Student Groups to Receive Extra Funding Educator
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Y.l Today's weather: Our second Cold and NON-PROFIT ORG. century of U.S. POSTAGE windy, with excellence PAID highs in the Newark, Del. : Permit No. 2f low to mid 30s. Vol. 111 No. 32~-~ :Friday, Jan. 31, 1986 Student groups to receive extra funding from the board of trustees allocated last year, Teeven by Jennifer Bishop (BE 86), budget board According to the plan work after the Student Activities ed out by Teeven and Beau said. These groups, the Stu and Melissa Jacobs controller. Fee was defeated last May. DUSC did not receive the ad doin, each group will get addi dent Programming Associa Staff Reporters Each spring the Budget ditional funding until after the tional funds from DUSC this tion, WXDR, the Minority Stu- DUSC passed the buck, Board allocates funds to the spring budgetary hearings for spring equal to the amount $52,000 to be exact, to student more than 90 student organiza 1986 had taken place. Beau that they received during last dent Programming Advisary organizations Monday. tions on campus. Last year doin worked with DUSC Presi year's budgetary process. Board, and DUSC, usually The Delaware Under DUSC allocated $89,000 to dent Bob Teeven last fall to Four groups, however, will receive about 75 percent of the graduate Student Congress an these groups. Requests for work out a fair system of not be allocated the full budget allocations, said nounced plans for distributing funding totaled over $200,000, distributing the additional amount, but will receive a Teeven. the additional $52,000 received according to Dave Beaudoin funds. percentage of what they were continued to page 5 County divests funds by Celfne Lundin Staff Reporter New Castle County plans to divest its $5.7 million invested in companies with holdings in South Mrica, but only if it can make equal or better invest ments. The New Castle County Council voted unanimously Tuesday w' divest county pen sion funds over a two-year period, but the bill requirE!s the approval of County Executive Rita Justice. The law to divest will go into effect immediate ly after Justice's approval. The ordinance, proposed by THE REVIEW/ Tim Butler Council President Karen Weathering the storm- University students use the Smith Overpass to avoid traffic but they couldn't avoid Wednesday's Peterson, was the second snowfall. divestment proposal to be voted on by the council. The first ordinance was approved by council in December but Educator stresses liberal arts was vetoed by Justice. by Sharon Anderson A major problem with higher educa he thinks sports and other commitments The second ordinance in Staff Reporter tion, Karelis said, is the lack of "interest sometimes "distract attention away from the academic experience." - . eluded the conditions of Today's career-oriented college in some of the traditional liberal arts sub divesting over a ·period of two jects that have historically defined what In order to improve undergraduate students ove_remphasize specialized education, Karelis said that FIPSE is years and restricting the coun studies at tJ:ie' expense of traditional a proper education is." cil from holding the moral con Liberal arts training provides many measuring "outcomes instead of pro liberal arts programs, according to cesses'' when determining which schools siderations of divestment over Charles Karelis, assistant to the secretary skills that promote flexibility of the mind, Karelis said, which increa~s a student's will receive grants. the legal obligation to make of education. and keep s~_ure investments. tolerance to alternate viewpoints. "We are looking now at what people ac "This is essential for a lifetime in which tually know on graduation day," he said. · The Prudent Investor Rule, you will have to adapt to unforeseeable Since 1981, the university has received a Delaware law, obligates the see editorial p.6 changes," he said. two grants from FIPSE, said Peter Rees, pension board to insure max- --------------- "Things -change imd that's the only associate dean of the College of Arts and imum profit and minimum Karelis, who also serves as the direc predictable thing - that things will Science. losses through its investments. tor of The Fund for the Improvement of change." One grant supported the undergraduate "[Through the Delaware Although he does not think extracur research program, which enables Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), met students to conduct research with facul law] you can divest if you with The Review in an exclusive inter ricular activities are useless, Karelis feels don't cause harm or loss to the view Monday. that students should spend more time on ty members. people you represent," ex FIPSE is a national program which academics. The College of Arts and Science receiv plained Councilwoman provides funding· for colleges to reform "Outside activities are a great excuse ed the second grant. in 1982, to develop the Deborah Boulden. and improve the quality of postsecondary for inside inactivity," he said, adding that computer academic advisement program continued to page 3 (ACADVISE) on Plato. education. continued to page _4 I, I J Page 2"• The Review • January 31, 1986------------------------------------------------ Replace Lost. 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"I can't really ex So said Stephanie Wright, a ·» ·~ ... music teacher from Stanton press what I feel. But she died Middle School, one of two in what I guess they call 'The Delaware candidates to be the Path of Glory.' I can't think of Governor dec,lares 11U)urning, first teacher in space. Wright a better way to go." was at Cape Canaveral, Fla., On Wednesday, Wright gave Tuesday, when the space shut a presentation to students at 'wants flags flomn td half-staff tle Challenger bearing Christa her school "to tell them how important Christa was, and to McAuliffe and six other Gov. Castle declared a six-day period of. astronauts exploded over the reassure them about the space Keenan said. mourning in Delaware late Tuesday for the vic The university~ however, bad tried all day Atlantic just 75 seconds after program." Wright, who showed films of tims of the space sl)uttle accident. Wednesday to lower the flag~ said Gary Sum launch. merville; director of Public Safety. To "For the first minute and 10 McAuliffe in training, said the The .~rioa .. coi. nc.. idin.ng ·w.t.·tb .•. .l'r ...e$ident assistant students were "numb." Jf,eagan s decJaredperj,od of tnourning; ~ll end l()w~ tbe flag~ Summerville said, "you need a seconds, the launch was .Monday at midnight. said Jeff Welsh, the everything they said it would "It was difficult for me to true. k wif:tl a ~bel'J:YPieker on it. The university govern. or's press secre.•t.ary. All state ;flags ate only bas one, and-that was broken.', be," do" she said, "but at the said Wright, who watch to fly at balf·mast during tfiis period. truck ed the launch with 25 other se~enth and eighth-grade level The univ~rsi~ then asked to boJTOw a you have to hit them right The flag on tbe north.end of tbe university from the City ofNewark, but that truck was teacher candidates from VIP Mall did not at.