Vol. 102, No. 17 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DEL. Friday, November 3. 1978 Mischief Night On the Pranks End in Inside Campus Damage ·By EILEEN STUDNICKY and JOHN O'FA~RELL Pulverized pumpkins, eggs splattered on doors and .windows, trees mysteriously rolled in tattered paper and strange midnight shrieks set the atmosphere for this past Mon­ Classes Cancelled day evening's mischief night vandalism. A Security guard and two students in Securi­ So students can vote ..... p. 3 ty's escort van encountered more than their share of pranks when five or six youths smashed the van's windshield with rocks and bottles at 9:10 p.m. near the mtersection of New London Road and Cleveland Avenue, ac­ Carpenter cording to one of the van's passengers. Student Security guard Tom Jones was east­ Calls Plumber bound on Cleveland A venue, approaching New London Road when he radioed Security Washed-up in the flood .. p. 7 concerning a number of youths throwing ob­ jects at cars. As he drove on to get a descrip­ tion, the van was hit twice through the wind­ shield and once on the side, according to one passenger. Glass shattered, hitting Jones' face and tor­ Rock .. A.. Bye .. Baby so, and showering the two passengers in the second seat. No one was hurt, according to the You can lead a quartz to Security report. water ................ p. 11 The suspects fled between houses on Cleveland Avenue as soon as their blows hit. They had attacked from a clearing between two houses, an eyewitness said. The vandals left a trail of apples, and a trash can overturn­ Thanks, Fred ed on a car, said the witness. Security and Newark Police answered The mad programmer attacks Jones' request for assistance, a passenger the new season ........ p. 14 said. But no one was caught, according to Lieutenant Richard Turner of Security. Turner said that Security received com­ plaints of "fights here, a rock throwing there," thro1,1ghout the night on Monday, but very few vandals could be caught. He added that the night's activities kept his men busy. "All we could do was respond to a portion of our calls." Review photographer David 5. Resende Other incidents across campus resulted in MIDTERMS ARE OVER, and students can't seem to hit their books during this water damage to carpeting, trash strewn in week's Indian summer weather. (Continued on Page 6) Calendar ............... p. 5 Campus Briefs .......... p. 5 ·Urban Affairs Awarded HEW Grant Classifieds ............ p. 15 By MARTY HIGGINS study, with the university public service program on the gram has also been added to also receiving $13,900 to cover Editorial ............... p. 8 The department of Urban graduate level, according to the department's staff, Rich Affairs was recently awarded tuition and fee costs for these Daniel Rich, Dean of Urban said. students, according to a HEW EtCetera .............. p. 11 $53,560 from the department The fellowship award, said Affairs and Public Policy. report. Retrospect ............. p. 5 of Health,· Education and The institutional award has Rich, have been granted to Welfare (HEW) for the 1978- The grants did not go to Sports ................ p. 20 been applied in the areas of four st'udents working toward Ph.D candidates, said Rich, 79 academic year. internship programs and a Masters degree in Urban This Weekend ......... p. 14 The grants, a $22,360 in­ Affairs or Public Administra­ "because our interpretation practicums, and field and of HEW's intents is that the stitutional award and a pl'acement services. A sup­ tion. In addition, each student money should be used for $31,200 fellowship award, are port coordinator for the Ur­ will receive a stipend amoun­ students geared toward . a to be used to improve the ban Affairs graduate pro- ting to $13,900 for 12 months of career in public service rather than in teaching." The university is one of 74 New Deal- Student Teachers Reshuffled colleges and universities to By LISA PETRILLO out the strike, but the office (Clinical Studies) said it would receive funding for institu· Due to the prolonged New Castle County teacher strike, affect the placement of next semester's student teachers," tional grants and one of 97 in­ all 122 university seniors student-teaching this semester said Barbara Shalley, a student teacher in Spanish. stitutions to receive have been reassigned as of last Monday, according to Direc­ The student teachers have been placed in area private, fellowship grants. tor of Clinical Studies Angela Case. parochial, and public schools not involved in the strike. Par­ When asked why his depart­ The teachers walked out on Oct. 16 and Case decided to ticipating districts are Del Castle; Avon Grove, Pa.; Cecil ment had received com­ wait 10 school days before transferring the student teachers County, Maryland; St. Marks; Salesianum; Padua; Ur­ paritively large grants in to other schools. Case said there were no schools with suline; Pilot; Tower Hill; Sanford; Tatnall; and Friends. relation to the other institu­ semesters extending beyond the university's. This will The latter nine are private institutions and, said Case, "it is tions, Rich said, "We are in mean senior student teachers will graduate as scheduled on not unusual for these schools to get student teachers, good standing with HEW. In December 14. although we don't send many.'' the past years we have To avoid reassignment, many of the students said they Transportation was not a problem in the new placements, received grants and we have were willing to delay graduation and wait until the strike according to Case. She stated that students are assigned as carried through effectively ended. "We weren't given the option," said first grade stu­ close to home as possible and carpooling is encouraged. and our students have always dent teacher Barbara Mitchell. "A lot of us wanted to wait (Continued on Page 4) made a good showing.'' Page 2 THE REVIEW, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DEL November 3 , 1978 All Stores join.in celebrating the Grand Opening of our Beautiful HI-FI HOUSE in Newark, Delaware! 6TORE­ WIDE DON'T WAIT .... Limited Quantities will Go Fast ... Hurry In Now! Save S30 to Stt6 on BOSE SPEAKERS The Incomparable BOSE 901 Series Ill Less power needed for that "Great Bose is Boss" sound! 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Has servo electronic belt drive, delivers highest standard of sound quality possible Special superior tape transport design integrated tone arm. DC motor. free floating in its output class. Mates well with the Bose speakers reduces wow and flutter to below 0 .07%. sub chassis. With base and hinged cover. above. List S310. Delivers ionally clean . detailed List Sl80. recordings. switching locates All Items subject to prior sale PHONE VISA' 738-9100 CONVENIENT TERMS Hi hfide uous·e '" •ARRANGED · g THE AUDIO/VIDEO SPECIALISTS • '2610A KIRKWOOD HIGHWAY: MEADOWOOD II SHOPPING CENTER NEWARK November 3 1978 THE REVIEW, UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DEL. Page3 Two Congressional Seats to be Voted on Tuesday .. RUNNING FOR HOUSE Career Education Act for ele- federal programs. Graduated University of Delaware 1965. Law degree from Syracuse Col­ OF REPRESENT A liVES- mentary and secondary schools. GARY E. IUNDES. 28. Business degree from Thornton College, In­ lege of Law, 1968. Trial lawYer 1968- THOMAS B. EVANS, JR. 47. Sponsored constitutional amendment diana. Reporter for the Delaware 72. New Castle County Council1970-72. Former co-chairman Republican Na­ requiring Congress to balance the State News. Administrative assistant U.S. Senate 1972-present. Member of tional Committee. U.S. Represen­ federal budget. Supported Sen. to the State House of Representatives. Foreign Relations, Budget, In­ tative 1976-present. Supported tax William V. Roth's proposal for an Public information officer for New telligence, Judiciary, and Democratic credit equal to 50 percent of tuition across-the-board tax cut of over 30 Castle County. Thinks tuition tax Steering Committees. Co-sponsor of a costs for parents with children in col­ percent. Wrote Regulatory Review credit is a basically good idea, but bill to limit court-ordered busing. lege. Supported tax credits for Act, which would give Congress that an across-the-board cut is unfair Authored bill to prevent Department parents with children in nonpublic power to veto regulations of the to low and middle income groups. of Health, Education and Welfare elementary and secondary schools. federal bureaucracy. Sponsored Thinks colleges will increase tuition (HEW) from withholding funds to House sponsor for bill to limit "sunset" legislation to eliminate inef­ by the amount of any tax credit over a schools that refuse to bus students. court-ordered · busing. Supported ficient, overlapping, or outdated few years. Opposes court-<ordered Co-authored bill to prevent HEW from busing. Wants to introduce competi­ ordering busing for any reason. tion to the utilities.
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