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VOL. 91
UNIVER~ITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE
NO. 26
FRIDAY. JANUAHY 10, 1969
Uof D Band To March
In Inaugural Parade
SNOW JOB--Unshoveled walks rob people of sure footing.
Starr f'holo
/,~. Slet.l<'
Sc/l f' ll<' ''
Tip Top Fire Damage
Estimated At $40,000
One
of
university
students'
two
favorite
watering spots went up in
flames early Sunday morning.
The Tip Top Lounge, 1 77
E. Main St. , was heavily
gutted by fire doing an
estimated $40,000 damage.
The
fire,
discovered
shortly after 1 a.m. was
fought for almost :~0 minutes
by Newark and Elkton, Md.
firemen
in
sub-freezing
temperatures. Firemen were
hindered by iey sidewalks and
streets.
The Violet H.ay Laundry,
at 179 Main :)t. . suffer~d
heavv smokP and water
damage and would · cost an
estimated $2.000 to dean.
The <J&J Delieatessen at 175
E. \lain St.-: separated from
the lot:nge by· an aile~· , also
suffered smoke damage.
Flames wPre roaring out
the windows and door over
the sidewalk when firemen
arrived. The entire interior,
which was remodeled last
summer, was destroyed.
Deputy State Fire Marshal
Richard C. Lynch estimated
the content loss at between
$15,000
and
$20,000.
Charles Walfers of Newark,
who handles financial matters
for Mrs. Norma G. Thomas,
owner
of
the
building,
estimated structural loss at
000.
By LINDA NERTNEY
Once again the University
of Delaware Marching Band
may be heralded as number
one.
The university band has
been
selected
by
Governor-elect Peterson to
represent
the
state
of
Delaware in the Inaugural
Parade in Washington, D.C.
on .Jan. 20. President-elect
Nixon has reduced the size of
the parade to one marching
unit and one float from each
state.
The order of march will
follow
the
long-standing
tradit ion of having states
represented in the order in
which they entered the
Union. Delaware being the
First State will be first in the
line of march after a special
presidential
unit
from
Whittier, California (where
Nixon attended high school).
This will be the first time
that the university band has
been asked to participate in
this national event. One
unusual feature of the parade
is the choice of university
bands only as representatives
of the various states.
The band will leave the
university at 9 a.m. on Jan.
20 . The musicians will have
lunch at Schraffts Restaurant
below Baltimore. They are
scheduled
·to
arrive
in
Washington at 12:15 p.m.
The parade will begin at 2
p.m. They will return to the
university that e.v ening after
dinner at the Swiss Inn.
The band was selected by
the
State
Inaugural
Committee.
They
were
advised of their selection by
Mr. Kramedas, head of The
Inaugural Committee and the
invitation was cleared
the
university two days befor.e
the Christmas holidays. There
was some conflict due to final
exams.
Exams
were
rescheduled
for
approximately 35 of the
more
than
100
band
members. Expenses for the
trip will be absorbed by the
Inaugural Committee.
The H.OTC color guard
will accompany the band and
take part in the parade, also.
The band will play from a
selection of four traditional
marches in the parade. A
::epresentative of the band
will journey to Washington
Evaluation Goa/:
Basis For Choice
With
everyone ' s
cooperation, his next choice
of subjects may be more of
what he wants.
'J'he primary objective of
the
Course
Evaluation
Committee is to give the
student at tlw universitv a
strong base from which. to
work when ehoosing courses,
specifically electives, and also
to
establish
a
rapport
between th(> student bodv
and faculty. (See page 12 f~r
the text of the committees
philosophy.)
The evaluation also helps
the professor to discern how
effective
his
teaching
methods are and the student
knows before he enters a
course whether it is of
discussion or lecture nature.
He then will be more likely to
get the course of his choice ,
and id
do better.
No Friday Review
The last issue of The
Review this semester will be
published Tuesday. No issue
will appear Friday , Jan. - 17.
All copy, advertising and
classified ,,dvertising must be
in The Review office, 301 .
Student Center. no later than
2 p.m. Su~day. All copy and
advertising brought in after 2
p.m. will be held O\'er until
the first issue second semester
which will appear Friday,
Feb. 7.
Sunday evening, January 19,
to be briefed on parade
format.
In speaking with David P.
Blac kington,
assistant
director of the Marching
3and, it was learned that
David Brinkly of NBC had
contacted the band in order
to
acquire
interesting
information to pass along to
the television audience as the
band passed by .
The band will oractice
next Thursday, at I: :10 p.m.
Jn case of rain or snow this
practice will he held on
Friday at the same time.
VIEW OF THE TOP--Inside view of the gutted Tip Top, one of Delaware students preferred spots
for refreshment, illustrates extensive damage caused by a fire last Sunday. Flames consumed $40,000
worth of property.
~Staff Photo b~· Cl1ich All••n
This is the second major
attempt at course evaluation,
the first one being last year.
Attention must. be drawn to
Dr. Harry Hutchinson, of the
economics department for
adding
support
and
organization to the Course
Evaluation Committee.
One improvemen.t the
committee thinks will help , is
that this year the course
evaluation will be eonduded.
or hopefully conducted in the
classes instead of in the
(Continued to Page 13)
\Unknown Donor
·Gives 65 Acres
North Of Campus
An anonymous benefador
reC'ently gave the university
()5 acres of land north of the
main campus.
This land, bordered on the
west by H.ou w 896 and on
the east by White Clay Creek,
is adjacent to land previously
given to the. university and
brings the total holdings in
that area to 1 H2 acres.
University
officials
already have designatt1d the
new campus as the site for a
multiple-unit residence hall
and dining complex to be
completed by 1970, and as
the location for a conference
center. Final plans for the
dormitory-dining hall were
approved by the Board of
Trustees at their semiannual
meeting on Dec. 7.
Since the main Newark
campus of the university,
exclusive of the south campus
athletic
complex
and
farmlands. consists of about
190 acres, the new area
almost doubles the space
(Continued to P•t• 1 6)
PAGE 2
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
.·!II
TODAY
Lll'I'HEH.AN S'J'I , D~:N'I'
!\SSOCIA'I'ION - L>inner of
H.eeondliation, 2-1:l Haines
Stre~t. Wear old dotlws. 6
p.m. Admission 75 cents.
Alt'I'IS'I' S~:IUES
Paul
Taylor
J>an<:e
Company,
Mitchell
Hall,
H: 15 p.m.
( :eneral admission
$:t50;
student admission, $2.50.
DANCE
Harrington
Dining Hall, H::{0-12 p.m.
Admission
7!)
ecn.ts.
Sponsored by Sharp Hall.
Music by th1• Humors.
MJ<:CIIANJCAL
ANI>
Al•:ltOSPACI•:
EN<:INEEit SE!VliNi\lt
J.10
JN<:
DuPont Hall. ;{ p.m. Dr.
Df'wk Hull. Distinguished
Visiting
Professor
and
Chairman of the Metallurgy
Department. University of
liverpool.
will speak on
"Propagation Charadcristi<:s
of Atomically Sharp Cracks."
Coffel'
will
be
sPrved
pwc<!ding Llw seminar in 100
l•:vans Hall.
BIU<:AJ>E DINNEit
Militarv Seiene<' Department
and S~·niors of the ltO'I'C.
Constitution l{oom , lloward ·
.Johnson's (ltoutl' H9fi) . at
fi ::HJ p.m.
INDOOH
Tltt\CK
D<•lawHn• vs. Lehigh (V lV. F).
Delaware Field House at 7 : :-Jo
p.m.
D !J P LlCA'n:
HH.I D< ;~<;
CLUH
'1'. V. Lounge,
Student Center, at 7:15 p.m.
TOMORI~OW
JH:NEFIT PARTY - For
the "H(•terodoxical Voiee."
H::{O p.m. at the PhO(mix.
IJPWAHD
BOUND
PltO<:ItAM
Education
Bui!ding ·at 9: :m a.m.
SCJIOOL-COLLE<;E
ENGLISH CONFEH.ENCE
ltodney
Room,
Student
Center, 9::-JO a.m. Luncheon
in the M-V Itoom, Student
Center, at 12 noon.
SWLVTMI NC:
Delaware
vs. Lehigh (V & F). Carpenter
Sports Building at 2 and :~
p.m.
I :NJVtr:ltSJTY FILM
· ' DP a d
I·h• a t
on
a
Mf~rry-Co- ll. ound." Wolf llall
at 7 p.m. and the Hodney
Hoom, Student Centc>r. at 10
p.m. Admission 25 eents with
IJ) eard.
SUNDAY
I. ~ I 'I' A It I i\ N
FELLOWSIIIP
J{pv. f{obert
!kmstrel't will deliver a
I 0: :w a.m. servi<'<' on "The
Future of llop<' and tlw llope
of the Future." Students
needing transportation may
call :-J6H-32-11 or 7:{7-3959.
STCDENT _RELJC;IOUS
LIBEltALS
Will meet at 12
noon after chureh to take the
Reverend H.obert Hemstreet.
to lunch.
HILLEL
HRl !NCH
Temple Beth El at J 1:30 a.m.
An Israeli muple will speak
about tht>ir experienees in the
army and the present war in
Israel.
I:NtVEHSITY FILM
''Murder, She Said ." Wolf
Hall at H p.n1. Admis.•;sion
free with II> card.
MONDAY
IJNIVEHSJ'I'Y
S'I'H.lN<:
Q t: A I{ 'I' E T
An
International Festival, 8 : 15.
p.m., Mitchell Hall.
NEWAHK
ALUMNAE
CHAPTER
MEETINU
_Kirkbride ltoom, Student
Center, at H p.m. Miss L)ep
Lafferty, presidfmt. Student
C:overnment As..<;odation will
speak
on "The Student
<:overnment Today at lJ. of
D.,
There will be a Baha'i'
Club meeting at 4:15 p.m. ,
Friday, January 10 in the
McHenry
H.oom of tht•
Student Center.
Editor Examines
~\tl~
Extra
Expunging
~WHEN~
~640RADIO~
~It\~
f'IRDAY
3-4 : 30 P. M. C ..W.Show (Top
Hits)
4 : 30-5 : 30 P.M. Ste\'e Bowen
Show (Top Hits)
5 : 30-6 : 30 P.M . Rich Miller
6 : 30-7 : 00
P. M . News and
Sports in Depth
7 : 00-8:30 P.M . Torn Kelly's
Soul Music
8 : 30-10 : 00 P.M. Tim Isaacs
Underground Sound
1 0 :00 - 12 : 00
A . M.
Rick
Browne's Mood Sound
12 : 00-2:00 A.M. Don Ritter's
Odyssey
SATURDAY
12 : 00-2 : 00 P.M. Don , Ritter's
Early Odyssey
2 : 00-4:00 P. M . C . W. Show
4 : 00-6:00 P.M. The Creature
E :00 -6:30 P.M. pon Henry
Show (Top 1-:lits)
P.M .
News and
· 6 : 30-7 :00
Sports in Depth
7 :00-8 : 30 P.M. Don Henry
Continued
8 : 30 - 11 : 00 P.M. Blue Hen
Basketb:tll : Del. vs. PMC
11 : 00 -2 : 00 A.M . WHEN's Top
100 Hits of 1968
SUNDAY
6 :00 - 8 : 00
P.M.
Walt
Christenson's After Dinner Music
8 :00 - 11 : 00 P.M . .I on Rafa's
Easy Listemng Music
11 : 00 - 1 :00 A .M. Schreiber's
Cobweb Corner
MONDAY
3 :00-4 : 30 P.M. Dave Jonassen
Show (Top Hits)
4 : 30 -5 : 30 P.M . Terri Vane
Show (Top Hits~
5 : 30-6 : 30 P.M . Don Henry
(Top Hits)
6 : 30-7 : 00
P.M . News and
Sports in Depth
7 . 00-8 : 30
P . M.
Bryan
Gordon's 69 Rebellion
8 : 30-9 : 00 P.M. Pan-Am Club
9 : :J0-1 0 : 30 P.M . Rich Miller's
Easy Listening Music
10:30-12 :00
A.M .
C . W.'s
Dedication
12 :00·2 : 00 A.M . Cramming
Music
The following is taken from an
editorial in the Daily . California
(University
of
California,
Berkeley) by editor Konstantin
Berland!. It was written after the
California found some four-letter
words changed to dashes in their
copy, and is printed here as
student newspapers at Albright
and Muhlenberg are in danger of
being censored--The Editors.
By KONSTANTIN BERLANDT
(CPS)--A
four-letter
word--something you see or
hear or use or do every day, a
very expressive word that
merges love and hate together
at their most magnif'i<:ent and
frightening monwnt.
But Straight eoneepts are
often 1iarrow. They only
understand one meaning for
the word, and that meanin~~ is
obscene. It is something very
dirty that Straight people
don\ want their wives _ and
children to read.
Their analvsis of it is as
blind as their ~ndorsemcnt of
law ·n· order to solve our
societ~· 's problems. It will all
go away if we ean just repres:;
it. If the kids don't use tlw
word, then tlwy won't think
it or f<•el it or do it and won't
n•cogi1ize. it when it's being
do1w to them . . .
\Vp maintain that a word
cannot he innatl'IV obscene.
Perhaps in some c<;ntf•xts it is
obscetw. In otlwrs it may -be
simply a graphie metaJ?hor.
an exclamation, a poetic
exvression of bitterness. ,
When a reader must spend
time playing hangman. his
understand is weakened. In
poetry, dashes can destroy
the rhythm, the rhyme, .t he
mPter and the · mood. In an
emphatic political speeeh
dashes
can
weaken
the
speak<>r's
power
and
persuasiveness.
And
they
slant a news article with a
connotation of disapproval
the editors do not intend to
give.
Turning a few words into
dashes may not sf'em terribly
important, espedally sinet• we
can imagine the rrltssing
letters anyway.
But the
p robl~·m
_hel'omes
more
important wlwn, in the guise
of rPfusing to print obscf!nity.
the printN refuses to print
more than · a few words,
refuses to print <·oncPpts.
Th•.' courts (Roth v. ll .S.
19fi 1) defend frePdom of the
press with a narrow dPfinition
of obscenity that indudt>s
onlv materi~l which. to th e
an~rage person: makes, a
predominant appeal to thP
prurit•nt
jnterests
"when
taktm as a whole '' ; whieh ~oes
substantially
beyond
the
(Continued to Page 6)
The Week
·1n Review
8y UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
•
ELECTORAL REFORM HEARlNGS SOON
WASHINGTON---Congress may be on the brink of overhauling
-the Electoral College system. Senator Birch Bayh of Indiana said
Wednesday a North Carolina elector will testify _before a Senate
subcommittee when it opens hearings on election reform. Dr.
Lloyd Bailey switched his vote from the state's support of
Rkhard Nixon in order to cast an independent ballot for George
Wt.llace. Congress refused to challenge the vote, but urged
changes in the election system.
NUCLEAR TREATY ACTION DELAYED
WASHINGTON---The Senate Foreign Relations Committee
decided to delay action on the nuclear non-proliferation treat~ '
Tuesday until after Richard Nixon ta~es office. Co~mittee
Chairman William Fulbright of Arkansas satd members beheve the
new administration should be given a chance to review the trea!.y
and submit recommendations lv - ue the Senate acts on it.
ESCAPED KlLLER CAUGHT
WASHINGTON---Washington police arrested the suspect~d
slayer of two F. B.l. men in the nation's capital Wednesday. Bit he
Austin Bryant, a 29-year-old escapee from a federal reformat~ry,
was captured by robbery squad deted.ives in, the s~uthea;-~ sect1on
of the district near where the two agents were ktlled. lhey had
gone to the apartment house to sel~ k Bry_ant, a s~spect i~ one of
an unprecedented rash of bank holdups m Washmgton smce the
first of the year.
DEMOCRAT REPLACES AGNEW iN MARYLAND
.\NNAPOLIS. MO.---Marvin Mandel, a power in the Maryland
Demoeratic party and Speaker of the Maryland House of
Delegates was selected to suceeed Republican Spiro Agnew as
governor Tu~!sday. Agnew resigned the governorship to become
the nation's :·J9th Viee President on January 20th. Mandel, who
needed 9:{ votes of the total 182 cast by the legislature for a
first-ballot vidory, tallied 126 votes.
31R:iA'\l TRIAL OPE'\S
LOS ANGELES---The first day of the murder trial of Sirl1an
Sirhan lasted 90 minutes Tuesday and involved defense motions.
The lawyers attempted, without suceess, to get a :{0-day delay in
the trial an,d for two separate juries. One would decide on the
verdict and the other would set the penalty. Sirhau is charged
with last summer 1s slaying of Senator Robert _K ennedy.
CUBAN REFUGEES ESCAPE THROUGH BASE
MIAMI---Offidal sourees revealed that 81 Cuban refllgees who
via the U.S. base at (:uantanamo Bay were flown to
Miami Wednesday. So;ne Cubans were believed killed or eaptured
by Cuban border guards as they tried to break into ·the ba'ie.
Authorities have refused information about the refugees .
esc~ped
POdCE ENTER S.F. STATE CAMPUS
SAN FRANCISCO---A force of aoo riot police forced the
evaeuation of protesters Tuesday frJm the grounds around San
Franr.isco State's administration building. lt was the first major
confrontation since the troubled school reopened dasses Monday.
No one was hurt but one demonstrator was arrested.
V -\NCE I-lOPES FOR AGREEMENT
PARIS--- AmPrica's number-two man at the Paris talks voiced
hopes Tuesday that North Vietnam will ehange its mind about a
round-table formula for expanded war negotiations. This is the
one big issue holding up the start of the talks. The U.S. wants a
round table with a green stripe down the middle separating the
Allied and Communist delegations. North Vietnam rejected the
idea Monday . U.S. negotiator Cyrus Vance told newsmen , "We
seriously hope this does not reflect their considered opinion and
we hope they will reconsider their altitude. "
LEHANO~ RULERS QUIT .-\fTt.!{ /'.'rT. \C":
BEl RL'T---The gov£trnment of Lebanon resigned 'l'uesday
under criticism following last month's Israeli raid on the Heirut
airport. Political observers in the mideast. nation say Lebanon 's
next premier is likely to be a pro-Egyptian leftist, Rashid Karami.
who favors earrying the battle to Israel.
ODD BODKINS
By DAN O'NEILL
~ ~~ '-roU) t>IJ~~~ ~~?
:t. ~~0(1.} ~ ~\C~ l. EO~M~t>
W\T~ {>L.\~R~ (L.OSI~~
~~t> ~U'(f'IN ~\~IIJ~
~\'.\0
\\IS t-\~0~ \~ IN
~1.\C:.~.'
~<(
(\,_~
!
•
DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
PAGI 3..
Letter -Reveals Consideration
To Fire Bresler, Myers In '67
"Aureole" is one of the featured pieces to be presented tonight in Mitchell Hall by the Paul Taylor Dance Company. The
Paul Taylor Dancers are appearing through the University's
Artist Series Program.
University Artist Series
Modern Dancers To Perform
The
Uni versi ty
Artist
Series will present the Paul
Taylor Dance Company in a
program of modern dance
tonight at 8:15 p.m. in
Mitchell Hall.
Leading off the 1969
season of attractions, the Paul
Taylor group will feature
three of Mr. Taylor's finest
works, "Lento" to music of
Franz Joseph Haydn ; "From
Sea to Shining Sea," to a
score by John McDowell; and
"Aureole," danced to music
of George Frederick Handel.
The Company played its
fourth Broadway season in
December 1967 at the Billy
Rose Theater. This was
followed i~ the Spring by a
nine week tour of Europe
with performances at the
Festival of Nations in Paris
(interrupted when French
students closed the Odeon
Theater), Stockholm, the
Royal Danish Ballet and
Music
Festival
in
Copenhagen , the Ljubljana
Festival in Yugoslavia , and St.
Hr.?lens, England. Paul Taylor
also
taught
his
dance
·• Aureole" to the Royal
and
the
Danish
Ballet
Company
performed
for
Danish Television.
The Paul Taylor Dane~
Company
has made 14
foreign trips since 1960, five
of
these
under
the
sponsorship of the U.S. State
De part men t 's
Cui tu raJ
Presentations Program.
' They · appeared at the
1960 Spoleto Festival of Two
Room Cancellations
Students wishing to cancel
their room contracts must do
so by Jan. 15, 1969. Forms
are available from your hall
director or at J00 Brown
Hctll. Failure to cmtceJ by
January 15 will result in the
forfeiting of the S25 room
deposit fee .
:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·.·.·.·.·:·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.::;:;:;:;:;:;:·:·:;.
Worlds, toured Italy in 1961 ,
and danced at the Festival of
the Nations in Paris in 1962
where Taylor received the top
prize for choreography.
From 1963 through 1966
the .Taylor group has toured
both South America and
E•1rope, and in 1967 they
opened
with
an
around-the-world tour under
the aegis of the State
Department.
They
also
played
three
Broadway
seasons and were the first
dance company to appear on
the
Public
Broadcast
Laboratory
television
program.
Tickets
for
the
performance are $2.50 and
$3.50 and may be reserved by
calling 737-2204.
A letter revealing that the
Board of Trustees conside red
firing ;)rs. Robert .J. Bresler
and Albert E. Myers in
October 1967 and a· request
for a probe of the situation
by the national AAUP are the
latest developments in the
controversey
over
tlw
dismissal
<~f
the
two
professors.
The letter, from . James M.
Tunnell Jr. , chairman of the
Hoard of Trustees, was sent
last week to SGA president
Dee J.affert.y. Mary Warner,
ASO, and Bill Taylor, AS~) , in
reply to a meeting the three
had with the board Dec. 7.
According to Bresler, the
national
offiee
of
the
American
Association
of
University Professors will be
asked to investigau• tlw
circumstances Unner \Vhich
his eontrad and Mye rs' are
not being rem~ wed.
Both Bresler and :\'1yers
charged that the letter was
. "fiilf·~d with inaccuraeips" and
denied any breach 'of c:ontract
as alleged by Tunnell.
Tunnell emphasized in his
letter that " the decision not
to renew these contracts...
has
been
made
by
academicians and, as we are
informed , was based upon
academic grounds. How could
we (the board) justify 'second
guessing' faculty people in
the area of their special
competence?"
Myers ,said there is no
question in his mind that if
his department and Bresler's
had not refused to renew the ·
contracts "the board would
have fired us."
"The board doesn't have
to evaluate us in any way that
matterS," Myers said. "It
fully
expected
the
departments to do their dirty
Student Ha~ Responsibility
To Obtain His Own 2-S
Does the Records Office
have your Selective Serviee
number?
Admissions
Counselor,
.John .Jones, warns that it is
the responsibility of the
student to make sure that his
Selective Serviee number is
turned in so he can get a 2S
deferment.Jones said that in
order to obtain a deferment
the student must send in a
letter or a 104 Form himself
and have the university send a
109 Form to his draft board
annually.
Aceording to Jones, the
university sends the Selective
Service ~umbers of full time
students eaeh semester. The
university prints instrudions
on
applications
and
registration forms and makes
a verbal reminder to all
ineoming freshman mPn that
they are. respon!.ible for
making sure the unt' ersity
has their numbE>r. Ho\' t' ' t'"· it
seems that some studPnts .; ,L.It
neglf!ct to do this. Then \\'hPn
they get a 1 A notice in the
mail thev are in a state of
panic. T~ aroid this stress
make sure that you have
turned in your
Service
number
H.eeords Offke.
SE>Ieetive
to
the
work for it, and they did."
Tutmell
reviewecl
the
history of the case saying the
board first became aware of
Bresler and Myers after the
ROTC walk-on in October
1967.
After
the
walk·on,
Tunnell said , some students
signed confes.-;ions, many of
which were false. He claimed
Bresler and Myers urged
students to do this, and they
them selves
signed
false
confessions.
"When
Drs.
Bresler and Myers signed
these statements, students
were being punished . for
doing
the same thing,"
Tunnell said.
Tunnell called the. actions
a "breach of contract" and
said
there
was
some
sentiment among the board
members then for immediate
dismissal of Bresler and
Myers. Tunnell said this
(Continued to Page 13)
Brenda's Trophies
Prove Her AWinner.
By PHYLLIS RICE
Even though she lost the
College Football Centennial
Contest, Brenda Shrum still
considers herself a winner.
Brenda, a sophomore at
Delaware believes that she is a
winner because she got to go
to California, won a $500
scholarship , and the use of a
new Chevy Supersport for a
year. In this sense, all three of
the girls have won.
The winner was chosen
exclusively by the most
number of ballots ·s ent in
from her area of the country.
Hrenda
expressed
great
appreciation for all of the
support she received from
everyone at Delaware when
she said, ' 'I wouldn't have
· been there if it hadn't been
for the kids at sehool.
Everyone did so much."
especially in her own dorm,
Rodney
E- F.
Brenda
considered it an honor to be
one of the three finalists.
Originally , only the queen
was supposed to get the use
of the c~r for a year, but
Hrenda said "Life Magazine"
•.vas so pleased "because never
has it had this big a response
for any contest Life has run,"
that
they
announced
afterwards all three of the
girls would receive a car.
Part of the biggest prize
for Brenda was just being able
to visit San Francisco. "It's
AAUP Resolution
Praises SGA
The following resolution was passed unanimously by the American
Association of University professors on Dec. 18, 1968. It wa:-- s_e nt to Dee
LOJfferty 'AS9 president of the Student Government Assoctahon by Dr.
Fred williamS, president of the Delaware chapter of the AAUP.-·The
editor.
" The Delaware Chapter of the American Association of
University Professors wishes publicly to express ito; appreciation
of the leadership provided to the student body during the current
s~mester by the Senate and Officers of the University of Delaware
Student <:overnment A'iSociation. In the Chapter's view that
leadership has been mature and responsible and contributed
greatly to the development of a sense of comf!lon purpose on the
part of the. student body, something which has been long lacking
on this campus. .
' ' As is proper in a community of scholars, individual members
of the Chapter may approve or disapprove specific steps taken by
the Student (:overnment Association in its efforts to resolve the
current controversy. What the Chapter finds worthy of high
commendation is that the Student <:overnment .\ssociation diu
undertake to i'nvolve the student body in a rational way in the
decision making processes of the . University. This can only
advance the cause which this Chapter has long sought: the
development of the University into a truiy great educational
community."
the most romantic city l've
ever sec-: n ," slw said, and went
on to describe their activities
for the few days st ~ was ·
there, which ranged from
sightseeing to receptions.
Brenda's car is supposed
to arrive sometime in the
spring. When. they asked her
what color she wanted, she
was so · overswhelmed she
couldn't decide, so they
decided (Qr · her. ··Blue and
gold' so~·nd apJ>ropria te??'?
Two Pro.fesfors
fa·ce Di$~ipline·
for ·Sl~ep-ln
Disciplinary action has
been taken against two
students in connection with
the Dec. 12 Student Center
sleep-in.
Dean of Men Donald P.
Hardy in revealing the action
declined to reveal what the
action was and who the
students were who received
notices of disciplinary action.
"It is the policy of the
university to keep such
matters confidential between
the students, their parents
and the university." Hardy
said.
'I' he
stu de n ts
were
apparently not suspendE>d
from the university according
to sources dose to the
students and one of the two
students said "I feel that the
university has acted in good
faith in this."
The two were apparently
the only students disciplined
of the 150 who took part in
the sleep-in attempt. The
sleep-in had ended after
Hardy told the studen.t s they
would have to leave the
building or face disciplinary
adion. The two had said they
intended to stay but left
nevertheless,
escorted
by
campus security officers.
Frosh Parking
Effective Jan. I I. 1969,
Freshmen will no longer be
required to park at the
Delaware Field House parking
lot when parking on campus
on Saturdays.
UNIVERSITY
PAGE 4
Trustees & Academic Freedom
While the Jt.•t ter from .James M. Tunnell
Jr .• chairman uf 1he Board .uf Trustees. to
SGA tJresident Dec Laffertv and two other
students concerning the Br.csler-\'lvers t·ontroversy is an en<·ourag·ing· step toward
improving trust ee-student relations. its contents only reinfur('e that fad that the hoard
was ,·ocal in the decision not to rehire the
two anof essors.
Althoug·h Tunnell denies any meddling
on the part of the hoard. the letter dearlv
. reveals that had the two profess ors not heen
dismis sed hy their departments. the Board of
Trustees would han~ done so anyway.
The tJressure to for('c th e dismissals was
atJt>arent ly at no 1ime ()\·crt. hut was <·onslant from l>e<·emher I !Hii when the lmard
<·harg·ecl then .:\ding· President .John W.
Shirley to wri ~ <· a letter to Bresler. \hers
and a third proft•ssor (whose ('ontrad 'was
not renewed this fall) warning· them against
a~sociating with student protests and st•ning
as faculty ach·isors to student org·anizations
The fa<'ulty of the ('olleg·e of Arts and S<·iencc
later ,·oted that IIH' lt'tter was "unanetJtahlc
in hot h tone and c:ontent."
Tunnell sav s in his letter that at the
time the Shirle~·· lettt•r was drafted there was
some sentiment among the t rustt•es for immediate dismissal hut that this was ahancloned hecause "tht• pussihilit.'· existed. ancl was
helieved to he rcalistie. that thcst• men would
not measure up to tht• standard whi('h would
justify r e newal of tht• ('ontracts."
lfow the trustees <·ould han• made sut.'h
a judg-mt•nt without ('Onsultat ion w.ifh senior
professors in I ht• depar~ments , ,of. l,;reslt:r and
;\l~· ers short of ~;ome sort of dairn1yan<.·e on
t ht:ir· tJart i:-; a my st cry sinn~ Tunn e ll s<n·s
no (·onsultation \nt:-> m~tde with the dt•pat:tments. The only ('ondu:-;ion to lw g·ained
frnm this is that if ('Onsultation did not take
tJia<·e. the possihility of not ;.ent•wi~g· their
t·ontrads eo.;isted hN·ause tht• Board of
Tru:-;tces wished it to. t•:xist. The trustt•es
REVIEW
VOL. 91
.-\ nd n •w
Eclilnr-in-t·hi..r
Eclitnrial llirt•t' loor
llu•in•••• Mana~:n
Sha1111
t
~1 .
II.
~ te rn
Mull t! ll
;<'or J,!'' ('hanlh~!rln.in
~~~ ~ utt
( ;rt-utort• x
t•: ri.-!1 Srnith
Kufrll'r
K<•ll 1\ldlanit•l
' ''"" Editnr
Ft•nturt· Edilnr
St>urt• Edit~or
:\d,· t•rti~in.:
SH• \' t '
\1arHtJ:t'r
.J.Yit• J' •u•
-"••ndnlt.- Editur
1-:lt•ttnnr :--;huw. Hu san Sndth
"""' · '''"'" Editur•
"""' · Ft•nlurt· Editnr
,\•st . Ss>nrt s Eclitnr
l'huln ( ' hit•f
l"irt·ulntinn ~lar~:•tc•· r
SinH ..\rtbt
l.nt·nl .·\lis
l'h~· ll b
.lun c,.
.luhn 1-'oll'h ,o
:-;, , ., .,. Sdwllt•r
.lud~· Md":orlin
llio-k I 'nolur
Hultt•rl l.y11o·h
(; tWTi fa11 ~ 1.:d\
~~ · c · n· 1ar'
Fnt·ult~ . ..\d• i"nr
Hoht·~·• l1
l'rof.
Bu i lt.•,.·
· Staff Wrilt•r·-: .lim Ho·•·htt•l. .-\llt •ro llo•r· n • tt•in . ,lant•l \ ' nlhrm .
Ft·"d ( 'a n •r. 1\ :tthh.•to,t J ~1
('arT .
1\ a thlt•t•rt ( 'op:--otl. Ualt•
c ' uullunll' tl. ( ; t • •n · ~ d a
Su ~ :& II
v.... tt ·.
:\1t•C';Jrth y ,
~Jan ' ' '
t ' htll ' l\
l':ol:o,
Jo: a ~ tnu .
I» a It•
l .yn1 1 l·: rk:-o ntL
(; I'H va I 1,
~l o lln y ,
l'h y lli ,o
Hi •·•·.
Jo:\'t>lyu
.liru
Bar·har u
H P idt•ll•t'rJ,! '
M11yt•r .
Linda
11:1\'t• Sl'ltrut•olt• r· .
Hill
Fit•ltf .
.lt•r· r·y
Nt~rtru.'y,
Hn ~: t• r . ..
!"\nnrll'l \\' rih·r!" : :--:tt•\'t• .\ nd e.·r·:.. u n , .I irn :\lt•ll111' . Te. · r· r~ Ne.•wit t .
·\l ;1 11 H:•kh , C' h n l'li Hnu , .lt •t· t·y ~n t i 1 h , :\·1u rt
Fl•th• ro lf .
llu!"illt'!"!" !'\tnff :
Huh
U;fi.l4~rr
-'=~- -~ c_.
•
. . - ...-.. ~~.:<
4'
I .
~.:-~·~::.~ .
·---~
l. t • a r~· . • l u t n•
ICHp pt •l.
1-:d
Sh •w a rt.
( ' in·ulntiun ,••H n ff : I y t t ll l' rn h ..·r . !"\ •u· H ~. , . , .. ~-1 : dorie.• Ur-alu• .
l'hntn Stnrf: l' hi,·l; .-\ll, •u .• lin • Ht•dol t•l. :O:io w l.t'<' . Mnur·,.,., ,
lh•:trdnn , S :trn :--:ort·••lu •rt .
l 'u tdi ;' llt •d ld-\\'t•t•l\ h ct u r· iru• tht• : t~ · n d t.• nli• · y t•a r h y tht"
r a dualt · ..; fw)t• td tltH! ~· nf I tw l ' ui\'l'ndty of )lt•law:trt •.
l\c•warh, lh •la wa r e.•
Edit n rinl a n d h tt;' int•:-t :-- t~ffkt •:-o art •
lt•t•atc•d <t it tht• thi1·cl floor uf t lh' !"'\ t udt•nt ( ' t•ntt.•r .
l'hollt' :
-; : ; ~ -:!c i l!t
t•l •i n il•ll :-- t' S t•rt.•:--:-ot•el a r·t• •••If nt.'t>t'':-<ar i ty thct!'t.' .,r
tht• 1111in·r!"l itr .
:\cl \'\·•· li !' iiiJ.!' and :o" ul· ~ · · riptiou ratt.•:o ' '"
We han• aJJplauded thc student rig·hts
statement as one that would g·i,e ~tudcnts
unprc('edented opJ>ortunit .' · to eo.;erdse re~·ponsihilities wc haYc heen told ar<' rig·htfully
ours and likewise ('ommended work on thc
l'onst it ut inn. bylaws and judidal reform.
Howe\'er. the opportunity to imtJiement these
has not materialized hC<·au·se o f... cx<·eeding·ly
slow worli h:r two ('Otnmittees.
It was last ArJril ~;~that the studet1t hody
overwhelming·ly aJ>pruYed the l'Onst it ut ion.
Then newh·-elt>cted S(;;\ JH't•sid<•nt Det> Lafferty st>nt~n<·ed t hc dol·umt•nt to a scnate
t·om.mittct> for t•xamination and writing·.
~othit1g· has resulted.
Work has ht•;.n- g-oin.~· on in t ht• area of
judidal reform for alwut the same amount
of timt•. Last saJring- a ··hlue rihhon" l'Om·
mit tee under t ht• <·hairmanshitJ of \'i<·c Presi·
dent .John E. llontt t rel'l·h·ed the rdorm
tJroawsals and ht•g·an to work on modernizing
tht• antiquated systt•rn. And. when Dr. E. A.
Trahant assumed 1ht• unin.•rsit~· JJresidt•nt.'y
111 1•ft•r 1'
rt'•Jllt' ~ t .
1-:nlt.•rt.•rl a .. "'C't 'llflel · ·l:t ~!' ruuth •r. lh"t't' nll•e..' r ) :L l !l·l l'l . at
tht• :'\t•wark I'""' llff io- t•. Nc•w:or k . llt•luwan•. llllolt•r tht•
,., ,., .. r '''"''" :t . 1,. 7!• .
~at it~n:tl 1H ' \\' ~ I•apc. • r n ·h c l't i :-o itH ~ ; all':-( hancl1t..••1 1 hrf•u~h
tlw Sath•twl 1-:d•wnth•Jwl ..\cln.' rlhdn ).! St.'r\'il'l'~ . ~i110 l ,t, xin~·
t~tn .\\' l . , :-\ ••\\' Ynr h.. ~, . ,,. Yt~t•h }luif i.
!.J"~ITED PRFSS INTERNATIQN ,.l \L
CPS
( 'III.U:(a:
I'HI-:s~
!'1-:N\'It'l-:
•
MEMBER
-
The Committee BoondOggle
So·hwnrz.
';' '" n .. ia :-;,.a rl . .1 : 1111 1'~ H. Sndth . Toni Tt.•traul1 . Uah• \\' e. • i :-o ~ ,
:-o:hnl'llll \\'hilnH t t• . Ur·ia u \\' ill1arn :-; , M:11·y ;\litH' \\'ul f e.•, Hc·p tt
\\' r h •h1. l .i n d a Z i rtiiiH ' I'tn:an . t;,•rald ltrunne.·r· . .lint Mo ~· ,•r- .
4 ':tn d
~~:f:if}N~(f?, . .~:.i 't:
JANUARY 10. 1969
NO. 26
S.D.:\1.
'IF YOU SET WATER STANDARDS SO HIGH, YOU MIGHT REALLY HINDER INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT.'-Walter J. Hickel
It has hcen almo~t two months sintc .t he
Statement on Student Hig·hts ancl J{estwnsihiliti r~ s was a~ assed hy the fatuity. o\·er a
,·ear since the Student ( ;(n·ernment Asso<'iation constitution and bylaws heg·an to take
their final form and almost as long in worli.
on judidal reform.
THE
hoard should ha\'e the rig·ht to establish
guidelines and workable · definitions for dissent and insuhordination, hut only if it is
under the premise that academic freedom
must he maintained. But the dealings of the
Board of Trustees in the Bresler-Myers controversy makes it clear that no such premis e
has heen followed. And, if their performance
as university o\'erseers thi s winter is to he
taken as a s tatement of policy. it appears that
thev do not intend to subsaibe to this
pre~ise in the future .
did not want Profs. Bresler and Myers to
remain whether or nut there were anv academic merits to their fa\'or.
•
In the letter Tunnell charg·es that Bresler
and Myers were guilty of ''insubordination".
his definition heing· "when a few of the
faculty t.ake an indetJendent tourse which is
<·ontrary to that pru,·ided by their colleagues
acting· collectively . . . " Chairman Tunnell
and the Board of Trustees have <·onveniently
made the line het ween insuhordinat ion and
dissent indisting·ui;.;hahle.
There should he little arg·um<'nt that the
Letters Policy
The Review welcomes letters to the editor .
They must be siqned and must bear the address
and telephone number of the writer. A name will
be withheld only when disclosures which a:-·2 made
in th1! interest of the university would subject the
writer to reprisals.
Letten deemed libelous, defamatory or abusive
cannot be printed. Since the flow of letters to the
editor is larqe and space is limited, letters of 300
words or less are preferred. All are subject to
condensation at the discretion of the editor.
h e let it he known thai he wanted the judidal
reform l~t'IIJJosal finished by <.'hrist.t~_1as retess.
It is now well pas t Christmas and the
t>roposal has not heen made . puhlk.
Both the l'Onstitution and judi<-ial reform
do<·uments are extremely important propos als
in the future de,·elopmcnt and JH' o .~Tess of
the uni,·ersity.
It is nice to have "rights
and re~tJOnsihilitit·s·· hut they are to no benefit if we do not ha,·e judkial reform and a
modern student g·oyernmen1 constitution to
hack them 'up.
A.M .S.
Guard To Go?
(~m· . Charles L. Tern .Jr. leaves offit·e
Jan. ~1. and with him wfll prohahly g·o t hc
nine months of National (;uard patrols on
the ~treets of Wilming·ton. Probably.
Outside of the d<ns uf d\'il di:sord<•r Ntrh·
last April. the JJa t r-ols haYe at<.·omplishe~l
nothing e:Hept to int imidatc I he hla<:k t'it izenn of the dt \'. increase radal tensions.
ali('nate police and l'ivk administrators. t·ost
the state's taxpayers se\'eral hundred thousand dollars and pruYe t·unclusiYely that .Jan.
21 is not soon enoug-h to rid the state of a
a .. lawnnrder" g·orernor.
(;o\',·elcd Husscll \\'. Perersun has hcen
mum un whether he will order tht- renwntl
of the pat ruls destJitt• a <·amtJaig·n tJrog-ram in
other nreas of state g·m·ernment that an•
alien to the <·nm·eaJt of armed patrols in a
dty. Playing- the politit·all~· -ex(Jedient ,·ariety of campaig·ning·. Peterson neYer madt•
his position on the g·uarcl's renwval or n•tt•ntit»n dear during· the fall <·ampaig·n ancl has
hedged on doing so sinl·e.
It seems fair tu say that Peh•rson just
ist•t the kind of man who \\ould ket'IJ the
guard em the streets hut it atJtJears that w<•
will just haYe to wait and see.
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
UDG To Produce
Sensitive Play
Three
Pniversity
of
Delaware students. Kevin
McCann, Charles Hids, and
Richard Robinson, will be
featured in the next major
produetion,
" Tea
and
Sympathy," to be presented
by the University Drama
Group, at Mitchell Hall ,
February 5-8.
"Tea and Sympathy," a
New York .dramatic success
by Robert Anderson, about a
sensitive boy in a New
England preparatory school
and the ordeal from which he
is rescued by a teacher's
understanding wife, will be
directed by Howard Kuscher.
Laden with the record of
21-month-long run in New
York and nearly all the
prize-statuary that could be
bestowed at the time of its
original
Broadway
production,
"Tea
and
Sympathy" will star Lorraine
Beaver as the sympathetic
faculty wife intent on helpin g
a distraught youth unjustly
accused of being "queer."
Kevin McCann will be
seen
as
this
tormented
adolescent whose self-doubts
become so exaggerated under
lA
the jeers of his fellow-5tudents that he puts his
masculinity to an unfair test ,
wherein failure drives him to
a
miserable
attempt
at
suicide.
Charles Hicks will play the
role
of
the
boy's
housemaster, and husband Of
the woman whose heart goes
out
to
the
harried
youngster- -the man who in
his
professional
he-mannishness
leads
the
persecution
against
the
sensitive boy, and so leaves a
hint
that
he
may
be
protesting too much on this
subject. Richard Robinson
plays the boy's loyal but
troubled room-mate.
Others in the cast will be
Frazier Jones as the boy's
babbling father (pathetically
happy to hear that his suspect
son has visited a college
widow), Renee O'Leary the
next door neighbor and
friend of the housemaster's
wife, Eddie Fischer, Ricky
Davies, Scott Hoerl as fellow
students, and Bob Cornelius
as one of the teachers in this
small town boy's school.
.
I
* * * •*
Gabriel : ... and two novas
exploded in Galaxy 621.
There is a small hole in the
Milky Way and a minor dent
-' in the Big Dipper. Nothing
serious. But now then, I have
a spec ial supplemental report
on that little planet, Earth.
The Landlord (with a
sigh): By Me, I was afraid of
t hat.
Gabriel ( briskly): Let's
see, here . :VIore· holes burnt in
the carpe t of gree nery , more
scars
on
the
mountain
meadows, more garbage in
the sparkling streams, more
pollu tants in th e crysta_l air,
more . . ,
The Landlord ( waving his
hand ): Don ' t bothPr v·ith the
de tails. Gabrie l. It's t he same
everv vear.
{; a.briel : It 's worse eve ry
v ear . sir. Wh at wao; once a
beau tiful pit>ce of p ro pNt:V is
bein g ru int>d by vandal ism ,
a nd slovenly
hooli ganis_m
habi ts.
Talk
a bou t
undesi rable te nan ts!
The Landlord : I kn o\..,.. J
.k now. T hev ac t as thou gh
t hey th ougl~ t t hey owne d th e
place.
Gabriel : Hv everv sound
rule of property management ,
sir, th ey simply have to go:
(raising a trumpet) Shall J
sound the evidion notice'!
The Landlord (wearily):
Yes. J suppose so. But, wait.
Let me take one last look.
But for some reason [ was
. . _,
•
·,
.
·:/L~ ::~ ~')
.
'.
.
'\
:· ·
Electric Factory, New Ph illy .Spot
And Wilmington Rock Shows
By DESMOND KAHN
Two firsts for life rock
over the break; The first first
was a Wilmington show at the
Scottish Rites Cathedral, a
decent enough place for a
show, put on by The Do-it
Head Shop, which is located
on North Market Street up
the road from
Becker's
1~ _Report On Depree~~!~~!!_
fond of them. They ... Look.
What are they doing?
Gabriel: The old year's
ending,
the
new
year
beginning.
They're
celebrating, sir.
The Landlord (nodding) : I
can't say I blame them for
celebrating the end of the old
one. What a hard one for
them it was--wars, riots.
violence, death. destruction .
They must be glad to see the
last of it. But why do they
have tears in their eyes? Are
they thinking of the horrors
of the ear to come?
:.(
· J
. :~~
-. .
0
.... · . . · . . c ·
Our .Man Hoppe
Scene:
Heavenly
Properties, Inc. The Landlord
wears a pained and worried
look as his cost accountant ,
Gabriel , runs through his
annual
report
on
depreciation.
PAG& 5
Gabriel: No, sir. They are
sorry to see the old one go.
.
The Landlord (surprised):
Sorry? How odd.
Gabriel: Yes, sir. They see
the old year, awful as it was,
as a piece of their lives and
they love it. They treasure all
of the past, their bad times
and their good , their sorrows
as we ll as their joys.
The
Landlord:
How
strange.
And look now.
They're blowing horns and
laughing and kissing each
other. Are you sure they
(Continued to Page 7)
Corners near the Jesus Saves
.sign. Rhinoceros, which has
an album out on the Electra
label, and The Collectors, a
Canadian group with an
.album out also, played to less
than half-full houses for four
shows
on
Friday
and
S;;turday, Dec. 20 and 21.
The Collectors projected a
of
moods,
wide
range
especially on one extended
number, What Love. An
amplified sax and a large
silver flute were special
instrumental
effects. The
performance suffered from
melodrama,
due to the
singer's
mannerisms
and
almost reverent tone on
material that didn't call for it.
Every time one of the
m;Jsicians would go into a
riff, this singer would extend
his arm at them with his
index finger projl!cted as if
said musician wa'i the Four
Horsemf!n
of
The
Apocalypse.
Rhinoceros is a seven man
group with an organ -an
electric piano, on~> to two
guitars. bass, drums and
w a n .d e r i n g · c o w b e I I
man-singer. With that much
instrumentation,
thew's
always something happening.
The group easily manages
both strong rhythms and
innovative riffwork at the
same time - a very heavy
sound. They generate a lot of
exdtement.
but suffered
from a eertain monotony.
due
to
thf! samt! beat
repetitively.
The
light show
was
surprisingly effective. Thanks
to the lack of support. this
wa'i probably the last show in .tlw near futun•: Way to go.
Wilmington music heads they said it <·ouldn't be done
in this town and they were
right.
The se<!ond first was a
visit to The Kalidioscope
northwt>st of Philadelphia.
right over the river from the
Belmont
exit
of
tlw
Sehuylkill Expressway: this
place is worth . a visit. An
ornate old movie theatn~. it is
now outfitted with brilliant
light work on st_pge and a dim
aLmosplwre offstage suitable
for moderate intimades and
. c heap thrills in the row on
row of very comfortablt:'
sofas. Sat.u rday. De(:. 28th
harl a double bill : th•• Sou I
Survivors and Rhinoceros.
Th e latter is a seven man
group blah blah blah .
Both · groups have strong
soul influf•nee : the former
group is owrt about it. They
have three singe rs who double
ac;; go-go '{ll y :; . One of the
good t!tings about this group
is th e drummer who has a lot
of' flash y volumf' and l<inda
trickv b~ats. Some of tht> best
rock ·drumming is in hard :;oul
music.
Rhinoceros really put on a
(Co, ntinued to Page 6)
Money Due Today
CAN A GRECIAN PEACE BE HAD BY ITS WOMEN? That was the central question of the
Readers' Theater version of .. Lysistrata," Aristophanes' old bone-and-crone comedy about how the
battle of the sexes saved a country from dissipation by war. Patrick Garvin directed the metrical,
modem translation of the play, which starred Mary Barczewski (center) and Bob Blake (second from
left). The presentation was simply done on the small stage in Wolf Hall on Wednesday and Thursday
nights.
(Staff Plwt ;J
IJ~· Jim
IJf'cllll'l)
All money for the Student
Center Cou neil sponsored ski
trip Jan. 26 through Jan. 31
is due today . Please bring
money to room 100 of the
Student Center.
Cost
is
~ 15
for
transportation ;
$ 80.25
package for lodging, meals,
lift tickets, lessons tax and
gratuities and $18 for renting
equipment.
There are still 10 openings
which must be filled to avoid
cancellation of the ski week
at Whiteface Mountain , N.Y.
PAGE 6
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
first Terry Reid Album ·Proves
To Be Another Rock Trio Success
By DESMOND KAHN
H.t\Nn. BANG, YOU'RE
Tf:RRY RI~JD · is the first
offering from another strong
threeman
group
from
I:ngland. 'J'he success of the
t .ueeman groups is partly due
to the use of multiple
tracking
techniques
for
wcording. whieh allow them
to fill it'! a full sound for their
records, but it is also due to
the fact that it is easier for
three men to stay together
than for five or seven - so
there is more room for
improvisation.
To be suceessful, such a
group
needs
excellent
musicians. For examplE', in a
Rock Shows ...
(Continued from Page S)
st.ron1! show , f!snedallv on
.t\pri<~ot Brandy·, a · long
instrumental. The lead singer
really threw himself into
things. One soul sistn in the
audifmee f~ven started dancing
in Uw aisle.
I alsc payed my respeets
to th<~ El('dri< ~ fo';~dory and
Look in ;'1.1uddy Waters and
the Mandrake Mt•morial. Tlw
MPmorial is probably the
111nst emative group I have
n!viwed. The fragilt• beauty of
l.lwir inusie is worth far mon.•
re('ognition than they have
r!'cei Vl'd.
They
utib:e
e l('dronil' pfff•ds in a vPry
inlt>graL<'d
wa~·
wilh
a
p<'rv<.d\"c East<~ rn influencP.
The rirurnrnPr has nitw
drums and f"iVl' ('y mbals.
which lw tunes likP a piano
and plays liktt on('. Of tlw
t.hr('e _ main
an•as
of
d r 11 m 111 i n g :
s t i <' k w or k .
<·o-ordination.
and
tonal
contrast. this dumnwr works
mainl~· in tlw latt..r. After Llw
show.
tlw lt>ctd guitarist
expou ndPd on · tlw di ffieuiLi<'s
of obtaining Llw riehm•ss of a
lin•
pPrformant~P
in the
rPeorcliitg studio. he satd Llw
group's first album was too
thin . whieh I ltaci notiePd.
and reve ale d that the new
album is ready for release, a
vast improv<!ment over the
first in richnf!SS of sound and
musieal depth.
Muddy Waters brought the
most down home looking
blues group I've evN seen
onto t.hf~ stage, playing the
most basil::, eoherent and
earthy blues to be heard
today
in
<~ommon
with
Canned Heat. Since he was
still l"(>eovering from the flu,
Muddy didn't ••xert himself
too stre nuously, but thf!
audien ce got a s'trong last~ of
·whctl Mr. Waters calls the low,
low .
way
down
hlm!s,
including his famous Hootehy
Kootd1y Man, played by
<-'Vt'r~' bod y from the Shadows
of Knight to Steppc•n wolf.
It was surprised to hear
tha t Mudd~· hadn ' t heard of
.Jim
~.1eCarthy
y<'t, hut
as.~ ured him he would in Uw
near future. Wate rs thinks of
Hlues Boy King a-; playing
cit\: blues. Muddv eanH~ to
(~h.ieago wlwn he \~·as a: lw<'nty
eight. and :w haci been
playing harmonica sinee he
wa-; LhirtePn. I'm not sure.
but. I think lw mentiotwd
Om•- Ball Bill .Jones and
s,, amp ( :ator Swanson as his
primP t•arl~· in flu e net's.
Fraternity Of The Week
Delts To Continue
Growth, Spirit
Dt•ll.a I :psilon's t'llilpLt•r of
l>t•lt<~ Tau J)t>lta has ht•t•n an
inl.t•gral part. of llw t•ampus of
Lht> I !nh·f•rsils of Dt!lawart~
sin<'P 1~17. Now with a thret•
yPur old addition our liring
eapadl.y has t•xpandt'd to
fadlitit'S for -Hi botlwrs and
hottst• tnotlwr i\lrs. :\larion
Vollun1 in tlw J)('lt. slwltN on
South ( :ollt•gt• ,.\n•ntw.
'l'lw I >PI.ts an• a group of
eolh•gt• nwn with a broad
rang t' .
of
in Lt' rt's ts :
int('llt•dual.
athlt•Lit·.
and
soda I. Th1'st' in tt•rt•s l.. an•
by
eonsisLttnt
n• flt•dttd
spirii.Pd parti('ipation in most ·
e ampus
and
fratt•rnal
adivit.it•s.
J>.-1 ta
Tan
l>t•lta 's
philosophy of inrolvPnwnt
ha'i bet•n wPII t'XPmplifit>ci b~·
its
participation
in
tlw
intr<tmural
pro~ra111 .
/\lt.hot1gh not llw lar~f·s t
fratNnitY in numbNs . . tht•
Dt•lts w~n· tlw first to initiatt>
a "If' football L<~ am and a
.. ))" baskt•thall tPam in to tlw
intramural program, and arc
·always well rPprt•sented on all
lt•vels in virtually every sport.
Last Year's softball team
capLU~l·d
the
fratPrnity
t·rown , but was upset by tlw
.. B" team whieh went on to
win tht• o\·er.all championship .
Tht• wealth of diwrse
Pf'rsonalitit!S and Llw opt>n
friendliness of all of Uw
brollwrhood has eonsisten tly
east Delta Tau l>elt:a into a
position of high respE>ct in the
campus <~ommunity. lindPr
the guidant.'t' of President
Bnll'E' ~orthrup WE' strive to
<'ontinue
~rowth
as
a
fraternit~· in Llw hopt• that WP
l'an
c·ontribu tP
to
the
uni\"Nsity and n•ap maximum
benefil from what it offNs us
in 1~69.
\\"ith Spring rush IPss than
otw month away . WE' would
like
to
invitP all male
unde rdassmen to meet tht•
makt>
some
nt-w
Dells.
frit•nds. and begin to disem'N
thP nw;minJ! of the strong
frat•!rnal bonds of DE>Itism.
large group the drummer has
to be the mainstay for time;
the rest of.the group leans on
him·- he is foreed to stay with
fairly straight stuff. With the
threeman group, however, he
can hit offbeats etc., without
putting a strain on the groups
cohesi veries.c;.
Both Raker for the Cream
and Mitchel for Hendrix have
been able to play what almost
amounts to solo style, and
the unnamed drummer for
Terry Reid does quite a lot of
syncopated work with the
emphasis on coordination
rather than pure technique.
The range of Reid's voice,
coming aeross with a slightly
strained quality, is interesting
on old standbys from Season
Of The Witch to Summertime
Blues and Bang, bang as well
as the originals on the album.
The arrangements are well
done,
with
continuity
maintained,
even through
ehanges in tone. The organ,
guitar (Reid), and drums are
used creatively and without
relying on volume or weird
effects.
Little ·Words: ..
(Continued from Page 2)
eustomary limits of propriety
and good taste ; and which is
' 'ut.ter!y without r~,deeming
soctaltmportance . . .
Prior censorshio of the
press is in eonflict with
the Constitution 's
First
Amendment. Obscenity must
be left to the df!termination
of the courts. Left to anyone
else, we can already see
obscenity's definition quickly
expanding
to
censor
unpopular political beliefs . . .
Dr.Magelby To
Appear Friday _
D.r.
Kay
Magelby of
Hewlett-Packard will speak to
an
electrical
engineering
seminar at the University of
Delaware Friday, .Jan. 10 at 2
p.m. in Room 1:H Sharp
I ,aboratory.
Dr. Magelby will discuss
"He wl ett-Paekard
Digital
Computers and Their Design
Concepts."
Dr. Magelby's
visit
to the eampus is
sponsored by the departme nt
of electrical enginePrin~.
There will be a coffee
hour immediately following
the seminar in Room 310, du
Pont Hall. Th'e public is
Hut we all saw the word ,
not the dashes, as :n11ybe it's
getting through. Maybe \ye're
beyond their power, so when
they censor a word we can
still hear it, whtm they censor
a man we can. still hear him,
and whfm they censor a
movement we can still feel it.
Correction
In the news story covering
the December 7th meeting of
the Roard of Trusl.f;!e8, the
December lOth issue of The
Review
contained
the
following statement: "In the
area of student affairs the
Board approved a plan ... and
to ·allow all seniors to live off
campus." This interpre~ation
of the Trustees' action is
incorrect. The action the
Trustees
took
was
to
authori~e
offi<~ers
or the
University to study the
impact of allowing all seniors
to live off campus and to
devt!lop plans to that end if a
su•p in this direction seems at
all feasible. The University is
already <:onduding a study of
this matter.
John E. Hocutt
Viee President fur
Student Affairs
Ml.ddle East Talk
And Jam Headlines ~i:::::::::::nvi=ted=to=at=ter=\d.=~~=~~=~:::::::::<
Phoenix Weekend
WPl'kt>nd events at the
Phoenix eoffee house indude
a
discussion
of
the
1\rab·lsracli confliet tonight
and
a
-benefit
dance
tomorrow night.
Tonight at 8 p.m., an
offidal of the
American
Committee for Middle East
Understanding will lead a
dialog on the reeent t!vents in
the troubled area. Reverend
Henry Bucher has workt>d
with· the Jsrat•li development
program and in Equatorial
Africa.
Jim Mr.Carthy and tlw
Ajax People (with spedal
gut!st appearance of llw White .
Knight t•:.•peded) will be
ft-aturt>d in a Phoenix -HE>tcrodox ical Voit~e hent!flt danc:t>
at
8
p .m.
tomorrow.
Admission is bv donation.
Part. of the rund~ will be USPd
to n•modl•l t.he cofft•e hoUst!
for a r('~ular light show and
t.lwatt•r arts pr<•st•ntation.
at.
20
Tht•
Phot•nix.
AmsLPI AvPnut>. will rt>opc'n
next Saturday night with a
hard ro<•k jam for anyon :•
wit.h a hlmvn mind aftN tht~
firsl day of finals. During Llw
st>nwstt-r hrt•ak , t.lw Phot>nix
will bP dost•d.
Tlw "llt>terodoxieal Vok«'
l{t•vist>d'' will appear bt>fore
racatiut. . aecording to the
Voic.·t• staff.
If You Haven't
Bought Y our'Colorful'
1969 Blue Hen Yet...
You'd Better Hurry!
Buy Your Yearbook
before Febraury H. 1969.
Price is ten dollars
No Books
will be on sale at
~nd
the
of the year.
Order your book in
room 300 of the Student
Center. Office hours 1-S daily .
Buy A Blue Hen!
T:1en Take A Study Jreak
at
THE HOWFF
FRI.JAY
10 p. '11.- 1 a. :n.
Light Refresh:11ent
:;
SATURDAY
9 p.'ll . - 12 p.,n.
Couples Only
PAGE 7
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
JFK Advisor Hits Third Series Concert
C~~~:~co.~'!l~v~~~'!' Festival Presented By Quartet
Wedn,!sday
night
Dr.
Rohert J. Alexander, former
advio;or on Latin American
policy to President Kennedy,
lectured here on Castro, and
the influence of his form of
Communism
in
Latin
Am,~ rica.
...\ccording
to
Dr.
Alexander after the rise of
Castro, everyone assumed
that no one could stop the
"wave ' ' of Fidelissimo. Ten
yeal's· after the revolution
ther~ has been no other
C~tro type revolution in
Lat in America.
Alexander
mentionP.d
several · reasons why Castro's
Communism hasn't spread.
He
believes
that
Latin
America sint-e 1959, has not
been standing still. This is one
reason for lack of success.
Countries in South America
have
been
changing
economically and in social
strueture.
Dr.
Alexander
believes the failure of Castro's
Our Man .Hoppe ...
(Continued from Page 5)
aren ' t happy to see the old
year go'?
Gabriel: No, sir, they're
weleoming in the new year.
The Landlord: Welcoming
it? But don't they know what
it will bring--more war. more
riots, more death, mor~
destruction.
Gabriel: I suppose so, sir.
But they keep hoping each
year will be better than the
last. Despite all odds, they
never
give
up
hoping.
Frankly , I think they're a bit
manic on. the subject.
The Landlord (softly):
Look at them, Uabriel.
They're laughing and crying
at the same time.
Gabriel : Yes, sir. They're
not
only
destructive,
disrespectful and slovenly,
they're obviously not of
sound mind. (lifting his
trumpet again) Now, sir?
The Landlord: No, wait,
Gabriel. Perhaps, if I ' gave
them one more year . . .
Gabriel (annoyed) : Good
You, sir! Yo:.~ say that every
year.
The Landlord (laughing
and at the same time wiping
away a tear): I know, Gabriel ,
I know. But I keep hoping
next year they'll be better.
Classics ...
revolution in that country
fifteen years before, which
gave peasants land.
The great varieties of
other political groups in Latin
Ameriea
is
a
major
impediment to Castro. The
Christian Democratic Party,
Nationalist
revolutionary
parties, and the military are
pushing for revolutionary
change.
·
Dr. Alexander also sees
the changin'g of Castro sintoe
his take-over -: doin g h a ~m to
his movement. He stated,
"Vt:nezuelian
Communists
say, if he'd (Castro) held the
same banm:r in1958 as in
1960, he would not have
succeeded.
Times
have
changed and with them, the
perception of Castro by other
Cnmmu11ists."
Dr. Gibson Will
Assist Provost
Dr. J.C.Worthen
Dr. George H. Gibson,
formerly coordinator of the
graduate program for the
E I eutheria u
:.1ills-Hagley
Foundation , has been named
special
ao;sistant to
the
provost at the university.
Dr. John E. Worthen ,
acting provost. said that Dr.
Gibson will be responsible for
c o o r. d i n a t i n g
and
implementing
special
academi<:
projeets
and
programs, particularly those
with
broad
University
implieations.
An assistant professor of
l!.S. history at the University
of Mississippi, Dr. Gibson
came to Delaware in 1962 as
a research assistant in the
Hagley Museum. He was
named coordinator of the
Hagley graduate program and
· an assistant professor of
history at the University of
Delaware in 196-1. Since 1967
he has also served as Director
of Summer Sessions and as an
assistant professor of history.
A graduate of Furman. he
reeeived master's and Ph. D.
degrees in U.S. history at the
University of North Carolina.
He has published numerous
articles
in
historical
publications and for several
years has served as managing
editor of Delaware History,
the journal of the Historical
Society of Delaware.
The
University
of
Delaware Resident String
Quartet will present "An
International Festival" on
Monday at 8 :15 p.m. in
Mitchell Hall. The "Festival"
is the third in a series of six
formal concerts offered by
the Quartet each year.
Departing fr~m its usual
three work programmatic
scheme. the Quartet will
present a number of single
movement
works.
The
con<:ert will
open with
"Chacony" by Henry Purcell,
a
one-movement
variation-like work by the
greatest composer of the
English Baroque.
The main work of the first
half will be Mozart's Quartet
in D, K. 499, composed in
1786. The second half of the
concert
will
open with
"Quartett-Satz"
(Quartet
Movement) by Schubert, a
dramatic and lyrical creation,
and one of many not
discovered till after his death.
The
8th
Quarter
of
Schoustakovich will follow.
Closing the program will
he "La Oraeion del Torero"
(The
Prayer
of
the
Bullfighter) by the 20th
century Spanish Impressionist
composer Joaquin Turina.
This work mirrors the spiritual
world of the bullfighter as,
moments before he is to enter
the
ring, he faces his
"moment of truth" in the
chapel. .
After Jan. 13, the three
remaining concerts of the
series will be given on Feb.
17, March 24, and May 19.
(Continued to Page 15)
FIG::H:T EIRT::H:· DEFECTS
ljwe MARCilv.oF DIMES
Ideas Sought On ••••••• •• •••. ••••. ••••
Pass-Fail Study -t 3rd ANNUAL HANGOVER t
·By Subcommittee t ( . .
.H oP
·
:
A unive.rsity wide
system
IS
now
c o ns i de re d
pass-~ail
bemg
b
y
a
student-faculty subeommittee
~~ ~~=tr~~t~~~~ity Committee
Suggestions
have
been
sought
from
department
heads and administrators but
the
suhcommittee
is
espedally
interested
in
receiving
eomments
and
proposals from the student
~@n ~~~~1)-:J
IJ r\l
ir
ir ~ U
ir · · ·
ir
ir
ir
ir
ir
ir
~
~
· .
1 •
;
Student
subcommittee
members are: David Owen,
EGO, Paula Weisel NUOP,
Linda
Kaska and Chris
Hekiesz ED7 , The faculty
rr..embers include Professor
Joyce
Kee,
Dr.
John
Burmeister and Dr. <~ordon
Bonner. Written suggestions
may
be
submitted
to
subcommittee chairman Dr.
Bonner in 105C Robinson
Hall.
' .-tl.
ir
ir
ir
~
by the !'iiit. UHt-fJit4 •
·•
t!'·••
~~~
- 1.• • ~.,. • [
* * '*
~ -; · ~ *
.....,
TONITE,
~
7 5.41' •
fl
1
January I Oth 8:3 0-12:00
HARRINGTON DINING HALL
ONR . last fling before · Finals-
~ w w w w w w w w w w w w w w
Tuesday In The Review:
A SPECIAL CLASSIFIED AD SECTION ON
APARTMENTS
RICHARDS DAIRY INC.
57 Elkton Road
ONLY A QUARTER PER AD
STEAKS, HAMBURGS, SUBS
TO TAKE OUT
Need a roommate? Looking for an
apartment or have one for rent? Need
furniture for an apartment or selling it?
OUR OWN MAKE ICE CREAM
The section will run Tuesday, Jan. 14. Ads
must be in no later than 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan.
12 and may be left with payment at the
Student Center desk 1 Review mail slot or at
the Review office, 301 Student Center.
Phone 3o8-8771
Mon. thru Fri. 7:30a.m. to II p.m .
Sat. 1:30 to 5:30. Closed Sunday
game." -·
--
-
-...-
•
~
~
i!
~
-iC
~
•
•
.lit .lit .lit .llt ' .llt .lit w ·,
~ TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT~
(Co.ntinued from Page 19)
HP.ns never threatened, going
down to their third defeat of
the tournament and fifth
straight of the season .
''We were just flat,"
lamented Couch. "Everything
seemed to fall apart out
there. I just couldn't move. "
To
sum
up
the
tournament ,
Peterson
commented: " Our problem is
not playing b~sketball for 40
minutes. F'or periods of time
we could play with anybody
in the tournament, but the
lapses hurt us. It's a matter of
·concentration. We have to
learn to be intense and apply
ourselves • for the entire
ir
•
JixlllDilf ;
fjJ~
i!
~~~:r~tp~~;~::~~~:;:u~~!
· committee~
·
_ · .ir.
~
- - --
PAGI 8
We first met Mung, The Review's cartoonist
emeritus, standing in front of the steam-smoked
bathroom mirror in his East Main Street apartment. A
towel wr~pped around his waist, he was in the process
of removmg a two-day collection of stubble.
. "_You guys from True Male Magazine?" · he
mqutred as we crowded into the bathroom. "The
photographer can stand on the john if you want some
waist up shots."
"No. We're from The Review," we replied. "We've
been sent to interview you."
the doodles I had all over my books might be used in
The Review. So I brought them over and I've been
doing cartoons for you guys ever since."
Mung's cartoons, first appearing in the fall ..of
1966, were signed "Codor." He switched to "Mung"
a short time later and his success was apparently
instantaneous. The day his first "Mung" drawing
appeared
a visitor to The Review office remarked
that "Mung" was certainly a better cartoonist than
that " Codor guy."
" I' ve eome to think of myself as the only
cartooning major here at the university," he says. ' ' I
3lso do illustrations and have been very interested in
printmaking iri the last year. l enjoy doing cartoons
because I enjoy making fun of people , things and
especiall y myself. Hesides, they're the best things I
,
d0.
Mung savs his sometime uncertainty about th e
direction he . wants his artistic talents to takP him was
the cau se of a traumatic experience two summers ago
while he was in Europe.
'' I was standing in front of one of Rembrandt's
self-portraits in an Amsterdam museum," he recalls.
"Rem brandt's e yes seemed to be staring right through
me , moeking mP. 'Can you be this good ' they sPemed
.to say . The experience pointed out my limits and the
goals to which l humbl y strive. I decided then to
make the most of my talents.
" After three years of cartooning I feel that I have
reached a technical level where I have the beginnings
of a sty le. I've felt at times that I am a little fish in a
hig pond hut am confident in mv cartoons and am
ready to take them to tht~ market plaePS" -and setl
them. And if I can' t do that, I'll rely on my secqnd,.
best talent-begging! "
·
Mung has often been critici zed for a "lack of
taste" and general irreverance in some of his ca.r teohs
and ·admits that it may be true. ' ' We all have to be
gaping fools -sometime or another," he says. "l'm not
above being juvenile. But I think on the whoh! I've
tried to please my audience while not eompromising
my sense of humor or ideals. We're all jewels in thP
mud as the poet Elliot said.
;·
\~.~,/;
.
...... Boy would they be surprised if they found out
that you did the cartoons.
. . .she loves me, she 'lov.es me not, she loves me,
she loves me not. . .
''Okay ," he said, pushing his room-mates cat off
the edge of the sink onto the floor. The cat, a
seven-month-old Siamese, was alternately falling into
• the murky. residu~ of shaving-creamed water and
getting-thr6wn to the floor.
" Damn cat," he muttered .
His shaving operation completed, we walked out
into his spacious combination living, dining and
bedroom. Sweeping aside a pile of dirty underwear,
we made ourselves comfortable on his bed , a
handsome Terminal Hotel model decorated in late
orange crate. The hospital ward green walls about us
were covered with posters, art work and a thin film of
dirt. There were no chairs anywhere in the apartment,
just beds. The interview began.
"Where should I start? At the beginning?" he
asked.
" That would be just fine. " we totd him.
' 'lt was all dark and warm, I remember, and then
all of a sudden I was upside down and somebody was
whacking me on the backside."
" No. no. Not that earlv."
" Okay . :vty name is Richard Codor and I started as
a child. My first major work was executed on our
kitchen wall in erayon and finger paints. The reviews
were less than favorable . Actually , I wasn't really
interested in art before college ·although J was tile
cartooni~t for my high school paper."
He paused to extract . a wool y stocking from the
eat's mouth and continued.
"I came to college thinking more in terms of being
an English major but it didn't tum out that way.
Then in my sophomore year somebody suggested i.hat
"I have a pre-occupation with the seamier side of
our lives anrl I've always been attraded by the
monstrous. My
favorites among artists are
Hieronymus Hos<~h and Goya who are both famed for
their nightmare visions of life.
.. .... . Hey little girl, come in and look at my
etchings.
SICt(( /'lrolo.~ ll .v Jim H!•drll'l
' 'My greatest infiut>IH't' ha-; twen :\lad :VlagaziJw
which l"vt> always triPd to emulate. I ha\'P a cull e<-tion
g~ing bad< almost 1 f) yt:•ars. l' n• tried gettin·g a .i ob
w1th them but apparently they haH'n 't adctPd all\'Ollf'
nPw to their staff for tlw last nine Vt!ars.' '
· "·
Intensely interested in the sta.te of world .affairs.
Codor says the ~ew York Times '\Pws of llw \\'t~Pk in
lteview seetion was his first Sunda\' t·omic section.
''The
hierarchy
of
1\m~! ri<:an
political
cartooning, Herbloek. Mauldin and Conrad han'
always appeared then' ." he savs.
" But the man to beat t~day is Oliphant. whose
cartoons are objeet lessons in design and drawing
accompanied by an excellent wit." (See pag£> four for
Oliphant's latestl
Politically. Codor ealls himself a roman tie
pragmatist and says '' I like to think Ameriea is going
forward but there's no reason to believ£> it ·won't fall
nat on its face."
· ~lis fut~r~ n'mains a question mark despite .
obvaous art1st1c talents. Before an\' e<:'rtain future is
determined. h£> says 1-tP. would- like to join an
archeological dig in (; alilee, own a featur~-length
copy of "King Kong," dive for escargot off the coast
of southern France. go sky-diving. talk about the
crimi_nal mind wi.th Rex Stout , clean his room. writt:'
and Illustrate a ehilds book on torture and ha\·e a
hamburger in Minooka. Illinois.
·
"Once J do all that," he concludes. "I will
probably have to comprOi"lise by basic values in life.
My biggest fear is that I'll end up doing something J
hate. I' m waking up from a four year sleep here at
Delaware and like everyone else am on the verge of
life."
1
PAGE 9
FEBRUARY 1968
I
~
c::LJ
THE GRADUATE
MARCH 1967
FEBRUARY 1968
PAGE 10
Ahh, You Never-
know When
T ~I ling The
'l/jj
He'5
J
ll
1
''!JjWWhen He. Pulis
Sure.. You
· Do!
His Eav- He 7s
Telfin9 The.
Tru-th.
Trufu.
JANUARY 1968
r
i .
(;taJ~t·
----------- ----..
MAY 1968
----- - - - - ·-· - --Please till o~+ one of: #-lese
forrns. Do not 1 in o.nywo.y ,fold,
5tClplt ,miAtlldt~~d or-.. .
MARCH 1968
-~
'lou don't. even k.no. ~r,..,
.
·JJha--t: _you r pmtestir,9
O. D·'=''JL: , cmd you /ool:
like o.. .. .
I
(
SPRING 1967
J
NOVEMBER 1967
PAGE:_ 11
I
1
lijl1
1
'
When He Pufs
I
On His Glasses
He's Telling
The_ Truth.
lj 1)1''Nhen 1-fe Bfo0-15
''11111111'
&t,When
I
His Nose, Hes
Tellin.9 The.
~
Opens His Mo~-fh
To Seenk ...
-
Trlifh-.
MARCH 1968
NOVEMBER 1968
A-5 o. 9 i r I of Dela.wa.Ye 1 you
ro.nk with fhe !oUJeY order d 5trru{Ans .
You 1ye pr-ud/sh, bor/sh) i mmafu v-e,
not too 9o.od looking . o..11d h a.ve
bc>-cl }?veafh. You Go-t No Cauth !If
\
I?;
Your- fly i s open.
SEPTEMBER 1967
MARCH 1966
PAGE 12
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
Text Of Course Evaluation Phi-losophy
r,
spo~soreJ ob~r\ehe s~~~u t inoo'!i
~~~~~rsityc~~~~;~ed
in
most
The evaluation will seek
~~udd~~~ ~~~~~0~~ .~~~~~~~ tta:e~~
~~~~s~~ieJhi~ ~~r~~~~~s~s ~~~e~~
special problem and seminar
~~~;;::o/n<Jre\~~!~ in e'"::1~:u~hn~
Results will be published in
completed forr:ns and deli_ver
them to a. de~1gnated off1ce.
D. Publtcatton
A formal presentation of
t~e results _in b':>oklet fo~m
Will be publtshed tn the sprmg
in time for use with next fall's
preregistration.
APPROACHINC; COIJH.SE
EV 1\L UATION WITH
(;()J\LS IN VIEW
One of the most pervasive
and difficult of pr()blems that
characterize
growing
and
changin~ universities such as
Delaware is the Jack of
commu nieation
between
administration. faculty, and
students eoneerning their
common interests in attaining
thP hest education possibl e.
The
need
ror more
encompassing.
more
pent!trating,
and
more
frequPnt dialogue among all
members of the earn·pus
community concerning the
-natun-! of instrudion is
evidenced by the reeent
formulation
of
several
eommittees to deal with the
teaehing
and
learnin~
situation.
Within
many
departments, students have
been
placed on
faculty
curriculum committees. The
Committee of lnstruetidn
uncier the Acting Provost of
the liniversit.y, Dr. Worthen,
has been established on an
interdepartmental basis to
deal with eomrnon eon<:t!rns.
Vlost recently of all, Dr.
Trclbant has called for a
Tt•aching
Effe<:tivcness
!•:valuation Committee to
channel student eon<:ern for
qtlality of teaehing in tlw
classroom.
1\
''community
of
sdwlars" in which .both
faeully members and students
are active participants in the
search for truth ean only
t•xist in an atmosphere of
m u I. u a I
(: o opt' ration.
u ndt:>rstanciing. and trust. If
tlwsc; e·ommittePS are to bP
any more• than bureaucracy.
this atmosphere must e•xist in
a varv n•al and workable:• wav.
/\t the found<Jtion or u;is
spril
is
an
underlying
op<'nrws.s
to
fair
and
n•sponsible eritidsm.
William C:ilmorP Sims has
statPci:
"'\t•ither praise nor blame•
is tlw obje:•ct of true <:ritieism.
.Ju:;Uy to diserirninatt•, firmly
to
establish,
wisely
to
prescribe. and honestly to
rewarci .. these are the true
aims anci dutie~ of criticism."
The Course Evaluation
Committee has been working
to <'stablish tlw means of
e1wouraging this type of
criticism. 1\ standardized tool
to l'lidt and record student
criticism <'ould be useful to
all student. faculty, and
0
~~~c~ac~~fucfe n~~:i·~~ea ~~~~~r
to a~h~1 al~~15owing is a philosophy
of the Evaluation. · The Editor.
I. Definition
1\
course
evaluation
program is a systematic rating
by students of the means by
which
they
are
being
. educated in the classroom.
Standardized criteria · which
are valid on an interdisdplin·
ary basis are u!ied t<) measure
the rdatiw effectiveness of
methods of instruction and
tht! eontent of all courses
offered in the lJnivNsity
curriculum.
II. Objectives
A. To give students a
guicie for the selection of
courses and teachers.
B. To provide each faculty
member with information
which would be useful in his
own continuing efforts to
improw tlw quality of his
t('aehing.
C.
To
supply
all
University
<·ommunity
members with a readily
available resouret! on the
nePds.
eoncerns,
and
perspective of students as a
prinu.ry
fador
to
be
l'Onsidl'rt·d
in planni'nl.( for
personnel, curriculum, and
other acad••mi<~ affairs.
Ill. Proet•duws
1\. Sponsors
'J'Iw Stu dl'n t <;<w~·rnnwnt.
/\ssocialion
providt!rl
Uw
original impetus for tlw
projP<'t anci is now supporting
it linandaiJ~·.
B. (~tu•stionnain·
Tlw qut>stionnain• eonsists
of
approximatt>l~·
thirt~'
oh.it>e·ti ve qut-stions cowri ng
such art! as as dass lt>etu n•s.
n•aciing material. PXams. and
quiz and lab ses.'iions wlwn•
a p pI i t• able .
It
has
bl'l'n designt>d b~· proft>ssionaiS
to hl' statisti<:ally wliablt.• and
valid for liSt' with a large
numlwr and wiciP varit:>ly or'
type:•s of studt•nts. Tlw results
w iII
be
tabulatPd
by
c.·omputPr for t>ITil:itmcy and
<H-eurcwy.
C. Distribution
. In orciPr to assure that tlw
Pntin• stude•nt body, not just
a
rancion
samplt•.
will
rc.•sponci, tlw qtit>stioitnain•
forms wi II be• ciist.ribut.Pd in
l'lass anci a small amount of
l'lass
timl'
must
bt•
rPlinquislwci to fill tlwm out.
l'rofe•ssors will rl'cl'i\'l' Uw
cards h~· mailbox for Padt of
tlwir dass st•<·t.ions. Tlwy e·<ul
tlwn
appoint.
studPnt
monitors to l'ollt>d
tlw
~1i!!mff\i16iiffil@lt&IJrt11ftilimtnliffifffM&lftilirtili?tfiltffiltrtmrtf!~T
One Dollar Gift Certificate
Toward your
Next Pair of
SHOES
Jncludirt~
famous
brallds as
*ETIENNE AIGNER *de ANGELO *SANDLER OF BOSTON
*MADEMOISELLE* MISS PAPPAGALLO •BERNARDO
*OLDMAINE TROTTERS
1001
West St.
~E~
· < FJu
I.TO.
OF
WILMINGTON
DELAWARE
~1
administrative
committees
concerned
with
this
improvement of academics.
The pubnshed guide from the
com putated
questionnaire
results will be this tool.
A I on g
with
the
evaluation's usefulness to
various
special
interest
groups, the individual student
and the individual faculty
member
will
be
maJor
beneficiaries.
The serious
student attempting to get the
most out of his education no
longer will be forced to rely
on the campus grapevine. An
objectified summary of what
a majority of all students who
took a course said is certainly
a more reliable souree than
the pos.'iibly biased opinion of
a few friends.
Notallthe
information
presented on
courses will be mere value
.i u d g men t s
of
what
supposedly is good or bad for
all students. Some will relate
fads and allow the student to
decide fro~ which dasses he
personally could derive the
most.
If individual
faeulty
mmnbers are to receive
construdive
criticism,
students must be trusted to
be
mature
in
their
diseriminations, even though
their years of exposure to the
disciplines <:annot equal those
of more professional raters.
1\s graduate studies and
careers cnsut!, a studtmt's
view of the applicability and
vahw of a particular course
may change. Howev•!r, the
importanee of a student's
eurrent attitude toward the
instructor and th<• <:ourse
eannot be overlookeci a" a
vi•.al fador in the total
lpaming situation. In fact, the
student's attitude is at least
equal to his innatl~ ability in
d.-termining how much is
learned.
Since rating ~oes on in
evE>ry classroom ev('ry where.
the only real ehoi<:e the
instructor ' has is whethN hP
wants to know what theSE!
ratings are. If he dtooses to
j!Pt this knowledge, he is in a
position to profit thereby.
.Many individual profes.'iors at
th<> ll. of Delawar~ have for
years done their own class
surveys in an pffort to get this
f'et!dbaek. ThE> inter-disciplin·
ary eourse evaluation is not
tn(•nt to rt>plaee tlwse fine
dforts.
but
only
to
supplement them and to
stanrlar<iizP crii.t'l'iil as to what
<'onstitut.es good teaching. 1\Io
profes~or need fear student
discussions h1 which faculty
opinion.
.
members come to see their
Student 1:ourse evaluation
student~
as
capable
programs such as the one
participants in the process of
being proposed for use at the
analyzing
teaching;
U. of Delaware have had long
discussions in which students
. and succes.'iful histories at
come to see themselves as
other schools. Harvard has
c:o-partidpants in a ·(:ommon
printed
its "Confidential
task.With · the
increasing
Guide to Courses" for over
empha"is being plat:ed on
forty
years
now.
"The
college degrees, it is essential
Advisor" from the U. of
for eaeh :-;tudent to w<:eive
Illinois and "The Purdue
tht~ best edu<:ation possible
Rating Scale for Instruction"
and it is only through
have
won
widescale
constant improvement of' the
acceptance.
quality of instruction and
We
of
the
Course
content of t~ach courst! that
Evaluation Committee have
this can be ach it!ved.
studied these other projects .
LARGEST SELECTION
extensively for two years now
and have received assistance
OF
from our own Departments
FABRI<.:S ANYWHERE
of Education, Sociology, and
Psychology for questionnaire
DRESS MATERIALS
reliability and validity. With
the approval of Dr. Trabant
NOTIONS
and other administrators, and
DECORATIVE FABRICS
the support of S.G.A., we are
prepared to implement a
thorough and well planned
program. We hope that it will
136 E. Main St.
be a eatalyst for discussion,
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
\
:
DANNEMANN'S
•
:•
I I
•••
I
••
41!
••
•
:
•!
••
•
•••
•••
•
••••
•..••
CHICKEN DINNER
lnGIUd4t!l:
·a Oven Roasted Chicken
Dlni!Utr
•
1
• French F11es • Cole
Sl~w
• Dinner 1oil and honP.y
\II Fo1·
89(·
..
;•
:•
I
QUARTERBACK CLUB"
•
IUUURANU
:
:
618 S. COlLEGE AVE.
NEWARK, DEL
·A
; nrou~: ,:':J .::..nr-~u
·e
:....•......................................:
PAGE 13
UNIVERSITY . OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
72 Percent From, Del.
Student Geography
··.; !•
' ll
·n r..'
a'
Hefore flunking linals,
student.-; may be interested in
knowing where they eome
from.
New
undergraduate
students (first tim(! freshmen
and
trans fer
students)
enrolled for the first semester
at the university were drawn
from 21. states.
/\s expt:>cted, Delawareans
predominated with 72.2 per
eent
of
those enrolled.
Neighboring states placed the
bulk of other students. There
were 1 1.6 per eent from
Pennsylvania , 7.H per cent
from New .Jersey, and :t5 per
eent from Maryland.
Only ~1 . 5 per cent wNe
drawn frorr. other states, and
1. .'I per C('n1. were drawn from
foreign countries.
Total undcrgraduatPs wen•
drawn
from
~lt1
states.
PPrcentagPs wf:'re DelawarP.
71 ll<'T eent: PPnnsylvania.
Tunne/1 ...
(Continued from Page 1)
..
(),."1
~ I
.I
course
of
adion
was
ahanclo1wd h ec aus~·
"the
possibility existPd, and was
believed lo be rPalistic. that
these men would not mC'asurP
up t.o tlw stand<!rd whieh
would .iustify renewal of the
contracts."
'l'untwll added that "there
i<; no basis for llw students'
suspidon t.hat tlw l~oard of
Trustee,; t'XI:~ rted any pressun•
on an yone t.o get rid of llwsP
Jnl'n." .
:VIvt•rs said lw and Bresle r
arg1wcl ''at"· h-'ngt'l~,...., :,with
studl'lit.s· t.h persuark them
110t to sign fals<• l'onfessions.
"1\.1' wen• llw so-c:alll'CI wt.'l
hlankC'ts in llw action."
'vly<'rs said. <lnly aftl'r tlw
univ<•rsiL~' took action against
studt•nts who sig1wcl t.lw
eonf1 ~ssions did
! lw,v sign.
\1y1•rs said.
1\ third fan1lt.~· nwmbPr.
histor~'
instrudor l·:rlwarcl
:..:a plan. afso sig1wd
t lw
eonfession. llis l'ontniC'l was
not retwwed this 1'<111.
Brc'sll'r also said lw hacl
twn·r urgPd anyorw 1.\1 sign
the• sta!.t•mPnl.. I !t' said lw has
Rt'pt tlw national :\:'\1 ' 1'
infortJt('(l of tlw sit1111lion at
!>t'lawarl' and plans f.o ask for
an offi1·ial inwst.igation.
"I t!iinl. Hr. 'l'tllllll'll's
ll'l.t.l'r rnai\Ps it t · h•;~r WI' \V!•n·
rlismis.'iNI for our anti !:c)'J'( :
adivitiPS: . lw said .
\l~· c•rs
I'Clll<•d
t h ('
riPpartrnt•nl.al ad.inn outli1wd
in TltlliH'II's ll'i.LI'r "onl~ · "
srnok<·'StTI'<'Il.··
Course Evaluation·
(Continued from Page 1)
dorms as it. was last ~· .-ar.
( liH:' llaw. hoWt'\'l'r. t•:xisb
dltl' to sonw of l.lw twgli~eiH"C'
of somt' of t.lw dl'part.nwn t
heads. Aceording to nwmbPrs
of Uw CoursP Eralualion
CommitLPt' Departnwntlwads
wen• all askt'd to appoint
so nu•otH'
from
tht'ir
d~partnwnt a st.udPnt that
would lwlp witll tlw program.
It St'Pills sot\W of t.ht•m ~illwr
have not bt'Pn infornwd. or
lut\'l' ignort!d this rPqlwst.
'l'lw _t.'valuation "iill bt'
(~onducled during tht:> Wt't.'k
before finals. and Uw book
containitig results will bt.•
prodttL"t'd in t>arly spring.
11.1 pe r cent ~ New .Jers~ ·y.
H.9 per cent; !Vlaryland :-.;.9
per
cent.
Other
states
provided 3.1 per cent of the
u n de rt~raduate
population
and foreign countries sPnt 1.1
per cent.
Craduate studPnts wNe
rlrawn
from
:19 states.
Delaware sent 52.:1 per ce·n t,
l ~~.:~ per cent wc!fC from
l'<n1nsylvania ; 7.n pt~r cl'nt
from fl..1 aryland; 5.5 per (~ent
from :'\ew .Jersey; and 7.f) per
Cl'nt from foreign (:ountri(•S.
States beyond tlw three
bordering states sentling the
most students to Delaware
were
New
York ,
1.60;
Virginia,
75;
Ohio, 41;
\llassaehusetts.
27 ;
Conneeticut. 21; California.
2:}; Illinois. 20; and Mi<:higan,
19. Total foreign students
numbered 167.
Coordinating Council To Combine
Students, Faculty In Education
Anne Rosz~ and Diane
Scatasti, graduate students.
The faculty members include
Dr. V aJ Arnsdorf, associate
A Coordinating Council of
elected faculty and students
in the College of Education
has
been
furmed
~
an outgrowth of an Ad Hoe
Committee
studying
the
organization and objectives of
the College.
The Council is responf:ible
for implementing the goals of
the College of Education ~
pad of a request for a
statement of Community
Design by President E.A.
Trabant.
The Council is composed
of four students and nine
facu I ty
members.
The
students are Sharon Brady ,
and
Brenda
J a'quette,
undergraduates, and Mary
professor of education; Dr.
John A. Br9wn, professor in
the College of Education and
the
department
of
mathematics; Dr. Norman
Crawford, lecturer in the
College of Education; Dr.
Stanley
Deno,
assistant
professor of education; Dr.
George Henry, professor of
education; Dr. Charles Maries,
assistant
professor
of
education; Dr. Ralph Duke ,
professor of education and
dir~ctor of student teaching
and
the
Educationai
ROTC Summer Sessions Now
Available For First Time
HOTC will be offered
during the summer snssions
for
th<~.
first timP this
summl'r. the military scil-!llCI:'
department. has announced.
The
pi1rpose
of the
summer sessions is to provide
an opportunity for transfer
studmts. studt~ nts admittPd
in February . and others. to
takP Milita~y Sdenee s0 they
can
continue
with
the
program during tht• normal
'· ttl: ademi t~.:.o;~· vear
without
· .: '(:c·Hnpressir.ig'; two military
· scicn(~f!
courses
in
one
semester.
Military seienee 105, the
normal fall semestPr eou rse.
will be offered in tht~ first.
session. eomnwncing .June 1.6
'A-pology'
TO TilE EDI'l'OH. : .
~.ly apology is offered to
the Committee of Concern
for my aeeusation of a breach
of trust in regard · to the
Bn!sler-:V1yers Petition. It was
rny
contention
that an
ultimatum was issued with
the pPtition after I had signed
it.
The Committe.has
adequately demonstrated that
I was wrong.
'l'lw
ultimatum
was
already on th(' petition. in tlw
form
of
tht·'
wend
"itnml'diatPiy. tlw mistakP
was mint- in ;nisunderstanding
the spirit of Uw petition . I
errotwously took the word
"immediatelv''
to
bt:>
rhetorical and · tht• two· wePk
"grace pPriod'' to be an
ultimatum.
The mistakt:> was mine.
but the r.-pudiation of my
signatu r~ on that petition still
stands on tlw grounds that. I
do not think an ultimatum
was warrantt'd in this cas.~ .
Floyd Kemske. ASO
N-t.;WARK LUMBER
co.
22i E. Main St.
.......,........ ,...
7~7-5502
BUILDING PRODUCTS
and ending July 22. The
course content will cover the
definition and causes of war,
a survey of the evaluation of
warfare and wP.apons. tlw
"'~apo n s of the army, and the
history and organization of
th e l\eserve Officers Training
<5orps.
Military scitmce -lOfi , the
normal
spring
semester
course, will be offered in the
second session commencing
.July 2H and ending Aug. 29.
The course eoniR.nt will
includl! the principles of war,
the organization
of the
national
defense
establishment and factors of
national power.
Leadership
laboratory
(drill) will bf' eondueted as an
integral part of eaeh session
and will bl:! on a highly
personalized basis.
Aceording
to
the
l)(•partmPn t. students who
have credit for :viii 106 only,
or will have sm~h l'redit by
.June. tll'f'd take only the first
st•ssion in order to continue
in tlw fall with ~·Iii :Wfl.
Studl'nts who have no
credit fur :VTilitary Scienct'
and who desire t.o begin t.lw
program
can
take
both
sumnwr sf'ssions and t·onlinue
in t.he fall senwstPr with t.hP.
sophomon• course. lntereslt'd
students an· urgPd to cont.ad
t.hc Departnwnt of :Ytilitary
St•ipnel'
for
furth e r
information .
0\\'~
.-\
I'IIOFITAIII.E
I'AIIT OH 1-'1 ' 1.1. '1'1:\IE
Hill
WF
E.-\H~':-;r ;
.\IIIIEII
~t ·: ('l
HF
Consulting Center for S:!hool
Exclusive Delaware Premiere!
Personnel;
Dr.
Rubert
Stegner, associate professor
of education and biological
sciences; and Dr. Edward
Dodson, assistant professor of
education.
Dr. James B. _Heck, Dean
of the College of ~;ducation
and
chairman
of
the
Coordinating Coundl, said he
hopes the initial statement
concerning the organization
and objectives of the <~ollege
will be finished by mid-May.
Dean
Heck said
he is
impressed by the fact that
each Council member has
been elected rather than
appointed to the group. The
Council is meeting twice a
week.
.
rmNSTA~
QJH!lJk
WILMINGTON, DEL.
FIVE PERFORMANCES
JAN. 23-24-25
3RD d.IG viiEEK
THURSDAY 8:30 P.M.
FRIDAY . . 6:15 & 9:30 P.M.
SATURDAY .. . 6:15 & 9:30P.M.
EVFNIN<;S AT 8 PM
MATINFFS-WF.D -SAT-SUN 2 PM
NO RFSFRVFD
SFATS~
RICHARD
HARRIS
.i.~. 't\\tATRICAL lVt.
~~at 'tllE DBCAJ)l' a-,,
AMERICA'S GREATEST MUSICAl
YVONNE
DECARLO
SBLLtq
1)0 Ll't
I
·~ TECHIIICOLOR'" PAIIAVISIOfl •
FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEfl ARTS •
Tickets On Sate At Boxofflce
ONLY AT SHOWTIME! .
BOX OFFICE OPENS NtGHTL VAT
7:15PM· 1:30 FORMATINEES
MAIL ORDERS NOW
PRICES
111':->I~E:->~
WOHI\
l." 'll:\JF
1.01 ' .-\TIIl:'\'~
1'11'1'1-: .'TL\1 .
~7 .-'l . nu
"
and 1 tu ' !'o ltart• hour:-- a "'''' "·
II'
.' ·cut ntn m•·•·t tht·:ott• rt 'tlllirt•nu· nt"' ••nd
•·a s h in't'!'<llnu·nt and an· ,.; irH·t·n·h in lt•rt•slt·d in a fa:-.t n •twal hu:-.itH'!'o!'o uf
~uur "" n IIH· n WHITE ~:hin~: ~'""''·
Atlcln·~~.
ancl
........ ,,, ... Ill'
inlt•r,·i••"
tH'r s c•nal
Jillll~
ltt•J•rt· ~··ntntin· .
~umiH·r .
\\ith
a
('f(O\\ ~ I'IZZ..\ 1'1110'.
; _.,;:-. Olh·t· Unult•\·ard
l'it•·. :\1u. c; ;IJ :IU
l ' ni\· ,·r~il~
MEZZ
rur
f 'un1 -
BAL.
Thur-Fri·Sat. 12:00 12:00·11:00 8:00
NOTE! Please specify either 6:15 or 9:30
P.M. for Fri. & Sat. dates.
Please enclose a stamped self-addressed
envelope or tickets will be lleld at IIDX·
office. Make checks payable to Playhouse.
muuth . HI rnurt · clt•JH· ndiuL! nil ~ i~. t · of
ruult·.
Ut·liahlt· man ur \\uru.nn
''anlt•fl
fli ... frihulur in thi"" an•a lu n · ~tu, · k ,· um ~
IHlll~ !'ot't' ttrt·d lua · ati•u' ~ ••: . u ·h a~ n ·:-- tau·
rant~.
hu\\ lirH! a lit•,\ :--, and t'lc '' ith
natiunal hrarul t•r••t,an•d
pi1/.a:-. .,..,J.f
lhrunJ.rh nur t•lt•t·l rit' "'I'll"' \\ hil-h \\ill
hal,t• in fuur minut• ·~.
~~~ t' \IH'rit· IH't'
llt' t' t· ~~ ar .\ ,
\\t• furni !'l h all acht·rli.,.in)!' .
nu· re·haudi ~ inJ,! .
arul !~oiiiJIJur1 malt· rial .
\\' ill nut iHit•rl't· r•· \\ ith t•n•:ott•nt OtTIII)H tiuu .
a:ot
lnt•nliun :-.
··an
ht· H ' f ' in•rl
t''' t•nin~r::o~ and Wt•t•kt•lul :ot.
t'a~h
in'' '" lrnt•nl of ~:! . :!UII . IIIt to .S 1. titiU , U'J j, ITtJUin·d .
..\1 :-~ u n a.:uud ntr
lut•ttl
ORCH.
I
-
.ill.
Milltown
Shopping Center
Milltown &
Limestone Road
Open daily
·10 : 00 to 6!00
Wed. &
Fri. eves 'til 9 : 00
Saturday
9 : 30 to 5 : 30
Phone
(302)998 -0494 Mail orders filled
Add 50c postage
PAGE 14
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE
APARTMENTS
ROOMMATE NEEDED for 2
bedroom apt., Colonial Gardens
(you get your own room) . Call
738· 4 795 or come to apt . H - 1 0.
MALE ROOMMATE needed
to sha fE- apartment in Ivy Hall.
Call 368 · 4538 after 6 p.m.
APT . for rent, furnished, 2
bedroom, plus utilities, $95 per
month. Call 737·0632. No pets.
ONE MALE wanted for 3
bedroom towne house furnished ,
washer include(., in College Park.
$50 per month plus share utilities.
Call Harold 738·2526 . If not
there, leave tToessage.
originally $150, will accept best
offer.
See
Bob
Martin
D-3
Colonial Gardens, 334 E. Main
Street.
GUITAR : GUILD D·40 (steel
string) 1 yr. old, with case, $180.
Classical (Clemente Segoria model
86) 4 yr. old, $30. Phone now
368·5852, ask for Jim or leave
message.
CAMERA : POLAROID 800
(60 sec. color, 10 sec. B & W),
photoelectric shutter, flash, and
leather case, 5 yrs old, cleaned
and reconditioned 1 yr. ago, $40.
Phone now 368·5852, ask for Jim
or leave message.
ELECTR O ·- VOI C E
664
Cardioid
Dynamic professional
microphone,
dual
impedance,
on-off switch, satin chrome finish,
two 15 ft. cords, desk stand. Dave
107 GA, 737·9626.
·
THE GUITAR WORKSHOP
Specializes
in
Quality
Folk,
Classic and Electric Guitars and
Amps at UNBEATABLE prices!!
Huge discounts on all accessories.
EXPERT REPAIRS. Hours 11·9
p.m. wkdys., 1 0·5 Sat., 737·1340.
117 Capitol Place, Nwk., (Rd. is "
opp. ent. to Red Mill Apts. off
Kirkwood Highway) Last Shack
on left at end of street.
TWO
AR4X
SPEAKERS.
Have 8 inch woofer and 23/• inch
tweeter. 2 years old. Call Chick
Allen, 206 Coiburn, 737 -9783.
FOR RENT
SINGLE ROOM for rent, 44
Center Street. Call 368·1701.
--------------------------------
Ad Should Not Be Over 30 Words. One
Quarter Should Be Enclosed In Envelope With Ad. Please Type.
Deadline Tuesday
LOST & FOUND
. _LOST in area of Harrington
dm1ng hall,
one lady's silver
Bulova watch. Reward offered.
Please contact Aileen Webb, 214
Gilbert F, 737· 9600.
-~---~----------------------1\U TOM OF. I LE S
1964
RAMBLER,
V -8,
St a ndard
Transmission,
Radio,
Heat er, Good tires, low mileage,
tagged until 7/69. Must sell . $400
or best offer. Call 368·0076 .
RAMBL E R
'62,
Classic
Delux(',
excellent
condition.
Good
starter,
transmission ,
compression, bearings, tires, and
heater.
New
shocks,
wheel
balance, tune-up . Call evenings
478 -3783.
1959
RAMBLER,
Ambassador, 4 door sedan. Good
FOR SALE
MOTORCYCLES
CONTROLS, power pack and
2u ft. of track for Revell ( 1/32)
raceway, trestle risers etc. Also
Ice Skates--two pair in very good
condition (boys) one pair size
five,
one pair size
1 0.
Call
368-1983 after 5 : 30p.m .
LAFAYETTE
4-TRACK
stereo
tape
recorder -- two
. detachable speakers on 20 ft.
cords. One year old, retail $165,
selling for $75. Also Hand-woven
Argentian poncho--virgin wool in
colorful designs. Two years old,
· 1966, 306 cc Yamaha, $375.
Contact Dennis, 117 Gilbert A ,
737·9626.
RIOE WITH THE BIG ONES
1963 .
BSA
Gold
Star
Tw.n--equipped for racing but
ideal to chop. Not recommended
for those with lack of experience
or guts. Must sacrifice $425. Call
368·7002.
MISCELLANEOUS
PETER B .: We enjoyetl the
ultim a te . Like to get to know
Agencies List Summer Jobs
Available For Students
Studt•nts
looking
for
stllnnw r jobs can now gPL
lwlp from many ag(•ncit>s.
P o s.i t i o n s .
i n c I u d ('
('VI'r_vthing
l'rom
camp
c o u n s l' I o r s h i p s
to
pn• -prul'essional traiiWPships.
Tlw /\ lnNican /\ ssot'iation
of C:oiiPg(• StudPnts has put
out tim•(• booklets listing
Summer Evaluation
"Summt•r Sl'Ssions IIJ6X :
A
Study
of
Stlldt•nts.
Faculty . and ( 'nurses" has
bt•t•n
compikd
hy
tht•
Summt•r Sdwol Offict•. The
stud~' is haSl·d on facult~· and
studt•nt
n•sponst•s
h1 1
q ut•st inn nai l'l'S l'Oill plt'tNI last
summt•r. .- \fll'r distrihu(ion to
d t'. p a r t llll'll t
c h a i r m en .
directors.
and
lkans.
a
numlwr of ropit•s is still
:t\'ailahlc. and a t•op~· mm· he
had h~' ralli11g lht• Summt·r
Sdwol Offict• at 73X-:!146.
.
DELAWARE JANUARY 10 1969
REVIEW CLASSIFIED ADS
body. Recent paint. New recap
tires. Heater, radio, au to trans.
$150. Phone 368·9776 .
'64 TR4. Red, new paint, new
top, radials, very good condition.
$1,200. Call 737· 9024.
1967
MUSTANG,
4-speed
transmission, low mileage. Call
998·8094.
MUSTANG '
1966
Conv.,
$1200 must ~ ell . Call 994-6097 or
652-9463 from 9 -S Mon. thru Sat.
-R"E"viE"wcCAsSi"FiEo"AoeoiTo"R----------~
REVIEW MAll- SLOT
I
I
STUDENT CENTER DESK
AD-:
NEWARK
organizations interested in
hiring
studt>nts
for
the
sumnu•r.
One
includes
openings in recreation .and
resort an•as, another lists jobs
in business and industry . and
tht• third gives information on
johs · with
tlw
federal'
gowrn tm' n t.
'l'lw national Diredorv
S t> r v i e (' ' s
'' Sum m e.r
Employment Diredor" lists
unusual johs for students at
summer
camps,
resorts.
summer theatres, ranches ,
and restaurants as well as
opl•nings
as
desigm~rs ,
tf!chnidans.
actors,
and
musicians.
Tlw Devereux Foundation
Jnstitttt(• . for ){eseareh and
Training
offer
summer
traitweships with stipends.
These arP supported, in part.
by a grant from the l'.S.
HPhabilitation
Servict~s
Administration .
The
traitwt-ships arP available in
researd1
and
professional
ai dP.
rt'sidt>nt
eamp
counseling. and day camp
counseling and tutoring.
Together
these
tlu~e agencies
list
more
than
100.000 jobs with something
for students with any type of
bacl<gruund and interest.
In formation
concerning
these job openings can be
obtained by writing to the
agencies.
.
For the AACS booklets
write:
Summer
Johs,
American
Association
of
College Students, ao
N.
· LaSalle
S~reet.
Chkago,
Illinois, 60602. There is a 152
serviee charge.
For r
the
"Summer
Emplo y m e nt
Directory"
write:
:'llational
Directory
Servjce, P. 0. Box 65 , Dept.
C, Cincinnati. Ohio. 45232.
There is 15:~.50 charge.
For further information
on Uw summer pre-professi ·o nal
trainel;•ships
and
application blanks write to
Dr. Henry Platt, Director,
;rtw Devereaux Foundation
Institute for ltesearch and
Training, Devon, Pa . .193:~ :~.
a
Harrington Dining Hall . Only 75
cents, t'leas!.!!!
TO MR. FRED S., Are you
missing a final? If so, you can
reclaim It today at 1:15 on the
beach in front of Sussex. If you
are not there at this time, the
final will be put in the back test
file at the library.
COM 1NG : Special classified
section Tuesday on Apartments.
you. We're waiting at the window.
Love, DAPHNE and friends.
TYPING--paper, dissertations
etc. on IBM Selectric. 368·4347.
EXCELLENT TYPIST with
electric typewriter available to
tvoe th 'l !ill~ ,
term papers, etc.
Pick up and delivery. Reasonable
rates. 475·8373.
BASS PLAYER wanted for
soui/Phsych/rock
group.
Established group, steady gigs.
999·8455 of 998·5735.
IF YOU ARE A COMMUTER
and come from the Canby Park
area and would like a rider, please
contact Mary Jo at 656·4242 any
night other than Monday.
CONGRATULATIONS to the
most wonderful football team!
We all love ya! Love, First floor
Kent.
WA NTEO
FOR
LIGHT
HOUSE cleaning one afternoon a
week. Salary and duties to be
arranged; call 368· 7492.
GEORGE
CHAMBERLAIN
TAKE NOTE: The Review office
nef!ds a newspaper rack NOW! We
are tired of begging, 'pleading,
wheedlin'] · and crying. We now
DEMAND il newspaper rack for
our exch ange papers, please.--your
sloppy but lovable editors who
would lil-:e to have a neat office.
BABYSITTER
needed
for
9-month old child. 9·12 a.m., 3 or
5
mornings
a
week.
Call
368·9073.
BABYSITTER
needed
1·5
Wednesday
afternoons
next
semester. Three children, 2 in
school. Call 368· 9776.
WANTED : BODIES to fill our
da nee
tonight,
8:30·12:00,
a•
EXHAUSTED?
41 I. MAIN ST.
OVP~ 175 TITLES
c........
$1 EACH
AT YOUR BOOKSELLER
Breakfast lr Luncheons
z 1- ~T.~.AIEG,
• • •.• • ,
·~··
"THE ULTIMATE IN PIZZA BAKING"
151 E. MAIN STREET
CALL
368-8574
OPEN SUNDAY
--
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
FRIDAY •
SATURDAY
4 P .M .
-- -
TO
II
II
12 P . M .
A . M . TO I
A.M .
A . M. TO 2 A.M .
So,·•
.I
Platten
Clprette. f
•
LIN COLN. NEB RASK A 68501
Tuesday In The Review:
A SPECIAL CLASSIFIED AD SECTION ON
APARTMENTS
.:-I I (
K ! .i
~' ( ~
,, n
ONLY A QUARTER PER AD
Need a roommate? Looking for an
apartment or have one for rent? Need
furniture for an apartment or selling it?
0
The section will run Tuesday, Jan. 14. Ads
must be in no later than 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan.
12 and may be left with payment at the
Student Center desk,. Review mail slot or at
the Review office, 301 Student Center.
LADIES NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
....
~
Each
i~clu ·
artist
* Tremendous Savings of 40 to 60%
* Latest fashions in all heels, toes, and widths.
* Layaways welcomed.
first
seco
Thtn
Cogs
c
f Near Silo's
Style
Fashion
Elegance
i ~l -::J U ,
Uni v·
are
publi
NEWARK, DELAWARE
DE(-IVERY AFTER 4:00 P.M.
tl
~ I
CANCELLATION SHOES
Ill BRIL.4lll
t. ; ,
-UNDERSTANDING COMES
FASTER WITH
CLIFFS NOTES'
SHOP, INC.
Sodas
ll
·n r.:
DELU'XE CANDY
7:• ......
.. ' ~ i .
'
Shoe Outlet ·
3610 Kirkwood Highway
Plastic Park
999-1342
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE JANUARY 10 1969
PAGE
-
y ou
- an
he
ou
he
est
. \1 !
.
ied
' , . • ·l tS .
Alpha Epsrlon Pi
The long sojourn on the
home front is completed and
the brothers of Alpha Epsilon
Pi have trudged through the
snow to beautiful downtown
Newark.
Many
of
the
GREEK COLUMN
brothers celebrated The First
at parties in and about the
vicinity. Congratulations to
Step-Brother Phantom for a
truely intoxicating evening.
Exams are upon us again
and this realization has
caused undue consternation
amongst the brothers who
have yet to book - it this
semester. But, after all, what
difference can a flag or two
make
in
the
great
metaphysical
scheme
of
things.
Over vacation it was
discovered
that
Brother
Harding's
pussy
had
disappeared . The third floor
is in mourning over the loss
of the cat. Could it be that a
certain hamster owner paid a
. midnight
visit
to
Brandy wood'!
'1tead 7~?/~te~u
lP
I
J
... .. ·::s
ALPHA TAU OMEGA
Pinned : Brother Robert E.
Jarrell, ASl, to Miss Lynn
Bnu:e Scheihle, ASL
Brother ltonald L. Pearl,
a EO, t.o Miss Susan Disbrow,
NUO.
Brother Robert E. Pitts,
AS9, to :vliss Kay (;uthrie,
Newark.
Engaged: Brother Dennis
E. Aubrey, AG9, to Miss
Kathy Harnes, ASO.
Brother Charles F. Oyler,
EG9, to Miss Wendy Baker,
Philadelphia.
Brother Don L. Powell,
EC:l, to Miss Linda Mitehell ,
Wilmington.
Brother
H.obNt
Y.
Hodwleau, ' f)H, to :Vliss
Nancy Schmidt, AC:O.
Brother
Edward
F.
Soeeorso. ASl , to Miss Alice
Wienkowitz, New Castle.
DELTA TAU DELTA
Engaged: Brother Bruce
Hohemer. BEO. to Miss Cindy
Miller. Wesley College.
ALSO ON CA"'PUS :
Engaged :
Miss
Denise
McDermott. AS2, to David
W.Carr, L'" .S.~.. Bainbridge.
:vi d.
Robert L. Poskitt. ED9,
to '\lliss "Mar Iiese Stutzman.
HEO.
KAPPA ALPHA
Pinnt>d:
Brother John
SPitz, AC:9, to Mis..<; :'-Janey
Conn. '.JCO.
Hrot.her Hit•k Hartman ,
EGO, t o \!iss Virginia Hice.
AS9.
Brother Larry Walker,
PEO,
and
Miss
Linda
Thornton.
Brother Paul Luisi. ASO.
and Lori (;avron , EDl.
~:ngaged: Hrother Charles
naudioso, EG9. to \1iss
Joanne Augustini.
Brother Jim O'Connor,
BE9, to :\1iss Cindy Busse,
Wilm. _
\ta;·ried : :~rother (;ary
Simpson , A(;9.
to Miss
Debbie Hetts.
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA
Pinned: Hrother <.:eorge
5.
-
Concert ...
(Continued to Page 7)
Each of these programs will
include one work with guest
artist. Players in the Quartet
include: Laurence Shapiro ,
first violinist , Haim Shtrum,
second
violinist ;
.lohn
Thurman, L't:'llist: and Walter
CogswelL violist.
Concerts
by
the
Uni versity 's String (~uartet
are free and open to th e
public.
.•et ·
ighway
"t
The
Card Center
Sl Eut Main St.
~ARDS -
M I VI
GIFTS
'ARTY $~PttLIIS
15
McDowell, AS9, to M1ss Carol
Green.
Hrother Pete Piepmeier,
EDl, to Miss Jane Michal,
'71, West Chester State
College.
Engaged : Brother Harry
R. Taylor, EG9 , to Miss
Cathy Bethards, ED9.
Brother James Cubbage,
AGO, to Miss Mary Elinor
Phillips, /\SO.
Brother Vv' illiam White,
BEO, to Miss Judy Krill,
EDO, Kappa Alpha Theta
sorority , Univ. of Md.
Alpha Tau Omega
PHI KAPPA TAU
Pinned: Brother C;erald E.
Dixon, ASl, to l\liss Barbara
McGrath. ASl.
Hrother l.f~eRoy P. Hanna,
ASO, to Nliss Susan Hurd.
.NI.' 1.
Engaged: Brother William
~-I.
Erwin. HE9. to Miss
Kirsten 1\rentzt~n. EDO.
PI KAPPA ALPHA
Pinned:
Brother Mike
Leritsky. A< :o. to Miss Janet
~ e\"ille, ED~.
Engaged:
Brother Bob
Barr. to \I iss Sandra Bergey,
;~. ~o .
SIGMA NU
Pinned:
Hrother
:\'Iontague. EH.I. to
Pauline \1ilewski, AS 1.
Russ
Miss
ALSO ON CAMPUS
Pinned: Ralph . c:oldrkk.
AS9. of Phi Kappa Psi ,
/\llegheny College, to Miss
Tina De<:eorge, NU 1.
Engaged:
:\'Jiss
Linda
~ertn(·!Y, AS9, to Ensign Chip
Dudderar. U.S.N., Meridian,
\1iss.
Miss <:ail Parassio, ED9,
to ltiehard .J. Hohmann . Jr .•
AS9, Ohio State University.
:\1iss JoAnn .Jordan. HEO,
to
f{ o g t' r
Mc E I w a i n •
Elizabethtown College. Pa.
:\1iss Lynn Ericson, HEO,
to Fred Hyer, New Jersey
College of · Medicine and
Den tis try .. lersE!Y City. !'i..J.
:\Iiss l\lary Ann Campbell.
AS9. to Thomas Weikel.
~1AE9.
.
:Vliss ~:leanor Hamilton.
Hc9 , to Richard Hasty, New
~;a')tle.
Miss
Carol
Diekinson.
!\1(:9, to Edward Fisher,
Hueknell Cniv.
.\1iss Cathie Haird. ED9. to
John C.
White.
Eastern
Baptist College.
J
Christmas is over, finances
are depleted, and all that
work that we. planned to
catch up on remains to be
done. A<; is too often the case
at this time, we must
announce
that
several
Brothers were lacking either
originality or money when
they confronted the problem
of getting a r.hristmas present
for a special friend,solving it
by giving either a · nifty glass
cutter or a small trinket they
had found no previous use
. for.
Our traditional snowball
battle with the triangle· gang
took place Monday night,
with us as hosts this year. We
had a major problem in
hitting our targets as they
appeared to have had a strategy meeting beforehand
where they learned to waver
and stagger. A side effect ofthis meeting apparently was
to make them very hungry, as
they rummaged through the
foog we usually reserve for
other lower class visitors,
such as garbage tr~cks.
Delta Tau Delta
'Twas the week before
finals, and all through the
house , not a Delt was
studying, not even Knauss.
The nylons were hung on
the deck with care. in hopes
that Jute~ Trapp soon would
be there. And up from the
bar there arose such a datt.er,
I dropped my Martini to :;ee
what's the matter.
And
what
to
my
bloodshot
{'yes
should
appear. but .lollyDean :\Tickles
ehugging a beer.
The pinmatcs were nestled
all snug in our beds, while
visions of diamonds danced
thru their heads.
Jt's only in .iest we speak
of our party, limited to milk
and cookies by Hardy.
"Supressed D\•sires" is our
theme•, Saturday Night will be
th(• scene.
P.S. After a gwat 68. we
wish you a fine 6~.
Ka_p pa Alpha
With
on('
week
finals many of the newly
ret 11 rned
brothers
have
already started studying, of
course,
only
inbctwcen
hockey practice and snowball
fights. Brother Buz West will
lead team pra~tice and t€!ach
personally c:hecking. ·All he
has to learn now is stopping
and turning.
We wish someone would
tell us who the new guy in
the new wing_ is. He highly
resembles a 182 lb. can of
vanilla nutriment. Brother
Yates?
Impossible.
The
KAstle was defended Monday
night when challenged by the
new colony out West. At least
50
brothers
highly
intoxicated with the madness
of battle drove the enemy
back. Come on hummers
don't stop the tradition.
Lambda Chi Alpha
On the last night before
vacation the Lambda Sty was
overflowing,
and Brother
Chet walked off with the
Grand Prize Blue Ribbon.
''Hog Kisser" put up some
stiff competition. as did
Drippy , but they came up
short by the length of a eurly
tail anrl had to be content
with
the
self-satisfying
knowledge: <•f d ~uud d'f0rt.
In .\1emoriam: A little
pie<~e of everyone of us diPd
la'it week as the doors of thP
Tip Top were dosed for thf:
final timc~.
In .\'lemoriam \io. 2: To
those
three
dt•pran~ rl
brothers, Baldy. Hutch. and
Cub, wlto. in a fleeting
moment
of
assiduous
pukhritude , threw off tlw
last vestiges of frPPdom and
e nsc h o n<~ed
them Sf! I\'es
forever in the bleak. harre!l.
bosom
of
bondage.
''Henceforth
and
wherewithal. darth we into
the sanctimonious chasms of
our
monchromatic
cerebellum. Amen."
Pi Kappa Alpha
the
Ladies and Cientlemen of
Unidel
community.
having nothing in the way of
trivia to relay to you this
week, we interviewed our
Brothers for suggestions. Here
are
their
reactions,
revelations, and resolutions.
Brother Gaspari revealen to
our interviewers that the
National Office i~ alive and
well
in Patagonia (they
couldn't locate -Argentina).
Recently initiated Brothers
Bandekow,
Russell,
and
Stouffer resolve not to attack
our pledge and resident knave
for more tban four hours at a
time. Brother Dii~eonardo
vows to become a state Fuzz ,
knowing
so
well
tt:e
intricacies of the Delawar.'!
vehicle code. The Brotherly
Hawk
vows
to
restrict
wenching during Rush to not
less than 20 and not more
than 26 hours of every day.
Brother Burris vows not to
attempt cet.tain things with a
circular saw, and Brother
Levitsky vows never to go to
dinner alone again .
Delta Epsilon Chi
Cengratulations are in
order to the Oelta Epsilon
Chi basketball team in their
victories over Pi
Kappa
Alpha's squad, and Sigma
Tau's hot ball handler's.
Rrotht:!r ~1oon hung in there
and Hrother Ridge eame on
strong hut always dribbled
befon! he shot. Meanwhile.
Brother Chet eouldn't Pven
get it up and in.
Thanks are extended to
Dean \iiek!Ps . Prof. H.J.
Donnellv. Bruc.:e <;pyrell, and
Bill
Vosberg
for
their
assistanee in the achievement
of our affiliation with Tau
Kappa
Epsilon fraternity.
whieh will be'-'ome oflidal
Jan. 16.
Outstanding athlete of tlw
week is Brother HonnN. thf'
rock of our basketball team.
He had it hard on all
occasions.yet he managed to
come through for the big
S(!Ores.
The
Brothers
wish
everyone a very warm '69 and
extend the hope for a lasting
peace in the coming year.
RENO'S PIZZA
"FREE DELIVERY
22 ACADEMY STREET
737-9705
FUN WORKING IN EUROPE
before
MONARCH NOTES
·Books
·S<>hool Supplies
·Office Supplies.
·S<'hool And
Business
Stationery
·Weddin~ Invitations On Short :\oti<'e
NEWARK STATIONERS
44 EAST MAIN STREET
368-4032 .
GUARANTEED JOBS ABROAD! Get paid, travel, meet people,
SUMMER and YEAR ROUND. 20 countries, 9 paying job categories offered. For FREE cultural program literature including
details and application s, write: " ISTC admissions, 866 _United
Nations Plaza, New York , N.Y. A Non-Profit Student Membership Organization.
•
PAGI 16
UNIVERSITY ·op DELAWARI!, NI!WARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
Navy Information Team·
To Visit Next Week
A Naval Aviation Officer
Information Team from the
Naval Air Station Willow
Grove, Pennsylvania will be at
the university on Jan. 15 and
16, 1969.
They will counsel male
college studc~ nts on the
opportunities
of
a
commission
as
a
Naval
Officer.
Mental
Aviation
exams; multiple ehoice, will
bt~
offered to interested
Sorority Group
Has Symposium
To Organize ·
The Sorority Committee
of
the
1\ssoeiation
of
Women Student.-; held an
introductory
"Sorority
Sympoisum" last Tuesday in
the Morgan H.oom of. the
Studt~ nt CentN.
Designed to bring together
women
interested
in
Pstablishing a sorority system
on th e univt~ rsity eampus tlw
nw *' t i n g
p r o v i dc d
an
opportunity
for
wurmm
students
to
talk
with
uwmbers of the eummit.tee
' and
repH•sentatiws
of
Wilmington Pan -lleiiPnic .
Sondra 1\rnsdorl', 1\S~ .
ehalrman
of
the
!\ WS
cotntllti.t~·c
t!neouraged all
Parnestly interested students
to beeome involved in efforts
· to initiate loc ~al sororities.
The
next
organizational
mel'ting, open to t'Vc!ryone,
will be lwld on Feb. 6 at 7 : :w
p.m. in the Ewing H.ooms of
tlw Studtmt Centt>r. Anvotw
wishing further infurm~tion
should eontaet either Donna
Dalby in ~2f; Smyth, Mary
James in ;{ 1;{ llarrin~ton C or
Kathy Triekey in ;102 West H.
students at their convenience.
Several progrctms are available
in Naval Aviation.
Seniors can qualify for
pilot, flight officer or air
intelligent.oe officer and go on
active duty after graduation.
Students should inquire into
~hese programs during their
junior year.
Second
Semester
sophomores, and juniors may
apply fo~ summer training
programs (aviation reserve
officer candidate) which leads
to a commission and flight
training.
Students with less than
20/20 vision are eligible for
such programs as flight
officer and air intelligence
offieer. Students are invited
to stop by the K.au b Hall ; 9
a.m. - :I p.m., to investigate
the opportunities of flying
with the United States Navy.
Anonymous Land Donor
(Continued from Page ·1)
available for resident!e halls
and instructional buildings.
Jn announcing the gift,
President KA. 'l'rabant said,
'''l'he University is extremely
pleased to receive this gift
which enables us to make
detailed plans for effective
u~;e of this entire area. We arc
grateful for the continued
support of this
private
benefactor
who
has..
generously provided much of
the land for · this new
campus.''
.II .
~ . 1~
Univer.dty officials have
been working for more than a
decade on long-range plans
for the orderly development
of campus facilities to meet
antidpated
enrollment
growth
and
changing
educational requirements.
,
y ou
· an
. \1!
·
he
ou
he
offi ·
est
Del
. ied
Inc .. ' , . • · l tS.
met- ••''"
nigl
SUC CCI
as ·.
Sec
Wei
Dex .
:j W
1
i
' 'u!'b
Dm·..r.- ~
sui nr 1 1.'
grou :·j~
.rC,
i
ac tl :\
with < raw::tl .
of t w d
orga•1i
•'· ''
Ale?'r
•r
bei r
qu e
~ C'' c r ~ :1
it i : ' lf> I
org<
bee •.... ,, ·:::s
the
Ass•
tak(
deCJ
; ~
·. _' H
WOl. ..
fai l
7 ---
r
.,
..E:/ r" -'
You can qualify, because you're a full-time student of the University of Delaware!
And look at the advantages:
• No Charge for Checks.
• No Minimum Balance.
• 25 free personalized checks each three-month penod during the regular school year,
plus a beautiful "Blue Hen·· leatherette folder . (Additional checks at a low cost of
lot each.)
• Privilege of bank-by-mail deposits to your account by parents.
• On·campus Farmers Bank Office in the Student Center Building. Hours: 9:00A.M. to
3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday .
1
)
f'.
,1! ,
•. I I
•
•
•
Al l
ch <
rna •... s.
Take advantage of this "No Cost" service. It will save you money. Sign up today at
our Campus branch.
·
FARM~~ BANK .
STATE OF DELAWARE
••et ·
TIE fiiST 1111 ·11 TIE fiiST STATE
Highway
M.
JMIVI
lnco-rpo·rated ·samnQ Association
cials have
10re than a
, ,mge plans
lv <k velopment
>~ :tiPs to meet
'n rollment
d
changing
· Ui <(' ments.
.:_,Aabk
t~J/ ·
3:00 P.M.
In Placement Office
Grad Guide Here
Installs New Officers At Phoenix
Five
newly
elected
officers of the University of
Delaware Sailing Association,
Inc., were sworn in · at a
meeting
held Wednesday
night in the Phoenix.
ASO,
Wayne
Rigby,
succeeded Thomas Alexander
as commodore. First and
Second rear commodores are
Wells Rusteberg and Steven
Dex~r. Margaret Miller was
:>worn in as secretary, and
Doug Tuttle as treasurer.
The USDA is presently
suing the university on the
grounds that the university
acted arbitrarily in the
withdrawal of its recognition
of the club as a student ·
organization. According to
Alexander the complaints are
being made on the equity
question.
According to Alexander,
it is the contention of the
organization that they have
been dealt with unfairly by
the Sturlent Government
Association, because it has
taken no steps to oppose the .
decision. Alexander stated " I
wo~·ld say that the SGA has
failed
us
and
most
particularly its presidtmt, Dee
Lafferty."
Alexander
said
that
according to the Students
Rights and Responsibilities
Statement,
section
four,
" Student
Organizations
, petition the SGA Senate for
recognition , each submitting
a statement of purpose, a
constitution . .. Upon
the
a•)proval by the Senate and
the
Office
of Student
Services,
recognition
is
accorded these groups...
These groups may have an
affiliation with organizations
outside
the
university ,
provided this relationship
entails no conflid with
university objectives, policies
and activities."
According to Alexander,
'' I haVf~ ye t to be shown
'>'tr bylaws connict
with the. polici,~s and goctls of
Delaware ... We have followed
the law of the land. At no
time have we violated any
rule of this university."
The outcome of the
litigation will be released by
the Court of Chancery - of
Delaware on Monday.
,;hm·e
::::
· ·y·wrlis··:·:·:·:·s·o--al·ght··
Urgent need for identical
twins of either sex. Ages 16
to 40 years. Two hour.
painless study of brain waves.
$5.00 each per hour.
Please
contact :
Department of Opthalmology,
Jefferson !\1edical College
S29-6765.
Peterson's
Guides
to
Graduate Study, 1968-1969
edition,
containing
information on over 13,000
graduate programs, is now
available for student use in
the Placement Office in Raub
Hall.
The Guides are arranged
in 10 volumes, covering
gra duate programs in the Arts
and
Sciences,
Biological
Scienees ,
Business,
Education,
Engineering,
Communication, Library and
Information Sciences, and
'Public Administration and
International Affairs.
Each volume is subdivided
into particular areas of study.
'!:'he programs of study listed
indude those leading to both
master's and doctoral degrees.
The Guides exist in order
to bring a more orderly flow
of information from graduate
schools ,to undergraduates.
CENTER BARBER SHOP
10 EXPERT BARBERS - NO WAITING
I..ADIBS' A liEN'S HAIRCUTS
··Newark Shopplq Center -737-9853
1969 Caprice Coupe
'READY •••
.fROM THE
-WORD
e Lightweight Styling
e Built-in Kick stand
e
Schwinn Tubular Rims
e Foam Cush ioned Saddle.
All bikes assembled No
charge service & repair -All
makes ..Large stock of parts.
S.D. KIRK & SON
173 E. MAIN STREET,
NEWARK
· No clowns . No hoopla. No
funny hats.
This is an event for the serious
car buyer. The man who has X number of dollars to spend and is determined to get his money's worth. and
maybe more.
Come to a Chevrolet Showroom
during our Value Showdown.
Ask the man to show you, on
paper, how you can order most any
1969 ..Chevrolet with a big V8 and
automatic trnnsmission for less tha n
you could last year.
Come in and spend some time.
Dig. probe, ask questions, take notes.
You owe it to yourself to be thorough.
Go for a drive.
Get a free sample of Chevrolet's
luxurious full-coil, cushioned rid<:'.
Shut the windows and see how fresh
the interior stays, thanks to Astro
Ventila tion. F£•el th<:' kick of the higgest standard V8 in our fiPld .
Then go down the stn·e t or across
town and see how W<' stack up against
Those Oth<>r Cars.
We think you'll wind up with a
Chevy.
More people do, you know.
•auJ'H·'"'
Putting you first, keeps us first.
The Chevrolet•
Value Showdown IS On.
YOUNG MEN WHO
UNDERSTAND
YOUNG MEN'S PROBLEMS
:·
ROBERT L. SIDELL AND ASSOCIATES
1700 W.A..WASET STREET WILMINGTON, DEL. 19806
Telephone 658-6844
1\'IASSACH USETTS ~I UTUAt Life Insurance Compa;,!l
M. JAMES BEZANSON, JR.
SPRINGFIELD. MASSACHUSETT S· ORGANIZED 1851
ROBERT J. LANDRUM, JR.
Duncan Featured To SPeak
At Basketball Dinner
Assistant athletic director
Raymond B. Duncan will be
the featured speaker at the
Second
Annual
Delaware
Basketball Dinner on January
15.
TO THE VICTORS BELONG THE SPOILS . . .The Boardwalk Bowl (left) and the Lambert Cup
plaque adorn the Delaware Fieldhouse Display Case. With the loss of only seven seniors from this
year's championship team, the Boardwalk Bowl and annual Lambert Cup award may be here for a
long while . .'ilu/I/'ilolo II ~· Stllll Slmlwrl
Grapplers Win Fourthi WatersTopple Swarthmore
Duncan will speak on
" The Man Behind the Bench"
following a dinner in the
Rodney Room of the Student
Center at six p.m. Delaware
will host Lafayette- in a
basketball game at. Delaware
Fieldhouse at 8 p.m.
Delaware
defeated
Lafayette 91 -89 in ·· four
overtimes when the two
teams met in (<~aston, Pa.,
early this season.
Members of coach Dan
Peterson's Blue Hen varsity
will be on hand to be
introdueed before the dinner
cials
and Peterson .w ill make some
pre-dinner remarks.
Tiekets for both the
dinner and...the game are only
$5 per person. Reservations
may be made by calling the
Alumni
Office
at
the
university ,
738 -2~41.
Everyone is welcome.
..... ·- .
--
R~odes
Drug .
Store
TRAILWAYS
BUS SERVICE
36 East Main
Stre~t
(Continued from Page 20)
8y ST F. V E ANDERSON
e I a w a r c 's
varsity
.l; rPsl.ling tParn
beat
Swarthmore
:H-2
last
WednPsda~· in tlw Carpt•nter
Spurts Building.
!'warthrrwn~ f'orf'eit.Pd two
rn.ttehes. and the lopsidt,d
.~' ''>r<' hides th<• f'ad that
sPve;-:tl of tlw individual
conl.t-sb "VPre quite dos<!.
Tilt• bt!sl of these was the
Hill IL mat.d1 between lliek
l\~or ri s qf' Delawart• and t :arv
\l ussbaurn of Swarthrrion.!.
\!either wn•stiN was able to
I)
get a takt!down in Llw lirsL
pt:;riod. \1orris was in th1•
down 'position at tlw start of
llw
SPI:ond . period
and
qtti('kJ~:
n•v..rsed :--.iussbaum
for
two
points.
Then
\ussbaum I:'S<~apt!d for otw
point.. and llw t. wo ·.n·estiPd
standin~ up f'or t.lw rPnutindN
of tlw pt!riod.
l)({AW
1\t llw start. of' tlw third
period Morris \vas in t.lw up
position,
but
Nussbaum
t!St'aJwd a se1·ond t.i nw for
anotlwr point. 'l'lw mat.1:lr
PtHi<'d in a 2-2 draw.
In tlw 12:J lb. wei~ht .-lass
Ed
So<'t'IHSo
pintwd
SwarthmorP's 1\lan H.obin in
f> :51. Hobin INi Sol'corso,
2-'1. at t.lw t•nd of tlw st•cond
pNiod. In l.lw third period
Sot•t•orsn's
supl'rior
t~onditioning . enahlt•rl him to
c"'
Cll
c
Cll
c.
E
takedown
and
pin
his
opponent. !If' is :~ - I this year.
Tlw l'rosh grapplPYs beat
the Swart.hnH1re J.V. ~t:{ - 0.
Th e frosh are 2-0 this year:
the varsity is -1-0. Hoth te:1ms
travel
to
Ph ilad£>1phia
tomorrow nite for a match
against thP Tt>mplc ( lwls. The
frosh wrestle at li: :10 p.m ..
and thP varsity match starts
at H p.m.
Delaware v. Swarthmore :
wrestling
5 , 5 ~~3 :
5occorso (D) pin Robin
S : JJ .JO : Jarmon (D) pin Cambell
137 :
Rathmell
(D)
dec
Nussbaum D. 5-1.
145 : Surm (D) dec wood 8 -o.
152: Baxter (D) dec Thomas
4 0
Morris
(D)
• .160:
Nussbaum G. 2 - 2.
o-~ _6 7 : Ernst (D) dec Blakemore
1
177 : Forfeit to Delaware
unl : Forfeit to Delaware
~ drew
Swim Meet-
\\'OHI>~
(Continued from Page 19)
t o
i 11 t t> r e o I I (' g i a t .l'onipeti lion.
Ht>ns pia~· host to
Lt•hi~h
Pni\'t'rsil.y
at
( :arpenter Sports Building
tomorrow at 2 :00, admission
is fr·pe wit:1 l.D. 'l'lw VarsitY
will Pnter tlw llle('l with a 2-;·1
record and tlw Frosll with a
:1-1 record.
Ttw
were outscored 17-5 from
that point to the unpleasant
finish.
In their first game of the
new yea r the Blue Ht>ns easily
defeated Drex£>1 7H-60 last
~3aturday in Philadelphia. In
the process the team broke a
fi ve ~anw losing streak.
It took Drexel six minutes
to score from the floor as the
Hens, who Jed from the
onset, spurted ahead 9-1. At
intermission they led -12-19 as
a result of an exce ptional
man to man defensive effort
by .Jim Coueh, Steve .Jackson
and the entire Delaware
squad. Drexel was held to
only five baskets in the first
twenty minutes.
Couch also had a strong
offensive game as he poured
in 14 pc:>ints during the first
half and finished with 22 for
the night. This tied him with
Dragon forward Ron Coley
for scoring honors. Loren
Pratt
added
20 despite
fouling out and Jackson
chipped in 17.
_Lt.'t
v:
1'
'l
,_.
5
']
f
l
~
~
FOH TilE WOI:LI>
nul a man ~· lor~
in
1ha1 hl• lun·~ his ('Ountry:
lt~l him ralht•r ~· Jury in this.
that ht• lon.•s his 1\ind.
Save up to 40%
h
S•
B..\H A'I F..\ITII
a
a
b
/'
Sheet music -
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DELAWARE,
NEW~RK,
P.AGB 19
DELAWARE, JANUARY 10 ·1969
Cag·ers Winless In .E. Carolina Classic;
Fall To VPI, Wm. & Mary And Cornell
ak
some
Don't ask the basketball
tearri what kind of Christmas
they had.
The Hens traveled to
Greenvill", North Carolina to
compete in the Eastern
Carolina Classic on Dec. 26-8
and lost three straight to
Virginia Tech, William and
Mary, and Cornell.
The scores of the games,
79-58, 82-76, and 93-77,
would tend to indicate that
the Hens, moving up a notch
in
class
from
the
not-too-impressive
Pocono
Classic
in
which
they
partici'Pated last year, should
stay in the little leagues.
the
only
Lions
: the
the
~ 11.
9.
NOT TRUE
et
SENIOR Rich Wilson edges by his Temple counterpart in the
breaststroke to help the Hens pull out a victory in the 400 yard
medley relay.
Stu({ 1'/wlo /J y Slr'l'<' .'il'hl'il!•r
But this is far from the
truth. In the Virginia Tech
game, the Hens were down by
only four with ten minutes
left in the game. But in the
next six and a half minutes,
they couldn't score a point.
They were down by ten with
4:32 left, and then the game
broke wide open. Six-foot
seven
inch
Ed
Roth
committed his fifth personal,
and the Hens, who had lost
Temple Owls Submerge
By STEVE Kl RKPATRICK
The Delaware frosh and
varsity split a swim meet with
Temple
U niversity
Wednesday
evening
at
Carpenter Sports Building
.with a crowd of 100
spectators looking on .
Temple won the varsity
competition by a score of
56-18 and the Hen frosh won
54 -19.
The varsity meet went
down to the last race with
Temple winning the 100
freestyle relay.
UNDERWOOD SETS MAR-K .
''I
was
very
much
How About A
Hen Pep Bandt
There are five remammg
home basketball games this
season at which the presence
of a pep band would greatly
the
<~ heerleaders
in
aid
arousing spirit for Delaware's
basketball team.
Pep bands are an integral
part of major college games.
A band would certainly liven
the Delaware games up.
whieh would entice more
spectators to eome , which in
turn would improve the
team's performance. Coach
Dan Peterson has reiterated
his interest in such a band a
number of times.
Hasketball games at the
Palestra
are
indeed
an
experience. and this is a
direct result of the pep hands.
\\hen the team comes on the
court'. the band is there to get
the fans juiced and keep them
juiced, whether the team is
winning or losing. The event
is nearly turned into a party,
rather than the usual funeral
at Delaware games.
Am one
interested
in
fol'ming a pep band should
contact Greer Firestone in
the WHEN office.
encouraged by the new
breaststroke
rt'cord"
commented Coach Harry
Rawstrom. The Delaware
varsity 's Dave Underwood set
a new pool and university
record in that event with a
time of 2:a0.3 . Tw.o other
pool reeords were broken in
the meet, both by Temple.
:~utch Tropp set a new record
of 22.9 in the 50 freestyle,
and Scott Bannister set a new
one meter diving reeord of
254.55 points.
"Our overall times showed
that wf:' held up well over the
holidays," said Rawstrom,
''so that with normal work
<>nd usual improvement the
team can loo,k forward to
better times. "
Co-captain Loren Pratt with
two minutes left in the first
half,
were
completely
annihilated, as the Gobblers
outscored them, 15-4 to coast
to th~victory.
·
"Depth
was
the
"all-important
factor,"
grumbled
Coach
Dan
Peterson. Virginia Tech used
eight men interchangeably
without
a
loss
on
effectiveness. When we had to
go to our bench, it was a
different story."
Coach Ed Johnson's frosh
team fared well, winning the
meet on the strength of their
freestyle
swimming,
by
winning all five individual
freestyle races. Bog DeYoung
won two of these for
Delaware.
Patterson of Temple won
PRATT BENCHED
Foul trouble also hurt the
Hens, just like it hurt them
the day before. Pratt had four
personals late in the first half,
and
consequently
was
benched for nine minutes.
On the final day ()f the
tournament, the strain of
intense competition got to
the
flu -weakened
Hens.
Showing signs of fatigue,
Delaware handed Cornell a
21-5 lead in the first seven
minutes and never could
cateh up. Co-captain .Jim
Couch cut the lead to 38-:~6
and 40-a8, shortly before the
end of the half. The Hens,
trying for the last shot of the
half, lost a pass and (ieorge
Chapman hit a ao footer to
give the Hig Red a 12-38 edge
at intermission.
BLOW LEAD
The next day, the story
wao; much the same. The Hens
had a 58-51 lead over William
and Mary, who was on an
eight game losing streak, and
there were 13 and a half
minutes left. ·
But for the next seven and
a half minutes, Delaware
couldn't make a field goal.
When they got back into the
groove, they were losing,
68-60, and never did catch
up.
"We just stopped playing
offense," moaned Peterson ,
"For some reason, we started
FIFTH STRAIGHT LOSS
In the second half. Uw
(Continued to Page 7)
In Swim Meet
Hens
DE YOUNG WINS TWO
trying to beat Willi~m and
Mary with one-on -one stuff.
That's a good way to blow a
game, and we certainly blew
this one."
two events, and set a new
pool reeord in the 200
individual medley.
Johnson commented that.
th£~ frosh showNi a ; slight
regression
due
to
tlw
vaeations at Thanksgiving and
esptH:iall~· at Christmas. and
will probably do e\'en bl'lter
when
eonditioning
is
improved.
Marching Band
FROSH JUICED
Wh.-n ask(~d about the fad
·that thP frosh times in th£'
last meet were fasttor than
somt' of the varsity times. he
attributed this to the raet
that the frosh an• always
more psyehologically exdted
than tlw varsil~· , si ncP they
an• new to the university and
(Continued to Paqe 18)
BEE HIVES' BlENDING BAR
The University Marching
Band will practice next
Thursday, January 16, at
1:30 p.m. In case of rain or
snow the practice will be held
Friday, January 17, at the
same time.
,.
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Here 1S one of our b•ggest sellers . Blended
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302 •
19711
366-8725
PAGE 20
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE, JANUARY 10, 1969
Waters Leads Lehigh Past Blue He-ns
By ALLEN RAICH
It's tough to win a
basketball game on the road
but when you only shoot
:n .H'Yr from the field and
don't score a bucket in the
last six minutes it is virtually
impossible.
The Blue Hens found that
out last Wednesday night in
Hethlehem, Pa., as their
offense performed erratically
and - evlmtually died in a
75-59 loss to an undersized,
u nimpressivt>
yet
juiced
Lehigh squad at the victors'
court.
The Engineers entered the
game with a dismal 1-9 record
and by winning avengt>d a
6 7 -t15 defeat at the hands of
Delaware, suffered earlier in
the ·season.The loss was costly ·
for thf! Hens as their overall
seasonal log dropped to 4-6
while
their
all-important
mark in the Middle Five fell
to 2-2.
DELAWARE CO- CAPTAIN JIM COUCH has been named to
the first weekly Eastern College Athletic Conference's all-star
team from the combined Divisions II and Ill.
Couch, a junior guard from Pekin, Illinois,
selected to the
learn on the basis of his 22 point, strong-defense game against
Drext"l Tech last Saturday afternoon.
Couch is the leading point producer on this year's Blue Hen
basketball team with 148 points, but Steve Jackson and Loren
Pratt have better point-per-game averages.
was
I'Y.NAMIC OUO
The
Lehigh
scoring
combination
of
5 -11
sophomore guard Hob V7alers
and 6-5 junior center Hob
Fortune proved fatal for the
Hens. The duo, which had
collected only four and eight
points respectively in their
first clash with the Hens,
collaborated for ,H> of the
hosts' 75 points. W1ters
tallied 25 points induding 9
of 18 from the field while
J.<ortune shot the eyes out of
nine of ten shots from the
floor on his way to a 21 point
game. As a team, Lehigh
connected on 29 of 53 for
54.7%.
Foul troubles, a common
dilemma for the Hens all
season, on<..-e again played a
key role in the Delaware
defeat. Loren Prall, Ed Roth
and John McMiliPn all picked
up early foul::; which caused
them to play more cautiously
and
less aggressively on
defense.
This
deficiency
enabled Lehigh to go to the
basket more often and pick
up points on drivPs and feeds
underneath and around the
ba-;ket.
The Engineers rebo':Jnding
was remarkable. Despite a
starting five whose heights
were 5-8, 5-11, 6-0, 6-3, and
6 - 5, · they
ou tmuscled
Delaware espedally in the
second half, and finished with
a 4 2-a9 edge off the boards
over the taller Hens. Roth led
the Hens with 1:{ rebounds
while McMillen grabbed 11.
HIGH SCORER
Steve Jackson was the
high scorer for the Hens with
19 points, one better than his
average of 18. However, he
had an atrodous shooting
night hitting on only 9 of 25
field goal attempts. Pratt, a
17.4 point per game man , had
12 points while McMillen
added 11.
The contest was a seesaw
minutes before the Engineers
took the lead to slay at 11:25
of the first half, as a 12 foot
bank shot by Waters put
Lehigh in front 16.14. f'I'Om
that point they surged to a
32-28 halftime lead.
In the second half the
Hens vain ly tried to overtake
the determim!d Engineers.
They did pull to within :{6-35
with 17: :~5 remaining but
from that point Waters and
Fortune took over. In the
next six minutes 29 seeonds
they aecounted for 11 of the
Engineer's 19 points. At one
stretch during this pt>riod the
Hens were unable to hit a
basket for
almost three
minutes.
PRATT OUT
\Nith
11:06 remammg.
and Lehigh up 5:~-,14 Pratt
committed his fifth personal
foul and Jpft the game. Unable
to cut the lead, the Hens
finally went into a full court
zone press with 8:56 on the.
clock, trailing 54-48. They
cuttheleadtofour, 56-52at
7:~{H of the second half. on
two successive jump shots by
.Jackson and then Delaware
switched to their customary
man
to
man
defensiv~
alignment.
The Hens' last bre.ath
came however with 6:10 left
when center Roth hit a bank
shot to cut the margin to
5H-54. This proved to be the
Hens' last fit!ld goal as they
Inside Track - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · t h · e · ·.b.as.·k.e.t,._h.it·ti·n·g·a-fa·n·t·a·st.i<.~--·b·a·t·tl·e-r•.o.r-t·h·e-·fi·rs·t-·ni·n·e----·(C·o·n·t·in·u·edlllllll!toP.I!Pa~g·e·l·S·)- ·
''We Must Leave
The Game Alone''
I
'l'lu• l..ll'l'ambll' lo t.lw 1>l'ficial pla~· in~ rules of
l'OIIq!l' foot.hall is known as "The Fo.othall ( ~odP. " [I.
i ~;
printNI i>~· Llw Foothall Hules Committee
imnwdiai.Piy in adratH'l' of thP official pla~· in~ rules
and st.al.<•s quilt• simpl~· t.hat.
·'TradiLiomtll~· .
football is tlw ganw
of tlw sc·hools and colh•ges."
lnt.t.•rcoiiPgiatl' football dot--s indet>cl lwlong to till'
l'olkg<'s. IL is t.lwir ultimal.t• dPcision that governs
what constitutt--s t.lw prPst>nt da~· ganw of football and .
what it. should ;tt•c·omplish as a tnetnbt•r of tlw
unin•rsit~ ·
c·otnmunit~·. Th(• \"iPwpoints of (~Wr~·
ttll'tlllwr of th.- \iational t'oiiPgiall• ,\thiPtic
. \sscwiation on cru!'ial issuc•s facing Uw \CAA rt>flPcts
tlw intc•n•sl of !.111• adtninistration. fal'ulty. studt.•nL.,;
pla~· i ttg IIH• ganw , :.he• c·•.>;wlws anrl also tlw financit-r
of t.hc· l'ullq!PS.
SKY ROCKI.:TI'J(; ~ ~ XPL-"~SES
Tlwn· c'llll lw no doubt t.ltal t lw <'osts of
inlt•n·oiiPgiatt• football an· rising sky ltigh. To notP. in
tlw l'acifil' Eight conft•n•tH'l' tlwrP w,1., an increse of
9 7 .:l', in football budgPt.s on•r a tPn yt•ar JWriod
IJl't wc•(•n I ~:)7 to 1 ~Jn7 . !\luch of this budgt--t increase
c·;ut lw attributt•d to tlw incrl:'asP in tlw cost of tiring.
Yet most is dut• to a ruiP that was ori ginally plaePd on
tlw \iC ,\ ,\'s rule hooks right after \\"orld \\'ar II.
L' nlimitt'd substitution in football permits a full
11 -man unit to run on and off tht.• fit•ld l'ach time tlw
ball changes hanrls. One unit is trainl'd in offense. one
in defens.•. Tht•rt.• an' also spt>cial teams for kick
returns and otlwr situations.
Within unlimih•d substitution. more popularly
known as two platoui1 football. lies the major crises
of tht• annual :">JC.\i\ comention bt•ing held this week
in Los Angch•s.
The original unlimitt>d substitution ruling lastl'cl
-
--~--------~--
--
until 1952 when tlw eol!egiate rule makers , with the
dollar sign in mind , inacted a form of limited
substitution to reduce the cost of intercollegiate
football. With a substitution ntle change coming into
effeet every year until 1965, the amount of
substitution increased until in 1965 the colleges
returned to two platoon football. copying their
popular professional counterparts.
The fact that two platoon football has increased
football spPndings cannot be denied. Tht>re are more
· specialists. biggPr squads, more coaches. more
Pquipnwnt. and addt>d transportation and nowadavs
everything costs motwy.
·
THE I>OLL\R HOW I\1P0t{T:\NT?
.Just how important. ' is tlw almighty dollar to
eoiiP;!t•s? :'11d;eoq.(e Bund~· . prt>sidet f, of t.lw Ford
Foundation statt>s in a spt>cial report that the colleges
and uniH•rsitit>s "an"' fa<'ing what might Pasily beeome
a crisis." liP adcll:'d. "\\'e are faePd with immilwnt.
bankruptc·~· and finaneial c•nwrgPncy at a thne when
our public standing has nt·n•r bPen higher."
What cloPs this havt> to do with football? \lone~·
for financial aid. rf'cruiting cos ts , and training tables
dm•s not grow on tret>s. Most college football teams
operatP at a deficit. Only a few operate at a profit.
But. so what? ls tlw principal rea<;on for maintaining
a football team to raisl' mmwy for- the institution?
CPrtainly not. an~·otw who professes to the prof.it
making proposal is gravely mistak£'11. As \Valter Hyers
of tlw \iCAA says football programs are for the
student who plays tlw game. the college which
conducts the program and the coaches who have a
responsibility to their successors.
·
If lllOIU'~· is that important to the :\C :\ .-\ rull' lllakers
why cton t tlw~· plal·e a national eeiling on•r th£'
· grants-in-aid and sdwlarships which now are limit~d
only by conference statute or not at all ; place a
ceiling over recruit-ing. (recruitments at sueh nobiP.
institutions as Oklahoma, or Texas are ridiculous) :
but not changP that which today is making college
football great.
FOR FREE SUBSTITUTION
Thert> are numerous ralid arguments for both sides
being diseussPd at this moment in Los Angeles
concerning the fate of two platoon football. My
conclusions concerning unlimited substitution as it
stands today are these.
·
r
1. Tlw student playing the game is not a full time
athlPtf'. Sports is just one of many facets of a college
student's life. Most of his time is spent pouring over
textbooks and in t.he laboratory. With limited
subst.i.tution. a football player must learn both
offensin• and defensive plays rather than just one or
the other. He must in effect spenrl double the t+mc he
- now spt-mds wit.h football. There just is not enough
tinw.
2. The students' degree of participation would
decreasP. There would not be as many players needed
on the team and good , qualified, interested players
would be forced into an early retirement.
3. The coaches would not be able to utilize their
own spPcific talents to the fullest in teaching the
players. The players would not be able to specialize in
one phase of the game and the game of football
would return to the pre-1965 da\'s of colorless.
plodding football.
·
What with the great drawing powers of the
professionals, a return to one platoon football might
result in the demi.s e of intercollegiate football. As
.Jack Curtis of the UniverSity of California at Santa
Harbara, chairman of the college football coaches
rules committee said, "This is college football's finest
hour. We must leave the game alone."
some
the
only
Lions
~ the
the
~ t11.
et