SGACommittee Seeks Explanation In Writing

UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE
_TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1968
SGACommittee Seeks
Explanation In Writing
SGA SENATOR and Junior Class president, Bill Witham (hand·
raised) spoke on the Howff after the controversial matter
concerning Bresler-Myers had been tabled. Staff Photo by Sing Lee
SGA Senate Debates Act
On Bresler- Myers Probe
By MARGE PALA
An SGA meeting that was
nearly canceled due to a lack
of quorum ended in heated
debate.
The controversy began
when Frank Novello outlined
a minority position regarding
the dismissals of Drs. •Bresler
and Myers As a member of
the
SGA
Nonrenewal
Investigation
Committee,
Novello attempted to spark
the SG A to take action
concerning the issue. He
argued the futility of the
Committee's
proposed
investigation. The following is
an
excerpt
from
the
statement in which he defines
the intricate problem.
"We have been frustrated
at every turn. The office of
the Provost says, 'It does not
discuss .the specifics of
decisions to renew or not to
renew faculty contracts.' Dr.
Lippert invokes the as
yet-unapproved
Student's
Rignts · and Responsibilities
Statement, which protects
the student's records as
confidential, and to be
:=::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:
BILL COSBY. CONCERT
BILL COSBY is coming
this Friday!
Tickets are on sale now at
the Student Center Main
desk. Price of admission is $4.
Two shows, 7:30 and 9 p.m.,
will be presented in Carpenter
Sports Building.
Featured with Cosby will
be singer Rhetta Hughs.
released only upon the
consent of the student."
The
Committee
has
ob.tained written permission
from both Dr. ~Bresler· and
Dr. Myers. to release any
information pertinent to the
investigation. Though the
administration has not yet
been confronted with these
statements, it is believed that
they will have an effect on
the Administration's policy
of confidentiality.
According to Vic Sadot,
AS9,
the
committee's
chairman, it is neutral in its
approach to the situation. It
makes no assumptions as to
the ultimate causes of the
dismissals. The committee's
goal is to investigate the
circumstances regarding the
action. Those involved in the
action
have
consistently
to
give
any
refused
in formation
on
the
potentially explosive subject.
Novello's remarks were
preceded by a request that all
faculty and administrators
leave the meeting. After
considerable debate and time,
those present, who were not
students, left voluntarily. He
felt that their presence could
inhibit frank and effective
discussion of the issue and
proposed strategies to correct
it.
The legitimate investigative
attempts of this committee
will form an effective basis
for student action on this
problem. It was the consensus
of the Senators that only the
action taken by a unified
student body will produce
results.
The SGA Non-renewal
Investigating Committee is
currently sending a letter to
faculty and administrators
involved in dismissals of two
faculty members asking for
explanations
and
clarifications on the cases.
Vic Sadot, AS9, chairman
of
the
newly-formed
committee, said in the letter
"since
this
(the
that
investigation) will require
your full cooperation, we
request a written statement
from you."
The
committee
is
investigating the non-renewal
of contracts of Dr. Robert J.
Bresler and Dr. Albert E.
Myers. The two professors
have been informed that their
contracts will not be renewed
in June 1969.
Sadot said in the letter that
"many
people
in
the
academic community seem to
feel that we may lose two
valuable teachers in these
men.
However,
our
committee does not find it
reasonableto take action on
any assumptions without first
investigating."
"In the sense that we act
on no premise other than to
search for the truth, we are a
We
neutral
committee.
question no one's integrity,"
Sadot said.
The committee offered six
questions as guidelines for
recipient of the letter for
written
replies
to
the
committee:
1.) Have the 'reasons for
non-renewal of the contracts
of Dr. Bresler and Dr. Myers
been given to them in
writing?
2.) \Vhat were the reasons1
3.) Has there been any
political pressure relating to
the dissenting views of these
men involved?
4.) Was anyone involved in
any way in making the
non-renewal decisions besides
the full professors? If yes, in
what capacity?
5.) What do you think are
Commuters Meet
For Group Gripe'
Commuter complaints may
or may not hit the Rodney
Room in full force today and
tomorrow between 11 a.m.
and 1 p.m. during the
Commuter Association-sponsored "Group Gripe."
Group Gripe is an - open
mike-styled meeting which
the Commuter Association
has scheduled ~in order to
promote invoivement among
its members.
According
to
the
Commuter - Association
leadership, participation at
regular meetings of the '
organization
has
been
extremely spai'Se, and as a
consequence, SGA Commuter
Senators and officers of the
association do not have a
complete and clear idea of
what their constituents want
them to do.
Delaware State Plans
1970 Budget Increase
DOVER-The president of
Delaware
State
College
Friday called for a 67 per
cent budget increase for fiscal
1970.
Dr. Luna I. Mishoe, college
president, said that "Our
approach this year is different
than in the past ... Year after
-year we have suffered from
the lack of adequate support
and if we are to carry out
adequately the mission of the
college, we must have
adequate support."
The statement came in a
formal paper to state Budget
Director F. Earl McGinnes. It
explained the justification fott
increases
in
various
categories.
The college has requested
$1,998,322 for the fiscal year
starting next June. Last year
the
college
asked - for
for
the
possibilities
re-opening the case?
6.) Could you give us a
copy
of
your
own
"curriculum vita" or record
ac;; it relates to teaching,
research, publishing, and
community service, if you are
among the faculty?
Sadot said that after the
replies are compiled and a
report written, the committee
will present a report to the
SGA Senate.
$1,276,00 but
$82,000 less.
was given
"The college suffers now
from a pileup of many, many
years of low-level budgetary
support," Moshoe said. "The
lack of adequate support has
reached the breakdown point
in several areas."
The largest increase would
be in salaries. Mishoe said the
college's salaries have never
been competitive. "At the
1,000
student
college,"
Mishoe said, "We are barely
holding our own within the
minimum requirements for
faculty holding the doctor's
degree."
· Additional funds will go
for student aid programs,
capital outlay, supplies and
material and contractual
services.
"We hope that the Group
Gripe · will give us some new
insights and viewpoints from
the commuters, as well as get·
some of them activated
in working to further their
own interests," said Erich
Smith, commuter senator and
vice-president
of
the
Commuter Association.
"I simply can't believe that
two thousand · commuters
don't have problems. which
need solving and interests
which
need
furthering.
U n fortunately,
ordinary
meetings of the Commuter
Association do not seem to
be the way to reach these
people, to get them to show
some
interest,"
Smith
continued.
The noon hours were
chosen for the meeting
because it was felt that more
commuting students would
be around at that time, Smith
said. In addition to the open
mike, students who, for one
reason or another, cannot
speak will be provided the
opportunity to leave written
remarks with a representative
of the Commuter Association
at a table in the Rodney
Room.
(Continued to Page I)
~=~:;:;:;:;:~:j:j:j:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:t;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;
SGA Elections
Petitions are available in
·the Student Government
Association's office or at the
S·t udent Center desk through
Friday
for
freshmen
interested in running for
officers for the Oass of 1972,
and for those interested in
seeking the vacancies in SGA
for a male senator-at-large
and a female commuter
senator, and for those seeking
to fill the vacancy for junior
class secretary.
Elections for these offices
will be held Nov. 21 and 22.
PAGE 2
TODAY
WESLEY FORUM - Allen
Rogers will discuss pa<>t and
future student uprisings at 7
p.m. at 192 S. College Ave.
CPA EXAMS- 'l'o be given .
through
Friday
in
the
Kirkwood and Blue and Gold
Rooms of the Student Center
at noon today and 8:30a.m.
tomorrow and Friday.
GROUPE GRIPE- To hear
commuter complaints in the
Rodney Room of the Student
Center from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m.
TOMORROW
CONCERT
University
Concert Choir and Chamber
Singers will present a concert
in Mitchell Hall at 8:15p.m.
WOMEN ENGINEERS Society meets in the Ewing
Room of the Student Center
at 6:30p.m.
VETERANS
ASSOCIATION - To meet at
7 p.m. in the Morgan Room
of the Student Center. All
veterans invited.
"JIMMY SHINE" - Buses
leave Student Center parking
lot at 6 p.m. for the
Baltimore play.
GROUPE GRIPE- To hear
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER -S, 1968
commuter complaints in the'
Rodney Room of the Student
Center from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m.
FRIDAY
PHILOSOPHY CLUB
Daniel C. Bennett, professor
of philosophy at Swarthmore
College, will speak on social
justice at 3 p.m. in room 013
of the EN Building.
MATH COLLOQUIA
Joanne Elliott, professor · at
Rutgers University, will speak ·
at 2:10 p.m. in room 100,
Sharp Lab.
"An
BILL COSBY
Evening of Comedy and
Music" will be presented in
Carpenter Sports Building in
concerts at 7 and 9 p.m.
FROSH FOOTBALL
Delaware vs. Lehigh at the
South
Campus
Sports
Complex at 3 p.m.
WOMEN'S
CLUB
Covered dish supper in the
Rodney Room of the Student
Center at 6:30p.m.
HOWFF - Quiet place to
talk
for couples only.
~y
Refreshments
served
waitresses from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. in the Faculty Club.
MECHANICAL
AND
Mother Refuses To
Let Son Register
SAN JOSE, Calif. (CPS) -not legally a person, and thus
Does a draft hoard or ··a
' needs - .her permission to
-' parent have first daim on a
register.
minor child?
"He will not register,"
That legal question is
Mrs. Whitehorn ·wrote Local
being raised by a Palo Alto
Board 62. "I refuse to allow
mother who is refusing to let
him to do so. I have no
her 18-year-old son register
intention to ..allow Eric. for
,.. ·
for the draft.
wliom .. I ani· still l~gally
Mrs. Evelyn Whitehorn
responsible, to be placed in a
contends that her.,son Eric is
position where he must
participate in a war · which is
counter to those things he has
been taught to support."
Eric is on probation on a
charge of refusing to obey an
order to disperse during the
Oakland draft protests in
October 1967. He has three
other brothers, one of whom
The University of Delaware
is a three-year Navy veteran.
Concert Choir and Chamber
Another has returned his
Singers will. present a program
draft card. The third is riot
of choral masterworks at
yet eligible for the draft.
8:15 p.m. on Thursday and
Mrs.
Whitehorn
has
Sunday in Mitchell Hall.
thrown a new legal argument
The featured selection,
at the local board. Up to
"Rejoice in the Lamb" by
now, draft resistance has been
Benjamin Britten, will include
based mainly on arguments of
student soloists Pal}lela Tice
conscience
presented
by
Bastian, Newark, soprano;
pros pe c ti ve
draftees
themselves.
Randi Jagel, Brielle, Ne~
Jersey, alto; Thomas Meehan,
The issue is further
Wilmington, tenor; David
complicated
because
Lutz, Robesonia, Pa. and
age-of-majority laws are not
Robert Meeker, Spring Grove,
uniform across the country.
Pa.,
bass.
The
organ
In some states, an 18-year-old
accompaniment will be by
is considered a citizen.
George Broske, Mt. Joy, Pa.
The
University
String
Quartet
will assist the
Concert Choir in three
selections: "This is the record
of · John," by
Orlando
Gibbons; "Rejoice in the
Lord Alway," by Henry
Purcell; and "Elegy," by
Ludwig van Beethoven.
The Concert Choir and
Chamber Singers are under
the direction of Joseph B.
Huszti, associate professor of
choral music.
The public is cordially
invited to attend these free
concerts.
Chamber Singers,
Concert Choir To
Present Program
ODD BODKINS
AEROSPACE · Engineering
seminar in 140 Du Pont Hall
at 3:30p.m. David C. Hazen,
professor in the department
of aerospace engineering of
Princeton University, will
speak on "Some Aspects of
the Aerodynamics of High
Lift Production."
SATURDAY
UPWARD · BOUND
Meeting at 9:30 a.m. in the
EN Building.
MOVIE - "Behind a Pale
Horse" in Wolf Hall at 7 p.m.
Admission 25 cents with ID
GOLDIE'S DOOR KNOB Film revival of "The Varsity
Show of 1937." Admission
25 cents with ID.
FOOTBALL - Game at
Lehigh University. Tickets are
on sale at the box office in
the Delaware Fiel<f House for
$3.
CROSS
COUNTRY
Delaware vs. Gettysburg on
the Polly Drummond . Hill
Course at 2 p.m. Varsity and
freshmen.
Teams·Square-Off
For Campus Bowl
Here is the schedule for the
first round:
November 6 in the Rodney
Room of the · student center.
Everyone is invited to attend.
· 6:30 p.m. Cannon vs.
Sigma Nu;
7:00
p.m.
ATO vs.
Harrington E;
7:30 p.m. Rodney A vs.
Theta Chi;
8:00 p.m. Gilbert C vs.
Sigma Phi Epsilon;
8 :30 p.m. Harrington B vs.
Alpha Epsilon Pi;
9:00p.m. Brown vs. Sharp;
9:30 p.m. Sypherd vs.
Lambda Chi Alpha;
10:00 p.m. Kappa Alpha
vs. Gilbert D;
.- November 7 in the Rodney
Room (first round also)
6:30 p.m. Russell A vs.
Kent;
7:00 p.m. Smyth vs.
Rodney B;
7:30 p.m. New Castle vs.
Delta Tau Delta;
8:00 p.m. Phi Kappa Tau
vs. Gilbert E;
8:30p.m. Rodney E and F
vs. Belmont,
9:00 p.m. Gilbert F vs.
Harrington D;
9:30 p.m. Squire vs. 68 A
and B;
10:00 p.m. Russell E vs.
Thompson;
There wiH be a meeting of
one representative from each
of the teams in East Hall on
Wednesday at 4:00.
~}~~~:::::::::~:}::::::: ...;.•:·:·:·:····.
THIEU'S THREAT OF BOYCOTT
SAIGON South Vietnamese objections to sitting at a peace
conference table with the Vietcong jeopardized American hopes
Saturday that a cease-fire could spring from a halt in the U.S.
bombing of North Vietnam.
Sources close to the President palace said, President Nguyen
Van Thieu's refusal to send a delegation to Paris talks at which
the Vietcong would have equal status was seen as a move to save
this war-torn country from "national suicide."
·
ASTRONAUTS HONORED
JOHNSON CITY President Johnson awarded medals to
America's three Apollo astronauts Saturday and praised them for
putting America on the threshold of the moon.
Donn Eisele and Water Cunningham were decorated with the
Exceptional Service Medal and Wally Schirra, commander of the
flight, was awarded a cluster for the Exceptional Service Medal he
received previously.
CZECHS MORE DEFIANT
PRAQUE Czechoslovakian press, radio ·and television attacks
on Russia took a new note of defiance Saturday. It · was
apparently aimed at preventing any appeasempnt by Czechoslovak
party leadership.
·
All the attacks were centered around a book compiled from
reports by Soviet journalists who accompanied the invasion, army
officers and other officials of the invading forces.
The press attacked the book as being a collection of half
truths, rumors and unproved statements.
·
PRY OPEN SCHOOLS ·
NEW YORK The New York school crisis is running out of
peacemakers. At the end of last week there were signs that the
i>ro~lem of the schools might faiL iQ~Q -t~e. .hflfl~.- ~f . th~!.J3.~~!e
Legislature.
:
,'
. · , ; . ' ~N
Governor Nelson Rockefeller said that- he might call a Special
session of the State Legislature. He added that this would mean
Mayor Lindsay, the Board of Education, the Regents and State
Education Commissioner, James E. Allen Jr. had failed.
U.S. EMBASSY STORMED
AMMAN More than 1000 demonstrators smashed windows of
the American Embassy on Saturday and tore a U.S. Flag to
shreds. The demonstration was broke up by police with gunfire
and tear gas.
The assault on the embassy was part of demonstrations .
throughout the Arab world in protest of the Balfour Declaration
51 years ago Saturday.
It was on Nov. 2, 1917 that Lord Balfour put Britain on
record favoring a national homeland inPalestine for the Jewish
people.
GANGSTER WEAPONS REGISTRATION
': 30-_day am~~sty period went into effect on Saturday for the
reg1strat10n of gangster-type" guns and "destructive devices"
b~nned by two Federal firearms laws that ·become effective in
m1d-December.
.
Under the conditions of the "truce" all information offered
during ~gistration is secret and can never be used in any criminal
proceedmg.
By DAN O'NEILL
ELECTION . RETURNS
All State Results
Are Unofficial
Candidate Listings
Are in RepublicanDemocrat Order
Unless Otherwise
Indicated
Totals Are As Of
12:01 a.m. Today
William v. Roth Jr.
Russell W. Peterson
Harry G. Haskell Jr.
U.S. Representative
Governor
Mayor of Wilmington
Lt. Governor
18. John A. Dillman Jr. (R) 2886
Francis J. Callahan (D) 2 8 7 6
19. Ernest s. Spence (R) 2 0 7 7
John Matushefske (D)
2117
20. W. Clarence Drummond (K) 14 7 8
Kenneth W. Boulden (D)
'2692
21. Joseph T. Cashman (R) 2456
EdwardS. Stansky (D)
273
22. John F. Kirk Jr. (R) 2542
Andrew J. Cole (D) 2 0 8 3
Sherman W. Tribbitt (D)
94120
Eugene D. Bookhammer (R) 96504
23. George Jarvis (R)
3811
Frank P. Alcamo (J?) 17 3 2
State Treasurer
24. Joseph R. Murphy (R) 26 6 8
Roger A. Martin (D)
19 9 3
25. John G.S. Bullingsley (R) 3 0 3 7
Ivan Parsons (D)
1711
26. Marion I. Seibel (R)
223 5
Mrs. M. K~thryn Mayer (D)
17 48
27. Jerome N. Unruh (R) 2806
Arthur C. Davis (D)
2 74 5
Delaware
U.S. Congressman
William V. Roth Jr. (R)
Harrill B. McDowell Jr. (D)
111605
78946
Governor
i
Charles L. Terry Jr. (D)96940
Rusell W. Peterson ( R)
9 9 412
Daniel J: Ross (R)
104 7 91
Mrs. Mary Etta Gooding (D) 8 7 3 28
State Auditor
George W. Cripps (R) 10 6 6 3 7
S
Walter J. Hoey (D)
84 6 7
New Castle County
1. Fred Brown (R)
3 0 25
Abe Goldfeder (D) 3 24.9
2. Gerard F. Gorman (R) 2 7 08
Clifford B. Hearn Jr. (D) 2 6 8 2
3. Raymond T. Evans (R) 1408
. Oliver S. Fonville (D) 2144
· 4. JohnH.Lynniii(R) 1037 •
Charles Butcher (D) 2 0 2 9
2.
5. Henry Ross Kozicki (R) 186
John H. McMahon (D)
4109
6 . George C. Hering III (R) 3 718
John D. Kelly III (D)
2659
7. Robert i Berndt (R)
William R. Remington (D)
56 61
S Sl
3
8. Herbert A. Lesher (R) 3 948
Thomas A. Bennett (D) 19 9 2
9. Clarice U. Heckert (R)
3234
William M. Little Sr. (D)
2099
10. DavidS. Benson (R) 4881
(unopposed)
11. Thomas L. Little (R) 5 15 9
Henry 0. Pilcher (D) 18 24
12. Pierre·S. duPont IV (R) 4446
(unopposed)
13. W. Laird Stabler Jr. (R) 4909 ·
(unopposed)
14. Mario A. Pagano (R)
Joan F. Wright (D)
34 9 8
2116
15. William L. Frederick(R) 2876
Edward Laskaris (D)
241 J.
16. Warren B. Burt(R) 3797
Helen G. Byrd (D)
..
2114
17. William F. CasseUo Jr. (R) 2341
Phillip W. Orth (D)
2 7 30
i. Michael N. Castle (R)
64 9 1
Russell D.F. Dineen (D) 5 511
2216
2. William H. Burton (R)
Herman M. Holloway Sr. (D) 4 5 81
John E. Babiarz (D)
Harry G. Haskell Jr. (R)
•
(
13479
18666
President of City Council
Ruffin N. Noisette (R)
Wm. J. McClafferty Jr. (D) WOn
Kent County
Robert W. Riddagh (R) 15 7 8
Margaret M. O'Neill (D) 1610
29. Dr. Lorin B. Sebreil (R) 1643
John P. Kelly (D) .
1343
..f-0. Mrs. ~ancy F. (nsen (R)383
Jacob Zimmerman (D) 5 30
31. W. Neal Moerschel (R) 2240
· Julius Tudor (D) .
194 7
32. Dr. George R. Miller, Jr. (R) 1353
Joseph L. Rawlins (D)
6
14 7
33. George R. Quillen (R) 2 2 6 9
David G. Jones (D)
1814
State Senate (Dist.)
3. RalphS. Kennan (R) 52 3 2
George F. SChlor (D) 6 9 6 2 ·
4. Dean C. Steele (R)
116 7 8
Lawrence J. Nicholson (D)
53 6 1
5. Louise Connor (R)
719 5
Robert J. DuHadaway (D)
46 7 9
6. ~eynolds duPont (R) g
(unopposed)
. 36 2
7. Margaret R. Manning (R) 8 3 17
Walter J .. Plagens (D)
O
38 2
8. Anthony J . Cicione (R) 5 8 1 :)
Leon J. Becker (D)
4867
9. William F. Hart (R)
·7 835 .
William Baumgardt (D) 3 6 2 5
10. Paul C. Hassler (R)
Melvin A. Slawik (D)
Mayor
·H ou.se of Representatives (Dist.)
State Senate (Dist.)
House· of Representatives (Dist.)
Wilmington
l
443
6017
11. Daniel T. Pennell Jr. (R) 4126
Calvin R. McCullough (D . 5 9 0 6
2
12. Everette Hale (R)
6 96
SS
Robert F. Sauscerman (D)
29
13. J. Donald Issacs(R) 6008
Rodney C. Hart(D)
4878
New Castle County
Executive Offices
N.C. County Council Executive
William J . Conner (R) 6 34 2 2
John P. Ferguson (D) 4 .9977
President of N.C. County Council
C. Douglass Buck Jr. (R) 6 7 818
Paul Seidenstat (l>)
44 52 3
14. William T. Best (R) 3 3 i6
AUenJ.Cook(D) 3815
15. Andy Foltz (R)
4181
James D. McGinnis (D) 3085
16. R. Leon Pleasanton (R). 1712
George A. Robbins (D)
O O,:
2 2
Sussex County
House of Representatives (Dist.)
34. John R. Rogers Jr. (R) 1_131
Lewis B. Harrington (D)1400
1184
35. Louis W. Burton (R)
Howard A. Clendaniel (D) 108~136. Rowland Wollasron (R) 25 7 6
R. Glen Mears Sr. (D)
S
2 89
37. Whaley Jacob Jones (R) 1251
W. Harrison Phillips (D)
g
14 9
38. George Edward Gray (R) 289.5
Wilson E. CAmpbell (D)
2 041
39. Robert M. Dodge (R) 2 219
Edward H. McCabe (D) 107 6
Sta_te Senate (Dist.)
17. Frank R. Griet (R) 2630
Harry S. Smith (D) 213 8
18. Thomas E. Hickman Jr. (R) 466 3
Curtis W. Steen (D)
640
19. David H. Elliott (R)
481-9
Dr. Chas. F. Moore (D) 24
3
3
.3
'
PAGE 4
UNIVERSITY OF · DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, , TUESDAY, NOVEMBER
Last week this column
described an organi?.ational
problem in E-52 Theatre.
This
installment
will
investigate
one
answer.
attributable mostly to the
President of · E-52, Steve
Nielson.
If the problem is . an
organization that disturbs
student initiative, then the
answer
must
be
reorganization. Steve Nielson
has directly involved a
number of students in his
reorganization planning.
First comes the fifty points
that will become a new
constitution. These were
generally proposed hy a small
group called, apropriately ,
the Steering Committee. Such
points as E-52 financial
responsibility for lab theatre
and rechannelling of funds to
bypass the Department are
worded in the Committee.
The Second step is a
general meeting of E-52
members,
including
a
representative
of
the
faculty -administration. This
student-Departmeut
cooperation is an essential
part of the plan. When the 50
point program emerges from
general
meeting it will
become a new constitution,
student
motivated
and
department approved.
Finally
the
approved
constitution is offered for
higher consideration, funds
are
channelled
(through
SGA?),
and
the
new
constitution takes effect.
Although there is no blunt
confrontation,
there
is
substantial
change.
All
members of E-52 are direetly
involved in creating their own
system.
No
university
institution is alienated.
Here, then, is a perfect
example of substantial change
through
institutions.
The next thing to watch for is
if the new system(which
should take effect next year)
will cause any change in
either quality or quantity of
lab theatre productions.
I have been asked to
inform readers that this
column represents my own
view of the situation. With
this request I gladly comply. I
have been coached by neither
E-52 nor the department.
This article represents an
accurate , if simplified, picture
of one event.
1968
The breakthrough in birth
control that many had long
awaited came in the fall of
1968--a method that was
cheap ,
safe,
simple,
Church -approved
and
guaranteed 100 per cent
effective.
It was unveiled by Indian
Family Planning Minister
Sripati Chandrasekhar. In a
speech at Poona, India, he
simply appealed to all Indians
to give up sexual intercourse
for one full year.
American family planners,
hopelessly mired in complex
disputes over pills, loops,
rhythms and encyclicals, were
elated. "Why," cried one,
slapping his brow in delight,
"didn't we think of that?"
None could argue that
America wouldn't be a better
place in which to live with
fewer Americans cluttering it
up.
And
thus
the
Chandrasekhar
Plan
was
easily sold on the patriotic
slogan: "Ask not what you
can do for your country, just
knock it off."
The right wing, which had
long equated sex with
Communism,
zealously
supported the campaign. The
left wing, which had long
equated sex with a waste of
time, was equally pleased.
And the middle-of-the-road
American, vaguely uneasy
with the times, was overjoyed
to join in a militant program
of inaction that was socially
acceptable.
So Congress unanimously
passed a law banning secret
heterosexual
practices as
"lewd, subversive and socially
destructive."
In six months the change
in the American character
was marked. Fist fights broke
out on every bus, riots on
every corner and few spouses
bothered even to snarl at each
other any more. A testy
nation was near collapse.
"There must be a better
way," snarled the President
testily.
It was dtscovered by the
no ted
anthropologist,
Professor
Fangworth
Grommet. In a study of ·the
primitive Ugulap Indians, he
noted that they did nothing
but make love 16 hours a
day. And, he said, because of
peculiarities in the human
reproductive system, this
resulted in the lowest birth
rate in the world.
So the nation was saved.
For here at last was the
breakthrough in birth control
that
many
had
long
awaited.
Chronicle Features
"And l~m Stayi.ng Right Here To Gttard It For You'~
THE DELAWARE
REVIEW
VOL. 91
NO. 14
NOVEMBER 5. 1968
Editor-in-chief
_
Editorial Director
Husines11 Manager ..
_ _ Andre w M. Stern
___ _ _ Shaun D. Mullen
--- - George Chamberlain
News Editor ------ -- ---- - ----- --- ----- Susan Greatorex
Feature Editor __ _ __ _ - --- -- -- ------ - -- --- - - Erich Smith
Sports Editor ----- - --- ___ _____ --- ------ -- - ---- Steve Koffler
Advertising Manager ------ - ---------- - - - Ken McDaniel
Associate Editor - - --- - -- --- --- -------- -------- Lyle Poe
Asst. News Editor11 ----- -- --- Eleanor Shaw, Susan Smith
Asst. Feature Editor -- - --------- --- -------- -- Phyllis Jones
Asst. Sports Editor - -- ------ ·------ - ---------- John Fuchs
Photo Chief -- --- ---- -- ---- --·---- - -------- - Steve Scheller
Circulation Manager . . __ . --- - - - - -- - ----· Judy McFarlin
Stare Artist - - - - --- --- - -- -- -··-· ----- -- -- -----·- Dick Codor
Local Ads - ---- --- - __ __ ---- - -- -- --- - .. ___ __ Robert Lynch
Faculty Advisor --- - ---- -------- --- Prof. Robeson Bailey
Starr Writer11: Jim Bechte l, Alle n Berm<tein, Janet Callum ,
}'red Carey, Kathlee n M. Cnrr, Kathleen Copson, Dale
Coulbllln·n , Georl-\'ia Ea~ton , Lynn Jo:ricson , Barbara Field,
Susa n Foote , Dale Gra vatt, Jo:ve lyn Heidelberg, Jerry
McCarthy, Chuck Molloy, Jim Moyer, Linda Nertney,
Ma rl-\'e l'ala, Phyllis Rice, Dave S<"hroeder, Bill Schwar z,
Geor·J.\'ia Searl, James R . Smith , Toni Tetrault, Dale Weiss,
Sharon Whitman . Brinn Willinm>< , Mary Anne Wolfe, Scott
WriJ.:"ht, Linda Zimm e rman, Gerald Urunner, Jim Moyer,
Carol Rogers.
Sports Writers: Steve And erson, Jim Mell or, Terry Newill,
Alan Haich, Chuck Rau , J erry Smith, Mort Fetterolf.
Husine1111 Starr: R ob Lem·y, Jan e Ruppel, Ed Stewart.
Cirt'ulation Staff: Lynn Prober , Sue Reece, Malorie Drake.
Photo Starr : Chi<•k All e n, Jim ll el'ht e l. Sing Lee, Maureen
Reurtlun , Sam Struber·t.
Published bi-weekly durin!-\' the a cademi c year by the
unde rl-\'radunte student body of the Uni verMity of Delaware,
Newark , De lawa re .
E<titorial and bus iness offices are
located on the third fl oor of the S tudent Center . Phone :
7:1!1-264!1 . Op i ni ons expressc<l are not necessarily those o r
t he univers ity.
Ad vertis ing and s ubsc ription rates on
re'luest.
}~ n tered a ~ second c lass m a tte r , December l:J, 1!145, at
the N ewark P os t Offi ce, Newurk, Delaware, under the
A c t of March :1 , 187!1.
Nation a l newspape r adverti s in ~r s nle~ handled throuJ.\'h
t he Nati ona l Edu cati onal Ad \'ertis inJ.:" Ser vices, 360 Lex ing ton A ve., New York , N e w York 100 17.
UNITED PRFSS INTERNATIONAL
COLLEGE
PRESS
CPS
·
SERVICE
"'EMB~R
-·
...
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWAR
I
~·
·: ~·
·.·:-
·''
,.,
c r_
Miss Dugan To Accept Charter
For Society Of Women Engineers
Installation of officers for
the universitis newly formed
student section of the Society
of Women Engineers will be
at 6:30 p.m., tomorrow in
the Ewing Room of the
Student Center.
The student charter will be
awarded to the new section
by Betty Lou Bailey, of the
Philadelphia
professional
Gain Acceptance
.\
.:! J
't l
It t:
.·:.
t il
1>:
. 1 .~
:1!
I ,.
t' .' )
.·~
section, a national officer.
Incoming · section chairman,
Jean
Dugan,
a
junior
mechanical
engineering
administration major from
New Milford , N.J., will accept
for the women engineering
students.
The featured speaker for
the event will be Catherine B.
Hock,
of the National
Group
Aids Pre-meds
The College of Arts and
Science ha<> established a
Science
Advisory
Health
Committee
to
aid
undergraduate
majors in
medical , dental and allied
professions gain acceptance
to professional schools.
The
function of this
committee will be to gather
as much information as
possible on a particular
student and then complete an
objective
Confidential
Student Evaluation form
which will be sent directly to
those professional schools
designated by the stu dent.
At the beginning of the
first semester professors 'of
science courses in which
sophomore premedical and
predental
students
are
enrolled will be provided with
an
Evaluation
Student
Performance form to be
completed
at
the
conclusion of the course and
which will be forwarded
to the
Health
directly
Science Advisory Committee.
The
committee
will
convene
periodically
to
consider
all
students
requesting the evaluation.
A
stu dent
liaison
committee is being formed
which will work closely with
the advisory committee. Plans
are being made to establish a
program of speakers chosen
from medical , dental and
paramedical
fields.
This
advisory body offers its
services also to premedical
students in other colleges of
the university.
The committee consists of
Dr.
W.
Robert
Bailey
(biology) chairmen, Dr. Peter
A. Chevalier (biology), Dr.
Robert L. Boord (biology),
Dr.
Allen
.Granda
(psychology), Or. James B.
Mehl (physics) and Dr. John
C. Wriston (chemistry).
Highway Safety Bureau, who
will discuss "A Systems
Approach to Safe Motoring."
0 ther
officers
being
installed incluc.ieMargaretmary
Torelli,
a
sophomore
mechanical and aerospace
engineering major from North
Miami, ~Ia . , vice chairman ;
Nancy Redgate, a junior civil
engineering
major
from
Wilmington, secretary; and
Kathleen
Nuruddin,
a
sophomore
electrical
engineering major, from New
York City.
The first chapter of a
national ·
technical
organization
for
women
students on the Delaware
campus, the society was
formed under the guidance of
Dr. Celina Ugarte, associate
professor of civil engineering.
She is a member of the
professional organization and
was the first registered
professional
engineer
in
Delaware and in her home
country, Nicaragua.
Dr. Ugarte was encouraged
in her efforts to form the
student section by Dr.
Edward W. Comings, dean of
the College of Engineering,
and Dr. Eugene Chesson , Jr.,
chairman
of
the
civil
engineering department at the
university.
Another
stimulus was
provided by the appearance
on campus last spring of the
Philadelphia
professional
section, of which Dr. Ugarte
is a member. This gave the
students a chance to meet
practicing women engineers
and hear of the opportunities
in the profession.
Of all the applicants, the
University of Delaware was
the only school that was
granted a charter by the
national organization this
year.
SOCIETY OF WOMEN ENGINEERS-Newly elected officers
of the newly formed student section of the Society of Women
Engineers pose in front of Du Pont Hall with their faculty
advisor, Dr. Celina Ugarte , associate professor of civil engineering.
They are , seated from left, Margaretmary Torelli, vice chairman;
Dr. Ugarte ; Jean Dugan, chairman; standing, Mrs. NancyRedgate ,
secretary; and Katherine Nuruddin, treasurer.
Accelerator To Add New
Teaching, Research Areas
New areas in teaching and
research
will
be
made
available early next year by
the addition of a Van de
Graaff
accelerator
to
laboratory equipment at the
university.
The new machine and
supporting equipment, valued
at around $100,000, will
permit
research
and
instruction in areas of nuclear
physics and electron physics
not previously taught at
Delaware.
The machine will be
capable of accelera,ting both
electrons and nuclei through
a potential of 21/2 million
volts. At this high energy
rate, electrons are traveling
very close to the speed of
light, while nuclei travel
slower because of their
LSA Circulates
Guard Petition
Cadet Captain Bob Shrouds, BE9, presented Jane Timmons,
AS 1, 1968 Military Ball Queen, to the First Battalion recently to
publicize the election of ROTC sponsors for 1968-69. Miss
Timmons will reign as military queen until April. Each
company -sized unit in the cadet brigade will elect sponsors from
those nominated this week, on Nov. 29. Any cadet in the brigade
can nominate a sponsor provided she is a student in good standing
at the university.
Circulation of the Lutheran
·Student
Association's
petition urging the immediate
removal by Gov. Charles
Terry of the National Guard
from Wilmington began this
week.
The petition will be
circulated throughout the
dorms this week and part of
next. Also there will be a
copy at 243 Haines Street if
anyone does not get to sign it
in the dorms.
Carol Gruber , president of
LSA, told The Review , "We
feel that this is our first step
forward in the right direction
and we hope the campus will
support us."
The petition reads as
follows :
·- "Whereas the National
Guard is patrolling the city of
Wilmington, Delaware; and
"Whereas the presence of
the National Guard in the
city of Wilmington assumes
that a state of riot exists
where there is none; and
"Whereas the National
Guard assumes the inability
of local authorities to carry
out their duties; and
"Whereas the National
Guard is insufficiently trained
to perform the duties of
which
they. have
been
assigned; and
"Whereas the National
Guard
practices
discriminatory
law
enforcement, and
"Whereas the National
Guard subjects the citizens of
Wilmington to verbal abuse,
"And finally , whereas the
physical presence of an armed
force
intimidates
and
interruptsthedaily life <'f the
citizens.
Therefore, we, theLutheran
Student Association of the
University of Delaware, do
strongly urge and recommend
to the Governor of the state
of Delaware the immediate
removal of the National
Guard from the City of
Wilmington. We extend to the
entire University community
an opportunity to support
this petition by afixing their
signatures hereto."
greater mass.
The accelerator will be
used in teaching and research
activities
in
electron
acceleration. Part of the
physics department's research
in solid state physics involves
analyzing crystals bombarded
by electrons. Many of these
experiments are performed at
very
low
temperatures,
sometimes as low as 450
.degrees below zero .
In biophysics, it will be
used
to
extend
the
measurement of the effect of
radiation on larger biological
molecules. The machine will
be
available
to
the
engineering departments for
such uses as the study of
radiation damage to metallic
surfaces.
The north end of the Sharp
Laboratory basement is being
remade tl) accommodate the
:-:.ccelerator. The floor is being
reinforced and a 2-foot-thick
concrete wall erected ' to
shield adjoining rooms from
the machine's beams. The
accelerator requires· the same
shielding as a very high
voltage X-ray machine.
A safety device in the
accelerator room door will
shut down the machine when
the door is opened so
personnel cannot ·be exposed
to radiation by inadvertently
entering the room while the
machine is in operation.
The machine will be
remotely
operated
by
experimenters in a shielded
control room. Experimental
results will be fed into the
control room via coaxial
cable. Experimental data will
be automatically recorded by
pen recorders or magnetic
tape. If required, the tape can
be fed into the University's
computer for data analysis.
The accelerator is a major
expenditure of a 3-year
$556,000 National Science
Foundation grant to the
physics department to extend
teaching and research to new
areas, expand the number of
new graduate fellowships, and
ex tend
undergraduate
.teaching facilities.
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, TUESDAY, NOY.EMBER 5, 1968
Fraternity
ot The week.
•
~rep~ ~p~~~ '!.!Jl~o~!!.!it~t 9_~~.~f!.n~
founded March 1, 1868 at the
University of Virginia by 6
men dedicated to brotherly
and high ideals. Since then
1 alk f n s
f th
a 1 w s 0 1 e. orne 0
e
m?st well known are Sens.
Dirksen,
Morse ,
and
Thurmond.
Delta Eta chapt;er was
founded at Delaware 10 1948•
suffered several
m Its early ye.ars, reachmg. a
low of 1.2 active brothers 10
1965. Smce t~en we have
grown t? 30 actives; and plan
t? .contmu~ to expand at a
Similar rate m the future.
top ten of all national
fraternities b th ·
b
of chapte~ a~d ~~mn~e~ ~~
initiates Brothers 0 f p·1
Stu dent r S Jh Oug hI on R'all.gi•On
~
'
Letter To The Editor
·
11
·
What is freedom? What is
equality? Is equality that
state of affairs whereby any
person or group is permitted
to conduct any type of
religious service on campus as
long as it does not violate a
university rule or threaten an
administrative establishment?
Or is equality that state
whereby
NO
ONE
is
permitted to conduct such a
meeting.
The whole question boils
down to the definition of
freedom. In the context of
religious
freedom,
the
university . chooses to define
equality in the latter manner.
Neither religious services nor
prayer meetings may exist in
public university buildings.
But where else can a
completely
universityoriented religious group (not
directly affiliated with any
church)
conduct
these
meetings? The arguments on
this problem line up similarly
to those arguments on open
dorms and cars on campus:
"But where can student~ go?
Things were better in high
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;.;.;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;:·:·:······
Chamber Opera
The
Chamber
Opera
Group,
Clarence Snyder,
musical director, will debut
with three contemporary
one-act operas Friday and
.Saturday at 8:30 P.M. at the
Wilmington Music · School,
4101 Washington St. The
Program . is: William Walton's
"The Bear," to Chekov's
play: Carlisle Floyd's "Slow
Dusk"; and Samuel Barber's
"A Hand of Bridge." To
benefit
the
School's
scholarship fund.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::·;·:·:··:··:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::.;.·.·.·· ··
_Ski Buffs d.o it!
Inglish leather®
For men who want to be where the
action is. Very schussy. Very masculine . ALL-PURPOSE LOTION .
$2.50, $4.00, $6.50. From the complete array of ENGLISH LEATHER
men's toiletries.
1\
I'..:UULll Ul Ml\1 LU.\II'A~Y . I~(, t-.UIOII\All," I U ~t.tll
·
school!"
Hopefully,
the
newly
formed University Religious
Council will be able to iron
out difficulties along this line.
In addition, perhaps it would
be possible to employ and
- maintain
the
former
Presbyterian Church Stone
Building on Main Street (now
university
owned
and
unleased) as a university
chapel. Student rights' leaders
now have more fuel to add to
the controversial - Student
Rights' Proposal .
Robert Stier AS9
~n~
set~acks
Being one of the smaller
fraternities on campus, Pi K
A now offers close fraternal
brotherhood
to
all its
members. 1 ~eour h~~~tin~~~~
program
our social and
expanded
cultural programs, having
such speakers as Dr. Dolan of
the Political Department
come to speak to us.
Civil Service Seeks Seniors
Tally Today To Take Test
.
Seniors wdl have an
opportunity to . compete in
the Federal Serv1ce Entrance
Examination when it is
administered on campus on
Saturday, Dec. 7.
Complete
details
and
application forms are now
available at the Placement
Office in Raub Hall. Today is
the deadline for returning
these applications.
During the past five years
more than 50,000 young men
'and women have used the
FSEE as a pathway to re~-~r;dingcareersin government.
Over 6,000 recent college
graduates were hired from the
FSEE during the six-month
period from January through
June 1968 alone.
FSEE was designed with
the college student in mind.
The test covers only verbal
···
· ·
ab1ht1es and quantitative
reasoning; no speci.fic subject
matter knowledge IS reqUired
to qualify.
Open to seniors and
graduates in any academic major,
the
program
is
appropriate for students in all
curricula except engineering,
the
physical
sciences,
accounting and a limited
number of other technical
fields.
The estimated salaries of
this year's graduates will
begin at either '$5,732 or
$6,981 a year. The higher
starting salary is paid to
students
having
good
academic records. · Higher
salaries are also -paid to
applicants who qualify in the
very competitive Management
Intern
portion
of
the
examination.
For the Liberal Arts Major,
PQT can. open a whole new world
o_
f opportunity ...
Each year, NSA offers challenging
career opportunities to Liberal Arts
majors through participation in the
Professional Qualification Test.
This year, NSA has scheduled the POT
for Saturday, December 7, . 1968.
Completion of this Test by the Lit;>eral
Arts major is a prerequisite to
consideration for NSA employment.
The Career Scene at NSA:
The National Security Agency is the
U.S. Government agency responsible for
developing invulnerable communications
systems to transmit and receive vital
information . As an NSA professional,
Y.OU will be trained to work on programs
of national importance in such
areas as:
• Cryptography-developing & logical
proving of new cryptologic concepts
• Research-the gathering, analysis,
and reporting of substantive data
• Language-used as a basic tool of
research into a number of
analytical fields
• Programming-includes data
systems program writing, and
development of mechanical and
administrative procedures
• Documentation-technical writing
in its broadest sense, including
research, writing, editing,
illustrating, layout and reproduction
Your specific academic major is of
secondary importance. Of far greater
impO'rtance are your ingenuity,
intellectual curiosity and perseverance
-plus a desire to apply them in
assignments where ':imagination is
the essential qualification ."
universities can be partially or wholly
reimbursed through NSA Fellowships
and other assistance programs.
The deadline for PQT applications is
November 22, 1968.
Pick up a PQT Bulletin
at your Placement Office. It contains
full details and the necessary test
registration form. College Relations
Branch, National Security Agency,
Ft. George G. Meade, Maryland 20755.
Att: M321. An equal opportunity
employer, M&F.
SALARIES start at $6981.00 and are
supplemented by the benefits of
career federal employment.
ADVANCEMENT AND CAREER
DEVELOPMENT-NSA promotes from
within, and awards salary increases as
you assume greater responsibility.
NSA also is anxious to stimulate your
professional and intellectual growth in
many ways, including intensive formal
as well as on-the-job training.
Advanced study at any of seven area
national
security
agency
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE,
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER §. 1968
PAGE 7
!Hair' A'Stateme~t Dramatic Conference To Be Held
Of Total Freedom
By JIM BECHTEL
"Hair,
The
American
Tribal-Love Rock Musical" is
still growing in all its plastic
plentitude just a half-block
from Broadway. "Hair" is a highly uptight
declaration of total freedom
that thrives on outrage--but is
very little else. Painted and
packaged for delivery to the
fringes of the Theatrical
Establishment
from
off-off-Broadway, the show
seems to be secure but
uncomfortable in its new
home.
ACID, SEX, PEACE
It is immediately evident
that "Hair" is out of its
element; but that is partly the
point of the show. Loosely
hung around the rise of
Hippiedom and the heavy
changes that our recent
entrance
into
the
thirty-two-year
cusp
of
Aquarius is supposed to
bring, the show is a montage
of lively assaults on American
society.
Though
barely
held
together by the suggestion
that
the
music
and
often-flimsy lines emanated
from
a
"tribal-love"
community
of
milktoast
hippies, the musical did seem
to have a theme. And that
might best be summed up by
the description of Sally Eaton
(Jeanie) in the program
notes: "Sally is for acid, sex,
and peace."
"GOT A JOINT?"
The audience is also
confronted with sweetly safe
praises of homosexuality,
sodomy, nudity, free money,
black
power,
and
drugs-,-among other things ..
This was all too much for the
Saturday
matinee
theater-goers,
who
were
visibly shook when they
arrived at the theater to loud
exclamations and embraces
from members of the cast.
To further set the mood of
the show, actors also handed
out flowers, panhandled, and
shouted "Anybody got a
joint?" (Somebody offered
one, but it turned out to be a
phoney.)
"TRICK OR TREAT"
As I watched the cast
trying to copy the Living
Theater's
physical
involvement of the audience,
I couldn't help thinking that
what they were trying to
accomplish had been said and
done much better in the
streets.
I thought of Halloween
two nights before, when I
discovered that "Trick or
Treat" from a city kid is a
pitiful request for a handout
(money, not candy--that's
what a kid in Harlem
understands). That is what
"Hair" is all about: feel
what's happening. Do it. Be
it.
"Hair" serves primarily to
educate
the
adult, the
out-of-touch
and
the
generally out-of-it. If you fit
these categories, see "Hair"
and see it .beforP. it's too late.
(Now.)
A BETTER IDEA
If you don't, you will get a
better idea of what the show
is trying to say by spending a
night (without money) in and
around Junior's Cafe, on East
Tenth Street and Avenue B.
Then take a Subway uptown
(Continued to Page 9)
By BOB SCHWABACH
Congratulations, I think,
Tricky Dick Nixon, 36th (if
you count Cleveland once)
President of the United
States. (People 1 we are in
deep trouble: Richard M.
Nixon does not believe in
John Maynard Keynes.)
******
It's kind of a political
week, so remember Chester
A. Arthur. Also:
NOVEMBERS
1860 Abraham Lincoln
and Hannibal Hamlin elected
President and Vice President,
with 180 electoral votes.
John · C.
Followed
by:
Breckinridge and Joseph Lane
(Dem.), 72 votes; John Bell
and
Edward
Everett
(Constitutional Union Party),
39; Stephen A. Douglas and
Herschel V. Johnson (Dem.),
12.
1888 Benjamin Harrison
and Levi P. ·Morton (Rep.),
233 votes, defeat; Grover
Cleveland and Allen G.
Thurman (Dem.), 168.
1900 William McKinley
and Teddy Roosevelt (Rep.),
292. William .Jennings Bryan
The
Annual
Dramatic
Conference sponsored by the
D e I a wa re
o ·r a m a t i c
Association
and
the
University Dramatic Center,
will be held in Mitchell Hall
on Friday and Saturday,
November 8th and 9th.
Friday's program for the
DDA Educational Division,
will bring approximately 600
State High School students
and their teachers to the
the day's
campus,
for
program.
On. Friday evening, the
Community Theatre division
will begin. This section of the
Conference will continue
through Saturday evening in
conjunction with the Annual
Conference of -the Eastern
States Theatre Association
with the local groups as hosts.
Members
of
ESTA
representing a five state area
will assemble for the program
of activities on Friday
and Adlai E. Stevenson
(Dem.), 155.
1928 Herbert Hoover and
Charles Curtis (Rep.), 444.
Alfred E. Smith and Joseph
T. .Robinson (Dem.), 87.
1956
Dwight
D.
Eisenhower and Richard M.
Nixon (Rep.), 457. Adlai E.
Stevenson and Estes Kefauver
(Dem.), 73.
1962 Edward M. Kennedy
elected to the Senate.
NOVEMBER 7
1805 Lewis and Clark get
their first view of the Pacific.
(Clark wants to go surfing but
Lewis wants to look for
Japanese fishermen's floats.)
1811
General
William
Henry Harrison, Governor of
the Indiana Territory, defeats
the Shawnee Indians, led by
Chief Tecumseh's brother, at
the Battle of Tippecanoe on
the Wabash River. 1820
Score: James Monroe, 232.
John Quincy Adams, 1.
(Elector William Plumer of
New Hampshire voted for
Adams.)
187 4 H~rper's Weekly runs
a cartoon by Thomas Nast,
depicting an elephant as the
symbol of the Republican
evening and a full day on
Saturday.
The Conference will open
at 9:00 a.m. Friday moming
with a description of the
Contemporary Theatre in
Japan. This illustrated lecture
will be given by Dr. William J.
Bruehl of the Uaiversity
Faculty, who spent last
summer on a Research
Fellowship in the Far East.
The balance of the day's
program will be devoted to
the theme: The Evolution of
a Production. The play, to be
described and shown to the
Conference,
is
E-52
University Theatre's recent
production of LAMP AT
MIDNIGHT, by Barrie Stavis.
Dr. William Jaeger, a Faculty
member in Dramatic Arts and
Speech, will describe his
make up and the changes
used in order to produce the
aging Galileo. The leading
character progresses from a
virile man in his mid forties,
to an old man of seventy.
Following Dr. Jaeger's
lecture,
which
will
be
illustrated with photos and
slides, Michael and Patricia
Rabbitt, setting and costume
designers for the play will
describe their contributions to
the creation of the play on
Rabbitt will
stage. Mr.
explain the various research·
and te-chnical media that he
utilized in the making of the ,
many projections used during
the course of the play's
action. Mrs. Rabbitt will
demonstrate her work as
costume. designer through the
use of her research into late
Renaissance costume, the use
of materials, color and line,
and lastly; show some of the
various garments worn by the
actors in the production.
morning
During . the
session, University Greetings
will
be extended to the
Conferees ~y
the
new
President, Dr. Edward Arthur
Trabant.
Following a break for
lunch, "Lamp at Midnight"
will be performed at 1: 30
p.m. University students who
have not yet seen the play are
welcome to attend this
performance. University of
Delaware > students
need
merely show their I.D. Cards
to be admitted.
All of those in attendance
during the day are invited to
return at 8:00 Friday evening
for a performance of Mime
by Mr. William Douglas, Jr.,
the son of the Supreme Court
Justice. Mr. Douglas has
studied his art with the
French
masters,
Etienne
Decroux and Marcel Marceau.
Mr. Douglas has worked as an
actor and mime on the stage,
screen and for television and
has his own Mime Theatre in
New York. There is an
admission charge for this
of
$1.00.
performance
Tickets may be reserved by
calling
737-4343
or
purchased at the box office
on the evening of the
performance.
The EST A Conference on
Saturday, will feature repeats
of Friday's lecture-demonstrations with a performance
of "Lamp at Midnight" at
8:00p.m. in Mitchell Hall.
During the afternoon, the
highlight of the program will
be a talk by Mr. Davey
Marlin-Jones
entitled,
"Community Theatre- You
and the New." Producer-director of the lively spirited,
and adventurous Washington,
D.C. Theatre Club, Mr.
Marlin-Jones
was
an
outstanding speaker at last
year's educational section of
the
D D A - U n i ve rs it y
Dramatic Cen'ter Conference.
University
students,
faculty and staff are cordially
invited to attend any or all of
the sessions .on either day of
this year's meetings. As noted
above, the performance of
William Douglas at 8:30 p.m.
on Friday evening will carry
at $1.00 admission charge.
RICHARDS DAIRY INC.
57 ELKTON ROAJ>
STEAKS, HAMBURGS, SUBS
TO TAKE OUT.
ouu OWN
MAKJc~ ICJc~
Phone 368-8771
CREAM
Mon. thru t•'ri. 7 ::Jo a.m. to II p.m.
Mat. 7 ::JO to 5 ::Jo.
(~losed
Sunday.
/
YOUNG ME·N WHO
UNDERSTAND
YOUNG MEN'S PROBLEMS
ROBERT L. SIDELL AND ASSOCIATES
1700 WAWASET STREET
WILMINGTON, DEL. 19806
Telephone 654-6894
MASSACHUSETTS 1\-1 UTUAL Life Insurance Company
SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSET. TS • ORG~. '"!IZEO 1851
(
PAGE 8 '
UNIVERSITY O'F DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1968
9
&-<-qC&[A'SSlfi'E 6~-ADS*'*'%A%~ Folk .Singers Present Week
Of Informal Performances
' '~~6ii'' §xi'if'' ' ' ' ~' ' '~' ' ' t=~=r===== = = = = = = = = : :!= = = = ~= =~= = = = = = = = = =r : : =MoT'o'lic:Yci~'ii:s=· -·~.-:...: ,,,,,,,., ·:, .,:,:, ,.,., .,:,.,.,:,.,:, , .,:,., :,:,.,.,.~~~'' 'i~~'~'J' ' i!~\!~'ii\~'''i~~'''i~~
ASSORTED
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS--including TV,
antique music cabinet, and
sideboard, bench) birdbath ,
footlocker,
throw
rugs,
portable bar, guitar, tennis
rackets, slide rule, men's 34
long stretch ski slacks , and a
boa constrictor and bull
snake, with cage. 737-1174
after 6 p.m.
SIX STRING CLASSICAL
G UITAR--very
good
condition $35. Call Carol
Pullen 658-5690 after 5 p.m .
G rl•
PeS
1967 TRIUMPH TR 6, 250
cc, at off season rate. Good
condition , less than 4000
miles.
Equipped
with
helmets ,
signals
and
saddlebags. Contact Barb
Hall, 737-9891.
1966 YAMAHA 305o-Jt's
light blue and in very good
condition; asking $425. Call
737-4530 and ask for Bob.
1967 YAMAHA, YDS- ,
250
cc,
contact · Art
Lindemanis, 109 West F or
EA 8-4331.
HONDA 160 cc. Excellent
condition. 7500 miles. Must
sell. Call and make offer.
Gerry Albert, 306 West A.
MISCELLANEOUS
DEAREST MIKE, you and
your sideburns turn me on.
rsvp
RIDE
WANTED
into
Wil~n~on
OOM 10lli ~d
Van Buren Streets and/or
Harlan Elementary School.
Between 11:30-12 Monday
through Thursday. Contact
Joy ,
110
Gilbert
B.
7 37-9627.
R 0 U N D
T R I P
TRANSPORTATION TO NY
for $6, Nov. 9. Leave here 8
a.m. , leave N.Y. 11 p.m.
Equestrian Club needs to fill
bus. Call Sharon Ay delott
114 Russell B or Stu Ligon
204 Rodney A.
T YPI NG-Pa pe rs,
dissertations, etc. on IBM
Selectric 368-434 7.
D0
S 0 MET HI N G
DIFFERENT at Christmas
Vacation. Fly to the Bahamas
•••
(Continued from Page 1).
"We hope to have some
discussion
of
parking
pro b I ems ,
commuter
representation ,
on
SGA
WHEN, the Review, the
&rounp, ~d llie p~~
lack of services and programs
for the commuting students,"
said Smith. "This, as far as I
know, is the first time this
kind of meeting has been held
here at Delaware in a long
time. It may be a total flop, if
past
participation
at
commuter meetings is any
indication. I do know that
the open-mike complaint
session
has
been
very
successful
on
other
campuses."
In addition to the two
gripe sessions, there will be a
regular
meeting of the
Commuter Association ·at 4
p.m. Thursday in ihe Student
Center.
/ /
\
~)
l
~/
/
~
for $195. Contact Bob
Lynch , 405 Sharp Hall
Campus
mail for .more
information.
AZ BEEF BARBEQUE-All you can !eat Nov. 15 ,
5-6 :30 p.m. 500 lbs. choice
meat cooked by experts.
Tickets at S.C. main desk.
Come on down to Ag Hall
and enjoy.
WkNTED: 1968-S Proof
sets. Highest prices paid.
Phone 737-9907. Ask for Bob
in room 208.
FOUND: one nair white,
lace panties. Siz.e 5, hips
36-37. Found in the vicinity
of Harrington B on the night
of 10/30/68. Please claim.
See Dave, Room 102 Zoo.
IS FERTWIX really an
episode of "Experiments in
Music?" Contact second floor
r
By GEORGIA EASTON
The singers performed not
only Friday night at Caesar
Rodney Dining Hall and
Saturday night at Goldie's
but al'so at various dorms
during the week. After these
programs, time was allowed
for students to meet the
friendly pair.
David and Dan will be
playing at the University of
Pennsylvania this week as
another stop on their college
tour.
Boarding the 9:40 bus to
Philadelphia on Sunday, folk
singers David and Dan ended
their week visit at the
university.
The duo's very informal
programs not only featured
vocal solos, guitar solos, and
vocal harmony but also some
sing along songs that the
audiences eagerly took part'in
performing.
The informality of the
concerts was also emphasized
by David's frank comments.
In looking to yesterday's
election and third party
candidate George Wallace,
David felt that college people
should not be satisfied to
merely back the candidate of
their choice but "must make
their opposite opinion heard
;:;:;.;.;.;.;.:.;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::.:·:·:<·:·:· :::;:;:;:::::::;;:::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::
Homecoming Pictures
Thirteen
Homecoming
Queen candidates have not
yet picked up their pictures.
Photographs may be claimed
in the Review office, third
Student Center.
;,!6!8JD~a~n~d~s~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~o~.:··~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1-41 ~I'M A CAMPUS
~EC~ ITER ~~OM
CONOCO.
r~
..)
COIIIOCO·'s NOT .)U~ SEi'Vl'E:
'STATIOWS. WE 1 ~l: IN PE~oL.EUM
COAC.., PL.A~T F«>DS1 CHEMICAL~~ ..
)
ltJ 'l9 COLU.~\~IeS •
VJ~A'T'S. YOU~ !:.PEC lt\L.TY ~
I
\.I
.)
1 MA.)OQED
I~
PI"0'-0 .
I
/
Who knows ... we may form a company band.
-··· ~
.
;~very
"Where do you go from here?"
Math
Seeking Graduates all degrees
0
0
D
maJor shoul
ha·v e a. beer
t-o oaJI
hts o ·w·n~
ENGINEERING
SCIENTIFIC
BUSINESS
CHEMICALS I
PLANT FOODS I
oAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
('T ho Nat 1onnl Bre w 1ng co. u f S aito .. MlJ . ot Baltu . Mtt . Also Pho c n • ~ • Ml am 1 • Oe tro 1t
NOV.
Continental Oil Company
COAl I
PETROLEUM I
See your
placement
officer.
Recruiting
NUCLEAR
~2
·.
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1968
,k
E
' ,s
.. ' not
,_. ; ::sar
11
and
' ie's
' rms
: c .11ese
:,,-ved
: •·1, the
be
of
~~~ ~· "
as
· ·; , JJ ege
,·:11
"' -~ ~
.res
:'; lll ~ l ing
o: . \ t '
not
- · > ~ _ . res.
. ~ .. ; ned
' hird
... :, .
·:· ?
:: ~
'Forward March'
ROTC Moves Ahead.
By JAMES SMITH
The department of military
science ha'; made another
transition in its somewhat
complicated history.
In 1889 the university
(then
Delaware
College)
established this department.
Its enrollment in 1890,
included four seniors, six
juniors, 19 sophomores and
52
freshmen.
Delaware
graduated 87 commissioned
cadets in 1968.
The
department
ha';
survived
and
prospered
through
several
major
revisions. During World War I,
Delaware College (now the
university) was an adjunct of
the United States Army.
Officially it was known as
No. 351 Students Army
Training Corps. Today ROTC
is a voluntary program.
Along with increases in
quantity
of
cadets,
improvement
in
quality
instruction is evident. Each
advanced course ROTC cadet
is required to attend one
summer
camp
session,
consisting of six weeks of
intensive training.
At the camp this year, in
competition among 6,000
cadets,
Delaware
cadets
averaged in the upper 33 per
cent. Five cadets were chosen
first in their units and six
ranked second.
According
to
Major
Chester
Steckel,
public
information officer in the
department, "The transition
to an all volunteer program
has
been
very successful ... 50 per cent of the male
freshmen
class
h ave
enrolled."
Currently there arc 273
students enrolled in the
advanced course .
The cliche, "ROTC builds
leaders," may be laughed at,
ridiculed or ignored. This
year among advanced cadets
there are many campus
leaders: presidents of, the
Student
Center Council,
Inter-fraternity Council, Class
of 1970, the Delaware
Concert Choir and other
organizations. Also the Vice
President
of
SG A, the
editor-in-chief of The Review ,
and captains of three varsity
athletic teams are members in
the advanced course.
The department has six
new officer instructors this
year. All are combat veterans
and alumni of different
universities: Alfred, Tulane,
University of Maryland, Penn
State, VMI and West Point.
Undergraduate men are
given an opportunity to
become officers in the United
States Army. If that's your
"Bag," the program and
facilities are available.
C.
Hazen
of
David
Princeton
University
will
speak at 3:30p.m. Friday in
room 140 DuPont Hall.
Hazen's visit is part of a
seminar series sponsored by
the department of mechanical
and aerospace engineering.
Hazen is a senior member
of
the
aerospace
and
mechanical
sciences
department and associate
dean of the faculty at
Princeton. He has gained wide
recognition for his pioneering
work in low-speed flight, and
particularly in boundary-layer
research .
He received his BSE in
1948 and his MSE the
following
year
from
Princeton. He has been a
professor at the university for
more than 15 years. He
served as a consultant to the
Air Branch of the Office of
Naval Research and to a
number of groups within the
Department of Defense. He is
an Associate Fellow of the
American
Institute
of
Aeronautics
and
Astronautics.
Hazen's seminar topic,
r
g
t
GIRLS- 14 KARAT GOLD FOR YO .
Thr OIMAR fatrong Co has a se te c toon of over
~00 ·toHerent solod 14 karat gold PI[R('fD
lARR 'iGS And at proces you can aHorrt'
YoJ·t ; ~ave from 2~ 0 o to !iO% from the su~
gr~IP~ retaol proces Send $1 DO for postage
and h.t · ,~l•nt(. whoch wolf be refunded on ful l
on your forst order. to DIMAR farrong Co.
Kendall I' 0 Bo• ~31. Moamo, Floroda 331~
Don't delay ~e nd today, and we'll send our
beautoful colo r catalog
\
I
\
Outing Club Plans 3 Ski Trips;
To Offer Movies For Beginners
At least three skiing trips
are being planned this year by
the Outing Club for those
students who alread y know
how to ski as well as for those
who want to Jearn.
Skiing movies and other
information will be made
available by the club for
beginners.
The first trip will be to Elk
Mt . . in Pa. According to
Robert Faust, AGO, the
mountain has the longest lifts
and usually the best snow
conditions.
Scheduled for Jan . 12, the
price for transportation is
$6.70 J?er person. Lift tickets
at
group
rates
are
considerably cheaper here
says Faust.
There will be a six day trip.;
to New Hampshire during
semester break. Students will
visit Loon Mt. , Waterville
Valley , and Canon Mt. Here
they have gondolas or tram
ways which Faust says are
comparable to some in the
Western areas.
Lift tickets will be good
for all three areas. Price for
transportation has been set at
$21. Rates for food and
lodging will be available later.
A weekend trip on Feb. 21
to White-Faced Mt. in N.Y. is
also
being
organized.
Bobsledding and ice skating
will be available at the ski
lodge.
Faust describes the area
with four double chair lifts,
18 trails and three open
slopes as "excellent."
Rates for this excursion
will be $38 per person. This
will include transportation,
food and lodging.
All trips will be on a
first-come, first-serve basis
and will be limited to 44
participants. They will be
open to all undergraduate and
graduate students and faculty
members.
A sign-up sheet is available
Latin American Interest
Evidenced Among Students
For years there has been a
growing
interest
among
students and faculty at the
about
Latin
university
America. This year, for the
first time, the library has
begun a subscription to the
Argentenian newspaper, "La
Nacion." At the same time,
several
new
professors
Princeton Prof To Parley
With Prospective Polytechs
i .. · ·
PAGE 9
I . I
"Some
Aspects
of the
Aerodynamics of High Lift
Production ," will concern the
devices and techniques being
studied for improving the
off
and
landing
take
of
modern
performance
aircraft. This is a critical
technological problem area
which, if solved, could help
improve
our
intercity
transportation situation by
making possible the use of
smaller airports and airports
closer to population centers.
A coffee will precede the
seminar in Room 100, Evans
Hall.
offering courses on Latin
America have joined the
faculty.
PAN AM CLUB
With the purpose of
developing this interest, the
Pan-American Club called a
meeting Oct. 29 of faculty
· and students with interest in
Latin America.
The main objective of the
meeting was to explore the
possibility of creating a major
in Latin American Studies.
Dr. Felix Nigro, professor of
political science, opened the
meeting. Every member of
the faculty who was present
expressed his approval of the
idea anq promised to work
within their departments for
the offering of more courses
on Latin America.
similar program.
Dr. John Deiner, assistant
professor of political science,
proposed the creation of a
committee consisting of one
member
from
each
department in the College of
Arts and Science in order to
unite interested students and
faculty and to draw a definite
agenda to proceed further
within the normal university
channels. This will be done
within the next three weeks.
·wHEN TO BROADCAST
WHEN will broadcast the
Pan-American Club every_
Monday night at 8:30 p.m .
The program will feature
Latin and North American
hits, andshorttalkseach week.
at the· Student Center desk
for the three trips. A deposit
will be required in advance.
Reservations should be made
before Christmac; vacation.
"These trips should prove
to be.. a real blast and a
needed diversion from studies
and the miserable winter
weather
in
Newark,"
emphasizes Faust.
nH a 1•r '' ...
(Continued from Page 7)
to Columbia and talk to the
people at the card tables in
front of Low Library (about
revolution , sex , drugs, Power,
Biafra, etc.) .
f\nd finally, if you're
either black or brave, keep on
going on up into the ghettos
of Harlem. That's whereit's
happening--America's
Labyrinth, where many more
than seven youth and seven
maidens will be sacrificed in
the acid belly of Moloch.
"Hair" says that this is the
age of Aquarius, "destined
for
either
greatness-or
insanity." Whichever it will
be · will depend on how our
turbulent, confused world
copes with the plethora of
new forces and trends now
confronting it.
YOUNG SHOW
"Hair" is as fresh, lively,
and alive as its youthful ,
inexperienced
cast.After
at
work ,
seeing
them
however, I think there ought
to be a production like
~ 'Hair" created every year--if
only to give great new talent
a chance to be seen.
Steve Curry (Berger) is the _
stand-out clown of the show;
Ronald Dyson (Ron), who
sings the lyrical opening song,
"Aquarius," has the best
voice, and Richard Kim
Milford (Woof) turns out the
best acting job. Star of the
show is Barry McGuire.
INSTITUTE PROPOSED
Dean Ruben Austin, dean
of the College of Business and
Economics, proposed the
creation of a Latin American
Institute. This idea was
backed by Dr. Kent Price,
assistant
professor
of
biological
sciences,
who
pointed to the success that
the University o~ North
Carolina has had with a
ATTENTION
Seniors And_Graduate Students
Our Commencement Plan, which has received
national recognition and acceptance among
colleges and Universities, has been specifically
designed to meet your financial needs, both
present and future.
We invite you to investigate this plan with us
Fc:.~-f-ff-For complete information call:
f:2-f~f·
-£_~ c.-ff-f-
~-f}:.~-f
"'\ lfl
PLANNED GROWTH
654-5389
or
See one of ou~ campus
representatives
-fidelity Mutua I Ufe
Milltown
Shopping Center
Milltown &
Limeatone Road
Open daily
10 : 00 to 6!00
Wed. &
Fri. eve a 'til 9: 00
Saturday ·
9 : 30 to 5 : 30
Phone
(302)998 -0494
Mail order• filled
Add 50c postage
PAGE 10
RSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, TUESDAY
Hen Swimmers Hope To Set
New Marks In Carpenter
By STEVE KIRKPATRICH
After two wee ks' practice
Coach Harry Rawstrom is
enthusiastic about the coming
Blue Hen swimming season.
With
six
returning
lettermen , a spectacular new
facility at Carpenter Sports
Building and ten strong
sophomores, another strong
season is easily within reach.
"Our men are doing all
they can absorb and we're
going to move ahead. We may
all be surprised to see just
how fast we can swim!"
commented Rawstrom.
Captain Dave Bent leads
six returning lettermen back
after a winning 7-5 season a
year ago. Others returning are
Tom
Alloway,
Jeoffrey
Bariy
Guerke,
Coleman,
Drew Hagerty, and Rich
Wilson.
So phs Schedule
Activities
Activities for the rest of
the semester highlighted the
last Council meeting of the
sophomore class.
.
The La~ender Hill Mob will
play at a dance sponsored by
the class Dec. 19.
Spirit buttons will be sold
at the Nov. 16 game against
Boston University. They will
also be available in the dorms
a few days prior to the game.
The Class of 1971 is
co-sponsoring two campus
events: the Bill Cosby concert
.. -.and th~ Howff... Both are in
need of more publicity.
Remaining new business
included
suggestions
for
community projects the class
could carry out, a committee
to revise the by-laws, and a
regular meeting date.
All
sophomores
are
welcome at
their class
council, which will now meet
at 7 p.m. Thursdays in the
same week as the Student
.Government
Association
meetings.
. Ten of the 21 squad
members are sophomores,
who as frosh last year
compiled an excellent 7-2
record. Mike Brennan, Dennis
Carey, John Fabris, Bruce
Mart'in, John McDermmott,
Peter
Piepmeier, Charles
Proud, John Stehle, David
Underwood , and Richard
Wiefand
make
up
the
sophomore group . Rounding
out the team are Bill Freed,
Bob Hill, and Allen Jones, all
upperclassmen and new team
members this year.
Coach
·Rawstrom
anticipates
new
school
records in the freestyle relay,
the 1000 yard fre~style for
Carey, 200 yards backstroke
for
Guerke, 200 yards
breaststroke for Wilson and
may be some butterfly records
for Captain Bent and Stehle.
Coach Edgar Johnson has
fifteen frosh working each
day and they are hopeful of
continuing the fine record of
last year's team.
PRACTICE
Although formal practices··
began two weeks ago many
team members of both squads
have
been
working
individually and informally
since the first week in
September.
They
began
working the first week of
Pick
Perfection
VENTURA 1300
ALSO IISO TO ISI7S
RING SO
WEDDING
Th e ce nt e r e ng ag e m ent
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practice with 2500 yards of
swimming each day and are
now up to 3500 yards a day
wfth an eventual goal of 5000
yards a day.
This
is
Rawstrom's
twenty-second
year
as
swimming coach at Delaware
and is it understandable that
he
is
"nothing
but
enthusiastic about this new
pool" in Carpenter Sports
Building. The facility is really
two pools, one racing and one
for diving. The new racing
area is 60 feet by 7 5 feet and
can accomodate eight racers
at one time in a meet. This
added
size
is
also
advantageous because more
athletes can work at once in
the wider area than in the
older narrower facility at
Ta lor G:v.m.
GONE ARE THE DAYS of swimming meets in the pool of
ancient Taylor Gym. This year, meets will be held in the huge ,
modern pool in Carpenter Sports Building.
u. of D. Photo
doyour .
ontact lenses lead
a clean life?
Contact lenses can be
heaven .. . or hell. They
may be a wonder of
modern science but just
the slightest bit of dirt
under the lens can make
them unbearable. In
order to keep your con tact lenses as comfortable and convenient as
they were designed to be,
you have .to take care of
them.
Until now you needed
two or more separate
solutions to properly prepare .and maintain your
contacts. You would
think that caring for contacts should be as convenient as wearing them .
It can be with Lensine.
Lensine is the one lens
solution for complete
contact lens care. Just a
drop or two, before you
insert your lens,coats and
lubricates it allowing the
lens to float more freely
in the eye's fluids. That's
because Lensine is an
"isotonic" solution,
which means that it
blends with the natural
fluids of the eye.
Cleaning your contacts
with Lensine retards the
buildup of foreign deposits on the lenses. And
soaking your contacts in
Lensine between wearing periods assures you
of proper lens hygiene.
You get a free soaking
case on the bottom of
every bottle of Lensine.
It has been demonstrated
that improper storage between wearings may
result in the growth of
bacteria on the lenses.
This is a sure cause of
eye irritation and in some
cases can endanger your
vision. Bacteria cannot
grow in Lensine which is
sterile, self-sanitizing,
and antiseptic.
Letyourcon~cb be the
convenience they were
meant to be. Get some
Lensine, from the Murine
Company, Inc.
UNIVERSITY O'F DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, TUESDAY, NOVEMB·ER 5, 1968
PAGE 11
Athletes Speak·- - -.........
Criteria
. . . . . . . . . . . .•By BOB YOUNG . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
Booters ShUt Out By Owls, 2-0;
1 Mistakes Cost MAC Championship
Bob Young EDO, comes to the University of Delaware from Baltimore,
Maryland. He came as a prospect for coach Peterson's basketball team. He's
had a change of heart and Is now a front-runner for catcher on the baseball
team. This semester Bob Is pledging Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. Bob has
offered to tell It "like it ls."-The Editor
I think that the college student, in general, is more mature than
he has been given credit for.
Many people feel that the student in college hasn't grown to
maturity and the policies of many universities reflect this feeling.
There are two types of maturity in question here: social
maturity and emotional maturity. In order for the individual to
be mature in either or both of these areas the sense of freedom
must be accompanied by a sense of responsibility. Since going to
college isin effect an attempt to make yourself a better part of
society, you are fulfilling a social responsibility, hence you should
be allowed some social freedom such as being able to dress in a
way that suits you, yet remaining within the laws of society.
The question has risen concerning maturity where language is
concerned. I feel that the language on the University of Delaware
campus sometimes becomes a bit distasteful. However, in
comparison with the rest of society, the language used at
Delaware couldn't possibly offend anyone. If someone says that
the language at this university is corrupt, he should first put it on
a scale in comparison with the median of society's language
corruption. I'm sure that anyone doing this would find that the
language on this campus is rather good.
A clarification should also be made about incidents that some
people consider immaturity and others consider fun. An
occasional roll fight in the dining hall is good for blowing off
steambutitshouldn'tinvolveanybreakageof university property or
injury to fellow students or dining hall staff. That is the
difference between fun and immaturity; you're having fun as long
as nobody suffers as a result of your actions but as soon as this
occurs the incident becomes one of immaturity.
The mature individual is someone who realizes that values are
the basis for our society and they are determined by the majority
in the society, therefore they must be the same for all members
of the society. No small group of people can determine that since
they agree with some values they will not hold to them. There are
laws that protect the values of our society and the people who
· break these laws are the ones who are immature. I have only seen
a few of these acts of immaturity on campus and these haven.'t
been really flagrant. ..
·
'
·
Since the 0nly basis for maturity is the behavior of people
within a society, then the only mea;ns by. which maturity can be .
measured i~·. a comparison of the behavior of college students
versus that of non-college students. It is with this in Nind that I
come to the conclusion that the college student must be pretty
damn mature.
Rutgers ...
The team moved like it
hadn't moved all afternoon,
advancing from its. own 15 to
the Ruters 36.
DiMuzio then returned and
the Hens were hit with a five
yard penalty. It was third
down, and DiMuzio, who was
two for 11 in passing for the
first half, went to the air and
was luckless again, as his
receiver dropped the aerial.
Delaware was forced to punt.
Then the scoring started.
On the third play from
scrimmage, Mitchell broke
through the Hen line and
backfield and outlegged the
last defender, running 84
yards for the score. But
De 1aware,
· undaunted,
marched 57 yards in 11 plays
to regain the lead, 14-10.
Late in the period, Rutgers
scored again on a 35-yard
Policastra to Jim Benedict
pass and took the lead for
good. In the fourth period,
the Knights, paced by Mel
(Continued from Page 12)
Brown's 30 yard run, drove
62 yards in nine plays to put
the icing on the cake.
By JIM MELLOR
The university soccer team
lost any chance of winning
the MAC championship last
Saturday afternoon when
they were beaten by Temple,
2-0.
This was the hooters' first
defeat of the season.
The Owls played according
to their game plan, which was
to concentrate on defense
and hope for a break on
offense. That is just what
they did, allowing the Hens
only 11 shots while they took
24.
Temple's first break came
with less than three minutes
remaining in the half, when a
miss cleared by the Delaware
Harriers
To Meet
LaSalle
Today the Blue Hen road
runners will meet LaSalle
college at Philadelphia.
The meet_could go either
way for two reasons. First,
LaSalle finished fourth in the
Big Five cross country meet
last Saturday, beating only
Temple, whom the Hens also
beat earlier in the season.
Secondly,
Delaware
and
LaSalle each lost to St.
Josepti's by one point in dual
meet competition.
· Saturday, the Hens will run
against Gettysburg in their
last dual match of the season.
After the Gettysburg meet
the road runners will begin
preparing for the I.C. 4A
championships in New York
City on November 11, and
the
Middle
Atlantic
Conference
championship
meet in Philadelphia on
November 22.
DOWN
WITH
SOILED
SUMMARI.ES!
Kahoe ...
really having dominate ball
control.
The Hens played good
soccer but couldn't seem to
keep the momentum up
enough to penetrate Temple's
defense lind score.
"Mistakes cost us the ball
game," . said Dusewicz, "we
played good ball but made
two costly mistakes."
The
Hens
travel
to
Pennsylvania today to meet
Franklin and Marshall.
WHAT'S?
. YOUR •
HANG UP
" .··•
Blondes!
Brew!
(Continued from Page 12)
Frantz provided the sole
Delaware TD in the third
quarter. The final two scores
were the result of a 5 yard
romp by halfback John
Branner and a 20 yard pass
from sub quarterback Charlie
Dvorak to Brad Wisniewski.
The
victory
evened
Delaware's season log at 2-2
while Lafayette's record is
now 3-2.
....,::
Brea~!· ·
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defense was kicked in front
of the goal and hit the back
of
Nino
Vittorio, and
bounced into the far corner
for their first goal.
The Owls got their final
score late in the fourth
quarter when Joe Doering
kicked a comer kick in past
goalie John Dusewicz who
was screened on the play.
In all of Temple's games
they have scored a total of
seven goals and six of them
have been by Vittorio. They
do not have a real high
scoring attack, so they have
developed a very good
defense to combat their
opponent's offense. This is
what they did to the Hens.
"We didn't get our offense~
going,"
remarked · Coaclf .
Loren Kline, "and had only a
few solid shots on the goal."
Most of the game was played
in midfield with neither team
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PAGE 12·
Delaware Outhusfled
By Knights, 23-14
By JOHN FUCHS
Powered by the hard-nose
running of Bryant Mitchell
and Mel Brown and the
flawless passing of Rich
Policastro,
the
Scarlet
Knights came from behind in
the third quarter to top a
~ub-par
Delaware squad,
•23-14 last Saturday.
Mitchell
and
Brown
combined for 287
yards,
eight short of the total
Rutgers offensive yardage.
The former is now fourth in
all-time rushing for
the _
Knights, and is quickly
approaching the top. The
latter had the best day of his
career, carrying 16 times for
117 yards, averaging 7.3
yards per carry.
Policastro, starting his
second game of the season,
did just as well against the
Hens as he had done the week
before against Columbia. The
junior
signal
caller
competed seven of 15 passes,
going four for four in the
second half. His third period
35 yard bomb to Jim
Benedict put Rutgers ahead
tostay,17-14.
DiMUZIO HAS TROUBLE
Tom DiMuzio, on the
other hand, just could not
connect at all. He completed
only seven of 23 attempts,
exactly the same as ~n 't he
Villanova game.
. Nor was that tht: only
similarity
between
the
Rutgers
and
Villanova
contests. Like in the Wildcat
game, the Hens just didn't
have the finesse that they had
shown in the last two weeks
against West Chester and
Temple. They lost a fumble
on the first play from
scrimmage, giving Rutgers a
field goal, and didn't make a
first down until the fourth
time they got the ball.
Even the play that set up
the Hen touchdown in the
closing minute of the first
half was freakish. With a
fourth and four situation at
midfield, DiMuzio dropped
back to pass. The Knights put
the pressure on, and the
junior quarterback was forced
to run. He advanced the ball
four yards and fumbled, but
an alert· Chuck Hall picked up
the pigskin and took off
down the left sideline to the
Scarlet 18.
DISPUTED PLAY
The play had the officials,
press and fans arguing for
some time. Some people
called it a forward lateral.
However, when the ball
changed hands, DiMuzio was
beyond
the
line
of
scrimmage. Thus, according
to the officials it had to be a
fumble.
Meanwhile,
the
play
brought the Delaware section
of the estimated 18,000 fans
to life. Two plays later,
DiMuzio jogged around left
end for the score, and the
jubilant Hens took off to
the locker room with a 7-3
edge.
Throughout the first half,
the defense did a tremendous
job. Middlelinebacker John
Favero continued to do the
superb job he always does,
and senior tackle Paul Camp
dumped Policastro a number
of times behind the line.
BUCKLEY MOVES TEAM
Soph Bob Buckley started
the
second
half
at
quarterback, replacing the
ailing DiMuzio, who has been
bo_thered by a bruised thigh.
(Continued to Page 11) .
JUNIOR HALFBACK Sa~ Brickley cuts to his right to gain much-needed yardage for the Hens as
Sta(f Photo by Chick Allen
Hank Vollendorf prepares to take_ Knight Larry Clymer out of the action.
Ka hoe_Scores Three Times
As Frosh Crush Lafayette By ALLAN RAICH
Two weeks ago Gardy
scored
four
K a hoe
touchdowns yet the frosh
football team was defeated
46-41 by Temple. Last Friday
however, three touchdowns
by the 6-2, 205 pound
fullback sparked a Delaware
victory over Lafayette 54-6 at
the loser's field.
The Blue Chicks scored in
each p~riod with a 26 point
Delaware's, 01Jponents' Results
William & Mary
VILLANOVA
33
12
BUFFALO
TEMPLE
50
40
MASSACHUSETTS
Vermont
49
0
Colgate
LEHIGH
27
11
BOSTON U.
Connecticut
33
23
BUCKNELL
Maine
42
21
CHUCK HALL straightanns a Rutgers defender as he gains some of the 84 yards he rushed for on
Saturday.
Staff Photo by Chick Allen .
second quarter explosion
putting the game well out of
reach.
Kahoe scored the team's
first TD on · a one-yard run in
the first quarter. His two
other scores, a two-yard
plunge and a 23 yard pass
from quarterback Bob Smith
came in the. second quarter.
The Germantown Academy·
sen Sfl t ion
h~s
now
accumulated 9 touchdown's
and 54 points in four games.
Kahoe
has
personally
accounted · for 45% of the
squad's 20 touchdowns with
one game still remaining
against Lehigh Friday at ·
home.
Bill Armstrong added two
touchdowns to the ·victor's
cause_.
Armstrong,
a
teammate · of Kahoe's 'at
Germantown,
scored " O'n
second quarter scampers of 7
and 20 yards.
In
the
second
half
Lafayette was completely
shut out by a tough Chick
defense. A 53 yard aerial
from Smith to end Paul
(Continued to Page 11)
Chicks Swamp Harker Prep;
Retain Undefeated Record
Rick Bender, Terry Waltz,'
and Bill Dobbs scored two
goals apiece as the freshman
soccer
team
completely
overpowered a young Harker
·Prep squad last Wednesday
6-1, at the university field.
Exhibiting a hard-nosed
defense and a sporadic
offense which sputtered in
the first half, the booters
nevertheless managed to score
once in each of the first three
periods and three times in the
final fifteen minutes.
The victory brought the
Chicks' record to 2-0-1 with
one game remaining against
PMC at home on November
13. The hooters won their
opener against Washington
(Md.) College, 3-0 on October
16th. Bender had two__.. goals
and WaJtr. one during the
contest. On the twenty
second of October the team
travelled to Lancaster, Pa. to
face Franklin and Marshall.
The · match
went
two
overtimes with the score
ending a tie 1-1. Waltz scored
the lone Delaware goal of the
game.
ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT
Coach Ai Robersonwas
pleac;ed with the game's
outcome but saw much room
for improvement over the
team's performance. "The
offense was very tight in the
first half and did not run .:very
well but we really laid it on
them in the last two periods.
We completely dominated the
final half of play." Roberson
was extremely impressed with
the play of right wing Waltz
and goalie Joe Owsley, who
made seven saves during a
relatively quiet afternoon
around the Delaware goal.
The Chick roster includes
co-captains Kirk Johnson, left
wing; and Bender, right inner;
left inner, Dodds; right wing,
Waltz; and center forward,
Mohamed Alsaleh, o.n the
front line. Bob Jaep, Scott
Warren, and Larry Abrams
rotate at the two halfback
spots while fullbacks Gary
Harding, Chip Wood, and
Terry Siegele, and goalie
Owsley round out the starting
team. Other players include
Dan Winn, John Sullivan,
Alan Kessler, and Dave Starr.
In an overall appraisal of
the team Coach Roberson
predicted that the majority of
the members of the team
would play varsity soccer.