Jones Names -New V .P

Jones Names -New V .P

A five star Today's weather: All-Amerkan NON PROFIT ORG Sunny and newspaper US POSTAGE pleasant, PAID high in the Newark Del upper 7~ - Perm•t No 26 Vol. 113 No. 40 Student Center, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716 Tuesday, October 6, 1987 Jones names -new V .P. by Dave Urbanski operations at Management Informa~ frame begun in 1984 would not be com­ tion Services, the duty presently handl­ pleted on time. Executive Editor ed by Dr. L. Leon Campbell, provost "President Jones has an outside con­ President Russel C. Jones named and vice president for academic sultant looking at the way things are former Boston University colleague affairs. going at MIS," Hollowell said. "We David Hollowell as senior vice presi­ Campbell- who is in New York Ci­ want to see if the [conversion] can be dent for administration at the Univer­ ty until Thursday- and MIS Director completed within the time frame." sity of Delaware Monday, creating John Marrazzo were both unavailable Hollowell said he and Jones discuss­ another high-level position and filling for comment. ed the move from BU "after his ap­ "a hole in the organization," Jones Hollowell said "several vice pointment" in January, and "serious said. · presidents" told him they "weren't get­ discussions" began in July. Hollowell Hollowell, 40, who is BU's vice presi­ ting enough administrative support has visited the university four times dent for administration, will begin his from MIS" and were also concerned and will visit again later this month for duties Jan. 1 and said he will im- · the five-year projected conversion Jones' inaug_~ration ceremony. mediately begin overseeing most of the from the Burroughs to the IBM Main- continued to page 14 David Hollowell City police imp~eme t special unit Main Street 'main beat' for eight-man sq_uad . by Ted Spiker Street anaits surroun~ng side streets than anythmg else Staff Reporter since he became the chief of An eight-member Newark police in late August. Police "tactical" unit began He said most complaints patrolling Main Street Thurs- arise from vulgar language day night- both in patrol cars and rowdy behavior on weekends, although the pro­ blems are not limited to those nights. He cited the shooting near the Stone Balloon on SPECIAL TO THE REVI Fox Tuesday, Sept. 14 as an Hard to swallow - Laura Domnick sheds some tears after Delaware's field hOckey squad example. lost 2-1 to the 12th-ranked Maryland Terrapins Thursday. The department "is not go­ ing to tolerate" the problems on Main Street, such as disorderly conduct and Abortioii protest staged urinating on public grounds, he said. Rather than waiting for peo­ at Christiana Hospital ,ple to contact police, he ex­ "plained, the unit provides the by Kathleen Clark The pro-choice university you don't feellike having them advantage of responding to Staff Reporter group, Women Working for around!" problems as they arise. Change (WWC), counter­ According to · CAC Board The foot patrol, for example, There were cries of opposi­ protested with 17 participants. President Bruce Howes, the tion from pro-life and pro­ will enable face-to-face in­ The protest Saturday was purpose of the protest was "to teraction with the people on choice groups during a heated non-violent with only verbal embarrass the medical center anti-abortion protest in front of Main Street, he said. hostilities exchanged between so they will change their policy Norm .Gershman, of Ger­ Christiana Hospital Saturday groups. on abortion." morning. shman's clothing store at 168 WWC members chanted, The Christiana Hospital is E. Main St., said that the The rally attracted over 300 "Women have the right to not legally obligated by the pro-lifers representing the police presence will deter choose. It's all right. We will state to perform abortions, crime and make the streets Third Annual Pastor's Protest not lose." however, they choose to do so more secure, adding that Against Abortion, sponsored "Abortion is murder!" an on their own accord, Howes by the local chapter of the whenever police are visible, it angry pro-lifer shouted at the said. is an advantage. Christian Action Council pro-choice group. ''You can't <CAC). just kill people just because continued to page 7 continued to page 4 Page 2 • The Review • October 6, 1981 ________________.._ .... .._...., ..... _.. __ .._.__ .............. __________ ..__..,;,;, Nation/World News Analysis Chinese students still fighting for freedom by Mike Freeman quickly as it began. The cam­ The Chinese government students including, for the fll"St possible. Editor in Chief paign against "bourgeois has talked of reform for some -time, graduate students. "It's easy to scare these liberalism," as it was called time now. But the iron fist • Hundreds of thousands of kids," said a Western political Ten months ago there was by the Communist Party, is of­ behind the rhetoric showed fighting in the streets of China. the country's nearly 2 million expert. "They are completely Never before in the coun­ fically over. that the leaders are not truly students were sent to labor at the mercy of the party in try's history had such a Western analysts, though, ready for any sort of political camps in rural and remote their job assignments. They number of student demonstra­ say the issues raised during revision. parts of China this past sum­ can wind up in some the -demonstrations are far "There is still a debate mer "to learn through living Mongolian wasteland." tions against the Communist· from resolved. And neither government rolled through the about socialism and and seeing." This requirement cities with such violence and party officials or students capitalism and which way we will be applied for the first two enthusiasm. themselves are admitting should go," explained China's years of college. anything was solved. Foreign Affairs Director Yu • Mandatory military train­ But while these leaders ex­ There were defiant marches ercise political muscle, through the streets. Television "The demonstrations have Fuzeng. "These students must ing has been reintroduced for been solved, but the students' think of the whole country - first-year students. China's students know that it footage from the country is only a matter of time before showed students raising clin­ mistaken ideas are not solv­ not only of themselves." • Graduates are now re­ ed," said a spokesman from And in a move to solidify quired to work for one year in the traditional leaders leave ched fists and shouting for the government, making way more freedom and China's Education Commis­ their beliefs, the government factories before being allowed sion in a recent interview. outlined several new policies to continue their education in for a younger, more liberal democracy. leadership. And for every crowd of "They must learn that China soon after the demonstrations graduate school or study mu<it have the socialist system to "open students' eyes to the abroad. students there was also a and the leadership of the Com­ realities of China," said gathering of IJ('lice. Confronta­ The showing by the students tion seemed inevitable - and munist Party." another education official in has toughened resistance by "In this society we must be soon became commonplace­ Said one student: "Look at an interview with The Boston the more traditional high­ prudent, but that doesn't mean during the brief fight for more Spartacm. He led a revolt in a Globe. ranking leaders of China. we don't have passion for democracy. slave society. His revolt failed. Those "realities" include: These leaders, aging and sure freedom and democracy,'' But now the streets are But his spirit was an inspira­ • Mandatory political educa­ to soon exit their posts, are try­ said a student. "If left free, quiet, the "revolt" ending as tion to others. Maybe we are tion classes have been rein­ ing to insure China's com­ people will naturally choose like that." troduced for all college munist ways in any manner democracy." 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ONSALE $389 • ---------------------------------------------·October 6, 1987 • The Review • Page 3 Coast Day Air pollution cited as possible dolphin killer by Michael Andres effect," said Schoelkopf. breath for 3 to 5 minutes, which is sufficient time to burn News Features Editor The lesions were not respon­ sible for the dolphins' deaths, membrane in the lung and A possible cause of death of he explained. · cause fluid build-up, he said. the more than 400 dolphins "The most common thing "This has not been confirm­ which washed up on some we saw and what was listed as ed," stressed Schoelkopf, "it's East Coast beaches this sum­ the cause of death of the something we've been working mer was toxins which they animals was the pneumonia on trying, to get documented, were breathing, said Bob we saw in the lungs," he said. but right now it's the closest Schoelkopf, founding director "All the lungs were bright we can come to what initiated of the New Jersey Marine red," he said, adding, "when the viral infections. Mammal Stranding Center. we opened them up they all "I'm not saying pollution is had fluid in them." a problem, but I think it's very see related story p.l3 He explained these findings unrealistic to say it isn't a pro­ caused researchers to wonder blem without testing for it." Only about 10 percent of if ''[the dolphins] came in con­ Schoelkopf said he hopes the animals that die wash up on tact with something in the air meteorological and oceanic the beaches, said Schoelkopf in that burned their lungs." conditions combined with the his Sunday lecture at Coast This year, New Jersey had waste to create a one-time­ Day.

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