Gridders Triumph, Make Playoffs ... P. 20

Gridders Triumph, Make Playoffs ... P. 20

Gridders triumph, make playoffs ... p. 20 University of Delaware. Newark, DE Tuesday, Dec. 1,1981 DUSC limits graduate students By JIM SQUIER undergraduates in WXDR's $20,000 in funding annually. membership, he said. According ·to Clark, that A resolution to prohibit In the letter, Clark quoted amounts to about 80 percent graduate students from from the Student Guide to of the station's budget. holding executive positions in Policies' Freedom of Associa­ Rogers added, "No registered undergraduate graduate student tuition goes student organizations passed tion section, which states, "Membership in registered for registered undergraduate by a vote of 16 to 1 at the student organizations is student organization fun­ Delaware Undergraduate limited to full time ding." All funds allocated by Student Congress (DUSC) undergraduate students, DUSC come from meeting last Monday. unless specific exceptions are undergraduate sources, he The action was prompted authorized in the {group's) explained. by a letter to DUSC from Bill Rogers said these facts give Clark, general manager of DUSC, the parent group of all WXDR, and Don Schuerholz registered student organiza­ the program director, ac­ DUSC tions, the authority to clarify cording to DUSC President policies concerning such Bruce Rogers. The letter re­ 'Application for Registra­ groups, including the authori­ quested that DUSC clarify the tion.' " ty to contradict provisions in "eligibility requirements for WXDR's most recent their constitutions. the station's leadership posi­ registration application, Clark proposed that, tions," and asked if a dated September 19, 1978, because of the proximity of graduate student could hold says "Members of WXDR­ the election and the hastiness the position of general FM shall be students - full or of the discussion of the resolu­ manager of WXDR. Rogers part time - graduate or tion, DUSC exclude the elec­ said the DUSC decision will undergraduate, currently tion in its ruling, but his re­ e applicable to all matriculated into a degree quest was denied. undergraduate registered program and having paid the Rogers said his next step student organizations. appropriate fees." will be to draft the resolution Clark Said the election of Therefore, WXDR in letter form, copies of which the next general manager of representatives contended, will be sent to the Board of the station is scheduled for both the Student Guide to Directors of WXDR and the December 6, and explained Policies and the WXDR con­ Student Life Committee of the ·Review Photo by Leigh Clifton that one of the two candidates stitution, already provide for Faculty Senate. "If GEORGE THOROGOOD p~ys to a packed Carpenter is a graduate student. There graduate student eligibility. necessary, the resolution will Sports Building crowd last Tuesday night. For more pic- are currently about 10 to 15 Rogers said that WXDR go to the full Faculty Senate,'' graduates and 80 he said. tures and sto 11. depends on DUSC for about University throws away tons ofpaper, shuns recycling By CASEY GILMORE for recycling drives have failed. Some administrators who would because it contains sensitive Although the university generates "These projects sound great until you like to collect papers for recycling materials, such as marks, budget about 1,800 tons of paper trash each get down to the nitty gritty of it," he cannot because of the space restric­ records and business transactions. year, it does not have recycling said. "Then everybody loses interest tions. Hempel said that "finding This shredded paper is then used as facilities. and they disappear.'' space for the several daily and bedding for cows on the university According to Dr. Robert Mayer, Other well-intentioned students weekend papers we get is a problem farm." vice pFesident for facilities manage­ have encountered different problems on a daily basis. We have expanded A solution to the waste paper pro­ ment and services, it is cheaper to get when they tried to collect paper to our activities and they now occupy the blem can be found at the Sunday rid of the paper than to try recycling recycle. area where we used to keep the Breakfast Mission, located in Wilm­ it. According to Mary Hempel, direc­ papers.'' ington. The mission, which provides "Some money would be saved by tor of information services, several All the university's paper does not food and shelter at a low cost to the recycling rather than paying for the· '' environmentally-conscio llS'' go to waste, however. Rounds said, unemployed, runs a paper collection disposal of the university's paper," he students in Lane Hall once tried to col­ "the computer center generates a operation which covers the northern said. "But this saving wouldn't offset lect papers from residence halls and tremendous amount of paper. Much of half of the state, including Newark. the price of collecting and sorting the administrative offices, but were forc­ this is taken to a paper shredder "We bale the papers in Wilmington, papers if the university undertook a ed to stop when the papers, which then take them up to Philadelphia recycling operation." were stored in the dorm, became a where we sell them to a recycling Newark Director of Public Works fire hazard. on the plant," said Bruce Rankin, one of the Arthur Fridl said that while the Domenick Sicilia, operation truck drivers for the mission and a co­ Newark re-cycling center CONRO manager in the Student Center, inside supervisor in the operation. "On recycles cans and bottles in the believes "It would be great if some Wednesdays we pick up newspapers Newark area, no facilities exist to student group, in the dorms or other­ and pamphlets from .Sharp recycle paper. He noted that the coun­ wise, could collect papers for recycl- ~ Laboratory and newspapers from ty landfill (Pidgeon Point) near the ing. We'd be glad to cooperate private homes.'' Delaware Memorial Bridge has been because we've got a lot of newspapers Abad start filled "twice over," and recycling ef­ to get rid of from the candy counter, The mission also conducts a paper forts should be increased to reduce especially on weekends and at the end drive in conjunction with CONRO. The Hen basketball team The drive is held on the second Satur­ the bulk of waste paper. of semesters when students don't col- . drops first of season ........... 20 Robert Bounds, director of plant lect their papers because they don't day of.each month in the South Chapel operations said some previous efforts have to keep up with them for their Street parking lot, between Delaware on the part of stuclents to collect paper classes.'' Avenue and Continental Avenue. Page 2 • TH£· REY1~W • D~ce;,bef' 1·, 1981 Sotne people are asking, GSU working towa visibility, acceptan By RODNEY K. PAUL straight people. " "We're not trying to because you see the separate the straight world tear them down, from the gay world," said mean we don't exist." Lori, co-president of the Gay Besides meetings Student Union (GSU). "We're posters, the GSU just trying to say that we ex­ presents its opinion in ist." monthly newsletter The primary purpose of the Out. They also plan to GSU, she said, is to "reach weekly radio program out" to gay students and give WXDR in February. support. Michael, who like According to a recent Lori asked that his last name of Out, the GSU has be withheld, agreed, adding, a large banner, ' "The group is here to provide Healthy Not Just a peer-support atmosphere." and they intend to put it the fence in front of the I "Our purpose is not to con­ vert every person on campus dent Center sometime to being gay," he said. "We The article also said, A lot of people are here: for people who are don't expect it to stay already gay or bisexual." long, but it will be a IIUW"'-"~~• pride for those who Approximately 100 people make it long after it has ( "\Vould like to, BUT••• participate in GSU activities. The GSU runs a coffeehouse torn down." Friday nights in Daughtery Lori believes gays are Hall, and informal meetings the victims of discriminatkla. such as a lesbian rap group For example, she explailled. are also held weekly. gay students have The Wehle family has owned the controlling Maintaining high visibility driven from their is important to the organiza­ hostile roommates who.,.,,...,. .... 1. interest in The Genesee Brewing Company to their sexuality. "We tion. "We· want to say to those since its founding ln 1933, and continues to people who aren't 'out' that vide a temporary we want to support them and work to alleviate this do so. there's nothing wrong with blem,'' she said. being gay," Lori said. The GSU also tries to , This same high visibility heterosexual students In addition to the Wehle family there are over can cause problems for the either think they are GSU, such as when their have been labeled as 2. 3,000 other stockholders. We know of no posters are torn down. others. "We try to tell special interest group that owns even a single "There are plenty of people there's no true who would rather we kept a for what a gay person share. low profile," Michael said. Lori said. "But if we're not violating The organization - any of the university's rules, the motto "be what you If control of the Company changed, full public it's not fair for them to tear Lori said. "Personally, our posters down." we are taught all 3. disclosure would have to be made to the Lori said the poster pro­ that homosexua blem represents a fear of Securities and Exchange Commission under homosexuality amon.g Federal law.

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