VOL. 95 NO. 27 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE FRIDAY, DECEM3ER 8, 1972 Tern pie Resigns As SGCC Head By ROY WILSON The rathskellar is almost Student Government of finished, according to College Councils president Temple, and should be Harry Temple, citing lack of implemented soon. The time and personal financial Student Travel Service may difficulties, has confirmed a be operating by next decision to resign as president semester. The Record Store is and is leaving the university "dead as far as I'm to begin a three year concerned," said Temple, tour-of-duty in the army. calling it economically not "I'm really tired of not feasible. having time to do anything .. . "We've got the makings of I'm tired of being in debt," the economic foundation,'' said Temple. said Temple, citing the Travel His decision leaves the service, SGCC phone presidency in the hands of directory, and particularly Jed Lafferty, former the soon to be opened secretary of the UDCC. rathskellar as potentially Lafferty was selected as profitable operations for the acting president at last SGCC. Once the SGCC has a Sunday's UDCC meeting, firm economic base, said when the possibility of Temple, it will be able to Temple's resignation was first make political decisions presented. Temple's formal without having to worry resignation is expected to be about losing fu11ding from ,ht; submitted at this Sunday's administration. unce meeting. Lafferty, in an interview Temple, who has based his Wednesday, said he hoped presidency on working that Temple's resignation toward a firm economic base would not affect the College for the SGCC, said he hoped -Councils. Lafferty, who says that his resignation would not he views the job of president Staff photo by David Hoffman Harry Temple Staff photo by David Hoffman have any effect on most of as a figurehead, said he plans Jed Lafferty Resigning those programs. (Continued to Page 2) Acting President Starvation fund Cites 'New Politics' For Nixon ·win Mankiewicz Accounts For Defeat Aid Feeds Hundreds By LARRY HANNA Mankiewicz used the example of a novel called Great portions of the purpose of food to relieve the "The 480" (by Eugene Burdick), which he said world's population cannot When George McGovern was just beginning his hungry. long march to the Dem.Juatic nomination, it was was based on an actual incident of the 1960 survive on the food their own To facilitate the university said he was employing a "New Politics." But Kennedy campaign. "A group of young land provides. The University community in making according to McGovern's campaign director, computer technicians came to Kennedy and told Starvation Relief Fund is contributions, the Review Frank Mankiewicz, it was Richard Nixon who him they could break down all the people in the attempting to meet the will accept them daily used a "New Politics" while McGovern stuck into 480 categories," said challenge of keeping many of through next Monday from with the "traditional" politics. Mankiewicz. "They said they could then do these hungry people alive. 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 4 "The McGovern campaign involved what Ed extensive polling and be able to tell him how his A five dollar contribution p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Review Muskie aptly called 'retail politics,'" the stout, positions on issues would affect him with each to the fund will provide a office, 301 Student Center. greying campaign veteran told a Rodney Room (Continued tE Page 6) hungry village with a well Donations to the fund will audience Tuesday night (he also appeared at a ~! stocked fish pond and source also be accepted through the Winterim TV project news conference). "In this of protein. The fund has campus mail until next type of campaigning," Mankiewicz explained,­ already received donations Thursday, and should be sent "the candidate goes directly to the people and that will give five hundred in care of the Review, (301 the press, and his TV and radio commercials malnourished and thirsty Student Center). involve his own appearance·· It's the politics of children a supply of vitamins Next Tuesday, the Review Tammany Hall or Chicago of the 1890's, except and milk that will last thirty will publish a list of names of that in the McGovern campaign people were days. all those who have motivated by a set of ideas rather than by jobs or Contributions to the fund, contributed as of Monday which has been established in favors." morning in addition to the Nixon, Mankiewicz maintained, has ushered in a special account at the fund's total. Checks should Delaware Trust Co. by the a "New Politics" which "may dominate future be made out to the University campaigns." Review, will be channeled Starvation Relief Fund. equally next Thursday The Review urges all "Nixon did no retailing, never met the press, through the Salvation Army, faculty, students, and staff to had no meetings with voters," said Mankiewicz. the United Nations contribute a small portion of "He didn't appear in his commercials, and he International Childrens what they will spend this made great use of computerized technology and Emergency Fund, and CARE. season for gifts to the direct mail." The success of the Nixon campaign, The funds will be sent in the Starvation Relief Fund. The he went on, "may indicate the country has name of the University of Review hopes campus grown too big for the old kind of campaigning, at Delaware Community and organizations will also give least at the national level." Photo by Duane Perry earmarked solely for the freely. Describing the direct mail technique as a powerful development in political campaigning, FRANK MANKIEWICZ PAGE2 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, I In Sunda·y Concert With Jim Croce Temple Resigns. • • (Continued from Page 1) "needs to re-examine his role Poco To Appear On Stage to carry through with the in the operation of the Office Rathskellar. Course of Student Affairs." evaluation and an SGCC In criticizing the faculty An evening with Poco and electric guitar; Rusty Young, Pennsylvanian, recently made newsletter are also important union, Temple said that special guest Jim Croce will pedal steel guitar; George it big with the hit single "You items on his list. "accretion of power and be presented at 8 p.m., Gratham, drums and Tim Don't Mess Around With Lafferty said he does not renumeration (higher pay) is Sunday, in the Field House. Schmit, bass. They all double Jim." His latest single is see in the SGCC the "highly taking precedence over Poco was one of the as vocalists and composers. "Operator." powerful thing" that Temple teaching and academics. If i n no vat o r s of the Poco has just released its envisions, preferring to see it the faculty gets an increase, country-rock movement, but fifth album entitled "A Good All seats for the concert more in the role of a where will the money come their music has expanded to Feelin' to Know." Their are reserved. Tickets are CO-Qrdinator. from? We're not getting what include blues, experimental earlier albums include $3.50 and are available at the According to Temple, he we pay for now." techniques, contrapuntal "Pickin' Up the Pieces" and main desk of the Student plans to enter Officers In summing up the harmonies and sophisticated "Deliverin'." Center on campus and at Bag effectiveness of the College phrasings and lyrics. Jim Croce, a native . & Baggage in Wilmington. Candidacy ' School and Members of the rock perhaps finish the rest of his TCouncils in its inaugural year, quintet are Richie Furay, . - undergraduate education in 1 r••-•••n-----••--... the army. In parting, Temple or::~a~on ~.:~~e~ig ... \~.: six-string guitar; Paul Cotton, WINTER 1M P.ROJ' ECT . lauded much of the not de-centralized as it was administration and flung supposed to be." Pointing out unnecessary and should be IN several jabs at the faculty that the system requires a removed. union (AAUP). couple hundred people to be "It's been educational as I "The university is involved for it to work, he hell," said Temple. "I wish it · URBAN EDUCATION administered by men of good said that it was "difficult" to didn't have to end so soon." character who are co-Qrdinate a bureaucracy of Temple said he plans to even-handed and fair," said that size. He particularly felt return "mainly out of I 27 ACTIVITIES Temple. Saying his opinion of that the President's Advisory curiosity," and possibly • . President E.A. Trabant had raised considerably, he called ~~C~oo;ru~n~c~il~w~ao;rs":'-:in~e""f'"'fe,...c""t"'iv... e, ..,.a,,n_.,.,dO"'T.,....,c..,o""n""t,...in~u~e~h~is~ed:!"':"'u':!"c~at"'!!i"'::ooo:n~h~e'!!"r':!"e":!'. '"" i OpEN TO A( ( STUDE NJ$ Trabant "very receptive" and "responsive." He added,' i though, that there are "some 100 POSITIONS STILL AVAILABLE. very rotten parts" in the i administration and criticized • the "corporate" mentality that exists within the I SECONDARY & ELEMENTARY - university. • Temple particularly • criticized the Office of I GRADES 1-12 Student Affairs, although he • admitted that their "hearts 1 are in the right places." He INFO: Room 133 Hall Educ. Bldg. singled out Vice-President -i John Worthen as one who ......

PROGRAMS FOR WINTERIM STUDENTS FROM THE STUDENTCE *SIGN UP NOW IN ROOM J07 FOR THESE SHORT COURSES BEGINNING CANDLEMAKING BEGINNING KNITTING BEGINNING BILLIARDS Make sand and ice candles. Experiment with color and scents. Learn basic and special stitches, shaping Learn ?asic rules, shotmaking, bank shots, and strategy. Use household items for molds and colors. Five 1 Y. hour classes for patterns, how to use different kinds Emphas1s on practice and shooting rather than textbook on Monday and Wednesday evenings in the S.C. 7:00-8:30. of yarns. Five 1% hr. sessions meeting strategy. Five 1% hour sessions in S.C. games room Monday & Registration fee: $4.00 Tuesday & Thursday, 3:00-4:30 in Wednesday mornings 9:00-10:30. Pencader. Registration fee: $2.00 RE!llistration fee,: $4.00 *SIGN UP NOW IN ROOM 100 FOR THESE BUS TRIPS JANUARY 5 JANUARY 9 JANUARY 16 8 AN AFTERNOON IN THE FRANKLIN AN LONGWOOD GARDENS, BRANDYWINE A GREAT DAY IN D.C. J~~)l~At} AT INSTITUTE AND FELS PLANETARIUM IN WINTERTHUR AND THE RIVER MUSEUM, and THE HAGLEY Afternoon at the National PHILADELPHIA. Bus leaves S.C. at 12 noon, BRAND NEW MUSEUM OF MUSEUM Bus leaves S.C. at 9:15 a.m. returns Gallery of Art, FBI, or returns at 5:30. Cost of $2.50 includes NATURAL HISTORY. Bus leaves at 4:30 p.m. $3.00 includes all admissions .and The Smithsonian. admission and transportation. Special S.C. at 12 noon, returns by 5 p.m. bus ride. A twilight bus tour of the leading monuments, discussion 1/15/72 on astronomy by Dr. Cost of $4.00 includes admissions memorials & government buildings. Richard Herr. and transportation. Dinner at The Plumbery (meals $3-$6) Tickets to a new production of Thorton Wilder's "Our Town" at the Arena stage. Bus leaves S.C. at 12 noon, returns approx. 12:30 a.m. Cost of $5.00 includes theatre ticket and transportation. FOXFIRE COMMUNITY *PUT THESE EVENTS ON YOUR CALENDAR CRAFTS, LECTURES & MUSIC DINNERS FOCUSING ON THE FOLK OFFBEAT FILMS COFFEE HOUSE CONCERTS HERITAGE all at 6 at 8 pm in 140 Smith JAN. 9-7:30 EWING RM. all 8:30pm FREE/ID Table service JAN. 4 "Beat the Devil" "Ghost & Witch Tales of Eastern Shore" 11 "Night of the Hunter" EWING RM. Paul Dowell & Beverage JAN. 12 "Mickey One" ~2 TOM SEBOK RODNEY A/B 11-7:30 S.C. LOUNGE Provided 18 "Odds Against Tomorrow" "Southbound" Bluegrass Music 19 "Lilith" 16-7:30 CHRISTIANA FREE/ID EWING RM. "Brandywine Ramblers" JAN. 10. ~~ ELLEN DICK. CID Traditional Folk Music & Conversation EWING ROOM STUDENT CENTER COUNCIL EVENTS 17 LANE 18-3-5 PENCADER COMMONS JAN.16 CHRISTIANA Rugbraiding demonstration & display. 115 PENCADER SPECIAL ~: KEARNY SMYTH 18-7:30-S.C. LOUNGE CORE COMMONS 20 EWING RM. Ola Belle Reed JAN. 22 traditional folk music EWING ROOM IN and 7:30-10:30-S.C. SATURDAY FLICKS 19-3-5 S.C. LOUNGE Bring Some Puzzles, bingo, films, music, finger 140 SMITH 7:30 ONLY ·auilting demonstration & display. FOOD painting, trading posts for crafts and 75c/ID 22-3-5 S.C. LOUNGE And Your junk. IF YOU WANT TO MAN YOUR JAN. 6-"Goodbye Mr. Chips" Crewel demonstration & display. Family& OWN TABLE AT THE TRADING 13-"A Boy Named Charlie Brown" 23-3-5 PENCADER CORE COMMONS Friends. POST, SIGN UP IN ROOM 107. 20-"1 Never Sang For My Father" Bargello demonstration & display. DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 3 WHEN To Begin Campus Impressions

L======sy JIM DOUGHERTY --..J Annual Radiothon Editor's Note: Reporter Jim Dougherty has spent much of his windows have Christmas From the dorms on North WHEN, the campus radio organization to contribute to time gathering Impressions of life at the university, This Is the third lights turning off and on in Campus, music begins to station, will hold its annual the society. Carollers will be In a series of three articles on them and in the restless making a trail down dorm these impressions. filter slowly down into the 24-hour holiday radiothon silence all around on this cold lower edges of the mall, and a beginning on Monday at 3 halls, Pencader and Christiana night the Christmas lights potpourri of faint rock and p.m. and continuing until 3 on Monday night collecting The Scrounge has only a strangely have the beckoning for the drive. Any student few people inside, and most roll buzzes in the cold air. p.m. Tuesday. and lonely look -of flashing Yet everything in sight is still, In its fifth consecutive interested in participating in of them are just staring out at neon. the carolling and the party the night, waiting; and the every object silent, and the year, the radiothon will try to The weather has cleared afterwards are asked ~ to call Student Center is even more way everything around is so top its goal of $1,000 for the up enough so that the stars neutral and undisturbed Delaware Tuberculosis and Jayne Stoneberger, AS4, empty, with maybe three or are out, but the lights above public relations director for four little kids running up makes the night appear Health Association. This the tennis courts and dreamlike, and out of focus. organization is the area WHEN. Carolling will begin at and down the tiled walk-way Newark's well-lit streets and 6 p.m. Monday. while their parents slowly A deep night breeze rustles distributor of Christmas seals. factories all glow so intensely a few leaves, and then moves The TB marathon will be search the bulletin boards that it is hard to really see the that seem to cover every effortlessly over the tops of held in two locations on stars unless someone stands the trees., kneading through campus for the 24-hour available space on the walls. near the grove of trees just Workshop On the mall, one or two the night and replacing the duration. The Student Center before the library, or in the many silences with a deeper will host the disc jockeys for couples, occasionally a single middle of the mall, or in The Unification Church guy, or a large group of silence; and the rock music the first 12 hours, and after 9 some other dark spot where located on 307 Baynard chattering girls are walking, and the occasional bursts of p.m. the program will move there are no lights or houses. traffic seem to become just to East Hall, the station's Blvd., Wilmington, will but they all walk quickly on For some reason there is no this Saturday night, as if another part of the spreading regular studio, to complete sponsor an all day workshop one in any of these spots; all quiet that begins to cover the cycle. and seminar on "The New there is a hurry to go where of these areas are quiet and every part of the lonely Donations will be accepted Age Revealed." It will be held they are going. undisturbed, and even in the On the streets, cars buzz outskirts and the restless the entire time WHEN is "on well-lit places, no one is on Dec. 9, beginning at 9 a.m. quickly by in short bursts; center of the Saturday night the air," and the station urges walking, just thinking or and silence, or a just barely college campus. each individual and meditating on the night. heard humming sound that gives the streets a lingering THE MALL Completion Scheduled For May four-in-the-morning quality, can be heard for a long time On the mall, the empty benches, imitation gas light in between the sparse Saturday night traffic. lamps, trash cans and bulletin Solar Home Uses su ·n Power boards, and the low slung Across from the Student black chain that guards the By DAVE MacWILLIAMS Center the empty tennis side of the pathway, all have courts, illuminated by "We're so excited about this project that we during a typical day with five hours of sunshine. an abstract look, as if always talk about all the promise, bt>t there's still "The average household uses about eighteen to powerful lights, stand mutely standing alone against the sad as in a still-life portrait, and a lot of work to be done on it," remarked Dr. nineteen kilowatt-hours, so that's more than pale light has transformed Paul Massicot of the Institute of Energy enough," he said. On cloudy days and at night, a the glare of these lights them into their starkest appears to unnaturally expose Conversion, referring to a solar house due to be change-over mechanism would allow commerical reality. Nothing moves as the completed here in May. power to be used as there is no provision for a group of tall naked trees night breathes slowly, and that surround the courts. The project, the first of its kind outside the storage of electricity. "This project isn't meant carefully; darkness seems to Communist Bloc, is designed to test and improve to replace the utilities," Massicot pointed out, DORMS set on the edge of each path, upon ways to harness the sun's radiant energy to "only to suppliment them." each object, each thought; produce electricity and heat for a typical home. Large brick dormitories and darkness bathes The heating system of the house would most are well·lit, with nearly every Massicot expressed hope that systems such as the everything in a sublime sort one to be employed in this solar house will help likely not be as dependent on other sources as other window bright with of quietness that no one this the electrical because there is storage system lamp light, while a few to alleviate the energy crisis caused by the night has bothered to disturb. increasing scarcity of fossil fuels. This shortage of involved. This consists of tubes of a hydrate type fuels may cause the cost of electricty to double salt which has a very low melting point. Hot air by 1980 if demand for it increases as expected. A from the ducts in the roof would be run through solar house, though not designed to be totally these tubes, and the salt would melt as it picks Campus Hosts independent of conventional power sources, up the heat. When solar heat was no longer would ease the load on them during hours of available, air could be run back through the tubes peak demand by utulizing the sun's energy. to pick up the heat stored in the salt, causing thP The building is to be constructed with its salt to freeze again. (Continued to Page 6) Artist Gar/indo steeply·sloped specially designed roof facing south, where we receive most ·of our sunlight. York Amati Opera and the By DONNA BELL Covering the roof would be plexiglass, which Mexico City Folkloric Ballet. would serve to protect the solar cells underneath It's not difficult for the At one time, he directed his it and to trap the sun's radiation, in the forq1 of unaware observer to get own ballet company. heat which would then be carried to the rest of caught, enmeshed in the Another of Garlindo's the house in ducts under the solar cells. The 'Cobweb' art of Xavier Garza methods is the combination entire roof under the plexiglass will be black or Garlindo, the romantic faces of a face sculpted of wood or dark in color so that the maximum amount of fading into gradual shades of clay on a painted solar energy is absorbed. The solar panels are softness, the texture of silk. background. "The designed to be removable so that different Garlindo, Residence Life's Condemned" is one of these arrangements may be tried and components will guest-in-residence, has been compositions. It is dark and be readily accessible. displaying his art and sinister. Garlindo's wife, who explaining its technique on titles many of his works, both SOLAR CELLS campus this week. He ·'takes named this one and wrote a The heart of the system's electricity all the tricks of the theatre poem on it. The face is a production consists of 20 eight-foot by four-foot and puts them in a canvas." witch who is to be hanged. panels of cadmium sulfide solar cells. Massicot Having studied art at the "She is alive, but already half pointed out that silicon ~ells of the type used in Chicago Art Institute, dead" Garlindo states. satellites are not employed in this project Garlindo is fascinated because they are more difficult to manufacture especially by the use of AUDIENCE and more expensive for a given output. But veiling by ballet dancers to When "The Condemned" regarding the reliability of the cadmium sulfide emphasize movement and was displayed at an art show cells, he mentioned that "there have been some shadow. Most of Garlindo's in Mexico City, people stood problems with degradation in this particular cell. paintings, therefore, employ in line to see it and to read There are a couple of different kinds of net or silk, and often, strings. the poem, "The Hanging chemicals in it that intermix and produce all Woman." Ironically, the artist kinds of harmful electrical effects and after a BACKGROUND laughs, the witch was while, the cell will give you less electricity. One Staff photo by Burleigh Cooper Garlindo himself was a purchased by a plastic of the aspects of our research is to increase the life ballet dancer. He studied in surgeon. Garlindo plans to of the cell." Dr. RiChard Berg, professor of physics, discusses Detroit and New York, and create another sculpture-- Massicot put the expected electrical output of construction of the solar energy house now under performed with the New (Continued to Page 6) the house's solar panels at 25 kilowatt-hours construction. U' PAGE4 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, 1972

;,/" " ,·. ., . .,·::::,,,-. ..-.. The Real World '/

Gift-giving this season can mean much more to you in at least one special way-- if part of those gifts you give go to a starving child somewhere in the world. The University Starvation Relief Fund is but a small effort to make a difference in the lives of thousands of the world's peopll!. It will have an effect though, if you tare enough to donate a smafl contribution. It's a hard thing to do, but when you finally take a look at your own personal world in the face of the real one, yours is way out of proportion.

' ••• AND ONE FOR MY FRIEND, HERE!' · - OUR MAN HOPPE------ZPG: Tribute To Whatshisname ------'------By ART HOPPE-­ Amidst all the Cabinet re-shuffling, Foree Base at 3 a.m. for a trip to Outer Mr. Nixon announced he would retain Mongolia?" his present Secretary of State because "Mr. Secretary .... " Term If A Long Goal "I'm telling you it isn't funny. you his "outstanding abilities" would enable him to "continue to play a central role" sat here day after day, month after month, waiting for the phone to For the first time ever, the rate of population increase in the in the Government. This high tribute warmed the hearts ring .... " United States has dropped below the level necessary for zero' of the Secretary's millions of fans across "Mr. Secretary, pull yourself population growth. That announcement earlier this week probably the land. Actually, the momentous news together! Let me make one thing brought cheers from most Americans as they realized that a much of the re-appointment was delivered perfectly clear: I am the President!" desired goal had been achieved. personally to the Secretary by the "By George, it is you, sir! Oh, wait till I tell Joe Alsop you called. At last. But population experts were quick to point out, and rightly so, President himself. Over the telephone. Fortunately, a transcript of the It's an unexpected hour, sir." that a short-term decline such as this one is not likely to lead to zero historic conversation has been preserved "Thank you, Bob. You don't mind if population growth right away. Drastic swings in fertility have taken for posterity. I call you Bob?" place in the past and could very well happe:-1 again. A small upward "Call me anything you like, sir-- ha shift is possible, say the demographers, because of the post war baby ha-- as long as you call." ***** "Well, Bob, I want you to know I boom. There are now about 500,000 more women aged 18 and 'over "Hello, switchboard operator? This is the President. Please get me my hear nothing but good things about you. than there were 10 years ago, and even a very small increase in the Secretary of State." Nothing. Henry was saying just, the fertility rate could cause a significantly greater population growth "Yes, sir. Right away, sir. Do you other day ... " rate. have the number?" "It's a pleasure to put him up in our While we can't expect to see zero population growth in the United "The number? Don't you have the Embassy in Paris, sir. And with all due number?" modesty, I think we at State have done States just yet, we still can't forget the potential which exists. That I know we had it, sir. It was pinned a pretty good job keeping out of his American women have come to the conclusion that they want to the bulletin board. I remember seeing way these past four years by not getting smaller families is only one factor which is moving us closer to the it myself only a year or so ago. One mixed up in foreign affairs." goal of ZPG. More women are electing to stay single while married moment, please .... Perhaps it would be "Exactly, Bob. And it's because of women want to have their children later. The tremendous increase easier if I looked it up in the directory. your outstanding abilities in this respect within the last decade in the effectiveness and in the use of Do you have his name, sir?" that I want you to play a central role in "His name? You mean you don't my new Administration." contraceptives and the relaxed abortion laws in many states have know his name? His name is.... Just a "As Henry's assistant? But he's become two important factors in the recent rate decline. minute. Henry? What's the name of.... " already got one." If we ever believed that in reality we would reach zero population "Oh, never mind, sir. I found the "No, Bob, as my Secretary of State." growth, we can't stop now, thinking we've attained that goal. We number. It was pinned under your "Oh. Well thank you, sir. It's a high haven't. All of the factors which population experts say were Commission to Investigate the honor. I don't suppose there's anything Feasibility of Dredging an Erie Canal. you'll be wanting me to do these next responsible for this decline in births must continue to be at work Let's see if I can still read it. Yes! One four years?" now and in the future. We have been encouraged by the good news moment please, sir. There you are. Go "Do? Certainly. I expect you to but the work is not over yet. ahead, please." continue working there at your desk on "Mr. Secretary, this is the President the same great tasks you've been speaking and .... " working on these past four years." "Look I don't know who this is, but "All right, sir. But I may have to I'm getting pretty sick and tired of that resign by spring. I've almost got the ship old joke. What is it this time? Another in the bottle." invitation to a White House dinner on (Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. April 1? Orders to be at Andrews Air 1972) VOL. 95 NO. 27 DECEMBER 8, 1972

Editor-in·chief . ..••...... ••.....•...... Karin I. Stearns Business Manager .....•.•....•...... •• R.A. Bobzin Managing Editor .. .. •...... •. .• ...... : . ...••...•... Ray Wilson Executive Editor •••..•.•.••. •.•. ..• ...... •...... ••.....•••. Mimi Boudart News Editors ...... •. ... .•...... • Roy Wilson, Ken Robinson Features Editor •..••... .•...... •...... • ...... Paula Johnson Sports Editor .....••...... •..•..•...... •..•.. Roger Truitt Photography Editors ....•...... •...... •• Burleigh Cooper, David Hoffman Layout Editor ...... •... ..•...... • . .• ...... •.... Lorie Grosskopf Copy Editor ...... •...... •...•.. Cathy Birk, Larry Hanna_ Advertising Manager .•...•.•...•...... •.•.....•.• Joel Smith National Advertising Manager .•.....•...... •...... •...... •.. Tom Crawford Assistant Sports Editor •...... •...... •...... Gene Quinn Circulation Manager .. ..• ...... •...... •... . •...... • John Anklin Advisor ...... •...... •...... E.A. Nickerson Secretary ...... •...... •...... •...... Martha Toomey Art Director ...... •...... • •.. Sue Rosenberg, Debbie McCulley

Reporters: Donna Bell, Barbara Carter, Don Davis, Jim Denny, Mike Dinsmore, Nick Fox, Peggy Gelhaus, Terry Godby, Larry Hanna, Susan Hertzog, Carolyn Hodgdon, Stan Howard, Sue Isaacs, Allen Jacobs, Jeff Kreshaw, Rob Kling, Joan Koster, Mark LaRose, Michael Lewis, David MacWilliams, William Mahoney, Rhoda Mast, Bill Mead, Karen Modugno, Jackie Nye, Barbara Paul, Bonnie Pease, Aletta Shrewsbury, Steve Smith, Dave Stroble, Patti Testerman, Jerry Tulley, Brad Wisniewski, Vince Wood, Ed Wrightson. Photoraphy Staff: Larry Conforti, David Corbishley, John Martinez, H. Brooke Paige, Chris Petroski, Dave Stroble, Steve Zeron.

Published twice weekly during the academic year by the undergraduate student body of the University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 1g111. Editorial (738·2648) and business (738-2649) offices located at 300·303 Student Center. Opi,.,ions expressed are not necessarily those of the university community. Advertising rates are on request. Subscriptions are $6 per year. Entered as second class matter, December 13, 1945, at the Newark, Delaware Post Office, under the Act of March 3, 1879. National newspaper advertising sales handled through the National Education Advertising "Hal\! The Administration must be sleeping-· usually by this time workmen should be erectlnt Services. the inaugural st:lge on the Capitol steps!" -· a : - DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 5 Reader's Respond Trash No. 33 ------___, Food Resources Scissorbreath Cuts Out L------By BILL MAHONEY To the Editor: products of the West their The tremors began suddenly, shaking the Scissorbreath was a large mechanical box with diet drastically changes. It is Your first editorial grounds of the Citadel of Hullihen with a scythearms and a discarded radio set for a head. an obvious fact that any entitled "Contribute" in the violence known only to those who frequent He was mounted in a shopping cart pulled by group of people living Dec. 5th issue of the Review piranha hangouts and exhibit an extraordinary Quasimodo and tended to spew ticker-tape as he separately from the rest of raised my eyebrows and fondness for meat grinders. The quaking forced spoke. the world must have an brought my pen in hand. In most of the fairy-tale degenerate denizens of the "If it serves no obvious purpose in life, adequate diet or they would essence you have stated that realm out of their dank holes and sent them destroy it," said Scissorbreath in polite greeting. not be there. But with their the "Green Revolution" has scurrying about in search of .•earthquake "We aim to confuse," replied a Secretary contact to the outside world failed. I say that it has not. registration forms and temporary court bravely in the time-honored salute. they become familiar with It would take a 3-hour, injunctions against the rapidly-splitting ground. "We go forward, master?" asked Quasimodo, 600 level course to bring to the "good tasting foods" and Lackeys shrieked and disappeared into the pulling on the shopping cart. the cheap ones, like sugar and light all the problems depths of dark crevasses from which there "No, we never do that. We must first observe starch-type foods. Thus they involved in hunger and eternally came a long string of off-color our disciples at work." go from a balanced diet to an underemployment; but in knock-knock jokes and various other intellectual The inhabitants -of the Citadel of Hullihen unbalanced diet; tooth decay, essence the problem has been sediment that tagged the abodes as either the went back to their scurrying and attempts at malnutrition, lethargy and the intrusion of the white future homes of retired Drop/ Add aficionados or complete chaos. By materializing in the center of mortality rates soar; not to man's morals thru waystations for transient marsupials in the the Department of Paperwork's head office, mention increasing racial preventative health practices market for a hllmburger stand franchise. Scissorbreath was afforded a beautiful view of and poor political managers. friction (due to the obvious Foodservicers and Administrators retired to the proceedings. nutritional vitality of the The insistance on decreasing concrete bunkers to watch the proceedings as "Why we here, master?" asked Quasimodo. infant mortality and dominant social group and Metermaids, Checkers, and Secretaries flitted "We have come to make sure that things are morbidity in areas already the potential for mental about in anticipation of a quick and merciful going backwards as usual. I intend to stay and overpopulated has caused an illness among the children of death. Transient mutants with revoked passports supervise." even larger population on a the newcomers, due to low skulked about in the shrubbery looking for the As he spoke, a shipment of sacred generally static level of protein uptake of th~ fetus Northwest Passage as immigrant cheese Undergraduate Catalog texts was delivered to the resources. This has led to and suckling because of poor merchants peddled their nefarious wares to door. underemployment, diet by the mother). Besides gullible spectators. "You're only two months late. Get those nutritional deficiencies and in all this the new comers filthy things out of here until next year when places like Calcutta, usually lose their cultural they're of no possible use to anybody," shouted migration to the cities for no identity and become OUT OF THE HOLE a Secretary. other reason than that there dismembered as a social Just as the atmosphere had soared to a level of The room that held the Department of is no room in the group, moving to the cities Paperwork was decorated in a. quaint Early countryside. Saving lives thru "where things are better." excitement comparable only to that generated by kiwi races, the ground opened up with a muffled, Rubbish pattern once created by a scow captain the practice of medicine or This leads to overpopulated who enjoyed bringing his work home with him. giving of temporary food cities and underemployment, if not off-key, "pop" reminiscent of the opening of a bottle of week-old prune squeezings. A dark, There were so many different strains of rodents stuffs does nothing but delay more racial tension and existing beneath the piles of paperwork that the problem: feeding the culture shock. · cavernous hole appeared in the earth and a flock of seagulls quickly decided to head south. first-name relationships were abandoned. Piles of people adequately and My brother was in Borneo paper lay strewn around in a filing system permanently. (Sarawak) in the Peace Corps, Out of this giant aperture appeared the sinister and long-remembered Scisso:breath, the reminiscent of the birth :records of the Mongol The ideal would be to and it was there that he saw a horde. Important forms were kept neatly stacked develop a country's resources Punan girl, three weeks out of Master of Paperwork Bureaucracy. With him appeared his faithful assistant Quasimodo the first, then increase the quality the jungle .and in the city for inside fiercely -burning incinerators. of life (thru medicine, etc.) the first time, go to a beauty Gremlin, a fish-cannery reject whose only claim to fame was that after 30 years he was still because then the society's parlor. DEAD FISH infrat-structure would be able I could go on citing other breathing. Amidst the rush-hour carnage and literary to maintain that standard. examples of developmental waste products, the Secretaries and Scissorbreath was a formidable creature Administrators kept busy losing every major However except for a few failure, but let it suffice to promoted from cataloguing back-issues of minor areas of the world, say that the technology is piece of paperwork short of the Gutenberg Bible pictorial fossil magazines by the dark hordes of which was rumored to be missing-in-action things are in such a backward there, but the lack of cultural the Cardpunchers, a vanished race whose only disarray, developmentally, understanding and respect for anyway. Degree requirements were revised by the debatable contribution was the installment of the hour with the only copy being bronzed and that this is not possible. a people's views generally computerized Chief Administrator and a legacy The job of agriculture is produces more negative than stored in either a Swiss bank or a can of flour in of folded, spindled, and mutilated computer a Mexican taco factory. the accomplishment of the positive factors in these fodder. His promotion to Master of Paperwork possible. Sure, we can developing areas. These kinds Bureaucracy gave him the responsibility of Two Secretaries with razor-sharp fingers and develop a new rice variety of problems go beyond the m?.intaining chaos in the paperwork backbone of eyes like dead fish stood contemplating a that has all M'te nutrients a scope of the agriculturalists tt.e Citadel of Hullihef!, a job that was well problem that even a slow first-grader could person would need (even developing better varieties of JJ&ndled by the present inhabitants of the handle without alcoholic assistance. when it is polished as the edible plants and animals for hallowed halls. (Continued to Page 24) Asians like it), but what good mankind. They hit the very is it when the people refuse core of out development to eat it because it has the programs and how they - Aesop's Fables "wrong texture?" Vietnamese should be effected. Which farmers grow these new brings us back to the varieties of rice, but they politicians, both here · and won't eat it. They like their elsewhere. The problem and 'Dump Pat' Move Announced rice to stick, because then it fault (or praise) lies with the is more easily handled with world's political planners. chop sticks. In Laos, A.I.D. ------By JERRY TULLEY-----­ Larry R. Kipp AG4 developed an irrigation of this explanation. They We did not Intend to imply WASHINGTON· (UPA) In addition, there are .system near Luang Prabang that the "Green Revolution" has President Nixon cited Mrs. Nixon's total reports _that Mrs. Nixon's that would double the rice failed, but only that It has yet to be completed. We believe the announced today that a new support of the President's heavy campaigning during the crop. The Laotians then growth of crops that produce Vietnam policy, and her higher grain yields represents a first lady would be appointed last election "markedly decided to grow only half as prom Ising advance towards to reign during his second · statement that she would be reduced her sexual prowess." much rice. The reason has feeding the world's hungry, However{ until the wrinkles of term of office. willing to give her life for This, combined with the well been explained by introduc ng them can be Ironed South Vietnam's President out (both cultural and technical), The announcement, publicized flings of psychologists to be something and these people become free to coming in the midst of a Nguyen Van Thieu, in his Presidential advisor Henry fend for themselves, u11ent relief like: 'Why invest in the Is needed even if It as only a major reshuffling of "valiant struggle to preserve Kissinger, has reportedly future, when there is only temporary solution. The Editor administrative positions, was democracy." bruised the President's ego, war?' an unexpected development A more likely explanation, and sparked a bit of jealousy Other factors play a part •il the President's effort to in the Chief Executive. as well. The introduction of these sources report, is a reshape the Federal "cooling of affections" In regard to possible money in an area where Government. replacements for the First barter was the accepted Winterim TV between the President and In making the the First Lai:ly . Some White Lady the President would say system automatically makes Winterim TV needs an announcement the President only that there were several the people with no money House aides have reported audience for the taping of a cited a "lack of mutual that the President and Mrs. women under consideration, poor, unless, like the Arabs, concert in the East Hall agreement with my wife on but in a late afternoon news they have some valuable Nixon no longer share the telelvision studio tomorrow the key issues of our times," conference Press Secretary resource. But even so, with same living quarters, and that at 2 p.m. as the reason for her Mrs. Nixon has been forced Ronald Zeigler confirmed the increasing familiarity of dismissal. However observers rumors tliat Gloria Steinem, these peoples with the to move into the White House in many circles were skeptical basement. (Continued to Page 25) ~ PAGE 6 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER B,

Guest-In-Residence Garlindo. • • Chorus To Give (Continued from Page 3) material is by applying a Virgin. Garlindo's style baa painting which will be "all knife heated over a candle. also been compared to light," the antithesis of "The Botticelli. He says he does Condemned." Garlindo employed rusty not especially intend works Hoi idav Concert While staying at the metal in his composition to be Biblical, but "you The music department is indoor concert, the singers university this week, the "Sun King." The metal is sometimes capture the offering an alternative to the will present the "Gloria" by former dancer worked on a used as the earth on which essence." drudgery of semester's end the French composer, Francis sculpting in tar. When asked the sun king sits. The rays of Elaborating on "the exams and term papers on Poulenc. The grandeur of this the advantage of this the sun behind the 'king are, .essence" in works of art, Monday night with its annual work will be heightened by medium, he explained that again, string. Garlindo explains that there Christmas choral concert in the accompaniment of a tar is "harder than clay, Preferring not to be was a time when he was "in Mitchell Hall, followed by the full-size symphony orchestra softer than wood." His classified as belonging to a love with the Mona Lisa." He traditional tree-lighting composed of students and method of sculpting the "school" of art, Garlindo tried to draw her over and ceremony on the Mall. some additional string players admits that his style has been over. Each time it was not the The evening of holiday from outside the University. called surrealistic. Also, it has same, but some of the feeling entertainment will commence This major choral piece will Bicycles been called Biblical. His wife was there. at 8:15 p.m. in Mitchell Hall give listeners the opportunity A Bicycle Club is being titled one work "Solomon Garlindo plans to continue with the Women's Chorus's of hearing serious, sacred touring with his works. Next formed for the Newark, and Sheba." Another, named rendition of a Benjamin music written during the very "Reminiscence" reminds the year's schedule is very busy. Britten festival piece. This same music era which was Delaware area and is opened observer of a head of The "Paintings are to be seen." will have the added attraction dominated by jazz and to aU interested bicyclists. of 11 harp accompaniment by popular songs. For the There will be a meeting Kathy Mareno, a teacher and perceptive ear, influences of December 11, at the New So.lar House. • • advanced student of the harp contemporary trends will be London Community Center, in Philadelphia. evident in this rather classic Rt. 896 North, New London (Continued from Page 3) Chapel Street. It is being built Three Christmas inotets type of composition. Road, Newark, Delaware. The "With a system like this," at a cost of $90,000 on a characterized by the rich Following their "concert Massicot explained, "eighty grant from the National textura.l sounds _of . thP hall" performance, the choral meeting is scheduled from 7:30 to 9:30 PM and its percent of your heating needs Science Foundation. The Renaissance will be groups and all interested could be met." Using the performed . next by the persons will gather informally primary concern is to house will be liveable, with a same "heat of fusion" basement, attic, living-dining concert chmr. outside on the Mall around organize the Bicycle Club. principle (using energy As the finale of their the· campus Christmas tree. area, two bedrooms, one and contained in a material as it one-half baths, a kitchen and changes from a liquid to a an attached garage. In its first Mankiewicz Describes 'New Politics' ... solid and visa versa), air year, it will be "populated by (Continued from Page 1) conditioning could be lightbulbs," and will be used obtained also, though it for testing purposes. particular category." take place at the Pepsi-Cola that he believed "the mainstream of the party would require a conventional "Kennedy turned them exhibit of the American system along with it and a National Exhibition in wants a change in leadership down because he didn't think salt with a lower melting Moscow by a public relations because it is an appropriate N.Y. Theater Trip that could be done," related point than that of the salt Mankiewicz, "but today you man, and added that action after a losing The Winterim Theatre trip Pepsi-Cola (whose president, campaign." However, he used for heating. The can break down the conventional air conditioner to New York City on Jan. 18 he said, is one/ of Nixon's sharply criticized what he population almost any way would work only through 21 will meet on Jan .. closest friends) was recently called the "Connally-Meany at night you want." With when the load on it would be 11 in room 121 Memorial tongue-in-cheek, he told the given the exclusive right to group" (the faction leading less. During its operation, it Hall at 10 a.m. The first fee story of a successful sell its product in the Soviet the anti-Westwood forces), Union. calling them an "ideologically would cool the salt as well as for the course of $30 will be Democratic candidate in the house. By morning, the Orange County, "There was a time," elitist group that wants due at the meeting; the entire Mankiewicz said, "when a control of the party" in order salt would be frozen and cost is $110. Contact wftose staff "wrote 111 000 ready to take oyer its job. President did not dare use that they may be able to Professors Black, Newman or different letters as part ~f a The house will be located direct mail campaign-- and foreign policy to make his "name delegates the way they Henry for information. friends rich-· or if he did, he used to." just north of the General there were only 90,000 Services Building on South :>ossible voters in the at least was careful to keep it iistrict." a secret. No President ever Turning his attention to did it so openly as Nixon political issues, the ex-Peace has." Corps administrator said Recalling the Cuban RINGS Nixon's campaign theme for missile crisis, Mankiewicz said 1972 was not "Bring Us people rallied behind BIG Together" but "Leave Us President Kennedy and Alone." believed what he said. ARGAINS "Polls showed that most "Suppose the same thing people actually wanted the happened tonight," changes McGovern was Mankiewicz went on, "and advocating, Mankiewicz said President Nixon came on TV "but . they either felt he was' with pictures he said were of (8 TRACK AND CASSETTE) the wrong man to do it or missiles in Cuba. I wouldn't TAPES they were willing to just take believe him. I'd say the AMERICA- "HOMECOMING" things as they are for a while pictures were faked by the JONI MITCHELL- "FOR THE ROSES" $449 longer." Pentagon- that it was a Reg. $5.69 NOW Mankiewicz told of the scheme for them to get more McGovern staff's frustration money." Lp FIRE SIG~ THEATRE -"NOT INSANE" at its inability to arouse Mankiewicz was $339 public opinion on the questioned at both the press Reg. $3.99 NOW corruption issue, and conference and the lecture attributed this failure to the about the left-right feud K055 headphones at low, low prices fact that Americans have presently building in the become accustomed to Democratic Party which iust for you! threatens to bust wide open · dishonesty in government. NOW 95 Peppering his remarks with tomorrow when the national ESP- 6 ....•.•....REG. $95 $64 committee votes on whether the sort of barbed witticisms 95 for which he became noted to retain or replace Jean PRO ~AA ...... REG. $60 NOW $39 during the recent campaign Westwood as national. chairwoman. ("Finding corruption in the 7278 ...... REG. $34.95 NOW 95 Nixon Administration is like Mankiewicz said he feels $24 uncovering a V.D. epidemic Westwood will step down 95 in a house of prostitution"), voluntarily but "she might K711 ...... REG. $29.95 NOW $20 Mankiewicz discoursed at . fight it through, particularly length on alleged Nixon if there is an understanding K-6 ...... REG. $26.50 NOW $1895 scandals of past years. that she will leave sometime in the next six months." He charged that the He endorsed George famous Nixon-Khruschev WE DO REPAIR WORK Mitchell and Lawrence ~' kitchen debate" was O'Brien for the post, adding .actually a Pepsi-Cola was sponsored by the Rush over to 135 E. Main St. .. li.1 publicity stunt arranged to university Speaker's Board. DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 1 Movie Review Film Attacks Bourgeoisie

'------By CH R !STOPHER HORAK

Luis Bunuel, at DINNERS brutally poisoned his seventy-one one of the grand Throughout the film, the supposed father on orders masters of the cinema, bourgeois couples spend their from his long dead mother. remains an anarchist whose time at real or imagined After telling his grisly tale, he surrealistic films have more dinner parties talking about takes his leave. The whole often than not caused a the finer things in life. scene apparently takes place scandal. Already in his first Although the men make their in real space and time. In film, "Un Chien Andalou" living selling heroin, they another scene, the dinner (1929), made with Salvadore ridicule the masses who are guests are machine-gunned by · Dali, he shocked audiences by ignorant of social etiquette. a group of gangsters, which slicing eyeballs and throwing One of the group, an turns out to be a dream. priests out the window. ambassador from a country in South America, defends a TECHNIQUE Bunuel, by focusing on the Nazi war criminal as a perfect Bunuel's surrealistic mental and physical gentleman. images are not a product of deformities of man, has his editing or other camera consistently attacked all The government, like the techniques. Rather, it is institutions of repression (the Catholic church, is through his miseen-scene that Church, social structure and represented as an institution the static camera objectively the government), yet which is interested in records the absurdity of remained largely apolitical maintaining its own power. existence. and asocial. At the same· time, The couples are arrested for he has given free reign to his marketing heroin, but are personal obsessions such as released the next day for Despite the gruesome his obvious foot-fetish. reasons which are lost in the images, "Discreet charm of BARRY DRAKE, a folk singer currently on the New York the Bourgeoisie" is an Bunuel, as a Freudian has bureaucratic machine. Coffeehouse Circuit will be appearing at the Grey Stone Bulding absurdly funny film. In the always treated reality and Clanking typewriters on the tonight and tomorrow night. The Coffeehouse Circuit has soundtrack, actually drown film, Bunuel reaches the dream visually as if they fostered such other notables as Jerry Jeff Walker, Jim Croce, existed on the same level of out the reason when it is pinnacle of his artistic vision, perception. Even in a film given. yet remains accessible to a McKendree Spring, and Jim Dawson. Admission for the Drake such as "Los Olvidados" popular audience. performances will be 50 cents with an ID. which appears to be a PERVERSION documentary of social Institutions, by repressing injustice, social realism and the individuals' freedom, surrealism are mixed. Thus in bring out sexual and other his new film "The Discreet kinds of perversion in man. A Motherhood Not An Issue Charm of the Bourgeoisie," Catholic bishop, after hearing one is never quite sure what the confession of an old man has happened; dream and on his death bed, gives God's reality become equally absurd absolution and then blows Says New Rep. Worthen and grotesque through the man's head off because Bunuel's Swiftian satire. the old man apparently By SUE ISAACS that her opponent would are "to secure equal rights murdered the bishop's Sandra Worthen, probably also offend most of and opportunities for women, parents. The last shot reveals newly-elected state the families in the district in to encourage women to IIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi the old man in a Christ-like representative from the which both parents worked. advance their status through image. Twenty-seventh district, told The new motto of the political action, to encourage women to secure the election, § a meeting of the Delaware Caucus is "Every Woman is in 5 Dream and reality become Women's Political Caucus Politics." Roslyn Rettew, appointment, and :: equally absurd. Sitting in a Tuesday that motherhood newly -elected co-chairperson participation of women to i_= cafe, the women hear the and in policy-making - should not be an issue when a of the Caucus, claimed that story of a despondent young woman runs for political everything in which a woman positions, and to encourage 5 lieutenant, who in youth office. is involved, even volunteering, women to express their views Worthen, a Democrat who is a form of politics. in a positive and politically lr-----~------~ effective manner." = won election in a All women have political I predominantly Republican power, she stated, and, if a Committees have been set tt.PlfWJIX i district, told the woman does not exercise this up to achieve these purposes. 5 power, ·someone will exploit CCFf'EDIOilS£ ;;;; approximately 60 women The Communications present that during her her. Committee, headed by STRING QUARTET ~ campaign she was asked Both political parties knew newly -elected treasurer Julia about her two children "at which candidates were the Hoffman, is concerned with OEC.8 75c j least once a day" but said she · logical winners even before printing a newsletter, felt comfortable as a working the primaries, Rettew compiling and updating the BILL ..~~!MES I mother because it is the claimed, and they were membership list, staying in DEC. 9 75c relationship between the · willing to run women against touch with the media in order 5 children and the mother that a "logical winner." to promote good press JIM ALBEKTSON i counts. "lf we cannot insure that relations, and setting up a ****** i She added that she heard women have a real voice in speaker's bureau to inform DEC. 14 FREE!! § at one point that her the present parties, it might the public. opponent intended to attack be necessary to withdraw The Financial Committee IRISH D·RAMAi her on the grounds that "I from them, she maintained, is in charge of collecting the did not love my children." addinl! that J;>Olitics means $3 membership fees and **·**** - more than votmg once every raising funds for the Caucus, DEC. 15 75c I "I was angry," Worthen four years. ALAMO said, but says she realized The purposes of the Caucus (Continued to Page 1 0) ****** JUST DREAMING? I Dream of diamonds magnificently set STUDENT DISCOUNT CARD DELUXE CANDY in 14-karat white Ill yellow gold. SHOP. INC. 20 Orchard Rd. Dream of tlor.ious ring comfort. NAME ...... · 41 East Mam Street 9 until lATE 1/y "1'/w Hilll! /,ci•dc!r.~" is entitled to a di5cQunt of 10% on all purchases CARD MUST BE PRESENTED UPON PURCHASE ANC BREAKFAST, LUNCHES, INTERNATIONAL SIGNED BY STUDENT TO BE VALID. .,: ~ PLATTERS SNACKS SOl MARKET STREET . - DAILY 8-8 501 Market Street WILMINGTON, DEL. 19801 OPEN DAILY :. ~ BE Wilmington, Del. 19801 12 WEST GAY STREET 9·5:30 ·Ill 12 West Gay Street WEST CHESTER . PA . 19830 FIR DAY TILL 9 (Except Sundays) YOURSELF West Chester, Pa. 19830 Open Dally 9-5:30 DAILY "I'LL MEET AND MEET Daily 4377 KIRKWOOD PLAZA Friday Till 9 WILMINGTON, DEL. 19808 10-10 10-10 SUNDAY YOU THERE" A FRIEND 4377 Kirkwood Plaza Sunday 12-7 Wilmington, Del. 19808 12-7 DECEMBER 8,

ferris: New Directions Driving along the was a turning point, Ferris, the student becomes Ferris operates a not others. They are workinC tree-lined entrance road, the according to John J. Kovacs, eligible for promotion to phasing-in class for students in a non-threateninc first thing you notice is the supervisor of social services at "sophomore," based on who have had trouble situation. For the first time, white administration Ferris. "A tremendous attitude and behavior functioning in the traditional someone has asked tile building. To your left is an restructuring" began after changes, and the "junior" and classroom atmosphere. "It's a youngster what he wants to above-the-ground swimming that date, Kovacs says, with "senior" levels are attained question of tack of do." pool and several small, upgraded requirements for after additional 60 day experience, not ability," In Beverly Howell'• well-kept, brick buildings. caseworkers and a general periods. comments the co-director of science class, two young boy1 There are no wire fences, philosophy which was Based on a version of this open-classroom program. were engrossed in learnlD& walls or guards to be seen changed from custody to behavior modification, the about the fundamentals of anywhere. Nothing, in short, treatment. four-level system seeks to Students are gradually electricity through a project to suggest that you are encourage maturity by moved from phasing-in to the The largest percentage of kit. Further back in the visiting a home for juvenile rewarding stu~ents with more classes in the regular program the approximately 90 boys room, was a display board delinquents. weekend passes and activities where the teacher-student highlighting the riiJII, living at Ferris are committed as they progress to the senior ratio is 1-10. In the nine by Family Court on bracelets and pendantl level. Students must reach classrooms of the education produced by the school'• This is the Ferris School "uncontrolled" charges. this point before they can be building, "a multiplicity of "Rolling Stones" Junior for Boys, a live-in treatment These are children who, for released, a process which options" is used in the Achievement company. center for delinquents which many reasons, have been takes an average of six to teaching process, according to "They like to have a lot of is part of the state's Division unable to successfully adjust eight months. director J. M. Tiku. "There physical activity with their of Juvenile Corrections. to school or home life. Located on a large, wooded are no grades involved here," learning," she remarks. "You Records· show that the great he explains. "Students are can't just throw books at acreage about one mile from majority of boys are at the After his release from Ferris, the student is aided in competing with themselves, them." Price's Corner, the school school due to truancy and receives emotionally and his return to the community other school -related through an Aftercare psychologically disturbed problems. "My personal children aged nine to 18 who counseling (parole) program. feeling is that these kids have "The actual test is in the have been committed to the never been given institution by Family Court. community," Kovacs says. responsibilities before getting "Our program is only as The Ferris School staff is here," comments Pedro challenged with the job of effective as the community Ferreira, a staff worker in the support the boy receives. This first determining each boy's intake program. problems and then is damn hard to get." Ferris students are housed transforming the individual A student spends his first in five, brick cottages, which into a responsible, mature 30 days at Ferris in a member of his community. reception process, the intake are divided into sleeping and This goal is approached program, during which time recreation areas. On the through a comprehensive he undergoes extensive ground floor, a TV set, chairs, program of academic and medical, psychological, a small library and a ping vocational education, a educational and vocational pong and pool table are behavior incentive system and testing. Following this a provided. Upstairs, the boys individual and group conference is held between sleep in a large room in bunk counseling. members of the staff and the beds. All of the living The Division of Juvenile boy himself. A long-range quarters appeared neat and Corrections has noted that plan of treatment is worked clean and several of the the Ferris School of the out based on the staff's cottages were decorated with sixties was best described as assessment and the student's the students' posters and art "a prison for children," with input after which the boy work. corporal punishment and receives "freshman" status. A typical day at Ferris illegaldetentionrampant.1969 After two months at begins at 6 a.m. Dressed in dark green work shirts, dungarees and fatigue jackets, the students take part in the Text by Ken Robinson academic and vocational programs after breakfast from 8 to 3:30 p.m. After dinner Staff Photos by Larry Conforti at 5, the boys are free for .reading or recreational activities until lights-out at 9. REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE9

Woodshaven: Progress The Woodshaven-Kruse of the girls. In the cottages this system a token economy School for Delinquent Girls the girls are given a status is set up in which the student near Claymont, Delaware is a classification according to is rewarded for her strange mixture of old and their progressive achievement, achievement with specific new buildings housing old starting with 'resident' then things that she wants, such as and new programs. The 'junior citizen' to 'citizen' to wool for knitting, a special once-stately dormitories and finally 'honor citizen.' The kind of soap, permission to school house dating back to number of privileges given are go to lunch off campus, or to the late 1800's are in sharp scaled according to each a certain dance. The student's upholstering, piano, health schools in 1954, the two contrast to the futuristic­ status. For example, residents progress is evaluated evecy and baby care, nurse's aide, schools merged. The number looking cottages under are not permitted passes three weeks at a conference cosmetology, manicure and of juveniles presently at the construction on the muddied, whereas honor citizens are in which the girl's counsellors make-up. Programs in school is 75, although the expanding campus. allowed to leave campus each and the girl sign a "contract'' remedial reading and writing population has reached as The school's programs are weekend. of things for which she has are funded by the high as 125. The optimum also in a state of transition Each cottage plans agreed to work. government's 'Title Two' number that can be handled explained David Katzen, its recreational programs for the Other buildings at the program. efficiently is between 60 and principal. A recent graduate evenings ·· social activities institution include a security The reformatory was 70. of Temple and the University such as dances with Ferris or cottage where students just originally two separate Outside the paint-chipped of Pennsylvania, who has Glen Mills School, going returned from running away schools, Woodshaven, for cottages, men were putting been with the reformatory bowling or going swimming. are housed, an honors cottage white students and Kruse up Christmas lights and a school for one and one half Kitchen and laundry duties School for blacks, which was remnant . of a dance, a torn where those who are ready to located were Delaware years, Katzen described the are assigned for a six month be released live and the poster that read "WELCOME school's policies and the new period. Some rooms in the Technical and Community BACK, GLEN MILLS" hung schoolhouse itself. The school College is today. After the changes. residences also serve as has a normal range of subjects on a door; the atmosphere The girls are referred to vocational training classrooms Supreme Court's ruling to was one of normality in an geared at the high school end racial segregation in the school by Family Court, until the new cottages are level. English and math are unnormal place. usually only after several completed this January. required, as phys. ed. will be violations. The offenses One example of the new as soon as an instructor is which they commit are not programs at Woodshaven is a hired. Some electives offered Text by Cathy Birk crimes per se, rather they are system of behavioral include oriental literature, such things as truancy, reinforcement known as cashier, business machines, Photos by John Martinez running-away or "Behavioral Management." In cooking and sewing, uncontrollableness. Often these problems are rooted in the inability of the girl's family to live as a unit. When a delinquent arrives at Woodshaven she is temporarily housed in a reception cottage where her case is diagnosed and a permanent social worker is assigned to her. She is tested in mathematics and English and given thorough physical and psychological examinations. During this period goals and directions are defined for her. After about two weeks she is placed in a dormitory or cottage based on her personality type. Thus, immature, aggressive or gang-oriented girls are housed separately. The staff's personalities in each cottage are also matched with those PAGE 10 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8,

Zodiac Columns Caucus Probes Women's Role In Politics. • • (Continued from Page 7) questionnaires about issues to attempt to get more women officers were elected. They Called Nonsense half of which will go to the candidates, does research on in elections. are Roslyn Rettew and Janet National Committee in and initiates legislation, and In addition, there is the Niland, co-chairpersons; Ocie Washington, D.C. lobbies whenever necessary. possibility of a Women's Lindh, secretary; Julia Lynn Kaufman, a two-year Resource Center which will Hoffman, treasurer; and Jean By Astrologer Policy Council member, be a clearing house for all V. Gall, Eleanor Dohan, Cheri · By TOM GREER reported on the Liason Two ten.tative committees information women should Moore and Lynn Kaufman, Committee which was set up are the Medical Committee know and a coordinating Policy Council members. In a lecture Wednesday to make contacts with other which will try to insure a agency for all women's Women's Lib calendars, a night in the Kirkbride Room women's organizations in the greater voice for women in groups. book entitled Born Female at the S~dent Center, state like the AA UM, the the delivery of medical At Tuesday's meeting the and buttons stating "Women astrologer Henry Winegarden League of Women Voters, services and in medical bylaws of the Caucus were Make Policy Not Coffee" termed newspaper astrology sororities and church groups. experiments such as birth adopted unanimously and were on sale. columns as "basically Also, there is a Legislative control, and the Candidate nonsense." Committee which sends Committee which will The newspaper astrology columns are based on the twelve ''sun signs" of the zodiac, which indicates the general position of the sun at the time of birth. "In drawing an accurate horoscope," Winegarden said, it is important to determine the "exact time of birth as well as the place where a per5on was born and the position of the moon and planets at the time of birth." "No two horoscopes are alike," he said. Even identical twins have different horoscopes since they were born at different times." Winegarden said that heredity and environment must also be taken into consideration in determining behavior. In examining the scientific TONIGHT. . I case for astrology, Winegarden concluded that there was an apparent connection ·between the THE LAST position of the moon and the equilibrium of the human constitution. AN·GRY· In a Baltimore study, a physician noted that 85 percent of yearly hemorraging problems in his MAN hospital took place at the full moon. In another study at . the University of . Pennsylvania, a physicist starr1ng determined that the electric potential between the head and chest was highest at the Paul Muni full moon. This change in electric potential, the physicist theroized, is the David Wayne cause of increased crime during the full moon period. Winegarden defended the 1959 fliclc about a Jewish Ptolemaic doctrine · of astrology by arguing that earth is the astrologer's doctor in the ghetto central concern; he is interested in the way our solar system affects life on earth. "Whether the earth revolves around the sun or sun FRIDAY EVENING around the earth is not relevant to the astrologer." FILM FESTIVAL STEAKS Assorted Sandv.. c hes 140 SMITH Roast Beef All Italian Turkey Tuna Y. lb. Hamburgt.r 7:30/9:30 PM Bar·B-0 Meat Balls Hot Sausage Cold Cuts Jumbo Steak Hamburger Fashion's New Address Sub FREE For imported and domestic sportswear, dresses, outerwear, and shoes. 175 EAST MAIN ST. STUDENT ACTIVITIES Avant garde and traditional NEWARK, DELAWARE PHONE · 737-9890 clothing for today's thinking Ms. DELIVERY AFTER 9 PM MON.-SAT .. 10:00 ttll 2 :00a.m. COMMITTEE SUNDAY •.. 11 :00 1111 1 :00 a.m.

• ... r· 1 ~. ' •· DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 11 Student Center Provides Winterim 'What To Do' EDITOR'S NOTE: During Wlnterim, the Student Center and the Student Center Council will sponsor a vast array of programs desl_gned to appeal to virtually every segment of the unlversit.y community. They Include bus trips, movies, community dinners, non-credit courses. and concerts. These pragrall)S_ represent a great deal of Investment in time, planning, and money on the part of students, facult)!. and admmestratlon. !hey are certain to be Interesting, worthwhile, and enjoyable. Complied by Jim Denny Ed Wnghtson, and Mike Lewes. · ' D.C., Philly Among Attractions Center_Plans Bus Trips

The Student Center will will leave for the Brandywine Town," at the Washingt01. sponsor a number of River Museum in Chadds Stage Arena. interesting and worthwhile Ford, which features the ' The bus will leave the bus trips to local and regional Wyeth family paintings. The Student Center at 12 noon attractions during Winterim. museum itself was once a and return at approximately Students can sign up for any large grist mill, and is situated 12:30 a.m. The cost of $5 or all of the trips now, along the Brandywine River. includes both transportation weekdays in room 100 of the An exhibit on local ecology is and theatre ticket. Student Center. also featured. (Continued to Page 26) On Friday, January 5, The trip will erid at The there will be a bus trip to Hagley Museum in Longwood Gardens in nearby Wilmington, where the Kennett Square. Featured history of the Wilmington Saturday Flicks will be a special tour of the area's industrial development The Saturday Flicks will gardens with film and is featured. Also included is a continue during Winterim at historical highlights. The jitney bus ride which will 140 Smith Hall at 7: 30 p.m. gardens were formerly the take visitors to the early for 7 5 cents with I.D. estate of Pierre Samuel duPont Company "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" duPont. Displays include rare powder-houses along the opens the series on January 6. and exotic botanical species Brandywine. Peter O'Toole and Petula from all over the world, as The bus will leave the Clark star in an updated well as the beautifully Student Center at 9:15 a.m. musical version of James landscaped gardens of native and return at approximately Hilton's novel. trees, shrubs, and flowers. 4:30 p.m. The cost of $3 On January 13, Charlie After Longwood, the bus includes all admissions and Brown makes his debut on bus fares. campus in "A Boy Named ELLEN KEARNEY will be giving a series of six concerts here Charlie Brown." Linus, during the week of January 15-'20. Ellen is a composer guitarist, SCC Dinners WASHINGTON, D.C. Snoopy, Lucy, Schroeder, and vocalist from New York's coffeehouse circuit, and her The Student Center On Tuesday, January 9, Patti, Violet and Pig-pen all Council will sponsor several there will be a bus trip to appear as themselves. The Winterim week is being sponsored by the Student Center Council. gala community dinners Washington, D.C. The Sopwith Camel also has a during Winterim. Table afternoon will - be spent at small part as Snoopy's dog service and beverages will be The National Gallery of Art, house. No-Credit Min,i-Ciasses provided. Guests are asked to the F.B.I., or The The final movie of the bring one dish or food to Smithsonian Museum. There ' series is "I Never Sang For The Student Center 3 to 4:30. Registration is serve six people. All students, will be a twilight bus tour of My Father," starring Melvyn Council will be offering three $4 .00. professors, staff, family, the leading monuments, Douglas, Gene Hackman and intensive study non-credit friends, and guests are memorials, and government Estelle Parsons. All three of Winterim courses for those BEGINNING BILLIARDS welcome. buildings; Dinner will be at the principals were registered for official A beginning billiards Dinners will be held at 6 "The Plumberry" at a cost of · nominated for Academy Winterim courses. Register in course will instruct how to be p.m. on the following dates at $3-6. Students will be given a Awards although none were Room 107, Student Center. a hustler, become the new the following locations: $1 discount with each meal. victorious. The movie is the For a registration fee of Minnesota Fats, or just learn Wednesday, Jan. 10, in the The evening will be topped dramatic story of the only $4.00 to cover materials basic rules, shot making, Ewing Room, Student off by a new production of preparations for death and and instruction you can make position, bank shots, english, Center; Tuesday, Jan. 16 in Thornton Wilder's "Our old-age. multi-colored, scented, sand combinations and strategy. 115 Pencader Core and ice candles from Whichever moves you more, Commons; Monday, Jan. 22, household molds five _times registration is still only $2.00 in the Ewing Room, Student Folk Heritage Explored during Winterim. The sessions for five lessons of an hour Center. will last an hour and a half on and a half. The class meets in The final dinner on Are you fed up with the Student Center Games impersonality, technology, rug belt and mat braiding Monday and Wednesday night Monday, Jan. 22 will be Room from 9 to 10:30 on the whole T.V. dinner theme? from 3 to 5 Thurs., Jan. 18 at in the Student Center. followed by fun and the Pencader core commons. Mondays and Wednesdays. Then the Student Center's entertainment- a bingo game Learn basic and special Foxfire series is for you. Thurs., Jan. 18 will also stitches, shaping for patterns with prizes, body painting, Through a series of craft feature, .at 7:30 in the new join-in arts and crafts and how to use different demonstrations, lectures, and Student Center lounge, Ole kinds · of yarns while Coffeehouse demonstrations, musical entertainment the Belle Reed and Family. A fingerpainting, live music, a completing your first The Student Center folklore and handicrafts of half century of North sampler, vest, hat or shrink in Council will sponsor trading post (bring your own old time Delaware will be Carolina music. junk), grunt and groan movies .a beginning knitting class. Coffeehouse concerts during offered. The entire program is Quilting and examples of Five one and a half hour Winterim. All shows will be at with no class, and free and open to the public. uniq·ue Lancaster County bring-your-own-instrument sessions will meet on 8:30 and 9:30 and will be On Tues., Jan. 9 at 7:30 in (Continued to Page 26) time. Tuesdays and Thursdays (rom free. the Kirkbride Room, Paul On Friday, January 5, Dowell, president of the " Tom Seqok and Ken Worne Maryland Folklore Society Dreyer, Welles Film Classics will appear with their varied Old Movies will tell of "Ghost and Witch music featuring original The Student Center Tales of the Eastern Shore." A Winterim study of January 10- "Journey into material, in the Ewing Room, Council will sponsor a series Southbound featuring America's two greatest movie Fear" (Welles). Student Center. They return of offbeat, little-known but Blue Grass mountain music makers, Carl Dreyer and January 14- "Mr. the next Friday at Rodney A nonetheless well done movies will play Thursday night, Jan. Orson Welles, is being made Arkadin" (Welles). and B Lounge. during Winterim. The films 11 at 7:30 in the new open to the public through January 15- "Vampyr" Ellen Kearney, direct from will be free with I.D. and be Student Center lounge. the co-operation of Mr. (Dreyer). New York's Coffeehouse shown at 140 Smith Hall. At Christiana Commons Gerald Barrett, and his January 16- "Day of circuit, will appear January The first in the series, Tues., Jan. 16 starting at 7:30 Winterim class. The movies Wrath" (Dreyer). 15 through 20. Kearney, a "Beat the Devil" will be there will be plenty of old are all free, and are shown at January 17- "The composer-guitarist-vocalist, shown on Thursday, January time music and lots of 7:30 in 140 Smith Hall. Stranger" (Welles). will be in the Ewing Room 4. The cast of Humphrey conversation with the January 7- "The January 21- "The Monday, Dickinson C/D Bogart, John Huston, Robert Brandywine Valley Ramblers. Magnificent Ambersons" Immortal Story" and "A Day Lounge on Tuesday, Lane Morley and Gina Lollobrigida It's a good chance to see a (Welles). in the Country" (Welles). Lounge on · Wednesday, · satirize screen sex, suspense, rare dulcimer and autoharp January 8- "Masters of the January 22- "Ordet" Christiana Commons on adventure and intrigue. And performance. House" (Dreyer). (Dreyer). Thursday, Smyth Lounge on who better to satirize the Mrs. A. Roy Breneman January 9- "Passion of January 23- "Gertrud" Friday and back to the Ewing (Continued to Page 26) will demonstrate and display Joan of Arc" (Dreyer). (Dreyer). ,Room ·on' Satuiday. · ·· · · ·· • · 1 PAGE 12 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, 1972 WINTER 1M WEEKLY SUMMARY Capitalized titles must be used on registration forms with project number.

Project No. No. Department Faculty Sponsor Title (Description) Cost No. Credits Students

AG.& FOOD RURAL/URBAN INTERACTION/W EUROPE 01-46-776-10 1-3 25 $453.00 ECONOMICS Elterich, J.G. Seminars and field trips on study tour of Europe.

AG. SCIENCE Lomax, Ken AGINEER WINTERIM TOUR- 01-50-776-10 1-3 20 $203.00 To acquaint students with testing, research, design, construction, processing and distribution of Agricultural Machinery and products. Webb, Jerry COMMUNICATIONS IN GOVT/INDUSTRY 01-52-776-10 1-3 10 $150 Series of one-three day trips to communications-oriented businesses and institutions. ~resent paper at seminar on I\ last day of Winterim.

ANIMAL SC & Krauss, W. ANIMAL EXPERIENCE AND CARE 01-51-776-10 1-3 25 -i)- AG BIOCHEM Haenlein, G. Practical experience in care, handling and management Fowler, R. of dairy, livestock, poultry and laboratory animals. All, Runnels, T. one, or a combination of animals may be chosen with a Martin, J. minimum of 40 hours actual experience for each credit hour claimed.

ANTHROPOLOGY Holsoe, S.E. DEPTH STUDY SWAHILI/KENYA 02-03-776-10 3 10 $749.00 An Old Swahili Town- Lamu, Kenya: A Study in Depth of an African town by residence and involvement in small research projects.

ART Siroto, Leon PARA-ETHNOGRAPHIC FILMS 02-03-776-11 open none A showing in the evening of four commercial films that rna ke ethnographic and ethnological points, interpretation of films by students. Ritter, H. CULTURE RESEARCH PROJECT/EUROPE 02-06-776-10 3 15 $500.00 Acunha, J. Individual research of various cultural offerings in Western Europe including museums, theatre, etc.

Cook, John ARTISTS/CRAFTSMEN IN LONDON 02-06-776--11 3 10 $373.00 U. of D. students will visit the studios of outstanding painters, sculptors, designers, printmakers, photographers and craftsmen in London.

Spinski, Victor PROBLEMS IN CERAMICS 02-06-776-12 1-3 30 $20 Studio_ . open for . student-initiated projects under superv1s1on of expenenced student assistant with final critique by Prof. Spinski. Tanis, Stephen SILVERPOINT DRAWING 02-06-776-13 2 7 $10.35 Prep~ratio':l of _variou~ silverpoin_t drawing surfaces and drawmg With s1lverpomt, goldpomt, and platinum-point on the above surfaces and commercial papers. Shurtleff, Bryon PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB WINTER PROJECT 02-06-776-14 3 13 $25 Two portfolios and/or a group show on: The beauty of Winter Delaware; Technology and social change and the domestic Winterim Projects.

ART HISTORY Mooz, R. Peter AMERICAN PAINTING AT WINTERTHUR 02-05-776-10 1-3 8-10 $70 Analysis of American painting through documentary, art historical and technical methods. Each student will research and X-ray an original painting at Winterthur and prepare a report in the form of a catalogue entry on the picture. Trips to conservators studios will ·be made to Washington, New York and Philadelphia.

BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES Boord, Robert L. DISSECTION OF THE RHESUS MONKEY 02-08-776-11 2 6 $13.95 Intensive dissection of primate body to learn significance and relationship of structures and to gain appreciation of the complexity and beauty of form.

BUS. ADMIN. Buckmaster, Dale THEORY BUILDING IN ACCOUNTING 03-58-776-10 1-3 10 none Students will examine the nature of .a general theory of accounting, examine alternative methods of theory building, examine the primary theoretical accounting models, and attempt to reach agreement on a general theory.

Blum, James D. EPS OF THE ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES 03-58-776-11 1-3 8 none In depth study of how earnings per share are calculated.

Donnelly, H.J. RESEARCH IN INCOME TAX 03-58-776-12 open none Individual research in income tax.

BUS. ED. llyas, Mohammad BUS ED SECONDARY SCH PRACTICUM 03-59-776-10 2 5 none Student will contact a cooperating teacher, make the necessary contact with school administrators, perform tasks assisgned by the cooperating teacher, evaluate the experience.

0-3 5-6 CHEMISTRY Sparks, Peter G. SCI APPLICATION ART CONSERVATION 02-10-776-11 $45 Trips will be made to conservation studios and laboratories located in Washington, D.C., New York City · & Philadelphia for the purpose of studying first-hand the techniques used in the conservation of art objects.

CHEM. ENGR. Katzer, James B. ; S02 CONCENTRATIONS IN NEW CASTLE 05-70-776-10 0-1 10 $10 Correlatio.n of state measures and independently ~ measured .S04 concentrations in -southern New Castle ' C_ountx with sources in the area using atmospheric .; d1spers1on model. 1 credit for non-engineering majors only. ' ... -~.-..-.-...... !til DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 13

Olson, Jon H. CHEM. ENGR. CONTROL EXPERIMENTS 05-07-776-11 0-1 6 none Petty, Charles R. Develop some useful demonstration experiments for Ch E 401 using existing laboratory equipment. 1 credit for non-engineering majors only. Olson, Jon H. APPLICATIONS OF COMPUTERS/CH E 05-70-776-12 0-1 5 none Develop skills in formulating and solving chemical engineering problems with computers, mini computer technology, control and dynamic simulation of reactors. 1 credit for non-engineering majors only.

Wang, H. CIVIL ENG. HYDRAULIC MODELING/LEWES HARBOR 05-69-776-11 0 5-8 Preslan, W. Laboratory testing of a 50'x50' hydraulic model located $90.00 in Lewes, Del. to determine optimum design parameters for new Lewes Harbor to be constructed. Richards, R. ADIRONDACK WINTER EXPEDITIONING 05-69-776-13 0 15-20 $145.00 Environmental consciousness to acquaint students with winter expeditioning techniques, and in particular with winter travel and camping in sub-alpine environments.

Richards, Rowland STRUCTURAL SAFETY SKI LIFTS/VT 05-69-776-12 Studying past failures to initiate a formal record of such- 0 10 $125.00 events and thereby help pinpoint possible causal relationships.

COLLEGE PARALLEL Rhoades, Richard (Georgetown) STUDIES IN THE SHORT STORY 15-16-776-10 2 6 none Intensive reading in the short story to enable student to decide whether the intent of a story is effectively ,. realized and worthwhile, and to weigh one story (writer) critically against another.

CRIMINAL JUSTICE Haas, Kenneth C. BRITISH APPROACH TO CRIM JUSTICE 02-11-776-10 3 10-15 Evaluation of the relative success of British Heroin $338.00 maintenance system as measured by three criteria: ( 1) percent change in addiction rate; (2) percent change in addict crime/rate; (3) effects on organized crime activity. Cown, Scott 02-11-776-11 3 30 Paul, Richard A. COMPARATIVE CRIM JUSTICE/EUROPE $383.00 Two primary emphasis: Study of Nazi War Crimes (Paul) and study of Criminal Justice Education in Southern European universities (Cown)

CURRICULUM Vukelich, C. & INSTRUCTION OPEN EO CLASSROOM TOUR/EAST US 04-64-776-16 3 20 $75.00 An investigation of open education primary classrooms in the U.S. with emphasis upon comparing classrooms along various dimensions.

Crouse, R. J. PRACTICUM TEACHING MATHEMATICS 04-64-776-19 1-3 12 Curriculum development tasks, individual and small -o- group instruction, teaching assistance, keeping a daily log of activities. Hagen, Frank URBAN CLASSRM MIDDLE SCH PRACTIC 04-64-776-20 3 10 -o- For a period of three weeks, the participating students will be engaged in the active process of transforming a traditional urban classroom to an open classroom. Crouse, R. J. IMPLEMENTATION OF A MATH LAB 04-64-776-21 1-3 4 -o- Help a secondary mathematics teacher set up and .implement a mathematics laboratory at Talley Middle School (grades 6, 7, 8).

Knight, Carlton EL ED PRACTICUM MIAMI PUBLIC SCH 04-64-776-23 3 12-14 $190 Students will teach full days for 2 weeks in one or three Miami urban elementary schools. Cape Kennedy, Miami Sea Aquarium, Everglades Nat. Park, the Keys, the Institute of Marine Science, Okefenokee Swamp, etc. will be visited and instructional materials gathered.

Stauffer, Russel G. SPEED READING 04-64-776-24 To improve rate and versatility. 60 $10

DRAMATIC ARTS WilKer, L. J. PROBLEMS/THEATRICAL PRODUCTION 02-15-776-10 3 Structuralism & Problems of Theatrical Production. 35 $-Q-

Rabbitt, Michael DESIGN/CONSTRUCT THEATER LIGHTS. Design and 02-15-776-11 3 5-6 $-0- construction of theater lighting system.

Wilker, L.J. CHILDRENS THEATRE TOUR DEL/MD/PA 02-15-776-12 3 8 $-0- 20 day tour to elementary schools with performance to 20,000 children.

King, Nancy WORKSHOPS IN WOMEN'S THEATRE 02-15-776-15 3 30 none Brabner, Joyce Workshops in Women's theatre for all women. Lynn Laredo of the It's All Right to be a Woman Theatre Troupe will conduct a five day workshop in improvisational and consciousness-raising theatre.

Hepburn, Andrew FILM AS A SOCIAL INVESTIGATION 02-15-776-16 3 4 none The use of film to show contrasting society in which we live. Hepburn, Andrew TOUR INVESTIGATE ACTING/TRAINING 02-15-776-17 9 $35 Travel to and study of 5-10 acting trainiprograms in 400 mile radius followed by planning of a new acting training program at U. of Del.

Hepburn, Andrew PROGRAM AT AMERICAN ACADEMY 02-15-776-18 3 5 $450 Designed to bridge the gap between educational_ and professional theatre training. 70 hours of professional training in theatre arts.

DRAMA­ Anapol, Malthon A WINTERIM TV SERVICE/CAMPUS 02-15-776-13 3 50 -o- COMMUNICATIONS Student originated programming, equal in quality to that of any small market educational (public) broadcast operation.

Adams, Mary C. AUDIENCE DEBATE TOUR/BRITISH UNIV 02-15-776-14 3 2-10 $638.00 Students in other disciplines may participate in tour. PAGE 14 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, 1972

David, Wilfred 03-60-776-1 0 ECONOMICS THE ECONOMICS OF BUSING 1-3 15 none An analysis of the private and social costs and benefits of busing. Reading & discussion- 1 cr. Research & report - 2 crs. Research & paper- 3 crs. David, Wilfred RADICAL ECONOMICS 03-60-776-11 1-3 15 none A criticism of the neoclassical doctrines and a study of the alternatives. Reading & discussion- 1 cr. Research & report - 2 crs. Research & paper - 3 crs. Brucker, Eric BANKING IN DELAWARE 03-60-776-12 1-3 15 none Bank regulation and structure in Delaware. Reading & discussion - 1 cr. Research & paper- 2 or 3 crs. Craig, Eleanor CONTEMPORARY READINGS/ECONOMICS 03-60-776-1 3 10 none Seminar discussions of 3 books from a selected list of current Economics works.

Connelley, L. ECONOMICS OF THE COASTAL ZONE 03-60-776-14 1-3 10 $7.50 Agnello, R. Economic aspects of the coastal zone; analysis of policies & problems. Trip & discussions & readings- 1 cr; plus research & report - 2 crs.; research & paper - 3 crs.

Hunt, Joseph ECONOMICS OF PROFESSIONAL SPORTS 03-60-776-15 1-3 15 none Seminar based on readings and research. Discussions with player rep's, club officials and sportswriters. Consu It sponsor on requirements for credit greater than 1.

Link, Charles RESEARCH TOPICS IN ECONOMICS 03-60-776-16 3 4 none Directed econometric studies in the field of human resources. Examples: relationship of training, sex, etc. on achievement in the professions.

Latham, W.R. ECONOMICS OF ZERO GROWTH 03-60-776-17 1-3 10 none Simulation of the economy under conditions of zero growth. Credits to be determined by consultation with sponsor. EDUCATION Crouse, James CIDOC/CUERNAVACA, MEXICO 04-64-776-10 3 30-35 Kepka, Edward Mexico: Study of Institutional Shape and Dominance. $4QO.OO Schulz, Lynn Seeing-is-understanding travel in Mexico as a means of assessing the ideas of such persons as Ivan lllich, Paul Goodman, Herbert. Marcuse, etc. Murray, F. ED INNOVATION/TEACHER ED ENGLAND 04-64-776-11 3 30 Martuza, V. Educational Innovation and Teacher Education in Great $299.50 Mosberg, L. Britain. Investigation of British teacher training programs including observation of classes, joint seminars, student teaching observation, etc. Archer, J. CROSS CULTURAL RESEARCH ENG/SCAN 04-64-776-12 3 10 $400.00 Research post adolescent personality development Eng., Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden

Townsend, E.J. COMMUNITY SERVICE EDUCATION 04-64-776-22 1-3 50 variable Edward, Richard Involvement in community agencies as a volunteer. 1 credit - min. 'of 30 hrs., 2-3 credits- volunteer hours and paper concerning co.mmunity work. (Deadline for registration- Dec. 15).

ED. FOUND. Morsta in, Barry R. SOUTHERN BLACK COL VOTING TREND 04-64-776-25 3 6 $110 To analyze the voting trends of newly registered voters (ages 18-21) at twelve different black colleges in the southern US.

Magoon, A.J. Interviews, visits, observations in public schools, 04-64-776-14 1-2 5 $25.00 Pennsylvania and choice of locations in Vermont.

ELEC. EGR. Partain, L. RUSSIAN TECHNICAL TOUR- Visit sites and study 05-71-776-10 0 15 $100.00 details of scientific & technical development in U.S.S.R.

Taylor, T. 150 $10.00 AUTO MECHANICS FOR BEGINNERS . 05-71-776-11 0 Automotive analysis, diagnostics and repair With emphasis on hands-on experience. Credit only for non- engineering majors.

Lutz, Bruce REACTOR SIMULATOR/DIGITAL COMPUT 05-71-776-12 0 5-6 Investigation of feasibility of using a digital computer in conjunction with a reactor simulator.

Rossmann-, George PHOTO PORTRAYAL ELEC ENGINEERING 05-71-776-13 0-1 4 none Description of undergraduate and graduate programs and research with pictures. Film and developing furnished. One credit for non-engineering majors only.

ENGLISH DeArmond, A.J. NEW TESTAMENT 02-16-776-11 0 OPEN New Testament. Supplement regular course in the $-G- English Bible. Safer, Elaine TUTORIAL IN MILTON 02-16-776-12 1-2 Tutorial in John Milton; 10-20 page essay. 8 $-G- Weygandt, A. ENGLISH/AMERICAN OUTDOOR ESSAYISTS 02-16-776-13 Study of English and American outdoor essayists. 15 $15.00 Breuer, H.P. MANN/HESSE/CRITICAL COMPARISOA Mann & Hess: A critical comparison. 02-16-776-14 2 20 $-G-

Brock, D.H. RESEARCH-COMPANION TO BEN JONSON 02-16-776-16 6 $-Q- Careful study of selected works by and about Ben Jonson and assist in compiling general reference book on Jonson. Black, W. N.Y. THEATER TRIP/SEMINAR/LECTURES 02-16-776-17 1-3 30 Newman, F. Project built around 3-night stay in N.Y. with lectures & $110.00 Henry, George conferences.

Mell, Donald C. Jr. 18th CENTURY ENGLAND IN NYC 02-16-776-18 2 10 $103.00 Visiting museums, seeing The Beggars Opera, hearing the Mozart and Bach Societies. f: ~CEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 15

$439.00 ENGLISti Halio, Jay L. THE IDEA OF A UN IV/EUROPE MODELS 02-16-776-19 1-3 10-12 First-hand study of British, Dutch, and French Universities: their curricula, modes of learning and teaching, student life, etc.

Finnie, W. B. AMERICAN SOCIAL DIALECTS/SEMINAR 02-16-776-21 2 20 -o- Arena, Louis Individual readings and group discussions of the differences between geographical and social dialects, both nonstandard and standard.

Beasley, Jerry PROSE WRITING TUTORIAL 02-16-776-22 1-3 3 none Practice in various forms of prose writing (expository; fiction, etc.)

Hull, Gloria T. FIELD STUDY· THE NEW BLACK POETRY 02-16-776-23 1-3 20-30 $1 Study of the new black poetry and its aesthetic; field study of the impact of this poetry in the black masses. Includes a free university-style poetry reading & discussion; compilation and evaluation of the field research data and experience.

Moyne, Ernest J. EVALUATION ·oF ENGLISH TEACHING 02-16-776-24 1-2 20 none Evaluation of the teaching of English, includinq the working out of evaluation procedures, the preparation of an evaluation questionaire, etc.

Barrett, Gerald PERSONAL CINEMA/DREYER-WELLES 02·16-776-25 1-2 20 $9.40 A study of the careers of two of our greatest film makers who were able to make artful statements in spite of the commercial pressures of their selected genre, the narrative feature.

Finnie, W.B. AF

Robertson, H.A. THE MECHANICS OF THE YEARBOOK 02-16-776-27 1-2 20-25 none Cumulative analysis of the yearbook as a comparative · literary publication utilizing the various techniques of representative yearbooks from both the University of Delaware and from other institutions. Nickerson, Edward REPORT ON CAMPUS CHRISTIAN MOVE 02-16-776-28 2 15-20 $15 Write and publish a newspaper dealing with the activities of the christian movement in all its phases. Farrell, Mary V. TUTORIAL IN WRITING SKILLS 02-16-776-29 0 15-20 none Providing practice in controlling written patterns of organization, grammar, mechanics and spelling to meet academic standards.

(ENGLISH Lemoncelli, R. COLLEGE PARALLEL) READING/ATTENDING 6 MODERN PLAYS 02-16-776-20 2-3 20 $65.00 Attending lectures, selected outside reading, evaluating plays. F'OUNDATIONS Yens, D.P. COMPUTER APPLIC. TO INSTRUCTION 04-64-776-17 1-2 10 $51.00 Uffelman, R. Readings, discussions, field trips concerned with computer assisted instruction, computer assisted testing and computer managed instruction.

GEOGRAPHY Rees, P. BRITISH NEW TOWN PLANNING/ENGLAND 02-19-776-10 1-3 10 British New Town Planning; field examination and $370.00 comparison with American New towns. Bunkse, E.V. STUDY(MEDIEVAL. CITY LANDSCAPES- study and exploration of med1eval patterns in modern cities in 02-19-776-11 1-3 10 $379.00 Germany, Holland, and Belqium. GEOGRAPHY Albrecht, J.C. BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES BIOLOGY & GEOLOGY OF CAVES-TRIP 02-19-776-12 1-3 15 Speleology - Seminar investigatioof the biology and $100.00 geology of caves and a field trip exploration of Virginia and Tennessee caves.

GEOLOGY Sheridan, R .E. MARINE GEOPHYSICAL/BAHAMAS 02-20-776-10 12 $150.00 Marine Geophysical Cruise to Bahamas

Pickett, T .E. GEOL. & NATURAL HISTORY/SO. ENGLAND 02-20-776-11 3 12 $370.00 Kraft, J. Geology & Natural History of Southern England. Field work at White Cliffs of Dover & other areas.

HEALTH SCIENCES Mooz, Elizabeth MED TECH/PRE MED/PHYS THER TOUR 07-86-776-10 2 20 $10 Visitation to Health Care Delivery facilities in Delaware and experience in terms of preprofessional in health related field. Individual medically-related projects for medical technologists, physical therapists, and pre-med students.

HISTORY Curtis, J. CALIF/HIST SOCY TOUR/MEDIA GROUP 02-23-776-10 2 6 $220.00 Schwartz, S. Tour of colleges & universities & the Calif. Historical Soc. presenting a media program.

Price, Joedd SPAIN: MEDIA WORKSHOP/DC TOUR 02-23-776-13 2-3 10 none Creative, visual study of Spain. Each student will create one slide-lecture. Trips to National Archives and Spanish Embassy in Washington, D.C. Curtis, James C. AMERICAN HISTORY THROUGH MEDIA 02-2~-776-14 2 18 $25 Schwartz, Stanley Students will learn the rudimentary techniques of audiovisual production, do photographic copying, process their own film, mount slides and record audio tapes. Retreat to Camp Tockwogh in Galena, Maryland.

HOME EC. Strattner, M .J. SOCIALIZATION IN YOUNG CHILDREN 06-78-776-13 3 6 none CHILD DEV. Assist with data collection for pilot research project.

HOME EC McCabe, Sandra TOUR INSIDE FOODS INDUSTRY 06-80-776-12 2 37 $25 McCreary, Eva Tours and discussion related to the research processing, marketing and service of food, as conducted by business, industry, and government agencies.

Morris, Lowella THEATRICAL COSTUME/OPERA WKSHP 06-84-776-12 1-3 40 none Smith, Frances "DiDo & Aneneas" opera production with-Drama & Music Depts. Students will research, design and produce costumes. PAGE 16 REVIEW Un of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, 1

HOME ECON. Rasmussen, A.l. DEVELOP STUDENT RESEARCH JOURNAL 06·80-776-13 2 10 none Develop format, policies and review procedures for a journal composed of reports frni FN 613 research projects.

10 $2.62 MARINE STUDIES Mangone, Gerald S. COASTAL ZONE ADMIN U OF MIAMI 08-89-776-15 0 Comparative study of Delaware and Florida Coastal Zone laws and regulations through joint seminars with faculty and students of the Ocean Law Program, University of Miami. open none MATHEMATICS Wolfe, Stephen _J. POPULATION DYNAMICS 02-26-776-10 Development of deterministic and stochastic models for the growth of populations.

Bellamy, David PSEUDO-GROUPS 02-26-776-11 2 open none A discovery-style course on pseudo groups.

Mjchaels, S.J. HOWTOGAMBLE IF YOU MUST 02-26-776-12 1-2 open $6 A strategy for the game of Blackjack (one of the worlds most widely played Casino games) based on the Edward Thorp's book "Beat the Dealer."

MECH.& Costello, F .A. MACHINE SHOP & MFG PROCESSES 05-73-776-11 0-2 15 in-state $48 AERO. ENGR. 60 hr. Manufacturing Processes Course at Del Tech out-of- $96 Comm. College North Branch including training on state lathes, milling machines and other machinery. 2 crs. for non-engineering majors only.

Danberg, J.E. AERODYNAMIC PRINCIPLES 05-73-776-12 0 15 $19 Greenfield, I.G. Objective: To introduce basic aerodynamic principles of airplane flight and provide in flight demonstration of the principles as well as introduction to preliminary flight training.

MILITARY Feret, John PROJECT ORIENTATION/FIELD TRIP 02-27·776-12 1-3 5-10 $110 SCIENCE Kiser, Billy Visits to Ft. Bragg, N.C.; Ft. Knox, Ky. and Ft. Sill, Okla. to investigate the role of a junior officer in the combat arms. Brownfield, J.R. INTRODUCTION TO ARMY ELECTRONICS 02-27-776-13 12 $75 An introduction to the US Army Electronics Command and equipment developed by the Electronics Command' Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. '

Brownfield, J.R. PRECISION TECHNIQUES DRILL TEAM 02-27-776-14 60 none Fundamentals and development of competitive drill techniques and routines. Emphasis on Precision Trick Drill Movements as contrasted to basic Military Drill.

MUSIC King, J.R. RESEARCH ON EARLY JAZZ BANDS 02·29·776-15 8 none Research and extraction of materials related to early (1900-1920) jazz bands. NURSING Benner, M. COMMUNITY HEALTH PROS/SEMINAR 09·91-776-11 1-3 20-40 NONE DiCecco, B. Video tapes and seminars to discuss community problems relevant to nursing. Topics covered: Abortion, Mental Illness, Suicide, Crisis of Old Age, etc.

Oglesby, Madelynn IN DEFENSE OF NURSING RESEARCH 09-91-776-14 open none A series of faculty-student informal dialogues on nursing research. Topics for the dialogues will be selected by participating students and faculty. One hour's credit offered (P/F) for attendance at all dialogues, scheduled 2·4 p.m. every Tuesday during Winterim, in the Commons Room (207) McDowell Hall.

Gift, Audrey ADVANCED CORONARY CARE 09-91-776-15 3 2 $6 Learning experiences will be provided in auscultation, arrhynthmia interpretation, and pharmacological aspects of coronary nursing.

Moser, Dorothy APPLIED BASIC NURSING CONCEPTS 09-91·776·16 2-3 open none Each student will spend a minimum of 30 hours during Winterim as a volunteer in an area of his choice in Wilmington Medical Center hospitals and will participate in seminars in the College of Nursing to relate the practical expe_riences to introductory concepts of nursing. (Registration dead line 12/1 5).

· Kennedy, Dorothy NURSING/MENTALLY RETARDED CHILD 09-91·776-17 3 8-10 $45 Role of the nurse with mentally retarded children.

Kee, Joyce L. TRAUMA NURSING 09-91-776-18 6 none Students will spend one week or 40 hrs. in the emergency room caring for patients with traumatic injuries. There will be four hours of class.

Juras, Lilliam A. CERTIFICATION/MULTIMEDIA 1ST AID 09-91-776·19 8 none Selected students who have completed the Standard Multimedia Red Cross First Aid Course will participate in the teaching of the course under the direction of an Instruction Trainer.

Franklin, Virginia NEUROLOGICAL DIAGNOSTIC STUDIES 09-91-776-20 1-3 5 none Observation of diagnostic procedures involving spine and brain with stress on radiological aspects of patient care and assistance with visual aid programming of such for dial access system.

Manglass, Betsy S. ILLUSTRATED NURSING TECHNIQUES• 09-91-776-21 10 none Illustrating Nursing techniques, procedures, and various tests and equipment u~ing 35 mm slides.

PHYSICAL Neeves, Robert SKI EDUCATION IN AUSTRIA 10-93-776-10 60 $430.00 . EDUCATION Intensive instruction by best teachers _in. f?urof:!e for complete novice, through advanced. V1sat Vienna, Salzburg, Univ. of lnnsbruck, and Munich. IJECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE17

PHYSICAL ED. Billy, Paul INTERNATIONAL & AAU WRESTLING 10-93-776-12 25 -o- Covers area of wrestling used in AAU and I ntern'ational Competition. Acquire and use those skills of freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling.

Rawstrom, Harry COI,..LEGE SWIM FORUM/FLORIDA 10-93-776-13 10 $208 Students will be exposed to various forum activities: ( 1) outdoor training in a long course pool; (2) movies, lectures and panel discussions by leading coaches; (3) participate in east-west swimming meet; (4) meet and speak with many world and national class swimmers and divers; (5) participate in a water show. Miles, E. WKSHP MODERN DANCE BALLET/JAZZ 10-93-776-14 2 25 -o- Workshops in Modern Dance Ballet and Jazz will be presented by Lida Nelson Smith, James Jamieson and Anna Marie Leo.

Rylander, C. Roy GYMNASTICS Gymnastics for the individual with skills beyond novice 10-93-776- I 5 20 none level to develop routines on apparatus and free exercise. Rylander, C. Roy PRACTICUM/PHYS OCCUPA THERAPY 10-93-776-16 Students wi~l. wor~ along with a therapist in order to 2-3 3 $39.50 bec?me fa!fllhar w1th what the profession is like and to see 1f phys1cal therapy is the desired profession.

Rogerson, Ronald THEORIES IN WEIGHT TRAINING 10-93-776-17 2 open none The purpose of this study is to allow the students the opportunity to life weights and at the same time analyze and compare their philosophy in weight training with that of others.

Hannah, R. M. APOCALYPTIC/PROPHETIC MANUSCRIPT 10-93-776-18 25-,30 none An ex.tension of last Winterim's study to include Historical and Cultural information and bearing on these writings. Two hours per day in the classroom and additional outside reading and written material.

PHYSICS Woo, S.B. PHYSICS OF TOYS- 02-32-776-10 7 $- 0- Some toys are used to illustrate some fundamental concepts of physics.

Herr, Richard B. FLARE STAR PHOTOMETRY/MT CUBA OB 02-32-776-11 8 none The 24 inch diameter telescope and photoelectric photometer at Mt. Cuba Observatory will be used to monitor known or suspected flare stars for sudden outbursts of ultraviolet light.

Halprin, Arthur FASTER THAN THE SPEED OF LIGHT? 02-32-776-12 1-2 10 none Recent scientific ideas on faster than light particle motion ( 1 cr.) and development of instructional film (2 crs).

PHILOSOPHY Staff SCIENCE FICTION AND PHILOSOPHY 02-31 -776-12 1-3 open - 0- Study of philosophical themes (ethics, social philosophy, philosophy of mind) in major works of science fiction.

Boorse, C. RADICAL/REACTIONARY VIEW ACAD 02-31-776-13 1-3 open -0- Critical discussion of classical views of education and Haslett, D. their recent radical critique, with some special attention given to the function and value of philosophy in particu Ia r.

Norton, D. THE PHILOSOPHY OF TIME 02-31-776-14 1-3 open -o- Ross, D. Studies of the nature of time according to major philosophical schools, with attention to the psychology, esthetics, and sociology of time. 1 credit i-~?_.,,n 1nd class participation. 3 credits major paper

POL. SCIENCE Nathan, James BRITISH PACIFIST LEFT/ENGLAND - Project will 02-33-776-10 3 10-30 visit with leadership & aid in library acquisition project. $403.00

Rich, Daniel THE POLITICS OF THE FUTURE Readings, discussions, films, lectures organized around 02-33-776-1 I 15 -o- the study of alternative political futures in cities nations and internationally. '

Palley, Marian AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IN HIGHER ED 02-33-776-13 3 15 $80 Federal guidelines in Women's Rights· for educational programs. Research internships with Health, Education and Welfare and the American Association of Colleges.

Boyer, William PUBLIC ADMIN/POLITICAL ACTIVISM 02-33-776-14 open none Lewis, Jerome This is the theme of the January 25-26 regional Mackelprang, A .J. conference of the American Society for Public Administration held at Clayton Hall Conference Center at U.D. Students must read one book on the public services, attend the two-day conference, and write a paper on the conference. Reynolds, H.T. ADOLESCENT SOCIALIZATION 02-33-776-15 3 20 none An analysis and report on a questionnaire given to junior and senior high school students on political ideology and efficacy.

Oliver, J. LEGISLATIVE INVOLVEMENT 02-33-776-16 1-3 5-25 none Researching issues and otherwise helping legislators on a state and national level.

I 'f. • ~ • , • .- ... '"I' p ...,. ~ .. - PAGE 18 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER

PROF. SERVICES Newton, James E. AFRO AMERICAN PERSONALITIES 04·64·776·15 2 25 -o- An experience to acquaint students with Afro-American personalities and their contributions to American Society (on campus).

PSYCHOLOGY Cicala, George INTELLIGENT EYE/ILLUSIONS ETC 02-34-776-13 1-3 20 none McLaughlin, John Construct materials to produce stereoscopic phenomena, "Op" art and/or other Illusions, then find the stimulus conditions most relevant in producing the phenomena.

Duchnowski, Albert PSYCH RESEARCH & SERVICES IN ED 02-34-776·14 3 6 none Students will participate in on-going research projects and/or observe psychological consultation in Head Start and public schools. Paper required.

SECRETARIAL Evanelle, G. OBS/SECTY SKILL/TRAINING/ENGLA'ND · 03-61·776-10 3 10 $338.00 STUDIES Cox, JoAnn Observation of office skills and training procedures in · England.

Shoff, Patricia SECRETARIAL STUDIES PRACTICUM 03-61·776·11 1·3 15 none Student will be working full-time on a job approved by the sponsor. There will be a self-evaluation, a follow-up by the sponsor to the employer, a log prepared and kept by the student. Washington, Esther DESIGNS/MATERIAL DATA PROCESSING 03·61·776-12 10-15 $6.00 Elementary concepts of data processing explored. Knowledge of hardware necessary, etc.

Wiley, Sarah M. BASIC TYPING 03·61·776-13 0 36 none The course is designed to provide students with basic typing skills and knowledge. The primary goal will be to help students research a skill level that will enable them to do their own typing (e.g.···term papers) .

SOCIOLOGY DiRenzo, G . ITALY/GREECE STUDY OBSERVATION 02-37-776-11 Study and observational analysis of the contemporary 3 15-20 $500.00 societies of Italy and Greece in a historical and evolutionary perspective. ·

Schwermer, Jurgen WHO PICKS UP THE HITCHHIKER? 02-37-776·13 0-3 open variable Attempt to test hyoptheses concerning the attitudes and salient social characteristics of drivers. Assess the exchange expectations of participants.

Nohara, Shigeo BOREDOM AND SOCIETY 02·37-776-14 An examinatioof boredom (nature, causes and 1·3 10 $3 consequences) as described in sociological literature. STAT. & Khalil, Hatem APL COMPUTER SEMINAR 02·39-776-12 0·2 20-30 $10 COMP. SCI. A seminar on APL emphasizing its practical application in science and engineering.

Khalil, Hatem PL/1 WORKSHOP 02-39-776-13 0·2 20 $10·15 A hands on approach study of PL/1 sponsored by the U. of D. ACM student chapter. EXTILES & CLOTHING Weaver, J .W. ECOLOGY VS. FLAMMABLE NIGHTWEAR 06-84·776-10 1·3 6 $-o- Lab investigation of non-phosphate detergents with flame retardant finishes.

Seltzer, Jack COMPUTING CENTER FORTRAN PROGRAMMING 05-71-776-14 0 20 Presents language constructs and terminology. 1ncludes none problem solving exercises and experience in coding, debugging and program execution. EDUCATION Eubanks, Vukelich, URBAN ED WILMINGTON PRACTICUM 04-64-77€-13 3 220 $15.00 HOME EC. DeCapua, etc. · Allow students a chance to appreciate problems & practices of classroom, to develop observation & teaching skills, etc. Stegner, R. ED PSYCH HE SOC SEXUALITY COURSE 04-64·776·18 1·3 8-10 -o- Finner, S . . One to three credits in biology, education, home Settles, B. economics, psychology, or sociology can be earned by Zuckerman, M. assisting in the review and evaluation of a mu ltid isc iplinary course of study and instructional materials for a new course, The Foundations of Human Sexuality, to be offered for the first time in the Spring, 1973. . ENGLISH Bennett, R.B. DRAMA THEATRE TOUR LONDON ENG/DRAMA • attend 02-16-776-15 1·3 20 Sherman, D. performances and explore numerous kinds of dramatic activity and meet persons inii..Jived in this area of London's cultural life. ENGLISH Gates, Barbara T. DICKENS & LONDON POOR THEN & NOW 02·16-776-10 2 20 SOCIOLOGY VanTil, Sally A first hand look at Dickens' London & the London of the urban poor today. Discussions with famous scholars, social workers & visits to social welfare agencies, tours, museums, etc. MUSIC Keenze, M. INTERDISCIPLINARY OPERA WORKSHOP DRAMA Sherman, D. Rehearsal & production of two on-act operas. 02-29· 776·12 3 35-50 Rabbitt, M . SOCIOLOGY Scarpitti, F.R. SOC/ANT/HIST RURAL/URBAN SPAIN 02-37-776·10 1-3 ANTHROPOLOGY Schwartz, N .B. 30 HISTORY Rural-urban contrasts in Spain & Spanish Price, J. history-inte..t4isciolinarv. SOCIOLOGY Scott, N.P. SEMINARS & TRAVEL IN BRAZIL 02-37-776-12 1·3 LANGUAGES & Huffman, H.R. 10 LITERATURE Seminars and tours in Rio de Janeiro and four other Brazilian cities. STAT. & COMP. Carberry, MaryS. SCI/COMP. CTR. COBOL PROGRAMMING 02-39-776-10 20 nont Smith, C. Presents language constructs and terminology. Includes problem solving exercises and experience in coding debugging and program execution. Carberry, MaryS. ALGOL PROGRAMMING 02-39· 776-11 20 nont Kite, J. Presents language constructs and terminology. Includes problem solving exercises and experience in coding, and execution. PAGE' 19 GOODf'iEAR TIRE CENTER

FEATURING: ~ Veterans TIR£S BRAKES All student veterans who are planning to participate in a BATTERIES TUNE-UPS Winterim project are urged to contact Ms. Neave, the Veterans Affairs clerk, in 011 HuUihen Hall, to receive Veterans' benefits. TUBES SHOCKS Contact should be made before the Christmas break. CUSTOM WHEELS MUFFLERS ALIGNMENTS All Students Receive Big Film Screenings Discount With ID Fifteen University of Delaware students enrolled in the Chestnut Hill Plaza department of art's experimental film course will show their Newark, Del. 731-1150 creations at two screenings, scheduled for 3 and 7 p.m. , tociay in the Ewing Room of the Student Center. The super-8-mm. films Next to Gaylords & Shoprite treat a wide variety of subjects ranging from drag racing to children at play. The public is invited to view the screenings at no charge. Math Winterim- There will be a short meeting of persons interested in the mathematics department's Winterim project investigating opportunities after graduation on Monday at 4 p.m. in 116 Sharp Lab. If unable to attend, please contact Gene Sand at 737-9665, or Dr. Remage in Sharp Lab. Coordinator

Applications for the position of Stu~ent Information Center coordinator are now being accepted for next semester. This is a salaried position. Applications can be picked up in the Center or in the Office of Volunteer Services and must be returned by today. Budget Forms Student organizations which did not request money from the Student Government last year, but wish to do so for the 1973-74 fiscal year should pick up a budget request form availai>le from the student government office beginning today.

HEALTH LECTURE IS IT ALL IN YOUR NERVES? UES. DEC. 12 AT 7:30P.M. AT ROSENTHALL CHIROPRACTICE OFFICE 220 WEST PARK PLACE NEWARK REFRESHMENTS SWIM JAMAICA $169* SKI VERMONT S93 Lay in the sun. shop wtth the tslanders. and wa lk The best skt school tn the eilsl offers"' week of fun. to the heat of a calypso band for a full 8 days and wtne. and fnends. Begtnners and Pxpert~ welcome 7 ntghts. WANDER EUROPE $1 90 SWING FREEPORT $169* Explore. lour. or JUSt wander We'll t<1ke you to Share the exettement of 1umptng castnos by ntght Europe and when you're ready. bnng you bdck and relax on the whttest of beaches by day. Ex­ fhts ts our spectalty. from tron<,porli1tton on the actly 8 of our days and 7 of our n.'ghts btggest atrltnes to passes on the smdlle~t tri1tns. Ski the Austrian Alps. Kttzbuhel Valley Weekly Ba>ed on Quads. Pnce excludes ldx and lips. Chnstmas departures on KL M 289 complete (room. pl

• I Sunday December 10 ~~~ Delaware fieldhouse 8 P.M. REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware

Reserve Seat Tickets 3.50 in Room PAGE 22 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, 1972 Jim Albertson At Phoenix Tonight Folk Artist To Entertain Folk artist favorite Jim contemporary sounds in folk coffeehouses in New Jersey, Albertson will entertain at music. Pennsylvania and New York. the Phoenix Coffeehouse at Currently, Albertson is Regular Phoenix attraction 8:30 tomorrow night. changed into hosting a weekly folk music Bill Haymes will appear Albertson puts his radio program over station tonight at 8:30. A Phantom's Note: In the swooped down on viliains Phantom Facts of 12/1/72, the program under the broad title WFPG on the Steel Pier in 22-year-old musician and answer to Question 7, concerning and smashed them with a "F Troop," should havt been: of an American Heritage of Atlantic City. He has recently showman, Haymes plays in "Chief Wild Eagle .., the guitar)? Folklore and Music. It Hekawees." Roaring Chicken was appeared at the Universities , the style of Arlo Guthrie, the Medicine Man. The Phantom 7. What was the consists mainly of traditional of Buffalo and Maryland, the interspersing his routine with welcomes any Information or folk music laced with stories questions. setting of the "Gene Fox Hollow Folk Music miscellaneous stories and and humor that appeal to Festival, and various comedy. London Show?" audiences of all ages. 1. Name the 8. Who played Bret, The program follows a original "" Bart, and Cousin Bo chronological development of and the actors who Maverick? folk trends, beginning with played them. 9. Who starred as T.V's unaccompanied ballads, sea 2. Who were the little songs and foreign roots and "Invisible Man?" including bJues and country twin boys on "Bertie the 10. True or false. The music right up to Bunyip?" Who was the University of Delaware villianous fox? appeared on the "G.E. ~_t,f AND Aft: 3. Who is the voice of College Bowl" and won ~~S AT THE /.!:]' -1 Charlie the Tuna and the four consecutive games ~\:). "(', ~ PHOENIX ~ Jolly Green Giant? (Hint: before going down before ~ ~ he also played Detective Temple University. COFFEEHOUSE (:) Jacoby on "Peter 11. Who played Yancy Music To Suit Gunn"). Derringer's Pawnee Your Head 4. On the long-running friend, Pahoo? "Leave It To Beaver" 12. What TV game Prices To Suit show, who were Wally Your Pocket show was hosted by Merv FRI., SAT. 8:30-2 Cleaver's two constant Griffin? companions? 13. What was Edd 5. What is the "Kookie" Brynes hometown of Rocket J. occupation on "77 Squirrel and Bullwinkle Sunset Strip?" Moose? What is the home 14. Who produces country of Boris "The Newlywed Game," Badenov and Natasha? "The Dating Game," and ·s. Who was "The Parent Game?'' Ouickdraw McGraw's 15. How many times burro sidekick? What was its weight in excess acid the name of the character does Rolaids consume? Quickdraw occasionally (Answers on Page 25) WHEN YOU KNOW ITS FOR KEEPS. A Ke epsake Diamond Ring .. . Love. guaranteed perfect, protected against loss and permanent ly captured forever registered. You can't buy any tn the bea uttful finer, anywhere. brilliance of POET I QUE $350.00 to $900. 00 a perfect dtamonj WED. RING $50.00 EMBASSY $200.00 to $450.00 Keepsake. Love is what WINTERSET $250.00 to $5 the perfect symbol Christmas of your is all about ~psake· spectal love. A Keepsake D iamond REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS Ring says love . . . w ith stunning beauty and the Rongs fro m S 100 t o S 10 .000 Traci e M ark Reg A H Pond Co fiery brilliance of a perfect ••••••••••••••••••••• center diamond. HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Send new 20 pg. booklet. ""Planning Your En gagement and Wedding"" plu s Levitt jeWelers fu ll color fold•r and 44 pg. Bride's Book gift offer all for only 25¢. F-72 Mervin S. Dale Nome ______AddreSS------Newark's Only Keepsake Jeweler Home of The Charm Bar 59 E. Main St. 802 Market St. City ------CO.------368-3221 Wilmington, Del. State Zi p· ------­ We GiveS & H Green Stamps 652-0338 KEEPSAKE DIAMON D RING S. BOX 90. SYRAC USE . N.Y. 13201 DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 23 5th · ANNUAL WHEN

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·. , stN ON THE RADIOTHON AND ON . ..· · . ~ ..'l 1' t ·~.> GAttl AMOttiAC!· FREE POCO ALBUMS . MIKE ooN~f~ly ' · ..;.Jf;{J "" GAMMA SIG CAROLERS WILL ~·~'%. h 1' "J?/. BE VISITING THE DORMS ON . "·-0~; ~ MONDAY NIGHT TO COLLECT DONATIONS ~ PAGE 24 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, 1972

Bureaucracy Burgeo~s In Dept. Of Paperwork. • • (Continued from Page 5) CLASSIFIED lizard in intense pain. on until Lizard-face went people trying to find out "Okay, if we have eleven "Twelve thousand?" what's going on and comatose from both the ANNOUNCEMENTS thousand waiting to register replied a· gargoyle assistant strain of counting on both everything. Can't have none TYPING - exp. typist desires for courses, we should typing - thesis, termpapers, etc. with a breath that could melt hands and feet and from the of that stuff. As they say, a Call 368-2701. normally by Bookstore policy steel at twenty paces. TYPING • Done on electric knife placed squarely in its little knowledge is a deadly typewriter bY exp. typist. order two thousand. Let':. be "No twelve." gullet, a token of esteem left thing." Reasonable rates, fast service. Call different and . order twelve," 737-1049. by a playful Foodservicer TYPING - Anything at my said a Secretary with spikes FICKLE CREW with onion dip on his breath "But I am the Master of home. Near university. Call for teeth and the face of a 368·3535. The financial seminar went and the nirvana of a potential Paperwork Bureaucracy!" IN DOVER visit Bilton's Bicycle Co. at Spence's Bazaar. main course in his eyes. New and used bikes. Repair, accessories, & parts. "So? I ain't no ANYONE - with apartment NOW SHOWING headshrinker. You're going to need a roommate for spring THRU TUES. Scissorbreath sat in semester? Call Cathy ecstacy as his disciples rivaled have to shell out five bucks 215-696-5764. 2 COMPLETE SHOWS NEED SOMEONE to do your the U.S. Mail in for an I.D., Mister, Uh ..." typing? Close to campus. Call NIGHTLY AT 7 & 9 PM "Scissorbreath." 368-3714. incompetence and TERMPAPERS Theses, "I thought you said your evolutionary mishaps. It was dissertations typed. Fast accurate name was Master service. Good rates. 738-4149. not until Quasimodo helped WORK ABROAD! NEW YORK FILM CRITICS TRIPLE AWARD WINNER! Whatchamacallit. That will be · 1nternatlonal Jobs • Europe, himself to somebody's wallet five bucks more for the name South America, Asia, Australia, that Scissorbreath was U.S.A. Openings In all fields · COLUMBIA PICTURES Presenls change." Social Sciences, Business, BEST A B8S PRODUCTION noticed. Sciences, Engineering, Education, SCREENPLAY "I hope you choke to etc. Paid expenses, bonuses, travel. Includes Student Summer death on your own foul Job Guide to overseas, Alaskai/ BEST u.s. Government, resort area an SUPPORTING ACTRESS "You got an I.D., buddy?" paperwork, monster." construction work. Ideas for ''Master?" quiered part-time school year jobs. All ELLEN BURSTYN asked a Secretary. new 1972 application information "Why, no." replied an Quasimodo. - only $4.00. Money back BEST guarantee. Apply early for best astonished Scissorbreath. "I'm going to retire and go opportunity • write today!!! SUPPORTING ACTOR back to cataloging bone International Employment, Box BEN JOHNSON "Then you'll have to leave 721-0123, Peabody, Mass. 01960. this area. There's been a lot digests for dogs . and people (Not an employment agency). TYPING • In my home on of sabotage lately. You know, with strange tastes. They electric typewriter. Experienced don't need me here in term papers, thesis; etc. Call 731-4147. anymore." DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS - 3,000 ring styles at 50% discount to students, staff, & teachers. Buy "Forward, master?" direct from leading manufacturer "Yes, Quasimodo, perhaps and SAVE! Vz carat $179, 'I• carat only $299. For catalog send SOc we'll go forward for once," for postage & handling to Box 42, Fanwood, N.J. 07023 (include murmured Scissorbreath, name of school). ATTENTION SKIERS! stifling a sob. FOR SALE '64 VW exc. cond. $600 firm. The duo disappeared into Call Danny after 11 p.m. at the crevasse and were never 738·1464 or 738·1380. MARRIED GRADUATE heard from again, except for STUDENT is selling his household MISSED KILLINGTON TRIP? a few random sightings near belongings. Furniture, c_onsole stereo, decorative handicrafts, abandoned fossil diggings Persian lamb skin coats, Nlkon where they maintained a FTN (f1.4), etc. Call 368-9617. BIKE • Schwinn Continental, booming postcard business. yellow book rack, chain and lock. $90. Call 368·3910. ORIGINAL, PEN AND INK, winter, note cards for sale. $1.00 YOU CAN for an assortment of 12 designs. send as greetings. Give as gifts. Call Sue Rosenberg, 737·9900 or Verma drop by 313 Harrington C to see On Dec . .10, the Spanish samples. WANTED Club is sponsoring a trip to PART-TIME HELP • Approx. STILL GO 3 hrs/day a.m. & p.m. availablei/ Philadelphia to see the play $3.12/hr. to start. Apply Unite Parcel Service 700 A S .., Wllm. "Verma" by Frederico Garcia Interviews every T-hursday. Lorca, performed by the NUDE MODELS for figure study and photos: Call 652·6557. Nuria Esperet players of ATTRACTIVE GIRLS • Part-time, top pay to act as ON A TRIP Madrid. Bus will leave at 6 models, hostesses, escorts, for promotions, grand openings. p.m. from the Student Center TOP.Iess dancers and cocktail waitresses part-time. $10·25 per parking lot. hour. Call 652·6557. AMBITIOUS STUDENT • The cost is $3.50 for bus wanted to be campus rep. for growing travel company many and admission, pay'able to travel benefits, cau now: TO ·MOUNT Mrs. Dawson in the Language 1 n ter-C o lleg late H olldays, 215-879-1620. Office, 325 Smith Hall. RIDE NEEDED TO Akron Ohio, on Saturday, Dec. 23. Will share expenses, call Doug at SNOW 738-1604. STOCK UP FOR VERMONT CHRISTMAS AT FOR ONLY

CALL STEVE O'BRIEN GIFTS GALORE ... WRAPPED AT THE STORE 738-8245 OPEN NIGHTLY TIL CHRISTMAS . AND SUNDAY 12-4 OR CALL NATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICES WYNN'S GIFT SHOP (215} 561-2939 (CO~LECT} ' 40 E. MAIN ST. DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware PAGE 25 Ordained Rabbi Expresses 'Soul' Melodies Fables ... (Continued from Page 5) Ethel Kennedy, and headed the list of Hasidic Singer To Appear Sunday possible successors. Shlomo Carlebach, a Carlebach left his pulpit in Bl"bl" 1 d · Steinem and Walters could f I. . 1ca verses an 1t and emotionally through amous persona 1ty on the New Jersey to tour var1ous singing and dancing and not not be reached for comment, folksinging scene, will appear countries conveying his en~~urages Joun: p::Ople to by study of the Law and however Mrs. Kennedy, here Sunday evening in Smith message not through sermon geb ttusy aln rna _e t. e world piousness. appearing on The Mike Hall at 7·30 p m b t th h H" . . 1 a e er pace to hve m. Douglas Show, said she had An . ord~i~ed u . r~ug bsong .. ls_or~l~a The black bearded Rabbi Carlebach's success Rabbi, music as een msprre v composer who has had several is partially due to his no current political best-selling LPs is known as a encouragement of audience ambitions. Answers To Phantom Facts Hasidic singer which participation and we are told Among others being traditionally expresses intense that: whatever the setting, "A considered are Martha 1. Mike - Tim Considine; Mitchell, Katherine Ross, and Bart -Jack Kelly; Cousin Bo. "soul" melodies and Carlebach evening is an Robby - ; Chip - enthusiastic devotion. unforgettably exhilerating Arlene Francis. Former First Stanley Livingston. · Roger Moore; Garner also Lady Mamie Eisenhower was doubled as Pappy Beauregard Hasidism is a sect of Judaism experience." 2. Fussie and Gussie were which fluorished in Poland in Shlomo Carlebach's visit is also reported to be on the the twins while Sir Guy de Maverick. list, but one spokesman was 9. The actor's name is the 1700's and 1800's. These sponsored jointly by The Guy was the foxy bad guy. Hasids were noted in that B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation quoted as saying that her 3. Herschel Bernardi, of unknown; the credits merely appointment would be like listed "?" their love of God and fellow and the University Speaker's "Arnie·" fame. "going from the frying pan to 10. False. Although man was expressed joyously Board. 4. Clarence "Lumpy" ' the icebox." Rutherford and Eddie Delaware did appear on the College Bowl in 1963, they Haskell. 5. Rocky and Bullwinkle lost to the University of Beautiful batch. of Burgers! Supreme sandwiches! Louisville, 370-135. are from Frostbite Falls, Sizzling steak sensations! Hot dogs steamed in beer! Minnesota; Boris and Natasha 11. X Brands. (and the ominous "Mr. Big") 12. "Play Your Hunch." are from Potsylvania. 13. "Kookie" was a 6. Babalouie was the parking lot attendant. ARRIVED sidekick and El Kabong was 14. Chuck Barris Quickdraw's alter ego. Enterprises. 7. Cartoon Corners 15. "Rolaids consumes 47 General Store. times its weight in excess Plenty of All at 8. Bret - James Garner; acid." Parking student Course Corrections prices Corrections in the Spring Semester Registration Booklets: The courses listed ML 391, sec. 10- SP. Lit. in Trans. and ML Beer served seven days a week! 394, sec. 10- SP. Novel in Trans. in correct form should be ML 391, sec. 10- SP. Novel in Trans. and ML 394, sec. I 0-­ .1130 Kirkwood Highway, Newark 737-8934 Kafka/Mann. POCO OR SHLOMO CHOOSE SHLOMO CARLEBACH 1. HE SINGS. 2. IT'S FREE. 3. HE HAS CHUTZPAH. 4. IT'S FREE. ' , 5. IT'S AT SMITH HALL ROOM 130. 6. IT'S FREE. 7. THIS SUNDAY, DEC. 10 AT 7:30 P.M. SINCERELY YOURS, SHLOMO'S MOTHER CO-SPONSORED BY UNIVERSITY SPEAKER'S BOARD AND HILLEL PAGE 26 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware

Bus Trips. • • 1HIS WEEK Off-Beat Movies. • • (Continued from Page 11) day wor s op DANCE •• Harrington D and E and seminar on "The New All (Continued from Page 11) controls. Arthur Penn, the On Tuesday, January 16, , lounge, 10 p.m.·1 a.m. SOc with Revealed." 9 a.m. there will be a bus trip to the I.D. SUNDAY movies than Humphrey director of "Little Big Man," FILMS •· Students of Mr. CONCERT •• Poco and Jim directs this 1965 film. Franklin Institute and Fels Sasowsky's experimental film Croce at the Fieldhouse, a p.m. Bogart? course will show their films In the Admission $3.SO. On Thursday, January 11 On Thursday, January 18 Planetarium in Philadelphia. Ewing Room of the Student HILLEL •• Presents Shlomo The Institute includes the Center, at 3 and 7 p.m. Free; Carlebach, co-sponsored by Robert Mitchum and Shelley Harry Belafonte, Ed Begley, open to the public. Speaker's Board. Free, open to world's biggest pinball PHOENIX COFFEEHOUSE •• public. Winters star in "Night of the and Robert Ryan star in Folksingers Bill Haymes, Anne machine, a new stamp MOVIE •· Sunday Cinema • Hunter," Charles Laughton's "Odds Against Tomorrow." Yerpe~ Tom Sebok, and Osburn B u nuel's "Dairy of a exhibit, a black scientist and usborne. 20 Orchard Rd. Chambermaid." 140 Smith. 7:30 only venture into directing. A The three play desperate 7Sc. p.m. Free with I.D. multi-media show, and a HOCKEY - University Ice MEETING Food terrifying thriller full of bank robbers hoping for the Hockey C~ub vs Drexel. 10 p.m. walk-through heart. Co-operative meeting to flnalizl suspense, rystery and one final big job that will In Ice Arena. SOc with I.D. J.V. vs plaiu and format for a food co-op The bus will leave the Drexel at midnight. In the Wilmington area; 2:30p.m. perplexing personalities, guarantee easy street. Robert TOMORROW In the Gild Hall, Arden. Student Center at 12 noon CONCERT ·• The Madrigal "Night of the Hunter" is well Wise directs. Singers will present a Christmas MONDAY The final movie in the and return at about 5:30 p.m. program of Renaissance music. LECTURE •• Phi Beta Kappa worth enjoying in a dark Little Theatre of Padua Academy visiting scholar Dr. Leo Marx of The cost of $2.50 includes Amherst wi'll lecture on room with someone you like. series brings back Warren 10th. and Broom Sts.1 Wilmington admission and transportation. at a p.m. Seats are rree, open to "Revolutionary Pastoralism In "Mickey One" is Friday, Beatty in "Lilith" with Jean public on a first come-first served America •• Can Dropouts bl On Wednesday, January basis. Revolutionists?" In 11S Purnell January 12's movie. The Seberg in the title role. The Hall. 4 p.m. 17, there will be a bus trip to BASKETBALL •• Cagers vs movie stars Warren Beatty in story of a woman whose Lehigh at the Fieldhouse J.V. and SEMINAR A five-day Deh~ware's newest museum, Varsity. 1 p.m. seminar on child protectlvt the role of a nightclub star crystalline world of story CONFERENCE •• Navigators services will be presented from 1 whose future the mob (not book love is shattered by the the Delaware Museum of Conference. Evangelical a.m.-4 p.m., Monday through Natural 'History and Presbyterian Church, Elkton. 1 Friday, Dec. 11·1S. Clayton Hall. necessarily an Italian mob) in-roads of reality. p.m. RADIOTHON •• WHEN Delaware's most famous MOVIE •• Saturday Night presents Its annual Holiday Flicks • "The Owl and the Radlo.thon. This year's museum, Winterthur Museum. Pussycat" 140 Smith, 7:30 and beneficiary will be the Delawart 9:30p.m. 7Sc with I.D. Tuberculosis and Health Assn The famous Winterthur PHOENIX COFFEEHOUSE •• Student Center, East Hall. 3 p.m: Foxfire Series. museum traces the Folksingers Jim Albertson Monday until 3 p.m. Tuesday Fontaine Coolie, Osburn and TREE LIGHTI.NG development of style in Osborne, and a speclal 'guest. 20 CEREMONY •· Mitchell ~.u (Continued from Page '11) Orchard Rd. a:30 p.m. 7Sc. 7 ' 30 p.m. - Christmas Choral demonstrate and display American interior HOP he Concert with the University Rose -Pattern with Mrs. Crewel Embroidery. architecture, furniture and n Concert Choir. Mitchell Hall, 8:15 Norman Hess will be offered At Pencader on Tues., Jan. decorative accessories from 3 to 5 at the Student 23 from 3 to 5 p.m., Bargello, between 1684 and 1840. LAPSES AR£ NOT HEALTH f r=oR. • Center on Friday, January complete with an array of The bus will leave the A AN}) oTHER L ,\JtN G 1 19. samplers and belts Student Center at 12 noon LLNArioN /11 Mon., Jan. 22, from 3 to 5 demonstrations and displays and return by about 5 p.m. p.m. at the Student Center, will be offered by Mrs. Ralph The cost of $4 covers all Mrs. Paul Eshelman will Mentzner. admissions and bus fare. DECEMBER 8, 1972 REVIEW, University of Delaware! Newark, Delaware PAGE 27 JVs Take Third Straight Carpenter Sports Building Hours SUNDAY, DECEMBER 17 • 9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.-Areas will be cleared at 4:00p.m. MONDAY, DECEMBER 18 THROUGH THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21 • 8:30a.m.· 11:30 p.m. Skaters Sweep lnterboro, 5-3 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22 AND SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23 ·8:30a.m. ·5:00p.m. Powered by AI Goren and SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24 AND MONDAY, DECEMBER 25 ·CLOSED. and Grecco scored the winner Delaware was short handed. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26 THROUGH FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29 • 8 : 30 Tom Grecco, the Delaware from Goren and Lynch at The JVs, with solid goal a.m.· 5:00p.m. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30 THROUGH MONDAY, JANUARY 1 · JV ice hockey team won their 6:55. tending from Lem Moore and CLOSED. third straight game beating TUESDAY, JANUARY 2 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3 • 8:30 Goren got his second goal Chuck Chiczewski, have now a.m.· 5:00p.m. Interboro 5-3, last weekend. of the night at 7 :25 of the THURSDAYb JANUARY 4 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24 • won three in a row after 8:30a.m.· 1 :00 p.m. Delaware scored first when third period giving Delaware a tieing and losing in their first THURSDAY, JANUARY 25 THROUGH FRIDAY, JANUARY 26 •• 8:30 Goren was set up by Grecco a.m.· 5:00p.m. needed insurance goal. two games. The next JV game SATURDAY, JANUARY 27 ·CLOSED. and Rockwell at 8:35 of the Interboro scored at 9:25 and SUNDA~1 JANUARY 28 ·5:00p.m.· 11:30 p.m. is tonight at the ice arena MONDAY, JANUARY 29 ·4:00p.m.· 11:30 p.m. first period. Interboro tied threatened again in the after the 10 p.m. varsity game the score at 9:36 when closing minutes when against Drexel. Kemple moved past the defense and beat goalie Lem Moore to the left comer. Robin Roberts closed out the first period scoring and gave Delaware's Winter Sports Schedule Delaware a 2-1 lead by VARSITY BASKETBALL FRESHMAN BASKETBALL SWIMMING tipping in a Paul Henry shot Date ~ Time Un ecldition to -lilted in ..nitv ochedulel Date 0-t Time PI- Docember Date ~ Time - December at 10:32. 2 C.thol ic Unive,.ity IV a F I 8:00p.m. A Jinuery 2 franklin&: Marshall 2:00p.m. A Interboro started the 5 Randolpii-Moc:on 8:00p.m. A 6 Brandywine Junior Colht91 I :OOp.m. H 9 St. Joseph's 2:00p.m. A 7 Franklin a Moor>holl IV a Fl 8:00p.m. i\ 9 Viii.,OVI 7:00p.m. A January second period with a power 9 •Lehi~ IV a Fl 3:00p.m. H 17 WestChester 6:00p.m. A 10 Bucknell 4:00p.m. H play goal at 3:21 while 12 Americen University IV a Fl 8:00p.m. H Febr too many men on Rc»noke, Ameriun U., Appalachian 19 NAPS 7:30p.m. H 27 Catholic University 1:30p.m. A State, Delew.re 31 Lehi~ 4:00p.m. H the ice. Jeff Thielker broke Jenuery Fobruory the tie for Delaware on a shot 3 Templo 7:30p.m. H Oote Time PI- 3 0rOKel 2:00p.m. A 6 Old Dominion 3:00p.m. H December 7 Gettysburg 4:00p.m. A from the left point at 4:52, 10 GIIIUboro 8:00p.m. H 2 Waynesburg College /w I :OOp.m. A 10 Lefevette 2:00p.m. H 13 Widener Colloge IV a Fl 8:15p.m. A West Virginia University /w 17 Rider 2:00p.m. A 17 Towson Stote 8:00p.m. A Duquesne University · Molrch 20 WestChester 3:00p.m. H 5 Ft. Belvoir IJ.V.I 7:30p.m. H 1-2-3 MAC. LaSelle ATTENTION 23 Rutgers IV a Fl 8:00p.m. H 9 Lafeyotte IV a J.V.I 7:00p.m. A 27 • Lefey,tto 2:00p.m. H 27·28 Wilkll Tournenwnt INDOOR TRACK 31 •Gettysburg IV a Fl 8:00p.m. H Jinuerv Oote 0-t Time Ploce WINTERIM Februorv 12 Pitt 8:00p.m. A December 3 • Bucknell IV a Fl 8:00p.m. A 16 Johns Hopkins 8:00p.m, A 16 Princeton Relays A J •Rider IV a Fl 8:00p.m. A 20 Rider I 2:30p.m, H January STUDENTS k •Lehi~ IV a Fl 8 :00p.m. A 24 Fronklin a Mor>holl 7:00p.m. H 13 Open Meet I :OOp.m. H 14 •Gettysburg 8 :00p.m. A 27 UniWrsity of Virginia 4:00p.m. A 19 Phi18delphie Cl•sic A A meeting concerning 17 •Rider 3:00p.m. H February Fobruory the charter flights to 21 •auckneiiiV a Fl 8:00p.m, H 3 Bucknell IV a J.V.I 3:»V A 3 Open Meet 1:00p.m. H :M •Lefeyette IV a Fl 3:00p.m. A 6 West Chestor IV a J.V.I 8 :00-V A 10 Open Meet I :OOp.m. H London will be held 27 O..xel IV 6 Fl 8:00p.m. A 10 Gettysburg IV a J.V.I 2:00-V A 16 Penn, Penn St10, Georgetown, on: Morch 17 0r.. e1 /w A'inericen U. !2:00p.m. H Merylond 7:00p.m. H 2-3 MACe 23-24 MACe Ho1str• LONDON CHARTER • Middle Atlentic Conf..-ence W.tern Section d- 't;" IC4As Princeton FLIGHT MEETING

TUESDAY Cagers Host. • • JV Matmen Fall To Army DECEMBER 12 (Continued from Page 28) Delaware's jayvee The Hen matmen will be Delaware wound up its anticipates good home wrestling squad opened their in action again Saturday night 7:30 room 130 three-game road swing last support. season by dropping a 35-9 at Easton, Pa. when both the night at Franklin and "I think it's significant decision Tuesday night to varsity and jayvee teams face Marshall. The Hens open their that our first two games on Army Prep. Lafayette College. SMITH HALL home season in the the road are much like the Bob Barker and Mark Army Prep 35, Delaware 9 (This meeting was remodelled Fieldhouse first two games of last year," Bastinelli recorded 118 - Chris Macey (D) and Zane Tolliver (A) drew, 0-0. originally scheduled tomorrow at 3 p.m. Coach said Harnum. "Only we had back-to-back victories at the 126 Bruce Coqossi (A) for Dec. 6 but was Harnum is pleased with his much more control this pinned Bob Heisler (D) in 5:55. 134 and 142 pound weight 134 - Bob Barker (D) def. Jim canceled.) team's progress and year." classes, respectively, and Hen Winnicki (A) 3-2. 142 - Mark Bastinelli (D) def. Captain Chris Macey battled Ken Bersnahan (A) 14·2. to a scoreless draw at 118. 150 - Nick Altrimari (A) pinned Steve Burley (D) in Those, however, were the 5:53. 158 - Dave School (A) def. only points Delaware could Steve Wilson (D) 7-6. muster as their opponents 167 - Ray Muchek (A) del. Dave Granville (D) 6-2. from Ft. Belvoir, Va. 177 - Mitch Burr (A) pinned registered four pins and three Ed Dillon !D) in 4:25. 190 . F"red McOnod (A) def. decisions in coasting to Tom Girman (D) 8-2. Hwt. Tim Colwell (A) pinned victory. Tom Downey (D) in 7:09.

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Spontan.oully develop• fun crutlwe lntallllencL ~ ·4HP relt for lncreeMCI enervy In d811y life. Ullfolcl111fe to a ~tural ltate~o~ff_!!!!l!~!!:....__ PAGE 28 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware DECEMBER 8, 19n Hen Cagers Entertain Engineers; Three Gridders Gain AP Honors For the fourth consecutive By GE~E QUINN with the shooting of center year, Delaware has placed a "When you try to put a lot Fletcher Johnson and player on the first team Little of people in the game, you forward Paul Zuidema to tie All-American team. lose continuity and are bound the Hens 18-18 midway Hen defensive end Joe to make a lot of mi:;takes." through the half. But, on four Carbone was named to the Hen basketball coach Don free throws by Ken Lukhard, 1972 Associated Press first Harnum couldn't say much a goal and two free throws by team Little All-American else after emptying his bench Wolf Fengler, and a field goal squad Tuesday night. in Tuesday's 92-79 romp over by captain Rich Hickman, Also honored were two Randolph-Macon in Ashland, Delaware shot ahead 44-36 at other Delaware defensive Va. halftime. linemen, tackle Dennis It was the kind of chaotic The Hens stung the Yellow Johnson and end Bob Depew, play (although it came mostly Jackets for some fast scores who received second team late in the game), with 13 after the second half tap. In and honorable mention turnovers and a whopping 28 five minutes they built an recognition respectively. All insurmountable lead of three are seniors. 58-40. Then, in came the Carbone, from Old subs and the last tenminutes or Westbury, N.Y., twice was Weekend Sports so seemed longer than the named to the weekly Eastern Today four-and-a-half-hour bus ride Collegiate Athletic ICE HOCKEY--Drexel at to Ashland. Delaware, 10 p.m. Conference All-East team this "The defense was very past season. The 6-3, Tomorrow good, especially in the first 225-pound defensive BASKETBALL-Leh~h ~ ten minutes of the second standout recovered three Delaware, 3 p.m. half," said Harnum, "and WRESTLING--Delaware at fumbles, made 35 unassisted Lafayette, 7 p.m. then we put some new kids in tackles, and participated in SWIMMING--Delaware at and they were confused 24 other tackles for the 10.0 St. Joseph's, 2 p.m. about their assignments." Hens. · One of the evening's big Captain Johnson, a 6-5, . personal fouls by Delaware, letdowns was the offensive 265 native of Passaic, N.J., that the Hens can't afford ineffectiveness of Hen made 37 tackles personally tomorrow against a strong forward Sherwood Purnell. out on 27 others. HEN SOPHOMORE GUARD Billy Sullivan out-maneuvers two and helped Lehigh team. The 6-4 junior grabbed seven He will play for the East in "There were two things rebounds and hustled on Cardinal defenders in last week's win over Catholic University. the East-West Shrine game at that I didn't like," added defense, but he scored only The Hens open their home season at 3 p.m. tomorrow against the San Francisco, Dec. 30 and Harnum. "We fouled too two points- both from the Lehigh Engineers at the Fieldhouse. Staff photo by John Martinez for the North in the Senior much again and we were foul line. Bowl game at Mobile, Ala., out-rebounded. It scares me "Sherwood's an excellent about everything he threw up Randolph-Macon with 24 Jan. 6. what will happen against a big defensive player and a good in the first half, finished apiece. Sophomore guard Depew was an academic team, if we foul the little rebounder," said the Hen 10-17 from the floor for 20 Eddie Webb netted 14. All-American last season and ones (6-6, 6-7, 6-4 Yellow coach. "But he's got to look points. Fengler hauled down "We were doing a pretty made 33 unassisted and 30 Jacket front line.)" for himself offensively. He's 11 rebounds and added 17 good job covering up the assisted tackles during this Delaware jumped to a got to develop into a more points and Hickman scored middle," said Harnum. past season. The 6-3, 235 quick five-point lead in the complete player and we're 12. "Zuidema got a lot of junk pounder from Staunton, Va., first three minutes of play. encouraging him to do so." Johnson and Zuidema baskets underneath (Johnson also covered two fumbles for Randolph-Macon came back Bob Nack, who hit on just were high scorers for was shooting from the the 1972 Hens. outside), but our defense Oth'er Delaware players played very well. One thing who have frequented the first Hen-S-coop about our defense, you have team Little All-American to work against it, especially roster the past three years if we have about a ten-point have been linebacker John lead." Favero in 1969, guard Indication Conway Hayman in 1970,

L------By ROGER TRUITT--· (Continued to Page 27) and halfback Gardy Kahoe in 1971. Tomorrow was supposed to be Boardwalk be the first Delaware team to ever make the MAC Bowl day for Delaware students and other playoffs. And conveniently enough, Delaware followers of the Blue and Gold. But there Fieldhouse will host the championships in early probably won't be a single Hen fan at Atlantic March. City's Convention Hall. Few will even bother to But first there is Lehigh. Most of the Hens turn on the tube and watch Massachusetts and remember the Engineers,a team which burst the the University of California at Davis battle for Hens' bubble last season on a snowy Saturday in the "eastern" regional championship. Newark. Lehigh, whom Delaware had earlier This apparent disinterest in football suits Don dismantled in Bethlehem, had been 3-6 in the Harnum and his thirteen varsity cagers just fine, section until they handed the Hens their first loss because the flashy Hen coach and his equally of the year in the Fieldhouse. Hank Wisniewski flashy team hope to steal the show and pack'em controlled the boards and scored 17 points that in at the Fieldhouse tomorrow afternoon at 3 day. He'll be around again tomorrow to torment p.m. For a number of reasons, tomorrow's the Hens. encounter with Lehigh will give an indication of Besides watching Wisniewski and his own where Delaware basketball is headed. players, it won't be surprising if Coach Harnum First of all, it's the season's initial Middle has one eye on the crowd tomorrow-at least up Atlantic Conference (Western Section) game for until Wolfgang Fengler leaps high for t.he opening the Hens. That's the same section that last year's tapoff. For season ticket sales are way up after contingent came within three baskets of taking the biggest promotional campaign in Delaware with a perfect 10-0 record. But three one-point court history. losses in their last four conference games tied The Fieldhouse, which wasn't any slum Delaware with Lafayette for second place in the before, has been given a facelift. A new tan West and the Leopards joined Rider (8-2), tartan playing surface, a Fightin' Blue Hen Temple and St. Joseph's in the Palestra for the emblem and 4650 seats should bring back last playoffs. year's swell plus quite a few newcomers. Even With the loss of only two players (Ken some who would rather be in Atlantic City may Staff photo by John Martina Helfand and Lee Swayze) through graduation, straggle in. ALL-AMERICAN FORM- Delaware's Joe Carbone puts tile the Hens have to be considered a prime candidate In more ways than one, tomorrow should give pressure on West Chester quarterback Tom PierantozzL to be the best in the West. Should Harnum's a good indication whether Delaware is more than Carbone, along with Dennis Johnson and Bob Depew, were cited troops measure up to their potential, they would a one-sport school. by the Associate~ ~J'FSS th~ w~;ek..,