woman was not hurt. police said, Blu e Hen yearboo k se ni o r residents, students and staff wi II Jane. In doing so. she c~t otT a black Grand After officers drove by the individuals. and no suspects have been located. pictures will be held today from resolve disputes before they Prix with Maryland tags. they stole the sign. which is valued at $350. 9 to 4 p.m. at the TUC. escalate. There will b e a The driver of the Grand Prix then and ran bet ween the bagel shop and Mellon BURGLARY AT THE CHRISTIANA Tonight , the men's meditation s kills training honked his horn. shouted at the woman and Bank to the rear parking lot. WEST TOWER basketball team wi II be playing workshop at the P e rkins gave her obscene gestures. Officers observed the two men ncar An unknown subject stole $525 worth of When the two vehicles were stopped in their truck in the parking lotm but the in the America East Student Center fro m 8:30 a.m to cash and clothes from a Christiana West traffic at the Delaware and South College subjects 11ed when they saw the police. preliminaries from 7 to 9 p.m. at p.m. Tower apartment S~nday evening, said 5 Avenue intersection. the man got out of his ll1c two men were later seen on Main the Bob Carpenter Center. There w ill be a 1997 World Capt. Jim Flatley ol Umversity Police. car. Street. taken into custody and charged with Accordmg to Flatley, $340 in cash. a In addition , " Oedipus Rex" Send-Off ice s how on Saturday He began to shout at the woman again theft and conspiracy. One of the men was will be presented by the at 5 p.m. in the Blue Ice Arena. leather jacket, two silk shins and vmious and kicked the driver's side door of her also charged with underage consumption creJit cards were stolen from the Professional Theatre Training The show features university, vehicle before he got back into hi s car and of alcohol. apartment. Progr a m at Hartshorn Hall at world and O lympic competitors. drove away. - 7:30p.m. Singer and so n gwriter Dar Police have been unable to trace the DRIVE-BY EGGI NGS PART TWO The fi I m " Get on the Bus" Williams will be g1v1 n g a man· s license plates. but are continuing to A 2 1-year-old Newark woman was investigate the incident. can be seen at 9 p.m. at the concert at Mitchell H all at 8 struck by two eggs Wednesday night. -compiled bY Angela Andriola Trabant University Center p.m. theater today . It will also be shown at II p.m. Fro m 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. the - compiled by Adam Sloane

,J February 28, 1997 • THE REVIEW • A3 • 'RSA lS the volce of university students,' President Eli Lesser says Promises fill state of RSA address

BY DIANNE DOUG HE RTY be students of the But Lesser said the RSA does believe said, '"w hen the students returned in the Co/1\ Editor first and be proud of what that means." fighting the problem means educating the Spring Semeste r there was a new bus C ONGRESSMAN APOLOGIZES A FTE R Eli Lesser, president of the Resident He said RSA has already begun to entire swdent body about the dangers of schedule ready for them with some more SAYING N B C'S A IRING O F Student Association, delivered the 1997 unify the university by developing close excessive or binge drinking. changes still to come." · "SCHIN D LER 'S LIST" BROUGH T "State of the RSA Address" Monday relati o ns with the Delaware Lesser also announced RSA's support Lesser also pledged the group'"S" NETWORK TV TO "AN ALL TIME L OW" afternoon to a small Collins Room crowd Undergraduate Student Congress and the of Student Life Telev.is io n and its support o f campus events. "We believe in Perkins Student Center. Blac k Student Union . " With the programming. He stressed the importance that in o rder to receive a complete W ASHI GTON - R ep. T o m Coburn, R ­ Lesser announced that the second­ combination of these three groups we ani of stude nt-run media and the expansion educati on at the university,'' he said, ''the. O~l a., apologized W edn esday for hi s c ritici s m s largest student group, now in its 25th year starting to get the word of unity out to all of SLTV as the fastest-growing student learning must not stop at the classroom." • ot the network television broadcast of . on campus, " is doing well ." students.'· group on campus. RSA contributed over $5 ,000 last ··Schi ndle r's List." sayi n !! he did no t inte nd to RSA is the voice of uni vers ity Lesser a lso to uched on the issue of "We believe that SLTV is going to be semester to help support residence hall diminish the si!! ni fica nc; of the murde r of students, Lesser said. He accepted the alcohol u se in hi s s peech . RSA has one of ours, and all the students', greatest and other university programming. Lesser m illio n s of J ew~s in the H o locau s t. res ponsibility to tackle th e problems of worked closely wi th other groups and tools and assets in the very near future," said RSA will continue to support these On W ednesday Cobu rn backtracked. re sident student s. w hich make up about committees since the university received Lesser said. programs next semester. a po logizing n o t so much for hi s c rit icism but 50 percent o f the unde rgra duate the Robert W ood Johnson Foundation RSA is also in favor o f upgrading RSA was also respo nsible for the for the way his comments were taken: ··r feel population. Grant to combat th e problem of binge cable lineup in residence halls. · addition of the po larwave, a te rrible that my criticism of NBC for ai ring thi s Among such problems, Lesser said, is drinking last year. The address foc used on recent refrigerator/mi crowave appliance, to the· m ovte was misinterpreted. I offer a n apology to the fragm e ntatio n of the unive rs ity RSA is not in favor of a "dry campus," achi evements o f RSA as well. Lesser rental options. a ll whom I h ave offended a nd personally population. He called for ·'every single Lesser said . "We feel that it would be a a nno un ced the largest issue the group Lesser concluded by calling upon the a p o logize for appearing in sen si ti ve to the worst student whether he o r she be a freshman very unwi se decisio n by the ha ndled was the new university bus uni versit y administrati on and over 170 a trocities known to man ." or seni or, black or white. resident or non­ administrators to make the University o f system, which students were not sati sfied student groups for cooperation to "make S en. Alfonse M. D 'Amato. R -N.Y ., told the resident, Greek or no n-Greek, o r a ny De laware a dry campus. It is a proven wi th. life o n th e campus of the University o( Sena te Tuesday night t h a t ·'to equate the nudity other group on thi s campus, [to decide] to fact: prohibition does not work."" RSA approached the issue, and Lesser Delaware even better. of the H o locau s t v icti m s in a con centra ti o n camp with any sexual connotation is o utrageous a nd offen sive. I am shocked a nd app a lled that a n y member of Congress would make th ese CONVERSATION kinds of s ta tements. 1 am particularly embarrassed tha t they were made by a member SMART to begin PIECES I' of my own party.'" On M o n day. Coburn , a second-term QUOTE OF TilE WEEK U.S. history. lawmaker who is co-chairman of the "STRAIGHT will not conform to Time Congressional Family Cau cus. criticized the the university. The uni versity will March 3, 1997 network for exposi n g c hil dren to the f ilm's training this week conf01m to us because we abide by the "violence ... v il e language, f ull frontal nudi ty First Amendment. We are going to According to the Census Bureau. and irresponsible sexual activi ty. It sim ply bring this school to its knees." 40 million Americans lack health BY ERIN DEA sides. Darin Loccatini , a 27-year-<>ld Penn insurance, including 13 million women should n ever have been allowed on public Cop.1 Editor televi · ion." " I stro ngly be li eve in comm unication State student and founder of Students and I 0 million children. The Student M edi ation Action and between the community and th e uni versity," Re inforcin g Adherence In On the Issues CONGRESSWOMAN MEETS WITH Response Team, a program inst ituted by the Shurtleff said. ''I'm looking forward to bei ng Heterosexual Tradition, insisting that Spring, 1997 FATHER OF EMPIRE STATE BUILDING Delaware Undergrad uate Student Congress, part of the program because I feel I can be of he will not change the group's mission SHOOTING VICTIM will begin their mediation training program help ."" statement whi ch mandates that its The birth contro l pill does not this weekend. T he low number of resident volu nteers members refuse to accept or support increase your long-term risk of breast WASHINGTON- As rlPUtil< h~vf' triPkiP.rl SMART. a program designed to settle could be due to the intense traini ng schedule, homosexuality. cancer. out over the past few days about the g u nman conflicts between o ff-campus students and Geist-Giacomini said. Fit who opened fire Sunday on tourists a top the Newark residents, wi ll go into e ffect in late "Two back-to-back weekends are a lot of 18: Miles of asphalt road in the March/April, 1997 Empire State Building. R ep. Carolyn McCarthy . M a rc h upon completi on of the train ing time to invest,'' she said. '·In the future we United States the year South Carolina D- .Y .. has fel t a sen se of eer ie fami liari ty. sessions. might try to be more con>cious of what works senator Strom 1l1Um1ond was born. Population of China: 1.2 billion Like Colin Fcr!!uson. the man who ki ll ed her The training program, created through the for students and what work s for those that Hwper"s Index Population of the United States: 264 husband and wou~ded her son in the 1993 L ong combi ned effort s of Assistant Dean of have a fami ly.·· Feb., /997 million Island R ail Road massacre, A li H assan Abu Students Nancy Geist-Giacomini and DUSC. Duri ng the training process, mediators wi ll People per television in China: 6.7 Kamal. the Empire State Building gunman. wi ll take place over the nex t two weekends learn to put power back into the hands of the Campaign contributions made to People per television in the United came to New York then went to a no ther state to and last approximately 35 hours. parties involved in the conflict. Gei s t­ President C linton by Hollywood States: 1.2 legally buy his gun. Like Ferguson. he c la imed "It's a huge time commitment and it makes Giacomini said. celebs: Millions of troops in China: 3.0 a motel as his residence. Like Ferguson. he was people apprehensive about getting involved,'' Role-playin g wi ll be one of the acti vities Haim Saban (producer of the Millions of troops in the United an immigrant who came to this country in said Meghan Foster. co-chair of DUSC's ofT­ used to give vol unteers a sense of how Mighty Morphin Power Rangers) - States: 1.5 searc h of the American Dream but tnstead campus student affairs committee. ''But it wil l mediation works. $327,500 Ne.vsweek commiued a b loody rampage laden wit h venom be an invalu able experience in the long run."" For example, a scenario will be presented to David Geffen- $224,800 March 3, 1997 against some perceived tyranny here. Approximately 25 students and eight non­ two disputants who will act out their Steven Spie lb erg and Kate For McCarthy. Sunday's shooting has students have appli ed to become volunteers in respective roles. Two mediators wi ll then Capshaw - $228,000 inevitably rekind led the pain of los ing her What smokers who bought the program. Of these eight people th ere are arri ve o n t he sce ne having minimal Barbara Streisand - $82.400 cigarettes every day for 50 years at husband a n d almost losi n!! her son Dec. 7, four university faculty and staff members, two information about the si tu ation and be required 1993. when Ferguson ope~ed fire on the Michael Douglas-$47,000 $1.75 a pack would have if they had Newark residents and two graduate students. to use learned mediation skill s to settl e the George instead banked that money each week: commuter tra in. Geist-Giacomini said. contlict. Tue day evening after talking with fellow March. 1997 One pack: $ 169,325 Acco rdi ng to Foster, the ideal balance "Some ro le-plays will last froni 45 to 60 freshman Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., a colleague Two packs: $338, 650 would have been 15 students and 15 resident minutes:· Geist-Giacomini said. ·'It gets to be whose constituent s inc lude the parents of "Use of this product may be Three packs: $507 9.76 volunteers. a very involved process."' Empire State s h ooting victim M a tthew Gross, hazardOus to your h th. Thls product - USA Today "W e've passed out applications at [city] Throughout th e fo ur-day training peri od she decided to talk with Gross' fa ther. Gross, contains saccharin which has been Feb.20, 1997 counc il meetings in order to drum up a better inc reas ing ly difficult role-plays will be who was shot in the head a nd lies i n a coma, is determined to cause cancer in response from the community;· she said. '"The 27. McCarthy's so n , K evin, was 26 when he incorporated into the curriculum. she said. laboratory animals." Approximate number of web sites: a dult volunteers who ha ve signed up a re was shot. also in the head. Once trained, SMART volunteers must be Warning on a packet of Sweet 'N June 1993- 130 . ''The first thin!! s he said to him was, ' I know; enthusiastic and will be a great additi on to the available for possible mediations at least two Low Jan. 1997 - 650.000 it's so hard."' said B c neva Schulte, M cCart hy's program." ni ghts per week. Scientific Ame1ican chief of staff. ··Everyone on the staff was in Alice Shurtleff, who has been a Newark Volunteers ' ski ll s wi ll also be peri odicall y Bill Gates is worth $ 15 billion, March, 1997 tears."' resident for over 30 years and lives near off­ tested thro ugh the use of mock mediation making him the 3 1st ri chest man in -<:ompiled b1· Scoa Coss campus student s, said she can relate to both acti vities. Geist-Giacomini said. CLI NTON & WHITE HOUSE SLEEPOVERS COME U NDER SCRUTINY

. WASHINGTON- President Cli nton Wednesday defended as ··entire ly appropriate" YWCA to his p ractice of inviting wealthy donors to the White H ouse. bu t a key H ouse R epublican char!!ed that new evidence of Clinton's direct Papa John's makes its involvement justifies a "bigger ana broader'' host race In vestigation of White House fu nd-raising acti vi tics. "' ] don't think people who support you and home in Newark relations help you thro ugh tough times and who believe in what you' re doing s ho uld b e di squ al ified from being the president's guest at the White progran1 H ouse." Clinton said durin!! a news con ference. BY DAVID REICHLIN when I li ved in Virginia. I' II definitely be ordering from · The p resident. trying to deflate the Staff R~ptJrter them a lot." balloonin!! controversy over D emocra ti a fund­ For Newark. there wi II soon be more sauce for the Like a ll pizza shops located in Newark, Papa John's continued from page A I raising efforts. said it was his fami ly- no t dipping: Papa John 's Pizza is opening its fourth store in wi ll rely heavi ly on students for business. Papa John 's is Organi zers of University United, an taxpayers - who bore the cost of Delaware thi s Saturday in the Ast ra Plaza on Elkton Road. current ly talking with the universit y in o rder to set up annua l o n-t:a mpus diversity event,, accommodatin!! White H ouse v isi to rs. "seven­ Even with establi shed pizza places such as Pi zza Hut , student discounts compa rab le to Domino·s Pi zza's commented Monday on the e ighths" of whom he had relationships with Pizza Plus and Ganello's Pi zza in th e same vicin ity as "Midnight Madness'" deaL which offers student s $5.99 uni versit y's track-record with simi lar" '"i ndependent of my campaign for president in Papa Jo hn' s. manager Shawn Maguire said he is not pizzas after 12 a.m. programs. '92."' worried about competition. Papa John' s stri ctl y sells pi zza with a vari ety o f Zenobia Hikes, assistant to the vice "lt" s something that you have to be aware of and know toppings. Weekday hours are II a.m, to 12:30 a.m. and it pres ide nt for student life said G R AMMY'S AWARD CLAPTON, what you' re up against but we"ve done well in oth er is open until I :30 a.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. University United. perhaps the CLINTON, BECK, BEATLES AND THE markets,'' M aguire said. of the chain sto re based in W it hin a minute's walk of Papa Joh n's li es a major uni versity's largest- cale single attempt SMASHI NG PUMPKINS Kentucky. competitor. Pizza Plus. to bring the races together on campus, Maguire said he is confident that Papa John's will Pi zza Plus manager Pe te r M ackay said he is not was a learning experience. EW YORK - The 39th Annual Grammy thrive in a uni versity atmosph ere. " Papa Jo hn 's is alanned by the opening of the Papa John 's franchise tight Awards was a historic occasion W ed nesday. In '·We have found open dialogue and competitive price-wise but our foc us is on quality and nex t door. a comforting, no n-t hreatening the nonmusical category. a .resident of the serving a be tt e r pi zza." M aguire said . '·Quality is 'The students know that we are the true late-night pi zza White H ouse took home a s tatue. environment are very important to · definitely our d e livery successful discussion of uncomfortable Firs t Lady Hill ary R o dha m Clinton - the number o ne s h 0 p . .. first White H o use occupant ever nomina te d for issues [such as race relations],'' she issue and Mackay said . a G rammy - w o n in the s poken word or said. that's what " We do the no nmusical album category for ··It Takes a Hikes said she thought the premise we focus majority of Village," her recorded reading of her bes t­ of the YWCA Study Circles Program · on.'· our business se lling book on child rearing. - a round table discussion - would · Other key winners included Eric Clapton, the E v e n bet ween two be beneficial for race re lati ons at the legenda ry Englis h rock gu itari st. who won tho ug h this and four in university. record of the year the second tame 111 ftve years, pizza chain is t h e Junior Jamie Wise agreed. Another· thi s time for "Change the World," a gentle tale new to the morning ... key organi zer of University United, of romantic devotion . C lapton won two other Newark area, Papa John' s Wise cited some pitfall s of similar ' awards to bring his career total to 12. students are pl ans to open programs. Beck, whose ''Odelay" a lbum was t he most l ook i ng e ig ht mo ' e "People tend to loose interest, so . critically acclaimed work of 1996. won awards forward to stores in you have to start out big," he said. for best male rock vocal and best alternative the opening. D e l aware. "Also, you have to have equal numbers music performance. " P a p a but only time of each race [participating], so people ' The Smashin!! P u mpkins, w ho lost a John's has wi ll tel l if fee l comfo rtable talki ng about issues.'' keyboard p l aye~ to a heroin overdose j u s t really good Papa John 's Local e nthusiasm fo r the Study before they were to play at Madison Square pizza, th eir will be Circles Program remains high, marked Garden last summer, won for best hard rock dipping suct:essful in by the participatio n of Wilmington­ performance. sauce is the a town based corporations like DuPont. and The B eatles won three Grammys, two for best pan ,'" already local leaders, like Gardner, while the " videos and the other for best pop per formance sen t o r cl utt e r ed universi ty continues to deliberate on its by a duo o r group for ··Free As a B ird ._" T he C hristo pher with pi zza THE REVIEW I John own possible involve ment with the son!! was recorded by the th ree survtvtng Mulvy said . joints. program. meJ:ribe rs from a tape left beh ind by t he late "I ate t he re 'ra.in,ees learn the art of kneading dough at Papa John's, located in T he YWCA is still looking for a II t he time ______...J John Lennon . E::!!!.!:.....!...P.:.:Ia::;z::,:a~o:.:.:n:..E:;:.:.:Ik:.t!.:o::..:n~R!.:o::..:a:!:d:.:.-;._ participants for Study Circle groups to meet locally between April .and June. -compiled from the Wash ington P ost/ Los Angeles T imes neH·s ser vice by Ryan G . For more information on the program, Cormier call Faye Bonneau at 368-91 73.

) I ~A:4~·~T~H:E~R~E~V~I~E~W~·~F~c~b~ru:a~ry~2~8~. ~1 9~9~7 ...... - ...... - ....-.~-...... ~ Morris displays 'New network speeches of helps students ..1 -black leaders sOlve problems • The exhibition was set up to • The Office of the Dean of Students celebrate Black H istory Month set up the program, which can be accessed on the Web BY JlLL M. HEROLD since this vehicle fo r expression has Srafj Rt:ptmt·r played a signi ficant role in African­ To celebrate Black History Month. American history and culture, she said. BY DENISE MATTHEWS would handle the problem they are Assist alii Neu·s Eclitor select speeches by prominent African­ 'This is, in part, derived from the facing. S tudents can do a general American orators arc on display at era w hen e ns laved Africans were Stud ents all have problems. s earch for the topic they are . Monis Library. prohibited from reading or writing.'' Some prob lem s are easy t o interested in , use an alphabetical The display is located on the first Rudisell said. handle. index or use the general topics floor of the library near the circulation " The speeches are importa nt Other problems- they don ' t listed at the left of SPAN page. even know where to s tart , and Links will provide users with desk. The display. created by reference documents that are untarnished by THE REV IEW I Jay Yov:movich librarian Carol A. Rudisell , is avai Iable editorial bias or journalistic bent. They Speeches by African-American leaders were displayed in Morris school pro blems tend to be the the name. phone number, and e­ for viewing from now unti l June 2. are passionate and powerfully reasoned most frustrating. mail address of a " Designated Library to celebrate Black History Month. Reference librarian Carol Now. thanks to th e Office of the Pro blem-solver'' who can help. In It is a bit tough to spot the display at arguments accompani ed by an A. Rudisell says she chose great orators from major periods. first. However, those who do stop to emotional appeal to action.'' Dean of Students, there is a place addition , departments have listed take notice wi II lind a diverse selection The display contains speeches given solve the problems of the present. .. but African-American speeches present on the World Wide Web where the problems they most commonly of styles of speaking. themes, and of by well -known speakers, s uch as we are attempting on a larger scale to within the Monis Library collections." student's questions and more can handle. course speakers. Martin Luther King Jr., Booker T . ful fi ll the promise of Ameiica. We are There are many resources available be answered, and i t's right at However, Moore cautioned , "I tried to select the major periods Washington and Malcolm X. attempting to fulfi ll our national to students who have further interest in s tude nt ' s fingertips. It 's called " We are really encouragin g and tried to select people who are On March 12 , 1964, Malcolm X purpose: to create and sustain a society this subject area, Rudise ll said . SPAN - Student Pro blem-solving students to inves tigate and solve known as great orators:· Rudisell said . said. "I am not educated, nor am I an in which all of us are equal." 'Those that are readily available. but Acti on Netwo rk . their own prob lems first. If they The speeches chosen address a expert in any particular field .. .but I am Jordan stressed this theme in her often overlooked." she said, ''include " When yo u have a problem ... really can' t find an answer. th en myriad of topics including freedom. sincere and my sinceri ty is my speech entit led "Who Then Will Speak both audio and video tapes , it 's very fru s trating." Assistant we e ncourage them to use SPAN liberty, equality , j ustice and the credential.'' for the Common Good?" She delivered handwritten replicas of original Dean of Student s Jane Moore said. and contact a problem-so lver,'' injustice of racism. she said. Al so included are several excerpts this message to the nation on July 12. manuscripts. as we ll as hundreds of ·' [Stude nts] go to an office to get a Moore said. The sampling of speeches, Rudisell from addresses given by less prominent 1976 in the Democrati c Convention ree ls of microfilm of the papers of the prob lem solved and the person SPAN can also be accessed said. "is intended to whet the students' African-American orators, including Keynote Address. NAACP ... there s huffles them to another from other areas on the uni versi ty appe tite . It is mea nt to serve as a women, such as Barbara Jordan, who Susan Brynteson. direc to r of Students arc encouraged to explore office with all the best intentions We b page. including the Official jumping-off point." said: li braries, said, "The exhibition contains and take advantage of these of he lping th e student , but the Studen t Handbook and th e Rudiscll chose to feature speeches ··we are a people trying not only to only a sampling of the o ut standing conveniences. Rudisc ll said. student ends up in the wrong place individual department pages. for thei r proble m ... The program was o rigin a ll y . Thi s always happened because desig ned by Dr. R o land Smith. th e re was n o informat io n vice president for student life, for a nywhere li s ting what eac h two other universities in the form department docs or what kinds o f o f a binder with the informati on problems it handles. Moore said. li sted page by page, Moore said. It Hard liquor sales on the rise Also. no person was designated to had two separate indexes. one with handle the problems that come up problem s li s ted in a lphabetica l - until now. o rder and one by department. The program can be accessed 'The hardest part, I would say • A study finds that Americans are buying more 'high spirits' from any computer that has access was t ransla ting o ur idea to th e t o th e W e b . It ca n be found Web," Moore said . "It was very BY ADAJ\'1 SLOANE Alcohol is classified into fo ur that people have been purchasing more recentl y opened bars.'· directly at www.udel.edu/SPAN/ time cons u ming." s h e said . A~.si.uwu News EtHto r categories: high spiri ts, low spirits, beer high spirits this year. as opposed to last Frances Dallago Jr., owner of Park o r by accessing th e uni vers it y's because o f the coordinati on efforts After a IS -year decline in liquor and wine, he said. year:· he said. and Shop Package Store o n E lkton ho me page, c licking o n " Offic ial it took to gather the informatio n sales. the statistics for national alcohol In Delaware sales for low spirits, '·Most of the low spiiits that made a Road. said. '·It doesn't make a difference Student Handboo k ... and then from each department needed to purchasing show that Americans which contain le ss than 50 percent comeback [nationally J were the less what the alcohol content is. they wi II clicking o n ''Trac king Down a set up the page. increased investment in whiskey, gin. alcohol (25 proof), went up 8 percent potent hard liquors. such as liquors like drink what they want to at that time ... Trouble Shooter.'' Smith is pleased with the and other "hard alcohols" by 0.3 percent last year, Pinchin said. cordials and schnapps:· he said. ··someone may come into the store SPA works by first directing transformation. ·'[' m very proud of., in the last year. officials said. High spi rits sales arc staying In Delaware, "beer purchasing went one day and purchase ice beer, and the students to the academi c o r [SPAN] and looking forward to it ;: However, Delaware has not fo llowed consistent, Pinchin said. up 3 percent since last year.'· Pinchin next day they might buy something else administ ra tive department that helping people ... Smith said. ' this national trend in hard alcohol sales High spirits must be more than 50 said. like Budweiser,.. he said. .. and consumption. said John Pinchin. percein (25 proof) alcohol, he said. such 'The student seems to be drinking a " De laware is a six pack state,'' .' administrative officer of the Delaware as gin and vodka. lot more beer than anything else.'' Dallago said. ;' Alcohol Beverage Control Commission. "We have not seen any indication Pinchin said. '·especiall y with the all the ·'If the bars had a dollar shot nighr. •I the student s might drink more [hard] .•' liquor." Students need .' The ABC has acknowledged th e university's diinking problem and plans . University provides dry to get involved in the future. .' ··our agency is trying to get the word $20 permit to out to campus students on drinking and overdrinking.'' he said. alternatives to alcohol Pinchin said it will be interesting to '· see if the new alcohol tax structure will . BY JAJ'\IIES J ANVIER planned alcohol alternative event. held as " It 's obvious that we have an help or hUJ1 the state of Delaware in the park at Stonegate ··. StoURep tnter the university equivalent of a spri ng-time un acceptable high level of alcohol use ' upcoming year. ' With alcohol abuse a perpetual carnival. among our community.'· said Bishop. There arc many political influences '. . . \' problem on college campuses, the Longwell-Grice said that Greek who was instrument al in bringing the that affected the tax change in Delaware. continued from page A I the studems decide to renew their ' Resident Student Associatio n is organizations and Student Life are also Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant '·[Delaware] was losing sale s to lease, they can also renew their ~· : 60 days, a resident should change sponsoring programs thi s semester sponsoring activities that promote to the university. Maryland because they have a lower tax non-res ident perm it s, which will their driver's lice n se and aimed at educating students about the alternatives to drinking. Bishop said that the grant plans to stmcturc," Pinchin said. cost another $20 do llars. Lang . registration to De laware, An'gelini harmful effects of alcohol. Students who play "kid games,'' at the reduce alcohol abuse. as well as to 'The tax structure was changed for said. 'This year. we really picked up the said. Carpenter Sports Bui lding partake in protect the non-alcohol users of the high and low spirits. and wi II not be in In order to acquire a permit. a : ball and ran wi th it.'' said Ro bert Shet z ler sa id . '' I d o n ' t mind chi ldhood activities including kickball commtm it y. effect until January 1998." he said. student need s to have an : paying $20 because I d o live in Longwell -Grice. assistant director of and duck -duck-goose. ··we are concemed with targeting the 'The taxes on both types of spiiits identification card and a vehicle ' Mary land so l h ave to pay RSA. ''111ese events may seem sill y, but in students with dri nki ng problems. but we will be lowered.'' Pinchin said. registration card. T he student can : A variety of educational activities and so m e thing." The non - resident. reality the students have a great time also want to keep drinking within the ''therefore lowering the price of ei t her se nd t heir application to : however. wa fru strated because social events ru·c being planned by RSA with them." Longwe ll-Gri ce said . lim itations of the law. while keeping alcoholic beverages to the distributors ... MYA o r g o in pe rson to the · she will o nl y be li ving there fo r for the semester, including Carpenter The RSA is also fundi ng Alcohol publi c ordinance.'· "We haven·! had a tax change since nearest one. Lang said. j three more mo nths and the notice Sports Building Night, Delaware Days Awareness Week. which ru ns yearly in T he typical weekend on campus is 1990 and that year the tax was raised," The closest MY A to Stone Gate · was put o n her car after she moved and Alcoho l Awareness Week. to October. Longwell-Grice said the week like a "catch-22 ... Longwell-Grice said. Pinchin said . ··It 's unus ual. but it Apartments i5 located 20 minute s ~ to Mary land nine month s age1. promote altcrnati ves to alcohol is devoted to educational programs about " It is a moment ary respite where we happened. away in Chesapeake City, Md. ' Anderson said. "There is no set consumption. alcohol abuse. and social events th at recei ve a great response to university The new tax structure will most Maryland po lice officers ; sequence in what we do ... Officers Carpenter Sports Building Night is a keep students away from alcohol-related events, especially athletic events. but likely reduce the states revenue between usually know if students are non- · can not di stinguish if the owner o f weekly event devoted to nonalcoholic events. students sti ll make time to diink." $4 [million 1 and $5 mi lli on ... Pinch in residents from the out-of-state tags : the vehicles arc students o r not. If social and spo rting activities at the ·'While our main target is the resident Lesser said th at if the un iversity said . on their cars. They also look fo r • the owner o f the vehicle has an Carpenter Sports Bui lding. Events hall students. we want to give everyone fi m1ly adheres to its alcohol policies, and "(The price reduction] remains to be 1 no n-re idents mos tl y on state · include basketball and volleyball. as well out-of-state tag and the y w il l be the alternative.'' RSA president Eli if the students adhere to these policies, seen ... Pinchin said. Technically lines . because s t udents rarel y ~ as extended hours for students who want staying in Maryland for mo re than Lesser said. ··we want the students to then th is would help to sufficiently cut wholesalers should pass on the pri ce know the M a ryland laws. Lang • 30 days, then they will need to get to use the fitness center. know that you don ' t need alcohol to down the rate of irresponsible drinking . red uction to consumers. but that said. ~ a non - res ident permit because Longwell -Grice said that unlike last have fun." ''With all of the events lined up and decision is entirely up to them. Shetzler said she doesn' t think , '· they are required by law." he year. there has been good student turnout Dr. John Bishop. chairman of the the plans for the Robert Wood Johnson ''The tax change is significant. thi s i s a fa ir law. " I f you're a • with these events, but he added '·we said. . I Student Alcohol Use committee, said the grant , we should really begin to crack however it is not definite that the prices stu d ent, II sho ul dn' t apply to you could always use more students." university wants to stress the importance The permit is effective for as down on the student alcohol problem ... of liquors will co me down ... Pinchin because you're s upposed to get the ~ long as the students' lease is , Delaware Days is another RSA of making alcohol a public issue as well. Longwell-Grice said. said. breaks' ' effective- usually o ne year. If Conference kicks off Women's History Month • Over 1,000 will attend the 13th Annual Wo men's Day Conference this Saturday at ,Clay ton Hall

BY CHRISS I PRUITT o utside o f the United States.'' year's conference. Arruda said. scholarships to cover the $35 registration fee , free : Copr Editor A rruda, who was las t year 's c hai r . said th e Abz u g. a forme r civil rig ht s and labo r law b us service fro m down s tate a nd free c hild care . · Over 1,000 wo me n w ill learn a bo ut wo m e n 's con ference is a n o ppo rtun it y to get wo me n o f a ll att orney. fought to defend the rights of women and Student registration is on ly $5 and the committee : health a nd awareness. personal safety. educational diffe rent ages and fin anc ial backgrounds together to b lacks. A rruda said . She was elected to Congress on a reserves 50 spots for universi ty students. Brooks said. j cho ices a nd i nt e rn a ti o n a l fr iend s h ips in t h e 60 experience diversity. wome n 's ri g hts a nd peace p latform a nd her first T his year· s workshops include a vari ety of to pics. i workshops to be exhibited at C layto n Hall Saturday. ''It ' s a ll abo ut go ing further tha n li t tl e o ld official act was to call fo r an end to the Vietn am War. One of the sessions, ''Women and Shamanis m Across 1 T he 13 th a nnu a l W o m e n 's D ay Co nfe re n ce, Delaware," she said. She continues her work as a lawyer. lecturer, news the Globe,'' ex plo res the ancie nt world of the shaman 1 spo nsored by th e Junior League of Wilmington Inc .. T h e Co n f e re n ce S t eerin g Co mmittee. w hi c h comme nt ator. writer and one of t he world ' s most and applies its prac ti ces to modern day. , the De laware Commissio n fo r Wo men. W ilmingto n organizes the Wo men's Day Conference. is co mposed infl ue nt ial women. Arruda said. Anot her work s hop. "Ca n ' t S ay N o '1" teaches i W o men in Busin ess and th e YWCA of New Castle of women from all over the state o f De laware. Arrud a S y lvia Brooks. too rd inator o f th e ed ucati o na l wo me n to be assert ive a nd ex press the ir fee lings • County. will be presented at C layto n Hall fro m 8 a.m . said . T he c o mmitte e t r ie s to pro mo te unity a nd s tudi es de p a rtm e nt. sai d the conference a lso openl y and honestly. ' to 5 p.m . community through planned work sho ps. s po nsored an art s how T hursd ay night at C layto n "Loves Me Not" addresses the dange rs of abusive • Th is year 's the me. ''Embrace the W o rld." was T here are over 60 worksho ps be ing conducted at Ha ll. re lati onships and teaches wo men to id; ntify pro blems l chosen to promote un ity wi thin di versit y across th e the conference thi s year. with speakers from different The show. '·Private W orlds ... d ispl ays the work of be fore they ari se. • state o f Delaware. said conference committ ee membe r backgrounds and lifestyles in keepin g with the th eme I 0 local women artists and ti cs into the intern ati o nal '· Re iki: Hands-on E nergy Healing'' he lps wo men to : Susan Arruda. o f international harmony. un ity th eme. shed their inhibit ions and d iscover the ir own innate • " W e we re inte reste d in broadening p eo pl e's Bella Abzug. inducted into the Natio nal Wome n' s The De laware Women's Conference Committee. in hea li ng power s thro ug h the art o f thi s ha nds-on : concept of the wo rld." she said . ·· w e want people to Hall of Fame as ··one o f the Most Admired Wo men o rd e r to e n s ure th a t wo m e n fro m a ll eco no mi c techn ique. • be aware of things th at go on outside o f Delaware and in American History." is the keynote speaker fo r thi s bac k g ro und s are ab le to p a rti ~ ip a t e. offeTs . ..l February 28. 1997 • THE REVIEW liAS Carper attends sex ed. talk at A.I. Dupont • The governor stressed the importance of sex education over giving out contraceptives

BY JENN DISALVATORE adolescent pregnancy preventio n The s tude nt s a t that meeting Ne H·,, F~ atu u ... editor led to Carper' s sc hool visit. said there were several c hanges G REENVILLE - A.l. DuPo nt The students have taken active which would help curb adolescent High School j ournali s m students s teps in h e lping promote pregnancy in Delaware, he said. hosted a candid sex educati o n talk prevention of ado lescent " First was a c h a nge in the wit h Gov . Thomas R . Carper o n pregnancy, said A.I. journali s m we lfare sys t e m ,'' he said . The Thur day. teacher Cathy Phillips. stude nt s believed th at the welfare Thro ughout the discussion , The students, in system in placed then fostered the Carper was reminded of the never­ w ith Kid Co unt in De laware , promotion of c hildren o ut of ending debate over contraception publ ished " Kids Voices Count," a wedlock. distributi on. supp le m e nt of a la rger repo rt Second, they saw a n eed t o '·Distribution is part of the which tracks s ta ti s ti ca l c lose the co mmuni cati o n gap education process," said junior information on the well-being of between parents a nd chi ldren, Djenaba Parker. "If the wcl lness children across th e nation. Carper said. " And I agree,'' he c enters are goi n g t o g ive Delaware ranked 2 1s t in the said . " Just the othe r day my son pregnancy tests, they should also nation las t year in adolesce nt asked me where b a bi es come supply the things which wo uld pregnancy , said Kids Cou nt from, ·a nd I had to give h i m an make the tests unnecessary: · Director Terry Schooley. The A.l. educated answer. Others disagree. studen t s unde rs tood th e " And he was amazed ." Carper " Di stribution should not take importance of the problem and said. pl ac e in the schools ," said A .I. decided to take an active role. Other topics incl uded greater junio r Taresa Larock. " It makes The supplement focused on the access to birth control, education acce s too easy.'' adolescent pregnancy problem in on how to say no respectfully, and Larock said students should be Delaware, said A.!. junior Dan education on the body, he said . comfo rtable enough to go into a Simmons. With this knowledge, a drug store and buy contraception. The counselors traveled around pregnancy prevention campaign " If they are too embarrassed to Delaware and met with s tudent was launched, Carpe r said . b uy co ndoms,'' she said. " then groups such as The Boys and Girls " You ' ll notice the ' Virgin , th ey shouldn' t be having sex ... THE RE VIEW I John Chabalko, · C lu b to discuss adolescent teach your k ids it 's n o t a dirty ''We did not want the distribution of contraceptive devices to become the focal point of our mission;• Gov. In an effort to educate students pregnancy, he said . " It 's easier to word ' billboards, a nd th e abo ut how to make informed t a lk to someone you r own age comme rc ials o n radio and Thomas R. Carper told students at A.I. Dupont High School in Greenville Thursday. choices. the Carper administration about the physical and emoti onal television,'' he said. has h e lped estab lish we lln e ss changes yo u are going through." This is a ll part of the p lan to centers in Delaware high schools . Sophomore Emily C lau s said educate, he said. Carpe r maintained that if the that the program was successful The program a lso intends to wel lness c enters were designed because the relationship was create more after-school activities World teen pregnancy wi th contraceptive distributio n in stu dent -to-stude nt. for th e students, he said . mi nd . they would not have been "I don't think the program ··r was a m azed at how many accepted by the parents. would have been as s uccessfu l babies were created du e to the Of Delaware's 29 high schools. without the student participation,'' (lack of] after-school activi ti es.'' 21 of them have wellness centers . on decline, report says she said. One out of every three babies Carpe r sa id . "Alt h ough these The governor has been working born today wi ll be children out of cente rs d o n o t d is tribute birth on preventi o n and education wed lock, he s aid . In 1950 on ly BY DIA E DOUGHERTY Andri anopo lous said the issue is T he all iance a lso s po nsors an contro l. they do take an active role metho d s for several years now , five percent of children were born Cotn Edir(/r one to be addressed by the community. annua l teen pregnancy prevent ion in pro moting s afe sex and said Andrew Lippstone, deput y out of wed l o~:k . Less women are giving binh before W ith state funding. Health and contest. in whi ch groups of teens arc abstinence." press secretary fo r Carper' s office. These c hildre n h ave a much 20 years o f age, according to the Social Services. in cooperation wi th encouraged to develo p a 30- second "We did n o t want the "T wo years ago I. a long with a higher chance o f being rai sed in re sults o f a new report. "Risks and state high schools. has developed 18 commercial on pregnancy prevention. dis tributi o n o f c o ntraceptive diverse group of students sat down poverty, he said, emphasizi ng that Realities o f Earl y Childbea ring school-based health wcllness cente rs. " Some of th e most effect ive devices to become the focal po in t in D o ve r t o talk abo ut teen people have to work together to Worldwide.' ' Here. students can go wit h parent al messages come fro m peers,'' of o ur mi ss io n ,'' Carper said, pre'gnancy," Carper said. " They c urb this problem. The repon, released Feb. 13 by the consent to discuss famil y planning and Andriano po lo us said. ''Therefore , st re ssing that educ ation is more did the talking while I listened.'' " We need to stop concentrating Al an Guttmachcr Institute, addressed other iss ues wi th counselors and other however they want to get the message im portant. That meeting go t the ball o n only the symptom ." Carper the global population with an intent to students. she said. across. the method is up to them ... The v igo rou s pa rtic ipatio n o f ro lling fo r a number of changes said. " and work more on a cure.'' raise aw areness o f ado le scent She said that no dist1i hution of binh The issue is extremely imponant to the students in the pro mo tion of taking place today, he said. pregnancy rates. contro l is in vo lved in the program. Carper. T he in stitute's re search attributed ·The wcllness centers arc a good "He reall y wants Dela\\'are' s teen th e e ncouraging numbers to a n resource for students because they are pregnancy rates to continue to lower:· increase in worldwide educati on, but ri ght the re in the schoo ls.'' said Li ppstone said. maintained more needs to be done to Andrew Lippsto ne. deputy press The stud y a lso reflected the 15TH ANNUAL PHI KAPPA TAU battle the issue. secretary for Gov. Tom Carper. importance of ed ucation in making More than 10 percent of worldwide With community s upport and good decisions: the higher a woman· s 5K RUN I WALK FOR BRUCE births- about 15 million in 1995- educati o n. teenage girls can make educati o n. th e more like ly she is B enefitting rh e Make-A-Wish Foundation were att ributed to adolescents, correct a nd re s po nsi bl e lifesiy le inc lined to delay marriage and , according to the repo11. c hoices whi c h inc lude preventing child beaJing. Date: Satmday, March 22, 1997 Time: 10:30am While national statistics in the pregnancy. he said. The report focused on developing R cgislmtion:5!i10 U D & HS students with id, Rll others $ 12 until 3/21; $ 14· race dRy Guttmacher report show the United A teen who has a baby. drops out of count ries. but teen-age pregnancy is States lagging behind other nations in school and does not marry has an 80 not a problem iso lated fro m developed New this yc;u: We are pleRsed ro a nnoLmce the addition. of the 5K walk! the curbing of adolescent pregnancy, percent chance fo r both mother and countries. Entry forms can be mailed to: or dropped off at: Delaware is holding its own. baby to live in poverty. However. T he United States reponed one of Delaware statistics are consistently Li ppsto ne said. a woma n who the hi g hest levels of adolescent SK for Bruce Phi Kappa Tau lower than national level s, said Alex is graduates fro m hi gh school and gets child bearing in th e developed world. P.O. BoH 874 720 Academy St. Andrianopo lous. public relati o ns maiTied before staning a fa mily has an Nati onal stati sti cs were three times Newark:, DE 19715 Newark:, DE 19711 directo r fo r De laware Hea lth a nd e ig ht pe rcent c ha nce o f li v in g in greater than in France and nine times Social Services. poveny. greater than Japan's repons. M a ke checks pRyable to: 'SK .for Bmce ·~ A five-year state average for 1989 In an a tt e mpt to in vo lve the In the United States. th e report For more information, please contact: to 1993 revealed 56.8 binhs for every community. Carper has developed the showed 58 percent of young wo men 1. 000 15 - to 19-year-old girls in Alliance fo r Ado lescent Pregnancy who receive less than a hi gh sc hool J erome Posfltko: 266-6077 or Matt Potere: 266-7052 Delaware. while the national average Preventi o n. funded by Health and educat ion give binh by age 20. where ~ . is 59.9. she said. Social Services. Lippstone said. o nl y 13 percent of adolesce nt s who The gro up, comprised of both teen;, fini sh hi gh school become pregnant by a nd adults. produces radio and age 20. te le vi s io n a nno un cements a nd is " C urbing teen pregnancy. responsible fo r the bill boards that read. Lippsto ne sai d . "needs everyo ne's Don't Bake on Spring Break! ·'Vi rg in. Teach yo ur kids it's not a suppon." diny word." Andri anopolous said . liE£~% 111 tile Sasd wltb a GoldeiJ Ba•e l'aa••.••• I rom ~~<2/VJ<2/Vaet~~ ~~ ~15 ~~ (Convenient to Christiana Towers) Specializing in: 731-2670 ••••••••••••• •Manicures •• ••• • •• •• •Pedicures .. ···· FREE ···· ... • • • Acrylic Nails .·· • Tanning Session • ·.. GREAT SUMMER JOB •Silk Wraps •• • GREAT FUN • with this coupon •• • • GREAT SALARIES • Nail Art & Airbrushing • • • • Cabin counsel ors •Waxing • • •• Limit one offer per person : for girls and boys •Swedish Massage ••• Must show I. D. upon : • and specialists • • for excellent •Wolff Tanning Beds •• redemption. •• PA Overnight • • • • Children's Camp •Slender Quest Toning Tables • •. Expires March 31 , 1997 • • • •• located 35 miles •• •• •• • ••• •••••••••••••• • •• north of VISA, MC, & . . /1§/1 Yfe rtrjfc a(e,; Am Express accepted. 10% Student Discount :on all regularly priced come visit us Wednesday, March 5 at the cQft,atla61e Trabant University Center Kiosk C! nail services S retail. If you would like to prearrange an appointment call Brett Rosenbloom 1-800-543-9830 A6 • THE REVIEW • February 28, 1997 New deans appointed after college shake-up

the po litical scie nce depanmenL In 1973. he Andersen said , " A s the field o f health combining 10 fo rm the College of Health and • A merger offive colleges into two opened became a fac ulty member in the College of c hanges to rclleet multiple perspecti ves, the Nurse Sciences. Urban A ffairs and Public Policy. new coll ege brings together faculty doing In addition , the Col lege o f Human up a pair of top positions to be filled Rich said the greatest challenge will he to re lated work w ho can therefore bctler prepare Resources. the College of Education and the build on the alread y existing traditio ns and students fo r the ir fie ld .'' College of Urban Affairs a nd Public Po li cy BY ERICA BRASLOW College of Nursing. strengths of the three s maller coll eges. The li ve coll eges we re combined into two will form the College of Human Resources. Staff Rt'poflt!l One of the bene ficial changes of the new 'The s um will be g reater th an the parts." as a way of preparing s tudents for th e future, Education and Public Po li cy. ew deans were appointed Fch. :w to the coll ege. Pau lanka said, w ill be that most o f Rich said . '·Within th e next couple o f years, Rich said. Grouping interrelated disciplines The idea to combine the live colleges first two newly created colleges constructed from the university's health-rela ted programs wi ll students should sta n to sec more o ptio ns and together in o ne college benefits a stude nt's came as a recomme ndatio n a year ago. It has a reorganit.ation of live former colleges. he housed in one college. stronger suppo rt the n they have today:· applicatio n o f hi s or her education. been developed by deans and accepted by the O n July I. Betty Paulanka wi II take charge However. the reorganization of the college According to Andersen, Paulanka was Paulanka sai d s he hopes the re­ provost and then went 10 faculty planning of Health and ursing Sciences and Daniel wi ll not be w itho ut difticultics. Pa ulanka said. c hosen fo r her strength in health care issues o rgani zation of the colleges will ''increase o ur commitlces. Andersen said. Rich w ill take on Human Resou rces, One problem will be '·getting people to think and working wit h students and faculty. visibility of a ll of o ur programs w ithin the The cu rrent deans of the Colleges of Education and Publi c Policy. sai d Dr. of health, in s tead o f their specific narrow Caro ly n Tho ro ughgood , dean of m ari ne uni versit y and the stale ... Physical Education. Athle tics and Recreation Margaret Andersen. vice provost for programs." studies a nd head o f the search committee who One res ult of the reorganization, as well as the deans of Human Resources and academic affair~. Rich. who has been dean of the College o f selected Rich, said he was chosen because he a nno unced last semeste r, is the College of Education w ill be returning to the faculty in a Paulanka. who has been at the university Urhan Affairs a nd Public Policy since 199 1. "executed a confide nce that to ld us he was N urs ing and the College of Physical research and teach ing capacity, Andersen for 19 years. is currently the dean of the started his career al the university in 1970 in not going to be a manager - but a leader.'· Ed ucation, Athletics and R ecreati o n are said. Racial attitudes displayed in Depression-era photos

BY KENDRA S INEATH prejudice," Carter said. manipulation. Curtis said. Stall Reporter The concept of manipu lating A misleading photo of mother and Photographs taken duri ng th e photographs to present a di fferenl child and its accompanying captiqn Great D epression capture the id ea than reality is displayed through s uggest the natural act of brea 1 prejudice of the lime pe ri od. said the Walker Evans· photos of black street feeding: however. after further director or the universi ty ' s life in Vicksburg. Ala., and Arthur inspection one notices the baby !s Winterthur Program in a lecture Ro thstein 's depictions of African­ sleeping. Wednesday aftern oon. Ame ri can migrant workers in Gee· s " Lang wanted the explicit record James Curtis· speech, entitled " In Bend, Ala .. Curtis said . of nurturing ... conveying onto t~e Searc h or the Primitive: Race and Both photographers arranged their rural family a sense or affe ctionate R ea lism in Documentary photographs in such a way that the bonding that most observer duririg Photography During the Great while male was seen as th e dominant the 1930; recognitcd did not exisL" Depression" was the second i n the force of the image, Curtis said. Curtis said. annual "Race. Ethnicity and Culture" Even R ussell Lee· s photo of an "People become mere props as series sponsored by the women's apparently perfect black family, part of a larger stage set... · studies department. clean and well-kept, listening to a The "Race. Ethnicity and Cultur~ .. Through a series of images and radio, is m arred upon further lectures take place every Wednesd;y commentary, Curtis showed how examinati on by a whiskey hollle in from 12:20 p.m. lo 1:10 p.m. in rooin photographs of the limes fed social the background. The hard alcohol is THE REVIEW I Scon Mallick a 209 of the T rabant University Center. Americans produce about two pounds of trash per day, says Grounds Services supervisor Roger stereotypes. Photographs or social sy mbol of the perceived hopelcssnc>s A companion to the fall course. devastation were oft14n arranged by Bowman, but "students historically produce more." Above, a student makes a contribution. of the black race. he said. "Research on Women's Issues," the the photographer. Curtis said. D orthea L ang's .. Migrant series is open to the public or can be "Racial attitudes influenced the Mother," a se ri es of six photogr3phs taken as a one-credit cour~e b} any taking of photographs too much to take n in 1936. is anothe r c lear student. Trash, wondeiful trash: assume photographers were w ithout example or s uc h photographic where does it all go? Interested in helping children? Interested in community BY .OLL 1. HEROLD Even though he is constantl y down on a lot of unnecessary waste ... cleani ng up after students, Howell said The university itself is making eftons service? Food. paper products. mopeds. they arc very polite and even help from as well, Bowman said. Old CO ITu gated snakes. ch1ckcn corpses. deer carcasses time to time. cardboard, metals and construc ti o n worker. Howell said. is linding perfectly operations at the university as well as by collected from campus dumpsi tcs. said good items in the bins. ·'My TYs, my private contractors. Roger Bowman. supervisor of Grounds s tereo equipment and a nswering 111ere is also a brand new program, Check out our First State Mentor Corps... Services. machine a ll came from the garbage he said. for recycling fluorescent light Faculty members and ;,tudcnts at the here ... The UD AmenCorps program. bu lbs. "There is a minute a mo unt of We are seeking 2 I interested freshmen and sopho­ univcrsil) produce a yearly average of Many students, Hqwell said. even heavy metal being processed out by a 3.400 Ions of solid waste. Bowman said. throw away brand new items still in light tube recycler.'' · mores to participate in a local public school mentoring This figure is eq ui valent to the boxes. So far. this program has only been program. Monthly stipend and educational award approximate weight of 680 elephants. This is especially true at the end of implemented in faculty and academic For mo re information and applications. contact the FSMC (The average weight of a full-grown Spring Semester. Bowman said. buildings. The university. Bowman office: elephant is 5 Ions.) Students just throw away anything that said. is still working o ut a way to usc 3 I 9 Alison Hall 83 1-0894 In contrast. Bowman said. the will not lit in the car a~ they head home this same process for the nuorcscent average American produces about two for vacation. he said. lights in residence halls. Information Sessions(held in Alison Hall Alumni Room 202): pounds of tra~h each day. "Students. Howell said students leave behind "Unfonunalcly, there is not a lot of ~f~ONO IIIIAV[~f. Friday. February 28. 10-11 am however. historically produce more." enough cinder blocks for him to build money to be m ade in the recycling HUNGER ' S HOPE Monday. March 3, 6:30-7:30pm Jm.cph Howell. a Grounds Services an entire storage room. He could usc business:· Bowman said. ~ mployce. said. "We coll ect a lot of this room to house the many other items trash. It 's predictable. there's a lot of from the garbage bins. such as carpets people on campus ... and appl ianccs. This year, 305 Ions have already "What some people consider trash," been collected. (61 elephants). Howell said. '·others consider The bulk of the university tras h. treasures Bowman said. is produced by the dining Bowman said one problem involving Universi of Delaware service> on campus. including dining university garbage is the amount of liner halls. the Scrounge and Trabant on campus. University Ccmcr. 1l1cre is one particular item of liner Last week, the TUC produced that Bowman said is all too common. I 0.330 pounds of garbage. This is a C igarcnc buns. little mo re than 5 Ions of tras h. (one While there arc CUITC illly many ash elephant ). accumulated in only o ne ums around campus. Bowman hopes The Office Of Residence Life Would like to congratulate the following Resident ; week. that the soon-to-come cigarette 1l1is number. Bowman said. is a 16 contai ncrs to be located outside Assistants and Hall Directors for making the Dean's List for the Fall Semester!! pen.:cnt incrca~c in solid waste from this residence ha ll s will improve the time last year. situation. The trash coll ected by the The new containe rs. 1mide by The Lesya Balin Joseph Dziamba Willimam Lowe Joe Stempien university's two garbage tmcks is taken No Butts Bin Co .. wi II be mounted on to the Northern Solid Waste Facility. the walls outside the donn . Joshua Beggs Robert Eckhardt Beverlyn Mandigma Bowman .•• tid. There. it is further But. even though they look like Kathryn Miller Howard Swain separated for recycling. mailboxes. Bowman hopes that students Julie Biter Vincent Farrell A large percent of the remaining wi ll gel the message and dispose of their Matthew Gabriele Shawn Mitchell Kelly Thompson solid waste is taken to an incinerator in "buns" properly. Douglas Bower Chesler, Pa. Bowman said the goal is So far this year. 226 Ions have been Jeffrey Bracht Tiffany Gibbs James Mullen Robert Timmons not to fill landfills. "1l1c process is very collc..:tcd and recycled from the efticicm ... he said. recyc li ng igloos used on campus. Bradley Carrell Alison Gluckman Matthew Nickle Aaron Uydess The university employs only four Bowman said . full-time staff members who work o n The '·mini igloos" arc emptied by Ronald Castaldo Diana Graziano Jenny Nuuttila Sandra VanAken solid wa~tc collection. Bowman said. st udent employees three to six limes per Daniel Vrgoc The workers coll ect trash six times week. Bowman said. Rocco Caveng Michael Guveiyian Kyla Olejarczyk per week from residence halls, three Paper. plastics. glass, and aluminum John Hawkins Heather pfeiffer Te:r:myson Wellman times per week from dining faci lities cans collected from the igloos are sem Sara Cloud and three to six times per week from lo the local Browning-Fcnis Industri es Kevin Connell Melissa Hertz Joshua Phillips Brent Whitaker academic buildings. operati on in Wilmington. Bowm

J February 28, 1997 . THE REVIEW. A 7 -· Student's wife says she'll sue for false complaint

continued from page A I Bes t' s case and sa id , ·No. tbs is And. Spica said, "This whole thing Center For B lack Cu lt ure. which fri end. "He pushed I'Us head into my bit.] She kind of laughed it off- I ' wrong."' is not over yet.'' She added that she is oversaw the Pearson Hall party. crotch,' ' she said. "He did it so hard I think because it 's the accepted thing."' University Police by Wednesday. Sti ll. Spica said. her frustrati on now pursuing legal means to ho ld Best Spica gave the fo llowi ng accoulll of had to push hi s head away. The men who were bi ting people " I was shocked." she said. "hvas continues to mount. responsible for fil ing an all egedly fa lse the dance in mid-January: "Then he sat next to me and put his barked and acted like dogs. Spica said, upset and crying. I wamcd to come in According to Thornto n. some accusation. A friend invi ted her Friday night to ann around me ... . I to ld him he was adding: "One girl came up to me and that very instant and get it over with. complications in the case delayed the Spica and her husband, 20-year-old the Pearson Hall event. ·'My neighbor such a pervert. l was really scared." aid, ·r saw those guys sweating you But he said !0 come in whenever it was investigation fo ll owing Spica's sophomore Jon M . Spica. met Feb. 4 wanted to take me out," she said. At th at point, a man whom Spi ca .. . Oh, that's just the Q-Dogs- that' s a good time for me." complaint. including the fact that the with Dean of Students Timothy F. W hen she arrived wi th her friend recognized a~ the first assail ant walked how they are.' I had never heard of Lawrence Thomton Jr. , supervisor accused do not live in Delaware and Brooks to voice their concerns about and another acquai ntance, Spica over and stood in fron t of her, trapping them unti l that night.' ' for the uni ve rsity's police division. cou ld no t be extradi ted for the case. noticed several Unive,rs ity Police her. A verbal confrontati on ensued Accord ing to one source, biting and said s tate prose~ u tors investigated misdemeanor charges. "What happened to her is totall y officers outside the bui lding. between the men and Spica. barking is a common behavior for Best's complaint and hy Tuesday had 'Tm not sayi ng at this point th ere inapproptiate:· Brook> said thi s week. " l really thought when I saw the 'They were both talking down to members o f th e historically b lack the warrant rescinded. were any mistakes made," Thornton '·But I didn' t quite understand at our police officers I was going to be safe ," me," Spica said. "Other people had to Omega Psi Phi fraternity, often called " If a person comes to us to make a said. ·'But I' ll be looking into the meeting what she was pursui ng.'' she said. "But then when I got inside I come calm [one of them) down.'' "Ques·· or "Q-Dogs'' - especially in complai nt. we' re not in a position to whole situation to St>e if there are Spica said she was very emotional didn't sec any of them." After the men left, a handful of the South. tell someone, · o. we can' t take your things we could have done differently at the tinie and that her husband helped Instead there were several blue-clad women helped Spica to the bathroom. But Clarence Garrett, president of complai nt ,'" T hornton said. "The and l ' II t ry my best to answer to mediate the meeting. security personnel outside the dance From there. she looked for a phone. the university's Psi Zeta chapter of Att orney General's office looked at [Spica's! concems.'' "I was looking for an answer, some area. '·Inside the gym, the lighting was lef1 the building and between midnight Omega Psi Phi. said '·our national kind of resolution." she said. ·'I wanted bad ,'' she said . "Everyone was and I a.m. walked to Grotto Pizza on papers frown on any canine reference."' to make sure something was done standing against the walls. No one was Main Street where s he called her Within the fraternity , he said, about what had happened. We talked dancing. I think because it was early, hu sband. who was home taking care of memhers should call themselves f R E I l c 1 I I I· C. 1 I{ I '\ ( ~ I :"J ~ l ' R . \ f\ C L about security and what could be done about I 0:30.'' their 4-month-old daughter. simply Ques or Omega Men. Acts like to make it better. Spica got up to dance. notici ng she Mr. Spica anived soon after, drove barking and biting don't go on wi thin " I felt that [Brooks) didn' t really was the only woman on the floor. A hi s wife back to the party and told the organization on this campus and walll to acknowledge rcsponsi bi lity for man c rawled up behind her and police what had happened. His wife re­ ''will not be recognized." he added . what happened. Not that he should. but suddenly. she said, ·'He buried hi s face entered th e bui lding with Shipman. one of the four university Omega it happened o n t hi s campus. hi s in my rear and bit me. who had been patrolling the pa11y, and Psi Phi members were present at th e campus." '·I kind o f fe lt betrayed. I'm a po inted out her alleged assailants. party Jan. 17, Garrell said . The Spicas sched u led another mo th e r and a wife. I felt very Spica then sat in side a patrol car and Garrett confirmed that Best and meeting for today with Brooks and humi liated." helped po lice file a report o f the Lee. the accused, are both Omega Psi rep~e s entatives from University Police. Less than an hour later, Spica said, incident. Phi members at Rowan College. the Office of Women's Affairs and the she was assaulted a second time by a Spica also told The Review she saw Neither could be reached fo r Women's different man who sneaked toward her male guests bite other women at the comment. rings while she was sitting and talking to· a party: '·I saw this one girl [who was 18kat 14k Save up to sale price $160 Fraternities prep for ORDER ~OW AND RECEIVE BY GRADCATIO~ Rush at Spring Expo Monday, Tuesday, & Wednesday March 3,4,&5 10-4 Bookstore Perkin's Student Center J()S'r'E~S- ;,.r ...\,f.!')'(Y;, ; .. .:::1 111._.[ VI '>JI • Rush gives all involved 'a chance to get to know one another,' one fraternity brother said

SOME. ME-W BY VERONICA F RAA TZ Hart. coordinator for Greek Affairs. many victories in athletic events. STI!,IVE. TO Stafl Reporter "But thi s is the first one where I've "We have also had a lot o f our Spring is back again. and with th e seen so many guys in one room. This !lE.A

The Ame.,..ican Cance.,.. Society'' ONNELLS soc Annual Daffodil Day

wjTREBLE DRAFTS ~ 5 Fo.,.. a bunch oF 10 cut. DaFFodil., CHARGER & $1 Bottles, ~7 Fo.,.. a pot. oF DaFFodil Mini-Bulb ., in bloom ODDS $1 Shots Bc Q,.de,., m"4 be pl"ced by cont"ct,ng Su7"nne Mo""'' "t 531- · $1 Rail Drinks 1745 or s-u-zanne.mOT'l"is-®mvs-.udel.edu, or by coiling the AmeT'ICGln . C"ncel' Society "t 1-500-227-2345. Q,.del'< "ccepted until Doors IN No Cover Mc;;~rch 3. Money mu'!>t accompany your ordel". (;" xt.rc;H; !>otd on before 10 pm, DaFFodil Day. but _o.,de., now to em

\ \ · REVIiEW •

February 28, 1997 AS

R t"- fl.E"L~AS£" D'-'E ouT? Taking a bite \ out of crime

At a party in Pearson daring to bring charges Hall Jan . 18, Tamikko against such assault while Spica, wife of a uni versity many women would sophomore, was allegedly probably try to ignore the sexuall y assaulted by two psychological effects such men from Rowan College. actions have. After all , if According to Spica, one such actions are allowed to of the men crawled up continue passively, where behind her as she danced will assailants stop? and bit her buttocks. Within Encroachments and the hour, another m a n violations of a sexual crawled up to her as she sat nature cannot be merely talking with a friend and, tolerated; they must be before s he noticed him, challenged and stopped. shoved his face into her The fact th at it took crotch and sniffed until she University Poli ce a month forced him back. to arrest the accused men Shortly after, both men raises other significant entered into a verbal questions. altercation with Spica until While The R eview it was interrupted by other understands that the men party-goers. live out of the state and Spica·filed a complaint could not have been with University Police that extradited for a night. The two men were misdemeanor, we question: identified by police but not Why wasn't action taken interrogated th at evening. the night of the party while Eventually, the accused they were sti II in · Letters to the Editor were arrested - exactly Delaware? At the very least one month later. the two should have been pilots decided to strike, fighting for fo r a fair contract as well. The working your way thro ugh school. The episode raises questioned and witnesses Boycott Budwesier; higher wages and job security . employers have threatened workers· would you still be able to pay for · numerous troubling shoul d have been rounded Ignore American Ameri c an Airlines management job security and pro posed c uts in schoo l, if your posi ti o n· was no questions, not the least of up that same evening. decided that smaller jets are the wages. pension, a nd health and longer deemed necessary, or if your wave of the future, and that it would welfare benefits. wages were slashed? · which is the bizarre nature One of the accused filed Airlines be more cost-efficient to have less As you can imagine. Anheiser­ -Dedicated workers deserve better of the sexual assault in a complaint against Spica experienced pilots fly them. rather Busch makes a lot of money in this than being chewed up and spat out question. after being notified of her For the most part. nothing beats than the existing uni on pilots. state. Apparently. management feels by corporations whi ch c laim their th e university lifestyle. Aside from If they ocurred, these actions, claiming she Bec ause of thi s lack of j o b that profits could be higher. so those employees are on big, happy family. · winning the lottery. the college li fe is security, unions are as important as profits will com e from the Suppo rt yo ur local unions ..' two acts, the biting and offensively touched him. A as free as you can get. Free from ever. The employees at GM and the employees' pockets. Support your community. Boycott­ sniffing, are quite simply warrant was then issued for high school. Free from parents. Free pilots at American are fortunate that Instead of a strike, T eam sters American Airlines. Boycott' juvenile, degrading and her arrest and she was to party. Free to make your own they have unions. which can Local 326 has call ed for a state-wide Budweiser. decisions. However, the lime will disgusting. They serve no given a few days to turn negotiate on such issues. boycott on all a lco l) o li c produc ts Christopher Jones soon come to enter the job market Non-union employees are not as distributed by t hese two [(!CI/1/Siers Local 326 purpose other than to herself in . and reality. ., fortu nate. When a company decides c9 ~ pora ti ons . Thcs<;=,, prqducts include 1 CJas,,nf '96 victimize women. This also concerns the l haven't been in the labor market that cost reduction is necessary Budweiser. Michclob. Busch, Strohs, The possibility that the editorial board, in that the too long. but I do know that once because profits are not as high as Gall o and Sutter H o me wines , you find a job, the idea that it will be offenders are from a school threat of s uch counter- they could be, it can yank that job Tanqueray gin , Jack Daniel s yours until the day you retire is a right out from under you. Bourbon and J&B Scotch. other than the University of charges regretfully pipedream. As you read the paper or If you're not a victim of this The uni on is asking consumers to WHERE TO WRITE: Delaware is both reassuring discourages assau lted watch the news , the evidence ''downsizing;· you· d hear this: "Yes. buy Miller. Coors. Robert Ma ndavi Letters and troubling. women from comi ng supporting this piles up. we know your salary was $50.000 wines, Cuny Sark Scotch. Beefeater The Review N ot long ago, General Motors Thankfully no forward. However, it is last year. but thi s year we decided g in a nd Maker's Mark Bourbon, 250 Perkins Student Center employees ~enl on strike because of that your job is really o nly worth ~v hi c h are products distributed by Newark, DE 19716 University of Delaware impractical and dangerous a cost-reducing measure call ed $40,000. Take it o r leave it (but Standard Distributing (a fair Fax: 302-831 -13% students have been to institute saf~guards o ut sourc ing. Management figured make your decision quickly please employer with a fair contract). E-mail: [email protected] accused. But to gain against counter-charges that it would be cheaper to use non­ because there's five people lined up A s a st udent. yo u may feel union suppli ers of auto parts rather to take your job if you don' t want insulated now, but consider what's The Review welcomes admittance to an on­ because there is always the than the existing uni on suppliers. it).'' going on o ut side th e uni versity in letters from its readers. Please campu s party, non-UD possibility that the accuser Yes. it would have cost less to Without a uni o n , yo u arc yo ur comm unity. in the bigger include a daytime telephone students must be invited is really the guilty party. use non-union labor. It also would defenseless in a world of dispensable pi cture. Consider the possibility that have cost hundreds o f union number with all letters. The and brought by a university The warrant for Spica's workers. one or both of your parents mi ght be Review reserves the right to employees their jobs (don· t forget Of much more local interest. the downsized or outsourced. student. arrest was rescinded their families). edit all letters. While no university Tuesday. employees of NKS Distributors and Would they st.ill have the money More recently. American Airlines the Tenui Corporation are fighting to continue your education·) If you·rc students were actual ly Meanwhile, University involved in the Police have said they will misdemeanors, we question look into how the two the intelligence and compl aints were handled to character of students who see if the situation could The does not need our help would bring to campus have been avoided. Such a people like the two men move ts noble and We won't save the , but it might save us who assaulted Spica. appreciated. Spica has also asserted In cases of sexual theirs to conquer. destroy and rape. what can we do to save ourselves·J must change or die. that other women at the assault, there are rarely Shawn party were si mil arly positive stories. But Spica They feel the land and animals arc Unfortunately. nothing. W e won't stop our popu lation Mitchell there for them to use or destroy as Our society and culture i built growth until a major famine tells us assaulted but acted as should be commended for they please. upon the very ideals that are leading we've grown too large. though it was a normal The environmentalists, and nco­ to our destructi on as a species. We wo_n' t stop wantonly taking her willingness to file a Bat Child occurrence. Here is another complaint in the face of so hippies, just as erroneously. believe We believe the earth is ours and resources from the earth until there's Escapes that the land is theirs to protect. They ours aloBe. and so we do our best to nothing left to take. large problem. Such much aw kward feel that the earth will die ui1less they completely cover it, like a swarm o f We won't stop destroying every behavior is incredibly complacency. fulfill their destiny as the earth' s locusts, wiping out whatever species s pcc1es tha t stands 111 the way of offensive and hould not be University Police should "The I!'Orld 11 ·as made for man. protectors. stand in our way, progress until o ur own place in the to lerated, regardless of recognize their failings in but it took him a long, long time to Both groups and ignoring the web o f life is threatened. whatever justification can figure that out. For nearl1· rhree a re wrong in natural laws that Sure, we could carpool to save the handling of the case million Years he Ji, ·ed as though the believing that will bring about gas and stop pollution. Likewise, we be offered. and continue their efforts to l!'orld had beenmadeforjelllfish ... they somehow No matter how our destruction. could all become vegetarians to Spica is to be determine how they could -Daniel Q uinn, Ishmael exi s t outside of We drain make a more efficient use of o ur commended, if her have better handled the the laws of nature much damage we the swamps, food supply. However, these are only n ood the deserts allegations prove true, for situation. T he earth. contrary to popular whi ch have Band-Aid soluti ons at best. belief. does not need to be saved. existed since life do to the planet, and pollute They will only s low o ur Environmentalists are fond of began. and which everything e lse de struction. We might be able to last telling us that we need to recycle, served human life will continue: in the name of another century before we run out of stop polluting and save the whales. If society just fine progress. resources . or we might be able to get we don' t li sten to th e tortured c ri es for the few whether it be rats, We pack our popu lation to grow an extra two o f Mother Earth, th ey say, we'll hundred-th ousand more people into or three billion before the collapse, destroy all li fe on the planet. years before we cockroaches, or an area than it but the collapse will still come. EDITORIAL BOARD It 's a rrogant to think that we became civili zed. can hand le a nd The. only way to s top o u r could do this. even if we wanted to. They both feel common bacteria then engineer it destruction IS to stop trying to take Mark Jolly Editorial Editor No matter how much damage we that humans are to fit even more care ot the earth and let the earth Shawn Mitchell Assistant Editorial Editor do to the planet. life will continue: spec ial. that we Ill. take care of us. . Leanne Milway Editor in Chief whether it be rats. cockroaches. or have a h igher 0 u r To once again realize that we are Peter Bothum Executive Editor common bacteria. Once we're gone destiny different population grows no better than any other species on Leo Shane Ill Copy Desk Chief the natural cycle o f evolutio n ~will from every othe r species o n th e exponentially, while our resources the planet. To realize we're not the Robert Armengol City News Editor resume and th e planet will recover. planet. The industri al ists feel we' re shrink exponentially. . e nd product of evolution but j ust Scott Goss Senior Staff Reporter Things will continue jus t fine here to exploit. the environmentalisb W e are on a course of another step along the way. Kelly Brosnahan Managi ng News Editor without us. teel we're here to protect. destruction. one that many sec but Robert Kalesse Entertainment Editor The basic be li efs o f the The earth can defend it self just few do little to stop. Because we J ill Cortright Entertainment Editor Sha11 ·n P. Mitchell is the assistant e n viro nmentali s ts a re the same fine. those who exploi t it onl y do don· t have lo. at least not yet. editorial editor at The Re1•iel!' and more to e ns ure the destruction of More importantly. we don ' t The editorial board meets before each deadline to debate beliefs that got us into this mess to belie1·es that humans hm·e ro1·alll­ their own speci es. Those that believe really want to . A socie ty won·t a topic se lected by The Review staff. Simple majority beg in w ith~- that the earth is screH·ed themseh·es and the planei. determines the editorial staffs stance on each issue. somehow a possession of ours. it needs to be protected a re change it ' s basic ideals. at least not Send e-mail to [email protected]. The industrialists and disillusioned. volu~tarily. It takes an apocalypti c agriculturists believe that the earth is So. if the planet i~ in no danger. event , something so drastic that we

Arl Editors: Rob W81Cfs Mike WllfJl)all Hotly Nonon Christa Manalo l'botOJII'IIpby ldlton: AdmlnlstraU•c NelOS Editors: John Chabalko Josb Wilhm Beth Ashby Be!h Maru.ewicz Edllon: City Ne'" Editars: Kalcue Angela Andriola Robert Armengol :.~:::-.. ------~~~------eREV1EWe

February 28 , 1997 A9

/ Music Appreciation and Anything 101, here we come

P erformance or Ham ster Ri ghts graduate school. Would we really want to attract Tory through Film. Those o f us w ho aced e lectives all that publicity, by being one of the Merkel And non-geniuses taking chances like Bowls, Bongs and Society will first universi ties in th e country to by c h a llenging themsel ves w ith of course be at an advantage to the modernize it s grading methods? demanding sc hedules would escape s uc kers who skipped half-price Would we want to be grouped with Dirty punishment fo r their sinful arrogance pitcher specials to read crap for some Dartmo uth , Williams and Duke in Laundry in course selection. time-wasting mind-shaping upper­ magazines such as Time? What about the right to an le vel class. The univer ity already earned its education'7 After a ll , te n years from now. share of publici ty lasr semester. We Slothful student s. unite' Four (or fi ve) years and $60,000 who will care whether their brain don't wamto hog the limelight. Table Tennis 101 is a damn good s hould no t be surgeon took In stead , le t the university way to rai se your grade point thrown away o n a n a na to m y continue with current endeavors to average while increasing those nerdy lecturers Four (or five) elective o r improve its image- the hip and handy beer-pong skills, right? droning o n about one o n th e snazzy Trabant University Center; Be li eve it or not , some l h e years and hi sto r y of the so-effective dive rsity workshops; ? overzealous educators a t certain inconsequen ti a l pinochle as and th e bricks, which stretch as far • colleges are unjustly determined to problems o f the lo ng as he as the eye can see. eradicate thi s c lassic technique to U.S. judiciary, or $60,000 should ha d good Leave the academic revolutions I engineer academic prosperity. on finick y grades? to the Ivy Leagues and the 400-level Their changes a re an o ut rage professors not be thrown T h e c lasses to the unfortunate students toward the American e ducati on defacing each and uni versi t y who can't find their way to the Deer ever y word of might be system as we know it I away on nerdy Park. Proposals at Duke, Dartmouth each and every able to sneak As for the rest of us, let's j ust sit and Williams are designed to factor essay wi th a red lecturers .... a new GPA back and be mediocre like the into o ne's GPA the diffic ult y of pe n. Like they syste m pas t administration. classes taken . have all the time us. For the This weekend remember: Only in the world to look for somet hin!! firs t year. for example. students· li ft a finger when it 's your turn to get / Fortunately, Delaware has not yet / JUmped o n thi s acad e mi c bad to say. Pu!t-lease! actu a l GPAs and weighted GPAs the li ghter. And onl y use your brain bandwagon. Rather. the end-product of time cou ld bo th be used. Then, after when trying to divide the cost of a Were Delaware to adopt such a and money spent at our prestigious havi ng both systems in e ffect 30-pack. po li cy , we lazy and unmotivated univers ity s ho uld re mai n the together fo r o ne year. a s tudent students would have to take classes traditional heavy sheet of paper with government o r faculty senate vote Ton M e rke l is a bi-ll'eeklr Subliminal a signature so fancy it 's guaranteed could determine whether or not to colunuiist for T!t e Re1•ie 11 ·. Dirr:r such as International Relati ons and Brain and Behavior instead of the not to smear. continue the new system. Laundrr appears e1·err other Friday. enlightening Introducti o n to These diplomas and o ur GPAs But le t 's no t gave the Send e-mail to [email protected]. Student Center are our ticket into the job market or administrati on any ideas.

pleasant. huh ? Anna B e tter than PUS, is the White PUSSHOP. If yo u stand next to Gun control is one way to VICES and look at the word before it , PUSSHOP is just as pl ain as day Calico as the former. Cockledoo Again. the designer convenientl y s ituated CAMPUSSHOP over a control the violence bend in the wall. right after theM. I VICE: I a) a moral depravity or have not yet found the PUS SHOP cormption. 2) blemish, defect. 3) a or PUSS HOP (if this is the way you drive-by s tabbing '~ water'7 to produce more firearms . ln turn, physical imperfection, deformity, or prefer to read it) within the TUC. If Duane Leave the guns at Wai-Mart. increased pro duction of firearm s taint. - Webster's Collegiate they are selling PUS, it is at le ast a Duke 2 . ·•J love to Hunt. l a m a directly trans lates into increased Dictionary blessing it's not avail able on meal ·sportsman· and that' s why l own 4. "T don ' t trust the !!Overnme nt. accessibility of firearms for potential plan . The hopping feline s are g uns." • That' s why I'm armed ru1d ready." con ume rs with less than no ble Ano th er semester is upon us, similarly elusive. Troubadour DUKE: If you mus t get your DUKE: Moron. ambiti ons. which means another precious $50 In sho rt , th e w ho le thing is a Song jollies from killing small woodland In simpler terms: each "Guns and down the drain for what most SCAM. And you will find that word, creatures. why not be a real man and 5. "It's in th e Constituti on; doesn't Ammo·· peri odical you buy makes it consider an insult to architectural by the way, if you connect the final use a bow and arrow? th at mean it' s okay?" easier and cheaper for Joe Criminal integrity. So I find the time green S of SALADS to CAM (what I am curious as to wheth er the Hunters wi II state that they love DUKE: The Constitutio n is a to find and purchase a gun . By appropri ate for my semesterly is missi ng from PUSSHOP on the proponents of '·firearms rights•· have humin!! because it ' s challen!:!in !! and 200-year-old docum ent. The world is s uppo rting the indu stry you are column o n the Trabant Center, other side). ever witnessed a young person die adveniuresome. I'd like to see -them a dynamic place; what seemed like a supportin g the criminal. ot herwise known as the "TUC." Maybe I give the perpetrator of from a gun- related incident ? I try to face down a wild boar with a good idea 200 years doesn ' t The answer to th e gun crisis is There arc many reasons to gripe this clever trickery too much credit. wonder if they have ever heard a bow and arrow and see if th ey still necessaril y apply today. Do you still no t mo re Brady Bill s or even a about the TUC. The auditorium seats M aybe he or s he was s imply mo ther scream in agony "No t my love their port. piss in your backyard'7 constitutional amendment. people a paltry number of students, often far shamelessly unobservant. son - Dear God - not my son!.. imply need to say: "I will no longer below the demand fo r po pular Whateve r th e case, I find the Every Friday night from I 0 p.m. 3. '·[ like to keep a gun in the house The gun-cont rol issue is a lot like pl ay a role in the slaughter of youth .'' movie . oversize letters highly inappropriate to 2 a.m. I vo lunteer at Christiana for my family ' s protec ti on: · the abortion issue in th at people have Watching a parent bury a child is The food court offers no meal in what is supposed to be a student Hospital's Emergency Room. Over DUKE: Hey. buddy. you watch their established opi ni ons and unless the !:!rcatest of tra!!edies: it is a plan in o rd e r to suck points and center. They are more than just PUS­ the past two years, I' ve seen many too many acti on movie s. Unless you tragedy strikes. they will most likely sadn'C ss beyond description. Don't FLEX from students. Disposabl e sy eyesores for Newark residents at young peo ple seri ously injured or are an active serviceman or a police keep their views. let th e next tragedy be the kid wh o plastic fork s, paper cups and night; they misrepresent th e purpose killed from gun-shot wounds. offi cer, you most likel y do not have However, gun proponent s need to li ves down the s treet fro m you . Sty ro foam plates fill tras h cans of the student center and the Generall y. the deaths do no t enough training or ex perience to use rea li ze that by s uppo rting the Do n't let the next tragedy be your beyond capacity. uni versi ty in general. immediatel y impact me: the a firearm in a cri sis situation. National Rifle Associati o n a nd chi ld. At the " vendor" booth, credit If they were placed solely above emergency room is always busy - In addition, by having a gun in purchasing guns they arc taking an card companies stalk and prey upon the food court, fine , but to stretch the there' s always something else to be your house, you increase th e chances ac ti ve role in increasin!:! the number Duane Duke !tas seen too mCIIll' tudents, pushing applicati ons for names of various edibles alon!! the done- and consequently, there's no of your child being in volved in a of yo uth who get shot e;ch day. _ro un g p eople die. E-mail me ci r debt under the gui se of free T-s hins entite airpon concourse implies that time to absorb the fact th at someone firearm accident exponentially. Do B y purcha ing firearm s. a [email protected] ro let me kno ll' and helping the earth. the TUC is primarily a rip-off eatery. has just died. you put piranhas in you r child's bath message is sent to th e manufacturers that You ll'illne1·er 0\\'11 a gun. Multiple television emissions Maybe it is , maybe it isn' t. The death does thunder down infiltrate the air and interject into As I said , it was supposed to be a upon me, however, when the family lunchtime conversations. "student center" wasn't it? Students members arrive at the hospital. But nothing is more insulting to were involved in its planning. right? When you see the family and witness my intelligence and stature as a And aren't o ne of its assets the I ' M D l MM -~ Du . \ 1 \!HooPS , their emotions - the body that was 0 n i iY vOr.. ' .bA ' I 'I I ll ll- J !00 student (NOT a mall chick, thank expanded student organization and just in th e trauma room s udde nl y AcuO[NTA.LLI 6HoT MY 6oN you) than the overgrown, glowing activities offices on its second flo or? becomes a person. LooKS L:x E kitchen magnets lining the airport I don ' t believe that st udents Yo u rea li ze that the soc ial \.Y1 1H ioo R' conco urse and balancing the neon stipulated that the TUC have big security number th at was connected 4UNT!l'ib ~O t>'J E ON E. arches by res ting opposite the glowing letters to aid lost souls in to a fury of beeping monitors j ust a heralded blue and gold YoU Dee search of PIZZA. B ut I do recall we few minutes ago is not a socia l R: FLEH! FoRGOT To banners. They are surely a vice of asked four years ago for mo re security number but instead a li ving. architectural mi sdecoration. if there student group perks . In light of this, th ink ing person who loves and hates ever was one. I propose: and lives j ust as you do. U5 E THE I was quite pleased, however. 1) Take down the letters and How do you comfort the people w hen I discove red the donate them to a more appropriate that arc affected by thi s loss? How SAFETY unaesthetically-i nclined individual home, e.g. an elementary school, do yo u explai n to a mother that her ON TT~ E responsible had at least admitted to mall or truckstop. daughter is dead? his or her shortcomings. 2) In its place put up 4' x 6' I return to my question: how can R ;FLE. Yes, sitting one day at a table on boards, each painted and decorated people be gun aficionados when the lower noor opposite the food by a different student organization. what I 've just described happens coun , it occurred to me that I might The University of Minnesota hourly in the Uni ted States'~ l)ave missed some important TUC lines the inside of a walkway that Below is a collecti on of typical provision. So I looked upwards to connects its two separate parts of hackneyed gun exc uses and m y fead the beaming rainbow-colored campus with such paintings. They opinion of each excuse: letters. PIZZA . .. DELI ... ICE are not all beautiful, but they are all CREAM ... SALADS ... and then I alive with school spirit. I . " Guns Don ' t Kill People ­ saw a word I had never not iced School spirit is what we want to People Kill People'· before: VICES. generate. right '~ Forget the DUKE: Where do you live? - There it was, as plain as day. By professional YoUDee graphics. Candyland? If every criminal in the golly, they had actually hit the nail posters, and banners. Students, let' s United States had a Bowie knife on that one! The wannabe shoppmg do our own and show the university instead of a firearm we would have mall look was definitely a "blemish. that school spirit cannot be created less deaths. defect and physical i mperfec.tion , •. by a common love of P IZZA or How do you accidentally stab How could they have gotten away checking out YoUDee on the divi ng someone'1 How would you work a with posting this word? They were board (sec U of D web site). sneaky , wrapping SERVICES We could create school spirit in a around a bend in the wall. multi-purpose room full of 140 conveniently splitting it after the R. student groups. each painting an , But that is not all. I had heard advertisement for their respective rumors from the neon-blinded group to be hung proudly along the Sypherd and Brown residen_ts of walls of the TUC. Then. and only PUS spottings. Lo and behold, af one then wi ll we have a vinuous student stands outside and looks 111 at JUSt center. the rioht anole, the brick wall which ' inter~pers~s CAMPUSSHOP Anna White is still reco1·ering reduces it to the much shorter and from being blinded bl- t!te fig/ItS. Site more memorable word- PUS. ll'elcomes comments at: In case any of you are unfamiliar t!telorax@ udel.edu. with PUS, it is that white ooze that forms under infected zi ts . Not

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' J j ~ 10 • THE REVIEW • February 28, 1997

Lecture traces SLTV PROGRAMMING SCHEDULE I CHANNEL 49

Jewish history on Sunday, February 23 7:00pm B urly Bear 8:00pm Movie: How to Make an A merican Q uilt NYC's East Side 10:00pm Movie: T e House of S pir its

BY ALLISON SLOAN popular novels. Monday, February 24 Stuff Reporter " The Lower East Side has The Lower East Side of New arguably become th e most popular 12:00pm B urly Bear York is a center for J ewish site of Jewish-American memory," 1:00pm Steppin' O ut memory and nostalgia, said a Wenger said. Thursday, February 2:7 ...... Jewish history professor from the 2:00pm To Your Health With th e help of slides, Wenger 12:00pm To Your Health University of Pennsylvani a in a showed the small audience what 3:00pm T ago Talk 1:00pm B urly Bear lecture Tuesday night. the Lower East Side was like in its 4:00pm Movie: Crimson T ide > SLTV In her speech, entitled "Jewish "heyday." The streets were lined 2:00pm Steppln' Out > Memory in Space and Time: The with pushcarts selling dry goods 6 :00pm B urly Bear 3:000pm BH 1 Invention of the Lower East Side," and food , and the area teemed with 7:00pm Steppin' Out > General In-teres-t Beth Wenger described the 3:30pm 24 FPS people and the sound of the 8 :00pm To Your Healt h transformation of the Lower East Yiddish language. 4:00pm Movie: T rainspottlng > Mee-ting I Side from a hubbub of Jewish life English professor Jay Ha li o. 9:00pm T ago Talk 6:00pm To Your Health > to a place of study and memory. who atLe nded the speech and O:OOpm Movie: Crimson Tide · When Jewish immigrants teaches Jewish-American 7:00pm B urly Bear a;-rived fro m Poland, many 12:00am Movie: Exotica > rRrDAY, 2/2<6 literature, said many immi g rants 8:00pm Steppin' O ut congregated in the Lower East came to the Lower East Side for > S_ide which became a kind of 9:00pm B H 1 5:00pm - 7:00PM language and cultural reasons. Tuesday, February 25 modern "shtetl" (small Jewi sh Ha li o agreed with Wenger that 9 :30pm 24 FPS > Pntkln!: ~tudnnt Cnntnt town). things weren ' t all roses in the 12:00pm Burly Bear "The Lower East Side enshrined neighborhood. There was extreme 10:00pm Movie: T rainspotting 1:00pm W hat In t > ~wing Room the flavo r of the Old World , .. poverty, infestation of vermin and .e all 12:00am Movie: Spr ing Break Wenger said. mass overcrowding, he said, :30pm BH 1 > Many people look back fondly comparing th e Lower East Side to 2:00pm Steppin' Out, on the Lower East Side, Wenger what people think of a place like > Come see about getting said , as a place of cultural Tijuana today. 3:00pm Women's History Month Special fami liarity. Jews moved away from the LL:00pm Movie: Grace of My Heart > involved in live campus However, remembering the area Lower East Side and into suburbs 6:00pm B urly Bear > video production, origina is an act of idealization, she said. as soon as they could afford it, "Many people use selective Halio said. However, they never 7:00pm W hat in the Hall > programming, news, memory when remembering the failed to return. 7:30pm BH 1 Lower East Side. Today, th e Lower East Side is > graphics, and every other 8:00pm S teppi ' Out " Memory has always been a nothing like it used to be, Halio > aspect of student life central component of Jewish said, and it can never be the same. 9:00pm Women's History Month Special history,'· Wenger said. Most of the Jews have scattered lO:OOpm Movie: Grace of My Heart > television studio Man y people focus on from the area and the Lower East remembering the Holocaust or the Side is slowly becoming a modern­ 11:40pm Movie: Gorill as in the M ist > production ! ! ! Jewish acquisition of the land of day Chinatown. Israel, she said . But the Lower > Meet Department heads Wenger, who won a prize for Wednesday, February 26 East Side came before these events th e best di ssertation o n Jewish­ > in sports, music, occurred a nd therefore has a American history from the 12:00pm Steppin" Out special place in Jewish American American Jewish History Center, :OOpm To Your Heolth > promotions & advertising history. has a lso written a book called "The Lower East Side embodies "New York Jews and the Great 2:00pm Burly Bear > production, and training the experience of second Depressions: Uncertain Promise." 3:000pm Women's History onth S pecial generation Jews," she said. It is an > to find out how you can In addition , she has published 4:00pm Movie: T e Fan important a rea of s tudy for several articles about American­ > get involved ! scholars , Wenger said, and the Jewish culture and women 's 6:00pm Steppin Out location has now become a site of history. 7:00pm To Your HealTh! > Jewish memory and a symbol of The speech, which was held in identity. Kirkbride Hall, was the first in a 8:00pm Burly Bear > For More Info She mentioned the current se ries of free public lectures 9:00pm Women's H istory Month S pecial > Call: 831-3094 resurgence of tourism in the Lower sponsored by the Jewish Studies O:OOpm Movie: The Fa East Side, commenting o n the Center and the department of tours that go through the East Side hi story. 12:00am Movie: Th e Trigger Effect as well as coffee table books and ......

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l { . ' In Sports

(beck out 1he seaiDd annual America East ba*etbaD tourna­ ment pu1out in the fold or The Review. Read it and wonder! .. February 28, 1997 • B 1

BY HOLLY NORTON Fearures Editor Standing at the intersection of 26th Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway and gazing at the famous Philadelphia Museum of Art's steps, I can't help but hum the Rocky theme song to myself. "Bum ba da dum, ba da dum, da da dum." Two siblings race each other up the steps giggling and wheezing as they ascend. Their parents frantically fuss over the camera bag as they hustle to catch the moment on film. The youngsters successfully reach the top and begin their own rendition of the Rocky celebration dance. Inside the museum the 14-foot, 6-inch Diana, the Goddess of the Hunt, protects the museum as the sculpture looms over the Great Stair Hall. Augustus St. Gavdens, an American sculptor, began creating the statue in 1892 and completed his piece in 1894. Diana formerly served as weathervane atop Madison Square Garden. Draped in fabric, she tip-toed on top of the 300-foot tower which, at the time, was the highest point in New York City. The Philadelphia Museum of Art acquired the work in 1932 as a gift from the New York Life Insurance Co. Reaching the top of the Great Stair Hall, visitors face countless options of galleries to explore which are all in historic order. Museum-goers bustle throughout the east and west sides hiding behind see ART page 84 their maps

Photo I Colby Berger, an counesy of Philadelphia of Museum of An. layout design by Josh J. Withers Freelance artist Joseph Madia sketches his own versions of statues and paintings like the one above in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Tattered and tom, :v;intage jeans are well worn . . Break out of the blues; finding good jeans is easier than it seams

BY CINDY AUGUSTINE Gap and the ones in Macy's, but along the bell are a little more cost­ Assistant Fea tures Editor right now I don't think about wear­ ly at $46 but definitely worth it for Back in the '80s they were worn ing anything but Levi's." those who want to be noticed. with a French roll cuff, and the Besides being well worn in, Acco rding to employee Julie color of choice was faded blue or Kristen adds that some are cheap Green, a j unior, Outer Limits tries possibly acid-washed. Then colored too. to cater to everyone's need : " high jeans appeared from out of nowhere "The most I've ever paid for a school kids, college kids, older peo­ (or maybe from tacky department pair was $30 and the least was $12, ple, younger people." stores), and people started wearing and they were Lee," she says. Although their vjntage jeans jeans in s uch shades as hunter With the sudden appeal of used assortment is not enormous, their green, chocolate brown and maroon. jeans, vintage jeans stores began size range is notable, and Outer In the '90s, vintage jeans made a popping up in New York's Limits also sells used corduroys, big splash in the sea of teen-agers Greenwich Village and SoHo which, Julie says, sell well. and college students. Suddenly slim (namely Andy's Cheapees and Those who no ICJdllll' fit into their fit Gap and trendy Guess jeans were Antique Boutique), as well as Levi's from high sc:bGtl. or whose replaced with faded and frayed Philadelphia (Urban Outfitters). pairs have been orumpllsd in thC? Levi's and Lee's. Now found in just about every back of the closet for tbe last year, ' Frantic girls scrambled to find a major city and suburb, vintage jeans may want to take advantage of pair that fi t and paid ridiculous have become incorporated into Outer Limit's jeans exchange, amounts of money (up to $60 a pair) nearly every college student's Every Monday and ~y, from to get their hands on them. Even wardrobe. 5-8 p.m., people can bPDg in their designer Ralph Lauren styled his If a trip to Philly seems unlikely old Levi's and exc:hruage tbem fot jeans with the authenticity of worn anytime soon, have no fear. Antique store credit. The amount of store and weathered denim classics. It jeans can be found right here on credit depends on the condition of seems that the new trend in jeans Main Street. the jeans, o those that are banging• was clearly "the older the better." Outer Limits carries a decent on by a thread will probably not get And why no t? Vintage jeans selection of Levi's, including much. come already bro ken in w ith instant relaxed fit and SOls. Their notable While the Gap doeli.DOt sell used· comfo rt. price range is $12-$29, which jeans, and probably won't anytime THE REVIEW I Melissa Krupansk:i "They fit me the way I like jeans shouldn't stretch a college student's soon, Galleria Gap manager Junior Liz CbereUo is on the prowl to find the perfect pair of vintage jeans at Indigo in to fi t," says j unior Kristen Gerosa. budget too much. Funky bell-bot­ the Iron Hill C Old Levi's have replaced Gap and Guess designer jeans as "in." "I've tried on others, like from the tom Levi's with fabric designs

, I B2 • THE REVIEW • February 28, 1997

, Lynch's 'Highway' a strange, surreal ride

In previous works like the television show "Twin Peaks" ( 1989) and the movie "Blue All right. my turn . The junior This ain ' t no plain Ja~e . Velvet"' ( 1986), it was in the all-American small editio n o f Th e Hitlist is back . I was But anyway. as of Friday, town where the viewer became submerged, (los­ he re during w inter a nd did a ll Jane Siberry will be ing themselves in some sort of demi-heaven right, a nd si nce the o the r bum who playing at the TLA at 8 p.m. , and where people co-exist with mystery, danger and .thinks he's the pro is mi ssing in ti c kets are o nly $ 17 .50 a piece: Do clean country living.) action. I gotta fill his big shoes­ me a favor, go to the concert and In "Lost Highway," the viewer gets thrown and big pa nts. A n yway. here's w he n you get back tell me who headfirst into ' 90s L.A. where a jazz musiciim, what's up for this weekend. Drink th is woman is, QK'l Call 215-569- played by "Independence Day" actor Bill some Sweet Wine a nd get crazy. 9400. Pullman. and his wife, Patricia Arquette ("True Romance''), are haunted by an eerie pornograph­ FRIDAY SATURDAY IC videotape that inexplicably takes place in their apartment with them as the stars. Bas ketball , basketball. H ey, do the right thing Lost Highway This gives Lynch the opponunit y to do what he basketball' Ten teams. and go see " Do The October Films does best: bring to life with exciting fl air the ./ only o ne wil l s urvive, a nd ./ Right Thing." OK, that Rating: -:.'c,'c_'r-_7 moments that appear mundane, while he secretly they' re a ll s tarti n g o ut a t was c heesy, but seri o us ly, thi BY GREGORY SHULAS cntiques Ameri can society. D e laware. What fun' The Spike Lee joint is in the house and StutJ Rt•Jmner This moving picture acts almost like a mirror America East Tournament will it's an awesome flic k . Take some Seductive. disturbing. enigmatic. exciting. hilar­ that uncovers the face of a twisted soul otherwise quality to the way Trent Reznor's soundtrack and be held a t the Bob Carpenter pills to cure that j ungle fe ver and ious. surreal, sexy and nihilistic. Those are only a known as modem Southern California. The audi­ the couple's dialogue blend together. The mood of Center this weekend a nd a ll are in get your butts over to the Trabant few of the words that can be used to describe David ence is shown frightening images of cellular their scenes is anti-romantic. while the action has search of t he coveted NCAA University Center to night at 8. Lynch ·s newest feature movie, " Lost Highway:· a phones, videotapes. Mercedes Benz, prison cells its base in the animali stic urges. Tournament b id. provided they lilm that successfully rctums Lynch to his full cre­ and living rooms. These everyday objects arc It is almost impossible to pinpoim the film 's win three s traight games. The M o re ma instream enter­ ati ve power after a six-year hi atus. shown as dangerous channels of violence and dis­ principal message, which turns out to be one of the play- in rou nd starts today, a nd the tainment fo r a ll you col­ Like most Lynch films. the setting is the most turbed sexuality. picture's most unique quali ties. "Lost Highway." excitement lasts all weekend. Call ./ lege kiddics out there. influential character. a character wh; determines Besides all the harrowing imagery of day-to-day has Its roots m expressionistic painting rather than UD1-HENS for ticket in fo. These Dar Williams a nd her cronie will the per­ formal institutions, "Lost Highway; · manages to the hterary or theatrical arts. Trying to explain its so nalit y thesis is like summing up in two words what o nes won· t be free. be rocking the d o me off Mitchell bathe itself with healthy doses of offbeat humor. Hall toni ght at 8. Call UDI - HE S and emo­ But don't think hi s more frequem use of humor Salvador Dali is trying to convey through hi s sur­ Review Grading Everybody loves their for ticket info. tion a I indicates that Lynch has lost hi s sorcerer-like pow­ real an. mommy. but thi s guy System h e mi ­ ers. There are more supernatural elements here than When combined wit h the movie 's trance-induc­ ./ went a little overboard. M.R. Doc's has got some phat sphere o f in " Blue Velvet" and '·Wild at Heart" ( 1990) com­ ing soundtrack, its vibrant and dark use of cine­ Oscar cali ber Oedipus R ex, the famous Greek entertainme nt going on tonight. the vari­ bined. And Lynch's deep felt sense that there is matography and archaic sense of sexuality, few See this fli ck tragedy by Sophocles, wil l be per­ Nice Hat Junior will be slinging ous life something more transcendent out there pervades thmgs can stop the magneti c pull that '·Lost formed tonight. Feb. 27 th ro ugh c uts all over the place in De finite rental forms that the fi lm throughout. Hi ghway" creates, a pull that can be compared to Marc h 2. The s how wil l be held at Wilmington. With a good select ion Catch it on cable inhabit the The scenes between Pullman and Arquette have stepping inside some weird, wi ld and beautiful dream where things have a multitude of dimen­ Harts horn Hall and promises to of c igars and beer. who can resist? Putrid, moldy, fo ul c reati ve a soft. sensual. primal charge. There is a subliminal medium. sions. instead of just three. be a knock-· em-dead performance. Smoke and drink up, but give a Get o n the tclly and ask for ti c kets call for more info. first at 234- a t UDI-H ENS. 171 3.

ed them. w ith Sheen and Hamilto n constantl y o n the Take a stroll over to Today and tomorrow. run. It even has creativity- one weapon Chapel Street w ith the only a t the Blue Ice Fools Rush In con sists o f a tin y remote control helicopter honey you met last week­ Arena, som e Delaware "Fools Rus h In,'· gathers it s few that fires a t the crowd. What it lacks is a end to sec " Baby" performed by world a nd Olympic compeiitors stre ngths from the c he mistry o f it s leadin 2. cohe re nt p lot. Sheen plays a pres id e ntial the C hapel S tree t Players. This will be taki ng part in the bi2. one. The Empire Strikes Back man and lady. With pe rsonable M atthew - advisor w ho learns there is a traito r in the production is sure to be an a ll-star The 1997 World Send-Off Ice '·The Empire Strikes Back" is still the Pe rry as the workaholic Alex Whitman and White House. H e d iscovers throu2.h a bit of event and will send earth shatter­ Show is coming to town. and as best of the trilogy. Originally re leased in incredible S a lma Hayek as the voluptuo us detective work. with reporter a nd- former ing responses throughout Newark . far as the skaters can see. Tonya 1979, the film's ne2.ative has been cleaned Isabel Fue ntes, t hi s fi lm is s ure to call to love inte rest Hamil ton at his si de. th at the re Now why o n God's green earth Harding is nowhere to be found . the sound e nh anced and a nu mber of short. both female a nd male fans. is a plot to assassinate the president (Sam would you \\ant to mis~ this s tuff? Thank God. Sean Eckert's scenes have been added. Although no ne are But a las, the casting decisions appear to Watersto n). But we never learn why, nor a re Call for the real deal at 368-2248. Delaware-based pipe -ma king com­ as substantia l as the scenes add;d to " Star be the w isest choices m ade, fo r the c huck­ we told exactly what the title conspiracy is. You heard it here kids. pany is nearby though, so look out. Wars, .. viewe rs finally get a good view of les are few a nd fa r between in Katherine Skip this o ne. the snow c reature th at gets Luke on Hot h Reback's screenplay. Had the film skipped The doctor tells you to M o' basketball. It's the and a de tailed computer-created view of the romantic-comedy genre and took a more brush your teeth to pre­ Hens' turn. a nd their Lando's cloud c ity of Bes pin. serio us stint, it would have made a wonde r­ vent 2.ingivitis a nd uum fi rst oppone nt is the The darkest film o f the three, it s till ends fu l sto ry about respo nsi bility, tolerance and -compiled by Cindy Augustine, Robert disease. The t~acT1cr te ll s yo~ to Hofstra Flying Dutchmen at 12 o n a downer wi th the fate of the characters the true n ature o f love. Kalesse, Jill Cortright and Christa Manalo read. study and ~et smart . Do ·em p.m. They' re gonna be flying back still undecided. and S/r(ll\'11 Mitchell both a fa\;Or. and yourse lf. and go to Hempstead w hen the Hen cret Although not worth seeing for the added see Mental Floss tonight -at th ro ugh wit' ·em . The two s plit "'in scenes, the film will help most people The Shadow Conspiracy Bottlecaps Bar a nd Restaurant. the regu lar season, but the story recapture a part of the ir lost childhood. Plus This m ovie has big sta rs like Charlie Call 427-9119 for more ticket info. wi ll soon be settled. this may be the last time to sec it o n a big Sheen, Linda Hamilto n and Do nald and di recti o ns into Wilmington. Get your butt movin ·. it ·s screen with the detai Is the way Lucas wa~ t - Sutherland. It also has ple nty of action , List~rine -Robert Kalesse for your c ranium.

British magazine gives

A. "Maybe it was Utah." Electric Factory (215) 627-1332 women more 'Options' Soul Coughing $12.50. Fri. Mw: 7 at 8:30p.m. Opening: Firewate1: finding their own "families." T hi s is one you cannot mi ss. ' Sour Nervous breakdowns. an often-misunders10od topic, are will be spewing out their jazz and rap­ explored 111 Ihc "Real Lives" section. A diary describes the six influenced hard core tracks all ni oht month leading up to one woman's nervous breakdown and dis­ B. "RAY, THE long. A shot of Firewater to s~ n cusses how Ihesc emotional lows can ac tually lead to personal should make the ni ght a good buzz. growth. NEXT TIME Luscious Jackson, $13. Fri. Mct rch ll1is sensiii\'cly-trcatcd story not only makes people who 28 at 8 p.m. have had a similar experience feel less alone, bui also helps SOMEONE If you think naked is a state of reader> understand thm people who underPo such thin as are not mind. go sec this all-female band per­ crazy or weird. "' "' form their funky mix of rock and rap. An i1~-dep th _personali ty quiz compares how you view your­ ASKS YOU IF ;elf 111 hvc_~hfier<::nt a~pccls of your personality to how others The Stone Balloon and didn't reallv rev~al ani--Ihing new. (368-2001) BY JlLLCORTRIGHT YOU'RE A A stmy about American author Ann Rule, who writes true Entt!t1oinmefl1 &lanr Th e Connells 11·ith Trouble crime books aboui serial killers. tells how he developed a 1l1c spine of Options. a British magazine for twenty-some­ Chwgers and Odds 58 (in advance) friendship with Ted Bundy when she worked with him at a cri­ GOD, YOU SAY thing women. reads "In vest in Yourself." But at the impon plicc Fri. Feb. 28 sis center before his convic- of $.+.95. compared Io $2 or $3 D. "I'm Feeling kinda nostalgic for '74- lion - a fascinating anicle. 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ALIVE!" guy being honest about hi s feelings? Glamour, except tl;at all the tyoung." says which pans of their anato­ This you gotta see. prices are in pow1ds. my stars like Sandra Bullock And the one prob­ (her hands) and Uma lllllrman CoreStates Spectrum lem with the pages on make­ (her nose) hate. Beck 11 ·irh The Cardigans and Arari up and hair coloring is th at "l'JO/tJIIUJ111iJJ.If) pJ_U.:J U_l ~;Jm fj .\lf/11){ ·a ·uo.\'f/)tJW In Ihe relationship advice cal­ Teenage Riot. $ 16 many of the brands are .\1/!fl "! .lilfPIItJS umpv ·:J ·l:IJu:uqJl'ott!J " I !tmp11H J!W3 ·y ·mw::pv Hu_i:i_WH II! .:J,'l'nJ ~'P!N ·v egmy. an anicle asks .. Are you Two o f indie rocks latest and Briti sh and not avai lable here. brightest break-through stars team up still the woman he fell for'r and analyzes several case histories SUI of course, the advice still at the CoreStates Spectrum for an holds. that show both sides of changing inexpensive evening of slick grooves And of course. and loads of attitude. relationships followed by an ex pen ·s opinion on what some horoscopes are here. It Bush 11 ·ith Vem ca Salt, 525 (on sale wouldn't be a women's mag­ Newark Cinema Center (737 -3720) Foots Rush In 1. 4. 7. 10 Marvin's couples said. Sat.) Ttt es. April 8 at 7:30p.m. azine without them. (Fri .) Booty Caii S:.fS, 8: 15. 10:30 Vegas Room 1:15,4: 15 .7: 15 .9:35 On each page of the lengthy Po p radio fave Bush and its r m­ A section called Vacation 5:30, 8. 10 Dante's Peak 5:15 . Donnie Brasco 1. .f. 7. 9:45 anicle are linlc tip boxes Ihat sex y-enough-to-date-Gwen -Stefani "Living" talks about bed­ 7:45. 10:15 . (Sat. ) Booty Call t:30, 5:-15. Vegas Vacation t :30. 4:30. 7:30. 9:45 offer reasons why relationships frontman bring their appealing if rooms and includes a list of 8: 15 , I 0:30 Vegas Vacation 5:30. 8. I 0 Trahan! Universitv Center change. which readers can use to overplayed altemativc to Philly. what's in and what's out in Get on the Bus Fri . 9. Sat. It . Do the undersiand !heir own lives. Dante's Peak 5: IS . 7:45. 10: 15 .( Sun.) Openers Veruca Salt may prove to be linens and beds. But. hones!- Booty Call I :30. 6. 8:30 Vegas Vacation Right Thing Fri . midni ght. Sat. 8. more entertaining. but together "Help! II 's a Fat Day '" pro­ vides help for those days when you wake up feeling like you 've . ly. who really cares? It's hard 5:30. 8 Dante's Peak 5: t 5. 7:45 they' re wonh the $25. (and expensive) enough keeping up with clothing trends with­ Cinemark 1ovies 10 (99-1-7075) somehow gained weight in your sleep. It oll'ers many possible reasons for this phenomenon besides Ih e usual hom1onal cause QUI havmg to wony about the adornments of the sleeping area. Regal Peonies Plaza 13 (834-8510) Dante's Peak t :-10. 4:25. 7:35. 10:05 Theatre of the Living Arts and also includes an inicresiing fact: "An average woman's And theentenamment section is prell)' weak; there's nothing Scream t :45. 4:3 5. 7:30. t 0:05 (215) 922-1011 (Sh ow iimes good for Fri .. Feb. 28 weight can va1y by up to 8 pounds in jus! 24 hours ... about mus1c, and the movies it reviewed are already out on Rosewood 1. .f. 7. 10 Fools Ru sh In Th e Bacon Brothers, S1111. March 9 through Thurs .. March 6) Booty Call Another an ide focused panty on what those who arc stuck in video here (most are released in British theaters after they finish t: 10. -1 :20. 7: t5 . 9:40 Shine 1:35. 4:30. at 7: 30p.m. t :2 5. 4:25. 7:05. 9:50 Dante's Peak 1:20. a pcm1anent "fat day" do to cope: join a suppon group. "I'll Be their U.S. run). The book reviews are !!ood thoul!h despite 7: I 0. 9:30 Absolute Power I :20. 4: I 0. No this is not another actor-turned­ 4:20. 7:20. 10:05 The Empire Strikes There For You" talks about the surrogate families we fonn and being quite shon. ~ - · musician - it's the other way around: Back 1. 2. 4, 4:50. 7. 7:30. 9:-fO. 10:10 7: 15. 9:50 Vegas Vacation 1:25. 3:30. is quite insighiful and 10uching. It presents the stories of three With its in-depth, intelligent articles on topics that affect read­ Kevin Bacon and brother Michael Star Wars t :30. -1 :30. 7:30. 10:20 That 5:35. 7:-f O. 9:-fS Star Wars I :30. 4:15. people who chose !heir own "families ... includin2 a wmmm ers lives. Options can cenainly hold its own beside Glarnout have been making rock music to2.eth- Darn Cat t: 15 . 3:30. 6 Scream 8. t 0:20 7:05. 9:55 Manoin's Room I. 3:10. 5:20. who adopted live children with Down Syndrome. ~ Mademoiselle and Cosmo. even at a slightly higher price of er for over 20 ye;rs. - Jerry Maguire 12: 50. 3:50. 6:50. 9: 40 7:30. 9:-fO The Empire Strikes Back A box following the story explains why so many people are admi SSIOn. t:t5 . .f :05 . 7:20. 10 :10 Star Wars 1:30. Absolute Power I :20. 4:20.7:20. 10 The -Jill Cortright and Mark Jolly English Patient 2, 6:30 Shine I 0: I 0 4: t 5. 7:05. 9: 55

I ' February 28, 1997 • THE REVIEW • B3

T HE REV IEW I Greg Shula;, Mov1e su it s counes) of Columbia P1 clu1~' Bruce Willis is in Delaware filming a movie and Greg Shulas found him. Check out the top left picture and see Bruce in all his glory (we ' ve circled him). And for a clearer shot of him look at the ones taken by the professional photographers. Die-hard fan embarks on quest to find Bruce

BY G R EGORY SHULAS The rain fel l softly o n my wind· " Yeah, .. I said quickly. '"(" m hot Slim Jim in the other. [headed hack five professional bodyguards an interview with. The co-owner of Stall Rt poria shield as the wind blew decayed on the tail of Bruce Willis. home where I would prepare for th e dressed in yellow raincoats and Planet Hollywood in about 20 dif­ ··Bruce Willis is in Wilmington." leaves onto the wet pavement of "I heard he's staying in town and next da) ·, hunt. bandannas guarded the set I ike ferent countries. husband of the a fellow fi lm student said to me as I Kirkwood Highwa). As I turned I wanted to sec if a n yone here ··You should take Maryland attentive German shepherd s who most sought-after woman 111 was leaving the Trabant Uni vcrsity onto Centerville Road. a feeling of would know where I could find Avenue west otT of 95 ... the same haven·t been fed in weeks. Hollywood and one of the mt glance he fit right intt} Though I try to shy away from aristocratic mansions. I ended up in side. He grew up there. you know ... my Chevy off the 1-95 north ramp me. "But if you want to do an imcr­ the urban environment. His hand the celebrity wor,hipping world some stretched-out. Dupont-esque Carney"s Point is the first exit on and then \\Cnt straight west to\\ ard vicw. you got to call the publicist movements seemed more influ­ "ith all its shallo" materialistic estate driveway that a ppeared to I-295 after you get ofT the Delaware where I was told Bruce \\aS sta~ ing. first."" enced by :.trect jive than Ho llywood: values. something unique imrigued span the length of Newark's Main Memorial Bridge. Bruce is in the And there it \\as . About eight or As it turned out the publicist stardom. But \\hen he started to me enough to step into my ·ss Street with no sight of Bruce or process of renovati ng the town of more trailer;, \~ere lined up one came to me. He said it was a closed \\a\e to the crowd he hind the barri­ Chevy Berrella and drive off into Dcmi anywher . Penns Grove (south of Camden ). after another. \long \\ith the multi­ . et and that no interviews or cam­ cades. the star pO\\ cr crept out. And the greater Wilmington reg1on Back in ciri liLation. I sought which is suffering from bad ceo­ tude of traile1' came golf carb. eras were al lowed. hy the time he walked back to hi,, where perhaps an encounter with refuge at Eli;pbeth"s Piu:a in the nomic weather. Penns Grove is abo ;,no\\ machiP·'"· power gencrato" "Working with Bruce is great." trailer with his body double cover-: one of Ho llywood 's last boy scouts Greenvi lle Sl10pping Center. right where Bruce's parents live. and tons l'f hn there. and I prefer to Brawler," a romantic comedy about s potlights. giant cameras and a He was rea ll y enthusiastic about from all thme s urroundin!! him. cat m y pizn at places with Italian an ex-hockey player looking for largc crowd - alJ nestled in th e film. though he did admit that Though I \\as warned against it. I: names. redemption. ha; the film shot clo,c bct\\ccn South Franklin and Tulip the work schedule prohibited him took two picture' an)\\ay. Wh~ : Surprisingly enough. Texaco was to Bruce's home. Since Wilmington roads. from going out around town. not"' Was I gonna come all this \\a) the place l<• go. is the nearest city that can be shot The sky was hlue and the temper­ But the more I tncd pu>hing him for nothing·> ' "OH, WOW 1 You·re a journal­ like New York City"s Queens. it got ature was in the high '60s. It for an interview. the more legal As I was cruising past Newport. 1: ist. .. the lldy behind the mini-man the lucky pick over Camden. seemed as if Hollywolld had fol­ excuses he gave to get me o ut of the reflected on the excitement of the. counter sa id to me. With her red Chester o r Philly. lowed Bruce all the way to New picture. It appeared that today was­ day. But i; one look at Bruce Willis.: bushy ha/r, warm eyes and enthusi­ Sadly though. my conversation at Castle County . n·t my lucky Jay for a Premiere­ a perfect stranger, worth all the· astic reference to my current form Texaco rapidly ran out of steam. So But the fa'>ler I got into the cen­ scale story. hours waiting and searching·1 ' of occurration, I could tell s he was a several minutes later, with an apple ter of events. the quicker I got a But then. al l of a sudden, the re he After all. he's just as human as, positive step in the right direction. Hostess cake in one hand and a glance at security. About four or was. The man I couldn't legally get you and me.

Stem's renowned .. ' .. poetry takes on new mearung• His award-winning writings reminisce of nostalgia and youth I JANE SIBERRY BY ELIZABETH BEUKEMA azi ne. '·The Sixties:· Bly encour­ KED. MO. Stt~/ J Rt• porr~.· , aged him to send in his poems for Gerald Stern's poetry has a pub I ication. DONOVAN quality that man y poets strive for Stern published his first book and few ac hi eve. collecti on in 1971 at age 46. He H is words have the ability t has been compared to Walt LOllnC~) Of Lllrt'la M:lnalo Whitman and Lt. Colombo. pre­ capture the listener and pull the1 The Theatre of Living Arts, located about 40 minutes away up 1-95, has all the nostalgia in the middle of South Street that any and into hi s nostalgic \\Orld of childj tending to be clumsy and ordi nary. hood and )OUlh. If poets \HI~ while in realit y he is quirky. origi­ every concert-goer wants - variety, quality and cheapness. from the heart. Stern's poetry ,is nal and largely uni versal. rustic romantici sm. Hi s the mes include merc y, jus­ In a poetry reading Wcdnc ay tice and forgiveness. and he has a niuht in Brown Hall. Stern's t ent unique gift fo r connecting the rich w:S widely apparent. Hi s wor has hi story of his life to a mo de rni zed. TLA Ain't no place like it won several awards incl ding ··yuppi fi ed" presenL o rants from the N· ional He writes o f hi s s tuffed pet BY ROBERT KALESSE that juts out of the n•of above the hox which used to support the scats. rise Torn old brown couches and a Endowment of the Arts · d the squirrel O scar. a po logiting fo r Ellh'rtaimnenl Editor ortlce. the TLA ,its in the middle of out of th e hard-cement earth and line wall-to-wall min·or lined wi th tho;e Guggenheim Fellows hip. sel ling him for a dollar w hen he Everybody wants to sec concerts thi s famou; Phill) block. the left and right sides and the front. urcular bulbs seen in the movies for . Stern's witty humor an candid was a c hild "because a dollar was - gcod concerts. But there is a Built in 19 10. the TLA opened as a separating the crowd from the stage. makeup stand o ut among the silvery heartfelt style brought a rm life a lo t o f mo ney back then :· chccl;iist a ll good patrons must go ni ckelodeon knO\\ n as the S ilver "Some bands don' t mind if the fan s tapestries hanging from the walls. to hi s writing that inspir d hard y But S te rn·s poetry is not all through first. Palace. According to TLA Video .. the come ri ght up to the stage:· Myers But the TLA. aside from it s nell Ja uu hs from faculty. stu ents and pretty a nd fl o wery. While some They want bands they"re interested o1iginal owner. the venue was used as says. "but there usuall y isn't much hi,tory and nostalgia. has o mc of the 1 " poets border o n syrupy a nd s urre­ N ewark residents in. a lot o f variety. some comedy a li ve theater in the 1960s. with actor: stage diving because it's so crowded hcst sound in the country. .th " Three a l. Stern's writing is a balanced Wl poem:. . mixed in . a good time that's nearby like Danny DeVito in residence. and the metal posts." "Clair Brothers. who arc the coun­ mesh o f euphori c youth and swift H earts:· a sentimcnta ycarn1ng and cheap. or at least moderately Then in No\embcr of 1987. Upon entering the stage. which try"s premier sound companies. arc in reality. for his memories o f so thern ew cheap enough to accommodate a col­ E lectric Factory Concerts bought the sports a huge arch overh ead o ri gin al­ Lancaster and have given us the'>C In '" M e moi r:· a candid look at Je rsey. " the chicken c ita! o f the lege student" s budget. and basically old movie house and decided. at first. ly used for Andrew Dice Clay's HBO >ound monitors:· says sound man world." he writes abo hi s Jewish the scandalo us memories of youth, just a good time . to show play,, show in the late '80s. it may be hard Tim Shapiro. "There arc only 12 in Stern ho lds nothing back . H e up-bringing and his g <~ ndm other's There "s one place that's just 40 The first show. " Little Shop of to beli eve. but the TLA can ho ld 800 existence and we've got ·em ... he says ritual Friday chick n- kill1ng. a breat hes a pass io nate fire into a minutes away. Located in the nostal­ Horrors:· was a hit. hut fans lost standing and 41 1 seated. proudly. striking tribute to ch nee a nd free­ fast-paced recollecti o n of steamy gic city o f Philadelphia. it completes interest quic kl y because that was th e To the left of stage is a ha ll way The sound quality and tight atmos­ dom. adolescence. writing · o f private the checklist to the full est. and the same month the movie came o ut on wi th flyers. photos and autographs of phere of the TLA is what draws bands Ste rn finds much of hi s inspira- moments bet ween his parents and atmosphere is one unlike an y other. video. says stage manager Paul th e former arti sts who·ve performed on their way up to the South Street ti o n in his chi ldh od memories. the frankly ho nest world o f inquis­ Just three simple letters: TLA. Myers. there. pasted to the walls in a coll age ve nue. and then when they've made it He writes o f hi s ·at her and hi s itive lillie boys . The TLA. an acronym for the "That was actuall y my first show of music history. to the big time. they repay the favor. vinegar-t:urc in Stern's writing seems to take on Theatre of the Living Arts. is where working here ... says Myers. pointing Up the stairs the feeling of walking Duncan Sheik. whose " Barely '"Ukrainian." a life o f it's own. He pours over you want to go. bar no ne . And with a to the old billboard featuring the man­ th e same footsteps as atalie Breathimz" is all over the air waves. is "Most people 'J out in the s un hi s poetry. infus ing a rare energy full slate o r awesome entertainment eatin g plant s backstage. Merchant and the 10.000 Maniacs. on hi s w;y up and will be at the TLA and dab on s un ·rcen ." he pref­ into hi s ins piratio n s . Even the for the month of MarciL well. timeli­ " It was kind of unfo rtunate Darius Rucker from Hootie and the March 16. whereas The Breeders. aced his poem M y father used sh ocking images of "Memoir.'· ness is everything. because the play lost a lot of interest." Blowfish. Tori Amos or Kcanu who·ve seen their MTY days. arc also vine2:ar as sun b lc k and a c ure fo r invo ke warm thoughts of c hild­ The TLA is situated on South Myers says. "Soon after that they Reeves. becomes evident. making an appearance March 21 . s tom-ach aches it's mut:h less hood independence and revelation. Street between 3rd and 4th streets. but decided to make it just music con- At the top ai1d on the third floor arc Whether seated or not". the TLA i~ in fact the best mid- majo r club addictive and \ Hks just as well." Stern. who won the Lamont with the way this block is set up with Celb. three dressing rooms as well as a around. With o ld and new acts mak­ Stern has b en writing poetry Poetry PriLe fo r hi s second book. all its weird and crazy stores. it can Upon entering to the concert hall. washer/dryer room and a bathroom ing their\\ ay into town every clay. the since hi s carl "20s. In the 1960s has been a writer all of hi s life and sometimes be easy to miss unless you th e fl oor immediate ly begins to slope with a shower. The rooms for the TLA i; bound to satisfy every musil· he be2:an · Hrcsponding with hi s work reflects many of his per­ keep an eye out for the movies. and it feel s as though a search for a opening bands arc relatively small. lover. Robert ~Biy. a editor for the mag- sonal experiences. Do nned with an ancient marqui s good scat is the mission. Metal posts. but the headline band is set.

----·------I -· B4• THE REVIEW • February 28, 1997 In the dead of winter, a breath of life

on gomg. tufts of poll en gone mad, bits of life lab following them were nothing. myself. day long. As I ran. I scraped the trappings of wafting in the afternoon wind, duped They made for the quiet background That's when th e thorns j umped Outside. it was damn ncar 65 thi s little downtown life off my back. like me by the bright warmth of an o f a painting sketc hed in quick o ut of crack in the 300-foot trees lin­ degrees - I remembered that much. I scraped off the crust of a stuffy Indian summer. strokes of my breath. ing the one-lane stree t. But in here. guarded by a canopy of North Mall hideaway, of a crowded The fields belong to someone, I I had made it. The thorns jumped out when I sleeping oak, ice and hardened snow BY ROBERT ARME GOL newsroom on a Wednesday deadline, was s ure. They rose to my right and The park. wasn' t looking. To shut me up I sup­ still lined the ditches. o f smo ke bellowing from the pipes beckoned me to follow. How could such a place exist pose. I had found Courtenay's Crystal It ''as damn ncar 65 degrees last o f an 18-wheeler caught dead before No. I couldn 't budge my course. here? And it worked. Cave, l thought. But there was no week. Rcmcmber"1 the tracks on West Main Street. But every few minutes, when But it does. The uphill , fo r the I put up my hands up in time to crystal , of course. and no real cave. I remember. I bolted. I said screw In the distance, a locomotive could squelch out a turn of my head, most part. was done. Ex haustion salvage my sweaty face. in tim e to Just the dark confines of howling it- I'm getting out o f this one-too­ screeched to me. It urged me on. I swear I'd swirl aro und in stride and kicked in. Dusk was fading to twi­ take a ni ce sharp one right th rough woods and deserted pavement. By many-Gallerias town. I could even hear the bricks catch a g limpse of what lay around light. the palm, in one bump of nesh and now, another winter night had fallen. So I bolted. On my feet. fallin g behind me and crumbling me. l hadn' t known I'd come to see out the other. I was coming back around, near­ I ~tartcd running up New London under my feet. The sunset loomed pale orange­ this place. I hadn' t known th at's why I could barely feel it. But the ing the world once more. Thump, Road. warm wind blowing across my I smiled. blue on the southwest horizon, a tan­ I'd kept running. blood gus hed in gall ons. it seemed, th ump. thump. The lights of civiliLa­ face. under my hat. crawling up my I smiled as the cars inched away, gerine splattered wet and bitter It made sense right then, th ough. and I ran fa ster and I fe lt better and tion twinkled over that last hill. If shorts and coursing sharply down my more and more sparse as the minutes against the inner walls of an entire I'd come to see the expanse of a soon the cramp in my belly shied my legs would have stopped, if my torn high school T-shirt. and th e miles pushed on. planet racing in circles, racing world apart from the one we walk away for the moment and it was mind could have controlled them, I I ran up New London Road, socks Thump, thump, thump on New o nward, toward the dawn of another through every day. And I' d come to cold . would have walked into the brush below my ankles. I could see the London Road, beyond campus, past day. Somewhere far from here some­ leave. Cold. It was frigid. and dozed - do~:ed off until the holes in my sneaks when I looked the Towers, past C layto n, past that one was waking up and I could I was too damn tired. My hands. blood and all. were morning dew coated my eyes and down: I've had them two years now massive green water tank in the sky. almost hear him yawning and crack­ I left. I veered right. traci ng the frozen. lined my face. and counting. There. out there. there is grass - ing hi s knuckles incessantly. south bend of the park. wanting to Suddenly I had sunk into the Instead. I went home. I ran up cw London Road and rea l grass, grass that's suffered All was gone, on New London see as much as l could , bearing in on depths of Creek Road, where fog didn't look back. I ran and ran and through winter, dry yellow grass I Road. Everything and everyone were the downhill slo pes. Jestcring for the hangs forever. The sun , I could tell, - Robert Anllengol is a city neu·s ran. tramped and tripped. and kept could see inhaling from the air little gone. The two kids and the golden road, jeering the concrete. joking to hadn't melted through the trees all editor for The Rel'ieu·. Philly Art Museum full of treasures

continued from page B I there are hour-long highlight tours that help novices n av i !>~ l e the fnnr-:o~cre :o~ re n ~ nf ~ n . and guides. Julie Berger. a museum tour guide in trai ning, c tied in a serene and dimly lit comer on the says the museum opened in 1928. Fiske Kimball was appointed director in 1925 and "wanted the west side sits Joseph Madia. a freelance artist who visits the museum faithfully for two to three gallery space to be sort of an architectural time warp.'' Berger says. hours a day. His sleek dark hair is combed back Kimball traveled throughout the world pur­ '' ith ci line-toothed comb. He sits with his sketch AN:D $.AVE; hook In his lap and his overflowing brown leather chasing items such as a Japanese tea house, relics portfolio at his side. fro m Indian and Buddhist temples, English and "'I'he availability of the museum for the hobby French tapestries, chandeliers and paneling, anisr: isn't used in Philadelphia." Joseph says. among many others, Berger says. " I'm lllc only guy around that sketches in here. He then had each piece taken apart and shipped to Philadelphia to be installed into the It's a.l,>~l') therapeutical pastime. museum in histori c order. 'This way.'' Berger "f'o:rt is permanent." he says with his warm beaming eyes. "It's not like singi ng. You sing­ says. "everything is coordinated together - the room itself and the works on display.'' it gcle!; ~way." Joseph sells some of his works, but For students looking to spend some quality he htlS-not made a career out of his rut. ''I don't hours away frqm the monotony of lame fratemi­ suggcsl making a living out of it. Your creativity dis:tppears ... ty parties. overcrowded and smoky bars or the Joseph works with pastels. pen and ink and fluorescent lights at the library, the Philadelphia water colors. "I like pen and ink because if you Museum of Art represents a tranquil refuge. make a mistake. it's there. It's a very interesting The museum is about a 45 minute skip up 1- business:· he says. 95. and the $4 entrance fee (with a student ID) Joseph's passion for art is not clouded by dol­ can easily be found between the cushions of any­ lar ;ign . "I pursue it only for the love of it. !try one's couch. Admission is free on Sundays not to become commercial." he says. ''It cunai Is before I p.m. your credibility... The museum does not ignore mu sic lovers. He has. however. sold some of his works. "I Wednesday evenings, the daily hours (Tuesday have done both realistic and abstract \vork s. but through Sunday from 10 a.m.-5 p.m.) are extend­ peofik' tend to buy the abstract:· , · ed un til 8:45, p.m. for various concerts. Steve Because Joseph says he has no specific Guyer .and the Excellos wi ll be performing "Jazz FM Wednesday" thi s week. favoriie location that- he is drawn toward to So, hopping into the car or catching the bus un~as'h his creative hand. he sketches th roughout the m\1seum. He says in the summertime he can into Philly req uires little effort. The museum be l'at!nd drawing outside the museum near the offers countless artisti c treasures which have pari-..-v.lay. been admired for decades. Instead of lounging around on your Laz-E-Boy easy chair while nurs­ THE REV IEW I Holly Nonon Thl! maze-like layout of the museum may This statue welcomes visitors from all over to the Philadelphia Art Museum. intirmdate a. first-time visitor, but fortunate ly ing your Saturday hangover. grab a friend and culture yourselves. 1- 800-532-FOOO

••·11 !•, niO l> >ti< ~ !"" II• • <':" N H...,. '"" In'~~ · ...... _.. · - ..,. ~ - , ~·JJ• , .... . "'''' ·~<'\UI¥' 0'-'1 • " •'• •· -· ·· - ~~~ " "'' •u .,,,.,., ~ ...,. ~ · ~··• · f , ...... ,,, --··~· Vintage jeans found ··; on Main Street contir:tied from page B I While her c li entele is primarily ., coll ege students. she says high Christi~a Cunningham says the schoo l students come in and shop as The Sisters of Chi Omega Welcome our store docs model some designs after well. Cindi adds that high Sc hool­ the antique look. er's tend to buy trendier jeans like 1Oth Pledge Class ... '·We try to match the style of vin­ bell-bottoms. wh il e college kids tage jeans with the low riders and sti ck to plain boot-leg fits. hoot cut. and the material with the Whi lc Indigo offers a larger sandbla sted jeans." she says. selection of sizes, their prices are Karin Baylor Stacey Meslin ext stop: Goodwill. While thrift s teeper th an the othe r shops on shops were the original site to find Main Street. Levi 517s (the bell­ Jennifer Benson Erin O 'Brien vi ntagc jeans. many have become bottom and nared leg jeans), which Sadie Bjornstad Katie Queen out-sold by trendy shops. It seems arc harder to find s in ce they haven' t th at the Goodwill on Main Street is been made since th e earl y 70s, are Shannon Buckley Rebecca Quietmeyer no exception. $32.99. whi le the 500s are $24.99. Allyson Burke Lauren Renk While their price can' t be beat­ Although Indigo carries only all jeans are $5- their se lection can. Levi 's. Ci ndi says students are mo re Laura Caputo Melissa Ricci Take a trip down memory lane interested that the jeans are used Kellie Coomes Karen Schaub while browsing through the racks and bell -bottom than the brand. and one can be su re to find at least The process tha t stores like Missy Cousino Emily Sweeney one cheesy brand that they wore Indigo and Outer Limits go through . Jessica Davidson Kerri Tenenbaum back in the day. Mixed in with the to obtain the jeans is simple. People Levi 's and Lee's arc PS Gitana. pick th rough yard sales and fle a Beth Dearnley Sarah Townsend Wrangler. Palmettos. C hi c. markets to find the jeans and sell Erika Dzelzkalns Kathy Velonis Jordachc and one obscure brand them to companies. The firms in name called asty Woman. turn put them through an enzyme Liz Ferguson Elizabeth Wentz (Hopefull y no one can. or will. wash. which is stronger than soap Alayne Finlay admit to wearing those). and water. and rate them on quality. Lauren Whiteman Although they arc inexpensive. · An A-lot pair of jeans has minor Liz Fischer Katie Wibling the color choices rank down there character naws such as a fray or a Joan Gail with their brand names: gray. black, tiny ho le. B-lot jeans have holes in Heather Wilson faded 'baby blue that's not quite the knee. and the holes in C-lot Kelly Gannon Beth Winslow white and the unforgettable acid jeans increase in size and number. Kim Harries washed in black and e lectric blue. Indigo carries A and B-lot jeans. Alex Witmer Lit: Robinson. a Goodwill Finding a pair that fits is the Amanda Hebdon Lauren Yanoff employee and freshman. says that hardest part of the entire denim Rachelle Kuchta \ mostly tvomen in th eir 20s and 30s process. Si nee the jeans are made Rebecca Zardecki bu) J~ans the re. with students for men. the sizes range from 28-40 choo~ing to browse through other inch waist and 30-36 inch lengths, Congratulations! racks in the store instead. and the correlation of the two makes Right across the stree t s it s it difficult to find a pair that con­ Indigo·; a new clothing store in the forms to a woman's body. Iron 14ill complex and a haven for " It's like a science or an art form tho~ e denim-seekers. to find a perfect pair." Cindi says. According to owner Cindi So for those willing to take the Handlon:. s he can hardl y keep time to try on count less pairs. it is enou&h jeans in stock. Since the likely that they will wind up with st?re._ppened in early December. something not only comfortable and C111d1 ~ays she has gotten three cool to wear. but also a piece of his­ shipments of jeans.. tory in th e form of denim ...... DEADLINES: CLASSIFIED RATES: Mail us your classified! If you prefer to mail us your classified, include: message, dates to appear, TO APPEAR: PLACE BY: UNIVERSITY (applies to students, faculty and stall- your phone number (will be kept confidential), and payment. Call us to Tuesday 3 p.m. Friday personal use ONLY.) Frida) confirm the cost of the ad if you exceed I 0 words. 3 p.m. Tuesday - $2 for first I 0 words, 30¢ each additional word. Mail to: The Review LOCAL 250 Student Center CANCELLATIONS AND CORRECTIONS: - $5 for first I 0 words, 30¢ each additional word. Newark, DE 19716 Deadlines for changes. corrections and/or cancellations are identical to ad **No classified will be placed without prior payment. placement deadlines. · All rates are for one issue. We reserve the right to request identification for university rates. Advertising policy: To ensure that your ad appears exactly as you want your readers to see it. If you wish to place a di splay ad. call check it the first day it runs. The Rniell· will not take responsibility for any error except for DISPLAY ADVERTISING: the first day containing the error. The maximum liability will be to re -run the ad at no 831 - 1398. Rates arc based on the size of the ad. PHONE#: 831-2771 additional cost. or a full refund if preferred .

February 28, 1997 • BS

HELP WANTED to develop into a full -time position for TOWNHOUSE. COLLEGE PARK. WEST KNOLL APARTMENTS I and 411/97 I bedroom and living room + Will pay gas. Call Greg 837-3134. th e ri ght aggress ive and energeti c FEMALES PREFERRED. CALL 2 Bedroom apanments available. Stop in kitchen and bathroom. I block from C 1PCOUNSELORS Join th e person. Be a patt of the fas test growing GAYLE (302) 636-0226. or ca ll 368-79 12. campus. semi private backyard. Call ath enturc & share the memories at industry of the 90· s. Must have reliable (302) 684-2956 between 12 p.m. and 8 ANNOUNCEMENTS Ul\1 IER CAMP• Top ranl..cd camp~ tmnsponation. Call Guardian Protection p.m. Mon.-Sat. for more info. Pocono Mountains. of PA need Se~ices Mon. -Fri .. 9 a.m. - 8 p.m. at Madison Drive - 4 person permit. 52 Madison- Four bedroom, 6/1. No ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! counselors to teach water and land (302) 832-560~. Ask for Depanment 51 . Several uni ts to choose from. All in ex c. pets. $995/month. 234-9565. GRANTS, SCHOLARSHIPS, AID ,porh. WSb/Lll'e Guards. Tennis. Located in the Newark m·ea. cond . & with WID 's. Available 6/1/97. ROOMMATES AVAILABLE FROM SPONSORS!!' Climhing. Atb and MORE! Call (215) 456-3 133. NO REPAYMENTS, EVER!II 81\7-9700. or e- mail Madi son Townhouse. 3 Bedroom. I Roommate needed for Madison $$$CASH FOR COLLEGE$$$. FOR pinctrcc(a pond.com. Reliahle. expetienced infant caregiver. bath. basement/garage. all app li ances, no Townhouse. $200/month + 1/4 utilities INFO: 1-800-400-0209. Flexible hours. Call Mary Anne @ 737- 2 bedroom. 2 full bath. Vill a Belmont. pets. I year lease $900/month + utilities. 73 1-2509. 9031. Exc. Cond. 3rd fl oor. View of the Avail able June I. Call 774-3570 8 a.m.- Hospitaht) Position-. Available Motels woods. $675/month . Avail ab le 6/1/97. 3:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri. or aft er 4:30 p.m . RESUME PROBLEM7 ? If so. please of America. a rapidly growi ng leader in 456-3 133 Mon.- Sun. 738-3652. Male roommate needed for SCHOOL call now to SOLVE this PROBLEM cconom) lodging. is hiring for the Telemarketing part-time days in ni ce LANE. Neat, non-smoker $195/month + FOREVER. I will write your resume foliLm ing positions: Room Altendant. office. Must have pleasant speaking utilities. Call Ken 837-3.182. and TEACH YOU how TO REVISE it Uti lit) Pcr..on. Full & pan-time positions voice. $6/hour . Main St reet location Madison Dtive Sign up early- I have the 2 bedrooms in quiet house I mile from yourself. Call Sean at 737-1731. a' ailablc. Apply at: Howard Johnson 369-3362. largest selection and the best houses. 4 UD $250 + 1/5 utilities w/d $250 Lodge & Suites 111 9 South College legal bedrooms, WID. AC. DW. W/W securi ty deposit. No pets 738-8520 Ask Rooms available for summer up to 6 .\ 'cnuc. C\\ark. DE 19713. carpets. renovated kitchens and baths. lorCm·ly. people. $230/month, free parking. Reminder: Mortar Board applications Paid Summer Intemsh ip in Wilmington $940/month plus utilities. Available June avai lable June 1st 731-4050. due by March 5 in 218 Trabant. area with Top Rated Fort une 500 I. Preferen ces given for 2 year lease. Li'c in Suhurban Philadelphia·> Contact company in the insurance and financial Call before 9 PM. John Bauscher 454- Madison D1i ve Townhouses . Excellent Sesame/Rock\\ ood Da) Camps. se rvi ces field. Full training prov ided. 8698. condition. A/C. WID. fini shed basement. Large private room in home to share. Grief and Loss Group starting now at the Counselors and speciali sts (6 10) 275- Northwestern Mutual is li sted in secmity li ghting. $940/month (302) 584- Living room , dining room, kitchen, Center for Counseling and Student 2'!.67 Box 385 Blue Bell. PA 19422. E­ America's Top Internships. For 7300. . WID. Walking distance lo campus 328- Development. Call 831-2141. :'\laii: sruaycamps~ aol.com information session dates ca ll Beth MADISON DRJVE townhouse for 4. 0686. Goldman at 234-6200 Ext. 35. Full time Excellent conditi on. laundry. parking. openings also available' Available June I. 737-1 771. 181 Madi son 4 Bedroom w/d. hardwood The Three Little Bakers Dinner Theater SUMMER JOBS ALL fl oors. available 6/1/97. Excellent 2 female roommates wanted for will be holding auditions for their L D/W ATER SPORTS PRESTIGE condition $890/month 738-7400. oversized newly-renovated house 2 spri ng/summer season on MARCH 8th, CH l LD RE ·s CAMPS Summer Pi zza Cook- Hand tossed. AVAILABLE JUNE I. TWO 2 blocks from UD. Washer, dryer, 12:00 NOON at the theater. Shows in AD IRO DACK MOUNTAI S Phil' s Pi zzetia Sea Isle City. N.J. Great BEDROOM APARTMENTS & ONE exercise room included, studious, non­ the season are: OKLAHOMA! which NEAR LAKE PLACID 1-800-786- Pay-Apt.-Meals-Bonus. Call (6 10 ) 647- 3 BEDROOM APARTMENT ALL lN Large efli ciency $450. One bedroom smoker, $300/month + 1/4 utilities per opens April 30th and SEVEN BRIDES ,'373. 4154. SAME BUILDING ON ELKTON $550. Two Bedroom $675 all included person. Available July I, 695-4809. FOR SEVEN BROTHERS which ROAD. ON UD BUS ROUTE. ALL heat , h/w. electric. cable, grass cutting. opens July 9th. Be prepared to sing 16 INCLUDE HEAT. OFF STREET wid. off street parking. yard . Available bars of a song of your choice (preferably PART TIME EMPLOYMENT Vetcrinmy Recepti oni st/Assistant pan­ PARKING. SECURITY LIGHTING. 6/1/97 and/or 9/1/97 738-7400. FOR SALE from one of the shows but not OPPORTU TJTIES Freedom City tim e. Experience preferred but not AND LARGE YARD $575 - necessary). Also wear clothes you can Coffee Com pan). located at the Hotel ne cessary . Call Lantana Veterinary $850/MONTH PLUS UTILITIES. Macintosh 5.25" storage stuff, 200MB move in. All roles are open and paid ! duPont in Wilmington is seeking staff Center 234-3275. YEAR LEASE. CALL TERRIE @ 4-bedroom house on Choate Street. 4- syquest drive-Brand New w/scsi cord For directions to the theater please call members who enJOY people and good 737-0868. pcrson occupancy. I bath, W&D, I year $200, 88MB syquest drive-works on the box office at 368-1616. cntTe.:. The hours .tre tlexible and the lca<;c beginning June I, rent $1200 per occasion $75, (2) 44MB cartridges- $25 pa~ i~ good. Also. \\C pay pm-king! Call FORRE T month plus utilities . $ 1200 security each. If interested page 247-6188. J~on at 654-4007 alier II :00 a.m. M-F Townhouse (B lair Coun) 3 Bedrooms deposit. on-smoking preferred. Call TRAVEL to ammgc m1 intervie\\. 3 Bedroom. Madiso n Dri ve. upstairs. 2 study rooms downstairs. I 1/2 Joel after 5:00p.m. at 368-3728. Washer/Dtyer. June 1st $800 +utili ties bath $ 1 150/month. Ava il ab le 6/3/97 . 1987 Plymouth Colt, 2 door hatchback, SKI & SNOWBOARD­ 731\-5 136 738-6453. new tires/exhaust, tune-up, $1500 o.b.o. SPRINGBREAK '97. Party In The Sun Attention Businc;,s Studenb. Paid intem COLLEGE PARK Townhouse 55 239-8215. & Snow! Students from over 150 11 ith a financia l planner needed. Madison- Available 6/97 3 Bedroom. Colleges. ONLY $239. Includes: 5 E\ccllcnt resume builder. Call 798-3199 Rehoboth- Seasonal Apattments for rent. Madison D1ive Townhouse several units Garage & Basement- A/C. Wash/Dryer. DAY LIFT TICKET, 5 NIGHTS ~k for Denise. 2 blocks from beach. For info. cail 368- I and 2 bathroom. 4 legal bedrooms. Dishwasher- $900/month plus utilities - HP Laserlet printer $125, various HP LODGING (LUXURY CONDO), 5 8214 or 227 -1 833. Cemral air. renovated kitchen & bath, W 996-9337. ' LaserJet font canridges $25 each, VGA DAYS INTERCOLLEGIATE & D. some with W/W carpet. Available color monitor $80. 731-4949. PARTIES, CONTESTS, ETC. W A TED: Part-time bartender June & Jul y. No pets, ample parking. (Drinking Age -18), Sponsors Include po sitions available in catering for Summer sublets or New lease 2 females prefeiTed. $950 or $1025. Earle CHERRY HILL MANOR Townhouse Molson & Labatts, MT. ORFORD, qualified studcms. Flcxihlc hours. year Bedroom apartm ent $540/month + Anderson 1-800-642-6890 before 9PM. 46 Eth an Allen Ct. - A vai Ia ble 6/97 3 Loft- 5' high. Easy to assemble. $70 Jodi CANADA (Just across the Vermont round: -,ummer hours avai lable. No utilit ies. June I st 369-1865 Amy or Bedroom - Private den. 11/2 Bath - AIC, 366-0360. Border) Also, Mt. Tremblant & Mt. St. previous bartending experience Dim1e. Washer/Dryer. Di shwas her Anne. Campus Orig/Ciub Group necessary. Student mu<,t be at least 21 One bedroom Park Place Apanmem for $875/month plus utilities 996-9337. Leader/Rep. Discounts. Call Ski Travel years old . enjoy servi ng people. and sublet. Call Park Place's Office 368- 1987 Chevy Nova, automatic. Good Unlimited. 1-800-999-SKI-9 or must be availahle through the academic Madison D1ive Townhouse. 3 Bedroom 5670 and ask for Audrey's Apartment. condition, no rust. $1100 negotiable. www.skitravel.com year 1997-1998. For more infonnation. wllarge basement study. washer/d1yer 5 bedroo m Townhouse College Park Don 456-0835. contact Charles Dorsey at 831-4368. and Central AC one of the nicest on $925 per month. Available June I, 1997. Madison Dtive $900/month 378-1 963. Madison Ave. 3 Bedroom available 6/97 Ca ll 994-3304. Spring Break '97 Panama City1! 895 plus utili ti es. 737-7 127 Buick '89 - Century sedan, V6, auto. Boardwalk Beach Reson $1~9 7/nights Are you looking for potential camings of trans .. cruise control, tilt wheel. AM!FM. Beach front. Daily Free Drink Panics. over $ 10/hour 'J A part-time opponunity Good Condition - Must Sell! ! Asking Walk to Best Barsll Group Discount !! $3 100 o.b.o. Call (302) 453-9198. V/MCIDISC/AMEX Endless Summer Tours 1-800-234-7007.

PERSONALS Spring Break Bahamas Party Cruise! 6 NEW METABOLISM Days $279' Includes All Meals, Panics BREAKTHROUGH. LOSE 5-l 00 & Taxes! Great Beaches & Nightlife! LBS. DR. APPROVED. COST $35. 1- Leaves From Ft. Lauderdale! 800-666-4 793. springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386.

Welcome new Alpha Xi Delta members Cancun & Jamaica Spring Break - we love you! Specials! 7 Nights & Hotel From $429! Save $150 On Food. Drinks & Free Parties! Ill % Lowest Price Guarantee! Alpha Xi Delta - get ready for the New springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386. Member Retreat!

AAA' Spring Break '97. Cancun, I love my Alpha Xi Delta Girls' Love Jamaica, and Bahamas! 1 7/nights w/air your N.M. Educator. from $399. Enjoy Daily Free Drink Panics, No Cover at Best Bars. and Group Discounts!! V/MCIDISC/AMEX Delta Gamma loves their new pledges!! Endless Summer Tours 1-800-234- 7007.

Delta Gamma welcomes back Larissa. Meg, Erica, Renee, Jess and Jen. We Florida Spring Break' Panama City! missed you' Room with kitchen near bars $119! Daytona-Best Location $139! Aorida·s New Hotspot-Cocoa Beach Hilton Delta Gamma get psyched tor tonight's $169! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678- date party at Cavanaughs'! 6386.

Have you ever been in a beauty/talent Congratulations to all the new members pageant? Please share your story. Call of Phi Sigma Sigma Holly or Christa at The Review. The number is 831-2771.

KAPPA DELTA_ HAVE A BLAST AT THE DATE PARTY ON Have you ever donated spenn to a spenn SATURDAY!! bank? The Review would like to hear about your experience. Call Christa or Holly at 831-2771. LARINI - THANKS FOR A GREAT JOB WITH KAPPA DELTA'S RUSH! Do you revolve your schedule around your favorite soap opera or televis(on REVIEW RIDE BOARD show? If so, call Holly or Christa at 111e Review at 831-2771. ONLY 792 hours until Spring Break!!! DON'T BE LEFT BEHlND! Place your ride needs here!' Heart. Jethro! Tull. Bad Company. I dance around in my tighty-whities while listening to the Monsters of '70s Rock . Ride to Atlanta needed for Spring Break. Want to join rne?Golden Boy x6164

\I '·· • B6 • February 28. 1997 ii:EviEw Nth DIMENSION BY BRIAN ED\VARDS ""- / 10"

SCUM

i REALITY CHECK _® by Dave Whamond v i J

FALL SEMESTER IN LONDON -MEEfiNGSI 1997 UFS, Inc. ~ ' i

OILBERT ®by scott Adams Attend either meetinK listed below: ,. Monday, 3 March 1997 Tuesday, 4 March 1997." 0 DILBERT A5KED ME. TQ ~ IMP0~5IBLE., IT'5 I'M HAVING 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. 3:30 - 5:00 p.m. 51'E.AK TO YOU ABOUT "' THE PROJECT PLAN ~ 'IOU AAAOGANT FL A':>1-\ B f>. C1<.5 < 330 Purnell Hall 329 Purnell Hall , YOU CREATED WITIIOUT TO MY Hl5 INPUT. ~ eABOON JJ! HONEYMOON. ) For more information or an application, contact: ~ ""\I Dr. Kenneth Biederman International Programs & Special Sessions ) ~ ' :y. ! ;{.,,· ..::: 308 Purnell Hall 4 Kent Way telephone: 831-1761 telephone: 831-2852

Alayna Artman Tara Lonergan Christina Awad jennifer Maher Laura Besedin Allison Parutar Pam Bollinger Krisi Patten Lauren Calabrese Renee Payton Brooke Carey Kristen Pazdera Alison Carr Stephanie Perritt Bridget Cecil Elizabeth Player Molly Conway Kimberly Rauss Danielle DePinto Christa Salata Melissa Dietz Marlena Saxon Sarah Forster Carly Seiler Eileen Geis Allison Senk Vicki Gremmo Alyson Sheridan Michelle Handleman Kim Thomas Megan Hannon Dilshad Vadsana Carolyn Keril_ Bridget William

Sa~y, :IVIa.rch 13 a"t Nicole Kesty Lauren Yates &:00 p.:D1. & 10:30 p.:D1. Danielle Lawler Kimberly Young Ti.ck.e"t•: $22 .------:~ Di.•cou.n."t• a."V'aJ1ab1e :for •e:n.:i.oi-8, •1;u.de:n."t• a.:n.d gro~p•­ For "ti.ck.e"ta, ca.l.l. L 0 u d & p r o u d "'· (302> 652-33"7"7 GRAND or 1-&0G-3'7...Q-lR..AND 6J}"c"_,·SifO....r --~~--=----- ~ -----==:::::;;;;;;______. 1111

( February 28 , 1997 . THE REVIEW •87 ______,...... _ ~--~~~~-~--~~~----~--~~~ ._- - ~ - ·lllll!ll· -.- ~ ~ ---===::--..:--:::::::;;;~r.::-:::-::::l ,...... - . -- .. . . -. - . -. ------. . I "' . .. ._\ ------I ------~\ ~\ - ~\ - ·~/ ~ -, &'alurda~ &/'arch/~· -~~~- ~' ..__, AL··-~- ~~~ ~ \ r ALA 8 band~, '-- 'a.:\ ' \ welcomes our ~\ ' '...l : 1 $ft.P;(B 4- 8 HOVRS of y<-at Mv~ic-11 ~ 1 pearls. Allison Ash Hillary Clark lwy Trot ten t LoCALyANDsHOW ~\ Katie Garrett ~ ~\ Samatha English

~ ~ •« ~ ,.,»""· "':"< "'>:-~· "'"'·j ' . -::o97.W ~~;< • ~ Elaine I"Janaro ~ ~ ~'Elissa Latts - ~ 3pm-4pm: Talavera 7pm-Bpm: Upstanders --=-\ Gayle Lovit ~\ ~\ Kim Morris ~\ 4pm-5pm: Juliet's Wishing Well xo" 'o\\ 8pm-9pm: Lexicon of Bad Words -.::___\ Jackie MacGregor 'e:J 5pm-6pm: Gingham Schmuz "'"'''0ol"·· 9pm-10pm: Mood Swings ~ \ Jill Mic±Bl ' ~\ ~ lO.rpm-llpm: Nero ~-:.1 ~ 6pm-7pm: Antje Duvekot v- ~-=-\ Lara Ol.esi D3.nielle Minkoff ~ ~ ~' .J\{{ aay for on{y $2. 00 ... oyen to a{{! ';_\ D3.n3. 1-Ertsell ·, ~ ._, TIX so{c{ at tfie aoor .._ Jessie Rosoff eJ ~ , _ \ 'L_\ 1&'~"'=·'3hc-"""'"-w;.;;s;;,~='"'"'"''"'"'""'- -'"'""'''""=~'-"~"'L'iitt:.ili!,~:;;gii;~::;_ '~'~'"=-'""'""~=--c:--""''-""'"~"··-•· '.__\ Kristie Siner ._ \ ~ \ Angie Sweeny ~ ~- ' Nichole Tagle ~- --'' Brought to you by SCPAB and the COMP12EHEN51VE STUDENT FE£. ',· \ Jen Dezaney ~ \ Visit SCPAB's hompagc at : hup: ude/.edu stu-org :;cpah_ We Are Entertainment : \ Meg han Deangelo I~. .------...------...------...------,...------.--....­ -- . -.. -. ·- -- .. ------.. -- .. ------. --- -. -- -- . ------•.- (

CONGRATULATIONS

28 1997 NEW MEMBERS

Jenna Bailey Kate Middleton University ol Delaware, Host Alice B eckman Michelle Miller Newal'k, Oelawal'e Alex Bradley Suzanne Miller FOR TICKETS: Meredith Bronstein Katherine Miola Li sa Carter Jen Mogel Cynthia Fahrenz Tara Morgan 302-984-2000 (DE) Jamie Frankel Gina Navaleza Nicole Frankonis Jennifer Noly Department of Fore1gn Carolyn Gl9or Melissa Schuler Languages and Literatures Summer Department of Music Dana Gre~ne Jessic a Secherist International Programs Lauren Haley . Kristen Smith StUdY and Special Sessions Pauline Hu ghes Stephanie Smith Elizabeth Hyde Andrea Smouse Anne Kenyon Jessica Suarez ~lfjEr:*~ Abroad Kara Krouse Lauren Sulcius Elaine Kurt s CathleenSwody WEDNESDAY France Vicki Lindros Beth Thompson MARCH 5 Jenn Von Horn M e li ssa Linke 4:30PM Alyssa M aco ni Elizabeth Wallac e Megan McC orm ick Michelle Wat so n 211 AMY DUPONT PARIS

INTEREST MEETINGS GET ON Tuesday, 4 March 199 7 THE at 4:00 p.m. in 341 Sm'ith Hall BUS or Wednesday, 19 March 1997 Friday, Feb. 28th, '97: 9pm Friday, Feb. 28th, '97: midnight at 4:30 p.m. in 20 1 Smith Hall Saturday, March 1st, '97: 11 pm Saturday, March 1st, '97: Bpm For more information, contact: All shows played at the Movie Theatre in Trabant Univ. Center: Dr. Mark Huddleston * S2.00 udmission with University /D. One guest per University//). 468 Smith Hall * Tit.:kets uvuilahle at the J'rahunt University ( 'enter or Bob ( 'wpenfer Center Box ( Jfficl! . telephone: 831-2358 e-mail: [email protected]

We~ Are Ent.:rtain me nt

! l BS • T HE REVIEW • February 28, 1997

K~ K~ K~ THE SISTERS OF KAPPA DELTA K~ The President's Commission to Promote Racial and Cultural Diversity K~ and K~ The Diversity Education Task Force K~ WELCOME THEIR NEW PLEDGES ••• K~ "• K~ PRESENT • K~ Christina Accocella Kristen Lalanas K~ K~ WELCOMING AND APPRECIATING DIVERSITY Dawn Bachetti Dina Larkay K~ K~ A one-day (or 1/2 day version), experiental workshop that shows us how ·to identify the misinformation we carry about ourselves and others, how K~ Melissa Barrett Chris Manzella K~ to heal ttw emotional wounds resulting from mistreatment, and how to K~ Kate Braker Candy McGinnity K~ reclaim the power to challenge all forms of discrimination. Join us for an enjoyable and empowering day! K~ Christina Cameris Meghan Poslusny K~ K~ K~ • Aimee Carr Miche le Prescott Spring Workshop Schedule: K~ K~ Jennifer Ciraulo Jessica Richmond K~ Thursday, February 13 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.- Noon K~ Dani lie Russo Saturday, Feruary 22 Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-3:00p.m. Megan Daum K~ Wednesday, February 26 Room #227, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-Noon K~> Renee DiPeppe Sarah Sager Saturday, March 2 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-3:00p.m. K~ K~ Wednesday, March 12 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-Noon ~gela Sertich Monday, March 24 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-Noon K~ Amy Fess K~ Friday, April 11 Ro om #227, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-Noon K~ Laura Freedman Kathleen Shannon K~ Monday, April 21 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m .-Noon Saturday, April 26 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-Noon K~ Stephanie Gabianelli Kristin Sherk K~ Tuesday, May 13 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-Noon K~ Jessica Gill Kristen Sisca K~ Friday, May 30 Room #219, Trabant University Center 8:30a.m.-Noon K~ Nicole Giorgio Kimberly Thomas K~ K~ K~ Holly Graham Jennifer Tucker According to Judith Gibson, Affirmative Action and Multicutural Programs, K~ the response of participants to diversity workshops held in previous years K ~ Susannah Jones Nicole Vay has been overwhelmingly positive . K~ K~ Erin Joslyn Kristen Wecksler K~ K~ Register through e-mail addressed to [email protected] K~ Melinda Katz Allison Wessel K~ or call 831-8735. K~ Adriana Kosits Kara Whipple K~ Kl\ K~ I I K~ CON GRATULATIONS • • K~ K~ *You're Simply The BEST* K~ K~ K~

Party.___,. In Tile Sun &Snow ! .:0 Molson & Labatts .:0 .a.ORFORD , CWDA fill! I Mil ACIOSS Mt. TltllblantAIIo.lnll.Tit£-­ ~-t.JD t!. -~--"i~~~~ ., oe~ \)ll\ll'C J ust another thing to like about: the t!. .lfo\Gl\U 1.0 f\1\l.'f tau"· ., eo~~oOO · D e law are Air National Guard t!. ~Of-- . ' .,~~~

STUDEim FROM OVER " A $5000 ENLISTMENT BONUS" 150 U.S. COll.ECES MOTE: THE LECAL ACE TOIS Y o u can rece i ve $5000 by joining the Delaware COMSUME ALCOHOL IS Air National Guar d . For m.ore inf"orm.atlon call 1-80 0 -742-671 3 now. The m.oney is going FAST.

PS: W e a lso offer over $20,000 in Educational Assistance:-)

~ : Need Extra Cash? Join the new store on campus!

Put the world at your fingertips. Software Engineering Systems Engineering Computer Design Better Ingredients. Signal Processing Electro-Optics Better Pizza. Image Processing With Raytheon Electronic Systems, you' ll create the technologies that define the future of tomorrow's world. You'll maximize your Engineering and Computer Science knowledge and make an impact when you join our team. We currently have over 13 6 Elkton RD 350 opportunities available in the technical areas listed above. Raytheon Electronic Systems will be visiting campus soon. To find Now Hiring All Positions! out more about the complex challenges we have to offer, please contact the Career Placement Office to sign up for an interview. (Assistant Managers, Shift Runners, In .. Store, & Drivers) For additional information, please see our homepage at: http:/ / www.raytheon.com/res Interested candidates who are unable to meet with us on * flexible shifts * weekly paychecks * 50°/o discounts * campus may send a resume directly to: Raytheon Electronic Systems, Professional Staffing, M/ S T2SL2, 50 Apple Hill Drive, Tewksbury, MA 01876-0901. Fax: (508) 858-1163. Start Today... call 888--218--PAPA E-mail: [email protected] U.S. citizenship may be required for some positions. Equal Opportunity Employer. RayllleOII Electronic lilt.... e Opens March I st Systems ~

• I 'I ( ' February 28, 1997 • THE REVIEW • 89 . Smith deserves Player of Year honors

reg Smith led the America The 6-foot-7 senior forward from won both meetings, but And doesn't character count for Then came that incident against fortable in that situation. He 's the GEast in scoring with 21.6 Lagos. Nigeria received the award the first was by two points on a last­ anything anymore7 Vermont which got Awojobi ejected kind of player who comes to work points per game. Boston last night at the America East second shot by guard James Smith has been nothing less than and suspended for his last three every day and works hard . And University forward Tunji Awojobi awards dinner at the Trabant Schwartz. The second meeting went a team player all season. After scor­ games, including his last career when it 's time to clock out, Smith ranked third, scoring 18.1 per game. University Center. The honors were into overtime before Schwartz took ing 23 points and grabbing 14 home game and for the game the would have his 20-something points Greg Smith led the America East determined over again. rebounds against Awojobi in school retired his jersey number. and I 0-plus rebounds. in rebounding with 11.5 rebounds by confer­ In both games, Awojobi drowsily Boston, Smith was asked how it felt Way to go there, smart guy! So how close was this voting? per game. Awojobi was second with ence coach­ trudged about the court, missing to outplay his opponent before a But don' t worry, the coaches still Who knows. But in an informal 11 . 1 boards per game. es' voting. close shots and losing rebounds and slew of NBA scouts. think you're the greatest player in Review poll of America East coach­ Greg Smith led the America East D i d passes out of bounds. "I obviously didn't play well,'' the league. es, Awojobi led the voting for best with a .613 shooting percentage. Awojobi Every so often, the big man Smith said, "because we lost.'' That's because that fact has been player, receiving one vote more than Awojobi was ninth. shooting 4 7 per­ deserve it? would catch a wide-open pass under The same could be expected of drilled into their heads since the Smith. Awojobi also won the award cent. He did the basket, slam it, and all was for­ Smith after any game. He would be season tipped off. Pretty red pam­ as most overrated player, while Greg Smith recorded double-dou­ block 60 given. (Ooh, we've never seen a 6- happy with an eight-point perfor­ phlets sporting the Nigerian ' s Smith was shut out of that category. bles in 14 of 18 conference games shots this foot-7 basketball player dunk mance if his team won. And he sleepy countenance were distributed Now that's comedy. this season, and scored more than 20 season to before.) would be disgusted with a 25-point by Boston's sports information It's also American. Let the super­ points in I 0 of 18 games. Awojobi Smith's five , Smith, on the other hand, worked showing if the Hens came up short. department at every Terrier game. star have his glory, and let his fol­ had just nine double-doubles and but he Awojobi all game long, muscling Awojobi plays with an arrogant "Tunji Awojobi for Player of the lower's praise his spoiled actions. broke 20 points just five times. trailed inside to receive post passes and swagger. He knows how good he is, Year," they said, as if he was run­ But still, behind the spotlit stage, Greg Smith wasn't the one who Smith In grab rebounds. and he knows he doesn' t have to tell ning for political office. another man works his butt off for got suspended for head-butting every other How could Smith have been you how good he is because he Even during the first weekend of his close-knit group of teammates, Vermont's star center Erik Nelson. category. snubbed by the coaches? knows everyone else will let you conference play, when Awojobi was and few take notice. knocking Nelson out for the rest of In the two head-to-head meetings True, Boston won nine more con­ know how good he is. averaging about 14 points and five Here' s to Greg Smith - the the season. But Awojobi was sus­ between Smith and Awojobi , Smith ference games than the Hens, but Yeah, he's good - so good, in rebounds per game, his name was America East's hardest-working pended for the last three games of scored a total of 39 points and whether Delaware won or lost, fact , that he was benched for inef­ deliberately planted in the brains of player of the year. the regular season for that very act. grabbed a combined 24 rebounds. Smith was always an unstoppable fective play during a 73-42 loss to coaches, fans and the media. So it only follows that the Awojobi scored 37 and had 21 force. fellow conference top dog Drexel. And the mind makes those asso­ America East Men's Basketball boards. When the Hens won, it was The bench just isn ' t where you want ciations: Brad Jennings is the sports editor at Player of the Year would be: All right. so it was an even because Smith was dominating. your leaders to be in a big game like Best player = Tunji Awojobi. the Review. He doesn't believe in Tunji Awojobi. matchup, but Smith did produce the When the Hens lost, Smith was that. Smith was never paraded around rewarding intolerable behavi01: better numbers. what kept them close. like a Messiah . He never asked to Send comments to [email protected] . be. He would not have been com- Men prepare for battle Tennis: Men can with Flying Dutchmen contend continued from page B I 0 continued from page B I 0

( 11 .5 ppg, 5.6 rpg) needs to make his Kenny Lovell. presence felt if Hofstra is to Johnson and Lovell should be advance. welcome additions to this year's The Dutchmen split the season team - Johnson was a three-time series with the Hens, but have never Pennsylvania high school state beaten Delaware at the Bob. qualifier at Sewickly Academy in Hofstra whipped the Hens 81-70 Pittsburgh; Lovell was a two-time in Hempstead. N.Y.. on Jan. 7 as the district quarter-finalist at Central · Dutchmen began to climb through High School in Manheim, Pa. Both the conference standings. Delaware co uld battle for a spot among the shot just 30 percent for the game. top six singles positions. While Smith scored 29 points and " We only lost one starter to grabbed 16 rebounds for the Hens, graduation," Travis said. ''With the , his teammates struggled- shooting returning six players and the addi- · 11-for-50. tion of several talented newcomers, • Hofstra used 21 points and I 0 this team will have a lot of depth.'' rebounds from Claxton and 20 In doubles, Lustig and Bernstein · points each from Thomas and will again pair up at the No. I spot. · Beckett to down the Hens. The defending America East dou- ' When the teams dueled again bles champions at their position, Feb. 2 in Newark, the Hens came ouL Lustig and Bernstein led last year's . lance of pis star freshman guard. ly. on top 79-72..ifhis time, Delaware. team with a record of 11-4. · "I' d hate to think of where we'd "This week, we' ve just been try'­ held Hofstra' a three leading scorers The remaining doubles partners be without [Claxton),'' he said. ing to refresh ourselves both mental­ to a combined 29 points. Arsic heat­ are yet to be decided. ed up for 22 points, Smith had 20, "He's the best player on this team." ly and physically.'' and the team shot near 50 percent. Wright said the teams' two meet­ The winner of tomorrow's game The key for the Hens this time ings were very similar. wi ll face the winner of the Boston will be the control of the Hofstra "We jumped on them early and University-Maine/New Hampshire back court. they looked weary [at Hofstra],'' he game. Boston holds the top seed in " Hofstra is a very confident said. "We contained Arsic, but Smith the tournament, and has a good team,'' Delaware coach Mike Brey st iII had a big game. chance of advancing to Sunday's said. "They are very hard to beat. We "Then, when we played at semi-fi na Is. have to control their guard-quick­ Delaware, we were sluggish. We Brey is excited about a possible ness. battled and battled, but we couldn't rematch with the Terriers. "I like our "We have to keep those guys out get over the hump. We controlled draw.'' he said. "I like our bracket. of the lane, and keep them off the Smith a little better, but Arsic and "There's no question that offensive boards with our big guys. Davis killed us ... [Boston] is beatable. There is a "We did a good job guarding the Brey said he was concerned about much more open field than there was perimeter [in the second game], but the stamina of his many yo ung play­ last year.'' [Hofstra big man] Beckett can get it ers. The Hens lost by two points to done too.'' "Whenever you have first-year Boston at the Bob earlier in the sea­ Wright highlighted the impor- players," Brey said. "you worry son, and dropped an overtime game about them hitting the wall physical- on the Terriers home Ooor.

Your vote counts with us! Come and SUMMER SCHOOL FOR PEOPLE eat at the Scrounge! ON THEIR WAY TO THE TOP. If you didn't sign up for for a $4,000.scholarship Patronize the Scrounge ROTC as a freshman or and advanced officer sophomore, you can still training when you return catch up this summer by to campus in the fall. with your points, FLEX and cash! attending Army ROTC You'll also have the Camp Challenge, a paid self-confidence and 7 ·d1g1 I Wille six-week course in i discipline you need leadership. Apply to succeed in college 1111 now. You may qualify and beyond. Mon. - Tltun. II -II:30 P• ARMY ROTC Fti. - $un. II1111 - 8p1t1 TBE SMAJmS'I' COLLEGE COUISE IOU CAN TAD For details. visit 221 Mechcmical Hall or call 831-8213 GAMES TO COMMENTARY

•••••••••••••••••••••••••WATCH • Despite leading the conference The America East men's in three major categories, Greg basketball tournament gets Smith gets snubbed in Player undetway tonight. The Hens of the Year voting. Go figure. play Hofstra Saturday at noon. JENNINGS •••••••••••••••••• B9

February 28, 1997 • BJO Piggott's 16 points lead team effott in win

BY GRAEME WHYTLAW grabbed nine rebounds. the · foul Gallagher hit three three-pointers Jed the way with five steals and "We made the most of our opportu­ Assistant Sports Editor "Our kids set the tone from the line on in that span to help the cause. five rebounds, as well as an in­ nities at the foul line and shot very, Execution is the name of the beginning of the game," Hens 26-for-31 "When you have good three­ your-face defense that distracted very well from the free throw game in basketball. coach Tina Martin said. "We ke.Pt shooting. point shooters you're never out of BU. line." The Delaware women' s basket­ coming and never backed down 's Boston a basketball game," Martin said. The Terriers fought back once The Hens next face second­ ball team defeated Boston after we lost the big lead and real­ made the "When they got it down to [a] six more with a six-point run that cut ranked Vermont in Burlington on U n iver ~ !!~' 76-65 last night, the ly showed our maturity." ------game very or seven [point margin] our kids the lead to eight with 8:14 remain­ Sunday in the quarterfinals of the Hens' fir t conference tournament Delaware used a total team Boston U. 65 i n teres t- didn't lose their composure and we ing. But Delaware pounded the ball America East tournament. win since joining America East. effort as four players scored in __Hens,______76...,. ingDelaware after rebui It our lead." inside to Piggott and Seifert, who "We're playing with a lot more The seventh-ranked Hens (9-18) double figures. Freshman center Delaware stepped up its intensi­ were fouled and went to the line a confidence and they' re wondering knocked the No. I 0 Terriers (6-20) Chris Seifert poured in 15 points went into the half leading 44-23. ty on defense and forced a myriad combined 20 times. what's going on with us down for the count. Delaware was and pulled down 12 rebounds. The The Terriers went on a 11-2 run to of turnovers, and as a result the "Shanda [Piggott] and Chris [Delaware]," Martin said. "Our led by junior forward Shanda Hens shot 43 percent from the start the half cutting the lead to 12 Hens rebuilt their lead to 14 points. [Seifert] both stepped up big time team is stepping on that floor Piggott, who scored 16 points and floor, and a gaudy 84 percent from points. BU forward Kelly Jo Sophomore forward Jackie Porac from the foul line," Martin said. Sunday looking for a 'W ' [win)." Delaware Greener pastures on the horizon ready for With 10 graduated seniors. must-win and little field experience, Hens hope youth runs wild game with

BY LEO SHANE III and three starting defenders, includ­ Hofstra Copy Desk Chief ing an all-American defender. Lacrosse is a game of experi­ Attacker Brock Livingston lead ence. Often, a bouncing ground­ the squad with 48 points (37 goals, BY BRAD JENNINGS ball or swift attacker can reveal a II assists) with fellow offenseman Spans Editor player's experience or ineptitude. Pat Gately trailed by only one point It's do-or-die time for the While this year's men's (31 goals, 16 assists). Delaware men's basketball team. lacrosse team has plenty of Defenseman Carey Egan (5 While the regular season has had coaching experience, many of the goals, 80 groundballs) headed the its definite ups and downs, a new most knowledgeable players have Delaware defense both in presence season begins for the Hens tomor­ left, forcing the team to move to and play, and was named a honor­ row when Delaware faces Hofstra at greener pastures. able-mention all-American defend­ noon at the Bob Carpenter Center. Coach Bob Shillinglaw said er. Team records and personal the coaching staff is impressed Returning attacker Kevin Laverty achievements with the said the losses have affected the will go out team 's defense more than the offense. "The the window. preseason defense lost a lot of experience. T h e prepara­ "But a lot of the other [defensive] America East tions. "I players are good guys. We have a men's basket­ think the young team, but we have more ath­ ball tournament is here. coaching staff is pleased with the letes and better sticks this year." Just win, baby. work ethic and the way things The graduation losses won't Delaware (14-15, 8-1 0 America have been progressing." upset the team too much because East) enters the tournament as the And although the team appears several underclassmen had signifi­ number five seed, while the Flying more athletic, he admits the cant playing time last year, Dutchmen (12-14, 9-9 America squad is greener than past years. Shillinglaw said. East) represent the fourth seed. "A lot of the players with signifi­ Another returner, senior goalie Because the first three rounds of cant playing time are graduated." Brian Cooper, has had to step up his the tournament are held at the Bob, In all, Shillinglaw said, the performance both as a defenseman the Hens will essentially be playing team lost I 0 players to graduation and as a presence. "I've taken more a home game. This fact has Hofstra last year. Included in that group of a leadership role, calling out THE REVIEW/File Photoa coach Jay Wright a bit worried. were the Hens' two top scorers defenses and being a leader on and Delaware will field an exceptionally athletic men's lacrosse team this year, but the "We have the toughest draw in off the field." young Hens will have to adjust quickly to college-level play if the team is to excel. the tournament," Wright said, Cooper said the coaches have "because we finished ahead of placed a greater emphasis on defen­ Delaware, but we still have to play sive play and strategy. " They 've man who missed last season, will make his debut Delaware's weakness, Shillinglaw said. them on their home floor. instituted more focus of team with the team this year. "He's as good as some "Hofstra and Towson both went to the NCAA "I've always been a proponent of defense. Our coaches commented of the defensemen who graduated last year," tournament. Towson beat Loyola in the first a one-site tournament, but now we that this is one of the better defen­ Shillinglaw said. round." have to [play the Hens at Delaware]. sive teams in years. The 45-man squad has 17 new freshman addi­ This year, the conference could prove even I should plead temporary insanity." "Our defense is stronger than tions. Shillinglaw said several of the new play­ tougher for the Hens to win. Shillinglaw said 10 Delaware will look for senior for­ ever." ers are solid athletes. of the teams on their schedule are among the top ward Greg Smith (21.6 ppg, 11.5 Younger players, Shillinglaw "J.T. Jones [a freshman defenseman] is one of 20 squads in the nation. rpg in America East) to make his said, will play a much larger role the fastest players on the team." For the team to "This year is a tougher schedule than we' ve usual whole-hearted contributions. this season. succeed, these new faces will have to make an ever had," he said. The Hens will also need big perfor­ "One of the nice things is that we impact on the field. Still, the players are optimistic about their mances from senior forward Peca have two good defensive players Since Delaware lacrosse began in 1975, the chances. Cooper, who played on the 1994 cham­ Arsic (13.2 ppg) and junior guard returning, both sophomores, so we Hens have made a tremendous impact, winning pionship Hens team, said last year the squad led Keith Davis (14.5 ppg). don't miss a step. their conference 13 times. In recent years, how­ both Towson St. and Hofstra going into the Delaware's younger players will "Jim Caboy [a senior defense­ ever, the team has suffered a championship fourth quarter before surrendering both games. also need to be consistent for the man] has had an excellent fall and drought; their last conference title came in 1994, "If we catch a couple breaks and play smart, Hens to survive round one. preseason." In addition, he said, and the team finished third in America East last we could win a championship," he said. "We're Hofstra relies on the high-pow­ THE REVIEW/Ftle Pboto Phil Dunkley. will be a strong force year. excited about this season." ered play of freshman guard Craig Despite losing key starters, the on defense. The Hens' record last season represents the And with a few right bounces, the young team "Speedy" Claxton (15.1 ppg) and Matt Roe, a sophomore defense- strength of the conference rather than could experience more than they ever imagined. senior guard Lawrence Thomas Hens hope to do well in '97. (I 0.1 ppg). Forward Tim Beckett see MEN page B9

Hens bring B.U's Awojobi vot~d experience• to 1997 Player of Year CHRISTOPHER YASIEJKO Jar season leading America East in Sports Editor scoring (20.8 points per game), Tunji Awojobi, the Boston rebounding (11.0 per game), and field University power forward who recent­ goal percentage (.600). court in '97 ly has become the next rung on sports' No other player has ever led the endless ladder of disrespect, is the 1997 conference in all of those categories in America East Player of the Year, the the same season. BY JAMES AMATO the capabilities of the team," conference announced Thursday. Smith was, however, selected to the Staff Reporter Travis said. "If we can stay away If experience means anything, from injuries, we should be able first team all-conference squad. Joining the Delaware men's tennis team to contend." him are Awojobi, Hartford junior cen­ ter Ryan Howse (14 ppg, 6.8 rpg), should be Travis, last year's America a force to Drexel senior guard Jeff Myers (16.3 East Coach of the Year, has com­ Awojobi missed the final three r ·e c k on ppg, 7.4 rpg) and Maine sophomore piled a 39-14 record in her three games of his senior season because of a with this guard John Gordon (14.7 ppg, 3.3 seasons as the men's head coach. head-butting incident with Vennont's year. With assists per game). Returning players include Erik Nelson Feb. 13 in a 61-56 Terriers six of the top seven singles play­ senior captain Mike Lustig, who THE REVIEW/File Pboto Gordon, a Wilmington, Del., native win. Nelson missed the rest of the ers returning, coach Laura Travis sea­ out of St Mark's High School, led finished last season with a 9-2 Sophomore Todd Kosta wielded a 14-2 record at No. 4 singles last son because of the collision. has a positive outlook on this America East in three-point percentage record at No. 2 singles. Lustig season for the Hens. He'll start at No. 3 singles this season. The 6-foot-7 Awojobi, a native of year's team. and free throw percentage this season. will assume the second positon Lagos, Nigeria, inherits the award from The team has been practicing BU coach Dennis Wolff received again this year. Drexel's Malik Rose, who won the . for three weeks in preparation for No. 5 singles last year, also returns . Bernstein, who finished 9-0 at Coach of the Year honors after leading The graduation of Kyle award in 1995 and 1996. Rose now its season opener this weekend at "We have a veteran team," No.5-6 last year, will play at No. 4 the Teniers to a 17-1 conference record Binnington, who finished 9-9 at plays in the NBA for the Charlotte 'Lehigh (Sunday, I p.m.). Parameswaran said. "I think we this year. Junior Adam Sloane, 8-3 (22-4 overall). The Terriers are seeded No. I last year, allows senior Hornets. The Hens are looking to build have a good chance to win the con­ at No.4-6 last year, will vie for time No. I in this weekend's conference Zach Schmidt to take over the top Awojobi edged Delaware senior for­ ·on last season's I4-4 dual match ference." at No.6. tournament at the Bob Carpenter spot. Schmidt finished 12-6 at No. ward Greg Smith for the distinction, ·record and second-place confer­ 3 singles last year. Sophomore Todd Kosta, 14-2 at Also joining the team this year Center. but Smith finished ahead of the more­ :ence tournament finish. No.4 last year, will move up one are freshmen Chris Johnson and Drexel freshman center Joe Senior Subash Parameswaran, celebrated Awojobi in every category "I feel very optimistic about who compiled a record of 9-7 at spot to No. 3. Sophomore Ira Linderman (13 ppg, 6.~ rpg) was voced see~pageB9 except blocks. Smith finished the regu- Rookie of the Yair_

THE REVlEW . Feb. 28-March 2, 1997 New name, same old game The North Atlantic Conference this season became the America East, but it'll take more than a new logo to grab the nationS eyes.

BY LEO SHANE III and logo. The change to the patri­ recent power ranking haYe gi \ en Copy Desk Chief otic and difficult-to-initialize name the America Ea t orne extra pre . ha helped di tingui h thi confer­ Tho e ranking , ba. ed on i nt~rcon ­ " That which we call a rose by ence from the ea of other , ference matchup . pia ed meric a any other name would still smell as Ha kell aid. Ea t men' ba ketball 13th out of sweer. " Scott Selheimer. port infor­ 30. - Shake peare mation director for Delaware, aid Ha kell aid that ranking i. he initially oppo ed the name e en more pre tigiou than it hat' in a name? change, but now think it i a good eem . Ten of the conferen e · For America Ea t, for­ idea. ahead of the Ameri ca Ea. t ar di\ i­ W merly the North Atlantic ·'In one way, if kind of a ion I-A. putting the l 3th -rank.ed Conference. official hope re pect name for the ' 90 , ·· he aid. conference third among equitable and power are. 'People are tating to pick it up. I opponent . O n June 1 1996, conference think in the long run it will make a That ranking i the hi ghe. t the pre ident and director voted to difference.' conference ha e er recei\ ed in c hange the conference' name But can a name really change men' ba ketbalL Ha. kell ·ai d. from the NAC to America Ea t. the whole conference? Women' ba ketball i. currently Stuart Ha kell, commi - ranked 18th. ioner of America Ea t. And while . uch aj d the name change wa recent tride: ha \ e part of a larger plan to "There's really nothing increa ed the confer­ gain more re pect nation- ence nati onal image. ally for the conference. outside of winning games America Ea t officials 'I found over the [the America East] could do till feel their team. do year traveling out ide our not receive the attentiOn geograph even the mo t to improve." they de erve. die -hard college fan " If OU :L' k. 1110 t found it hard to differenti­ people, they p rob a bl~ ate u from other confer­ -Seth Davis, college basketball would not think \\e·r ence ... too frequently in reporter for Sports Illustrated 13th," Selh eimer . aid . .. 1 the media we were till don "t th ink [the con­ referred to as the N AC." ference] get the respect Tho e initial , he it de er e . " Statistics and s~lldiitgs ai d, \ ere too clo e to other con­ Seth Davi , a reporter co er­ Ho\ e er Da i aid America Final1996-97~nca East ference ' like the Metro Atl antic ing college ba ketball for Sport Ea f amou~t of vera!!e and _sttz.ndings and stilfistics ..•...... p. .~ 1) ".: Conference (M AC) and Northea t Il lu trated, aid the conference· re pect. though mall. i: un der­ Conference (NEC). A a re ult. marketing technique ha e done tandable. Drexel and Delaware were often little to enhance it national im age. "T he conference champion i' mi takenly grouped into different "There' reall y nothing out­ at lea t con idered a f rmi dable conference by out ider . ide of wi nning game [the confer­ fi r t-round opponent [in the AA STAFF So, to combat anonymity. the ence] could do to improve,"' he tournament]. B o ton niver. it~ conference adopted a new name aid. and Drexel are team other hi ghl - PHOTOGRAPHY " It really re olve around how ranked team would rather av id . John Chabalko· well the conference can do in the The champion [of America Ea-. t] i ..-' , .Josh W-ithers · [NCAA] tournament. T he bigge t . a legitamite threat. - ON THE COVER - Jay. Yovanovicb : marketi ng mome nt [for the .. But the conference i · cer- America Ea t] wa when Drexel taintly a long \ ay from being a Delaware forward Mike beat M emphi la t year in the tour­ major conference. I don 't th ink ~. 5Im: · . (!OVER .DESIG .· name nt.'' they ll e er achieve that tatu: . at Robert Kalesse · John Cbabalko,, Bry on clutche the ball a Drexel forward Jeff M yer That ictory, a 7 5-63 up et lea t not for a long time:· Leo Shane Ill ·· Christopher Yasiejk() ·· over the fifth- eeded Tioer wa And until then he aid. the eye the prized po se sion. the fir t win for the 1 2~h - eeded conference will be ju t another Photograph b Dragon in their four tournament middle-tier conference - no mat­ John Chabalko. appearance . ter what the name i . In addition, Davi aid the Feb. 28-March 2, 1997. THE REVIEW The yo~ung and unrested Junior guard Keith Davis, shown here For Delaware, it will take with BU's • Joey Beard, continued efforts from the_seniors has taken charge of the and elevated play from the young Hens backcourt. players to win in the tournament.

BY GRAEl\ffi WHYTLAW coring (20.8, 7th nationally) field goal percent­ AssisUI/11 p011 Editor age (.599. 7th nationaJJ ) and rebounding (11.0). n order for Delaware to ad ance in the Arne1ica Ea t tour­ Smith ha a legitimate hot at conference player nament, the Hen mu t rai e their game to another level and of the year honor with the e number . He al o peed)' guard of Hof tra and Bo ton Univer ity. I play good aggre i e defen e. led Delaware in coring 20 of 29 game and rebounding Junior forward Michael Bry on. a tran fer fr m The heavy burden faJ I ftr t upon the Hen tarter , who 24 of 29 game , including 20 double-double . Georgia. and ophomore forward Tobia Mullen mu. t mak for the mo t part have had a doozy of a ea on. "The attention that Greg i getting i well the mo t of their pia ing time. The will ha e to work extra Senior forward Greg Smith ha the hea ie t load to carry. de erved " Delaware coach Mike Bre aid. "He never hard on pre uring defen i ely for the Hen . and orne c r­ Smith ended the regular ea on leading the America East in ha a bad practice, and i a definite pia er of the ear ing could be an added bonu . candidate.,. ·'We can be a factor in the tournament:' Bt-y on aid. Another pia er who has pia ed well of late i ..We' re on our home court, and I ha e a good feeling about it. .. enior forward Peca Ar ic. Ar ic fini hed up a eraging 13.2 point per game and hot 36 percent from three­ Sophomore John Bennett and Fred GonzaleL mu. t point land (20J career three-pointer ). He mu t tep up make their pre ence felt if they get the chance. Their job i. hi defen e to remain in the game in order for the Hen to block up the middle and force opponent to take poor to u e hi offen ive weapon . h t and blo k them. ''I went through a long tretch of not pia ing well The one thing that will hold the team together i c a b­ and I didn ·t know \ hat to e peer:· Ar ic aid ...I feel a ing. Brey mu t h pe hi team up, but at the arne time relax of late that I ha e played much better."' them enough o the can play their game. He mu ·t derive a Brey aid that he thought AJ· ic hot wa final I plan that challenge hi team to pia defen e for 40 minutes. coming around and that he wa warming up heading in tead of in purt.s. into th tournament. --r think we can be a factor:· Bre aid. --our enior The play of ophomore guard Tyrone Pen-y i ery leader hip i great and there i n t a much fa gap a. there impo11ant to Delaware. Hi leader. hip on the court in v a Ia t ear with Dre el. Any team [. eeded] one thr ugh dire ting the offen e a well a keeping the Hen oppo - fi e has a chance at getting the bid to the toLm1a.Jnent. ·· ing point guard in front of him i key. Pen-y i coring ·'We're ju t going to go out and ha e fun on Saturda ' i point per game and a eraging fi e a i t and fin­ and ee where that take u ,·· Bre aid. ·'We onJ , ha e a i hed tied for the league Jead in teal (2. 1 . couple of guy from the old y tem. and it could ha e ea. i­ ··r i a huge factor, and he· playing great:· Brey J been a 9-18 eason or' or e. I think v e came out and had aid. ··He· ke _ becau e he· a leader and he gi e u a a great ea on, and now there i one ·rep left.·· park. and he ha real] grm n up and become a man.· --we can ·t go in there with the mentality of ·we ha e to win.··· Perry aid. "We have to go in. pia loo e and play like we did all ea on.'' Delaware· econd leading c rer. junior guard Keith Da i . i playing a bigger role than he e er has b fore. Davi et the chool record for minute played in a ea on (1,047) and tarted e e1-y game thi ea on. Da i . a tran fer from Virginia Commonwealth, mu t be more con i ·tent on the floor to help the Hen keep their compo ure on both the offen i e and defen i e end . '·Keith Da i · job at [Virginia Commonwealth] wa to pia 17 minute. a a ba kup point guard:· Brey aid ...Now he' a captain and playing 34 minute . and it' a totall different en ironment for him:· The play of fre hman forward Mike Pegue and fre hman guard Ke tuti Marciulioni i al o important to Delaware. Pegue . a eraging 6.4 point and 3.8 rebound per game, mu t help Smith bump and defend the paint and hu t down their opponent in ide game. Marciulioni i one of the mo t important player THE REVIEW/John Chabalko off the bench for the Hen . Hi outside hot and quick er feet give Delaware another defender to keep up with the Sophomore guard Tyrone Perry has had to step Senior forward Greg Smith powers to the basket. into the role of floor leader this season. Feb. 28-March 2, 1997 .. THE REVIEW - HE REVI~\V • ·Feb. 28-March 2, 1997 Anyone's-gaine: Ten teams battle for title

both games were close. The BY BRAD JENNINGS number one seed after a very teams match up well statisticaJ iy. Spons Editor successful 17-1 conference Boston U. and Drexel head the pack in America East, but several teams Maine will call on forward n less than two weeks, 64 season. Terry Hunt (15.5 ppg, 7.2 rpg) I of the nation's best college But that lone blemish came and Delaware native John at the hands of second-seeded basketball teams will take have at least one reason to believe the championship is within reach Gordon (14.7 ppg,), a 41-percent and defending champion the floor for what has come to three-point shooter. Forward Drexel. The Dragons embar­ be known as the Big Dance­ Allen Ledbetter (9.3 rpg) will the NCAA college basketball rassed Boston 73-42 in in the toumament. Cats' tirst-round draw. streak. Each of those games was decided by show. need to perietrate the lane have to play big on defense if the Philadelphia Feb. 9, and the Led by senior forward Greg Smith, Vetmont wi ll use perimeter championship tournament. less than I 0 point , but Boston was without Hartford ( 16- 10, 11 -7 America East) has not defeated the top for close buckets. The Black Bears are going to move Die-hard college hoops fans first meeting of the season whose league leading 20.8 points and II shooting (6.5 three-pointers per suspended star forward Tunji Awojobi ( 19.8 two teams thi s season, but the Hawks have been strong Dutchmen are last in the on. and novices alike are begin­ between these teams saw over­ ppg, I 0.6 rpg) for much of that stretch run . against the rest of the pack. Many teams, such as conference in three-point rebounds per game have po itioned him game) to hang with the Hawks. ning to stare into crystal balls, time before the Terriers among the top I 0 in Division I coll ege bas­ Charismatic coach Tom Brennan The troubled player-of-the-year candidate Delaware, have had matchup problems against the ·shooting, but these shi fty NEW HAMPSHIRE: Like Maine, honing their prediction-mak­ escaped with a four-point win. ketball, Delaware must play aggressive will look to sophomore forward will return Saturday. Hawks. The Hens lost to Hartford by 29 in guards have not needed to the Wildcats enter the touma­ ing skills and preparing to win Drexel (20-7, 16-2 America defense and shoot well to survive the first Craig Peper (13.4 ppg, 7.9 rpg) "They learned they could win without Newark. re ly on the deep threat. ment with a four-game losing the annual office pool by cor­ East) storms into the Bob Claxton has been a round. and sophomore guard Spencer him," Boston coach Denni s Wolff said of Led by forward Anthony Bethune (15.5 streak. But New rectly identifying this year's Carpenter Center as one of the The -' Hens face Hofstra, whose quick Eisenmenger (ll.l ppg) to carry hi team's grit in the last two weeks. ppg) and center Ryan Howse ( 14 ppg, 6.8 pleasant surprise for Hofstra Hampshire may have an national champion. hottest teams in the country, a

BY ROBERT KALESSE Guittar onl ' recei ed t\ o ote a the Emerwim11e111 Ediror league· mo t underrated, f 11 'V ed b o you. want to kno_w who' be t in the Delaware' Smith and juni r guard Keith Amenca Ea t? I It the man from the Da i . Bo ton U.' Jim Schwartz and SCity of Brotherly Love or the man Maine' Ramone Jone , each with one ote. from Beantown? I one of the be t pla er a1 o the mo t o errated . TOUGBEST ROADARE A The an wer lie ahead. The men who Brotherl lo e - yeah. right. If_ know the mo t ha e poken. The America ah a tough to play on the r ad. but coach­ East coache know the game. have een the e in i t that oppo ing teams get . tuck in ide player . and ha e now pilled their gut out the tin , tight arena that i the Phy icaJ to The Re iew in an all-out coache poll. Education Athletic Center at Drexel. It Here· what they aid: recei ed five of the I 0 ote ~ . Not a big name. but ne coach put it. BEST PLAYER "It' a tiny little place that get loud quick:· Tunji thi . Tunji that. All ea on long people ha e been talking about Bo ton BEST FLOOR GENERAL Uni er ity' tar forwarcl the 6-foot-7. 230- Thaf all, Folk! Bo ton U. ophomore pound enior Tunji Awojobi from Lago . LeVar Folk i the man with the ball. and the Nigeria. And with good reason. vi ion to get it to the hoop. The 5-~ ot-l 0 The Terrier ha chewed ff an a erage Brooklyn nati e edged ut Hoftra· . Dariu of 19.8 points and 10.6 reb und per game. Burton b one vote. a -t.-3 tall . And hi opp ing kipper ha e noti ed and .. He' a peed little guy \ ho can kill ha e oted. but it wa a Jot clo er than you you \ ith hi pa · ing and pia alling:· ·aid thought. a big city coach. Awojobi beat Delaware· prized po - e ion in enior forward Greg Smith by a BEST CLUTCH PLAYER ingle ote. recei ing five of the nine He· not Malik Ro e. He may not be accounted. Although Smith led the the be t in the conference. But \ hen you MosT UNDERRATED PLAYER conference in both coring and rebound . need him to _core. the floodgate_ open and a Awojobi. when going head to head, beat flo d equal to the chuylkill Ri er c m Chuck Guittar Drexel Smith both time earlier thi ea on. down on the oppo. iti n. "They"re both dominant pia er and Pi e coa he a_ Drexel': JeffM er . a it' 11 be good to ee them face off in the ec­ enior Philly nati e. i thi ear'. be. tin the ond round;' aid one coach from abo e the clutch. MosT OvERRATED PLAYER · New York border. BEST ROOKIE Tunji Awojobi · Boston U. BEST COACH What do y u kn Thi would be a tough ne. Bo ton U. · Denni Wolff i. top in the con­ ference. Drexel' BiiJ Herrion i in top form Joe Linderman nm get a t BEST ROOKIE con idering the departure of Malik Ro e to light. receiving fi e ot the NBA, and Hartford· Paul Brazeau ha enter. Joe Linderman Drexel u ed the talent and experience to take hi But the couldn · t o erlo k Hof tra ·. Hawk to a third-place ranking. Craig Claxton (three vote ), leading hi team Sport fan may hate it. but thi one in coring ( 15.7 ppg) in hi fir. t ·ea nat the end in a tie. After a 5-13 conference record college leveL Ia t year. Brazeau ha done the impo ible, BEST FLOOR GENERAL bringing hi team back to re pectability in MOST OVERRATED the form of an 11-7 record onference in If ou read the begin nine of thi · arti Ie. LeVar Folk 1997. ou·ve probabl jump d right down here­ till in the hunt a well. yep. ou gue ed it. if Awojobi. re ei mg tw ote . En ugh aid.

BEST AMERJCA EAST GAME On Jan. 26, ew Hamp hire tra eled to arne year. Drexel with memmie of it pre iou _5- point Jo at home. Thi time though, it w MOST UNDERRATED PLAYER different. Nobody know enough about him. He The Wildcat Jo t but only by three neak up on you. No one talks about him points. in double o ertime, and for their too muc h. Some ad ice to Herrion at efforts, they got three ote a be t confer­ Drexel: play the Guittar. ence game thi ea on. Feb. 28-March 2, 1997 • THE REVIE'•'

AMERICA EAST REGULAR-SEASON STATISTICS

FINAL STANDINGS INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

CONFERENCE O' ' ~L coring Rebounding W L Per W L Pcr L5 STREU arne-Team G FG 3FG Ff PTS A\'G G REB. VG. Boston U. 17 .94-t 22 4 .846 4-1 W4 mith. Greg 29 _23 0 15 60-t 29 319 11.0 Drexel 16 2 .889 20 7 .741 4-1 W3 \\ Ojobi. Tunji 23 162 3 )_ 4:-5 23 243 10.6 Hartford 11 7 .6JJ 16 10 .615 2-3 L3 Bi gg. Ralph 26 170 17 126 4 3 _9 269 9.3 Hofstra 9 9 .500 12 14 .444 2-3 WJ 1ack, Tyrone 23 122 126 37 2_ 190 .6 Delaware LO -~ 14 15 A 3 2-3 L1 1)er .Jeff DREXEL 27 133 -tO 133 439 16.3 TER 26 216 . .) Vermont 7 IJ .389 14 12 .538 3-2 L1 Hunt. Terry M I E 2 170 62 3_ 43-t 15 .5 27 22-t ortlteaste ro 6 12 .333 7 19 .269 3-2 W3 Bethune. nthony H RTFORD 25 l-l6 5 90 3 7 15.5 26 20 Maine 6 12 .333 10 19 .345 1-4 L4 Cia ton. Craig HOFSTRA 26 130 6 127 393 I ~ . 1 197 7.9 ew Hamp hire 5 13 .278 7 19 .269 1-4 L4 Nel on. Erik ERMO T 22 109 2 10 32 l-t.9 DREXEL 17 :wo 7.-t Towson tate 5 13 .27 8 18 .308 3-2 WJ Gordon. John MAINE 29 137 2 70 -t26 14.7 M I 1E 2 202 7.2 teal AMERJCA E ST PRESEASON Field Goal Percentage (Minimum 5.0 FG made per game) arne-Team G N G. COACHES' POLL of Feb. 17) Name-Team G FG FGA FG% Perry. Tyrone DEL WARE 29 2. 1 (Fir t-place vote in parenthe e ) DELAWARE 29 223 372 .599 Bethune, Anthony H RTFORD 25 52 2. 1 I. Bo ton . (9) 99 pt. Name-Team PPG R K TOWSO T TE 26 170 14 .541 HARTFORD 26 54 2.1 2. Drexel (1) 90 pt . Smith. Greg D 27th 10.9 NEW HAMPSHIRE 26 132 24 .5''2 29 57 2.0 3. Delaware 7 pt. wojobi. Tunji B 19. -lOth VERMONT _2 109 215 .507 -ll 1.9 4. Hof tra 60 pt. . H RTFORD 26 133 26-t .50-t 26 -t I. - Hartford 51 pt . \ ojobi. Tunji BO TO U. 23 16_ 323 .502 29 53 I. 6. -t-t pts. A GRANK Bethune, nthony H RTFORD 25 l-t6 293 .49 Baile , Ju tin 26 -t 1. ' -tl pt. 0 11.1 7th Mack. Tyrone ORTHEA TER 23 122 2-o .-t Folk.Le ar 26 4 1.7 32 pt. 10.6 lith Claxton, Craig HOF TRA 16 130 299 .-t35 Burton. Dariu 2 -t3 1.7 2 pt . Hunt. Terry MAINE 2 170 -l25 A i t 21 pt . arne-Team G G. K Three-Point Percentage ( linimum 1.5 made per game) Roach. David YERMO T 26 12: P T AMERICA EAST 0 61.5 7th Name-Team G 3FG 3FGA 3FG o Folk. Le ar BO TO 26 125 CHA 1PIO SHIP e O 59.7 lith Bailey. Ju tin H RTFORD 26 39 93 .-t 19 Griffin, ~1ichael HARTFORD 26 12-t 1995-1996 Gordon. John M INE 29 2 .-t 14 Pen . Tyl' ne _9 Il-l Ore el 76, Boston niver i 67 DeRocckj . . Mike DREXEL 17 7-t . 9_ Davi , Keith _9 105 3.6 M P: Malik Ro e, Ore el NK Ar ic. Pe a DELAWARE 29 67 .36-t Burton. Dariu. 26 0 3.5 1994-1995 UM 5.2 19th Ei enmenger. S. ERMO T 26 5 .356 26 9 3.-t Ore el T2. ortheastem 52 Bike. Keith H RTFORD 26 -t7 13-t .351 DREXEL 27 92 3.-t MVP: 1alik Ro e. Dre el Hunt. Terry M INE 2 62 17 .3-t l A lNE 29 96 3.3 1993-1994 VGR K BOSTO U. 26 43 136 .3 16 HOF TRA 26 5 3.3 Ore el 6. Maine 7 VM 3.3 9th DREXEL 27 -tO 1-lO ·- 6 M P : Malik Ro. e. Drexel 2.6 _J t Blocked hot 1992-1993 G VG. Free Throw Percentage (Minimum 2.5 FT made per game ) Delaware 67. Ore el 6-t 22 7_ 3.3 KING G Ff FTA FT MVP: Kevin Blackhur 1. 0 wojobi. Tunji 23 60 2.6 Free Throw Percentage Guittar. Chuck DREXEL '27 76 91 1991-1992 Bethune. nthon) H RTFORD 25 3-t 1.-t Team PCT RA K Baile . Ju. tin HARTFORD 26 9 10 Delaware 92. Drexel 6 Beard. Joey BO TO 32 1.3 DEL WARE 75.0 -tth Ma k. Tyrone N'EASTER 23 126 156 MVP: Alex ole . 0 Won-Lo t Percentage HO\\ Se. R an 26 30 J._ Da is. Keith DELAW RE 29 121 15 .766 1990-1991 Lattimore. Lin _6 23 0.9 Team W-L PCT RA K Myer. Jeff DREXEL 27 133 174 .76-+ orthea. tern -7. Iaine -t6 Eame. Chri 16 19 .7 BO TO 20--t 33 th (Tie) Bi gg . Ralph TOWSON T. 26 165 .76-t M P : Ron Lace , ea tern Bro" n, Joe 26 0.7 Field Goal Percentage Defense mith. Greg DELAWARE 29 207 .763 1989-1990 ere. . Man 26 14 0.5 Team PCT RA K wojobi. Tunji BO TON . 23 170 .753 Bo ton University 75. ermont 57 DREXEL 3 .3 1-tth DeLa t>ffitte. Y. 25 I Lexer. Ryan TOWSO T. 26 131 .7-t o.: MVP: Bill Brigham. B Claxton. raig HOFSTRA 26 127 I 0 .706

PecaAr ic Feb. 28-March 27 1997. THE REVJEW Delaware's ·Maine man Two years ago, John (Jordon won a high school state title at the Bob. Now, his efficiency at the line and in the clutch give the Black Bears a 'trey' of hope.

BY CHRISTOPHER YASIEJKO guard pushed himself into the air and thru ted the ball Sports Editor toward the net as hi feet kicked forward. That basket f there is one place where John Gordon can play spec­ brought his team within one point. tacular basketball, it' the Bob Carpenter Center. He But Alex Karl en Gordon's junior teammate who I can still hear echoe of the crowd that packed the would oon become a hero, fouled William Penn's Tail arena in March of 1995, when one game forever left its Davis. At the line, Davis hit both ends of a one-and-one. mark in Delaware's high school record books. The Colonials led 49-46 with 39 second to go. Somewhere near where the Hens' bench now sits, Gordon After a failed drive by each team, Gordon moved once bed tear for a loss that never happened. upcourt and was fouled on another three-point attempt Two years ago Gordon, a University of Maine sopho­ with the clock showing less than 10 seconds. Because of more guard from Wilmington, Del., led St. Mark s High hi location at the time of the foul, Gordon had three free School to an unblemished 25-0 record (the first undefeat­ throws. ed sea on in Delaware since 1975) and the state champi­ Half of the 5,000-plus spectators - all of the onship. In the final game of the tournament, the Spartans WiJliam Penn faithful -yelled untH their lungs could yell faced William Penn High School (the only other team in no more. Gordon cleared the noise from hi mind and Delaware with nearly as good a team) at the Bob. released three shots from the line. Gordon and St. Mark's held the Colonial in check He hit them all. throughout the game. The lead changed hands like two The Spartans and Colonials were tied at 49 apiece kids trading baseball cards. with less than 10 seconds remaining. Overtime seemed One for you, one for me. imminent. But William Penn had gained momentum as the But William Penn's Gary Lumpkin now a star at game faded into its final minute. St. Mark's trailed 47-43. nationally-reborn Xavier, was fouled . . . by Gordon. It Things looked bleak. was Gordon's fifth and final per onaJ fouL He cringed and Until Gordon hit a three. trudged to the bench. He tos ed a cold, blue towel over his Twenty-one feet out on the right ide, the 5-foot-10 head, peeking occasionally to see if the nightmare had ended. Gordon directs Maine's offense at the Bob. Lumpkin hit two free throw to take a 51-49 lead with 2.7 seconds left in the season. ative and alumni of St. Mark' . For Gordon, a road game And then it happened. at Delaware isn't really a road game at all. Jason VanKerkhoven, now a member of the I feel comfortable here, he aid. 'I m ix-and-one Delaware football team inbounded the ball to Steve in here. I've got a good record. McManus who turned and flung the ball to Karl en, ta- In the win again t the Hen Feb. 13 Gordon hit two tioned past half-court on the left ide. · con ecuti e three-pointer plu three free throw to ecure Karl en took one step, two, then lunged toward the the victory. basket from 30 feet away a the buzzer ounded. The ball All John needs i a little bit of breathing pace:· pounded the backboard and fell through the net. Maine coach John Giannini aid after the game. ' At Suddenly Gordon' tear for a lo t ea on tran - dutch bme, he want to take the hots. He won the game formed into tears of joy for tu:l unbelievable state title. for u tonight in the last couple minute . The free throw St. Mark s won 52-51 on Karlsen' three-point he made and the three-point hot he hit obviou ly got our prayer but Gordon' clutch performance from beyond the offen e over the hump." arc and at the line olidified hi team' grip on the game. Thi ea on Gordon i among the leader of the Since then, Gordon has shone brightly at Maine. America Ea t in both free-throw percentage (70-for-84. where his size hasn t nearly slowed him down. 83.3 percent) and three-point percentage (82-for-198 41.4 'When I first came [to Maine], not many people percent). He already hold the Black Bear ' record for thought I could play at this level becau e of my height," three-point field goal in a ea on (82 I t in conference Gordon said Feb. 13 mome_nt after another clutch per­ thi ea on). The record he broke wa hi own: 72 three­ formance secured Maine's 56-52 up et win over pointers during hi fre hman year. Delaware. "Now I'm tatting to build a reputation for Gordon hold the top two po ition at Maine for my elf.' three-point attempt in a ea on. a well. In that win (whlch a] o was at the Bob) Gordon He needs 14 three-pointer over the cour e of hi next scored aU 12 of his points in the econd half. Nine of tho e two ea on to pa Matt Ro ignol a Maine' all-time points came in the last 2:45 of the game. They were the career leader in trey . Ro signol pent 111 game from Ia t nine points Maine cored in the four-point victory. 1985-89 in etting the record. Gordon ha played in ju t "He's a prime-time player· aid Hen ophomore 57 game in hi young career with the Bear . guard Ty Perry. Perry wa on the lo ing end of the battle He e en averaged 14.7 point per game thi ea on, when Gordon' 20-foot bomb from the left ide put the good enough for econd-be t on the team. Bear ahead 53-50 with 50 econds left. "I wa on him. I For Maine. Gordon continued tability at the line wa urpri ed be hot it, but it went in." and from the arc could mean a po t ea on victory. He i Gordon' mother buy 400 ticket every time her on the key clutch performer for a team which now ha a come to play at Delaware. She give them to friend rei- home away from home.