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page 19
Compromise allows DUSC voice on budget council
Student organization's president denied seat on committee; permitted to discuss financial issues with administrators
By Kent Schoch
St•ff Rl!!porrer
This year for the first time,
students will be able to offer their
input on administrative budgetary
decisions, such as tuition hikes,
under the terms of an agreement
reached last week by the university
and student government officials.
The Delaware Undergraduate
Student Congress (DUSC) and the
university budget council reached a
compromise Thursday which allows
DUSC President Rob McAnnally
(EG SR) to attend council meetings
and meet periodically with
· adminisuators to discuss financial
issues pertaining to students .
• See editorial page 6
Last week McAnnally asked to
be granted non-voting member
status on the council, but the
council members denied the
request.
Pipes said the council cannot
Dental
clinic to
treat HIV
patients ·
include a student because the body
is an executive committee, not a
representative one.
"If we make it representative,
we'll never get any decisions
made," he said.
McAnnally's petition was the
first request ever made· to allow
student representation on the
budget council, which decides
tuition rates and how much money
allocated
to
academic
is
departments.
McAnnally said he accepted the
council ' s compromise because R.
Byron Pipes , chairman of the
council and David E. Hollowell,
senior vice president
for
Administration, agreed to honor
two of DUSC's major requests:
• Pipes and Hollowell must
speak to McAnnally in sufficient
time to allow student feedback
before the council makes decisions.
• McAnnally must receive a
periodic report of everything the
council discusses.
The position of liaison between
.
meetings.
"My position has always been
that all the decisions we make are
important.- to students," Pipes said.
"We should seek as much [student]
advice as we can get."
McAnnally said he was satisfied
with the council's decision ... We
had to come to a compromise,"
McAnnally said, "but I think we
made some progress.
"We can be satisfied for now,"
he said. "It's better than what
we've had in the past."
University to introduce,
new alumni magazine
Remembrance
Reorganization of old publication saves $250,000
!~;,~uJ~~;~0~an
The Messenger, a much less
expensive version of the
University of Delaware Magazine,
will make its debut this week,
resurrected from termination last
·
spring.
Canceled .Puring last semester's
budget cuts, the alumni magazine
was reinstated this fall to serve
the university's graduates,
supporters and administration.
The publication, whose title
was adopted from the alumni
section of the University of
Delaware Magazine, will cost
$40,000 to publish each year, said
John T. Brook, vice president for
government relations.
Previously the magazine cost
$300,000 to publish per year, he
said.
The new magazine will be
more cost-efficient, partly
because the quality of the paper
has . been downgraded, said
see MAGAZINE page 5
Wilmington facility will
educate, train doctors in
proper care methods
By Abby Stoddard
Conrributing Ediror
BRANDYWINE SPRINGS - State
officials dedicated a new dental clinic
Thursday, specially designed to treat
HIV -infected patients.
Dentists can use the clinic to treat
HIV-infected individuals as well as
indigent patients, explained Dr . Robert
R. Rosen, president of the Delaware
Dental Society.
The clinic, which opened last May
and has already served 25 patients, is
doubling as a training center to teach
dentists how to treat HIV -infected
patients.
Every instrument in the clinic is
wrapped in plastic and stays wrapped
during the entire procedure, said Mary
Balentine, dental service coordinator for
the Emily P. Sissel Hospital near
Wilmington.
After each patient's treatment, all the
equipment is stripped down, disinfected
and sterilized, Balentine said . All the
suction tips used are disposable, she
said.
Waste from the clinic is flushed with
other waste or placed in red plastic bags,
alerting others its contents may be HIVinfected .
Housed in the hospital's basement,
the clinic is the result of a cooperative
effort between the state and private
businesses.
· Delaware Health and Social Services
(DHSS), Friends Against AIDS, Inc. and
Healthco contributed money and
equipment totalling over $41,500 to
furnish the one-chair clinic.
Plans for the clinic began in January
see CUNIC page 8
students and the budget council is
now a permanent part of the DUSC
president's role", and will be
continued by future DUSC
presidents.
When issues arise that affect
students, McAnnally said, he will
meet with the appropriate
organizations to compile students'
opinions .
He said will present those
opinions to Pipes and Hollowell,
who will in turn present DUSC's
consensus at the budget council
The University of Delaware Messenger
Dorms enact new policy
Resident assistants, students make own rules for dorms
By Benjamin Ringe
Staff Reporrer
Wray DeStefano
Norma Bialorucld pulls close her grandson Steven at the Veterans of Foreign
Wars vigil for five Delawarean servicemen listed as missing in action. The
ceremony honored American prisoners of war_ See story on page 4.
Runners with a good cause
Dorm residents and their resident
assistants will be busy this week tailoring
dorm rules to suit the needs of everyone.
Students and RAs will discuss rules
not covered in the student handbook, said
Cynthia Cummings, associate director of
Housing and Residence Life.
After agreeing on a subject, written
~ontracts will be signed by floor
members, she said.
The new program is an effort to reduce
policy violations in the residence halls,
she said.
Charges against students filed with the
Office of the Dean of Students in 19901991 increased 3:4 percent over those
filed in 1989-1990, Dean of Students
Timothy F. Brooks said.
"Last year there were many problem
areas, especially West Campus, and I
think this will help," Brooks said.
"It would be great to see policy
violation rates fall because the students
feel they have had a say. in the rules,"
Cummings said.
Noise level restrictions is one of the
rules floor members will decide, voting
on exactly what "too loud" is for that
floor.
"The main goal is to have the
residents feel comfortable in their own
living environment," Cummings said.
She said students are more likely to
follow rules they made themselves.
Mikhael McCarthy (AS FR), a
Harrington D resident, said, "I'm much
more likely to follow a rule I made with
see DISCIPLINE page 8 .
....----INDEX-----.
Opinion ............................... 6
Campus Calendar ................ 9
Vivant. .. ............................. 11
Entertainment ................... 13
Classifieds ......................... 17
Sports ................... ............. 19
Comics ................... ...........21
Five-kilometer race
proceeds to benefit
student organizations
By Andrea Galante
Lithuanian sees hope
for homeland's future
Professor says liberation will provide incentives
By Trent Van Doren
Sraf( Reporrer
--Also inside:--
About 950 students and
Newark residents running,
walking and rolling along in
wheelchairs crowded South
College
Avenue
Saturday
morning for the DuPont Teflon
- SK for Mission.
The event, beginning at Saint
Thomas' Episcopal Church,
raisedmoney for the university
Physical Therapy Club and
~piscopal Campus Minisuy.
Ken
Seaman,
academic
coordinator for clinical education,
said proceeds will be used to send
physical therapy students to
professional conferences.
Episcopal Campus Ministries
will use the proceeds to send
students to Costa Rica for charity
work, said Father Bob O'Connor
of the Ministry.
Seaman said, "We had
anticipated between 700 to 800
people, so the turnout far
ltex Myen, from Morrlatown, N.J., clocked in at 15:30 to win the exceeded our expectations."
l>uR,. teflon SK for Miuion run on Saturday.
1ee MISSION pase 8
Rhythm of a step ................ 2
New landfill regulations ...... 4
Fall fashion ........................ 11
Men's soccer loses .... ........ 20
Robert Klein,
performance review •nd
interview, fMP 73.
'•
Slaff~orrer
Victor Klemas was at home
relaxing in front of the tube on
Sept. 6, when broadcasters
interrupted the regularly
scheduled program to repon that
his homeland, Lithuania, had
been granted independence from
the Soviet Union.
"It was like the Berlin Wall
coming down!" said the smiling
university scientist as he recalled
his initial reaction to the historic
announcement.
"We called our in-laws and
my mother in Florida," said
Klemas, director for the Center
for Remote s ·e nsing in the
College of MariJ1e Studies .
"There were celebrations in
many cities. It wu almost like
New Years."
Klemas, who was born in
Lithuania and lived there until be
wu eight, said his countrymen
are
now
allowed
new
opportunities that they could not
have
hoped
for
under
Communist rule.
"In the past, people felt it's
not worth wortcing hard because
they will aet nothina out of it.
Now, tbe people have incentive.
They have aomethina of their
owa1 and they want It to
1ee LITHUANIAN , . . 3
2 • THE RMEW •
September 24, 1 991
Cultu·re
center
•
repa1rs
City, university
officials debate
parkulators on
WXDR talk show
In an attempt to ease
university and city of Newark
relations, which have been
recently choked over the issue
of the In-Vehicle-Parking
Regulator (IPR), Dean of
Students Timothy F. Brooks,
Newark's Chief of Police
William Hogan and Delaware
Undergraduate
Student
Congress President Rob
McAnnally held an open
forum
on
WXDR's
"Feedback."
On the only talk show at
the university open to listener
partic ipation the panel
di scussed the problems
students have with IPR.
"The aim of the show is to
deal with controversial issues
around campus,"
said
Cassandra Lane, general
manager of WXDR, after the
first airing of the program.
" It was definitely a
s uccess, "
she
said .
"Concerned students called in
and expressed concerns about
things like lighting in parking
lots around campus and the
possibility of a parking
garage."
Brooks hoped the program,
together with his leadership of
the Town and Gown
Committee, will elicit positive
attitudes between students and
the city.
"A lot of people are still
getting tickets since no IPRs
have been sold," Brooks said
following the show.
"There are a lot of negative
feelings of students for the
city," he said.
Hogan said that the IPR is
not the total solution to the
parking dilemma. However,
it is a necessary component to
manage the increasing influx
of students bringing cars to
campus, he said.
"We all left the radio
program seeing that it is
important for everyone to
work together not for bandaid solutions, but for long
term solutions," Hogan said.
"This
would
better
relationships between the city
and the university," he said.
The
show
basically
identified the concerns that
the various parties in the
community had, he said.
"The city isn't antistudent," Hogan said, "we're
just anti-misbehavior."
Brooks said the IPR
program turned out just the
way the city planned.
"The city wanted a ban on
parking," he said, "and that's
what they got. Still, no one
has purchased an IPR."
The call-in forum is hosted
by Kieran Gargonne, news
director of WXDR, and disc
jockey Dan Fisher (AS FR).
"Feedback" airs from 2:30
p .m . to 3:30 p.m. during
WXDR 's Sunday Digest,
which deals with university
public affairs, national and
local news.
Next week's show will host
ARA officials who will
discuss changes in the
university's dining services.
Professor's lecture
to cover universe's
origin, end
In its continuing lecture
series, Real Science For
Regular People, the Delaware
Museum of Natural History
will host a lecture by Dr .
Harry Shipman, a university
professor of physics.
Shipman's lecture, The
Restless Universe: Its Origin
and Ultimate Fate, expresses
his view as an astronomer on
the beginning and end of the
universe.
Shipman is the author of
four books and said he
understands the need to teach
astronomical issues in a down
to earth fashion.
"[ try to make it funny,"
Shipman said.
"People think science is
hard because of all the tough
equations," he said, "but when
the jargon is wiped away it's
all pretty simple."
The presentation Is Friday,
Sept. 27 at 8 p.m. at the
Delaware Museum of Natural
History.
Compiled by Doll8 Donovan
and Donna Murphy
.
~·
, ·.
•. ·
costly
Renovations to Center
for Black Culture
$10,000 over estimate
By Oara Rheinhardt
Sl•ff Reporter
Renovations to the Center for
Black Culture house on South
Painela Wray OeStelwlo College Ave ., one of the demands
made by Concerned Black
Members of the I(JQ Phi Theta fraternity move to the rhythms of a step show number in front of Rodney Dining Hall Friday night.
Students (CBS) during the March
II sit-in, are running behind
schedule, a university official
said .
Although the renovati·ons,
By Kristin Paw
JR), a member of the ' Kappa
adulthood, he said.
philanthropic information about begun in June, were targeted for
sun ~eporrer
Alpha Psi fraternity.
completion by September, the
Friday's show was created to
their groups, he said .
For most students a step is
Canes tapped the pavement
organize stepping at
the
"This was a good opportunity project is still not finished, said
merely a very short distance, but
with rhythmic beats, bringing
university. In the past, there were
to see a different side of campus," Joshua Greene (AS SO),
to members of black Greek
cheers while fancy footwork
often noise complaints from
said Sterling Marshall Jr. [AS JR], president of the Black Student
organizations, the word denotes
thrilled the audience.
students on campus, as var i ous
a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha Union.
music, history and tradition.
"The'se routines expressed
"The front porch was ready to
groups would step at odd hours
fraternity .
Over 300 people attended the
black heritage, and feelings of
during the year, Trent said.
All the groups "stepped" fall off, the floors were shaky,
second annual "Rod Quad" step
conflict and struggles in the
This event gave all black Greek
together at the close of the event the window frames weren't intact
show Friday night at the Rodney
community," Weeks said.
organizations a chance to come
in celebration of unity among and the electricity was on the
Courtyard. ·
The step dance originates from
together and show their talent and
black Greeks , said Frances blink," Greene said . He also said
Eight black fraternities and
a rite of passage in the African
uniqueness without competing, he
Christian [BE SR]. a member of the house was just barely passing
sororities roused the audience
culture, said Horace Trent, hall
Newark city code inspection.
said.
the Alph a Kappa Alpha sorority.
with intricate clapping and
director of Rodney A/B and
The estimated costs of $30,000
The purpose of the Rod Quad
"Everybody worked together to
dancing sequences known as
member of Kappa Alpha Psi.
was to honor the pledges and to
escalated to $40,000 because the
pull it off, " she said.
"stepping."
The traditional dance, known as
give prospective pledges an
Although
each
Greek center needed more repairs than
"This Americanized version of
the "rite of initiation," similar to
originally
opportunity to view the different
org ani zation is unique, they all administrators
the traditional form of African
the step dance practiced by
fraternities and sororities, Trent
strive for achievement and the anticipated, said Domenick B.
dance was created in the mid-'60s
fraternities and sororities today,
said.
uplifting of their race, said Philip Sicilia. assistant to the senior
and has been evolving ever
was performed by African
president
for
Besides stepp ing , the Greeks
Ward (EG SR), a member of vice
since," said Azeez Weeks (BE
children as part of initiation into
chanted
historical
and
Administration.
Alpha Phi Alpha .
Greene
said
he
was
disappointed the project was
taking so long, but said he was
satisfied that things were getting
cultures and races, and the university begins the accomplished.
Culture and an organizer of the week.
University officials praised the first Racial
Ronald
F.
Whittington,
week by not divesting," he said, "which in effect
The week featured video presentations on
and Cultural Awareness Week as a success, but
says they are not understanding other races and assistant to the president, said the
racism followed by panel discussions, said
said efforts must still be made to combat campus
sit-in did initiate the renovation,
Edghill, director for the Center for Black Culture cultures."
racism.
The week was funded by the Committee to but it was not the only reason the
and an organizer of the week.
President David P. Roselle, who gave the
Promote Racial and Cultural Diversity , the university undertook the project.
"More people could have turned out, but I
closing address Thursday night, said, "the week
"All the buildings at the
think that we had a pretty good turnout," she Office of Affirmative Action and Multicultural
has got to help. All problems of human behavior
Programs, the Cultural Advisory Board and the university are on a maintenance
said.
hold education at its root."
schedule and we are working our
Center for Black Culture.
Joshua Greene (AS SO), president of the
"It has not solved the problem," he said.
Black Student Union, said that although the
"I just hope that the people who attended the · way up South College Avenue
"However, it is very important for people to
events were beneficial in understanding racism,
programs this week were able to learn something where the center is located," he
celebrate differences."
The week featured video presentations on racial problems at the university are far from
and they share it with their friends and said.
Greene, however, disagreed.
colleagues," Edgehill said.
over.
racism followed by panel discussions, said
"The week is for understanding people of all
- Rebecca Toil en "If we had not demanded
Vemese Edghill, director of the Center for Black
see REPAIRS page 8
African culture leaps from step show
Awareness week educates campus community
POLICE REPORT
Pizza theft ends in
assault Saturday
Two university students were
robbed of a pizza and later
assaulted Saturday morning by a
group of suspects, University
Police said.
The victims were walking
through the Newark Hall parking
Jot when they were. approached
by four or five suspects who
took their pizza and followed
them to their residence, police
said.
At the residence, the group
attacked the students, causing
lacerations to the head, police
said.
The victims were treated at
Laurel Hall and released, police
said.
Motorist attacked in
veh ide on Park Place
A university student was
assaulted in his car by two
suspects at about 3:30 a.m .
Saturday, Newark Police said.
. The student, who was driving
westbound on West Park Place,
noticed the suspects in the road
harassing motorists, police said.
When the victim approached
the suspects, they took his car
keys , demanded money and
threatened to kill him if he
refused, police said.
The victim surrendered $180
after the suspects struck him
repeatedly through the drivers
side window, police said.
He suffered slight lacerations
to the left side of his face, police
said.
The suspects are described as
two white males 18 LO 20 years
old, about 5 feet 11 inches tall
and 180 pounds, police said.
One suspect had blond hair,
other had black hair.
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Cleveland Ave.
resident found dead
Saturday
A .26-year-old Newark
resident was found dead
Saturday in his house on
Cleveland Avenue, Newark
Police said.
Stephen J . Czeiner was
discovered on his living room
couch by a neighbor, who
notified police when he
discovered the bQdy was cold.
Police said the medical
examiner has not yet determined
the cause of death, but no signs
of foul play were evident.
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I·
September 24, 1991 • THE REVIEW •
3
LithUanian professor optimistic about homeland's future
oontlnued from page 1
flourish."
Earlier this month, the Soviet
State Council not only voted to
unanimously
recognize
the
independence of Lithuania, which
had sought its freedom for more
llW1 4S years, but also aclmowledge
the freedom the Baltic Republics of
Estonia and Latvia.
By Sept. 9, tens of thousands of
of the faithful flocked to the shrine
of the Blessed Virgin in the
Lithuanian village of Shiluva to
offer thanks for their long-awaited
freedom, Klemas said.
"The population there is certainly
Catholic and they have been praying
in secret and attending church in
secret [in the past]," he said.
"For those who are heavy
believers
in
God,
this
[independence] is son of an answer
from Him," he added.
Klemas, who worked in Lithuania
as recently as August, said that
Lithuania had declared its
independence over a year ago.
However, until this month's
dramatic developments, their
independence was not recognized by
the Soviet Union or the United
Above: U.S.
Secretary of
Education Lamar
Alexander and
his wife visit
Brookside
Elementary
School while
promoting efforts
in personalized
education for the
Delaware and
America 2000
plans. Right:
Alexander joins
elementary
school students
in sifting soil
while learning
about erosion.
States.
Klemas said despite the fact that
it was not officially recognized as a
state, he noticed a current of
nationalism and pride in Lithuania,
which has been reflected in the
country's economy.
When Lithuania initially declared
its independence, Klemas said, it
entered a free enterprise system.
They strived hard to save a surplus
of goods for the Republic while still
satisfying the required Soviet quota.
Klernas explained that the current
abundance of goods is from the
increased
motivation
since
independence has been recognized.
"Lithuania is now a year ahead of
schedule," be said.
Lithuania is very interested in
imitating the model of the United
States, Klemas said, because there is
a strong relationship between the
two countries.
He said he was grateful that the
effons of countless Lithuaninans to
gain their freedom have finally bore
fruit.
"I know people have been
working so hard for it and a lot of
people have lost their lives, he said.
"I'm proud."
About $75,000 in repairs were made to the Alpha Tau Omega
fraternity house after a fire damaged the property last February.
Greek house re-opens
after fire renovations
By Julie Alperen
Staff Reporter
Secretary of Education visits Newark
Lamar Alexander, U.S. secretary of
education, made a brief visit to a local
elementary school to inspect the
Delaware and America 2000 education
reform plans at work.
Alexander sifted soil with students
actively learning about erosion
Thursday morning during a tour of the
open classrooms at Brookside
Elementary School.
Brookside was one of 21 schools to
be selected for state funding of the Re:
Learning plan, a reform which
encourages pro-active education.
The purpose of Alexander's visit
was to laud educators for their effons
in creating personalized education for
the youths and advancing the America
2000plan.
After a 10-minute address to the
students, ages 5 to 9, Alexander
presented them with a book to
remember him by - "Alexander and
the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very
Bad Day," by Judith Viorst.
-
Donna Murphy
The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity
members have moved back into
their house after renovations were
completed in August due to
February fire.
About $75,000 was invested into
the renovations, said Jim Cambareri
(AS SR), fraternity president, and
were paid for by the fraternity's
national organization.
The fire, which caused minimal
damage, was attributed to faulty
wiring, according to Newark Fire
Marshal Ken Farrall.
The city has not assigned any
new house inspection codes, said
Fire Prevention Inspector Bill
Street, but it will increase its annual
inspections of Greek housing from
once to twice a year.
According to Dean of Students
Timothy F. Brooks, the university is
not planning any new regulations
for Greek organizations.
"The university does not have a
legal right to inspect houses except
for the ones they own," Brooks said.
"We don 't plan to supervise them
more closely than we ever have."
The fraternity had passed its most
recent inspection in September
r----------------------------------------------------------------------------,
1990, Street said, but code
violations were found after the
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The
U.S.
Student
Association (USSA) joined
with the National Abortion
Rights Action League in
Washington to opposo the
nomination of Judge Clarence
Thomas to the U.S. Supreme
Court.
USSA President Tajel Shah
said Thomas has neglected
opportunities
to
help
historically black colleges .
.. As
an
educational
organization, that is against
everything we stand for," he
said.
The
American
Bar
Association has given Thomas
a "qualified" rating, the lowest
rating the group gives
nominees, Shah said.
The USSA is also concerned
with Thomas' hand ling of
Equal
Employment
Opportunity Commission
cases, which he headed in the
early '80s. Shah said Thomas'
tenure at the EEOC show that
the nominee does not believe
in helping people who are
discriminated against, such as
homosexuals, minorities,
women and the elderly.
Orlando Robinson, co·
director of records for the
University of Wisconsin Black
Student Union said, "The way
the court has gone with
affirmative action and civil
rights, it's turned back the
other way."
"They're reverting back to
the 1800s mindset and we see
[Thomas] as another setback,"
he said.
Political analyst~ expect
Thomas' nomination to receive
little opposition as the
judiciary committee holds its
final vote this week .
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Phones answered 24 hours a day
All calls will be returned
:·
Stress can cause
illness for students
.,
:•
I
Hi,gh str,.~s levels can
almost double a student's
chance of getting a cold, health
officials said.
A recent Carnegie Mellon
University study estimates that
the common cold accounts for
about one-third of the illnesses
that students seek treatment
for.
Barbara Driscoll, health
center director at Clark ·
University, said stress can
suppress a body's immune
system.
"Students are a very high
stress group because they are
always in such a state of flux,"
she said.
Political correctness
cited as N.Y.
professor wins free
speech case
Call tor free information pamphlet • Reasonable Rates
BRIAN SPRAQUE
1989ANBC
DELAWARE VALLEY OPEN
MEN'S OVERALL CHAMPION
1988 ANBC NATIONALS
2ND PLACE
SATURDAY
GUNNING BEDFORD JR. H. S. • COX NECK ROAD
DELAWARE CITY, DE
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8:30P.M. • $12.00~1N ADVANCE)
$15.00 :4 TDOOR)
DOORSOPENA 5:30P.M.
RESERVATIONS
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12 NOON· $5.00
DOORS OPEN AT 11 A.M.
through the ceilings to create lofts,
and also had ex tension cords
running up through the ceiling, he
said.
A new sprinkler system was
installed throughout the entire
house, he said, the frre alarm system
was upgraded and electrical wiring
was reworked, Cambareri said.
Improvements were also made to
the appearance of the house, he said.
The fraternity purchased new
carpeting and furniture, painted the
exterior of the house, and also
replaced the ceilings on the second
floor.
"We're not just meeting the
standards now," said Alpha Tau
Omega member Keith McShaffrey
(AS SR). "We're fulfilling the
requirements, and then doing a little
more."
Scott Prisco (BE JR), a fraternity
member and house resident, said
members were not notified umil
August about when they could
return to the'house .
"It was a really bad situation
when it happened," he said,
referring to the fact that all residents
were forced to find alternate
housing for the remainder of the
semester. "Now that we've had
renovations done, it was almost
worth it," Cambareri said. "The
house looks better and it's a lot
safer."
Abortion rights
group, students join
to fight Thomas
nomination
A controversial New York
City College professor who
said
that
blacks
are
"significantly less intelligent
than whites" has won a legal
battle agairtst his school.
U.S. District Court Judge
Kenneth Conboy ruled that
City College violated Michael
Levin's constitutional rights
and that the case displayed the
dangers of the "political
correcmess" movement.
Levin,
a
philosophy
professor, sued college
officials last year for violating
his due process and free speech
rights when the college formed
a panel to review his research.
The judge's ruling said City
College cannot conduct any
further inquiries Into Levin's
writings or views and cannot
establish separate class
sections solely because of
Levin's opinions.
"My court case shows that
the roof won't come crumbling
down on [others who do
similar research]," Levin said.
. Meanwhile, City College
and City University officials
are inveatiaadng a similar cue
IBYOIYhiJ remarks made by
Leaalnl etfrlel, chairman of
die t111et llladlea deplrtment.
. Jeffries told hundreds of ·
audience members at a black
arts festival this summer that
Jews in Hollywood worked
with organized crime to deny
equal opportunity to black
Americans.
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4 • THE RmEW •
September 24, 1991
EPA sets landfill guidelines
By Matthew Gray
Sl~ff Repotter
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Remembrance
J:
MINPOWs commemora~ed by Veterans of Foreign Wars
•'
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Pamela Wray DeStefano
Partkipants in Saturday's vigil listen to U.S. Rep. Thomas R. Carper, D·Del., address the crowd.
....•'
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By Pamela Wray DeStefano
Photography editor
Clutching American flags and
yellow roses, ISO people gathered
Satll'!'day off Elkton Road to
commemorate five Delaware
servicemen and other American
prisoners o,f war and soldiers
missing in action.
The vigil, held at the local
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
(VFW), was attended by Rep.
Thomas R. Carper [D-Del] . Carper
spoke of his summer trip to
Vietnam as a member of a U .S .
congressional fact-finding team.
Carper said he and Secretary of
Defense Richard Cheney are taking
steps to gather information on
MIA/POWs, and hope to designate
an offici\! to handle the issue
exclusively. America needs to focus
not only on returning body remains,
he said, but also on the MIA/POWs
who could still be alive.
"We need more concentration on
following up live sightings of those
who may still be alive ," Carper
said.
During the annual vigil, about 12
children lit 50 candles representing
each state and its missing soldiers.
A dining room chair stood in the
center of the VFW field as a
reminder that many of these chairs
are still empty in homes throughout
the United States.
For Nancy Willing and her sister
Annie, this chair has a special
meaning. Their brother, Edward A.
Willing, once sat in it at their
dinner table.
Willing is one of the five
Delawareans still missing in action.
East End Cafe
270 East Main Street, Newark, Delaware
Phone 738-0880
Live Music Wed.-Sat. 9:30-1
LARRY RONEY- Every Wed. Night
1/2 Priced ~MPORTED BEER NIGHT
NACHOS GRANDE
Eftry Thurllday Night 9:30 pm-1 am
Eftry Tues. 4i Wed.
9:30 pm-12 am
$2.00 For
Imported Bottled Beer
He disappeared on June 21, 1968 in
South Viemam.
"You can't grieve forever ... the
intensity dies down, but I just wish
I knew what happened," said Nancy
Willing .
The four other Delawareans
listed as missing in action are
Gerald F. Ayres, Leonard Bird,
Gene Hess and Larry F. Potts.
Stanley Bialorucki, senior vice
commander of Post 475, said he
was happy with the attendance.
Only 60 aLtended last year.
"We don't just throw away our
people," he said. "We need to have
a firm commitment in order to
resolve the fate of our missing
Americans."
"Our brothers, our husbands, our
fathers .. . we need to bring them
home where they belong," he said.
The first set of landfill
regulations were released by the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) Sept.
11, stirring
controversy with an international
environmental group.
The standards require states to
implement a clay and plastic liner
in the landfill and a leachate
collection system consisting of
pipes under the landfill. Leachate
is the substance that results from
rain water filtering through the
landfill.
Robert D. Varrin, director of
the university's Water Resources
Center, said the new regulations
are a "step forward" and an
"application of 1990s technology"
to the issue of landfill operation.
However, Greenpeace opposes
the new regulations.
Fred Munson, Solid Waste
Specialist for Oreenpeace, said
the new EPA standards "are not
anything spectacular."
Munson said he fears the liners
will leak and that leachate
collection pipes will clog over
time, causing continued pollution
dangers.
Munson also criticized the
leachate treatment process used at
some landfills where treated
water is released into a nearby
lake or river. He questioned
where the heavy metals not
removed in the treatment process
end up .
However, Andrew Teplitzky,
chief of the Residuals Section of
the EPA, said the leachate
treatment process typically leaves
little or no heavy metals in the
discharged water.
.
Liners are currently required
for landfills in 39 states, Munson
said, and it appears the federal
standards encourage the closing
of older landfills which often
become toxic-waste sites.
About 19 percent of the
nation's toxic-waste sites, five of
them from Delaware, are closed
municipal landfills.
Peter Cleary. a spokesman for
the Environmental Defense Fund
said the new standards are "good
ne.ws for the environment" and
will mainly affect the South and
Southwest,
since
most
Northeastern states already
conform to the new standards.
Two out of the three landfills
in Delaware already meet the new
standards, said Dave Wilhelm,
Manager of Engineering at the
Delaware Solid Waste Authority .
The third, the Cherry Island
landfill, meets present standards
but differs in the type of liner
required
under
the
new
regulations, he said .
Under the new regulations, tho
ground water around active
landfills is required to be tested
twice a year for contamination
and must be cleaned if chemicals
are found.
Landfills must also be covered
daily with a layer of soil to avoid
pest infestation.
The EPA presented the new
regulations in 1988, but could not
issue them until the ,Office of
Management
and
Budget
approved them . They were finally
released after a lawsuit by
environmental groups in May.
Cleary said he hopes the
uniform standards will put an end
to the "town dump" and
encourage the development of
recycling programs.
If you want your ~hinking and living affected for your benefit,
then you should read this thought-provoking book, "What Hath
Man Wrought!" by Z. Trebla (Vantage Press) $10. Recently
published, demand may necessitate placing advance order now
at all bookstores, or order toll free 1-800-882-3273, 9 A.M . . 5
P.M. Eastern Time . Clip ad for reminder.
,_.
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· ·~'
I
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HAVE YOU CALLED ICT GROUP?
368-4004
We offer:
•
Flexible day and evening schedules
•
convenient location
•
automatic wage increases
•
paid training
We're waiting to hear from youUNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE!
.ICT GROUP, INC.
College Square Shopping Center (near Rickel's}
Rt. 273 & Library Ave., Newark, DE 19711
Pat ............... 1-800-828·9479
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2415 KIRKWOOD HWY. • ROSELLE CENTER
WILMINGTON, DE (near Prices Corner & VA Hospital)
CALL FOR INFO 994-2777
:I
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il
I'
MONDAY NilE FOOTBALL
75¢ 14 oz. pRAFTS
TUESDAY NilE
50¢ DRAFTS • OJ Dance Music
Tuesday 9/24
8-10 p.m.
I ~
SHRIMP
WEDNESDAY NilE
Thursday 9/26
9-11 p.m.
.
LADIES NITE
-.
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WINGS
Monday 9/30
9-11 p.m.
$1 Drafts • $1 Rail Drinks • $1 Shooters
THURSDAY NilE
.. ---
SUBS
~
.:·-: .~
Wednesday 10/2
9-11 p.m.
SPECIAL
THE
f
Contact
Lenses
Next step is to get a Part-time job for the semester!
Are you all settled in 7
Is your class schedule set?
.
t ,_
. .... ..
IMPORTANT
OPPORTUNE NOTICE ,
Glasses
Banner Optical Compflny
18 Haines Street
Newark, DE
TELEMARKETING
,,'1
., I
"THE COCKTAIL PARTY"
$~
at the door gets you FREE Food & Drink Package
for 1 hour between 9 & 10. 1
$1 Drinks Rest of Nlte. Come by 8 & beat the cover.
Ultimate High Energy Dance Music
FRI~
cooL SPOT!
r1I
& SAT. NilE
D.J. DANCE MUSIC
Ladles Hen Line Drink Specials
· Higher the Skirt- Lower the drink price
"IF YOU DARE"
FRIDAY "Happy Hour" with Super
Hot Be Cold Buffet FREE II
. -·H·--·--
~~JI
I~
I
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STAINED PAGES
....... . ------------------------------------------------------------------------·i
New alumni magazine .
September 24, 1991
••
· ~oftba/1 awards
named in memory
of accident victim
,,···
. , I
,..1' .
.-.
&jl Melissa Giller
~I •
Senior Sr.alf ~.,
,.' ... '·
'Friends and family of Douglas F.
Carpentier, the university senior
killed last May in a hit-and -run
ac.cident, gathered Sunday to dedicate
two awards established
in
Cllrpentier's memory.
Both award s· will benefit the
university's intramural softball
program which Carpentier played in
every year.
The first award, the Douglas F .
Carpentier
Undergraduate
ASsistantship Memorial Award, is a
$500 hOnorarium given annually to an
active participant in the intramural
softball program.
The money for the honorarium will
come from the interest generated by a
memorial fund established by
Carpentier's family and friends .
Additi9nal interest will be used
towards the enhancement of 'the
intramural facilities, said John
O'Neill, director for the Recreation
and ~tramural program.
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The second award, the Douglas F.
Carpentier Sportsmanship Aw ard ,
will be presented to the softball team
who best exemplifies the sp irit ,
enthusiasm and sportsmanship that
Carpentier displayed for the game.
The wimling team will be selected
by all of the teams in the league, and
its name will be engraved in a plaque
hanging in the lobby of Carpenter
Sports Building.
Funds
to
establish
the
sportsmanship award were raised
Saturday at the WSTW Softball
Maralhon held in Wilmington.
At the memorial service President
David P . Roselle , Byron Pipe s,
provost and vice pres ident for
Academic Affairs, and other
university officials spoke, thanking
supporters for their contributions and
attendance.
Carpentier's former roomate,
Michael Smyth, and his family also
shared memones of Carpentier. "It's a
good way to honor such a great guy.
I'm sure he'd be pleased with what
I
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ATTENTION
OFF-CAMPUS
STUDENTS
't
Copies of The Official Student Handbook are available in the Dean of
Students Office and at the Information Desk of the Perkins Student
Center through September. Free!
Please pick one up today.
OCSA Bus Trip to the
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The first iuue contains atori4
ranging from alumni features ..
overviews of events in differe •
university departments.
•
"We're trying to set a lot tf
news stories from each of
university's colleges," Weil said:
"It' s designed to give alumni I
sense of what their fellow alwnf
are doing."
The yearly University &J
Delaware Report of Privati
Support, normally costinl
S 17,000, will now be part of thl
Messenger's first issue and iJ
included in the magazine'•
budget, Brook said.
•
With the cost of the reporJ
absorbed by the magazine;
President David P. Roselle sai~
"The format will not only sav'
money, it will make money.
•
"Alumni will be willing to giV.
money when they're receivinl
something so attractive for thell
service," he said.
-'
continued from page 1
.
Barbra Andrisani, director for
alumni relations.
Costs w i ll also remain low
because no new magazine staff
will be hired, said Mary Hempel,
director for the office of
university information.
The entire staff was cut last
year when the magazine was cut,
she said.
The Alumni Office and the
Office of Public Relations will
produce the new magazine as a
Michele &riley
joint effort, Andrisani said, with
Michael Smyth, a roommate of Douglas Carpentier, commemorates the . both offices contributing writers
establishment of two intramural softball awards in his friend's name.
to the publication.
Hempel described the quarterly
all the time," said Stover.
we are doing,"said Sm~.
magazine as a ' maga - paper '
''His mom kept on saying, 'This is
Carpentier's sister, Nancy Jorns
whose format is entirely different
a Doug day. It has his name written
showed a video of Doug composed of
from last year's paper.
all over it,"' she said . Vince
pictures taken throughout his life.
The Messenger will be a 16Gagliardi, a close friend of Carpentier
Judy Firsichbaum, another one of
page color desktop publication,
Carpentier's three sisters, spoke about
said, "Softball was important to him
said Cornelia Wei!, managing
all four years of school. On the field
baseball' s influence 'in her brother's
editor and editor at the Office of
life.
and off the field he was a classy
Public Relations .
" Doug hit a homerun into the
individual. " Sportsmanship is what
_'1
hearts of all that loved him," she said.
I' d like to emphasize,"he said. "The •--------------------~~~~~~---•,.]
Eight -teams competed at the day·
long event, which featured a softball
tournament, free food and a raffle.
years. This is the closest thing to
nil
..1 .... ;.
The event raised almost $600 for the
48,
of
awards . Alpha Phi Omega and Phi
Kappa Tau fraternities competed in
Squirrel Lane in Newark, was
Bonfire Included for:
·1
the event.
charged in Carpentier ' s death and
Clubs • Dorms • Private Parties • Social Group~
I!
pleaded guilty to charges of leaving
Kate String and Cindy Stover,
Sorority • Fraternity
the scene of an accident and failure to
WSTW promotions directors, said the
station became involved because
report an accident. He was fmed for
Celebrations of all kind~. . .
both of these charges. said a
Carpentier interned at the station last
spoke swoman for the Court of
20 Min. Drive from Campul, New C81tle, Del.
spring, and played for the WSTW
Common
Pleas.
(302) 328-7732 for reservations
softball team. " He talked about sports
II.
~:~~~h\~;;~r~~;i~~ ~~c~~!~ ;~f:;
Q U I G LEY'S FARM
u R=
havl~t~:~~:~=~·meulman,
~
n-J
only $40 for members
October 4-6
see Plymouth, MA
contact Jen 312 Brown 738-8430
or Andrea 313 Brown 738-8431
or come to the Wildlife Conservation Club Meeting
5:45 p.m.-6:45p.m. September 26
room 204 Smith Hall
Cllristians of all den'ominatiol"ls ·
gathering together
Every Friday at 7 PM •
Two Locations - Choose Nearest One
Student Center, Ewing Room and
Dickinson C/D Commons
(Also 24 Bible Study Groups meet weekly at various times
and locations. Call 368-5050 for information.)
. We wash & cut your hair.
You dry it at our Hair Bar
full of Nexus, Sebastian,
Vavoom and Paul Mitchell
$14.00 women
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN
.__ _ _ FELLOWSHIP-...- •
GLASGOW MINIATURE
GOLF
HAIR AND NAIL SAlON
(302) 4 54 - 72 2 ~
Free 6am:e
100 Elkt on l<ood
Newol'oc, Delaware 10711
(open agenda)
with UofD
StudentLD.
Please Specify
U~e of Hairbarl
and /'aid First Game
Route 40 E at Route 896
(next to Peoples Plaza)
Only 5 minutes sowth of the Newark Campus
Tickets are $4
and on sale September 23, 24 & 25
in the Student Center Concourse
and in room 303 Student Center
$3.00 Game for Adults • $2.00 Game Children
(302) 836-9686
HOURS: Mon.-lbur. 6 pm- 10 pm• Fri. 6 pm-11 pm• Sat. A SUn. 1 p• • 11 pm
For more information, call 451-2629
I
Owntbesk}l
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To fly is one thing. To fly with the Marine Corps is something
else. They'll show you the meaning of wings. From the wings of
the'F-18 Hornet to the wings you wear as a Marine aviator,
· thi's is Dying at its best. And your ticket to fly is if'
~·
your college diploma. If you'd like to be up
there, contact your local Marine Officer Selec·
I
\;
lifJn Officer. 1-800-MARINES.
;i
~WM ~NNrJAh
COhhllGll DAY
A'F 'FHll PMiuADlluPIUA Mf18lll1M OF AR'F
"WIH£N:
Saturday, September 28, 1991
Leave Perkins Student Center 10:00 AM
1Leave Philadelphia 4:00 PM
i
1
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II'<
WMA'F:
'~njoy
· ,.. Museum Memberships. Meet people from other
colleges!
.
MOW:
11
1:
1:
·:
j:
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See Captain Mark Mahler at the Student Center on
September 26, or call (215) 386-5557.
·I
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,,' ~~__~ ,
,,, .
. ,,
.' ..'
....
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free admission (with University ID)f
ii;··. guided tours, and rafncs for free posters and
·~
· .:··. ,·.~,,area
rj
The~
Student Discounts Every Day
Saturday, October 12
Bus
leaves
Student
Center parking lot 9:20 a.m. and
11
returns approximately 9:30 p.m.
~~
r.
IT'S ALIVEI
COME WHALE WATCHING/
BALTIMORE ~~~~·a
HARBOR
;·
"'
~ THE REVIEW • f
.
.
'flI ,
I Tickets go on sale September 23 at 107 Perkms
· Student Center, from 8:30 AM to 4:00 PM. Cost
\i is $2.00, which covers bus transpor~ation. Offer
open to students, faculty, and staff only. Must
have University ID to purchase ticket and get free
ad~,i~sion to the museum.
ll
THE
EVIEW
Review & Opinion
Tuesday, September 24, 1991
The Review's opinion
Token gestures
The compromise to allow student input into
university budget council decisions is meaningle$S
'
·
·
,
-
The United States Olympic
Committee has a regulation which
requires that at least 20 percent of the
officials in governing bodies be
athletes.
Each Olympic sport has its own
governing body which must abide by
this rule, and it holds tnJe through all
the upper echelons of the organization.
This is a commendable policy, for
it allows the athletes, who are directly
affected by the decisions made in
these . committees, to actively
participate in the process.
This university should be so
civilized. Students are rarely given the
opportunity to voice their opinions and
be heard on issues which are of
importance to them.
Traditionally, the university has put
forth only a minimal effort to meet
student demands, and the recent
decision made by the university
Budget Council to include a
representative of the Delaware
Undergraduate Student Congress
ODUSC)isnoexception.
.
Robbie McAnnally, president of
DUSC, requested a seat on the
committee in order to assure more
student input on decisions which
directly affect students.
The compromise which was agreed
upon is hardly notable and does not
meet those demands.
By denying McAnnally's request
to be a non-voting member of the
council, the university has not
provided students with an active voice
in decisions. Rather, they have
placated the masses by giving the
appearance of concession.
McAnnally will not be able to
formally address the council, he will
only be heard through Pipes and
Hollowell. This is not enough, for if he
were to address all members directly,
his arguments would be better
understood and more effective.
Funher, by giving McAnnally only
a 'comprehensive periodic report' the
council negates the pu.;pose of having
a student opinion . For what can
MacAnnally do after the council has
already discussed the issue? This
position must afford McAnnally the
full rights · and privileges of
membership, with the exception of a
vote.
Students have no need for token
gestures.
They need a voice that will be
heard.
-MOW
Editorial policy
Review & Opinion: P"'l" 6 iUld 1 ""' re--....1 IO< opinion iUld commentaJy. The editO<ial ~bovnepresents
the consensus opinion of the RIMew sWf lind is written by the editor of the editO<ial pop, -=ept when initialed.
SWf columns ..., the opinion of the authO<. Cartoons represent the opinion of the artist. letters to the editor
con~~d,:~o~::day-=·Fridar
during the academic school yeM, Fridays during the Wmter Session, by
the •tudent bo~ of the Uni..,lity d ~ire, New~. Del.
Editorial columnists
..
lidaanl Jones, editor in chief
Paul !Cane, columnist
Robert Weston, editorial
pase editor
Ron hufmari, cOlumnist
Molly Willi.am1, columnist
r~
~~.,~------------------------------------------------------~
Letters to the editor
We need to visit Mars
Regaining control over rape
In the September 17 issue of The Review
Ron Kaufman poked fun at the prospect of
a manned visit to Mars. His column's
conclusion was that Americans need
Welfare rather than space exploration.
Kaufman is dead wrong.
Mars is exactly what the people of this
nation need. Kaufman claims that this
country has grown too large. He says that
we must turn Inwards for unity.
Hogwash. We must look outwards from
ourselves to attain true unity. From space,
the earth is quite unified. From space, there
are no politics. From space, this is not a
large nation at all.
A manned visit to Mars will assert to the
American people their unity as a nation. It
will show us all that Americans can work
together to achieve something useful.
There will always be those among us
who only look at the bad in all things.
Kaufman is such a person.
His column was filled with complaints
and was devoid of hope, reason and
solutions. This is understandable as he has
to think of a topic for a column on a weekly
basis. It is always easier to look at the
negative.
In Kaufman's tiny world, at his little
desk with his little pen , it is easy to
understand how Kaufman might feel small
and alienated
It is time for Kaufman to wake up. There
is hope. It is time to start winning , time to
start fighting, time to seek the heavens,
time to unite, time to go to Mars.
The recent repon(ld sexual assault of a
university freshmen has raised concerns
about the willingness of the university
community to be completely forthcoming
with information about sexual assaults
involving university students.
As members of SOS (The support group
for Victims/ Survivors of Sexual Offense), a
volunteer group made up largely of students
who work closely with the University
administration and provide support services
to survivors of sexual assault, we believe the
university is committed to this issue and
sensitive to the individual rights, wishes and
needs of survivors.
Rape is a crime of violence which talces
away all control and choice from a victim.
An essent ial aspect of healing for the
survivor is regaining a sense of control over
their life.
The first step towar~ regaining control is
deciding whether or not to report the crime.
While significant change has taken place
duringthe past decade with regard to
attitudes which blame the victim for rape
and sexual assault, it remains difficult for
survivors of to come forward because an
atmosphere of suspicion and blame still
exists.
Until survivors ilre no longer victimized
by these pervasive attitudes, they must
continue to agonize over the choice of going
public or remaining silent.
Many people blame the system, but fail to
realize that they are pan of the system. The
system needs to change.
You and I must change our attitudes and
create a supportive environment which
encourages rape survivors to come forward
and bring rape and sexual assault into the
open where it can be seen for what it really
is.
Jason N. Smith
ASSO
Guest opinion
~~-~Redefining
'the rules' of conduct and stigma of rape
l(..t'
•.z,, Richard J~' column on "Removing the we get to our doors . We look over our
shoulders as we walk down streets. We
:t'fnwarranted sugma of rape" showed the
. unfortunate fear of women to do that very
hesitate to get in an elevator with a strange
• ' ~hing. The women interviewed talk about man. We wonder' if going out on a date will
,; qteir fear of being alone on campus, of going mean we will be raped. We can't safely live
,, to parties and on dates, of being meat that on _sround, first, or even second floors of
need to feed on." But intertwined with apartment buildings. We cross to the other
•.-!heir' fears of being preyed upon is a fear of . side of the street when we see a group of
men up ahead. We ask for hotel rooms near
.. ~~ing stigmatized for being a victim.
the office. We wish we could get drunk and
Some of these 18-year-old women would
, ..~ot report the crime if they were raped not wind up being attacked because we
,:.~cause of the finger-pointing, the hassle, "don't know what's going on anyway."
Not every woman feels these ways all the
~their parents' reactions and the assumed
time, but ·I guarantee that every woman bas
,...lamishing of their reputations. It seems they
•...,.would rather suffer silently in their shattered felt some of these ways at one time .
It is the unchosen reality of being a
·, ,t"orlds than have a man face up to his crime.
Many women seem to suffer in silence, woman.
These are the "rules" women must play
~· laking what we are given, and adjusting our
.,.,:; lives to accommodate the reality that we are by, the precautions they must take, to
prevent being assaulted. H you break one of
~ten "prey." Our lives are often molded and
cootrolled out of fear of what may happen to these rules and are assualted, you can count
on
being questioned, blamed and
us.
We try not to walk alone at night stigmatized. And if you repon it, the baUle
(although sometimes it is impossible not to scars reach deeper.
But it doesn't have to be that way.
do so). We look for parking spaces near
As more women become brave enough to
street lights and have our keys ready before
. men
fight aaainst the stigma, as they realize that
rape is a crime of which they should not be
ashamed, the· Scarlet Letter of being raped
will begin to fade, and fewer rapists will
walk away leaving us to bear the weight of
their crimes. Rape is a senseless and vicious
attack on a human being who does not
deserve it anymore than someone deserves
to be robbed or murdered. Is anyone afraid
to report those crimes?
H you are raped, remember that you. are
not the only one.
Your report may help another victim.
Your repon may be what the police need to
catch the attaCker. Your repon may make the
world-including your father, your
roommate, your professor, and the guys
down the hall-more aware that rape
happens all the time to all kinds of women.
It is not a crime to be swept under the rug
or a reason to abandon a friend.
As Richard Jones said, report your rape
and make the rapist the one who is afraidyou have far fewer reasons to be.
Karen Roth
EDGR
The members of SOS
The manipulative Review
In response to the September 17 article
"Bar's dress code called unfair" I have this to
say:
Once again the Review and it's reporters
have proven their incompetence.
When I was asked to conunent on a new
dress code policy I simply stated that it was
discriminatory.
I did not say it discriminated aaainst
African-Americans. I further stated that the
dress code sounded like an attempt to single
out a group and flush out a certaitl element.
Once again I did not say AfricanAmericans. What The Review has. done by•
singling out my comments and by running
the sub-title, is portray an inaccurate picture
of the issue.
The Review made it seem as if the Black
Student Union and I had stated the policy
was an attack on African-Americans.
The editors should have included
comments by the Down Under's senior
management and their clientele.
H you took the time to observe the patrons
you would see that the bulk of them are
white: therefore the policy discriminates
against them as well.
The reporter of the story, Mike Martin has
made a big mistake and I warn him and The
Review, if any African-American or AfricanAmerican group is manipulated again they
will be attacked!
Joshua C. Greene
Pr~ident
Black Student Union
Addressing_racial problems
Why is apathy so pervasive on campus, in
regards to racial problems?
Due to rediculous charges like the one
lodged by the Black Student Union president,
Johua Greene.
Green and the BSU have lost all
repectability, in my eyes, due to this paranoid
claim.
With real issues still needing remedy, why
create false charges?
Now we have to determine if future BSU
charges are real or simply paranoid knee-jerk
reactions.
Nice job Joshua Greene.
Peter Meisel
AS94
For the record
Because of a reporting error in a
story headlined "Five Elements of
Chinese Art"which appeared in the
Sept. 20 issue of The Review, a
statement was incorrectly attributed
to Zhi lin which indicated that Lin
receiives undue criticism from those
in his homeland. He said that some
Chinese people have complained
about the negative treatment of the
homelnad of his ancestors they infer
from his paintings .
Because of and editing error in a
story headlined "Police blame fire on
arsonist" which appeared in the Sept.
13 issue of The Review, jon Townley
of the Aetna Hose, Hook and Ladder
was misidentified as Charles
Townshend.
Because of an editing error In a
story. headlined "Laboratory will cater
to 3 departments• which appeared in
the Sept. 20 issue of The Review,
jean Futrell was misidentified as the
chairwoman of the department of
chemistry and biochemistry. Futrell
is the chairman of the department.
Because of a reporting error in the
, same story, a quote was wrongly
attributed to Futrell.
The Review regrets the' errors.
.; Anti-Semitism: the most fashionable form of prejudice
'~
~
"If the Jew did not exist, the anti-Semite
wbuld Invent him."
~
-Jean-Paul Sartre
~
~
::
::
·:
.,
~
~
~
.,
This Sunday is the 50th commemoration
O.f one of the most disturbing examples of
1iwnan bu~hery and hatred in history, yet
llraely went unnoticed by the mainstream
~edla and political leaders.
Between Sept. 29 and Oct. 6, 1941 in
the Ukrainian capital of Babi Yar, the
German army rounded up the city's entire
Jewish population, all 33,771, shot them
a{l and dumped their bodies into a huge
pt.
Most of those wbo were shot were the
elderly, the sick, women and children.
Lut month, after the world ignored the
unsettlin& reality of the musacre since its
occ:urrence, Preaident Bush traveled to the
city to formally acknowledge what bad
happened and pay tribute to a memorial
erected on the site.
The borror of Babi Yar is an example of
a society tbat allowed rampant antisemlti1111 to .._
__
.......,,
..... -·'-··-__.5tUI lhouaJu.
The alaupter at &abi Yar Ia an example
of a society that allowed IUU'estrailled andSemiti1111 to become accepted &boqbt.
The wickedness of Babi Yar is an
umple of a barbaric society filled with
gutless ignorance and foolish subservience
- a society destroying itself.
Distressingly, recent media events in
this counUJ: over the put few years bave
shown an •anorant acceptance of antiSemitic rbetoric by the American public
llld the media.
Slowly, it's becoming voaue to blame
personal crises and societal Ills on the
Jews.
Oh, bow orijinall (The Jews have been
scapegoats for 4,000 years; you'd think
the anti-Semltes would find some other
whipping boy.)
• In 1975 tbe United Nations paned
Resolution 3379 which equated Zionism to
racism (and hu never been repealed).
This U.N. version of "Mein Kampf" Ia a
dlaarace to the "peace" oraanlzation and
alves ' carte blanche to the world'• Jewbaten.
The Zlonlam the U.N. is addreasina Ia
only a radical sect. In the aame vein,
American patriotism could also be called
racill by the belief tbat Americana are
better ...
u•an all other peop1e on earth.
• Last October, the Dartmouth Review
(the school's Independent conservative
piper) published a quote from Hitler that,
in pan, 18id, "By wardlna off the Jews, I
am fiJbtiq for the Lord's wort."
by the media, be blamed it on the Jews
He said because be is part Leban~se
Jewish journalists were ..out to aet him" '
The fact tbat he was actually brealdna
the law must have slipped bis mind.
• This put summer, Leonard Jeffries, a
profenor -at the City University of New
York, went public uyina, .. Russian Jewry
had a particular control over the movies
and their financial partners, the Mafia, put
together a financial system of destruction
of black people."
And If that alone wasn't bad enough,
He drew huae suppon from the ~ew
instead of public figures coming out and . York black community with rallies
chastising the publication for inciting the averaging around 500 people
destruction of the Jewish people, former
Although, after much d~lay he wu
Treasury Secretary William Simon;
criticized by that state's aov~rnment
William Buckley, editor of the National
offici all, Jeffries baa become a modem
Review; and columniat Pat Buchanan, icon for scholarly anti-Semltillll.
.
were among the vocal supporters of such • Most recently, the club In the Crown
sick thought.
Helahta district of New York between
Their rationale was that It waa "free blacks and the Lubavitch aect of orthodox
speech."
Jewry over tbe mistaken auto death of 1
WRONG I
black boy hu sent shock waves tbrou h
Dlsauls' ... I"··· that promote the death
the country (the drLver of the car ..1a 1
...,.. thought rs not free acqu1ned by a &rand jury).
...
of others ....
u popular
speech, but bara 11 ment and threats In this cue, the anti-Semitic blu of the
which are lllepl.
media cornea to llabt u every utterance of
• When John "Air" sununu went jet· the fat tub-o-anti-Semhlc-ucrement
seuina around the country at taxpayer "Rev." AI Sharpton (who, In a trip to
expense and wu aJven 1 public apankina Isreal Jut week, remarked, "I am In hell
already; 1 am in Israel") is reported in
areat detail while they virtually ianored
the mobs of rioting blackJ that murdered
an Innocent Jewish colleae student. ,
American society is in a sad condition
when Ibis type of filth is considered an
acceptable form of public speech.
Sure, some of 11 11 protected under the
First Amendment. but that does not mean
It Is any less destructive.
Babi Yar did not happen ovemlaht, but
slowly over time. And the anti-Semitism
that prefaced tb'at carnage started with
ideu.
We are now witnessing first-hand the
deterioration of our society.
It 11 1 shame that alter the fall of all
other outwardly anti-Semitic societies _
the Roman empire, tn Spanish Kinas, the
Rullian Czars and the Tbird Reich (to
name 1 few)_ the United States 11 no
closer to the ideal of "E Pluribul Unum."
ADd no closer to being "civilized."
R
~
Kaurman's
column appears every
Tuesday
In The Review.
o"
(Correction: In last week's column, I
mistakenly called Mara 'the third planet
when it Is, in fact. the foanh. Sorry, I wu
abient that day of second pade.)
September 24, 1991 • THE llEVIEW •
7
To some, utiiversity problems are in black and white
Easing race relations will require constructive efforts on all sides
"Just as the univtrJity Ita~ made a
commilmel'llto racial tuld etdtJual diwnU,,
so too should The Review. It il our hope thai
you will utilize the resource! )IOU luJve to
promote racial awarenus eutd to accurately
inform tM commw&il)l on all iullu."
- Letter to the editor which appeared In the
Dec. 15, 1989 issue of The Review
Wounds run deep at !his univenity.
The above excerpt wu published In The
Review following a J:I'OieSt of the newspaper
by the Black Students' Union (BSU) at lhe
Student Center In December 1989.
The BSU J:I'OieSt wu mOtivated by what
the group called a lack of sensitivity to
Aftican Americans in stories and a dearth of
1 minority-issue cover88e in The Review aDd
· spetiflcally a cartoon which appeared in the
Dec. 1, 1989 issue. The cartoon depicted a
black university official as a pickaninny
baby, a derogatory black caricature, who had
been aided by affumative actioo.
I was reminded of the '89 protest last
week when I got a letter from current BSU
President Joshua Greene which appears in
today's letters section.
On Thursday I met with Greene to discuss
!}le story, the letter and the future of relations
between The Review and the BSU.
, The meeting was mediated by Chuck
Tarver, station manager of the campus radio
station WXDR-FM, adviser to the BSU and
man whom I greatly respect.
Let me say from the outset that The
a
Review does not seek to grant the BSU
special privileges or to buckle under preaure
to African Americans on campus. However,
as a newspaper serving the university
community, we would be remiss if we
ignored black students or any individual or
group on campus who say they are
diasatisfied with the paper's COVef88e.
"I think every special interest group on
campus whether it's the BSU, RSA or
Greeks has a JrOblem with coverage in The
Review," said Ted Spiker, editor in chief of
The Review during the '89 poo:st.
.
Spiker said, "A newspaper's job isn't to
get along with every group but to make sure
issues are covered fairly."
And black university students have
repeatedly charged that The Review is unfair,
racist and bigoted in everything from the
stories we print to the way staff is selected.
"A large percentage of black students
think The Review is trying to stigmatize them
and there should be no reason for that,"
Greene said.
· ''That's why there is a lot of animosity
(Qw,~ The Review," he said.
"That's why a lot of black people read The
Review and say 'Oh, this is for white
~I e.'"
Then-executive editor Mark Nardone
stressed that he and Spiker had hired me
bued solely em my qualifications and that I
should expect "a lot of shit" from people,
especially African Americans, who thought I
was merely a token.
About 80 people staged a sit-in at Smith
credibility of the BSU. Greene
states that it was never his intention
to imply that this is discriminatory
towards blacks, and I applaud his
letter for clarifying that point.
But what Greene fails to
recognize is that as the president of
the Black Students' Union he
speaks on their behalf and many
will extrapolate his comments to
imply what they did. Just as when
any major leader makes statements
of opinion in the capacity of that
office those statements are viewed
as the opinion of the organization.
Further, had Greene carefully
read the article he would have
realized that it is never stated in the
article that anyone feels this is
discriminatory against blacks.
Were we reading the same
article?
The BSU is an important
organization which must surely
have more pressing and certainly
more interesting things on t~eir
agenda. By singling out this issue to
target. they belittle their comments
about other more important topics.
This is not a policy which is
worthy of the attention it received,
on
campus and what they said was harassment
of black students by police.
Greene was one of the organizers of the
sit-in and sported a beret and toted a bullhorn
far the occasion.
One of the protesters said "Hey, brother
why don't you come over here and sit with
us?"
Another: "Are you with us or against us?"
A lot of black people read
Much to many of the demonstrators
cha&rin, I didn't join the sit-in because if I
Th-e Review and say "Oh,
did, it would cross the line between objective
observer and active participant.
this is for white people.'
The BSU, like all other campus
organizations, can jlxpect fair coverage
during my tenure as editor in chief. The
And I did.
Reception in the black community was Review's coverage will be fair not because
I'm black, but because I'm a journalist and
mostly negative. In a column for the nowany good journalist strives for fairness.
defunct Black Student Union newspaper
Last year, as administrative news editor, I
Pamoja, someone whom I considered to be a
friend implied that my position at The . urged former BSU president Brian Johnson
Review was a token one and that somehow to call me personally if he thought their were
any stories he thought were newsworthy.
fd been hired as a concession to the BSU's
I worked hard, endured the late hours,
protest.
Through the campus grapevine, I learned
neglected my class~s · and busted my ass
getting stories once on The Review staff.
that many African Americans on campus
thought I was either a token or an Uncle
I would be lying if I said I wasn't
Tom or both.
motivated in large part to J:I'OVe wrong those
One friend told me that brothers and
who thought I was a token, a Tom or
anything else.
I rose through the ranks llld was elected
editor in chief lut semester. I thought tlW '
maybe progress could be made in improving {
the newspapers relationship with the black
community.
Thursday ]rOVed how wrong I was.
,
But it also opened the lines of ,
communication which can lead to such
imJ:I'OVements,
t
On Thursday I told Greene that I could ::
not speak for the agendu of past Review
editors but I could say that this year I plan
for the paper to deliver fair, accurat.e, honest :
and professional coverage to the BSU
specifically and the university u a whole.
We'll make mistakes of course, but we11 '
be willing to own up to them and work to
constantly improve.
.
The Review is ready to begin to cbange
the state of relations between the two groups
and I asked Greene if, starting this year with :
our respective terms in office, could we
work to forge a better future between the
groups.
He said, "All that I can say is that there be
a constant dialogue between myself, BSU
members and The Review."
It's a stan indeed.
Wounds run deep at this university but
that doesn't mean that we can't start healing ,
them.
Richard jones' column appears every
Tuesday in The Review.
Sisterly love?
·Sorority stereotypes may originate from within
Criticism of bar's dress code unwarranted and unfair
By targeting such a
policy with charges of
discrimination,
joshua Greene severely
diminshes the credibility
of the BS'SJ.
at." "
An example of this was at last year's BSU
sit-in at Smith Hall.
Hall to J:I'OieSt the state of race relations
Crying wolf on discrimination
A dress code.
A seemingly innocuous policy
whic'h is prevalent at many
establishments has now spurred a
slew of ridiculous accusations on
campus.
It seems that a local bar has
instituted a dress code in order to
improve the atmosphere and protect
1
fts clients by monitoring the
clientele.
·
The code does not allow hats, Tshirts , ripped jeans, tank tops,
e,.;cessive jewelry or beepers. This
is not a new idea, and it was
1
implemented in order to discourage
a clientele which has been the cause
of fights, specifically drug dealers.
Personally, I don't mind if the
dealers in the area feel
discriminated against. The DU is
simply frying to protect itself, as
well as its customers, from possible
problems.
Plenty of establishments have
hi;norically enforced dress codes to
be adhered to on the premises. 7Eleven stores will not serve
customers without shin and shoes.
I suppose that nudists should be
decrying the stores nationwide,
since they often do not wear these
items and may be upset by the
policy (Note -anyone may be
served without pants).
The policy at the Down Under
should also be blasted by the
National Organization for Women,
since women are more likely to
spon excessive jewelry.
And the Fashion Designers Club
' on campus should also get out there
and· start picketing in front of the
DU since the latest fashion of pretom ,je~s is also prohibited, and
that discriminates against those
fashion-minded students who
frequent the bar (Not that this is
sucll a bad idea since those 'pirhana'
jeans are really annoying).
About now, you may feel that I
am being ridiculous, but I believe it
is Joshua Greene, president of the
Black Students' Union, who is
being ridiculous.
By targeting such a policy with
charges of discrimination, Joshua
Greene severely diminishes the
sistcn wanted to know "where my head was
Richard
Jones
"WE, THE FRATERNITY
WOMEN OF AMERICA, stand for
service through development of
character inspired by the close
contact and deep friendship of
individual fraternity
and
Panhellenic life . The opportunity
for wide and wise humQII service,
through mutual respect and
helpfulness, is the tenet by which
we strive to live."
especially since many other local
watering holes have similar
policies, and were not targeted.
Admittedly, this is just as much the
fault of The Review for placing the
article on the front page as it is the
fault of the president of the BSU for
making ambiguous statements.
Greene also stated in his letter
that. other comments from patrons
of the bar should have been
solicited, and he is correct. But he
should have clarified his own
comments to include all dress
codes, not this specific policy.
All dress codes are inherently
discriminatory, and had Greene
meant to address this larger issue, ·
he ought to have more carefully
considered his comments.
I know that there are causes
which deserve attention from the
BSU, and it is simply disappointing
that they should have chosen this
policy.
It is also very unnervil'\g to see
how Greene reacted to this
situation. Surely he understands
that credibility is a must for leaders
as well as organizations, and by
issuing inflammatory threats
against the editors and writers of
this paper, he has lost all
credibility.
Additionally, The Review did
not manipulate or fabricate any of
the information contained in the
article, everything which was
printed was truth in that it was the
statements of the persons cited.
It is Greene who is trying to
manipulate The Review with
unwarranted threats.
Perhaps next time he will more
carefully consider the implications
of his statements when he speaks as
the president of the BSU.
If not,.. all influence the group has
will diminish.
Just remember the story of The
Uttle Boy Who Cried Wolf. When
the threat is real and the issues
important, the BSU may just be
ignored.
Attention all sorority members:
Have you had a chance to read
Panhellenic's little mauve Formal
Rush handbook? Upon rush
registration, as you know, over
600 women including myself were
distributed this very same book.
The 20-page booklet contains
the Panhellenic Creed, the rules
and regulaticns of rush as well as
descriptive abstracts of each
sorority.
Yet one page amid them all
completely devalues the principles
for which soroities claim they
stand.
Letter wearers beware.
The individuality you stress
each woman can maintain while
still being a sorority member may
be overlooked if Greeks and nonGreeks alike carefully read the
Panhellenic Council's book,
"Putting the Pieces Together."
Contrary .to the Panhellenic
Creed, the last page belitLles
development of character and
"social maturity"
(another
objective of Panhel).
The poem which begins "A
sorority is more than a flower ... "
seemed to have potential in
presenting an overview of sorority
life until I read further what is
considered "more."
A sorority is ...
" ... someone to gossip with in
every class."
It could just be me, but I
thought close friends usually built
their relationships by discussing
their own lives, not the
insignificant matters of strangers.
Gossip seems to be a pretty
weak foundation for "Sisterhood
-the
strongest
kind
of
friendship."
Molly Williams' column normally
appears evety Friday in The
Review.
Representation such as
this is one which all
sorority members should
strive to disprove, and
which most claim
is false.
"Borrowing a dress, shoes,
stockings, and jewelry from other
sisters and being best dressed at
the formal."
There is nothing wrong with
wanting to look good, yet that
verse seems to imply that stylish
appearances are a priority .
Whether someone wears velvet
or a potato sack to the formal, it's
always the person inside the
clothes that matters most.
"Moving in and realizing that
your homecoming nomination also
colors her hair, wears last year's
coat and has fat legs."
Now wouldn't that be a shocker.
Hopefully no one will move out
because of another sister's
physical appearance.
Better get that sister of yours
some new clothes, a beauty salon
appointment and a membership
card to a health club before the big
game.
. Whether a woman is 80 pounds
or well over 800 pounds with dark
roots and a 1974 jacket, it is her
prerogative.
The tone of that particular verse
seems to contain an element of
astonishment on behalf of the
writer.
,
Is that because all sorority
members are supposed to fit tbe
same mold?
Are sororities really as petty ,u
the one I read about in the "Sweet
Valley High" series?
Or have the identities of some
members been forcedly masked
with the stereotypes created by ~
council representing them?
•
If that is the case, sorortty
members should try to make just
as good a first impression as ~ir
rushees try to do, by distributi"g
literature that more accurately
informs what sororities represent.
This is the Thelma and Louise
generation, not the age of
Heathers.
The poem was a poor attempt to
try and sum up sorority life.
Sorority members are ponrayed•:in
the poem as superficial lfnd
shallow.
A representation such as this is
one which all sorority members
should strive to disprove, and
which most claim is false.
But the fact that it is provided
not by an anti-Greek non-member,
but the governing body of i'he
system is what is so disheartening.
Sorority members, I'm stire
you'-v e heard a lot of stereotYPeS
from anti-Greeks during the
course of your membership.
;:
Obviously, a woman need not
devote any attention to ignorant
remarks.
However, while a sororjty
member might rightfully go about
her business despite what nonGreeks think and say, it would 1Je
worthwhile if she did address the
stereotypes fabricated by fellow
members.
Defend yourselves. The soutce
from which stereotypes emerge! is
probably closer to home than most
sorority members think.
'>
Sincerely,
Rushee Number 191
Laura Fasbach is a copy editor '
for The Review.
:Battling the ·powers of the city's parking meter flag .
II
in
In-vehicle parking regulators (aka. parkulators) are exacerbating an already bad problem
It's getting jus~ about impossible to
P~trk anywhere on. or near campus
anymore -not like it was ever really euy
to start with.
.
With the implementation of those
famous "parkulators," you can park on
neighboring campus streets for 75 cents
an hour- for no more than two ,h ours at a
time - for just a mere $112.50 charge to
buy the. ~achine.
It's ru11culous. .
.
.
To date, not a smgle In-vehicle Parkmg
Regulator (parkulator) JJas been sold.
Many meter spaces around campus
'enerously offer ~ full 15 minutes for a
quarter.
That s
S 1.2~ for a
Tuesday{l'hursday clus period, and about
$35 per sc:mester for one clus, that ls, 1/
you can fmd one ~~those very rare and
often valuable park~ng spots.
If you have!~ t accumulated the
necessary 96 credillto buy a gold parking
sticker (which is actually cheaper than
parlculators at a merer S105), you •
out
those metered spaces like a fOil hunting
prey.
This brings me to my very
controversial and upsetting point.
A frie~. John, came to me in a great
deal of anger a few days aso. Apparently,
he had deposited a quarter for his measer
IS minutes so he could stop by a friend's
dorm room in Squire Hall.
Looking out the window, he watched a
Public Safety officer ticketing his car.
John was sure his time badn't expired, so
he ran down to checlc.
When he got to his car, there was a
ticket under lbe wiper and three minutes
left on the meter.
Wait. It aetJ worse.
He spotted a university employee
nearby and asked her to be his witness.
He proceeded to chase the meter reader
and plead his cue, including the fact he
bad a witness to bls unelapsed meter time.
The metermonster allegedly said, "I
don't give a crap if President Roselle wu
your witnenl"
He then told John that the violation
Sara
Weiss
flags sometimes flip up on their own, then
flip down again. All of th"ir own acc:ord.
Being that these devices are springtriggered, it would be possible for a flag
to flip once - in one direction - but
impossible to go back and forth.
Remember, never underestimate the
superhuman powers of a parkiq meter
flq. Hmmm...
After John approached the Public
'Safety officer he said, "he'd take (Jolm's)
word for it," and voided the ticlcet.
)i
John then voiced his anger to Public
Safety manager Richard Hester.
Hester was sincerely apologetic and he
called the officer's flag-flipping
explanation "dumb," John said.
My friend, who is not one to take crap
in any shape or form, has now decided to
appeal two previous public safety
violations.
My questions ~e simply these: How
many meter violations on campus are
legitimate? Are these "enforcers" simply
too lazy to wait for time to expire? Such
behavior is immoral, unfair, and probably
illegal.
·
Students are denied many parking
privileges as it is.
Our city and university are jointly
limiting students' their parking rights. The
city , tJuough parkulator implementation,
is just licking its chops to fatten it's
treasure chest. At least $10,500 wonh of
potential fines were issued last week in
parlwlator offenses alone.
Hopefully John's incident was an
isolated one. But if this is happening over
and over again, chances are students wilt'
have to be the ones to talte matters intct,
their own hands.
If you ever see something like thii
happening, to yourself or someone else,
get a witness and repon il.
~
Perhaps we should simply buy;
bicycles. The commuters will find it'
invigorating exercise. When it rains, you~can skip bathing in the morning, and talte":
a pseudo-shower on your way to clus.
Or perhaps we should get serious about
a campus parkiDg g~~rqe.
University officials like the idea, but"'·
don't fonee construction any dme In the~
near future because the budJet won•( ·
allow it.
'1
Yet with revenues from parkulatorw
violations along with university and state
funding, a parkina aaraae may not be:
such a distant pipedream.
t
Sara Weiss is a copy editor f!N The
Review.
STAINED PAGES
8 • THE RMEW • September 24, 1991
Discipline AIDS clinic
continued from page 1
continued from p~Ae 1
floormates than a rule an RA
says I'm violating."
Karen Poole (AS SR), hall
director of Thompson, said
students are excited about
making their own rules.
But not all students agree
selling their own rules is the
way to reduce hall tensions .
One student said, "The
community building through
contracts is a waste of time
because most violations against
other students are committed by
people from other halls, not by
hall community members."
One RA in Russell said,
"When people are closer on a
fl oor they tend to party together
in the rooms of a floor instead
of going out."
" Questions
about
the
program ' s results can not be
answered until the contracts go
into effect on Friday,"
Cummings said.
"We can only remain hopeful
that the program will help
students feel more comfortable
in the halls," she said.
1988 when the Delaware Dental
Society received a letter from
Dr. Dean L. Winslow, an
infectious disease specialist,
complaining that HIV-infected
patients were denied care by
private dentists.
After studying the problem,
Rosen said the committee found
"many dentists were concerned
about treating HIV patients ."
The problem was not
confined to Delaware, Rosen
said. "HIV patients were
having difficulty getting access
to dental care nationwide."
The committee then began an
education campaign, he said, to
show dentists they could safely
treat HIV -infected patients in
their regular offices.
But, Rosen said, "there was
still a reluctance by many
dentists to treat known HIV
patients ."
The mood at the ceremony
was upbeat, but officials
present said the clinic was still
too new to evaluate its
successes or failures.
CBC repairs
continued from
j
Renovations ,to the Center for Black Cuhure
cost $10,000 more than originally estimated.
The College Conaortium for International
Studie1 Ia composed of 170 American Colleges
and Univeraitin . About 1400 students partici pated In CCIS program& in 1989-1990 .
Sprino 1992
• ..)D:,¢0 ·.-'-?-
~
•
'
't.
'
.--~
.•
'
1~
renovation for the center, it
would never have been
done ."
The list of demands CBS
presented in March included
re-evaluation
of
the
multicultural requirement,
expansion of recruitment
areas, and allocation of more
funds to find academically
gifted black faculty, staff and
students.
Sicilia said the repairs to
the center are necessary to
improve cultural diversity .
"We all need to have a place
to go where we can feel
comfortable.
"The atmosphere at a
university makes a big
difference," he said. "We
want people to come on
campus and feel warmth.
This includes the reparations
of the center, the addition of
the Visitor's Center, as well
as all of the other renovations
going on."
MBNA America offered
$250 to the male and
female runners breaking
the previous state records,
and the first wheelchair
athlete to break 14
minutes.
Schweizer's Therapy
and
Rehabili tation
Challenge awarded $100 to
one participant from each
of the walking, running ,
and wheelchair categories.
Rex
Myers,
of
Morristown, N.J., was the
recipient of the Schweizer
challenge award, coming in
first overall with a time of
15 :30. Myers, 20, had not
raced since May and said
"it felt good" to race again.
Myers donated his
award to St. Thomas
Episcopal Church.
Denise Knickman (AS
OR) met the Schweiz er
challenge with a time of
breaking
the
18:15,
previous course record for •'
women of 19:03.
••
Olympic runner Vic ki
Huber of Wilmington won the MBNA America prize, ,}j
breaking state and cour e ~:
records with a time of .
·, ~
15:45 .
Wheelchair
athl et e
Michael
King,
of~.
Cochranville, PA, also met -.
the MBNA challenge with '.::
a personal and course '
record time of 12:52.
'"'
King is a member of the·::
United States Di sabl ed
Track Team and has been
racing si nee 198 7.
Runner Amy Reuter (AS ...
JR) said, " I like the fact .....
that the university and th e
community both do it. It is . .
a nice combination of"'
different groups. "
I
end Tl1e Ret•icw.
You.' re invited to learn about
"THE FATS OF LIFE"
STUDY IN IRELAND
The' Revie~.:'!
needs.: . '
computer.:
graphic
illustrators.
Call Sonia "
at.
mntlnued from p~Ae 1
p~Ae 2
I
··,·,-.i,ii
• ·-~=}·.
SK race for MissioA ...
St. Patrlck'l College
Maynooth, Ireland
Unlverelty of Limerick
Limerick, Ireland
• Liberal Arts Program
• 30 St.udent Maximum
• 3.0 G.P.A. Required
• Business Program Option
• International Student Village
• 3.0 G.P.A. Required
SPONSORING CCl..LEGES
St. Bonaventure Unlverelty
Keene State College, NH
Mohegan Community College
Come to a nutrition program
Thursday, October 3, 1991
in room 236 Alison Hall from
12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Receive practical tips for lowering the fat content of your diet.
Your heart will thank you!
Conducted by Marianne Carter, R.D.
Nutrition Clinic Counselor
TENTATIVE COST: $5.00
Bring your lunch. A beverage will be provided.
Open to all
To register, call451-8729
Enrollment is limited
CCIS
451-27.7, 1··~
Suite 2038
301 OlCford Valley Rd .
Yardley, PA 19067
(215) 493--4224
Other CCIS Programs: Italy, Englarid, Scotland, Sweden,
Germany, Portugal, Greece, Israel, Spain, France, Mexico,
Ecuador, Colombia, China, Switzerland, Soviet Union .
AtiN"
A M E R I C A3
Sponsored by the Nutrition Clinic,
Department of Nutrition and Dietetics
and the Office of Employee Relations
.MBNA America is looking
for People of all ages
We are looking for qualified Part-time Outbound
Telemarketing Representatives to promote one of
the nation's leading credit card programs.
Come join the 5,500+ people of MBNA America.
MBNA will be returning this Monday, 9/23/91, 10:00 a.m.
through Friday, 9/27/91, 5:00p.m. We will be accepting
applications at this time. Stop by to see one of our
representatives if you have any questions.
Successful candidates must be self-motivated, be results-oriented, and possess strong communication
skills. Previous Customer contact experience is preferred. Schedules are available as follows with potential
for some flexibility:
Monday through Thursday
10 a.m.- 2 p.m.
12 p.m.- 4 p.m .
• 5 p.m. - 8 p.m .
8:30 p.m. - 11 :30 p.m .
Base salaries are $7.4 7 /hr. with potential for attractive monthly incentives and bonuses.
•
•
•
If you are unable to visit us this week, please submit an application to:
MBNA America
400'Ciirtstlana Road
Newark, Delaware 19713
Or call (800) 637-2070 Mon.-Thurs.: 8 a.m .• 7 p.m., Fri.: 8 a.m. ~ 5 p.m.
•---......1~
© 1991 MBNA America
MBNA America Is an Equal Opportunity Employer
September 24, 1991 • THE REVIEW •
9
CAMPUS CALENDAR
Tuesday, Sept. 24
Meetins: International
Relations Club.
International Center, 52
W. Delaware Ave., 5 p.m.
Meeting: Student
Environmental Action
Coalition. 108 Memorial
Hall, 7 p.m. Everyone
welcome.
Stanley H. kaplan LSAT
Seminar: 1 00 Kirkbride
Hall, 5 p.m. Sponsored by
the Pre-law Student
Association. All new and
non-members are
welcome.
Bible Study: Word of Ufe
Campus Ministry. 219
Tom at 453-0266.
Smith Hall, 9 p.m. For
more infonnation, call
Tom at 453-0266.
Meeting: Galadrim (Sci-fi
club). Evans Hall, 3rd floor
drawing room, 7 p.m.
Come to the club Y.OU read
about in The Review.
Energy & Stat Seminar:
536 Ewing Hall, 2 p.m.
Contact: j.
Schuenemeyer.
Thursday, Sept. 26
Wednesday, Sept. 25
P&T Committee: 536
Ewing Hall, 10 a.m.
Franco-American
Seminar: P. Barbe,
Universite of Paris VI, "A
unified approach for limit
theorems on l-, M- and
some other estimators."
536 Ewing Hall, 1 p.m.
Student Combinatorics
Seminar: G. Fiorini,
University of Delaware,
Introductory Talk. 536
Ewing Hall, 11:15 a.m.
Bible Study: Word of life
Campus Ministry. 235
Purnell Hall, 9 p.m. For
more information, call
Stat Lab: Contact: J.
Schuenemeyer. 536 Ewing
Hall, 12:30 p.m.
Combinatorics Seminar:
G. Ebert, University of
Delaware, " The exterior
and interior graphs
associated with conics."
536 Ewing Hall, 3 p.m.
Colloquium: "Cognitive
theory and design :
Simulation models as
tools for the construction
of cognitive artifacts,"
Stellan Ohlsson, learning
Research and
Development Center,
University of Pittsburgh.
207 Williard Hall, 1 p.m. ,
Meeting: Equestrian
Team. 116 Sharp
laboratory, 6 p.m. All are
welcome.
Friday, Sept. 27
by lnterVarsity Christian
Fellowship (IVCF). Every
weeknight in over 25
locations around campus.
For undergraduates,
graduate students, and
international students.
Call 368-5050 for a time
to fit your schedule.
Seminar:
Homogenization and
Porous Media. 1<.
l<hashanah, University of
Delaware,
"Homogenization ,and
seabottom interaction."
536 Ewing Hall, 1 p.m.
Campus calendar is
provided as a service to
the university
community. Publication
is not guaranteed.
Campus calendar is
published when space
allows. Announcements
should be sent to:
Campus Calendar, The
Review, Student Center
B-1, Newark, DE 19716.
Wave Seminar: B.
Vainberg, Moscow State
University, "Asymptotic
behavior of solutions of
initial boundary value
problems for hyperbolic
equations ... " 536 Ewing
Hall, 2:30p.m.
Ongoing
Bible Study: Sponsored
FOR THE HOMELESS
Newark's "BEST" Subs, Steaks and Pizza!
& HUNGRY
454-9999
Free Lunch Delivery 11:00 am to 2:00pm
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Monday: "Wing It Night!": '
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Wednesday: "HUfylp Nig ~~: ·...,
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Open: Sunday through Thursday
10:00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m.
Friday & Saturday
10:00 a.m. to 2:00a.m.
(1st 200)
ASK
BEA
. .
?••
HELP DETERMINE
HOW YOUR
COMPREHENSIVE
STUDENT.FEE
IS USED
The Student Center Allocation
Board, which funds registered
student organizations, is
accepting applications.
Students interested in serving on
the board may obtain an
application from room 109
Perkins Student Center.
Application deadline:
We extend an Invitation to all Interested "Men of Good Character", the
opportunity to be a Charter Member of our Future Chapter at Delaware.
Wednesday, October 9, 1991
4:00p.m.
lutfl~Dktfri&Jn 5f£1J~ 29tli 1992
Call 451-1036
10 • THE REVIEW • September 24, 1991
.
·
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'
Think of it as separate checks for your phone bill.
If you've ever had trouble figuring out just who made which calls, take a tip from us. Get AT&T
1:
Call MaMger.t For free. D With Call MarUJger, all you have to do is dial a simple code. And we'll separate
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your long distance calls from the ones your roommates make. D Plus, if you sign up for Call MarUJger
now, you'll also get a free hour's worth of AT&T long distance calling.* And you'll become a member of
AT&T Student Saver Plus, a program of products and services designed to save students time and money.
D So sign up for AT&T Call Manager. Because there are .some things roommates shouldn't have to share.
GetAT&TCallManagertoday. Call1800 654-0471 Ext. 4813.
ATs.T
vivant
September 24, 1991 • TilE REVIEW • 11
"Women: '60s and '70s
influences, bold colors
The elegant, expensive and
'60s repercussions, as slim and
seemingly far~ut women's cloehing
sleek are key for the overall psyche
worn by high·fubion models on
of the season.
European runways probably won't
Trends from the late '60s and
be found on Newark's Main Street early '70s, such as bright colors and
or in the closets of most college
the hip-hop look, also re-introduce
themselves this year, says Roy
students.
Some of the so-called in-vogue • Campbell, a fashion writer for the
styles seem so impractical, bizarre
Philadelphia Inquirer.
Heidi Baron, a fashion editor for
and outrageous, they look more lilte
Mirabella magazine, suggests
Halloween costumes than Anne
Klein's or Mario Valentino's topwomen's clothing will feel a '70s
influence with longer hemlines and
class designs.
However, for this year's fall
"that peasant-gypsy kind of look
season, low-key clothes with a
with printed fabrics.".
comfortable, realistic, casual mood
The biggest change since last
are turning up on pages of fashion
fall, according to Michael
Borden, fashion director
magazines and catalogs.
Recalling last year when wide
for
Mademoiselle
headbands, polka-dots and catsuits
magazine, is bright,
dominated styles, fall is still feeling
bold
color,
breaking customary hue rules.
"Traditionally, darker colors are
associated more with fall clothing,"
he says, "and incredible brights and
pastels are normally associated with
summer."
Campbell notes that golden
browns also make their way into the
color scene, along with deep greens
for casual college "army chic."
One of this year's most welcome
characteristics: black.
Once again, the most slimming,
flattering and sexiest of all colors
provides a base for all types of
clothing.
Borden emphasizes that
black is almost always
in, as bright colors
need dark ones,
such as brown,
The black leather
motorcyle jacket
replaces the
traditional Top
Gun bomber.
Cherie Mayle (AS
black or gray, to ground them.
"The brights need to be
integrated with something - black
jeans, leggings or tights to winterize
them ," he says.
And like black, denim has
established itself as an integral pan
of the total fashion vocabulary,
Borden says. " Denim is always
important and is always reiterated.
re-invented and constantly re·
invigorated.
·
Baron points out that many chain
stores, including The Gap, currently
carry jeans in earthy colors.
Silhouettes loosen up as this
season's tops become baggier and
sweaters bulkier, with cables and
fancy knits . A sleek line is
see WOMEN'S page 12
Big cotton tops
paired with skinny,
black bottoms and
high boots provide a
balanced look for
women. Plaid linings
are the rage for
'
men's trench
coats and
jackets.
JR).
e
c~ua
anCherie and Chris·=
Barker (AS SO)
Photos by Allison Graves
Text by Jill Laurinaitis
Men: poor-boy look
Plaid madness enlivens
big jackets and shirts
(Left to right) Jennifer Vandergrift (Newark resident), Joel Lehman (AS
SR), Chris and Cherie.
A few words on trends
ofunillex dressing
Women no longer have an excuse
to raid their boyfriends ', fathers' or
broth ers' closets for sporty blazers,
overs i ;~.c d c otton shirts or loungy,
comfortalc sweaters .
While mensw e ar inluences on
wom e n 's s tyles have toned down
sin c e la s t year, many retail chain
clothing stores show more women ' s
versions of men's casuals.
T hi s ne w trend is what Campbell
call s "unisex dressing, or young men
and women basically wearing the
same stuff - belts, hooded tops from
, The Gap or J . Crew, or any styles '
t.hat look great on both."
· Other traits, which Campbell lists
as both '70s-influenced and popular
with both sexes, are baggy jeans and
"ugly shoes - black combat boots or
Doc Marten military-looking shoes."
Campbell emphazises jackets as a
replacement for sweaters this season,
with the "funky quilted baseball
jacket" leading the way.
Bombers once again are back, but
in quilted plaids or muted colors,
Baron points out.
Possibly even more popular than
the bomber, according to Campbell,
• is the black leather motorcycle
jacket.
"A few years ago, brown Top Gun
bombers were in, but people have
shoved tllem to the back of their
closets."
Another classic making a bigger
statement this year: baseball hats,
says Campbell. "They're for
everyone."
Men, get out your bagpipes.
And along with your
bagpipes, bring your Scottish
cap, a pair of plaid pants and a
loose, big · shirt and jacket.
While you're at it, put on your
best poor-boy look.
"Everything is being done
with
plaid,"
explains
Guillermo Zalamca, a fashion
editor at Esquire magazine.
And Zalamca's not talking
about·thc small plaid patterns
subtly used for pants last year,
but big-time, bold, .Scotch
tartanS.
This fall's plaids arc hardly
shy, and neither are the bright
colors showing up in wideribbed, oversized , wool
tunleneck sweaters.
Although '70s influences
are creeping up on women's
clothing, Zalamca says "no
way" are they doing the same
for men's fashions .
"Menswear always stays
classic, which gives it a longer
shelf life," he explains. "It
never really goes into a trend."
This year's slight variations
of the classics include slim,
narrow, unpleatcd pants, and
shins which arc cut softer for
a looser fit, according to
Zalamea.
He says blue-denim shirts
are being worn with ties, as
denim is being dressed up and
down this season . "Denim is
even paired up with blazers
for work."
Campbell notes he has
spotted students sporting
white denim at Temple
University and on other
college campuses, even
though the cooler weather has
kicked in.
Long-sleeved, hooded
shirts are thicker this year,
says Campbell, whQ also
claims that the baseball jacket
is the "new sweater."
How would Campbell
describe a typical college
man's outfit?
"A baseball jacket, quilted,
with a hooded sweatshirt
underneath. A pendant on a
black string, and wide leather
belt with a big silver buckle
belling white denim jeans, and
some ugly black shoes - that's
all you need."
Zalamea predicts suede
lace-ups will be the casual
men's footwear item this fall.
Other outdoorsy jackets,
shown in J. Oew and Tweeds
catalogs, have corduroy or
suede collars and yes, plaid
linings.
Comfort also shows its
Plaid accesories enhance oversized curduroy or
tweed blazers. joel Lehman (AS SR).
priority in men's clothing with
blazers made of cheni lie, a
fuzzy
fabric
Zalamea
describes as "really soft and
lush," made with wool yarn
and mixed with silk, colton or
rayon.
~·
Keep your kilt In the
drawer, says Zalmnea, but yw
might want to pay mort
attention to hats and ScotUshstyle caps, plaid or c:oune. •
they too are maldng a clasllc
comeback.
12 • THE REVIEW • September 24, 1991
Tweed caps
make a classic
comeback as
scarves add
texture to
men's and
women's
outfits.
Cherie and
joel.
Women's
continued from page 11
maintained, however, when big tops
are coupled with skinny bottoms,
such as short skirts, narrow pants or
leggings.
Campbell defines tights as an
accessory necessity. Tights are more
opaque than last season, sans lace
borders on leg bottoms.
"Balance is nice to have with a
builder look with narrow bottoms,
·such as a big sweater over a catsuit."
Borden says.
An alternative to traditional
sweaters are oversized shirts, made
with soft, heavy cotton, sweatshirtlike material with V-necks or big
zipper fastenings.
A myriad of different shapes are
reHt!ICted in menswear-inspired
blaze• and pants suits, as tweeds,
plai sand Prince of Wales patterns
doll\il,late fabrics.
Cflnpbell notes that the
men ear influence on women's
styles has toned down since last
Paul
Kane
• Friday - For those who have
trouble getting into Happy Hours at
the DU or the Balloon, check out
Sbarro Cafe Restaurant for $1
shooters.
• Saturday- If this isn't enough
to make you sick already, the DU
now has "Buck Off! Night," Onedollar discounts on anything you
could possibly want.
Even in the late-night food
department, Margherita's and the hot
dog dude outside the Balloon will
experience new competition from
Sbarro's since they now stay open
until 3:30a.m. on Thursdays, Fridays
and Saturdays.
This is,incredible.
It seems every bar in Newark is
offering a different special each
night.
This is hardly what Adam Smith
envisioned when he penned "Wealth
of Nations."
But this is pure capitalism at
work: several businesses competing
for the same market (in this case, a
bunch of drunken college kids)
without govemmept constraint.
Another feature of competition,
though, is that not everyone will
succeed, and in this case several
gimmicks will fail.
Without a doubt, good marketing
strategies will help and a catChy title
will be necessary to survive the
drink-special circuit.
Titles like "Buck Offl" will surely
catch on because of the irreverent
stance they lake.
But Sbarro's "Lowest Beer Party"
on Saturdays tells the customer right
off the bat about the quality of Its
product.
After one sip of the house beer
(which tastes remarkably like the
Beast), you '11 kn·o w they're not
talking about the price being the
lowest, but the quality of the beer.
All this means is that the average
student can go out almost every
single night of the week (and I'm not
advocating that anyone do this,
although many already do), drink a
fair amount and be well fed without
spending more than $60.
Hopefully, now that I'm legal, I'll
be able to go out and enjoy the fruits
of pure competition in Newark's
local watering holes. (TI!at is, if I can
ever get out of this damn office.)
Paul Kane is the Administrative News
Editor for The Review.
P.S. - If you're someone who does
go out every night, please don't drive
-all of Newark's bars are in walking
distance . And walk in a group
because even residential streets have
proven unsafe for students.
And they're both represented by the insignia you wear
as a member of the Army Nurse
Corps. The caduceus on the left
means you're part of a health care
sy~tem in which educational and
career advancement are the rule,
not the exception. The gold bar
on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you're earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 3219, Warminster,
PA 18974-9845. Or call toll free: 1-800-USA-ARMY, ext. 438.
Wool and mohair are the season's material for oversized
sweaters, as bold textures and big cables dominate
women's tops. jennifer Vandergrift {Newark resident).
ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALL YOU CAN BE:
STUDEN
z
0
I
Newark's bars have something to offer every night
Capitalism is a beautiful thing in
Newark. .
As the recession rips across
America, companies continue to
announce price hikes and employee
cutbacks.
Even this university announced its
largest tuition increase in five years,
while the ongoing budget crisis has
brought about sports teams cuts and
proposals to eliminate academic
programs.
But with no regard for economic
problems, beer prices have come
crashing down all across town within
the past three weeks.
Drink specials have popped up on
every single night of the week,
including Sunday.
Just a few examples:
• Sunday - The Down Under
offers $3.50 pitchers to help wash
down those $.50 hot dogs.
• Monday - For your football
viewing pleasure, Player's Saloon
and Restaurant offers $1.25 Rolling
Rocks along with a free buffet.
• Tuesday - In direct competition
with the Down Under's "What the
Buck," The Stone Balloon now has
$.49 Budweiser drafts and, for the.
bigger drinker, $.99 16 oz. Buds or
Bud Lights.
• Wednesday - New to attracting
college students, El Sombrero
Mexican Restaurant offers $1 drafts
from 9 p.m.to 10 p.m.
• Thursday -If you didn't get
enough nachos on Wednesday night,
head back to the Deer Park for $3 .75
pitchers.
THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO
BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY.
year.
As for footwear, Borden
recommends thigh-high boots with
leggings, and shoe boots with
narrow pants.
Big hoop earrings, chunky
bracelets, and other ethnic jewelry
adding culturally evocative touches
are ~1'ass ified as accessory musthavc!s!"
Berets and large buckles on belts
and ·sfloes also provide classic chic.
Offier late-breaking fashion news
to l&Cp an eye out for: sheer black
fabrics for a subtle way of dressing
up . '"More • 70s reverberations
inchwe intentionally uneven
henl!i~es and intense prints.
Best beer bets in town
RES
LLS
t-
~
z~
HOM
YELLL
~
SEPT. 27
SEPT. 27
SEPT. 27
on materials,
umni Office
.,
'
I
I
.
HO
G '91
•
1n
ente
ent
Sc tcmbcr 24, 1 YCJl • THf Rl VIEW • : ~
(From top)
lead singer
Axl Rose, new
drummer
Matt Sorum,
ex-member
Steve Adler
(Clockwise from left)
guitarist lzzy Stradlin,
Slash shows affection,
bassist Duff McKagan
Hard driveR
Rock n' roll
•
G N'R's
P.rtmary
1llusion of
grandeur
By Rob Rector
Emeruinment Editor
An album bound
py controversy
~nd diversity
By Ron Kaufman
Entertainment Editor
The songs
On the angry-titled "Back Off Bitch," the
impressive vocal range of Rose is highlighted .
After hearing the song's rage through
Rose's lyrics and the strain in his voice while
explaining his antipathy over a failed
relationship, it's a wonder he has any positive
relationships in his life at all.
~ (For those that were wondering, in the five
minute song, Rose screams the word "bitch"
Z:l times.)
~ Two of the most hard-driving songs on the
album, "Perfect Crime" and "Double Talkin'
Jive," sound as if they were mistakenly left off
f":lo
times 'II'
•
: The attitude of Guns N Roses ' Use Your
kllusion I and II can be summed up very
simply: The word "f**k" appears 34 times on
both albums.
: That's one "f**k" for every five minutes to
you and me.
. But the potency of the two Use Your
Illusion albums lies not only in a
controversial lyrical style, but also in the airslicing lead guitar licks of Slash, the heartjolting drum beats of Guns' newcomer Matt
Sorum, and, of course, the voice of W. Ax!
Rose.
And what a voice. It can climb to the peak
of human ear-drum decibels with the intensity
Qf an F-16 dogfight, yet can drop into a
gravely sounding snarl like a psychopath
behind the controls of a wrecking ball for the
first time.
Use Your Illusion I has no overall sound,
for each song carries not only a different
comment on daily life and emotional content,
but also a varied musical tempo.
•
(from I to r) W. Axl Rose, Duff McKagan, Dizzy Reed, Matt Sorum, Slash and I~ Stradlin stand calmly with
attitudes for destruction in their lastest simultaneous releases "Use Your lllus1on I and II."
1987's Appetite for Destruction.
The lead guitar riffs of Izzy Stradlin on
"Double Talkin' Jive" are some of most
melodic and bluesy tones to appear in hard
rock music since Deep Purple's Ritchie
Blackmore made them popular 20 years ago.
Taking a different tum from their usual
arm-ripping style, the ballads "Don't Cry"
and "November Rain" sport melodies that
show a great deal of impressive instrumental
controL
"Don't Cry" is the only song to appear oh
both Use Your Illusion I and II and while
carrying the same harmonies and choruses,
·
the lyrics slightly differ.
Though "Don't Cry" is a soothingly
mellow song, it pales in comparison to the
sheer beauty of "November Rain."
Originally appearing on a demo EP
released by G N' R before Appetite,
"November Rain" has wonderful piano
playing by Rose and beautiful guitar work by
Slash reminiscent of Pink Floyd 's
"Comfortably Numb."
The 10-minute epic "Coma" that ends the
album is the G N ' R answer to Nancy
Reagan's "Just Say No" campaign. The song
is an insider's look at a heroin overdose that
stresses survival in a world where it is
see PRIMARY page 14
UP ALL NIGHT Ole-hard G N' R fans lined up at mualc storea acrosa the
muntry, like Wonderland Recorda at 110 W. Main St. (pictured above), that
extended their hours to welcome the arrival of their band'• two perpetually
delayed atudlo releues. With over three hours of music, few were disappointed.
Many teens who, until recently, have heralded Poisan as .
hard-driven rock icons are going to lose their cherry on -Use
Your Illusion II.
1bese are the same kids who are content with hearil)&.the
edited version of "You Could Be Mine" on Top 40 ,rmllo
stations and shyly giggle when the word "bitch" is reel~ in
the chorus.
The album does contain the popular radio "listenerfriendly" song (as listener-friendly as G N' R can be,for .
popular radio), but includes a slew of tumultuous tunc:s, ,\hat ,
will feel like a cheese grater rubbing against the soft flesh of
those unaccustomed to their pure musical savagery.
Use ,Your Dluslon II features the three singles tllat.Jutve
been released, in one media form or another, as tempters to
what the upcoming albums will contain.
The now-famous quote from Cool Hand Luke ushers in
the pre-release d "Civil War" a socially literate tune
questioning the importance of living in "the land of the free"
when the land can't be tread upon for all the battle..wom
bodies strewn across it.
:
The second is Bob Dylan ' s "Knockin' on Hea\&n's
Door". It was first released as a live video filmed at th~ Ritz
and was repeatedly shown every other hour on MTV. •
The 1973 song is one that has been a favoriee of
musicians and is given royal treatment in the studio by G N'
R comple~e with trademark Axl Rose vocals and a choir.~
The last of the pre-released singles, "You Could Be Mine"
was in the latest Ah-nold destruction-fest, Terminator~
The song was tailor-made for the post-apocalyptic tiJeme
of the film with lines like:
• '
"I'm a cold heartbreaker I Fit ta bum and I'll rip ~our
heart in two I And I'll leave you !yin' on the bed."
But that is where the album merely begins.
:
In "14 Years," frontman Ax! Rose slams his ex-wife:Erin
Everly, criticizing her and her friends for being theorcore
reason of their troubled shon-term marriage.
:
The song doesn't cut comers telling her to just go away
and equating her to a hooker saying "Nothin's for free". :
The song showcases Ro~e·s talents beyond singing,
featuring wicked ragtime piano riffs.
:
He nails the lid on the coffm of his previous marriage:Vith
"Yesterday."
•
It's a beautiful, flowing melody reflecting on the empty
past and the need for nothing but photos to remember it lfy.
Guns is at their gear-grinding, alcohol-swigging,1!stfighting bad-ass best in "Get in the Ring."
:
The no-holds-barred single verbally mutilates members of
the press, naming people and publications.
:
Bob Guccione, Jr. of "Spin" magazine takes a partiiMar
•
0
see HARD ROCK pas( 14
Building a world of anarchy
By Russ Bengtson
Senior Staff Reporter
You gel nolhin' for nothin'
If lhllt' s what you do
Turn around, bitch
I've gol a use for you
Besides, you ain't got nothin' better to
do
And I'm borr:d.
- "lts So Easy,"
Guns N' Roses
Welcome to the jung le . Guns N'
Roses aren't a band, they're an alti tude.
But it hasn ' t been a bed of roses for
these Guns. With this group, it's so
easy to get in trouble.
• 1987 - The original cover for
Appetite For Destruction, by ~rtist
Roben Williams, was not well rece1ved .
The artwork depicts a woman who
appears to have just been raped. Geffen
Records changed th e cov~r , altho.u gh
the original stil l appears m the lmer
notes.
G N' R bucked the rising trend of
socially conscious metal with cuts like
drinking anthem "Nig htrain " and
A brief history of the
violence-ridden past
of rock's bad apples
heroin-themed "Mr. Brownstone."
Appetite steamed up the chans like a
runaway locomotive. It sold 13 million
copies.
• 1988- G N' R Lies. Eight of the
four tracks on the album had been
previously released as the LIVE ?!•@
Like a Suicide EP on Uzi Suicide
Records in 1986.
When G N l R writes a song ,
anything goes . The cut "One in a
Million" is a classic example.
"One in a Million" could have
finished other bands. Lead vocalist W .
Ax! Rose (William Bailey) used this
song as an opportunity to lash out at
ethnic groups and sexual preferences in
a rather direct manner. Rose didn't
make many f riends in the Parental
Music Resource Center (PMRC) that
year.
0 N' R was dropped from an AIDS
benefit show, and tourmates Living
Colour wasn't amused either ..Lies only •
sold four million copies, which ,p ales by
the blockbuster success of Appetite.
Lies was meant to fill the short
interval between Appetite and a long
awaited follow-up, "Just a Little
patience." Tbe next two years didn't
produce a new album, but began to
shape to the G N' R image.
• 1989- Guitarist Izzy Stradlin'
(Jeff Isabell) is arrested for "urinating
on an airline galley floor."
• 1989 MTV Music AwardsStradlin' is slugged by Motley Crue
lead singer Vince Neil for allegedly
hitting on his wife. Currently Neil and
Rose are at odds, and Neil bas
challenged Rose to box out their •
problem publicly.
• 1990 American Music AwardsGuiwist Slash (Saul Hudson) expresses
his gratitude by saying "f..lc" twice on
live TV.
• July 1990 - "Whaz 10 civil 'bout
war anyways?" Drummer ~teven Adler
' see ANARCHY~ 14
14 • THE REVIEW • September 24, 1991
L~ughs· from
the Big Apple fill Newark.Hall
By Jordan Harris
Conllibcnine Etlrot
On Saturday night, a bit of the Borsch
Belt oomedy arrived at Newark Hall when
New York based actor/comic Robert Klein
brought his intelligent, influential and
Jewish-humored act to the university.
In front of a less-than-capacity house,
Klein yucked about everything from Pee
Wee "I Touch Myself'' Herman to the
value of college essay exams.
Though the crowd may have been small,
the audience was definitely a reverential
one, for the minute Klein stepped on stage,
there were plenty of hoots and screams that
could have been heard on Academy Street.
The evening started with an
unintentional laugh, when Klein first
discovered that the Student Programming
Association (SPA) spelled his name
"Klien" on their T-shirts. Since he
obviously wasn't the one SPA wanted, he
walked off the stage with a sly look and
goofy grin before being screamed back.
As a college student, Klein looked
forward to any essay exams he would be
able to "get the shovel out for" made up by
professors who wanted to make a quick
buck by giving easy exams before the
holidays.
When he was a pre-med student at
Alfred University in the early 60s, Klein
said he lacked all capabilities for success as
a medical student: "talent, motivation,
math skills, chemistry skills, biology skills,
everything to make a good doctor."
Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas was not out of Klein's potshot
range. He considers Thomas a "political
actor," for someone called "action" before
his Senate conftmllltion hearings.
Klein also used his talents on the
harmonica to mock Thomas' upbringing on
a blues song about his "sharecroppin, hut
livin' childhood." He singing resembled
Bruce Willis' blues attempt rather than an
impersonator.
As a supporter and writer for Michael
Dukakis' Presidential campaign, Klein
stressed that, he had the right to make fun
·of the former Governor, and he did just
that. To him, Dulcalcis was a defmite stiff,
an "ethnic who was really WASP, one who
needed an ass loosening."
He then pronounced Dukakis' name
about 15 times, fourteen of them with a
heavy Yiddish "kkiss" on the end.
Klein used much of the show to talk
about aging and death in particular, with a
20 minute sequence on how the Jewish
bury their dead ("usually within two hours
of expiration") and bargain-hunting for
coffin prices. But seruor citizens were the
focus of this portion.
Eight years ago, his parents moved from
New York to a place in Florida called
"Section 21." Just the posed question of
"would you want to live in a place that
recalls the German front" sent hysteria
through the crowd, before he even
launched his impersonation of old Jewish
women dying .
As a past SJ,>Okesman for Disney, Klein
recalled his past trips to Disney World and
Disneyland, meeting a Yugoslavianaccented Donald Duck, and a gruff Mickey
Mouse. He raised a concern about Mickey
Mouse's stature in today 's society and
referred to him as the ultimate "impotent
corporate figure."
The evening closed with Klein again
demonstrating his singing and harmonica
talents, performing harmoniously despite a
cold that gave him a slight sore throat.
He launched into the 1'Yeah, Yeah" song
(in which the title doubled as the songs
verses, and chorus, and refrains), a
practically instrumental tune, sang the
blues with "If I'm Jewish, why do I sing
like this ," and closed the show with a
tribute 10 divorce lawyers, and a dedication
to his hometown.
Once Klein left the. stage, the audience
spilled out, knowing they got a taste not
only of New York style but of intelligent,
Jewish humor.
Reflections of a life on Klein time
By Greg Orlando
So!niotSti7f~
t
Pamela Wray DeStefano
Laughs abounded Saturday night in Newark Hall when comedian Robert Klein took
the stage bringing his unique blend of jewish humor to the audienc~ .
"The best joke I've ever heard? It
probably can't be printed-it involves a
hospital patient with the word 'shorty'
written on his gerutals."
Such is the wit and wisdom of Robert
Klein, stand-up comedian, actor,
harmonica player and talk-show host. [and
DENTURE WEARER)
Speaking in a telephone interview
before his university show Saturday,
Klein admitted he didn't know much
about Delaware . "Delaware is the
corporation state, isn't it?" he asks . "I do
a lot of corporation jokes."
"By the way, have I played [the
university) before? I'm at the stage where
I wouldn't necessarily remember."
Klein, who describes his act as
"comedy with a point of view," says he
enjoys playing university campuses
because the audiences are reasonably
intelligent and enthusiastic.
"Not like the progressively convinced
audience of Andrew Dice Clay ," he says,
slyly.
Anarchy
Klein says he was never one for the
rughclub scene. "Too many fat-girlfriend
jokes for my taste."
"Although," he laughs, "The money
isn't so good at colleges."
College campuses have also afforded
Klein some interesting experiences.
"One time, I was playing an outdoor
show at R.I.T. [Rochester lnstitue of
Technology) and there were two huge
tank trucks dispensing beer-ten per cent
of the crowd was inebriated," he says, a
tinge of nostalgia in his voice.
Klein has had his share of trouble
during non-college apperarances, too.
Klein said during one concert at a
geriatric resort no one laughed at his
jokes. "It was nightmarish .. .l could have
been telling jokes to an oil-painting."
"Another time I was playing a
nightclub on Long Island and a guy threw
a pencil at me . I stage dove and started
fighting with the guy ."
Klein rates hecklers high on his list of
pet-peeves. "I let them know it annoys
me."
·
"I tell them it says Robert Klein
playing on the marquis, not Howie [the
heckler)."
Another sore spot for Klein is the USA
newtork which aired his talk-show,
"Robert Klein Time," for two years.
"We had some· good times on the
show-we were the first to feature an alldentist jazz band," he iays fondly.
But the nostalgia ends there. "I'm not
bitter," Klein says, through what sound·
like gritted teeth, "but they replaced us
with The Real-Estate show."
The bile dissapates, however, when
Klein speaks about his harmoruca, which
he frequently employs during his shows.
"I like the harmonica. It makes you
sound like you know what you're doing."
Klein also said the harmonica once
enabled to get in the good graces of a
loose woman.
"But," he says, "The harrnoruca player ·
is potentially very annoying. When a guy
pulls out a harmonica at a camp-out, he
runs the risk of being beaten severely."
Unless, of course, the guy at the campout is Robert Klein and the song, 'The
Bronx is Beautiful This Time of Year."
Sbarro Cafe Restaurant
continued from page 13
is canned after allegedly being
given 18 months to kick his heroin
habit. According to Adler, he was
canned because he tried to kick the
habit. Adler is later replaced by exCult drummer Matt Sorum.
• October 1990 - Rose is
arrested for allegedly hitting a
neighbor with a bottle. The charges
are dropped, and the cut "Right
Next Door to Hell" on Use Your
Members of Guns N' Roses in a
Illusion I records all the gory
· details.
• Summer 1990- G N' R,
with new keyboardist Dizzy Reed,
ask journalists to sign a contract '
that gives the band control over
continued from page 13
their interviews and specifies s tiff
penalties for breaches.
becoming increasingly easy to slip
Rose's brief marriage to Erin
into a mental malaise.
Everly and his psychological
problems contributed to the
The title
seemingly eternal delay orthe Use
The idea of "using one's illusion"
Your Illusion albums .
is not an idea originated by Guns N'
· . Everly, the inspiration for
Roses, but one given widespread
"Sweet Child 0' Mine," and Rose
popularity in Sigmund Freud's book
were wed in April of 1990 . By
"The Future of An Illu sion."
January 1991 the marriage was
Though Freud's book is largely an
annulled. Neighbors reportedly
explanation of the formation of
found a tombstone in the Roses'
religion, he confronts the philosophy
garage, spray painted with the
colorful epitaph, "Erin Rose, R.I.P. of personal illusions by proclaiming
that each person sees the world in a
Sweet Child 0' Die. Slut. You
completely different way and because
were one of many, nothing
no one person's reality is the "only"
special ."
Maybe psychiatric help wasn ' t
such a bad idea after all.
Before the current tour, Rose
allegedly saw a psychiatrist for five
hours a day, five days a week, to
find the source of his selfcontinued from page 13
destructive behavior.
beating
from Axl when he states the
• June 17, 1991 - Uniondale,
root of Guccione Jr.'s criticisms are
New York . G N' R comes out 2 l/2
nothing more than mere envy of his
hours late before a concert and
father's "position" as editor of
blames Rolling Stone and Geffen,
"Penthouse" magazine.
everyone but themselves . x
After his vocal shredding, Rose's
• July 8, 1991 - St. Louis . A
maniacal, cat -li ke laugh echoes
r iot, triggered by a fan taking
throughout
the speakers in
bootleg photos, starts with Rose
triumphant victory .
plunging into the crowd, and ended
But don't think G N' R would
in a reported $200,000 in damages
dedicate only one song in response to
and 60 injuries.
the press' accusations; that would be
"Thank you Dallas, f.. k you St.
toqeasy .
Louis and God bless America ."
The following song "Shotgun
The tender sentiment to St. Louis
Blues" further explains Axl's itchy
also appears in the liner notes of
trigger finger when it comes to the
Use Your Illusion.
press, in particular a certain Vince
• September 16, 1991 Neil.
Midnight. Use Your Illusion, after
He leaves little to chance
many months of delay, is finally
concerning the ongoing battle
released showing that G N' R has
between the two in the usual, subtle
not cooled off. Each album has
0 N' R style, telling his opposer to
more obscenities than a Dice act
withdraw air from his anal orifice.
and they ostracize almost as many
Axl's attempts to illustrate life
people . Don't worry if you get
through his eyes in "Locomotive
insulted, you ain't the first.
(Complicity)".
93 E. MAIN STREET, NEWARK, DE • 731-2100
state of alcohol-induced bliss.
Primary 'Illusions'
reality, all consciousness is an
illusion.
Thus, the title Use Your Illusion
is a way of saying "be yourself'' or
"believe in your reality."
The song "Don't Damn Me" on
Use Your Illusion I is Rose's
defense of the controversy
surrounding the song "One In A
Million" from G N' R Lies.
Much like the title's ideology, in
"Don' t Damn Me" Rose explains that
lyrics express his own perceptions
and not universal gospel.
Whatever your reality, using
illusions are definitely not a bad idea,
especially when you are shown the
way by Guns N' Roses.
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sbarro
Sbarro
Miller Party
Night
Shooters
Party Night
Sbarro Lowest
Beer Party
s1.oo
51. ~O Draft
s4.1s
Each Shooter
4 Selections
64 oz. Pitcher
HOUSE BEER SPECIAL
S.50 Draft
sa.oo
64 oz. Pitcher
64 oz. Pitcher
PIZZA AVAILABLE TILL CLOSING-3:30A.M.
It's Your Move . • •
Hard rock times 'II'
The song features nasal, whiny,
trippy vocals from Axl off-tempo
downward-spiraling chorus and
ending with a driving piano solo from
Dizzy Reed.
The album draws to a close with
"My World", a song that completely
strays from the norm featuring only
drums, keyboards and a heavilysynthesized rhythm supplied by
Rose.
Rose describes his world as one of
"socio-psychotic bliss". His vocals
snowball forward with intenSity tha1
gather biting hatred and disregard as
the song progresses.
The album's lyrics are scholarly
and well-written but meshed with
more than enough blasts of acidic
foul-mouthed rampage and hate to
cause members of the PMRC to wet
themselves.
G N ' R has created a musical
world of its own where they don't
merely push the boundaries, they
destroy them and violently create
their own.
Give blood & save a life.
Sign Up In Advance
Student Center Concourse
Tues., Wed., & Thurs.
September 24, 25, 26
Sponsors: Alpha Phi Omega
Gamma Sigma Sigma
October 2 & 3
lOAM- 4 PM
Rodney Room, Student Center
Blood Bank of Delaware. Inc.
6
September 24, 1991 • THE REVIEW •
15
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Chesnut Hill Plaza
25 Chesnut Hill Road
Mi~ Shopping Center
4609 Kirkwood Highway ·
Store and Pharmacy Hours:
9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Sunday 9 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Store and Pharmacy Hours:
9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Sunday 9 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Store and Pharmacy Hours:
8 a.m. - Midnight
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STUDY ABROAD
WINTER
SESSION
1992
January 6 - February 8
"It has been my most rewarding experience since
coming to Delaware. Being able to su. fiftun
plays in London was a terrific experience that I
never would have had back at U of D. •
"This trip was an excellent experience for learning aforeign culture and gaining an appreciation
for !he things taken for granted in America.·
"I found the trip to be a very rewarding and
valuable experience. I would recommend it to
anyone! l was also glad we went to Scotland. It
gave one a good break fom London: it was a
welcome change in scenery. The school obseroations were interesting and very worthwhile."
"The excursions and field trips were the
most valuable aspects of the program. They
encouraged us to open our ears and eyes and
break the stereotypes. Ilearned German conversation by being in a German atmosphere,
trying to speak with the natives and by reading relevant and interesting articles and
texts."
England/ Manchester & Wales
England I London
People's Republic of China I
Mechanical Engineering
Honors and Geography
Tianjin
Germany I Bayreuth
Economics
Foreign Languages and Uteratures
Foreign Languages and Uteratures
GERM 106-Cerman n.Eie~ntary/lntermedlote(4)
GERM 1117-German m. Intormedlate (4)
GERM 20f>.Culture 11uoush Conwnotlon (3)
GERM 208-Contomporary C.rm111y I tll
SPAN 1Q6.Sponllh U- EJernontary/Intemwdlate (4)
SPAN 107-Sponllh ID • lntermedillte (4)
SPAN 20f>.CuiN.. ThrtJUgh Conve~on (3)
SPAN 208-Contemporary Spoln I (3)
Director : Ms. T. Gilgenast
Directors: Ms. A. Veitia and Ms. B. Ware
MECH 467- Origins of Engineering (;l)
Directors: Dr. Herbert B. Kingsbury
England I Sheffield, Portsmouth, London
Nursing Science
NURS411.Cu1Nrol Diversity In Nu..tn5: A Olnlai Couroe 0)
Directors: Dr. P. Beeman and Dr. L. Bucher
England I London & Scotland/Edinburgh
Educational Development and Educational
Studies
EDDV 3ai-Languogo Artt Methoch OJ
EDST 39().Inotructlonol Strote5'eo 0)
Directors: Dr. D. Hicks and Dr. L. Mosberg
USSR I St. Petersburg (Leningrad)
foreign Languages and Uteratures
RUSS 205-Ru..Uan ConveruUon 0)
RUSS 267-Contomporary RuNia I tl)
RUSS 401-Adv.Grammor and Compoohlon (3)
FLLT 327-Ru•illn Lheratureln Tnntlatlon OJ
GEOC 102-HumanGeography (3)
GEOC 266-Spodol Problem 0)
Director: Dr. P. Rees
OCON 367·Eoonomtc Refurmo In C hino 0)
HlST 367.0.W. History ond Cultu .. (3)
CHIN 167--nllaiChln<oo (I)
Director: Dr. B. A brahms
Mexico /Yucatan
Foreign Languages and Uteratures and
Political Science
SPAN U&Sponllh 1-Eiomantuy !4)
SPAN 167-"-tnllal Sponllh OJ
SPAN 2117-Contemporary Latin ~rica (3)
POSC 311-Pol~tao of O.V.Ioplnl Natj..., PI
ARTii 367-!'rK:Diumbtu M 11\d Arthltocture0)
Directors: Dr.!. Dominguez and
Dr. M. Huddleston
Israel
Political Science and Sociology
POSC 409-Contemponry Plb. ln World Poltttao (3)
or !!CXl467-Inllltultlono ol (o,.l "'
I'OSC '52·Problerrw In tilt Urbon Polftlco (3)
or !!CXl467-lsntK Urbaa Scx:1o1o1J1 Cll
Directors: Dr. M . Palley and Dr. V. Klaff
England I London
English
France I Caen
Costa Rica I San Jose
liNGL4n -Studtnln Dramo : London Thc•t.. 0)
Foreign Languages and Uteratures
Foreign Languages and Uteratures
FREN 1Q6.Frencll D • El<rnontuy/lnte...--ilote (4)
FREN 107-Frencll m. Intermediate (4)
FREN 206-Cullure Through Conve~on (3)
FREN 208-Contemponry Fran'" I P)
SPAN 1Q6.Sponllh U • EJ....,tll.lry/lntermedlate (4)
SPAN 107-Sponllh · Intermediate (4)
SPAN 206-Culture ThrtJU&h Con-on (3)
SPAN208-Contemporiryl.otlnAmerial OJ
Director: Dr. T. Bratm
Director: Dr. M . Bolden
Director: Dr. M . Amsler
England I London
Accounting. Business Administration and
Finance
ACCT361-Int. to lntematlonol Flno nclol R<portlng (3)
BUAD 391-S.mlnu on Intemot lonal Man•S"mrnt. tl)
FINC 392-Semlnar on Intematlonol FINne• (.l)
Directors: Dean K. Biederman, Dr. J.
Kmetz and Dr. F. Stiner
Italy I Rome & Greece I Athens
Art History and Foreign Languages and Ut.
Directors: Dr. 5. Amert and Dr. A. Lehrman
ARTii ~reek and Romon Art tll
FU.T 322-CIIIII<AI Lkerature ln Tranlllotlon Cll
Switzerland I Geneva
Directors: Dr.
Scott
Political Science, International Relations,
Business Administration and Economics
I'OSC/OCON /BUAD341 ·F.IIv. oftlw MultiNitlonal Corp. (3)
OCON 340-lnlomatlonal Economic R<!lotlolto OJ
POSC 416-Trantnatlonalll<!lotlono and World l'olltiCII PI
BUAD 3117-lntornatlollll B u - (3)
FIJ.T I67.COOIW,.tlonaiFI'Iftdll(1)
FU.T 167-ConwiNIIonoiPrenciiDOl
Directors: Dr. A. Billon, Ms. E. Craig.
Dr.j. Delner and Ms. L. Laureillard
England I London
Spain I Granada
Italy I Siena
Foreign Languages and Uteratures
!TAL 1Q6.1tallanU . EJement.try/Intermodllte(4)
!TAL 107·1tallaniD . Intermediate (4)
·
!TAL 206-Culture Throu8h ConverNtlon (3)
!TAL 208-Contomponry ItAly I tl cr.)
Director: Ms. C. Capone
m
DOMESTIC PROGRAMS
Hawaii I Oahu
Nutrition and Dietetics
NlDT 415167>Tranocullural Food Hoblto (5)
NlUT 415/67>Eifoct.s of Tourism O.V.Iopment on the
Cullu,.. and Llfeotyie of the Howalla n l'opulatjon (5)
Directors: Dr. R. Cole and
Dr. M . Kuczmarsld
J. 5. Crawford and Dr. A. R.
PLAN AHEAD!
Economics
BCON 34~lnttrftattonal Economic R<!ll•*>na (J)
OCON381 -Econornk:oofHurNil._,,_ (I)
Directors: Dr. C. Unk and Dr. J. Butkiewicz
uv.
If you would like to study abroad, the office of International Programs ~and Special Sessions offers programs in
many locales. Apply for the program 9f your choice through the sponsoring department, the faculty director
'Jr the office of International Programs and Special Sessions. You need not be a major in the sponsoring department to apply. Scholarships are available. Take advantage of this exciting opportunity to experience a
foreign culture and significantly enrich your academic career!
Applis;atioc Ct;Mdline: October 10. 1991. For information and an application package contact: l~terna­
tional Programs & Special Sessions, 325 Hullihen Hall, tr 451-2852.
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·II
16 • THE REVIEW • September 24, 1991
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4MO.
SEMEmR
SPECIAL
$150. 00
:: !
:·, :·
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Presenting
University Rings
Representatives from both ring companies will be
on campus two days. This will be your opportunity
to compare an impressive range of new and traditional designs. You can talk with the representatives
and get full details about your purchase options.
Whichever you choose, you're bound to look good
in your University of Delaware Ring!
STUDY ABROAD
Around the world in less than 80 minutes
Come and learn
about study abroad opportunities
at Delaware
Dickinson C/D Commons
Tuesday, October i, 7:00 p.m.
• Video (includes highlights from
London and Vienna programs) ·
• Speaker (Wm. W. McNabb, Overseas
Studies, International Programs)
• Student panel (participants from
programs in Spain, England, France,
Germany and more)
•FOOD
For more information, call Anthony
RA DK C/D Telephone: X2902
Order your college ring NOW.
,J()STE~S
There '.s nothing li ke Lege nd and Lady
Legend ! The most un ique college rings
ever designed-only ava ilable from
ArtCarved. This popul ar professional
look offers more ways to personalize your college ring . Don' t
. delay- visit your ArtCarved
representative during th is
· special salesevent tosee
Lege nd and the many
other styles avail abl e.
Thursday and Friday, September 26 & 27
BOOKSTORE CONCOURSE
-i ~~~~;;;ity
II Bookstore
Special Paymem Plans Available • • •
Les Miserables Tickets
go on sale Tomorrow!
8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.!
Room 107 of The ~tudent Center
Tickets $20 ·for full time undergrads with UD ID!
funded by the Stude~t Comprehensive f ee
.
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Unlve_
rslty of Delaware
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
~~,~~YOlk.
Set.
s.p. a
STEREO AND COMPUTER: MUST SELL
Technlct Rtctlver 8nCIICD carouael co
,.._., lnc:ludtt - · MedniDth COmpular
end tmaoewrller printer. 737-2111 IHvt •
ar.
rntllllge.
STUDY ABROAD PROGRAM. Around lilt
WOikl In 1111 llln 10 miniMal Dlcldnlon c.1)
COnlnonl, Tuttdllr, Oc:IDDtr 1II. H p.m.
W•htr,
::·~
lli24: Rtlurrie II; W~. W25:
GtnlnQ Rtedr lor Job J8mlloftt; TnuriiCII'i
1r'2111: Rtune I;~. 1130 (C... Week :
Rtctplon, Job JnllotM n j
M::J
1hl
:r~=~irno::r;~·~
:: :
.... :·
tzoo, rill
Dryer, 1100. ~ duty,
vanlng
'13 Subaru OL-AC--AMIFM. Ctlallll, new
c:Udl end diM, rune good, good lhlpe, $1500.
2»0144.
14111.
!i '
~ =·~~0,:
~~:_·1 Mr.•·-=~~: 1~1~.
T~.
\
=
~:.rtr;"
t1uue 1Dm oil) .
~:=r..=:f:;,~.~;
=~
a~
CLASSIFIEDS
ATTENTION JOB SEEKERS! Don't m1u . _
~.
CRUISER BIKE AND KRYPTONITE LOCKaxoelant CXII1Ciiion--t100 or b'o. Call456-5743.
RINGS SIZED, JEWELRY REPAIRED. Ntxt
-., yow
IIIVIct
- Frw Pldl
up rillCtlt
dllllvtly
dDm1Inormoat
olllct.
•llmMH.
Glln
at 456-,238.
1812 Toyota CtiiCII GT. 5 a pd., AIC. etereo
Wlt.pl,' new cluldl and ahocka, $2, 850. Cell
Dive 73HI073.
IF YOU HAVE EVER BEEN DATE RAPED
ANl WOlJ.D 8E WILLING TO TALK ABOUT
IT. PLEASE CALL MOLLY AT 451 -2771 OR
731-2111 . COMPLETE CONFIDENTIALITY
ASSURED, NO FULL NAMES NECESSARY.
RENT/SUBLET
AVALABLE
WORD PROCESSING. $1.75 PER PAGE. 388-
2480.
:;.r~~~~r~'l:t~' ;J5h:':?w,Yg;, ~~
Rob 0 133-80811.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: FtHTI!In Pwk Pl8oe. Ctll ~n40.
LOST: Skinny black and white male cal S.
College Ave. near train alation 9113. V~
~,S.but NEEDS DAI~Y MEDICATION.
I.
~r:=~o-:;:::::::=
~~~n::.~.tr~~~
lrlendlhlp~
hlnlyougo.
Jen Ntu-<:ongrata on your jobl We're work
buddlesllcMt, D.S.
=~r~:-~=:nr
~~::a
BOWL) Love and 1111111 from Manson (tile
Uncle Bob, 1ht ml~ Ia dennlt.ly you.
School ~ Child car. Sill! needeG'aubldtulll
~~r~~~:frf~07~:::~·~bl~~63~~~~
COSTUME SHOP ON MAIN STREET NEEDS
SALES HELP. FLEXIBLE HOURS. CALL 3860300.
~~~7a0~=~~r~h~,:,~:~~~~u':/,':::ll
Wanted: rides to and from salisbury State U.
(Maryland) or surround!~ area.-111 help with
rJ.~~7.ther expenaea Pteall call Donre at
EFFICIENCY APART. Elkton Rd . near
Sunoco-2
bdrm.-Hanceton
Apts.
$475.00/mo. Z5-8305.
~~~~:~In my home, nights. Call 386-
3 bdrm . townhouse . N. Chapel St. Avail.
lmmed. tllru Mil}' 31st $100/mo. util not Inc.
Cell 302-366-0583. leave mea.
PARKING-Ooae to campus. 366-0700.
Delaware Autistic Program needs aquatic aides
and lifeguards. Allernoona 2-4 M-TH. can Rob
Corday at 454-2202.
Mature Female; own room/bath; furnished
Aggressive, enthusiastic peraon Interested In
marketing and telemarketing lor last growing
buslneaa. (215)874-1314.
Alison F.-We heard you'Ve batn lying In BED
lor a week. Ale you Ill or just trying to get lucky?
With leNt from 1ht Phi PI Ftloe.
:;,"!;~ca~l'lhday Ellae Daniela! Love, Doma
Kara, you'lllnever gonen a paraonal before, so
Happy Betalltd 2111 Blr'lhday to Staoay Abboal
love, LKB.
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:~a::r.r,:~~~~·~~~k'.:r~~ ~,:,r:v::~.:~
~~'=~~~~~::-a=~~rs~1~ =-h~
carpet, balc:IOny, pool, AIC. cable, etc. 3 miles
from campus on DART route . $260/month +
utilltletll. deposit 456-1 172..
The University ol DetaMre General Accounting
~~~~~~~~~~'!,~~O~~~~~'ti
Panhellenlc Council thanks Kathleen Petrie,
Melissa Furr, Chan- Winters, Stad McMillian,
and Metlasa Gltlllr tor their fantastic worlt durtng
Down Under Benefit lor the Homeleaa and
Hu~ , Sat Sept 28, noon-6 p.m. In the D.U.
~~sk.;: ~~ ~·.:; ~.:~~~~:
..•
Free T-stirtlto 1st 200 people. $5.00 donatJon.
$3.00 wltll t1t gilt or a canned good.
<;Q I
Cur .AbpV4. I
17111{~~
I 92E.
II :~ ~bbotts
Shoe Repair
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1 Full Manicure $10.00
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USAF HEAL111 PROFESSIONS
TOLL FREE
1-800·423-USAF
and beyond 1111 call ol duty.
"The man moat directly reaponslble Is Miles
Benret Dyson.·
I
I ' ~4
STUDENTS.
:Uter the Air Force
immediately after graduation -without waiting for the
results of your State Boards. You
can earn great benefits as an Air
Force nurse officer. And if selected
during your senior year, you may
qualify for a five-month internship
at a major Air Force medical facility. To apply, you'll need an overall
2.50 GPA. Serve your country
while you serve your career.
~~~ ~ ~~~r:.·y~~ :rae:~~
LIVE TALK. 1-900-n3-3m. ADULTS ONLY.
S2.501mln. 10 min/minimum.
..............
1992BSN
4V
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PERSONALS
Rogers. ...... Only. 388-1 3011.
Pr•l• SIJdant Auodallon W8loomta new, old
and non-members Ill STANLEY H. KAPLAN
LSAT SEMINAR Tu... Sept 24, 5:00p.m., 100
Klrllbrlda.
~g~ ~:;:: o~:D':"~,;AO:.:~~b::
IF YOU HAVE EVER BEEN DATE RAPED
AND WOULD BE WILLING TO TALK ABOUT
IT, PLEASE CALL MOLLY AT 451-2771 OR
731-2981 . COMPLETE CONFIDENTIALITY
ASSURED, NO FULL NAMES NECESSARY.
The Review apologizes lor recent delays In
distributing lsauea to lkllvtrslty ofllcas. Delays
were caused by computer/printer problema.
0
The $7.50 haln:ut. Sci-. Pllaal ntJit 1D Roy
5:30p.m. 120 Shelp Lab.
LAMBDA KAPPA BETA: Small In nliTlber, but
large In aplrltl
Alison Flelo-Y-BOTHER with a ruptured
~~. ~t.':/:,:,u·re feeling tll!ler. love.
p.m./Transportation halplui./Contact Amy
Adami CBGSC for mort Information 456-7171.
Blotl ol 1111 month Ia Chooolttt Clllp at NY
Bagel In Colage Square.
Grab I We had a BLAST!
;•g.
Krll, HlippV 21111 Wal you IINity INde ll No
more ac:ama. L.ca getwe.IICI. ,..,.. Jadlle.
~~~~~M~S~Iu'g~~~~:~,:ee~:~JJWE~~·~
PHI SIGMA PI wiahae a balalld ~Bk1hday
to Joe Thompson, c.y ~
Shore,
rlhday to IIzabeth
¥::~::1 Happy
FAST FLM>RAISER $1000/Wk. Graeks, dubs,
ANYONE. No lnveltmanl (100) 748-ell1 7.
Female roommall, non-amolwr, lor Madison Dr.
TownhotMe, $213 + 1/4 utiiiUea. Ctll737~29 .
per.....,.j~. Fiiii10...,...,.S51or """'
IIU<Mnuand lO , _ I * ....,.j ~.
~~~~-WI gong tD
Wanted Male Roommate. Apt. In Papermlll.
Frw: hill, cable. lmmtdlalafy I 456-3125.
.,. T.-dep 11 1 p.m. fa friday-....
and ftldeyo II l p.m. lor T.-dly ~ 'fhe filii
10 ....,.. .,. S2 for IIUIMnu llllith 10 and lO cen11
Lambda Love to all LKB alateral Have en
AWESOME Mill!
rill ' - - rT11a.g1 II not ln.
One 01' two lllmale roommate~ needed for West
Knoll apt 455-01197.
SuppUedl Homemallera Needed! Send SASE :
Galaxee Distributors P.O. Box 1157, Forked
River..NJ 08731.
Used offtce and eqUip. sale. Sal, Sept, 28tn-8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. 13011 Philadelphia Pike, Wllm.,
DE. OYer 400 Items available. Call 792-9418 for
sale pr8YleW .
AVAILABLE-DAYTIME
BABYSITTING. Pnlllallonll oouplt IOOIIIng lor
1 bedroom tlllc:lencV on ElkiDn Rd., Mar MD
state lint $400/mo. lncludn all utilities. Avail
now. Todd 733-7027.
Students Earn Fast Extra Caahl Earn S3 an
:OK~~~~· ExcelltntcondltiOn. Must
POSITIONS
Homtmallera needtdl Send : S.A .S.E. to
Galaxee Dlstrlbutora P.O. Box 1157 Forked
River, NJ 08731.
WANTED
security Alarm lor your dorm room. Ponable
and cn.p. Ctll737-5459.
prollc:ltnot ,..ncl. Conllet Cheryl Grwwllle at
451-2175 r.tondly-FI1dlrf.
Nice room, lurnlahed, kitchen and laundry
privileges, 1 block from student center-7311018 (aller8 p.m.)
~~~~hn~~:A.~~:~.sherldryer; cable.
FOR SALE
RUSH III
The sisters of Sigma Alpha Iota extend a warm
fuzzy welcome ., the Delta pledge daaa. We're
;~Jlr'l~ ~t ,7i!t~;~: r,~~~rc~;,'lla~~
Hair Luster for
Shine $12.00
With Blow Dry
Deep Conditioning
Treatment $8.00
366-1235
Expires 10/30/91
Not valid with any other offer
I
STUDY ABROAD
SPRING SEMESTER 1992
!
February 9 - May 28
The University of Delaware offers study abroad programs in many exciting piaces throughout the world. Participate in a
study abroad program and experience the fascinating and unique world of different cultures and people.
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• All undergraduate students, regardless of major, can participate .
a All courses carry University of Delaware credit.
•Some courses fulfilltco~ege group requirements.
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• Cost minimal- includes regular University of Delaware tuition and a program fee covering airfare, housing, selected group excursions, course related
activities, and some meals in some programs.
•Study Abroad are available.
Semester in London
Semester in Paris
Semester in Costa Rica
Semester in Vienna
Study in London with faculty from London and the University
of Delaware faculty director who accompanies the group.
Learn about the influence of the history, literature, politics, the
visual and the perfonnlng arts of the United Kingdom upon
American and other cultures of the world. Experience the
excitement of the thriving cosmopolitan city which lives below
the Tower of London on the banks of the Thames.
Study in Paris, where Romanesque, Gothic and Modern architecture create a skyline spectacular by day and by night, where
the basilica of S..crl Coeur atop Monlpiii7UIS5e overlooks the
swiftly Oowing waters of the Seine and Notre Dome. Attend
classes at /'Ecole Inte,.,.,tiDnaltdt I'Accutil fraru:o-Nordique, near
the Arc de Triompht and Avenue des Ch4mps-Eiysees, taught by
local faculty and University of Delaware faculty director who
accompanies the group.
Study in San Jose, capital of Costa Rica, a couf:'lry bordered by
the Caribbean Sea to the East and by the Pacific Ocean to the
West; explore thccountry Christopher Columbus named "Rich
Coast." Attend classes and lectures on the campus of /Q Universidad de Costa Rial taught by local faculty and the University
of Delaware faculty director who accompanie .. the group.
Study in Vienna, a city where intellectual and cultural life of
Eastern and Western Europeconverges;explorewinding streets
and alleyways once traversed by Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms,
Freud, Kafka, and rulers of the Habsburg Dynasty;study paintings by the Ma sters in the KumfhisforischtsMuseum,experience
music in the Musilvtrtin, the Ktmurth4us, and the ThtsJteran der
Wim, attend classes and lectures at the Austro-American Institute of Education taught in English by local faculty and the
University of Delaware faculty director who accompanies the
group .
AllTH 31J.
ENCL 351 •
ENCl47l·
HIST 315-
MUSC 101 POSC 4U •
ECON
1~
Introduction to lrith lltentuN 3
SNdlctln the o,..,. 3
Hlttacy of Enaland• 171S lo l'nMnl l
• Sotlolloo A&S Group B.
Appndotiotl of Matlc l
"SoHoli'" .U.S Croup A .
Probltlllt of Wtlttm E11roprtn Polttlct by Country l
• S.tblla A.S Group C.
Econocnlct for EYCt)"'t't: AppllaUont to tht U.S ,.
llrh•ln ••d Earopc
ECON Jll·
lntc.raalhl,.l CocnaumlcMMn: Applicttlona in
lntemttioaal C0111n18 3
Topics; Hltptnlc Uttr.tu.n in Tnntlttion l
latin America Since 1130 3
Spanlth II- Etftl1cnluy I Jn-diao. &
Spanlth Ill ·fntennecliate 4
Sptnl•h ConvUMtk. 3
SPAN 211·
Lltln Amntcan Ch'Uludoft tnd Ctll""-l
POSC 311·
Pollrict of Dnciopboa Natloooa 3
'Satitli,.
SCroup B.
POSC 416Tn~nanatktNI aelttlona •world Polhlct 3
1-I ONO RS CRED IT mty be uransed.
COMM 4:1:1 -
Mode111 Arc.hit«turt ol LoriCion: 175()..1900 J
• SoiW1<0 A&S Group B .
3
"SoWoll.. A&S Group C.
Public SedOr EC'GI\omln: Application• to the U.S.,
llriloio . .d Earopc
HONORS CREDIT JNY be anongcd.
l
ARTH 402.FLLT 32'"
FREN 106 •
FREN 107FREN
~
POSC 4ClHIS"!' 102-
HIST 351-
FLLT 326 ·
HIST 1l6 ·
SPAN t06SPAN 107 •
SPAN 205 •
Mmlnar In the Hl1tory of Art 3
f~ndl Lhftaturt In Trwn•lttion 3
• S.tlsfte A&S Group A.
Frtnc:h II- Element.uynru"'"edlate 4
Frtnch Ill - inlrnnodt. .. 4
F~nd\
ConnrNtlon 3
Problemt ol Wultm Europnn Politlu 3
' SoHoll.. A&S Group C.
'
Wtttem Clvlllutlon: 1641 to the Prntnl 3
"Sotloll,. A&S Group B.
E.."'IHin Crltt~ 1919·1945 3
A.
MUSC 339-
Department of Political Science and
International RelAtions
347 Smith Holl
Department of History
401 Ewing Hall
Newark. DE 19716
• (302) 451 -2355
Newark. DE 19716
• (302) 451-2371
Unlwnlty of Delaware
Nework. DE 19716
451-2564
ECON 151·
Dr. William W. Boyer
Dr. Willard A. Aetcher
Studentalnternted Ill thil oveneu program 1hould
attend 11111: of the followlllalnlormallonal meetings:
September 26, Thunday 4:00p.m . 325 Purnell Hall
October 1, Tuesday 4:00p.m . 325 Purnell Hall
October 10, Thursday 4:00p.m. 325 Purnell Hall
Art •nd AfthittchaN of Central Eu.ropr 3
• Sotioii<O .U.S Group B.
Ctnn~a II· Elementary /l,termediltt 4
CUINn lll·lnttnnedltt. 4
Cmnt• Con•fl'Ntloft 3
Topictln Modem Eon...•n Hi....,. 3
• SoiWi,. .U.S Group B.
CompoMI'I of VlmN
' SaUdi.. .U.S Group 8.
lntrodudkln kl MICI'UftOftomltt l
' Satloli<O A65 Group C.
£CON 311·
Econocnlc: Crowth 6:0evelopment Polley J
• Sotltft.. .u.s Group c.
HONORS CIIEOIT may be uronged.
F~~a~tty
Dlndor:
Dr. Francis X. Tannian
College of Urban Affairs and Public l'olicy
184 Graham Holt
Studtnlllntunttd In thil overseu program ahould olttnd
11111: of the following lnlonnatlonal meetings:
• (302)
ARTI-1339 -
GERM 106CERM 107 •
CERM 205 HtST m -
Faculty Dir«<or:
HONORS CREDIT mty be arr•nged.
F~~a~ltyDir«tor:
Faculty Dinctor:
Dr. uurence Seidman
~ment of Economks
406 Purnell Holl
University of Delaware
Newark, DE 19716
• (302) 451-2394
September 26, Thursday4 :00 p.m. 203 Smith Hall
October 1, Tuesday 4:00p.m. 221 Smith Hall
October 2, Wednesday 4:00pm . 218 Smith Hall
The Scottish Semester
Study in Edinburgh, Scoll.tnd's capital, among the visually
most exciting cities In the world;attend classes at Moray House
College, an at;oeient and pn!5tiglous European teacher education institution. Students have ready access lo numerous
places of Interest in Edinburgh, e.g. the Scottish National Art
Galleries, Mu,.,..ms, and Ubrary u well as to a rich variety of
cul tural and recreational programs. Program features clinical
experiences in Scottish .:hools and a thrt!IK!ay professional
trip to the Continent.
This program is open to all sludelts who are Interested in becomi ng a teacher, coach or counselor.
ARTH 150EODV2lll EOST201 EDST 202 •
EOST 130-
Mo.aawn• tnd Mtlhodt ln tht Hl1tory of Art .)
lntrodactton to the Teuhln& of Re.clln& 3
Education •nd Sodcty '
Hu..._ O.nlopmlfnt and £duutiontl Prac:tlu J
lntrochldkwt 1o Eactptiontl
Chltd~n
3
EOST:l!ll·
5oriolasial Foun4btiant ot Eduttrion l
EOST:tOI-
Ecluceliontl Ptycholov ·Sod•l A•ptctt l
GEOG llO -
Students lnternttd In thlt oveneu program should alttnd
11111: of tht followlnJ lnlonnaHonal mretlnp:
Sept. 17, Tuesday 4:00p.m. 2fJl Willard Hall Education Bldg.
Sept. 23, Monday 4:00p.m. 207 Willard Hall Education Bldg.
Oct. 16, Wed. 4:00p.m. 207 Willord Hall Education Bldg.
~=~~;:.~~=h;;d•IIOf'•ofEdu~c•tionl
Faaalty Contact;
Dr. CharlesD. Marler
Department of Educ.alional Studies
221 -B Willard Hall Educational Building
Unlwnity of Delaware
Newark, DE 197t6
451-ll>SJ
• (302)
Enrich and enhance your life, your career, and the people with whom you interract. Develop a sincere appreciation for another point of
view, understand different lifestyles and customs, truly become open minded: participate in a study abroad program!
..
PLAN AHEAD!
Ap.plication Deadline; extended to Noyemher 1. 1991
Detailed information about the study abroad opportunities is available at the office of International Programs and Special Sessions, 325 Hullihen Hall, • 451-2852.
.. 1..
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17
September 24, 1991 • THE REVIEW •
The Review
Student Center B-1
Newark, DE 19716
•
•
18 • THE REVIEW • September 24, 1991
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Astro Shuppin11 Center • Newark, m: 19711 • 738-6466
SPORTS
September 24, llJ'JI • THE RH'IIW • 19
Women take second, men third in Invitational
Cross country teams
continue to improve
By Laura Fasbach
Copy Editor
What's in a
name? Ask
Curley Culp
In case you haven't noticed,
my name sounds kind of funny.
Having lived with it all my
life, I'm pretty much used to it.
You probably could not think
of a way to pronounce it that I
haven't heard before.
Being born with a name like
Nana -Sinkam (I won't even
discuss my first name) was
great for my spon: basketball.
But in modem sport, there
seems to be a shortage of nice,
phonetically diverse last names
for athletes.
As a young boy, I collected
all types of sports cards. But
the best players weren't
necessarily my favorites. The
ones with the cool -sounding
names always caught my eye.
Coy Bacon, Roger Phegley,
Mitch Kupchak. Those were
names that painted detailed
pictures of a player. Coy
Bacon. Now that's a name.
Bubbles Hawkins, Dave
Twardzik, Clete Boyer, Mike
Cubbage. I could close my
eyes and see Cubbage. And it
was vivid.
I spent long nights thinlcing
about what my name would
look like on a sports card.
What would it be like to be
in the same league as guys with
names like Shooty Babbit,
Lonnie Shelton, Foots Wa!Jcer
and the venerable Darnell
Hillman (who, as a point of
reference, had the largest
recorded afro in basketball
history).
Would they accept me?
Would the regulars say "Let the
kid in, he's got a weird name.
He 's all right?" I dreamed of
being in the same company
with players such as Curley
Culp and Warren Jabali.
The fantasy consumed me. I
imagined being in the starting
lineup of the all-name team
with Peter LaCock, .Baskerville
Holmes, Jim Spanarkel, Rudy
Tomjanovich and Jack Sikma
(who, when he played with the
Milwaukee Bucks, was the
white guy with the biggest
recorded afro in basketball
history).
Now I'm older and my
mother has thrown out most of
my cards. My Coy Bacon, my
Mike Cubbage and my Roger
Phegley cards are all gone. (I
threatened her with bodily
harm if she touched my Mitch
Kupchak.)
For a while, I was resigned
to the fact that we would have
to live the rest of our lives
reading box scores with names
like Dave Smith, Roger
Clemens (gag) and Brad
Havens.
But this summer, things
began to change. Along with
Roscoe "Skeeter" Barnes, an
outfielder for the Detroit
Tigers, there was the Chicago
Cubs' pitcher Heathcliff
Slocumb.
Now, there's Hensley "Bam
Bam" Meulens who plays with
the New York Yankees and
·fonner University of Colorado
forward House Guest ~no
joke).
And in July, Denver
Nuggets' guard Chris Jackson
converted to Islam and
officially changed his name to
Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf (no
joke here, either).
And what's more, I look
down the rosters of the
Delaware varsity teams and see
names like Cheyney Meadows,
a defenseman for the men's
soccer team, and Spencer
Dunkley, a center for the men's
basketball squad.
Players like football lineman
Rob Daddio and women's
soccer defender Laurel Pippen
(no relation to the Bulls'
Scottie, I don't think) tell me
that colleges around the
country must have plenty of
good names with which to
stock the pros for many years
to come.
But until then, I'll dig up my
Mitch Kupchak basketball cud
and look at it for a while.
Alain C. Nana-Sinkam Is a
Sports Editor oflhe Review.
The Delaware men's and women's cross
country teams proved their increasing strength
as they crossed the finish line at the Delaware
Invitational.
Coming in second overall to Navy the Hens
women were led by freshman Alicia Gulizno,
who ran a personal best collegiate time of
18:49 to place third in the 3 . 1 mile race.
Navy's Kerry O'Neil was the overall winner
with a clocking of 18:26.
"I surprised myself with what I could do,"
said Gulizno, who attributed her fast time to
the more intense level of college competition.
Delaware senior Amy Oppermann placed
fourth overall, four seconds behind Gulizno.
The next two finishers for the women
harriers were juniors Jill Riblett and Mamie
Giunta who placed ninth and 13th,
respectively.
"I'm pleased with how they ran but I see
there is room to improve," said coach Sue
McGrath-Powell.
The men's squad placed third overall
finishing behind first place LaSalle University
and runner-up Rider College.
"It's a competitive third against
traditionally tough teams in the region," said
Coach Jim Fischer. "We ran a great race, better
than last week."
Freshman Barry Pollack finished first for
the team and tenth overall with a 27:10 time.
"I went out slow," said Pollack, a Newark
native. "I was about 15 seconds off the leaders
from our team in the first mile and than I
picked it up as the race went on . The
competion was a lot tougher than last week."
Senior Marc Washington and Bryan
Denbrock were right at the heels of Pollack
placing 13th and 14th.
Fischer was enthused by the team's display
of unity despite the abscence of senior captain
Bryan Lennon, who missed the race because
of an injury.
" We were really hurting today because our
captain and number one man wasn't running,"
said Fischer. "He'll be out for an indefinate
amount of time.
"We have a group of [runners] that are .-~ ... ,.,\!.._.._,
really close together and we can compete well
as a team. I couldn't be happier with the way
we ran. We're good," he said.
RUNNER'S LOG- Both the men and
women harriers compete next on Saturady at
Lehigh University. Senior captain Bryan
Lennon, who missed the Delaware
Invitational, could be out up to a month due to
a hernia . Sophomore Paul Hannsen, who
placed third in the varsity B men's race with a
personal best time of 27 :48, unofficially
became the first Blue Hen harr ier to ever
compete barefooted ... It makes me feel faster, ..
he said ... If the courses aren't too rough , I'll Freshman Barry Polack (left) was Dela"vue'~
keep doing it.'"
top finisher Saturday with a time of 27:10. :
.
Hens
Tennis
fares well .:
wallop
Rams,
in tourney !
Ferguson pleased with
women' efforts;
Finnegan regains No. 1 •
I
By Jason Sean Garber·
Copy Editor
42-7
Irvine's 2 interceptions
key Yankee Conference
win over Rhode Island
By Dan B. Levine
Sports Editor
KINGSTON, R .I. - The express train .
otherwise known as the eighth-ranked Delaware
football team, concluded its East Coast trek
Saturday by rolling over the University of Rhode
Island 42-7 at Meade Stadium.
"We've been doing the 1-95 bit for three weeks
in a row and I don't know about the kids, but I'm
tired," said Hens coach Harold A. "Tubby"
Raymond. "We've spent 30 hours on buses in the
last three weeks."
Senior linebacker Tim Irvine's 42-yard
interception return for a touchdown early in the
third quarter gave Delaware a 35-7 lead and
cemented the Hens' fourth straight victory.
Irvine's first career touchdown highlighted a
game where Delaware (4-0 overall, 2-0 Yankee
Conference) scored 28 points off four of the
Rams' five turnovers.
"The defense just came up with a lot of big
plays today," said Irvine, who had two
interceptions against Rhode Island quarterback
Steve Holland.
FOOTBALL COVERAGE INSIDE:
• Game Box Score
• NCAA Division 1-M Top 10 Football Poll
• More game photos
·· we~had a lot ot turnovers. Those mtercepuons
were right to me. I credit the coaches for putting
me in position to make tlu>se kind of plays,"
Irvine said.
"We shot ourselves in the chest today," Rhode
Island coach Don Griffin said of his team's
mistakes.
·
The victory was somewhat costly for the Hens
as senior co-captain Marc Sydnor broke his left
arm and senior defensive tackle Rob Daddio
strained the medial collateral ligament in his left
knee.
Raymond said he expects Sydnor to re.tum in
three to four weeks, while Daddio is likely be
see FOOTBAU page 20
Delaware junior halfback Anthony Ventresca (33) breaks through the tackle of Rhode
Island linebacker Dave Slattery (89) during the Hens' 42-7 victory Saturday.
Hen faithfuls journey down
1-95 for Delaware's 4th win
By Jeff Pearlman
Assistant Sports Editor
KINGSTON, R.I. - It 's a bird! It's a plane!
No, it's a blue and gold Winnebago with an
inflatable Blue Hen that plays the Delaware
fight song!
Despite the six-hour drive from Newark to
Kingston, hordes of Blue Hen faithfuls made
the trip to watch their team rout the Rams 42-7.
"We bring the suburban that has the
Delaware fight song to a lot of the games," said
Bill Bolton, a 1952 university graduate from
Newark who says he has tailgated before every
game for the last 30 years.
"It plays the song on the outside so that
people can hear it. We just love football and we
Jove Delaware, so we follow the Blue Hens
every place we go," he said.
According to Bill Gerow, a Wilmington
resident who has missed only three games since
1936, there is a special element that causes fans
to follow the Hens on the road.
"They have a Notre Dame type of mystique,"
said Gerow, who graduated from the university
in 1941. "For me it's like a hobby. It's a lot of
fun, and when the last game comes I just start
counting the days till the season starts next
year. "
Gerow, who comes to games decked out in
the blue and gold Blue Hen colors, has seen his
share of memorable plays in his 55 years of
attending games.
"At Rutgers about 30 years ago, Delaware
lined up to kick off the second half," Gerow
recalled. "The kicker misses the ball completely,
and everybody runs down the field, tackling and
blocking each other.
''Then everyone wonders, 'Where the hell is
the ball?' The ball is still sitting there, and the
referees don't know what to do, so they penalize
Delaware for five yards," Gerow said.
The diverse fans in the group who follow the
football team from game to game ranges from
old standbys like Gerow, to proud parents such
as Barbara Chastain, mother of Hens center
Curt Chastain.
"I wouldn't miss one of these games for
anything," said Chastain, who tailgates with
other parents to an array of shrimp and
beverages prior to every game.
"The parents have formed a bond, especially
see FANS page 20
EMMITSBURG, Md.- Aftt r
two consecutive losses again'!
Lafayette University and Mount Sc.
Mary College, the Delawak
women's tennis team was look.ina Co
recapture their old winning spirit this
wee~end a! the Mount St. Mary~s
Tenrus Tournament.
•
With 15 teams swinging for
number one, the Blue Hens h~
some tough competition.
:
Delaware's first match Frida)'
morning pitted its top singles playtf,
senior. Katherine Adams, against
Laura Graham of Mary Washington
College. In a hard-fought conte'S ,
Graham prevailed 6-1,6-7 (3-7), ~
and pushed Adams into tJl):
consolation round.
:
Also at 8 a.m., second-rankep
singles player, senior Tara Finnegan,
drew Ann Colombell of George
Mason University.
Colombell was not much of a
match for Finnegan's experience, as
Finnegan won 6-2, 6-3.
Finnegan said, "It was a good
wake-up call. You have got to be
ready at8 o'clock for anything."
Coach B .J . Ferguson said of
Finnegan's match, ''Tara was patient,
which she had to be. She had to
allow the other girl to make
mistakes, which she did. Tara did not
even have to play her hardest."
Sophomore Julia Kratzer, the
number four player, also pulled off a
first-round victory against Judy
Beckenbach of Cornell University,
defeating her 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.
Said Ferguson: "I thought Julia
played particularly well. She had
tough opponents."
Sophomore Mary Wolfenden,
ranked third, was battling shin splits
and lost 7-6 (7-1), 7-6 (7-2).
But according to Ferguson, ''Mary
played really well. She just kept
fighting away and working hard."
The doubles team of freshman
Allison Ashurst and sophomore Beth
Egan lost their first match, 6..0, 6-0.
Before the match started, Egan
was stung by a bee in the left hand,
which swelled and limited her ability
to hit a backhand, she said.
But Delaware's other doubles
team, Gina Morro and Diana Bishop,
won their fmt round match 6-2, 6-l.
However, they lost in the next round.
see TENNIS page 20
Field hockey do\vns La Salle
Berardelli, Speiss
score to pace 3-1
Delaware victory
By Vincent A. DeMuro Jr.
Still R~porter
Plmela Wr-r DeStefano
Hens senior defender Jennifer Root (19) battles La Salle's ICelll
McGahey (10) mmin1 for the ball durin1 Saturday's game.
What's the word? This time it's
victory for the Delaware field
hockey team.
The Hens defeated La Salle
University 3-1 at home for their first
win this season.
"This will be a good confidence
builder," said Delaware coach
MaryBeth Holder, referring to the
team's 1-2-1 overall record.
Delaware (0-0 in the North
Atlantic Conferen..:e) ::ontrolled the
ball for most of the first half, and
made many hard drives into
Explorers (0-2-1) territory.
With 17 minutes, 40 seconds left
in the first half, junior forward Alex
Speiss broke the scoreless tie with
an unassisted goal.
Later in the half, senior tricaptain Renee Berardelli scored on
La Salle off a well-set penalty
comer.
"I think we played with
confidence," said Berudelli.
"We're not as strong as Penn
State," said assistant coach Mary
McCracken, referring to the Hens'
recent 4..0 loss to the fourth-ranked
Nittany Lions. "But our skill and
stick work is excellent."
In the second half, the Hens
dominated with Speiss, junior
midfielder Jennifer Daggett and
senior. forward Joanne Dobson
making strong advances at LaSalle
goalkeeper Michelle Richmond.
With 20:S4 left in the game,
freshman forward Sue Daddonna
scored her fiTS! collegiate goa) on an
assist from Berardelli.
Sophomore goalkeeper Katie
Partlow had another strong
performance, making three saves,
including an ncellent block with
her bare hand off the stick of
Explorers' forward Kelli McOabey.
Just one minute later, however,
Partlow lost her shutout when
McG~y~oredoffofare~
When asked how she felt about
the bare-handed save, Panlow said,
"It was a [good) save... bu& I have no
feeling left any more [in my hand]."
La Salle coach Tracey Orieabaum
had some complaints with her
team's performance. ''Their marking
was lacking ... and their transition
wu [poor] off the whistle.
"I knew Delaware would come
after us," lhe said. '1bey wort well
toptber."
The Hens return to acdon today
with a 3 p.m. home contllll aaablll
West Chester University.
Senior digs deep for volleyball
Karen Beegle
tries to leaa
Hens to title
By Wil Sham lin
AuisW!t Graphia fritor
Karen Beegle defmitely has a
knack for being in the right spot
at the right time.
She has proven it on the
volleyball coun time after time.
For the past three years, the
senior outside hitter has been
foiling Delaware opponents'
attempts to score , making a
name for herself as the team 's
defensive specialist.
If you look tt Beegle's stats
for the Sept. 16 match against
Loyola College , you would
never know she is nationally
Mick levin ranked in total career digs.
A d ig is any play that keeps
Karen Beegle had 1,260 career digs entering this
the ball in action. During a
season, which Is fifth on the all-time NCAA list.
three-game rout of the
Tennis
continued from page 19
• Kratzer and Finnegan both suffered losses in the
Second round Friday, knocking both into the consolation
round.
Finnegan, down 5-l in the third set, battled back to a 66 tie, forcing a tie-breaker in which she ultimately lost 11-
9.
Adams won in the first round of the consolation
tournament 4-6, 6-3, 6-0.
That win enabled her to advance to the second round
"' , SCO~EBOARD .
WOMEN'S SOCCER:
Hartford 5, DelawareP' ·
~verm~nt 3~-.oe~Ware · ~ ·
·voLLEYBALL·: (Rutgers
~ 1nvi~tional Tourney): ·,:
Delaware .3, Rutgers 0.
'<15-4, 15.;7, 15-11)
· ' <;:orneii3~ ~ Delaware 0.
~(15-11,
·15-9, 1 5-1 0)
.::oelaware 3, Fairleigh
Dickinson 1. (1 5-3, 15-
Greyhounds, 16-14, IS-6, and
1S-7, Beeale bad only one dig
recorded.
"She typically has a lot
more," said Hens' coach Bub
Viera. " She usually has double
figures in digs."
Coming into this year, Beegle
was ranked No. 5 nationally in
total career digs by the
American Volleyball Coaches '
Association with 1,260.
Only two players in
collegiate history have reached
2,000 total career digs.
After watching Beegle in
more than 100 games, coach
Barb Viera knows the secret
behind Beegle's prowess on
defense.
·
"She reads what's going to
happen and gets where she
needs to be in order to play the
best defense," said Viera.
"And she can do it almost
before the play takes place," she
said. "The defensive plot of her
round.
Ferguson said, "I was pleased with our performance
this weekend. The tournament gave us additional
experience by playing more opponents and analyzing
other teams' play."
The Hens host Villanova University today at 2:30 p.m.,
as Ferguson goes for her tOOth career win.
~------~------~~
.
The Review need~ people
wiih colnputer graplilcs
i
..
~_,~;
.experience~
Call Archie or Sonja at
'451-2771.
• 10, 13-15, 15-8)
!James Madison 3;
: Delaware 2. (13.15; 5: 15,15-12, 15-6,J5-9)
: fi.ELD HOCKEY:
~ Delaware 3, La Salle 1.
MEN'S SOCCERi
James Madison
DelawareO.
6,
FOOTBALL:
Delaware 42,
Rhode Island 7.
Fans
continued' from page 19
those who are all parents from the
last freshman team. I'm here to
support my child, but I am also
very supportive of the Delaware
program," she said.
Rob Wolford, th.e senior
Delaware captain who is injured,
" ·said the fans make a major
difference in the team's road
IUCCell.
"I think we have the best fan
support in the whole Yankee
· Conference," Wolford said.
"Everywhere we go we seem to
get just as big a crowd as the
opposition. It gets everybody
ready to play, and it's a big boost
for us . It really makes a
difference."
But what causes a person to
SOFTBALL MEETING
Wednesday, October 2, 6 p.m ~
room 203 in Carpenter Sports
Building. For further information
contact B.J. Ferguson at 451-8608.
drive hours in order to watch a
Division 1-AA football game?
"They can't play unless I tell
them what to do," sa id Joanne
Bolton, a Newark resident who
has followed the team on the road
for 20 years.
"Where they go, I go. They 're
'We just love football
and we love
Delaware.. "
- Bill Bolton, Delaware '52
the greatest bunch of kids you
ever could have. If you ask me if
I'm their mother, I'm all their
mothers," she said.
So when you go to the next
football game on the road and see
a blue md gold van driven by a
person wearing a strange Blue
Hen hat, do not call the mental
ward . It is one of the many
Delaware faithful.
Greenville, Del.
"The only reason I went for
the volleyball team my
freshman year was because all
my friends did, and it was the
thing to do," Beegle says. .
"A .I . had such a good
program," she says, referring to
a school which has become a
perermial contender for the state
volleyball championship.
Beegle hopes to end her last
season with a North Atlantic
Conference win - giving the
team a chance to compete in the
nationals in Dayton, Ohio.
But whether the team takes
the conference title or not ,
Beegle will keep a hand in
volleyball competition.
"I like to play beach doubles
or I 'll play in the United States
Volleyball Association, " says
Beegle. "I love the sport so
much."
1. Name the first pro
football team that Joe
Theismann played for?
2. Who was the first
pro basketball player
to win the Rookie of
the Year and MVP
awards in the same
season?
3. Name the last team
Babe Ruth played for.
.
THE HEAD SCRATCHER:
Who am I? I was the
last pro athlete to
guest star on The
Brady Bunch.
-'
on Friday, against a very familiar opponent, Tara
Finnegan.
"It was luck of the draw. It's tough playing against
your own teammate, but you have to block it out." Adams
said. "You have to treat this like it wu any other match."
Finnegan went on to defeat Aduns 6-2. 0-6, 7-6 (7-4)
and earned the right to be Delaware's new numba' one.
Adams will now assume the number two spot.
Finnegan would eventually lose in the third consolation
~,. ~, ;~h h~:r~ ,
game is why she has been a
starting varsity player for four
years."
Beegle, a biology major,
modestly downplays her role as
a defensive specialist. "Every
team needs a defensive person. "
she says with a shrug.
"I want to improv e my
offensive game and improve my
consistency," Beegle says. " I've
never really had a problem with
defense. It just comes to me."
While on the court against
Loyola, Beegle was absorbed in
the game.
Her eyes were affixed to the
white ball, shifting them only to
encourage her teammates.
Beegle owes credit for many
of her defensive skills to many
hours of practice, but she owes
her start in volleyball to
something else.
Beegle had to think back to
her high school days at Alexis I.
Du Pont H igh School in
SPORTS TRIVIA:
Firsts and Lasts
Men drop fifth straight
james Madison
blas'ts soccer; 6--0;
Hens still winless
By Brandon Jamison
Staff Rl!porlet
Fast and furious.
That's how one could describe
James Madison University 's (JMU)
offensive attack on Delaware, as the
Dukes defeated the Hens 6-0 in a
men ' s soccer match Saturday at
Delaware.
The Dukes (5-l) scored in a flurry
and often left the Hens kicking at air
as JMU maintained possession of the
ball for virtual! y the entire match.
"They really put on a passing clinic
out there," said Delaware head coach
Loren Kline.
Delaware (0-5 overall, 0-0 in the
North Atlantic Conference) hung
tough against JMU for the first 27
minutes of play, allowing only one
goal as JMU defenseman Bob
Johnson scored 9:32 minutes into the
first half off an assist from
defenseman Alberto Apodaca on the
right side.
The Dukes then erupted for three
goals in a 6:30 minute span , much
like Towson State did against lhe
Hens last Wednesday, to put the game
out of reach.
JMU forward Mark Mathewson
took over the show at the 27:04 mark
as he scored the flfSI of his two goals.
Mathewson then assisted on
forw.ard Patrick Burke's goal, and
finally finished Delaware off with a
chip shot through the Hen's defense
and past junior g'o alkeeper Mark
Puican.
In the second half, the Dukes
flurried once again, scoring rwo more
goals in 1:17 minutes, handing the
Hens their fifth loss without a win this
team's lack of speed.
"We had problems with their speed
today," he said ''They controlled the
ball so much that we had to play
catch-up all day."
Delaware's Puican was left with no
offensive support as the Hens
managed only two shots on goal.
The Hens will try to claim their
first win on Wednesday at home as
they challenge Rider College at 3:30
,
•
:
:
I
Maimllliiln Gretsdi :
Sophomore midftelder J.C. Finizio (3) takes on a Dukes defender . :
Saturday during James Madison's 6·0 blanking of the Hens.
: --,
.i
TRIVIA ANSWERS: (from last Friday's Review) 1. Hank (755) and Tommie (15)
Aaron are the brothers with the most career home runs; 2. There are six
Sutter brothers who played pro hockey (Brian, Darryl, Duane, Brent, Rich
and Ron); 3. The 1980-81 Boston Celtics did not have a Johnson on their
roster when they won the NBA title (Dennis Johnson joined the Celts in
1982); THE HEAD SCRATCHER: I am Sam Cunnigham, Randall's brother.
_:: ;
. :
.. l
-:;
Football
continued from page 19
sidelined for three weeks.
Delaware's offense overcame two turnovers
its flfSt three possessions to batter the Runs
a powerful ground attack.
Last week, senior halfback Jim Lazarski
the main beneficiary of the play of the offensive
line and Saturday, it was sophomore fullback
Lanue Johnson's turn to shine.
Johnson glided through the middle of Rhode
Island's defense for a career-high 141 yards on 16
carries, including a nifty 13-yard touchdown run
for Delaware's ftrst score.
"The holes were there," said Johnson. "They
were looking for the outside game since we ran a
lot outside against WiUiam &: Mary. They could
stop one, but the other wu open."
Following Rams fullback Sean Donovan's
game tying two-yard touchdown run late in the
frrst quarter, the Hens put any signs of an upset to
rest.
Junior quarterback Bill Vergantino drove
Delaware 65 yards in 4 :02, culminating in a twoyard toss to senior tight end Ed Helenski to give
the Hens a lead they would not relinquish.
Later in the half, two Rhode Island turnovers,
including a fumble on their own one-yard line,
helped Vergantino and Delaware enter
intermission with a 28· 7 lead.
CHICKEN SCRATCHE8-Irvine served as
captain in the second half followina Sydnor's
injury. The Hens' defense hu now recovered five
fumbles and intercepted eipt passes. Sophomore
linebacker Mike Bandilb replaced injured senior
co-captain Rob Wolford and responded by tying
Irvine for a aame·hiJh eiaht tackles. In other
Yankee Conference action Saturday, 16-th ranked
Villanova improved to 3..() in a 3S-3 rout over
Richmond. Twentieth-ranked New Hampshire
pounded Division ID powerhouse Hofatra 48-28,
Nassachusetts downed Maine 10-3, Boston
University fell to Holy Cro11 27-23 and
Connecticut wu 1turmed at home by Lehip 3S·
junior defensive end Mark Hrubar (60) chases down Rams quarterback Tony Squitieri (1
DIVISION I·AA TOP 10
FOOTBALL POLL
DELAWARE 42,
RHODE ISLAND 7
For week of 9/23
UD
URI
7
7
21
0
14
0
0-42
0- 0
UD -johnson 13 run (Orozic kick)
URI - Donovan 3 run (Cassara kick)
UD - Helenski 2 pass from Vergantino
(Drozic kick)
UD- Lazarski 1 run (OrOZ!Ic kick)
UD - Lazarski 2 run (Orozic kick)
UD - Irvine 42 Int. return CDrozic Ieick)
UD- Br~ 3 run (Orozic kick)
.
Record
1. NI!Yilda-Reno
~
2. 1daho
3. Eutem Kentucky
3~
.I
I
'
'
,. '~
2-1
3. Furman
5. Bolli! State
~
&.Delaw. .
7. Geot)laSouthem
8. William a. Mary
9. Holy Croll
10. TenetN a.tt.loop
4-0
2-2
~
2·1
2~
~
..
'.
19.
"
Team
/I
24, 1991 • THE REVIEW • .21 ~
COMICS
Calvin
By GARY LARSON
and
Hobbes
by Bill Watterson
BIG \MroR:IN'lT Ss::.R£1
~INGS!
GIT
GC P..~f>.'{!
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1\-\r..T SWPIO CAL;J
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\
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Aug. 11, 1959: In the heart of the Bolivian jungle,
archaeologists discover an ancient
and heretofore unknown sacrificial altar.
\
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All I ~ ll:J 00 IS B£.
rnENOS, ~\) l1t. I'KI:ATS
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TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
ACROSS
Qoonesbury
BY GARRY TRUDEAU
EJ{XP5ff3,8.1J., I THINK
/QHAT YOU'Rf; 60/NG 7D
HAVli7DlXJ7VS4Vf'
~ I?CIAT!ONSHIP IS
B45~Y BUIWAN
/iNTIRUY NfJUJ ave.
1 Hawk' s weapon
6 Garner
10 Knife
"14 Fruit
15 Dear: lt .
16 Weight unit
17 Cornbreads
18 "Farewell
to -··
19 Competently
20 Pastimes
22 Written
reminder
24 Green fruit
26 Optimistic
27 Recompensed
31 length unit
32 Get together
33 Opposite in
character
35 Animal group
38 Knights
39 Flower part
40 Desert hill
41 Layer
42 Regulations
43 Social event
44 Stag
attenders
45 Resigned
47 Basis
51 Singular
52 Revives
54 Decide
58 Singer Paul 59 Upsets
~J ~~~~~ ~~~r
63 Silkworm
64 Canvas
structures
65 Curtail
66 Coarse
cornmeal
67 Wisdom
'
ME R. V E GA s• INC
E L OP E. AG AT E. MAR
MA Nl PU LA T E
PRE
S N AG •s 10 E. S I RES
IS EST
• R E E D.
co WA R D•s co OT s••
AD AM s• sc OR N. SAP
P E AS .G LA NO •s ILO
SA G. so U L
RO VED
OP EN ED .R EC E S S
MO OR
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AN DE
so OT .A REA
10 E. EV ER LA ST lNG
L t
Rl L E
HE SSE
so
SA L L
ES K E R
GA
s•
•w
••
•• s• •• s• •••
s•
o•v•
s•
DOWN
1 Kids' toys
2 Asymmetrical
3 Floor covering: Brit.
4 Freeway
feature
5 Mother birds
6 A record co.
7 Be wor1hy of
8 - plate
9 Countrified
10 Used a rink
11 Leg bone
12 Pass out
13 Irish river
21 Despondent
23 Hebrew lyre
25 Chase back
27 Hand tool
28 Author
Ludwig
29 Not rash
30 Drugged
34 Powerful
light beam
35 Kick
36 - In a while
,
:
37 Exploit
39 Odds and ends 1
40 Type of palm
42 City on I-BO
43 Guides
44 Change
46 Holiday:
suff.
47 Take hold of
48 ----car
49 Actor Werner
50 Sawllke par1
53 Scoop off
55 Cherokee
land: abbr.
56 Permits to
57 Other
60 Weaken
22 • THE REVIEW • September 24, 1991
Tuesday - WHAT THE BUCKtl
- It jusc keeps getting better
- Find specially marked
Moosehead bottles and be
registered to win a color T.V.
Drawing oct.· t, t 99 t
- $ t Molson, Moosehead, & La Baets
- $ t wings and Pixxa
Alpha Sigma Phi
Be ,. ptll1 of Delllw~~n's newest and growing
9·24 Domino's Pizza 8-10 pm
9-26 Wings to Go 9-llpm
Wednesday-
EAGLES vs. REDSKIN$
- ALL Shooters $1.15
- Amstel Light and Heineken $ t .7 5
- Eagles vs. Redskins ticket giveaway
Fraternity ·
_
9 30
10-2
Sub Night
-Special
9-llpm
9-llpm
BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 22, 1991
University of Delaware's Interfraternity Council Presents.. ~
sept. 28 - Outdoor Rock Bene/it
.JlT21£1A111/CI&M11'1lT ./lflU§f/81
for Homeless & Hungry
~
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER
SUNDAY
22
ill1JJ~I8J
No RUSH activities
AED
TONIGHT!
Rush Dates
Tuesday
September 24
Nachos
Thursday September 26
8 - 10 p.m .
29
9 - 1 l p.m .
Shrimp Night
Monday
September 30
9-l 1 p.m.
Monday Night Football
Wednesday October 2
9-11 p.m .
AETT Presents ...
Excellence Through
Tradition
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
24
25
26
8-10PM
AEn 314 Wyoming
ZBT 143 Courtney St.
AI:<f> Rodney Room
8-10PM
AXA 163 W. Main St.
KA 19 Amstel Ave.
27
8-10PM
EN 20 E. Main St.
TKE 43 W. Delaware
K4P Rodney Room ·
Student Center
EXA Ewing Room
Student Center
~T~ 158 S. College
8-10PM
<f>KT 720 Academy St.
ATQ 153 Courtney
Have a safe weekend.
E<f>E 30 E. Main St.
<f>K'¥ Collins Room
Student Center
IlA<f> Ewing Room
nKA 313 Wyoming
9-11 PM
158 S. College
EN 20 E. Main St.
TKE 43 W. Delaware
K4P Rodney Room
Student Center
EXA Ewing Room
Student Center
9-11 PM
AEn 314 Wyoming
ZBT 143 Courtney St.
A.t<f> Rodney Room
30
No RUSH activities
WEDNESDAY
23
9-11 PM
AXA 163 W. Main St.
KA 19 Amstel Ave.
E<f>E 30 E. Main St.
<f>K'¥ Collins Room
Student Center
31 4 Wyoming Road (Behind Gilbert C)
TUESDAY
MONDAY
9-11 PM
AEn 314 Wyoming
nKA 313 Wyoming
ZBT 143 Courtney St.
<f>KT 720 Academy St.
ATQ 153 Courtney St.
IlA<f> Ewing Room
AI:<f> Rodney Room
9-11 PM
<I:>KT 720 Academy St.
ATQ 153 Courtney
nKA 313 Wyoming
nA<f> Ewing Room
~T~
9-11 PM
<I:>K'¥ Collins Room
I:<f>E 30 E. Main St.
TKE 43 W. Delaware
2
3
4
2.:.l.l..fM
SAM
All fraternities will
be extending BIDS
to selected rushees.
.KAP Rodney Room
Student Center
I:XA Ewing Room
Student Center
AXA 163 W. Main St.
KA 19 Amstel Ave.
EN 20 E. Main St.
aT.Q !58 S. College
<f>KT 720 Academy St.
ATQ 153 Courtney St.
IlA<I:> Ewing Room
A.t<f> Rodney Room
9-11 PM
~T~ 158 S. College
E<f>E 30 E. Main St.
ZBT 143 Courtney St.
TKE 43 W. Delaware
K4P Rodney Room
Studel)t Center
EXA Ewing Room
Student Center
AXA 163 W. Main St.
KA 19 Amstel Ave.
EN 20 E. Main St.
<f>K'¥ Collins Room
Student Center
1
AEn 314 Wyoming
nKA 313 Wyoming
ZBT 143 Courtney St.
All Freshman and Sophomore men are invited to any and all RUSH locations. Look for further information from the school news papers and postingsaroundcampus.
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the Greek Affairs office at 451-2631 .
***Please Note: The E<f>E Fraternity's Rush dates have been changed from the student directory advertisement.
SUPER
SEPTEMBER
SPECIAL
ATIENTION:
The following are the ONLY officially recognized
fraternities at the University of Delaware.
fREE 1 mo. Rent
AEII
KL\P
OKT
fREE Microwave Oven
A
ellA
TIKA
fREE Basic Cable
ATQ AXA LXA
NO S·ECURITY DEPOSIT.
Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom
Apts. from S51 o
includes heat & hot water
UD Shuttle Busline.
Ample parking.
PAPER MILL APTS.
Call731-9253
LN
KA
L<I>E
TKE
)
ZBT
nlcD
ALf
,
I
Please be aware of this listing when affiliating with
,a fraternity. If you have any questions, please feel
free to call the Greek Mfatrs Office at 451-2631.