-- Ossie Davis =!L . Women's lacrosse gets . - ·~ " ( .: , ~' tells stories ' - ~ dogged by Loyola l-lj ' ' page3 page 15 - ~ ' II-IE

EVIEWA FOUR-STAR ALL-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER FRIDAY Proposal to change student policies

By Roben Weston hearings are going to be open," Brooks said. Staff Reporter Officials might toughen alcohol, judicial, harassment guidelines Nancy Geist, administrative coordinator for the Dean of Students Office, said the Panly in response to an alleged sexual academic dishonesty, and adding gender and university, however, could overrule that changes would also protect rape and sexual a,ssualt in fall, proposed changes to student race considerations to the university see editorial page 6 decision. assault victims from further harassment. policies include closing judicial hearings to harassment policy, Dean of Students The decision to close judicial hearings The university examined sc hools with the public unless both parties agree to an Timot.hy F. Brooks said. was proposed in response to an alleged similar policies to sec how the cases are open hearing, a university official said The Council on Student Judicial Affairs September. sexual assault at Kappa Alpha fraternity handled, she said, 10 determine how 10 Tuesday. approved the proposals March 23. They Current policy requires an open hearing if house in September, Brooks said. The victim implement the change. The way the system Other proposed changes include were approved by the student life committee requested by the defendant. If proposed declined to press charges. is currently arranged, a student accused of a restricting alcohol in residence halls, treating April 6. If approved by the Faculty Senate, changes become policy, both parties must "It is very clear 10 me that women will not possession of crib notes (cheat sheets) as the changes will become effective in consent 10 an open hearing, Brooks said. The bring charges of rape and sexual assault if see POLICIES page 5 State begins first Student ,anti-drug campaign health Ads include payment WXDR spots, might rise campus posters

By Lisa Ruvolo Cost covers Staff Reporter addition, staff, Delaware's first anti-drug counseling office advertising campaign began Monday, employing posters, banners By AnneMarle Crawford and public service announcements at Staff Reporter the university. "The $75,000 campaign is aimed Cynthia Cummings, assistant The Student Health Service is at those 18 years and older who are director of Housing and Residence proposing a 32.9-pcrcent increase in likely to be involved in substance Life, said anti-drug pamphlets and the 1990 student health fee and a abuse," LL Gov. Dale E. Wolf said. broc hures from the attorney 15-percent increase in the Winter "We want them to know that jail is general's office will be distributed to Session student health fee to more than a possibility." campus residents. accommodate budget changes, a Wolf and the Senate Committee Conviction on possession charges university o!Ticial said Tuesday. to Combat Drug Abuse have been of as liule as five ~:.rrams of an illegal With the proposed increase, th e designing, since the state congress substance will result in a jail term of 1990 student health fcc would jump appropriated funds for the program at least three years. Wolf said . to $93 a semester. The Winter in February, an ad campaign with a The television ads explain five Session health fee wi II increase local marketing company. grams of a substance equals about $3.50 to $26. Officials will also air cable five packets of Sweet and Low, said Four percent of the proposed television advertisements and place Mark Gazdzinsk i, co-vice president increase would pay for increased signs on Dart buses statewide. The and creative coordinator for Mease health center employee benefits, advertisements announce, "In and Associates. "Delaware has a said C. Ray Huggins, director of Delaware, hard drugs mean hard significant drug problem and Student Health Services. time." Campus posters will stress the legislature wants to stem this before "We have no control over it," he message on the walls of residence it becomes ingrained." said. "The big thing is th e ri sing halls, Morris Library and the Student Wolf said, "If you arc going to cost of health insurance." Health Center. deal in drugs, you arc not going to Although an increase of $23 per "We wanted to come up with a deal in Delaware." semester seems large, Huggins said, hard-hitting campaign to get the About $300,000 for the program there have been many savings. casual user and the dealers to realize has been requested for next year's Fifteen percent of the proposed they are not going to deal in budget, which will be finalized in increases are necessary because Delaware," Wolf said. June, Wolf said. The Local Police Student Health Services would be WXDR Station Manager Chuck Chief's Council donated $14,000 to supporting th e Center for Tarver said the station will air a 30- the program thi s year. Counseling and Career second and a 60-second public The progra m·s objective is 10 Development. service announcement once every prevent more people from going to day for the next three mont.hs. jail, Wolf said . Dorm cons'truction bn Ray Street delayed until May , ncrete intern carlls :~; :ri:Jr By Kim Nilsen The university bought property Staff Reporter parallel to and north of Cleveland plants, conducts Avenue on Ray Street during the p:~~ c~~e~~~~~~ Award iri a~ is given By Mike Martin Demolition of several buildings past several years for construction i97.3. ,i;he annually by. th~ American Society Staff Reporter in the West Cleveland Avenue or a three-building dormitory of Civil :Eilgine:ers· for the most area, including the former Daffy complex for about 330 residents. Protessoav~itis · important work .done in pre­ Andrew "Sam" Lemheney (AG Deli building, and t.he construction The university will begin stressed concrete. · 90) knows Mickey Mouse. He of dormitories have been delayed soliciting bids for construction in designif1"Q ;· ,, "Winning that was definitely a knows Mr. Broccoli and the by the university for more than next week, Hollowell said. high point . in my career," Dolan comedy team of Hamm 'n Eggz as two months because of technical The city has received Monorail tracks· said. ·.·.·. well. problems, a university official said preliminary plans, but can only act The monorail system, which He also knows The Land, how Tuesday. on the final plans, said Ron By Johanna Murphy began operation when the park to care for it and how to make its Construction was originally Sylvester, chief of code Staff Reporter opened in 1971, has traveled more life nourish. scheduled to begin immediately enforcement for the Newark than 11 million miles, said Dave Lemheney, a senior m~oring in Andrew lemheney after clearing the land March 1. Building Department. University Professor· Charles Herbst, a spokesman for Disney plant science, recently Cl)mplcted and Mickey Mouse Because of problems of re-design, Hollowell said the university Dolan has helped tra.nsport World. an internship at Walt Disney land grading and ground water will submit official blueprints for millions of adults and children "The monorail has traveled t.he World in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. of t.he parks." control, the university plans to the dormitory and parking area into a world of fantasy. equivalent to 22 round trips from The Land, where Lemheney Lemheney, a 1986 graduate of begin construction May 1, said next week. To enter the. fantaSy world of the eanh to the moon plus 51 round worked from mid-June through Archbishop John Carrol High David E. Hollowell, senior vice "The building d epa rtment will Walt Disney World's "J~fagic trips from City to Los Dec. 31, is an agricultural facility School in Radnor, Pa., grew up president for Administration . take about one month to process Kingdom in' Lake ~uenaVista , Angeles plus an extra one way trip in Future World, part of Disney around plants. The delays have not affected the the files and inspect the Fla., visitors 'must take· either a to the moon, • Herbst said. World's EPCOT Center. While in high school he worked projected completion date, fall university's plans, so the May I ferryboat or the ·monorail system Dolan said because the cars " I want to get into at his grandfather's landscape 1991, Hollowell said. Construction dead line might not be met," from Disney's parking ·Jots or straddle the beamway, the ride's landscaping," Lemheney said. He nursery in Lancaster 'County, Pa. company selection and the city's Sylvester said. resort hotels. · smoothness depends on the said he plans to graduate in Now he works during holidays review of building site plans, The university did not renew Dolan, associate, professor of December and return to Disney however, might cause further civil engineering, was one of the see ENGINEER page 9 World "to do landscaping in one see INTERN page 9 delays. see RAY STREET page 9

;I \. 2 • THE REVIEW• April20,1990 Castle states all responsible 'Beach Party' to be D-Day's theme for environment obsta~les. . :;:,,. . t'· At the ·· ceremony, ( Mrs. "Beach Party" is the theme for Raymond ·told abouq,46,000 Delaware Day, May 6 on the By Sharon Conolly on any given day, he said. hearing-impaired people:· ~·we are Mall and Main Street, said Mike not . the tiandicapped. :We'' are the DiFeblx).{BE 91), vice president and Renee Oliver "From the air to our land, Staff Reporters disabled. I believe we are I of Delaware Undergraduate Delaware, like many other states, is I j,. currently living with our sins of the handicapped by society's failure Student Congress. WEST CHESTER, Pa. - In the past," Castle said. to recognize our unigue needs." ~· The event will feature local Michael N, Castle ! 20 years since the first Eanh Day, He said the Environmental She urged the governor to create l' bands, including the Flaming 1 responsibility for combatting Legacy Program completed in 1988, to improve air quality, focusing special services for the deaf. 1 Caucasians, and arts and crafts ) environmental problems has shifted however, resulted in "a blueprint for primarily on diminishing ground­ She was the first recipient of 1 vendors, games, food, a '.'Kid's l from government and industry to the action in managing the environment level ozone. the Wilmington Quota Club's 1 Corner" and a student groups individual, Gov. Michael N. Castle to carry Delaware into the 21st "Delaware has enacted ''Deaf Woman of the Year" award ~ -. area, DiFebbo said. . said Monday at West Chester regulations creating a state-wide In 1979. Last year, Delaware Day century." . University. Ben Sherman, assistant athletic replaced Spring Fling. According The program focused on inspection and maintenance ~ :.: "Slowly we are realizing we are improving air quality, water resource program for automobile emissions director for Media Relations and I to DiFebbo, Spring Fling had a all part of the same problem and, and will require cleaner burning Marketing, said: "Our sympathies { I bad reputation and attracted protection, waste management and i more importantly, part of the land preservation. gasoline to be sold in the state are with the Raymond family. ) mostly on-campus students. solution," he told about 25 people in during the summer-months," he Suzanne was a part of the Delaware Day, he said, is "(This) generation in particular is i the Philip Autograph Library 'as part Delaware athletic family for over geared toward community absolutely environmentally said. of West Chester University's Eanh consc ious," Castle said. "That is Under the original Clean Air Act, 30 years and will be greatly members and students. It aims to Day '90 activities. going to make the ultimate anti-pollution devices and decreased missed." promote better university­ In his "State of the Environment coal burning by industries and . The Raymonds married rn community relations. difference. Message," Castle explained how "I believe that Qelaware's utilities has reduced the air's soot 1951 and moved to Newark in DiFebbo said Delaware Day Delaware and its residents tackle environment has rounded second and dust levels by more than 30 1954. was very successful last year. environmental obstacles one day at a and is heading to third. Mrs. Raymond is survived . by About 5,000 people attended. He percent. time. "Whether your view is global, "But our population continues The Clean Water Act has her husband, three children, nirie anticipates equal, if not greater, as national or local, one thing is imposed more stringent water · grandchildren and two bro.thers. success for the second Delaware to grow and pressures on our becoming quite clear: the number of resources increase, we must stand quality standards. All municipal A memorial service will be· Day. people demanding clean air, pure ready at the plme, ready to confront waste-water treatment plants had to held next week. The family water and adequate living space is new and emerging environmental be upgraded, CasUe said. requests donations be made to Activists cultivate growing." issues." Delaware's wetlands, "once CODE Inc., in lieu of flowers. 'Living green' life Each U.S. citizen produces about Castle cited several legislative thought of as worthless swamps," Send donations care of Kathleen 3 1/2 pounds of waste each day. efforts to clean up the environment are now viewed as "some of the Cochran, Treasurer, 24 Lanford Delaware's 600,000 residents and prevent future damage. He said most productive ecosystems of the Road, New Castle, Del., 19720. I ·-. College students are generally produce 2.1 million pounds of waste the Mid-Atlantic states are working world." very careless when it comes to caring for the earth and their environment Such was the theme of a Student Environmental Action University says goodbye to-Trabant Coalition (SEAC) display Wednesday in front of Perkins Student Center. · Colleagues, students praise 20 years, two terms of achievements, contributions SEAC's main goal for By Susan COulby Trabant served as the 22nd impressed with Trabant's ability to miss the way Trabant treats every include the lunch hours he presenting the display was to Staff Reporter president for almost 20 years. He return from retirement and do a person like a friend. arranged with students and the ~ur more campus awareness and became the 24th president in good job. "He's a breath of fresh air in a campus tree-lighting festivities, co­ involvement for Earth Day and Many things are better the October 1988 after former Photographs highlighting events tough work day," Frankel said. hosted by his wife. promote the "living green" second time around. But for President Russel C. Jones resigned. during both presidential terms Jeff Thomas (BE 90), president Jerry Trabant said she liked philosophy. President E.A. Trabant, retiring During his years at the were displayed throughout the of the Delaware Undergraduate being the "first lady" of the "Living green is the way of from the university for the second university, Trabant has served as evening. Student Congress (DUSC), said he university and appreciated the · life where a person has the time is still a bittersweet · both an administrator and educator, After looking at the memorable appreciates Trabant's warm welcome they received when utmost respect for himself and experience. teaching mathematics during the moments captured on film, Trabant approachability and his willingness Trabant began his second tenn. the environment," said coalition To show their admiration and period between his two said he finds it impossible to name to listen to what students have to "It's good once, but it's been member Ed Jacobowitz (EG 92). affection, almost 1,000 friends, presidential terms. the best thing about his second say. great twice," she said. "College students are perhaps the students and colleagues honored To Robert R. Davis, director of term. "His door has always been open She said the two-hour reception 'I worst examples of living green Trabant Tuesday at a reception University Relations, Trabant has He said, however, that the new to us," Thomas said. was touching and that it brought because they tend to be careless, thrown by the board of trustees. also been a mentor. student programs and facilities, One thing Thomas and Mike back a lot of memories. liuer, spill things and think other Trabant will leave the Davis said he admires what he such as the sports convocation DiFebbo (BE 91), vice president of "It was all too nice for me to be J .. things take precedence over the presidency when Dr. David P. calls Trabant's "greatest skills," his center, have been exciting DUSC, said they appreciate is the tired, but I'll probably be exhausted ! earth." i Roselle takes office as the diplomacy and his ability to stand developments. funding Trabant arranged for in a couple of hours," she said, Jacobowitz said the university university's 25th president May I. firmly behind decisions. "I think his greatest DUSC's Outlook '90 programs. holding back tears. has recently shown more As Trabant and his wife of 45 "I have really learned a lot from accomplishment is successfully Dr. Maxine R. Colm, vice After the reception, Trabant said cooperation in supporting the years, Jerry, received their guests, President Trabant," he said. handling the university at a small president for Employee Relations, he could not find words to express organization's cause. ( , members of the university Laura A. DeBacker (AS 92), size and after its transition to the said she liked the way Trabant his feelings. "I think the university is more community filed one after another one of five Student Alumni large university it is today," said promoted faculty diversity and "Everything has just been such a aware of our purpose now simply with a farewell message. Association student representatives Katharine C. Kerrane, assistant supported the Committee on the gorgeous montage of people, because more people are showing "The reception was wonderful," directing the guests throughout the dean of students. Status of Women. places, things and events," Trabant a concern now. At first the Trabant said with a broad smile, evening, said she thinks Trabant "It's a great thing to have been Stuart J. Sharkey, vice president said. ·university seemed to brush us "an absolute kaleidoscope of made a good transition into the president twice," Trabant said. for Student Affairs, said he is also He said that although he is sorry aside." Jacobowitz cited the memories." presidency when the university He said he enjoyed becoming impressed by what Trabant has to be leaving the office again, he university's prohibition. of boxes Andrew B. Kirkpatrick, needed stability. reacquainted with the students, done for women and blacks at the will enjoy having the time to do for aluminum can collection in chairman of the board of trustees, Dr. Kevin Kerrane, professor of faculty, administration and state university. the things he has been too busy to residence hallways and a broken has worked closely with Trabant English, said, "Trabant is legislature. "When I leave the "Everything he has done has do during the past year and a half. "can bank" on Chapel Street, during his second tenn. He said the admirable because he came in presidency again, I will miss the involved real commitment, With this newly acquired free which has been out of order for reception was held because during a time of great turmoil and people the most." humanity and warmth," Sharkey ·time, Trabant said he and Jerry almost a year. Trabant has contributed so much his presence produced a calming Alben I. Frankel, a scheduling said. plan to work in their garden, take "I think many students do care during his 22-year involvement effect." officer with the Office of the Some other special activities in walks, go on picnics and go to the about our environment, and we're with the university. Kirkpatrick said he is most Univeristy Registrar, said he will which Trabant has participated beach. here to show them that they can ' . do something about the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~7~~~~~ ' destruction of our earth," said SEAC member Carla Scanzcllo ~ BALTIMORE INNER HARBOR ~ .I -. (AS 90) . LGBSU week aims to promote I • "We are very excited about ~ BUS TRIP ~ I ' ' j Earth Day and also very • T1ckets S5 each :.1 l visibilty, awareness, diversity ~ SATURDAY, APRIL 28 ~ l concerned," Scan1..cllo said. "We ~. -:..1 • Lr:ave Student Center at 9 a.m. ~. don't want people to feel that By Jay Cooke groups, including university faculty, Brooks said he thinks the program ~ • Leave Balt1more at 6 p.m ~ ~ • Tickets and mfo avail able by call1nq 451-2629 o r by ':~! .• they've done their part on that Assistant News Editor local churches, Greek is good for this campus because it ' stoppmq 1n our off1ce. 303 Student Center 1Thtrd Floor). ./[r .J. one day and that's it. The day organizations, and gay communities has a comprehensive agenda and ~ • Sponsored by the Off-Campus Student Assoc1at1on ·r, .. should serve as a beginning and Increased visibility, awareness of in Philadelphia and Baltimore. addresses issues vital to the not an end." diversity and education are goals "We know there arc people out university. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Student there who support the gay and Brooks said he is interested in Dickinson bands Union (LGBSU) hopes to achieve lesbian community. They just don't Thursday's lecture about Paper Mill Apartments·· to save families during its awareness week, which come out [to our events)," Fromme homophobia and violence against begins Sunday. said an LGBSU said. homosexuals because this is a offers spacious spokesman. crucial issue for both homosexual Dickinson A/B government This year's Bisexual Gay Lesbian and heterosexual communities. will sponsor a benefit concen for see editorial page 6 1 & 2 bedroom apartments I .. Awareness Days, called BGLAD "We've had problems in the past family counseling 7 p.m. April '90, will run from April 22 to April with anti-gay graffiti and with very 28 at Newark Hall, a Resident NOW AVAILABLE I" 28 and will feature workshops and Caroline Alvini (AS 90), negative verbal statements against I Stude nt Association (RSA) programs on topics such as safe sex LGBSU co-president, said, "We're gays," Brooks said. "We've not had 'I .. representative said. For rent. Located in I and homophobia. trying to reach out and get people to any [physical] violence against "Band Together to save Our 'I The LGBSU hopes members accept all forms of diversity. gays, and I hope we don't." I Families" is the five-hour safe suburban area. I I ' from the homosexual and the "As a student organi~. ation, I feel Nationally-renowned activist I concert's theme. Proceeds from I " heterosexual community will come we've done a lot for the Kevin Berril of the National Gay Walking distance to campus I the $3 admission charge will be to the programs because the lessons community," she said. "I hope and Lesbian Task Force will lead I I . donated to Family Services apply to all community members, people arc positive and responsive." the presentation, Fromme said. on shuttle bus route. I Delaware, Inc., RSA member said LGBSU Publicity Officer Tres From me said presenting Fromme said the LGBSU Kristen Shirling (AS 93) said. Fromme (AG 93). awareness programs is an annual considers the Berril workshop to be I I Heat & hot water. l) .. Local bands Surrender 18 , "We're not the stereotypes, myths tradition of the LGBSU. one of the week's highlights. Smashing Orange, A Cross, and monsters people see us as," he The purpose of the week is "not The lecture, "Hey! Queer," will Free Cable. Seven Wishes and Cirrus Faction said. "We're just trying to reach to be obnoxious, but to let people be held at 7 p.m. in the Rodney I will perform at the event. I everyone and bring everyone know we exist," he said. Room of the Perkins Student STUDENTS WELCOME. I together." "[BGLAD) is not recruitment. It is Center. I Complied by Brien Dougherty, L._ Jennifer Shaffer and Barrie Smith. Fromme said letters and just a celebration." Phone 731-9253 announcements were sent to many Dean of Students Timothy F. see WEEK page 8 ) , April 20, 1990 • THE REVIEW • 3 -. Ossie Davis speaks Entertainer places black theater's roots in slave culture Compiled from the College By Jay Cooke eulogy at black activist Malcolm parents and friends told on his Press Service Assistant News Editor X's funeral because , "I'm front porch, learned to tell tall somebody nobody was mad at." tales, imitate others and act out University OKs Actor Ossie Davis said He used hi s nmural acting nair roles. 'un-Catholic' speech Wednesday that traditional slave and a seri es of jokes and anecdotes This "listening in," Davis said, storytelling and lore not only to charm the crowd or about 150. was his first exposure to theater. developed into black theater and "[Black tradition! always was "Theater happens when there is As other Catholic colleges culture, but served as a source of more than only singing and one person who listens and one continue to limit what their inspiration and hope for the slaves dancing," Davis said. "It had to tel) person who talks," Davis said. students can see or read on as well. th e world that we were human "This is the essence of drama." campus, students at the "We were denied our name, beings." Davis said the English language, University of San Francisco denied our heriLage and denied our Religion and th e church played through the different connotations won an endorsement of their freedom, but we maintained essential ro les in th e development of th e words "whiteness" and right to talk freely at school. through our tradition of of black folklore, he said, because "blackness," degrades blacks. "We are reaffirming the right storytelling," he told a Smith Hall slaves used biblical stories us Synonyms for whiteness, he of every member of the audience. examples of how so meday th ey sai d, include brilliant, shining and university community to free Davis, who played the character would be free. untarnished, while blackness expression, free association and of Da Mayor in Spike Lee's 1989 Slaves would li sten to the invokes words such as soot, smut, free exercise of religion," said motion picture "Do The Right reli gious stories of the whites wicked and evil. USF President John LoSchiavo Thing," was th e keynote speaker or around them , then adapt the Because the English language Feb. 6 in announcing a new the 1990 Black Arts Festival. messages of Moses and Jesus, he restricts blacks, Davis said, blacks policy to allow free discussion In his speech entitled "B lacks in sa id . had to rely on other methods of of topics prohibited by the Theatre," Davis said that sla ves Davis said black th ea ter resulted expression such as .storytelling and Roman Catholic Church, which used storytelling, the earliest from from the slave co mmunity's simple folklore. runs USF. of black theatre, as a so urce of folklore. Afterward, Davis answered USF and Lo Schiavo inspiration in the face of injustice. "B la ck theater is the questions about his career, the introduced the new policy as a "[Theatre, singing and dancing] manifestation of black culture," he Academy Award snub of "Do The way to let students speak freely are art forms that come from the said. Right Thing," and Tuesday's death John Schneider without compromising Catholic core of the human so ul," he said. Dav is said that when he was a of civil rights activist Rev. Ralph A light-hearted Ossle Davis said Wednesday night that slaves Church doctrine. Davis said he delivered the child, he li stened to th e stories hi s Abernathy. used biblical stories to show they would someday be free. Under the new policy, students can distribute materials as long as they carry a disclaimer that USF does not 19 students receive endorse the "views herein ." They must also advise university warnings readers to contact certain administrators of the Campus Ministry to get the issue's for Newark crimes Catholic perspective. L0 Schiavo, most observers By 'Abby Stoddard students convicted twice within one agreed, was trying to avoid a Staff Reporter school year or three times during a lawsuit threatened when USF uni vcrsity career arc subject to refused to allow students to The university mailed the first 19 suspension. distribute pro-choice literature warning letters thi s week to "We're primarily looki ng for on campus last spring. students found guilty of off-campus people co ming through the city "We are very happy," said a misdemeanors in Alderman's Court , court system more than once," spokesperson for the American a university official sa id Brooks said. Civil Liberties Union, which Wednesday. Students convicted twice will had threatened to sue USF on The warning letters resu I ted meet with Brooks and face a behalf of the censored students. from a university judicial policy judicial hearing to determine if they passed in December which allows wil l be suspended . the university to take judicial action None or th e students who were Purdue bans picture against students convicted or sent letters this week were repeat crimes in Newark. offenders, Brook s sa id . of nude president De an of Students Timothy F. He sai d mo st offenders were Student Environmental Action Co;alltlon me!mt,·er!s · ;,,ret)ai'i~d .. t?: l Brooks said fir st-time offenders Purdue University Creative pins to promote Earth Day Sunday. See will receive warning letters, ancl see WARNINGS page 8 Arts Director Gary Sudano removed from a campus gallery an 8-foot painting of Purdue Nuclear power still reliable energy source President Steven C. Beering clad only in socks. "We don't provide a forum By Richard Jones Karam said the National Academy of Coalition (SEAC), said: ''I'm for nuclear for public displays of personal Assistant Entertainment Editor Science has addressed the problem of nuclear power. I don't think [nuclear waste] is that bad; points of view," Sudano said. waste several times. The problem is not but I think people arc real! y scared. " Graduate student David Nuclear power has been viewed at different insunnounlable. "If that's the only obstacle to Another member of SEAC, Andrew Long Loewenstein, who created the times in history as either a scientific wonder or nuclear power," he said, "we will solve it." (AS 93), disagreed with Diemidio. "Un less painting, said: "I wanted to do an environmenlal hazard. Unglesbee said the waste dilemma "has they find ways to diS)XJSC of waste, then it's not something provocative. It According to authorities in the field, it is a transcended the technical problems and viable and we're at risk," Long said. doesn't happen enough at resource society needs. "It's very reliable," he said. "Failures at become a political issue." Deep geologi cal Peter Grinspoon, a representative of Purdue." "Nuclear power is necessary because of the Three Mile Island were not mechanical but disposal, as proposed in Nevada by th e Grcenpcacc said"nuclear power is inherently rate we are burning up our natural resources," 1\uman, and we can overcome human failure ." Department of Energy, is recognized as safe. In dangerous." sai d R.A. Karam, the director of the Neely Karam said he thinks the public had an addition, 70 nuclear power plants around th e "It will never be safe. There will always be Nuclear Research Center at Georgia Tech unduly negative view of nuclear power country have stored waste safely and properl y human error and the potential for catastropic School may remove University. because of human error in these incidents. at their sites. disaster," he said. Surfer magazine Karam said nuclear energy is an efficient Steve Unglcsbcc, a rcprcsenlativc of the Karam also described radioactive waste Grinspoon call ed th e proposed deep and reliable so urce of power, even though U.S . Council for Energy, said a survey taken in disposal as a political fight, and sa id soc iety geo logic disposal unsafe and said that those there have been accidents in the past, such as January 1990 showed 80 percent of those has polarized over the issue. who push for underground storage just want to Librarians at Del Mar at the Three Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania polled thought nuclear power was an important Anthony Dicmidio (AS 93), a member of College in Corpus Christi, in 1979. or very important smucc of energy. the university's Student Environmental Action see NUCLEAR POWER page 8 Texas, say they might make Surfer magazine the only publication besides Playboy to be removed from the shelves. Indoor air pollutants cause It has nothing to do with skin, says Noe Guerra, head of daily fatigue, headaches public service at Del Mar's William F. White Library. •, Readers are taking the surfing Formaldehyde irritates the eyes, By Sharon Juska photus home with them. skin and lungs and has caused Contributing Editor Lifes~es "In a matter of days, it's just ·. cancer in laboratory animals. rags," Guerra said. "Almost Other polluting offenders are bug That listless stupor which often every picture is cut." sprays, cleaning agents and descends upon office workers in the Library officials cited the building materials, notably afternoon might not result solely Cifrealth same reason when they asbestos, which causes lung from too many power lun ches. canceled their subscription to diseases. These products, combined Instant Fatigue, headaches, and eye, nose many sources, and can contaminate Playboy magazine in 1980. homes as we ll as ofl'icc buildings. with a lack of ventilation, cause and throat irritation arc the most Apparently, stu~ents at Del health problems in many office common symptoms of Sick In a 19X8 stud y, the Environmental Mar, which is near the Gulf of Passport Photos Protection Agency found that every buildings. Buildings which are Building or Tight Building Mexico, are just as excited by home and office building wi ll be at insulated or too tightly scaled Syndrome, a build-up of indoor surfing as they were by racy . No appointment necessary! least slightl y polluted. worsen indoor pollution. pollulants which can make peop le Playboy photographs. Perhaps the most serious indoor Many newer buildings, built sick. "We're nauered," said Ben pollutant is tobacco smoke, whi ch during the energy crisis of the "Some people arc very Marcus, associate editor of produces cmbon monoxide and 1970s, were designed to seal in and sensitive," says Norm Feldman of Surfer, based in Santa Monica, carbon dioxide. Radon gas, whi ch recycle air and heat so energy costs the Clean Air Council. "If th ey Calif. exists naturally and seeps up from cou ld be controlled, according to come in to work on Monday, by the He said a lot of libraries will the ground , e

arrested and charged with Carding, off-duty trespassing; • Shoes are required; and policemen new • The maximum capacity of additions to fest 1,500 people will be closely monitored. By Adam B. Greenfield "This should not be a problem," Staff Reporter L'Taine said, "because only 1,500 pins will be sold and the pins, Bands, bands and more bands. which will cost $5, arc your ticket And people. Lots of people. In into th..: festivities." trees. On roofs. On each other's Pins went on sale Wednesday. shoulders. Watching. Dancing. Interested people can buy them Drinking. Singing. Celebrating. from any Wilbur Street resident, From morning to night. Rainbow Records or Newark Co­ Mardi Gras? Not exaclly. Op. Such was the scene at last year's Organizers sell pins instead of Wilburfest. And just as spring has tickets because, Flavin said, "This returned this year, so the festivities is more than just a day of will return to Wilbur Street May 5. celebrating and having fun. "We're really anxious and "There is a reason for it all, and File Photo these pins sho~ that the students excited for Wilburfest to arrive," Climbing trees is still legal this year, but those found on care, that they support the said Andrea L'Taine (AS 90), co­ rooftops or fire escapes will be arrested for trespassing. organizer of this year's day-long Emmaus House." celebration, which will begin a1 "We ulwuys receive great the residents on Wilbur Street are Flavin said he does not .10:30 a.m. support from th e peopl e at volunteering more and more of understand why the Newark Ihe annual event, held in the 'vVilllurl'es t," suid Haines, who will their time. This looks like it could community has had negative backyards of some Wilbur Street aucnd this yem 's event to speak be one of the best Wilburfests yet." feelings about university students. houses, features local bands and with Willlurfcsters inte rested in New and stronger guidel.ines "I've never understood those rajses funds for a designated learning about th e shelter. have been incorporated to ensure feelings when events such as ch_arity. "E ve ry year we get a significant safety at this year's event, L'Taine Wilburfest do nothing but help the Proceeds from this year's numbe r of volunteers from the said. community," he said. Wilburfest will go to Emmaus people we meet at Wilburfcst," "We didn't lay down this year's . Flavin said Edward Davidson. House, a non-profit sheller for Hainl.!s said. g uide lines to sound strict or owner of Foxcroft Apartments, File Photo Newark's homeless, as they have Music h :1s :llw

By Scott Reardon Natural Resources and Environmental addressed participants, said cooperation of "Delaware and Virginia have some of the the importance of better legislatio~ "to Staff Reporter Control. business, government and individual efforts highest concentrations of nesting song birds identify land that is historical or "Land use has gotten a lot of attention is necessary to tackle environmental and migratory waterfowl in the nation," archaeological. Local environmental control experts and lately," Small said Tuesday. "We've got to obstacles. Lowe said. "If the conservational groups can identify legislators discussed recent land use issues start managing residential growth and Later, Gregory Lowe, vice president of It is also one of the highest fish beforehand areas worthy of preservation, Wednesday afternoon at a symposium protect some of our wildlife areas. The Nature Conservancy, said in a speech: producing areas in the country. then a governmental body can say no to any called "Delaware's Changing Landscape." Dr. David Ames, dean of the College of "There are two types of threats to the "We allocate a 100 ft. vegetative strip developers interested in the land," Amick The symposium's goals included Urban Affairs and Public Policy, in a ecosystem. You have the direct pollutants between all land and water. And we buy said. formulating recommendations to protect presentation about the history of Delaware's from industrial and municipal discharges. land and zone it for the kinds of human "Preservation groups have to realize that natural resources and open space. landscape, said New Castle County's "But the most insidious threats come habitation that will not harm the g overnme nt agencies have a lot of Officials organized the symposium to overdcvelopment has been the largest from residential, farmland and septic run ecosystem," Lowe said. conflicting goals," Amick said. "Affordable discuss land management, said David change in Delaware land usc. off," he said. "These arc the pollutants Following the morning presentations, housing and traffic needs often come in Small, spokesman for the Department of Gov. Mic hael N. Castle, who al so threatening the Delaware Bay. Rep. Steven H. Amick, R-Newark, stressed conflict with land preservation." Greek Games offer three new events on Harrington Beach

By VIvian Ferrlola assigned areas of Newark. Staff Reporter "Points will be awarded on the 1> most original piece of garbage and ~ ~ Graduation The Greek community will the most garbage collected," Kaplan rekindle the flame of competition said. ~ ~ tomorrow when Greek Week begins. Women and men will show their This year's Greek Week and physiques in a Looking Fit ~o~cemments Greek Garnes main outdoor 'events competition later in the day. "The 1833 will be held on Harrington Beach. weekend will close with Greek iJ "The two main reasons behind Night at the Down Under," said Tom are now this idea are the beach is a more Lundy (AG 91), co-programmer. central location and there is a lot of Monday's events include construction going on at Hartshorn wrestling and Name 111at Tune. Field, where the events were held in Tuesday, there will be an arm­ available the past," said Dave Kaplan (BE 92) wrestling competition, and co-programmer of Greek Week. Wednesday evening, there will be a "Holding the events on Harrington swimming event at Carpenter Sports Beach will allow for higher visibility Building. at the of events to a greater number of Thursday, Greek God and people." Goddess will be judged on togas, a Every year . sororities and question-and-answer session, and a fraternities design and wear their talent show. Bookstore own T-shirts. "This year, however, "The Greek God and Goddess all designs and logos are being kept competition usually draws a big ?Jm'verso'!f oj r:lJe/aware secret and judges will award points crowd," said Elizabeth Beatty (AS that will be included in the final 91 ), co-programer of Greek Week. 65¢ each tally," said Lisa Mattia (AS 91)), co­ The air-band competition begins programmer of Greek Week. Friday. Groups are judged on "Competition begins tomorrow originality, lip sync and appearance. with tennis and bombardment, two Saturday is Greek Games Day new events that only the fraternities and the final day of Greek Week. will compete in," Kaplan said. The Highlights include the tug-of-war, events are being introduced on a trial the mattress carry and the chariot basis. Only the fraternities elected to race. University compete in them. Awards arc given for each -i. The competition continues individual event, overall wi nner of Sunday with the clean and green Greek Week, Greek Games Day event, which requires both winner and the Spirit award , Lundy IIBookstore fraternities !lnd sororities to clean said. April 20, 1990 • THE REVIEW • 5 New greenhouse Liberal arts majors named for father receive advice for career choices • l of board member 1, By Christine Smith next year. "There has been a lot of By Susan Coulby because, we ll, I'm not dead ye t," Staff Reporter interest, especially in the job fair." - Staff Reporter Fischer said. One seminar, Job Search .: About ISO peopl e attended the There are only five weeks until Strategies for Non-Business·_: The $1.85 million Fischer April II dedication , Crossan said. university seniors nationwide Majors, Monday in the Collins ' Greenhouse Laboratory was Money for th e project came from graduate and enter the job markeL Room of the Perkins Student dedicated in honor of a trustee's the Longwood Foundat ion, Inc. and For those graduates, especially Center, focused on helping liberal ··: father, a university official said various pri vate sectors, Crossan said. liberal arts majors who are arts majors find a job. It gave·~-. Tuesday. · Robert A. Fi sc her Jr., a board John Schneider uncertain of their career objectives, students step-by-step instruction91'i' President E.A. Trabant and member, led the dri ve for pri vate The $1.8 million was dedicated to Robert A. Fischer Sr., a the job search can be a frightening on how to begin the job search and ~~ Andrew B. Kirkpab'ick, chairman of fundin g, much of whirh rame from renowned leader In Delaware agribusiness. prospect. showed the many opportunities': the board of trustees, conducted the the Fi sc her family itself, Crossan The question seniors find available to liberal arts majors. official dedication and ribbon­ said. automatically," said Dr. David R. things will be developing there, even themselves asking is, "Where do I Therese Soudant (AS 90), a cuuing ceremony. The greenhouse, located north of Frey, associ~te professor of plant something that might change begin?" psychology major, said she thought '.' Dr. Donald F. Crossan, dean or the Delaware Field House, was built science. everybody's lives." For the first time, the Career the seminars were helpful because ·. the College of Agricultural Sciences, for the College of Agricultural The other part of the structure Because the building was not Planning and Placement Office has they are the only things geared -.. said the greenhouse was named after Sciences, but will be used primarily contains a classroom facility and a ready for use until the dedication, designed a series of job search toward liberal arts majors. "The job · Roben A. Fischer Sr., an outstanding by the plant sc ience department. The research laboratory, each seating only one plant science course meets seminars to will help students target search seminar opened doors to . leader in Delaware agricultural structure houses two different about 30 students. there this semester. In the fall, their career goals and determine different opportunities. Students · ~. business. Fischer has also been facilities in one buildin g. The gl ass There are also storage areas for however, the facility will house a their job search strategies. The should take advantage of the Career ~· . active in public affairs by serving on house, is a so phi sti cated equipment, insecticides, pesticides full semester of classes. series, which started Monday, Planning and Placement Office's ~. hospital boards and fund-rai sing tec hnological hothouse for growing and other materials necessary for The college will continue to use culminates with a liberal arts job resources." 'J committees. planL~. upkeep. the classrooms in the older glass fair Wednesday. Sciscione told liberal arts majors "He's lived and worked in Computers control the "The facility is definitely worth greenhouse and the newer Su!ve Sciscione, associate they have learned to adapt to ·:i Delaware all his life and started his mec hani sms th at regul ate th e the money spent for it," Frey said. commercial-style plastic hothouse, director of Career Planning and different situations and must ask . ~ own fertilizer business from humidity, temperature and sunlight "It really is what they call state-of­ Frey said Placement, said the seminars' themselves, "What can I do?" Her'. scratch," Crossan said. inside the glass greenhou se portion. the-art. It will last long into the "It was decided a couple of years purpose is to motivate students to advised students to forget about':._ Fischer said he was flattered On e motor devi ce, for ex ampl e, foreseeable future." ago that the new greenhouse use the office's services. their major. "Think of yourself as a when he learned that the greenhouse senses th e weather and adj us ts the "The potential [of the building would be constructed, but Sciscione said the turnout, 30 to human being, not as a major. You :. would carry his name. hothouse faci liti es accord ing ly. greenhouse] is tremendous," Fischer the wish was there a tong time SO students a workshop, was "I was also a little bit surprised "It even opens or s hu t.~ wi nd ows said . "New and exciting things will before that," he said. enough to continue the program see SEMINAR page 8 ; ~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . ~ POLICE REPORT -:-\. ~ .,' AMNESTY ~o ------:) Wolf computers stolen psy chology professor, said th e Geuy Service Station on Elkton and : computers were used for research Apple roads sometime after 3:30 ,. ~ , . INTERNATIONAL . a.m. Wednesd?. y, Lt. Alex von Koch _ n More than $2,900 worth of and thesis work by students. He said th e programs lost with the said. 1...:1 F I computer equipment was stolen computers would take at least one The attendant said he secured the ·. ~ 1 r~l. from two rooms in Wolf Hall 1 \1t month to rerun. window before he left to visit his ~ . .I I ~:rm vn~fi:'JJ~ sometime between Friday and ,- ( l ( }J (Tf/) } Monday, University Police said. The sick girlfriend. .. 0 ~ Station's cash swiped When the attendant returned, the . , window and register were open and /:... About $75 was stol en from an the money gone. · unaucnded regi ster window at the

continued from page 1 legal age and the other is not. If this change." _ al cohol w:1 s found in an underage Geist said the harassment policy's : crime could invite fri ends or family student's room, he or she could be revision would prohibit harassment members to a hearing. Their charged wi th a violation. based on race or gender, two . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ presence could intimidate the victim , "This new rule will help Public categories which were previously ' Brooks said. "I think this concern Safety to determine whether there is not included. Sexual and racial , for the victim overrides other a violation going on," Gei st said. "It harassment are currentJy prohibited considerations." delines what is allowed and what is by the guide to policy, but . The university judicial system has not." university officials thought sexuaf " • handled about six sexual assault Laura Zi egler (AS 93 ) said and racial harassment could be '.. cases in the past four or fi ve years. di sagreed with the change. "If interpreted differentJy, she said. ''I'M A Many victims may have been someone is 21 years old, they should "We decided to highlight race . reluctant to go through the hearing be able to drink regardless of their and gender due to concerns voiced .; · process as it is presently exists. roomm ate 's age ," she sa id . "It by members of th e Office of " COLLEGE "The incident this past fall started happens :Ill th e tim e in the real Wom en's Affairs about sexual a lot of us thinking about how we world." harassment," she said. are adjudicating sexu al assault Geist said th e proposed changes Jessi ca R Schiffman, program ~ STUDENT AND cases," Brooks said. to th e poli cy about "cheat sh eets" coordinator for the Women's Studies He consulted Andrea Parrot, a wo uld make IX>sscssion a violation. program said: "1 am glad th ey .._ WORKING FOR Cornell University professor and The old JX>Iicy was not clear about included sex and gender. I have' ~ lecturer about sexual assault who the issue. Under the proposal , a heard harrassment based on race · spoke at the university March 8. professor rould charge a student and sex at this university with my · KELLY HAS "She agreed it is a good idea to with cheating, even if the professor own cars, and 1 am sure it happens - have closed hearings for sexual discovers the notes before the exam much more often than when I hear it assault cases," he said. officially starts. myself." HELPED ME The alcohol policy change would Tony Diemido (AS 93) said: "I Schi ffman testified against Delta prohibit alcohol in any underage am rcnlly against thi s. I usc index Tnu Delta fraternity in January for - UNDERSTAND students' rooms, Geist said. cards to study and , as a result , I yelling at two women riding a"':· Currently, 21-year-old guests of an could be. cha rged with academic moped on South College Avenue. :- underage student are permitted to dishonesty." Student reaction to the proposed THE possess and consume alcohol in the Andrew Long (AS 93) said, "The judicial changes was mixed. ··~ minor's room. The proposed change administrati on assum es the student Edward Jacobowitz (EG 92) said.. ~; would also prohibit alcohol in a body is inherently evil and prone to "As long as counsel is preserved, I -· BUSINESS room where one roommate is of cheating, and th at is why they want have no objection to closed , , hearings." =· WORLD.'' Diemidio sa id: "I object to the ·:. change. If you want to have parents nnd friend s there for support, you" '· should be allowed to." ·· Laura Lachman (BE 91) said: "I :;' Ocean researchers have identified think the hearings should stay open. · more than 1 ,500 substances, taken We ha ve a right to know what's :• going on , not just rea d what is ·' from marine creatures, that have written in Tire Review. We should •· medicinal properties. Unfortunately, not be shut out from what is going on at the uni versity." the ocean--like the medicinally rich Connie Happcrscu (AS 90) said tropical rainforests--has been she questioned the change's , constitutionnlity. "I think it is a bad . ~ ; thoughtlessly exploited and polluted idea because , unless someone ._:. in recent years. For information on comes out and tells th e press, there "· is no way we can hear about what ;-... how you can do your part to help went on in the hearing. :. "If a person wants to press .,: preserve these ecosystems and their charges, the intim idation that could · resources, call Geoff Salthouse at res ult is someth ing which the person "I've broadened my education and expanded my knowledge. Improved my skills. will have to deal with." It's the perfect job experience to put on a resume or an application. " 737-6476 or the Newark Community Brooks said he was excited about " Food CO-OP at 368-5894. ~ the change. "It will make the system ~ more amenable to handling SC;~tual ,.. •~yTemporary assault cases." L Services Schiffman said, "Anything in lhe KEL This Earth fact sponsored ~ ()1990 Kelly ServiceL Inc . The Kelly Girl People -The First and The Best EOE M/F/ HIV Not an aaeney · never a lee. jucl icial process that enables people by SEAC and the CO-OP. l-~-? to munage the trauma is good ." OPINION 6 • THE REVIEW • Apr rl ~0 E<90

PUT YOURSELF IN MY 'Whip it good CAP~. EAATH DAY, APRIL 2.'1, SHOULD LAST LONG,E.R,. Crack! Tl-\AN JVSi 2.4 HOURS f So goes the university's whip as far as student policies are concerned. Like most university decisions which affect students, some of the proposals are good, sound alterations to . student policy. Others are just plain bogus. Case in point: the proposed change in the alcohol Local policy. If the Faculty Senate were to approve the change, underage roommates of 21-year-old students who have I alcohol in their rooms can be charged with a violation. pOISOn Delaware law says that anyone who is 21 years old can purchase and possess alcohol. By passing this ridiculous Hello. I'm from Joisey. Ha, ha, ha. rule, the university will deny some 21-year-olds that The early '80s were not kind to I ~ • h the Garden State. Joe Piscopo (a now rag t. proud Jersey boy) was yukking it up Because it's a safe bet that many university every Saturday night at our expense. administrators have children and probably have a bottle and it was preuy funny. of wine or can of beer in their residence, they are just as I rememb<'.r one episode when his guilty of this proposed policy. Forget it. character admitted, "I'm from Piscataway, New Joisey," as Equally absurd is the policy that could punish chemicals dripped on his lunch while students for studying from notes before an exam. What he was working at the "Union the university administration forgets, probably from Chemical" planL being out of the classroom for so long, is that some Making every day Earth Day OK. A little too close to home, students actually study for exams and don't need to Joe. As I walked down Main Street last weekend, I Living in Piscataway is like living cheat. An index card of notes does not a crib sheet make. on unclaimed land between two If notes are to be banned from a classroom before overheard two girls in front of me applauding Starkist and the other tuna companies for their recent pledge to cities - there's not much there exams, why not ban textbooks and professors who protect the lives of dolphins. town-wise. In fact. our only claim to answer questions as well? Studying is not cheating. Get One took a final drag from her cigarette with the fame a few years ago was Young a grip on yourselves, oh, paranoid administrators. words, "It's about time these corporations had a Drugs, the company which made all conscience." She then nicked the remainder of her butt the lrojan condoms in the world Proposals like this one show you are starting to dodder. What an honor. On the positive side, the university is considering onto the sidewalk. It rolled off the curb to join a pile of about 20 others. I went back to Piscataway last , allowing sexual and racial harassment to be included in "It's too bad the oil companies can't act with the weekend, you know, to do the Easter university harassment policy. While each case will have same compassion for the environment," her friend Lori Atkins thing. Driving along the Raril!ln to be considered on its own, changes like this show the replied as I stood behind them in the line for the MAC River, I saw my favorite diner university is concerned about sexual and cultural issues machine. She left the receipt on the machine, to blow (actually, it's just over the border in Middlesex Borough, across the street and will not tolerate insensitivity. away with the next gust of wind. nation, yet the solution is so obvious. I contemplated whether these environmentally Simply put, clean up after yourself! Your mother from Union Carbide) closed ofT with As an added plus, the university might close all concerned girls were completely oblivious to the doesn't work for the Public Works Department. yellow mpe. · judicial hearings to the public unless both parties agree eyesores they created as I met my friends at The If the .trash chute is closed in your donn, don't get A spokesman for the chemical ~ to an open hearing. This will be a crucial factor in Scrounge. any bright ideas about throwing pizza boxes and company told me Union Carbide had · sexual assault cases and other highly-sensitive and A sunny day, we took our trays outside on the patio. McDonald's bags out your third-story window. purchased the land because it was concerned about potentially personal hearings. Like the added harassment charges, Three guys behind us also opted to cat their lunch in Smokers, if you think you're doing us non-smokers a the great outdoors. As they searched for a table, a favor by stepping outside to indulge, you're wrong if hazardous materials buried in a the closed hearings show the university can be sensitive breeze blew about five napkins off one of their trays. you ning your butt on the sidywalk. . landfill next to the diner property. : (and sensible) in handling student concerns. None of them noticed. Take at look at the hurrdr,ed S..of-Ci~ on stQp~of Suddenly, Piscopo's joke wasn't so I glanced behind them and realized why. There were funny. · ~ If the Faculty Senate is at all aware of students' rights, KirkbrideH~lli : .I' •• • ~ . ... r -~.·~~-,:,· Union Carbide had been dumping ~ the latter two policy changes will pass without any hundreds of napkins covering the patio, among hoards It takes more than five Years to break down a plastics, cinder, pigments and other ~; major problems and the former two will die. of paper cups and cheeseburger wrappers. cigarette filt~r. · · . · Nobody noticed. Nobody cared. The world may be your oyster, but it's not your materials in the roughly two-acre ~ But don't hold your breath. The only time I had ever witnessed such a gross ashtray. Gum wrappers, cigarette boxes, banking landfill from 1930 until the '60s. At ~ The university is slowly becoming a dry campus, so display of litter was when I drove past the Field House receipts, straws and napkins may seem small to you, the time, the materials were not the alcohol policy will pass. The administration doesn't a few hours after a football tailgate. WAKE UP! but they're quickly accumulatirag on every street and considered hazardous. Today they trust the student body, so the crib sheet policy will pass, Sunday is the 20th anniversary of Earth Day. sidewalk. · are. As you're pondering whether to wear the Save the So what's being done? Union r;. too -leaving students with the welts of twisted justice. If you're throwing a party tonight, extend your Whales or Rain Forest T-shirt, try to determine whether Saturday morning cleanup effort past your living room. Carbide bought the diner for $1.5 your Earth Day enthusiasm is genuine concern or a You'll probably find plastic cups and beer cans million and will spend the neJtt few fashion trend. scattered in a SO-foot radius of your building. months poking around the landfill ';Reaching out We can't do much to prevent colossttl tankers from And when you're done reading this newspaper, for hazardous waste. spilling oil into our waters , but we can focus on our please don'tleave it on the steps J>y.Smith Hall. I am not condemning Union individual impact on the environment. Carbide. The company signed ad ~ Next week is Bisexual Gay Lesbian Awareness Days. Litter is such an ugly facet of an industrial izcd Lori Atkins is city news editor ofThe Review. administrative consent order in 19!!6 ~ The university gay community is sponsoring local and with the state of New Jersey to test ~ national speakers in an attempt to reach out to the the the river and surrounding area for ~ unreachable ... you. is right. environmental damage and clean up ..., The week of meetings and lectures are geared Going to the police is not easy; the hazardous material . My concern now is this: Earth ~ : toward heterosexuals as well as homosexuals and talking to anyone about being raped is not easy; talking to anyone about Day, the topic of the month, has ,· bisexuals. Do yourself a favor and at least hear what being raped is not easy. But with everyone talking about picking up · is being said. Safe sex is everyone's concern, but time, and with more reports of rape, trash, planting trees and recycling. : learning more about the gay community is everyone's the process will become easier. But what are we to do when we find responsibility if this campus it to free itself from its So I urge you, women, to stand out the land we live on has been poisoned for the past 60 years? all that I have, now that I am free up and do all you can to make your bigoted and homophobic past. A rape victim's pleas Chances are, unless you know the .. from his physical presence. attacker suffer for what he did to you. area, you are not really concerned I am writing this to the university Three nights ago, I was raped. about what glows in Piscataway. community for several reasons. His suffering will never be as No, it wasn't by the stereotypical But how sure are you of your First, for the male population. deep as ·ours, but isn't it bettel' than black drug addict who jumped out neighborhood? Not so many years You've heard it before, but maybe a not having him suffer at all? And in from bushes or dark alleys. It ago, it was common practice for few more of you will listen this your battle against him, you will wasn't by a Harley Davidson biker companies to bury chemical and time . find suppon from many sources, as or a heavy metal burnout wearing solid waste. Ta da! No more waste! Ted Splker, editor in chief When a woman says no to you, I have. In the end, you will have, if Mark Nardone, executive editor ripped jeans and a black T-shirt. It Only now are we beginning to sec when she says stop or don't, then nothing else, the peace of mind that Ken Kerachbaumer, managing ecitor Trlcla Miller, business manager was by a white professional, neatly the effects on the environment. please, please leave her alone. Don't you made at least a few more "' Bob Bicknell, editorial ecitor Bernadette Betzler, advertising s· * *** ten:~· c1e :'·'Wri1 not uncommon. It's real. It's with marks of distinction for content and co·, NpNMIItl • --opinion at n.. ,..,,_ ec.11 and Ia wrtnen br the ecllltorllll editor, dangerous. And it's no joke. noept when algnecl. The etlrlf oollmne .,. the opinion af the author plotu,.cl. c.rt­ FH iPhC)t0~1r8.1PhY and art, and opinion content. The Review wishes: lo ,....,.rapreMIII, the opinion af the artlet. The t.nere to the editor oonleln the oplnlone af our during the fall semester. Bob Bicknell Is the editorial editorofThe Review. April20, 1990• THE REVIEW• 7

Friday, April 20 Center, and Dickenson C/D lounge, 7 Film: •Heathers.• Admission $1 with Center par1(ing lot, 11 a.m. Check bulletin board for location, 7 p.m. p.m. student ID. 140 Smith Hall, 7 p.m. , 9:30 p.m. and midnight. Sunday, April22 Worship Services: Sponsored by the : Seminar: ·The Nutrasweet Story - A Seminar: ·uncover A Clue To Your Lutheran Student Association. 243: ,Lawyer's Perspectives.• With Roger C. Future.• Sponsored by the College of Y8rlety Show: Sponsored y the 1990 Haines St., 11 a.m. : ,Thies, Hyman, Phelps and McNamara. Agricultural Sciences. 'Rodney Room, Black Arts Festival. Admission $4. Eanh Day Activities: Sponsored by the • '240 Alison Haft, 1 :25 p.m. Sludent Center, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. NewarkHal,8p.m. Studert Environmental Action Coalition. Annual Gospelrama: 10th Annual ~ i The Mall, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Celebration. Sponsored by the 1990, Discussion: About solutions to Banatlt Concan: Sponsored by Saturday, April 21 Black Arts Festival. Newark Hall, 6 p.m. !ecological problems. With Dr. Steve Amnesty International. Admission $3 Meeting: Sponsored by the Circle K tSidebotham, department~ history and wlh studeniiD. BaochJs Room, Student Film: •field of Dreams.• Admission $2 Club. Collins Room, Student Center, 7 Monday, April 23 'Dr. -Tom Ray, department of life and p.m. Center, 8:30p.m. with student ID. 140 Smith Hall, 7 p.m., health sciences. Brown Lounge, 7:30 9:30 p.m. and midnight. p.m. Seminar: "Boiier Feed Pump Falklres.• Quaker Meeting: 401 Phillips Ave., Lecture: •Justice and Access to Health ; With Elmer Makay, Energy Research 10:30 a.m. Care.• Wrth Edmund Pellegrino, Center ! Business Meeting: Sponsored by the and Consultants Corporation. 113 Recital: Tenor Matthew Pressley. Loudis for Advanced Study of Ethics, ; LGBSU. Check LGBSU bulletin board Spencer lab, 3:30 p.m. Racial Hall, AmJ ctJPont Music Building, Children's Hour: Sponsored by the Georgetown University. 128 Clayton : for location, 6 p.m. 8 p.m. 1990 Black Arts Festival. Featuring Hall, 7 p.m. 1 a--a-..... orr...... _llk ...... and the Fixed Griots Wa Umoj·a, African-American .--.nn.., · ...... - ...... _ SaiUng Regatta: Intercollegiate regatta Christian Student Gathering: Point Property.• With D. Bellamy. 231 at the Triton Marina. Call Jim at 738_ dance and story. Meeting: Sponsored by DUSC. Collins : Sponsored by the Inter-Varsity Christian Pumell Hal, 2:30p.m. 8313 for Information. Meet in Student Room, Student Center, 4 p.m. 1 Fellowship. Ewing Room, Student Meeting: Sponsored by the LGBSU. I

.•. ------~ EARTH DAY 1990 'ENVIROt&ENT AL AWARENESS FAIR

l )

I'

BANDS: TRIKKI WIKKIT K.IDS CORNER . HERE AND NOW INFORMATION BOOTHS HONOUR SOCIETY ART EXHIBIT ON OLD COLLEGE VIC SADOT AND THE CRAZY PLANET BAND

SUNDAY, APRIL 22, 1990 1-5 PM ON THE MALL

Pleale take alternative transportation (walk, bike, bus, skateboard, pogo stick) to Earth Fest 90 SPONSORED BY THE STUDENT ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION COALITION AND HOUSING AND RESIDENT LIFE

Think about the implications of RAIN LOCATION: the answers to the quiz. FREE CARPENTER SPORTS BUILDING THE NON-TRIVIAL EARTH DAY QUIZ

1. What is the approximate world population in 1990? 8. How many pounds of carbon dioxide are added to the atmosphere a) 3 billion; b) 5 billion; c) 1 billion by watching the "Simpsons" on TV? a) .32 lbs; b) .20 lbs; c) .15 lbs; d) 0.5 lbs.

·~ 2. In how many years is the world's population expected to double? by running a room air conditioner for 1 hour? a) 10; b) 73; c) 107; d) 39 a) 9 lbs; b) 4 lbs; c) 1.5 lbs; d) .64 lbs

3. What is the United States population in 1990? 9. In the year 2000, how much habitable land will there be for each a) 250 millior.; b) 100 million; c) 400 million person? a) 5 acres; b) 25 acres; c) 1 square mile; d) 50 square miles 4. If you recycled the cans after you drank the case of beer, how much energy, equivalent to gasoline, did you save by recycling? 10. Approximately how many acres of tropical rainforests are lost per a) 4.5 gallons; b) 2.25 gallons; c) 1.0 gallons; d) 0.5 gallons day? a) 100; b) 1000; c) 10,000; d) 75,000 5. Which of the following states do not have a mandatory recycling law? 11. How much water is needed to produce one pound of steak? (.) I i a) Pennsylvania; b) Delaware; c) Maryland; d) New Jersey; e) a) 4 gallons; b) 100 gallons; c) 750 gallons; d) 2500 gallons <0"0 ~ • II Nevada .. 12. How many tons of topsoil are lost from agricultural lands in the .IS~~~- -.c I ;- ~ • 6. What percentage of native forests in the continental U.S. will remain U.S. each year? 10_ (I) after current Forest Service cutting plans? a) 250 million; b) 1 billion; c) 3 billion; d) 15 billion .Q- . l a) 12%; b) 5%; c) 1%; d) 0% ~(.) 13. By the year 2000, what percentage of the world's species are 7. How many pounds of grain and soy fed to cattle does it take to get expected to have been lost forever? as~ one pound of steak? a) 16; b) 9; c) 4; d) 1 a) 5%; b) 20%; c) 50%; d) 90% c;;-"0 of chicken? a) 16; b) 9; c) 4; d) 1 "0~ 14. A dripping faucet wastes how many gallons of water each day? a) C\1.-

I ' 1/2 gallon; b) 1 gallon; c) 5 gallons; d) 20 gallons

No matter what the score, come to Earthfeat 90 to ream how to change the world. This is not printed on recycled paper. ' •

...... - .... --... -·------·----· .. · · -~·-- · · ...... 8 • THE REVIEW • April20, 1990

targeting or narrowing down fields opportunities is the second step. Seminar of interest The six major functions Students can apply directly to a of an organization are company, ask relatives and friends, Teleconference addresses continued from page 5 administration, finance, research, check newspaper advertisements human resources, communications and use the campus interview wouldn't introduce yourself as Tom, and marketing. Students must program. Sciscione advised academics, black athletes psychology major." decide where they would fit best. students not to confine themselves He told the group they have the After deciding a field of interest, to one approach because 80 percent By Diane Heck them know there are other options," minor league system were created skills for which many employers students should contact different of available jobs are not advertised. Staff Reporter he said. for football and basketball, th e look. The problem they face is organizations and companies. Once He said networking is a Rudy Washington, president of problem would be solved . selling themselves. again, the question arises. "Where successful way to find a job Black athletes were scrutinized the Black Coaches Association, said Dennis Felton, assistant coach of Sciscione explained the first step do I begin?" because it is human nature to try to Wednesday when a panel of black families are eight times more the Delaware basketball team , said, to finding employment is job Finding employment help someone. Informational distinguished educators, coaches and likely to push kids into athletics and "At certain top levels, college docs interviews can be set up through athletes discussed the loss of support them in that area. "But how serves as a minor league, but here at networking and contacting education in the journey fm athletic many concerned black parents do we the universi ty we arc more in LGBSU week to begin companies directly, supplying success. see at PTA meetings?" he asked. perspective with the relationship helpful information and personnel The teleconference, "The Black Conference moderator James between sports and studies." continued from page 2 bashing," Prime said. "Visibility contacts. Athlete: Winners or Losers in Brown, of CBS Sports, said The discussion turned to how the can make people more aware that Sciscione said always send a Academia," adressed black youths' children, especially those from $1 billion th e NCAA received from Tuesday and Wednesday will [the LGBSU] has concerns thank-you letter to personnel unrealistic dream of stardom and the inner-city playgrounds, dream of CBS for complete coverage of th e feature separate safe-sex workshops involving human rights." contacts and a resume if the critical issues facing black athletes escaping the poverty, drugs and basketball games would be spent. for both men and women, focusing Friday is Jeans Day, during interview went well. on college campuses. crime of their neighborhoods by Brown asserted that everyone but on preventing HIV transmission. which students wear jeans to show The third step is researching the The meeting was broadcast from making it in professional sports. The the players are making money, so The woman's workshop will be support for the civil rights of gays, organizations to prepare yourself Washington, D.C., to Clayton Hall sad news is the success rate, players should receive money. held at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Blue lesbians and bisexuals, Fromme for an interview. and many other universities however, is very low, about one in Most disagreed. and Gold Room of the Student said. Sending cover letters and nationwide Watchers were able to lO,(XX), he said. Schultz, however, said, "A thletes Center. The men's workshop will be The symbolic meaning of Jeans resumes to prospective employers phone in to questions. Brown said that many years ago, must be able to live like every other Wednesday in 112 Memorial Hall. Day, Fromme said, is to show that is the final step, and Sciscione Arthur Ashe, former tennis star, black men saw sports as a way to get college student, and since most have Another of the week's highlights, homosexuality should be suggested following with a phone said, "Many black males, from a a college education. no time for a job, perhaps a type of Fromme said, will be a Die-In, to considered as normal and accepted call in two weeks. He also very young age, single-mindedly Ashe said, "Today, many black allowance may be considered." be held noon Wednesday in front of as wearing blue jeans. recommended sending at least 50 pursue a career in pro sports." athletes don't see college as a way of The panel concluded that the Student Center. The LGBSU has also scheduled resumes, because it usually takes Wyatt Kirk, chairman of the gaining knowledge, but as a universities need more blacks in The Die-In is a social protest a semi-formal to be held in the 25 leuers to get one interview. department of Human Development stepping-stone to the pros." athletic dcpanmenl5 and faculties to where participants drop to the Bacchus Theatre of the Student Students must learn to accept and Services at North Carolina A&T When they do not make it, they serve as role models. ground on cue and have chalk Center from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. rejection positively, Sciscione said. State University, said children will leave college and go back to the Kirk: said programs must be set up drawn around their bodies. Fromme Fromme said this event, like all "It is extremely important to get believe the myth, "If you do sports, streets, he added. to enable black athletes to said the event supports members the others except for the safe-sex nos. The more nos you get, the than you are all right. Richard Schultz, executive successfully compete in the game of the gay community who have died workshops, are open to both the more yeses you'll get." "We need to get to kids and let director of the the NCAA, said if a life. because of AIDS, violence or in homosexual and heterosexual other ways. communities of both sexes. Manlyn Prime, director of the Also lined up for the week is a Student Center, said the LGBSU discussion about gays and religion, ART HISTORY CLUB was granted the use of both the set for 7 p.m. Monday, and a lecture Student Center's outdoor patio and exploring the issues that parents of the concourse by the bookstore for gays and lesbians have to confront, Trip to DC April Z8 this week's activities because "they on Friday at 7 p.m. Both lectures have every right to be seen." will take place in the Blue and Gold S7 · n.m. SS • m. "There shouldn't be gay- Room of the Student Center. sign up 10·2 Mon. 4/23 U Tues. 4/24 19 warnings issued Old College Lobby IS seats available continued from page 3 effect." Because Alderman's Court is not convicted of alcohol violations or computerized, Brooks and his disorderly conduct, although a few secretary examine all summonses were guilty of noise violations or manually, comparing each name At~'ENTION SENIORS vandalism. with a university enrollment lisL IF YOU EVER HAD A STAFFORD STUDENT LOAN Newark Police Chief William A. Brooks said the process is time (Formerly GSL) Hogan said, "I realize this only consuming, and the letters reflect affects a small portion of the trials from the past three weeks. The Office of Financial Aid will be holding the following group sessions for Student Loan Exit Counseling. All university students, but part of the "I think it's going well," Brooks sessions will be held in the Perkins Student Center. educational process is to make sure said. "We at least have a start. April 23, 1990 7:00pm Collins Room they behave and function properly "We hope students will be April25, 1990 11:00 am Collins Room within a community. concerned about the consequences April27, 1990 3:00pm "I think this will have a deterrent of this." Ewing Room May 1, 1990 10:00 am Collins Room May 4, 1990 1:30pm Collins Room Pollutants cause illness May 8, 1990 7:00pm Ewing Room May 9, 1990 2:00pm Collins Room continued from page 3 pollution is found, White said, he May 15, 1990 10:00 am Collins Room often recommends that a heating, May 15, 1990 7:00pm Ewing Room Carbon dioxide can build up in such ventilating and air conditioning an environment merely through specialist upgrade the building's FEDEilAJ.IA.W :aEQUIIIU YOUR A'ITENDANCE! human respiration, according to Bill ventilation system. ·' Perkins ( formerly NDSL) and Nursing Loan recipients must attend a Rplll'llte meeting conducted by Student Loan Collecti ons Offic e. • • White, industrial hygienist with the Improving ventilation is the only Delaware Occupational Safety and practical remedy for Sick Building Health Consultation Service. Syndrome because air pollution The service performs indoor air­ sources are so numerous. Although quality testing for private the allergy-like symptoms can be businesses in Delaware which alleviated, indoor air pollution ____ ,.. believe they have a problem with should be erased because it poses "He's selling everything but his PS/2. indoor pollution. When indoor unknown long-term risks. It s going to be part of his future.'' ------=--- :..: ---=---=·- Nuclear power reliable

continued from page 3 Water Reactors (LWR), were more efficient. More than 100 LWRs are sidestep the issue. used in the United States. LWRs "They just want to put keep nuclear fuel in water and do not [radioactive waste] out of sight and use all the uranium fuel, leaving out of mind," he said. "Deep radioactive wastes behind. geologic disposal has never been Unglesbee said one reason done before and [nuclear waste] will nuclear power would become be radioactive for thousands of years popular in the future is because of and you never know what could environmental concerns. Burning happen in that time." fossil fuels affects the atmosphere. Karam said the waste-disposal Acid rain and the ozone layer's problem could be solved if the decay are possible indicators of current type of nuclear plants, Light carbon fuels' dangers. ,_.. ______.;;;,; __ _..-_ . We Give Students A BREAK! University of Delavware Studentsl 1 0°/o 0 FF any brake service or repair with coupon You are cordially Invited to participate in a • Brakes • Mufflers career Panel Discussion ·Shocks • Transmission ·Tune-Ups sponsored by IBM & The American Marketing Association. rtin------. · Batteries ~ere .is your opportunity to get three different career perspectives from a recent ~ Un1vers1ty of Delaware graduate, a ten year corporate veteran and an IBM manager. I I 368-36oo Date: Monday, April 23 { Godwins Major Muffler Place: Purnell Hall, Rm. 116 Time: 5:30 p.m -7·oo I 610 S. College Avenue . . . p.m. I (acro ss from fi eld house • University bu s access) DON'T MISS YOUR CHANCE TO GET YOUR CAREER QUESTIONS ANS\XIEREDI ~------:{ ... April 20, 1990 • THE REVIEW • 9

substances may someday be used giving LOurs. The intern also took Engineer Intern to fertilize plants in space, where classes and vi sited hortic ultural resources are scarce or non­ gardens, a sugar cane factory and continued from page 1 continued from page 1 existent. an orange grove. ______-1111!111 _.._~----• ; Biotechnology deals with tissue "My fa vorite part of th e bcamway, which was designed so ..... ,...... ,....._...... ,... __.._ program was giving the tours," he ..,_,...... _ ~­ ...... ,. and some weekends at his father's culture, the basis of g enetic ...... ,...._..,...... _...... ,...,....._...... ,.,_ ...... _...... ,.~~.....- -.- -"',..... the cars could withstand intimate ...... I"'RR!"'' ...... _._~...... _..... flower s hop, arranging and engineering. ll allows scientists to said. "I got to meet people from I- ·~ ...... ,...... __ ... ,...... ,_.._...,...... contact with it, he said...... deli veri ng flowers and advising incorporate characteristics of salt England , , Spain and The original bcamway, on ' customers. and drought tolerance, pest­ Brazil, plus [people from] all over which Dolan worked, was about Originally from Bryn Mawr, resistance and improved growth this country." three miles long and was used to Pa., Lcmheney heard about the into food crops. When they weren 't working at transport visitors to and from the internship program while visiting Virginia Mann , student The Land, intern s found plenty to Magic Kingdom, the parking lot Walt Disney World after high coordinator at The Land, said all do under th e Florida sun . They and the Disney resort hotels, school graduation. Disney employees mus t go freq ue nted nearby Cocoa and Dolan said. Lcmhcney applied as soon as he through a "pre-screening process Daytona b aches and visited the The monorail system was later was eligible, in his junior year of to be sure they will make a good Florida Keys, he said. expanded to 14 miles to connect college. Disney employee. Mos t of their free time, the EPCOT Center to the monorail Whil e interning at The Land, a "Disney has very high standards however, was spent at Walt Disney loop, Herbst said. six -acre pavilion where visitors for its employees," Mann said. World. the Although Dolan did not directly can learn about present and future "They must be outgoing, ask lots "The MGM Park had just work on the expansion, the plans food c rops and agricultural of questions and dress opened wh e n I got th ere, " he but which he helped create for the The Walt Disney Company technologies , Lemhency studied professionally." recalled. "We had free passes so so original s ystem were used to Dr. William Dolan designed Disney world's new monorail (lett), aquaculture, space agriculture, Mann said many of the interns, we spent a lot of time running expand the system, Dolan said. which Increases rider capacity by 30 percent. biotechnology and many other who are plant science, agronomy around the parks." "The monorail is an important important research areas. or crop production, and Lemhcney a id he found the part of Disney World because it's New cars for the monorail arc Dctriot projec t his most Aquaculture is the controlled horticulture students, return to internship rewarding and the first attraction visitors sec," being built, Herbst said. The new challenging because the People cultivation and harvest of aquatic Disney World to work in informative. l-Ie described working Herbst said. cars will increase rider capacity by Mover had to be built in the city plants and animals. The Land has landscaping. at The Land as "an excellent and Dolan said he visited Disney 30 percent. He said the beamway without upse tting the flow of the a high -technology production "A lot of them come back," she worthwhile experience." World to see the park for the first will not be changed. city. Working with many different facility for this type of agriculture. said. "Some find other work. One For Lcmhcncy, it may have time about five years ago. His Dolan also worked on the contractors also made the project The Land deals directly with of the past interns is now the opened th e door to an exciting in other trips, he said, were for design and construction of difTi cult, he sa id . NASA by researching space director of horticulture at a zoo." career in th e magic kingdom to business. downtown Detriot's People Mover, Dolan said he considers the agriculture and developing food­ Lemheney's study emphasis is known as Walt Di sney World. "For me, li stening to people's the transit system that connects the Disney monorail s ystem his production methods for lunar soil ornamental horticulture. Sitting in the living room of his up comments on the monorail was city's major hotels, convention favorite projec t because everyone and c losed environments such as "Basically," he said, Park Place apartment overlooking to more fun than riding on it," Dolan centers and other visitor sites. working on the project strove for space stations. Human waste and "ornamental horticulture is Elkton Road , a few healthy of said. Dolan said he considers the perfection . other seemingly unlikely landscaping." looking plants scattered about the Lemheney's duties included place, Lemheney seems eager to caring for greenhouse plants and accept the challenge. I" ' ' Another BORING Health fee might rise A FRoMCSB ... continued from page 1 said. Sunday Nite??? The Student Health Service is WE AN CHANGE THAT!!! The Center for Counseling and self-supported. "We get charged if a Career Development is located light bulb goes out," Huggins said. Have you ever shared a doughnut with TEN PI;OPLE! ... Taken your clothes off UNDER above the bookstore in the Perkins Ferguson said the university will WATER? ... Had your head spun on the end of a WHIFFLE BALL BAT?? Student Center and provides pay for the new Laurel Hall addition students with personal, educational for 20 years, which makes it an and career counseling. added expense. IFNOT-COMEJOINUS ~~ _ mm?ie. . Many universities combine their The total budget for 1990 will G health center and the counseling reflect only a 3-percent change center budgets, Huggins said. "But caused by the Laurel Hall addition. CSB ~"' 'pv-ru~ .f • this is the first time it has been done The new building will have more here. waiting rooms and consultation Sunday, April 29 ' , "The rationale is that people in rooms for greater confidentiality, ~ (kA;: ~ 1-~ budget control, by doing this, are Huggins said. 7-12PM going to do their best to lower The university health service fee .$6 v•tpy ,.\fsJo tuition." is comparable lO other schools with Before the proposed change, the similar health service programs. counseling center's operating funds The 1989 health fee at the ''<, came from tuition , Huggins said. University of Connecti c ut , for Five percent of the proposed example, was $183. At Syracuse increase will cover employee University the fee was $192, salaries. Ferguson said. The university saves about "I think [the 1990 fcc] is a liule $60,000 each school year from its high for the amount that I usc it," Association of Delaware Hospitals said Carolyn Hastings (BE 91). membership, said Paul A. Ferguson, Liz All en (BE 91) said : "I use assistant director of Student Health [the Student Health Center) but I RAINBOW'S ~ Services. think that the new fcc is too high. ALE The in-patient facility is not open They should keep the mte the same SPRING BLOWOUT in the summer, which also cuts but charge students according to the 5~ costs. services they usc." Some professional staff members, The remaining 5 percent of the such as doctors and nurses, have proposed increase wi II cover nine-month contracts, which saves additional operating costs, Ferguson one quarter of the salaries, Huggins said. Ray Street delayed contyinued from page 1 "I nstead, we lost a large amount of money." Daffy Deli's lease, which expired David Butler, director of Jan. 31, and denied the owners' Housing and Residence Life, said request to rent on a monthly basis two buildings of the new complex, because demolition was scheduled will provide housing for about 224 to begin. special interest housing students. Jean Pappoulis, co-owner of The third building will hou se 112 Daffy Deli, said she has lost three members of various sororities. months of income s ince the Fees for th e Ra y Street university discontinued their lease. dormitories, will be $2,0 I 0, "We could have been open for comparable to housing fe es in business for the last three months," Pencader, Butler said. Pappoulis said.

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t vivant April 20 1990 • THE REVIEW • 11 Recycling brews environmental energy

'Y Abby Stoddard gasoline, enters the recycling planL The remaining materials are blended with sewage and fed into a ~!aff Reporter Arter breaking the trash into four-inch pieces, the shredder feeds huge domed building called a : As the saying goes, one man's the smaller sections into air digester. The mixture sits in the ttash is anolher man's treasure. classifiers - relating drums which digesters for five to seven days, And with tomorrow's 20th apply suction to the incoming uash stirred by rotating bridges. anniversary celebration of Earth and separate heavy and light The material is then dried and Day, the environment can no longer materials. sold as lawn fertilizer called bank at "Landfill Trust," when Lighter trash, such as paper and Fairgrow, which is used throughoqt "Recycling Americana" offers more plastics, is sent to the Energy Delaware to fertilize football fields, credit and better interest. Generating Facility as derived fuel capital grounds, the median strip,s Everyone seems to be anxious to for combustion. The energy then on 1-95 and the grounds of DuPont. do their part in saving lhe planet. ~powers the recycling plant and the So from the insulation in Whether by dutifully saving energy facility, while the eJtcess is Delaware homes to lawn fertilizer, 81uminum cans and newspapers, or sold to Delmarva Power. trash once thrown away is back in simply buying greeting cards Ste.am is also produced during action, offering new alternatives to Lesli e D. Barbar:­ printed on recycled paper, recycling Leslie 0. Barbaro the recycling process, and is piped preserve th e environment Tons of garbage may enter the plant, but when It leaves It Is no is a popular way of protecting the Falrgrow fertilizer Is one of directly to ICI Americas' Plant. Before throwing away your longer garbage but valuable resources for bottles or Insulation. environment. the benefits of receycllng. Heavier materials roll back to the trash, thinking it's gone forever, Collecting recyclable items and bottom of the drum and are dumped think again. Plastic bags may be Jbiving to a local recycling plant accumulation on concrete tipping onto another conveyor bell. pieces. These organic particles and particles incapable of absorbing heating your home, while scrap ~ to take hours, but the process floors in an eJtpansi ve storage The belt then carries the material glass are washed in the same step. water. paper might just be illuminating Js now as simple as carrying the building. Here, the mountains of to a separation system, where 30 to The glass particles are then finely The glass is later dried and sold your classroom. Jtems twenty feet to lhe curb. trash wait to be recycled. 35 tons of ferrous me1al is removed ground up and mixed with amine to Owens Coming as fiberglass for And the less we use today will : Knee deep in all of New Castle Slowly, the garbage is strewn as it passes under a magnet, and is acetate solutions, making the insulation at $50 a ton. mean all the more tomorrow. County's household trash, Delaware onto conveyer belts, and later fed sold as scrap to Lukens, Inc., a steel Solid Waste Authority's into a shredder, completing the plant. Reclamation Plant processes 1,000 plant's only required manual job. The remaining heavy materials lqns of trash every day, resulting in An employee supervises the are transported to the Wet Process electricity, recycled glass, steam trash being fed to the shredder (at a Building, which separates all ind soil enhancers. rate of 70 tons per hour), making smaller particles (such as glass, : . Upon arrival at the plant, trash­ sure nothing dangerous, such as fiber, ceramics, stones and organic raued garbage trucks dump the day's explosives, light ammunition or and metal particles) from the larger Family separations aunt students

Nancy Kesling (AS 90) hasn't poken to her father for seven ears. When she was eight years ld, "he just picked up and left," fhe recalls, leaving her family tblivious to his whereabouts for fbnost a year. t Scou Calabrese (AG 90) counted 110wn the days until he could leave ~orne and come to Delaware, even ...ough he was only 10 years old ,..hen his mother moved ouL ; Divorce. Many students on campus are ffected by it, whether it occurs )when they are in elementary $Chool, reaching puberty or rushing rrr to college. It's no fallacy that Kesling admits that experiencing Jen Podos parents' divorce was difficult, but now she is "almost completely Even though a student may be legally dependant they are not free of the emotional pain which divorce can cause. we're phallicentric over it." She says her family went Kesling says. through counseling and as a result, him significantly, Rintoul says he What do the following items have in common: Cooney adds that 80 percent of she believes most stress was specifically recalls the his mother's pencils, candles, skyscrapers, smokestacks, hot the studenls said they would alleviated. words. dogs, baseball bats, rulers, popsicles and the approach marriage with extreme Calabrese still visits his mother "Whenever there was a problem Washington Monument? caution, a sentiment shared among in Florida twice a year, although his in the house or we would have a They are just some of the man-made symbols of most students who have dealt with parents' divorce continues to be a conflict. she would say 'If you don't the phallicentric society in which we live. These parental divorce. big concern and problem to his like it here you can always go live symbols can be found anywhere at anytime. "One lhing I learned is not to get family. with your father,' " he says. "It was Think about it. No, not it. married young like my parents "My mom still lalks badly about a threat." After all, wasn't George Washington the father did," says Rintoul. my dad," he says. "It's terrible. I've Dr. Teresa M. Cooney, assistant of our country? And aren't all of these objects long "The marriage has to be right," been trying to adjust my life to it professor of individual and family and thin? says Calabrese. "I guess it's all right for 11 years." studies, has researched and written Now some people may be offended by all of Josh Putterman to get a divorce, but only if you He says he would like to think various articles on the affects of this, but it's the truth. You can't escape it. How do don't have kids. If you have kids, that the divorce hasn't affected him, divorce on college students. you think Benny Hill made his name in televi sion, package, rooster, one-eyed wonderworm (one of divorce is a nightmare for them." but -he knows that he would be Cooney says many people forget cooking soum6s? George Carlin's favorites), schlong, dragon, peter, Another way for students to cope lying to himself. the affect which divorce can have Even God, or the idea you believe in concerning torpedo, baloney pony, love muscle, injector, Another student is still haunted on college students because they is to openly discuss the situation. the creation of all living things on the planet, is a purple-headed soldier of love and everybody's by her father, an alcoholic. As a are over the age of 18. "I found it comforting to lalk to perpetrator in this phallicentric world. favorite, the short way to say Richard. iesult, he ruined their family "People think that when students both close friends and family," says If you don't think so, then why do snakes, Those people favoring mammaricentrism prefer Structure. are legally independent they are one university student whose cucumbers, carrots, bananas and asparagus exist? such names as: jugs, boobs, hooters, a rack, : Her parents divorced when she emotionally independent," she says. parents divorced recently. And why do men carry the phallic symbol and not winnebagos (one of Steve Martin's favorites), Divorce also suppresses was four years old, but it wasn't Through her research with women? snoobics, bazumbas, scoops of flesh , headlights until later that she learned of her several colleagues at a large state happiness during the holidays. If God isn't a man, meaning its appearance may (and high beams), mounds, lungs, eyes, tomatoes, Cooney says holidays cause father's problems with alcohol. university, she discovered a number be in the form of a woman, docs that mean we also melo ns, knockers, chobies and everybody's · "My mom told us how he used to of statistics and facts about the hardships and stress on students live in a mammaricentric society as well? favorite, well, you know, it begins with at. get really drunk and come home effects of divorce on college because they feel pressured by both I know mammaricentric isn't exactly a word, With so many slang terms described for these and beat her," she says. students. parents. but, like those SnUDictsTM you saw in previous two areas, our society cannot be labelled anything Nevertheless, she recalls that her Thirty percent of the divorced "Holidays are terrible. I hate issues, it's legal here. el se except phallicentric and/or mammaricentric. them," says Calabrese. "You get father was always nice when she students surveyed revealed they Nature's proof of the existence of People look too hard to find a way for a word to tom because both parents want you went to visit him. had difficulty with their classes and mammaricentrism appears in the Bactrian camel, be placed in either society. Almost anything can be there." : Until she turned 21. studying because of their parents' twin mounlain peaks and a lowercase "m." represented in one of these worlds, depending Unfortunately, in some cases. · She went to visit him in January divorce. This duality of nature, the existence of both upon how warped an individual's mind is . divorce is inevitable. To help and finally realized the turmoil he One university student, whose phallicentrism and mammaricentrism, makes up But when one subscribes to either phallicentrism matters, Cooney advises caused her mother. parents divorced in November, roughly 80 percent of all jokes told in America or mammaricentrism or both, the person is also maintaining a strong relationship ' After he had been drinking agrees. each year. Nine-tenths of this 80 percent, however, innuenccd by another "ism:" chauvinism. with at least one parent. ~eavily one night, she thought he "I had a real tough time are too vulgar to repeal here. Chauvinism is unavoidable in our society, Kesling agrees, adding that concentrating on my classes," she Because of the prominence of the thanks to old-fashioned standards of male ""as going to hurt her. keeping a solid relationship with · In spiiC of Ibis experience, she says. "My mind wandered a lot" phallic~ntric/mammaricentric world, many dominance. When you laugh at a joke that the closer parent is important aays "I was not destroyed by this Half the students in Cooney's different nicknames have been invented for those concerns the radius of either the phallicentric or Regardless of age, divorce has !JWl, and I am not living the life of study said they felt the divorce parts of the human anatomy that arc at the cen ters the mammaricentric society, you become a affected their social life and dating. proven to have a drastic effect on lUl alcoholic's daughter." of these societies. chauvinist whether you arc male or female. "One effect of parental divorce is children. Studies have shown that · Roben Rintoul, Jr. (AS 93) was In the phallicentric state of mind, there is: You can't escape it. And not that it. that students that have experienced half of all the marriages in the '80s ~ight years old when his parents got johnson, willy, ding-ding , ding-a-ling , and '90s will end in divorce. divorced. Today he says he was old it tend to be more demanding in a tallywhacker, pccpec, manhood, loins, main vein , Josh Putterman is a sports editor of The "I guess it's just a fact of life," enough to deal with it at the time. relationship and are more leery to weasel, salami, wang-dang-doodle, tool, wad, Review. Calabrese says. : Though the divorce didn't affect trust members of the opposite sex,''

'• 12 • THE REVIEW • April 20, 1990

AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF 'PLANT ENGINEERS Politica.ISdence Departt•aentHonors Day SCHOLARSHIP r 1989-90 Monday, April 23rd at 4:00p.m. Two undergraduate engineering scholar­ ships ($750 each) will be awarded to enter­ in the Ewing Room of the Student Center. I' ing junior or senior level students majoring ~ ... ' in either Chemical, Civil, Electrical or •• M~chanical Engineering. Applications are Ceremonies will be held to induct new members of Pi Sigma Alpha and available at the Office of Scholarships and Sigma Iota Rho, to recognize new Bennett and Dolan Scholars, Student Financial Aid, 220E Hullihen Hall. and to make a number of other awards. All previously inducted students '• . ,- Application deadline Is April 30, 1990. and Bennett-Dolan Scholars are cordially invited to attend.

• .. i , PRE-REGISTRATION ADVISEMENT FOR ENGLISH MAJORS AND PROSPECTIVE . , ENGLISH MAJORS Be a Friend to 203 Memorial Hall the environment

, 'Yednesday, April25, 2-5 PM not a Foe. .' nilirsday, April 26, 9 AM:-12 noon l·i - You can help Motlday, April30, 10 AM-1 PM ( · · ' Tuesdaf,May 1, 12 noon-3PM · conserve ·the Earth's ... ·Wednesday, May 2, 2-5 PM natural resources. I... '?ursday,May3, 9AM-12 noon · · · Friday,May4, lOAM-1 PM DID YOU KNOW? THE AVERAGE AMERICAN USES SEVEN TREES PER YEAR, WHICH TRANSLATES TO 1.5 BILUON TREES PER YEAR IN THE UNITED STATES ALONE. DID YOU KNOW? FOR EVERY MEAL SERVED DURING THE YEAR IN THE UNIVERSI1Y OF DELAWARE DINING FACIUTIES, [A4tfmlfSALE AN AVERAGE OF 5.7 NAPKINS ARE TAKEN PER ""==--~--=- ~=---=- ~ -=-=-~ PERSON. ASSUMING 2 NAPKINS ARE ACTUALLY ~- - - ~ - I . "· : ··. · r KENWODO -- -- ·-- 11 ~~ NEEDED/USED PER MEAL, APPROXIMATELY 11.3 · '· I 1 --I.~ · ' ·. ~ - 1 I : MILUON NAPKINS ARE TAKEN AND THROWN f -- ,.. I • ' [· '"' I I i 0 I t.l Ll r C·I ) ~ AWAY UNUSED EVERY YEAR. 1. -~ . ~ . . . ::. , _·· : - ;I . •, [! DID YOU KNOW? ··'• r KENWOOD KRC 1003 ... Regularly $239.00 34 TONS OF UNUSED NAPKINS ARE DISCARDED 1 • Compact flat chassis N16 1 EVERY YEAR BY UNIVERSI1Y OF DElAWARE DINING • Quartz timer with 18 presets 011f151] • Auto reverse WJ SERVICES CUSTOMERS. • Metal tape switch $1 • Clock • Bass, Treble KENWOOD SPEAKERS ... Special Bonus! You too can begin to do your part to help conserve our Earth's ~ Buy any Kenwood car radio {fi'l natural resources right here at the University by simply taking only and receive 50% OFF any 5 7P t the number of napkins you really need. This new awareness can then I ·. Kenwood car speakers. be expanded on a daily basis to include other means of conservation I Pcofesslonal lnsfallation a'allable 0~ both here and at home. REMEMBER, take only what you will actually l :£di~~-er Hi& House need. PLEASE DON'T WASTE. 5347llmestone Road WE DON'T INHERIT THE EARTH FROM OUR ANCESTORS. In The Shops at Limestone Hills 239-9061 WE BORROW IT FROM OUR CH/WREN. OPEN: Monday-Thursday 10.9 Fri . 1CHi, Sal. 10.5, Sun. 12·4 3908 Concord Pike The 1990's is the Decade of the Earth. 1 mile South ot Concord Mall 478-3575 UNIVERSI1Y OF DELAWARE DINING SERVICES ·' OPEN: Moo .·Tues. 10.6 I Weds.-Fri. 10-9, Sat. 10-5, Sun . 12-4 ,. entertainment Apnl 20 1990 • THE REVIEW • 13 Morning Star still spinning

Teaching a vanishing art in Newark

By; Scott Reardon explains she must wait an hour St~ Reporter before class begins to let her weaving students in the door. 'fbe room at the top of the stairs The first floor restaurant, swjms in multi-colored, textured Kandi's Wildflower, is also a small ya(lls, gray-blue and deep brown knick-knack shop, heavily scented pottery, and handcrafted turquoise with potpourri and candles. jewelry. "The front of the building was Three rows of looms and several built before the civil war," she old spinning wheels rest in the explains, sitting down at a small adjacent room. Wicker baskets are table. "Kandi named this building scauered on the floor and seem to the Hanna Chamberlain House, be ~ randomly filled with after a woman who ran a finishing instructional guides and yarn. school for girls in the Deer Park For five years Morning Star, Inn one hundred years ago. lo~ated at 7 Elkton Road across "Sometimes it seems her ghost is froin the Deer Park, has catered to still here," Betsy says. anyone interested in the art of Nancy Parke r, a Newark weaving. resident, is the first to arrive. It is : we have regular customers 30 minutes before class. from New Jersey, Pennsylvania and She shakes off the rain, and says, Maryland, as well as Delaware," 'hello,' then excuses he rself and says Betsy Dillon, Morning Star's hurries upstairs. ow"ner, as she sits at an old wooden Once settled at her loom, Nancy Allison Graves table and watches the rain. confesses "I've always wanted to In the spiders lair, or at least the human equlllvant, Betsy Dillon's Morning Star weaving studio. 1'This is the only store in the area have a loom room! Dillon teaches students to weave with various natural fibers and looms like the one above. thi t offers hard to find fibers," she "I've got a hectic life, looking "Something you can make away." Kristina Kromer and Rebecca sais. "We have only natural yarns after my daughter and what not,'' commercially, it's not worth it," "My husband can't ask for Johnson arrive shortly before 7 here. Dannemann's and K-mart she says. "This is my relaxation." Dillon says. "It's not unique. We've anything,'' she laughs. Soon she too p.m. Both women work at Morris CaW all the synthetic fibers. Soon she creates a methodical got to keep the art alive." falls into steady rhythm with the Library. ."We have alpaca yarn from rhythm with the loom, working the The next person to arrive is loom. "I never wove before," says lamb, mohair from goat, angora foot petals. Debbie McGee, also a Newark Betsy, a graduate of the class of Kristina. "But once you get used to fre1m rabbit and even silk yarn," "I took the class to learn how to resident. She is so anxious to begin 1967, comes upstairs again, the loom, you can pick it up pretty Be.tsy says, noting the spools on the weave," she says. "I've seen a loom that she sits down without explaining that the knitting class quickly. walls that hang from the ceiling worked before, but I never had the removing her coat. downstairs will open the door for "Then again," she says, smiling, bellms. She smiles and says, "So chance to learn myself." "I'm making a blanket for my the rest of the students. She picks "Betsy is a great teacher." many fibers, so liule time ... Nancy is working on, as she baby," she says, measuring the up a handful of fleece, saying it can The five women settle into a Y/alking downstairs to the calls it, a "halfway acceptable bright yellow and blue squares in be woven into yarn on a spinning light chatter, working the looms. re~taurant on the first floor, Betsy scarf." her piece. "This is my chance to get wheel. Outside, the rain is still falling. Mom muses on 'Mutants'

Bi Vivian Ferrlola Movie Review,. the ir ninja skills daily, which Stf! Reporter teaches discipline and teamwork. These heroic green creatures work l-ook! Down in the sewer! It's a as a team and through their efforts tu!ll! It's a train! No! It's Teenage the streets of will M~tant Ninja Turtles! Greener than obviously never be the same. a $Cum covered pond. Able to That is, after trying for two Viewers can relate to their team deiour pizzas in a single gulp. weeks to get tickets. work, especially when Raphael gets you slept through the last lf The theater's are still packing roughed up a bit when he goes out collple of years and you never heard them in during the second week of alone to let off some steam. of :the latest kid-craze, here is your the film's release, and it has been Michaelangelo, Leonardo and chance to catch up on your T.Q., one of the biggest box-office draws Donatello come to his rescue j ust in turile quotient. since that othe r comic hero, time and Leonardo ho lds an a ll ­ :These human-like turtles started "Batman." night vigi l wh ile his friend regains out as normal little pet store turtles. It was evident in the voices and his health . they fell in a sewer that just Th~n gestures of th e kids in the theater My daughter leaned over at this happened to be inhabited by a rat that many of them have seen this point and whi spered in my car, that just happened to know the picture more th an once. For my kids "Mommy, I hope .this hu s a happy scci-ets of Japanese Ninja fighting . it was the first time, but th ey arc ending." While living in the sewer, they hooked on th e television cartoon I smi led and S

456·1131 . N.Y. 10001 , 1-800-777-CAI\AP. searchi ng for new laces to represent lor 111 AIRHITCH r (aa repor1ed In NY Tlmea , Lara AXO w ishes everyone good luck during ANNOUNCEMENT commerciala , fl lma, and catalog work. No Got and Conaumer Reporta.) For detaila c:all: Greek Week. Recant U of D grad. looking for non-smoklng CRUISESHIPS NOW HIRING lor spring, experi ence or training required . Children, AIRHITCH 215-464-1377 }HAC preaents the amaah hit Broadway mala to rent room In TownhOuse . Call Brad Chriatmu and next aummer breeka. Many teen•. adulta, all typal needed. No photoa GREEKSI SUNDAY APRIL 22 GREEK NITE musical: APPLAUSE ! Apri 13,14, 20 and 21 , (W) 475-8322 or (H) 328-411. poaitlona. Cali 1·805-682-7555 EXT. S· 1116 necessary to come ln. 215-568-4340 State COMPULSIVE OVEREATING A PROBLEM? AT THE O.U. All GREEKS WELCOME I 100 Wolf Hal, 1:00PM. $3 Studenta, $4 Non­ licensed and bonded. OA helps I Mondays, 7:30, Williamson Room. atudenta - available at lhe door. Female Roommate needed to share Wanted: 5 AGGRESSIVE Twist away ! Phi Sigma Sigma - Sig Ep Twist­ apartmanr with 2 olhtlra 11190. Call Valerie ENTREPRENEURS whO wantiD earn aerioua Do you know any courteous buadrlvers? We Happy Birthday to Andrea Somorolf, April A-Thon, Saturday - Al)ril 21. 10:00 Harrington Join a Board of Trusteea, Faculty Senate, or 738·5738. $. No territorial linea and unlimited Income want to hear Itt Complete the GOLD 21st, Auguat Calhoun and Stephanie N81blll, Beach DUSC commiiiiHI. Applic:allona available II potential. FIT or PfT. Serious Inquiries only. COMMENT SHEETS available on all UD Ajl(il 23rd , and Jolhanna Delahunty, TODAY Ill 306 Srudenr Center or caN !he DUSC Hodlne N.S. roommate needed for summer and fall . Cel for appt. 737-1569 buses . Students for better buses. Phi Sigma Pi ANGIE FARINAS IS LOOKING FIT FO R lor detail a, 451 -1082. Hurry appUcations due Beautiful apt. on Main St. Cell 738-4584. ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA! ' April24. Veterinary AsslstanVReceptloniat. Friendly, JEANETTTE KERTH , FOR WHAT IT'S JILL • NOW YOU'RE REALLY 2111 IF Great apt. available lor summer sublet. Uain client-oriented atmoaphere. Will train . FTI PT WORTH, IS 21 TOOAY I Love your lltde ala, ANYONE ASKS YOU IF YOU HAD FUN TWO DAYS 'TILL GREEK WEEK Don't miss your chance to have your Bus St. 3 or 4 people. Call738-1708. contact Sandy 738-5000 weekdays. Laurie TUESDAY NIGHT AND WEDNESDAY - BEGINS .. .ALPHA SIG · LE T' S SHOW OUR c omments heard. Complete a GOLD JUST SAY YES . WELL ROOMIE - SPIRIT! COMMENT SHEET today, Available on all Female nonsmoker to ahara lg. room In Exp. nail tech. wanted at Women in Motion. Chi Omega wants to thank all the girls that KLONDIKES PORCH HERE WE COMEt I UD buses. Students for bener buses. townhouse. 5 min . b ike from campua. 737·3652 - daytime hra. came to our open house ! We enjoyed LOVE VA · RACHEL EVERETT: Some bunny misses youl Rest uj) $175/mo. + 1/4 ut. Available Sep!, 1, pla­ meeting all ot youl lor the weekend I BUNNY Auditions lor an all girls a cappella group on caU 737-8086 ASAP. SUmmer poaldon gilt shOp • Rehobeth. Call April 28th - the day ATO takes Greek Gamest April 29 and 30th. Call Debbie (738-8356) if 302-227-8330 Tired of complaining w ith friends about the TO All GREEKS: IrS NOT WHETHER YOU PRE-REGISTER NOW for FALL FORMAL intareared. Male roommate to lhare one bedroom Towne University? Let your voice be heard I Join a WIN OR LOSE. IrS HOW YOU PLAY THE RUSH I Starts April 30 from 5:30 to 8:30 in the Court apt. lor summer session. Call Dan 738· ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT • Faculty Senate, Duac, or Board of Trustees GAME. GOOD LUCK IN GREEK WEEK - Collins Room I look lor details I • ).rnold Air Society, a service organization with 8260. fisheries . $5,000+/monthl Over 8,000 committee. Call the DUSC Hotline, 451- LOVE , AEPHI Hey all Greeks . ATO has Irs brotherhood, · Air Force ROTC, is participating In the 1\Aarch­ openings. Free transportation! Room & 1082, lor details because YOU CAN MAKE A now Its house, and this year, we will. ra ke - of-Dimes Walk-A-Then on April 29, 1990. Looking lor male or lemale roommate in Park Boardl No experience neceasary. Start June DIFFERENCE. AEPHI THANKS PI KAPPA ALPHA FOR A Greek Games. Good luck I Help out by either walking or pledging a Place. own room beginning June or July. 181h. MALE or FEMALE. Send $6.95 to M&l GREAT MIXER FRIDAY NIGHT! J • walker and show you care. II you need a $185.00 per month + 1/3 util. Call David or Research, Box 84008, Seatde, WA 98124 - GOOD LUCK ANGIE • ALPHA SIGMA AXO - do your sluff- Greek Week 1990 1 '"walking form or are Interested In pledging Brad at 368-5263 Sa tisfaction Guaranteed. ALPHA IS BEHIND YOU All THE WAY I START OFF GREEK WEEK AT THE DOWN n· ao meo ne call 451·6828 (AFROTC UNDER. SUNDAY APRIL 22ND. GREEK LAURA - We needed 4/ 15. Maybe so ~e d ay .,,Detachment) . Female roommate wanted to ahara 2 TV COMMERCIALS - No age limit, lor Don't just be a Brother, Be a Man. Alpha Phi NITE AT THE D.U. we'll be able to paint the town red ...ag ain l bedroom Park Placa apt. with 2 others. application, casti ng Info, your area (404) 861 · Omega: A Standard of Manhood you can be Love, R. --AVAILABLE Available summer and or lchool year 1990- 6888 E~T T1136 proud ol. AXO · Lars show them what we're made of t : 91 . $185 mo.i+utllities. Call and leave TOM - Thinki ng of you makes me smi le. ::... message 292-2652. Babysiuera wanted weekdays lOam to ,1pm. What does ATO have that all other Greeks AUDRA and MICHELE: It's been a long week Happy two months. Love. Your Baby. ' u -. Work with laat - pac~d carpentry crew in Will exchange babyailling time lor tanning. don't have- SPIRIT! (and the spirit award.) and I know I haven't been around a lot. rm Newark. Must be reliable, have dependable 2 females lor 2 bedroom Towne Court. Call: Women in Motion 737-3652 glad things are going right for you both. ALPHA PHI OMEGA - Everythi ng you could • ·' tranapor1ation, able to follow Instructions and June/July. 454-n48 Tell us your bus atoriea , Ideas; compliments, Here's to Happy Days • DRINKS ON MEl want in a fraternity and MORE . • safety policies. Call Bonnie or Dena at 573-. 1 complaints. Complete a GOLD COMMENT LOVE VA - RACHEL 2500. PERSONALS OCEAN CITY MARYLAND SUMMER SHEET today. Available on all UD busea. Ann Marie Root - you did an awesome job RENTALS- spacious, anractive, two bedroom Studenta for better buses. Only the latex condoms are effective against with the date party I - love yo ur sisters 1 TUTOR : Math/Statistics classes. Call Scoll. townhomea in North Ocean City. Nicely Hey Doctor Skilla: II you throw up again, 368-7585 bel. 9PI\A STD'a (sexually transmitted disease). The furnished, washer, dryer, dishwasher, central they're going to atltch your l inger to your II anyone see1 a new yellow Panasonic natural lambskin condoms are not, although Stacey Kam - you'll be great in looking Fit on AIC. Sleeps six. Write: P.O. Box 622 , Ocean nose II OJ'S - No Wave Productions. Parties . Cruiser Bi ke with a black seat and they are effecti ve lor contraceptive use. Sex Sunday! We're behind you all the way, The City, Maryland 21842. Cell301 -289-6626. Handlebars, please call 738-8628 with Education Task Force Alpha Phi Sisters. ' Dances, Clubs, all Formals. Call Bob (302) BALLOONS, BALLOONS, BALLOONS, FOR 733-0614 inlormatl on . REWARDIII Wanted - Male or females to share nicely ALL OCCASIONS: blrthdayi , get wells, ATO wants to thank Alpha Ph i, AZD, Ph i Psi, Have you heard? live lrom CSB ... Ir s Sunday furn ished townhouse for summer. 456-0866 congratulations, anniversaries, or just a Holly - Hope to see you at the retreat tonight! Alpha El)silon Pi, and Phi Sig for a great toga Night I • WORD PROCESSING- Accurate, affordable , fri endly hello. College Pro Balloon• is located available short notice. $2.00/page. 733·0629. YSS mixer. Male roommate wanted Papermlll OWN in Room 301 Student Center. Call 451 -2649 HEY ALPHA PHIS : Rest up th is weekend ROOM $190 mo . Call Brian 454-9065 or 292-8611 . Delivery Ia free. • Avoid apartment wailing lists. 2 bedroom per Good luck to Sigma Kappa's Maria Gingrich . GREAT JOB AT REGIONALSI University of because Greek Week is com ing II ' ' Foxcroft Apt. wirh loft. Sublet for summer She's got th e Best Body on. the beach. Delaware' s Equestrian Team was SUMMER APT. 2·bdrm., AC, pool, patio-view, Hey ALPHA SfG • Thank you lor your help represented at regionals by Lisa Ziropoulos SHERI KURMAN · CONGRATULATIONS on ' months. Possible lease takeover in fall. Call Wednesday nighl, especially Amy, Mandy, .... 731·7429. cable, FURNISHED, negotiable, 292·2084 Cast and Crew of APPLAUSE - you guys are 4th, Danielle Rapp 4th, Katie Pallendorl 5th, w inning the WORLD TWIRLING Jenn, Lisa, Chrissy, and Marcia. You girls are the greatest - I love you alii "Where's the and Jill Kolling 5th and 2nd. GOOD LUCK at CHAMPIONSHIPS. SHAWN, KELLI, SLIM, terrific. The Brothers of ATO (especially Rich) Dewey beach, 4 blocka to beach, 3br, 2 bath , Sublet: Room on Madison Dr. Perfect for coconut?" Love, Margo (Emily) zones Jill I STEVE South Ave. Seasonal at $8300. Responsible summer session . 169 + 113 uti. Call 453-9076 The GYN Department at Student Health ATO- the LEADER, not a follower. Welcome to the theatre! Don't miss HTAC's CHERI - GREAT JOB in HOLLAND and llub , groupa only. call Jack lingo, Inc. Realtor, Service oilers pregnancy testing with options, 227-3883. 3 rooms available 6/1 in townhouse. $110, APPLAUSE! · U. CHAWN 160, 260 + 1/4 utilities. Washer, dryer, AIC. routine gynecological care, and TCBY - This College's Best Yet... SIGMA 10 minutes to UD. Call 368-4257. contraception. Call 451 -8035, Monday - KAPPA in Greek Games 1990. COLLEEN McCLOSKEY Happy 19th Come to CSB on Sunday April 29th from 7- 1 •WORDPROCESSING by C . Lynne Friday lor appointment. Visits are covered by birthday! Hope it Is great. love, Lori , Janine, 12pm for fun and creative games. Publicati ons 368-2480 Student Health Service Fee. HELPI Need a nonsmoking male roommate For technical, creative, academic w riting : Amy for next year? Call Josh at 451 -1395 or 456 - CONFIDENTIALITY ASSURED. ~ NEED SOMEONE ON SHORT NOTICE GETTING YOUR IDEAS ON PAPER. 3:30- Good Luck Sue Ender: Ch i Omega's Bes t WHO IS FAST AND CHEAP? WPIIaser 0942. 4:30 p.m ., Mon., April23, 019 Memorial Hall. MELISSA SCHMIDT - Thanks lor being the Beautiful Body on the Beach. Experienced OJ - GOOD VIBRATIONS GREATEST BIG in Phi Sigma Pi. love , ~ printed. Papers typed. leave message Available for Parties and Semllormals. Good ... ·anytime for Karen - 738-2279 Male nonsmoker needed lor Papermill, own Ch i Omega - dueless no more, Greek Games Janina Hot Info. and Cool T-shi rts . Maci nto sh room. Start 511. $163.34/month + 1/3 uti l. pricesll Excellent references II Call Paul Kutch '901 Information Table, today, in fron t ol th e 834-0796 PRESTO RUSH ticket lor April 24th. Center 737-6014 B . SMITH, Happiest of Birthdays to my Student Center. floor seat. Cell Gall. 73t·3441 . For some sweet aeduction, come see HTAC 's favorite CRAZY CHI-0. I love you l l -COSTA Apartment above Sbarro' s lor sublet ATO has won the spirit award two years in a APPLAUSE I DELAWARE DIRECT Is backl For the bes t beginning June 1, 19go, Contact Amy or row. This year, it will be threat Chi Omega - rest up this weekend and get CO's at the LOWEST costs, call 456·0331 · LOST AND FOUND Alyson at738·5760 HEADING FOR THIS SUMMER? ready for Greek Games next weeki and ask lor Rob or Steve . MODELS/ACTORS DuPont Models, Inc . is Jet there anytime lor $160 or less, w ith LOST: Gold Alpha Phi Sisterhood pin with Roommate needed lor summer sublet in • Initials A. W. on back. II found please call opera house apartmPnts. Fully furnishediACi ' ' 738-8752. cable. Contact Jen, 366-1549.

- LOST: BLUE AND WHITE GYM BAG . Wanted 1 female undergrad to share Main St. • " CONTAINED CLOTHES, SNEAKERS, FilA apt. II interested ca11456 -1319 HEADSET AND GLASSES. IF FOUND, CALL SANDY AT 451 -8054 DAY, 731-0712 EVE . WANTED " SUBSTANTIAL REWARD.

Lost: Black and white 8 month old female cat. Now hiring summer guards and Instructors at Lost 4/10 University Area. Reward . Please the western YMCA. Indoor/outdoor pools, FIT Packaged right. _ caJI456-1046 or 451-8480 and Pi T, good pay, and Y membership included. Call 453-1482.

FOR SALE VET ASSISTANT NEEDED FOR HORSE VET. Weekends now, full time summer. Must ' Attractive 2 bedroom townhome. Central air, have horse experience, be good with people washer and dryer, patio, community pool. Ten and interested in vet. medicine. Call 6-to PM Pricea rigfit. minutes from campus. $62,000. 368·6406 301 -398-0835

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EK NrTE MEl Basketball Ep Twist­ arrington ;.. Hens batter programs FIT FOR ~ unveil '91 WEEK Rams, 15-10 OW OUR recruits I Rest up By Josh Putterman the ball over the plate." Sports Editor He retired the first three batters By Mitchell Powltz FORMAL he faced in the th ird. And after Assistant Sports Editor :30 in the WEST CHESTER, Pa. - being lifted in favor of junior , Actress Shirley MacLaine would Daryl Hendricks to start the ninth tharhood, In the card game that is NCAA will. taka · . ·have been proud of the Delaware inning, Conelias (3-1) departed Division I basketball, Delaware baseball team's effort Wednesday with a 15- 10 lead, yielding six hits, men's Head Coach Steve afternoon against West Chester four runs and only one walk while 990 Steinwedel has drawn a jack and University (17-11-1 overall). striking out one bauer. so~eday king, while women's Head Coach The Hens (18-5, 8-0 in the East "Things start to happen to d ... againl Joyce Perry took a pair of queens Coast Conference, not including pitchers that have not happened ryesterday's game) used a pair of previously," said Hens' Head and might have an ace-in-the-hole. me smile. The Delaware men's basketball y. reincarnations in beating the Coach Bob Ha nnah of how team announced the signing of two Golden Rams 15-10. Conelias' period of ineffectiveness •"' r you cou ld recruits, Delaware All-Stater Winning pitcher Mike Conelias is similar to a hitter's slump. "You Robbie Johnson, a 6-foot-5 hurled six innings of relief in his start guiding the ball instead of hn Sch aso~e job swingman, and Pennsylvania All­ best outing since the season opener doing what you can do best. Team captain Dave Birch slides safely Into second base with a seventh-Inning double during the ers State pick Brad Bell, a 6-1 point for the team's first reawakening. "I fully expected Mike to come Hens' win over West Chester. Delaware hosts Lehigh In a doubleheader tomorrow at noon. guard. king Fit on And Delaware's nine-run fifth out of it at some point. But our way, The The women's team announced inning erased an 8-3 West Chester season is so short you can't be sure freshman right fielder/first Keister, a sophomore center RBis for the season, led by Heath the signing of Mare! Van Zanten, a ,. lead for spiritual assist No. 2. of when it's going to happen. baseman Brian Lesher, the Hens' fielder, was batting .364 with 20 Chasanov's 21. Irs Sunday 6-1 center, Marisa Shackelford, a 6- Conelias, a junior left-bander, "You just hope it's soon enough leading hitter (.413 after walks through Wednesday. He has The junior right fielder, who sat 0 0 forward and Sasha Gaffney, a 5-5 came into the game for starter Dan to make. a contribution," Hannah Wednesday's game), to break an started every game. out the West Chester game with a weekend point guard. ' Williams in a sticky situation - said. infamous string of striking out in Flem ing also yielded a two-run back injury, also tops the club in Johnson, a jack of many with the Golden Rams up 5-2, The fifth inning lasted long six consecutive plate appearances. homer to Delaware's No. 9 hitter, home runs with four and stolen basketball skills, earned four years TIONS on , -none out in the third inning and enough for Delaware to send 15 Junior designated hiller Brian junior catcher Scott Airey, his first bases with 14 . He is tied with WIRLING of varsity letters at Wilmington LLI, SLIM, " : , runners at first and third bases. batters to the plate. Fleury had two RBis on a single in collegia te play, in the third second baseman Mike Gomez in High School while averaging 17.2 "My objective is to just go in Lead-off hitte r Tripp Keister and a bases-loaded walk. inning that temporarily tied the this category. points, 10.2 rebounds and 5.4 . · , • and throw strikes," said Conelias, started the frame with a single and "We knew we were going to get game at two. "Every day it's a different D and llub assists per game. Besides who had walked 23 batters in his continued it with a two-RBI-single to this pitcher, it was just a matter For the -game, the Hens ripped person on this team," said Keister Delaware, he was recruited by . . first 17 innings this season. on his second turn with only one of time," said Keister of the West 16 hits and raised the team batting of the balanced attack. 9th from 7- Loyola (Md.), Northeastern and "I've been struggling lately, and out. Chester starter, Shawn Fleming, average to .322 for the first 23 "That's why we're a good team. Robert Morris. I haven't been in the [strike] zone Other highlights from the inning who was charged with the first games. We're not just a bunch of ega's Bast "Robbie's strength is that he is ' too much. So I just tried to throw were two singles and one RBI for seven runs. Nine batters have more than 10 individuals." very versatile," said Delaware Assistant Coach Dennis Felton in a press release this week. "He can ..:·Delyra finds himself in right place again play inside or outside and has a great sense of team play." Conference Championship. lacrosse career like that. It was my Bell, who leads a team like a Senior goalie "He was someone you felt first test to grow up." king on the court, hails from puts past behind, comfortable playing in front of," DeLyra said he learned a lot Plymouth Meeting, Pa., where he said Assistant Coach Charlie about himself in the time away. led Plymouth-White marsh High ·regains old form Chatterton, who was a senior The history major concentrated on School to a 26-4 record. He defenseman on the 1986 team. his studies instead of the next averaged 15.7 points, eight assists By David Blenckstone But the kid with all the potential opponent. and seven rebounds per game. Sports Editor - Shillinglaw said he has the He played club lacrosse and "Brad Bell is a player who has quickest hands he's been involved came back last season like "a man all the tools to play point guard," On the lacrosse field, Gerard with - soon found himself in on a mission." Felton said. "He has everything we deLyra seems always to be in the trouble. "I didn't know if the players and look for in a point guard - good right place at the right time. He had been kicked out of the coaches would accept me," he said. vision, good passing skills and A senior goalie, deLyra has dorm in the fall and was placed on But they welcomed him back good leadership." started eight of the Hens' 10 games probation. Any more problems and with open arms. After all, he was The Hens return everyone from this spring and has recorded 85 deLyra would be suspended from still an exceptional goalie, and this this season's 16- 13 team, except saves. the university. time he was in shape after losing point guard Renard Johnson and He has 282 career sa vcs at The follo win g year, he was 35 pounds. forward Ricky Long, who will be Delaware and a .556 s ave involvcu in a fight. Thm was it, DcLyra is now the anchor of the lost to graduation. The Hens also percentage. dcLyra was suspended. But he sa id He ns' defense. have some wild cards if they need Last season, he saved the day that anyone would have reacted th e "His maturity level is the best them, as they have left two against Towson State with several way he did in hi s situa ti on. o n th e team," Shillinglaw said . scholarships unused. point-blank stops in a 10-9 win. Shillingla w sa id : "At the time he "He's got tremendous poise in th e The women's team, East Coast Saturday, he recorded 18 saves should ha ve kn own be tte r. He goal." Conference champions two years in a 9-8 victory at C.W. Post. should have walked away." "He keeps pushing himself. The running, will welcome the addition But off the field, deLyra seems But he didn't, and deLyra players and coaches apprecia te of Van Zaten and Schackelford to to have been in the wrong place at John mi ssed the next three semesters. that," Chatterton said. their winning hand at forward and the wrong time all too often. Senior goalie Gerard deLyra has overcome many obstacles in He came back in 19S8 out of DeLyra seems now to realize center, respectively. His five-year career at Delaware his career at Delaware and Is now the anchor of the defense. s hape atid mi ssed the team's what got him into trouble before. The Hens will lose forwards ~as been a maze of frustration and running tim e trials by two seconds. "They were mistakes," he said. Debbie Eaves, Robin Stoffel and trouble, but deLyra seems to have He also had an experienced goalie him, but Gerard was making the He was cut from the team. "I would chalk it up to immaturity. Daphne Joy and center Sharon found his way through. in front of him. save," Shillinglaw said. "He could have said, 'The heck I had an incredible opportunity and Wisler 10 graduation. "He's not exactly an angel, but But deLyra came out the "Randy was actually getting with this' and transferred," I almost blew it. " Van Zaten might succeed the he has matured more in four years following January and made an mad. If you know Randy's Chatterton said. "To this day, I still support scoring throne Eaves left behind. A than anyone I have had," said immediate impression. personality, he was like, 'Nobody But deLyra was determined to Gerard," Shillinglaw said. "The senior at Mount Vernon High Hens' Head Coach Bob Shillinglaw recalled a time stops my shot.'" play lacrosse. "I came back and Dean of Studentc; and I concurred. School in Alexandria, Va., she Shillinglaw. when deLyra completely frustrated DeLyra quickly earned the knew I did a lot wrong," he said. He had lG suffer the tallied I ,469 career points and 66ct As a freshman from Wantagh, former All-American and all-time respect of the upperclassmen as he "It was a mistake. I had a lot to consequences." rebounds. N.Y., in 1985, deLyra missed fall Delaware leading scorer Randy started eight games as a freshman, prove to myself. And because of that, deLyra is "Mere1 is a strong inside player practice and crucial playing time Powers during practice. recording 70 saves on a team that "My parents were 100 percent once again in the right spot at the ' because of an appendix operation. "He was trying to blow it by went 10-6 and won the East Coast behind me. I didn't want to end my right time, on the lacrosse field. see HENS page 16 Loyola beats women in Iaugher

By Mitchell Powltz stole the Hens' punchline 14 times. on a roll," Holder said. "The more they ' Assistant Sports Editor "Their goalie is outstanding, but we went up with goals, the more we felt like knew she was outstanding," Wolffe said. we couldn't do anything right." BALTIMORE - It might have been a "All we had to do was move her, but we As the game was turning into a Iaugher, little more entertaining Tuesday for didn't move her. We got intimidated Holder gave her team a plan at halftime. "If Delaware's women lacrosse team if Larry, instead." we could clean it up, we could get back into Moe and Shemp had showed up to Loyola Lady Greyhounds' Head Coach Diane it. College's Curley Field. Instead the Hens (5- Aikens praised her defense which left the "But we didn't." 6 overall) stooged their way through a 13-3 Hens looking silly. Wolffe scored her goal, then seven ' loss to the No. 2-ranked Lady Greyhounds "My 'D' is tough, really tough probably Loyola goals went unanswered until (12-0). the toughest it has ever been," she said. "I sophomore Cathy Alderman scored "I wish we had played better," said did a whole new defense this year, every unassisted with 3:05 10 go in the game. Delaware Head Coach MaryBeth Holder. day that passes by they just get better and "I think we can play a lot beuer than we • "Loyola is a very, very good team, but we better at it." did," Alderman said. • did not play well. They're definitely better Besides stealing the show defensively, "We need to work together, both than we are, but I thought we could have Loyola engaged in some offensive offensively and defensively," she said. "As given them a game• .and we didn't." escapades as senior Karen Ravn tallied two an attack player, I would go down on Hens' senior co-captain Barb Wolffe, goals and two assists, sophomore Andrea defense and I think sometimes I was more who scored a minute and a half into the Elkins scored three goals with an assist and in the way than I was helping." second half and brought the game to 6-2, senior co-captain Sharon Jones netted two Aikens found little fault with the Lady was also dissatisfied with the team's play. goals and an assist. Greyhound's play as they used the thrashing "It was a nightmare," Wolffe said lightly. The Hens didn't find life in the first half as a warm-up for top-ranked Harvard "We went out flat, stayed flat, our funny, as the Lady Greyhounds held them University, who they hosted yesterday. confidence leVf~ l went down, and as the scoreless for the first 24:09, until "I was pleased overall with my team," • - game went on it got worse and worse." sophomore Joanne Dobson scored sending Aikens said. "Even though we were 11-0 Delaware into halftime down 6- 1. John Loyola was led by a strong defense, Loyola College goalkeeper Sue Heether falls to stop a Delaware shot anchored by senior goalie Sue Heether, who "Once a tellm gets momentum, they get see, LOYOLA page 16 t Tuesday as the balls goes wide. The Lady Greyhounds won 13-3. t 1 16 • THE REVIEW • April 20, 1990 Freshman duo Golfers continue !{>lays major role ECC domination By Michael P. Williams Staff Reporter if '-for, softball team ... It was just another walk in the • grass for the Delaware golf team as By Jay Cooke had two hits and batted in a run, and it routed Towson State University Assistant News Edrtor Rittenhouse had a sacrifice fly RBI Wednesday at Newark Country and hit the ball hard all day. Club. Although Michelle Rittenhouse "I've always had a team where Junior Chris Miller led all : and Missy Miller knew of each the best nine play," said Ferguson. players for the Hens (385) against 1 "' i\her last spring when both played "If [the best player] is a freshman, Towson (436) with a 74, and junior 1 high school softball in southern so be iL" Freshmen Missy Miller (left) and Michelle Rittenhouse, both Pete Lovenguth shot a 76 to help : New Jersey, they never had the Miller and Rittenhouse both from New Jersey, play third base and left field, respectively. Delaware boost their record to 10-3 ~ chance to compare their skills on the casually downplay their roles on the overall and 5-0 in the East Coast ; diamond. team, saying the team-oriented On the field, Miller plays third baseman Kristen Buch. Buch, Conference. ~ "I had heard of her, I knew who atmosphere makes them feel base while Rittenhouse roams left however, became ill early in the Senior Ivan Seele and junior Bill : she was," Rittenhouse said. accepted. · field. During the doubleheader season and Miller got her shot. Clarke each shot 78 and sophomore , "We never really played directly ''I'm very comfortable," said against the Quakers, both played Miller has the starting edge right Duke Bowen shot a 79. ~aga inst each other, except in the Rittenhouse, who is from Voorhees, flawless defense, handling all now, Ferguson said, because she's The team's success is nothing : · states," Miller said. "It would have NJ. "When I first came out for the opponunities with a confident flair. hitting the ball solidly. new for Head Coach Scolly Leslie D. Barbaro been neat if we knew each other." team, I felt I would be Although both currently start for As for the added pressures of Duncan, who is in his 27th year of Sophomore Duke Bowden _ As graduation rolled around and uncomfortable. But [the the team, Miller and Rittenhouse being first-year starters, Miller and coaching golf at Delaware. eyes a putt Wednesday as the : they fmalized college plans, Miller upperclassmen] don't exclude you at traveled different paths to crack the Rittenhouse said the team's "I've never had a losing season, " Hens beat Towson State by 51 ~and Rittenhouse were determined to all." starting lineup. enthusiasm and energy help said the Hens' coach, whose teams strokes. continue playing the sport they "It's not a problem starting," Rittenhouse was originally alleviate extra worries. have won eight ECC conference loved. Miller added. "The team accepts recruited by Ferguson to play They also give credit to first-year titles since 1969. "We didn't play badly, but the A

• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• The regular Spring meeting of the Uni­ WEEKEND versity Faculty is scheduled for 4:00p.m. on Monday, April 23, 1990 in 130 Smith SPA FiLMS Hall. The Agenda will include: •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1. Memorial tributes for FRI., APRIL ZO Professor Emeritus Albert Branca ' to be presented by Professor Thomas Scott "A 111 Absolute~ brillilll satire, aremmble film~ Gary Fr1nklin·KABC· TV Professor Anita Crowley to be presented by Professor George Miller • 7 pm, 9:30 pm & Midnight

Professor Emeritus George H. Henry • 140 SMITH • NEW 'MJRLD PICTURES OlltJUtOlD'CMI IIUIIQGIIMD to be presented by Professor Frank B. Murray • $1 w/U of D I.D. Professor Emeritus Lewis Kelsey to be presented by Professor Emeritus Dale F. Bray SAT., APRIL Zl "A MAGICAL AND 2. Remarks by Dr. Richard Murray, Acting MOVING RIDE:' Provost FIELDOF DRFAMS KEVIN COSTNER 3. Report on Project Vision from the Faculty • 7 pm, 9:30pm & Midnight FIEIIDOF Review Panel, Dr. Frank B. Dilley, Chairperson • 140 SMITH , ...... ' DREAMS • $2 w/U of D I. D. AlJNlVERSAL RElEASE Cltlt Utrii¥UULaT'TmliQ.IJIIC. S~ch other items as may come before the Faculty.

(Funded by the Comprehensive Student Fee) April 20, 1990 • THE REVIEW •; "t7

Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson GARFIELD® by Jim Davis

£:.1/E~'I 1\ME l"IE ~llT <.IV,R­ r..c.~t.R, l''IE. R€G~O II' 1 ~1 WAHr 10 I..Ef\121-\ 1H.III.­ WCR~ .' I ~11!Mlff m lE~R~ A8:lllT WI~N\t.lG r..~O lOSit-16.' liE.<.~, 1 ~1 E'i£~ W~NT 10 COMPETE.' 'rU~M s WI!OOG ~lin{ Jll'ST \\~'1\~G ruN 8'1 '(c;JIIS£lt, 1\U\.\~'

ay , is THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON see the

7iirow tiJwn that str"'o~ boJC or I! II blow ; your"'heqd off! ..Wetl , :r.·a wing you for sure! .. ~y, mo.ybe 1:11 jUSt' climb f).p there: a.nd. ':jive you a :JoodPut'ch ruh:

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"Oh my God, Bernie! You're wearing my nylon?" "Now Betty Sue, we know you're upset ... breaking Murray is caught desecrating Semi-desperadoes up with a boyfriend Is always hard. But as they say, the secret appliance burial grounds. there are more protozoa In the lower Intestine." TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE .,

ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED II 1 Whey HA AM .F AK I R •s M UII 6 Centers AG E E R E NE .T ONO 10 Settles ., TH E S T R E E T S .A TTY 14 Singer O'Day SA LA AM .p OT HOS BY GARRY TRUDEAU 15 Before long •T 16 Proper BE LO w• co L •• 17 Bios ••GA ••IN .R E F .D UR ANT 18 Consent (to) AB N E R. A F T E R. ROE 20 Oklahoma city BE T[W E E NT HE DE V I L 21 Incubates 23 Studio stand OL E. LA TH E. SN A R L 24 Retreats R E GR E T .E MS .T E E S 26 Pacific coast RO AG ENA 28 Try hard ••S L AV .Ar• RR •o L D EST 30 Letter TO T E OA ST L I N E 31 Take for- - •c s . 32 Fondling I S E R .A ss E T .E S T A , 36 Born: Fr. R E OS •T ES T y EA R •o f 37 Arrests: . slang .~ 38 Chinese VIP 34 Cartoonist • 39 Delineates 3 Competitions 4 Shoshonean Thomas :-: 42 Backslide 35 " Anything ...., .. 44 Takes on 5 Huge 6 Observes Lent 37 Missile: : 45 Warehouses slang , 46 Is on hand 7 Blame 8 Corn unit 40 Cheese • 49 Religious 41 Wash cycle : headdress 9 Lgth. units 50 Requisites 10 Spreads out 42 Phi and psi " 51 Parliament 11 Spring 43 Copy ~ 52 T of AT&T 12 Scoffs 45 Machine toot 55 Artisan 13 Small fish 46 - Dvorak : 58 Pussyfoot 19 Grain goddess 47 Pithy l around 22 Displeasure 48 Ride ~ 60 Greek peak 25 Assistance 49 Furry beasts. 61 Listen 26 Erie and 51 Swarthy ' 62 Coteries Lauderdale 53 Boundary 63 --do-well 27 Overwhelms 54 Smaller 64 The BPOE 28 Dune makings amount 65 Overstuffs 29 Tamarisk or 56 Pronoun < banyan 57 Inadequate :~ DOWN 30 Vessels pre!. • 59 By means o( 1 Spanish room 32 Ice pieces 2 Camelot lady 33 Significant 18 • THE REVIEW • April 20, 1990 I I

CLASSIC 1990

ALL SIGN-INS ARE FROM 6:15 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. DON'T FORGET YOUR STUDENT ID CARD OR YOUR SIGNATURE WON'T COUNT!

Sat. 4/21/90: TENNIS (1st match) 10:00 am Smyth Courts BOMBARDMENT - 5:00 pm CSB **** Fraternities Only ****

Sun. 4/22/90: CLEAN AND GREEN - 10:00 am LOOKING FIT - 1:00 pm Harrington Beach **** Greek Night at the Down Under ****

Mon. 4/23/90: WRESTLING-7:00pm CSB *(sign in for Fraternities) NAME THAT TUNE-7:00pm Student Center *(sign in for Sororities)

Tue. 4/24/90: ARM WRESTLING-7:00pm CSB

Wed. 4/25/90: SWIMMING-7:00pm CSB Pool

Thu. 4/26/90: GREEK GOD/GODDESS-6:30pm CSB *(sign-in starts at 6:00 pm)

Fri. 4/27/90: AIR BAND- 7:00 pm CSB

Sat. 4/28/90: GREEK GAMES - 9:00 am Harri'ngton Beach

LET'S GET TOGETHER AND FEEL ALRIGHT!