Vol. 103 No. 19 Indiana U. Librarian To Direct UD.Library By KEN MAMMARELLA avoid allegations that parts of An Indiana Universit_f the university community librarian will be the next might not have been involved director of MorriS' Library, in the selection process·: Provost Leon Campbell an­ The Faculty Senate also ap­ nounced at the Faculty proved a major and minor in Senate meeting Monday. comparative literature. This The provost chose Susan interdisciplinary program Brynteson, assistant "director will be focused in the depart­ of libraries for technical ser­ ments of English and vices at the University of In­ languages and literature, but diana at Bloomington, over anthropology, history, two other final candidates philosophy and theater screened by the search com­ departments will also be in­ mittee. She will take office volved. ' Feb .. l6, Campbell said. The Senate established a Nathaniel Puffer will con­ minor in public administra7 tinue as acting director this tion and a 'CSC" designation semester, Campbell said, for courses taught by the while Brynteson familiarizes Center for Science and herself with university opera­ Culture of the School of Life tions in several trips here. ·and Health Sciences. Brynteson has worked in Four people were appointed · libraries since 1959. She holds , to the Council on Program a bachelor's degree in Evaluation, an internal philosophy and a master's university auditing group. _ degree in library f science They are history professor from the University of Raymond Walters (who Review photo by Joy Greene Wisconsin. replaces chemistry professor · WHEN AUTUMN -LEAVES .FAll, can winter be far behind? This university grounds worker finds In other business, Universi­ Edward Schweizer as chair- this modern technique easier than raking. - ty President E.A. Trabant (Continued to page 2) assured the Senate that students would have input in the selection of a replacement for Dt. John Worthen, vice Incidents of Crime, Assault Rise iri Newark president for student affairs ~y DAVID S. FIN'E homicide., rape, aggravated more citizens reporting activities and the dark, and administration. Incidents of crime and assault, kidnapping, robbery, . crimes and by better police secluded areas of campus as If an appointment is not .assault have risen by an alar­ burglary and · motor vehicle methods for handling the reasons behind many of made by the end of this ming amount in Newark, and theft, said Widdoes. reports, said Stafford. Newark's violent crimes. semester, Trabant said he increasing population in the "Right now we have to be Widdoes also pointed out "The university has many would wait until February to city and ·the university has careful to maintain some kind that the increasing rate of areas that are prone' to announce a successor to been the ~main cause, ac­ of control," said detective Lt. violent crime is a national assault." cording to police. Robert Stafford, a 19-year . trend, not confin~d solely to In addition, students are But according to university veteran of the Newark Police Newark. good "targets" for crime, ac­ on the security's chief investigator department and criminal Police consider the . par­ cording to Stafford. ··our ac­ Lt. Richard Turner, there has division commander. ticular nature of . a college tual crime rate changes when been "no increase of violent Stafford said that ·despite community a major factor students are here. During inside crime on campus." Newark's constantly rising behind Newark's. increasing Christmas break, for exam­ The discrepency "is kind of · population, the number of crime. "As long as we have ple, we have a dramatic funny, because when you look police the city employs has this (student) age group, crime decrease. When the at the university and-the city actually decreaseq. we're going to have pro­ students come back, crime as a group, there is an in­ -The crime increase can blems," said Stafford. He goes back up.'' TrabantSpeaks · cre~se," said Turner. also be partly explained by pointed. to students' evening (Continued to page ~ 4) Will Orwell's 19_84 come true? The most dramatic crime increase locally has been in 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0:0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3' aggravated assaults, ac­ Schlesinger Pr-ofiles Eoosevelt, cording to Newark police reports. A total of 50 cases were reported in Newark for Compares To Current L·eaders_ 1977. This figure rose to 59 in WXDR 1,978, an 18 percent increase. By DEBBIE MII,LER decades from Roosevelt's presidency to that So far this year, 54 ag­ "A baffling man who has to be iht-as1 red of Carter. Petitioning for support ..... 4 gravated assaults have been against a baffling time," was how an _,.,Jr­ The BO's and 40's were "decades of action" reported, up from only 21 in ticulate Dr. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. describt:d and at their conclusion the American pe9ple the corresponding period last Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the 1930's dur-­ felt tired and drained: ·Therefore, the 50's year, according-to reports_. ing his lecture "The Roosevelt Tradition and marked a "lull"·in society with Eisenhower as In addition, "indexed ·Legacy." ' president. The 60's ushered in another decade crimes" are up 19 _percent Schlesinger discussed political figures from of action, with Kennedy and Johnson. In the over last year; cases of Roosevelt to newly-announced presidential 70's we are like we were in the 50's, "a spent Classifieds .............. 12 violent crimes against people candidate Sen. Ted Kennedy before an au­ nation." have jumped 106 percent - However, Schlesinger predicts that in the · Editorial ................. 6 dience of more than 1,000 in Clayton Hall Mon­ from 32 reported ca~es in the day night. · '8o's "the dam will break." Furthermore, "We EtCetera ................ 9 first eight months of 1978 to 66 will stop saying the government can't do this cases so far this year, ac­ Schlesinger, a Pulitzer Prize winner and and can't do that." - Sports ............. ·..... 16 cording to Cpl. William Wid­ former special · assistant to President Ken­ _ He criticized Carter for claiming in a recent does, Newark's crime nedy, was the last speaker in the day~long con­ speech that the government could not cure the specifics officer. ference, "The New Deal: In Retrospect." problem of inflation. Indexed crimes include In his lecture, Schlesinger reflected on the {Continued to page 7) Page 2 • THE REVIEW • November 9, 1979 / VI!IBAR'S. DAY THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SA'):URDAY & MONDAY SPIAKIBS The Pros are celebrating Veteran's Day by having a sale on the "Veteran Brands" of Hi-Fi... brands that TUlUl!ABLIS,I'.l'C. are famous for the best sound for the money. I So if you want to save money on stereo components, come to a sale... but come to a sale that has the best on sale... a Pro of a Sale! . L!-. Fuji L-500 Beta Video Tape The All New Advent 4.- A great sounding two-way system built in Only $14.95 mirror-imaged pairs for superb dis- Philips GA222. 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