20
\ Vol. 100, No. 26 University of Delaware, Newark, - Delaware Tuesday, December 7: 197 6 DELAWARE'S NEW MOTOR Vehicle Code permits right turns after a stop at all intersections unless specifically prohibited. This modification adds yet another sign to the growing forest at the corner of Delaware and South College Avenues. (See related story page 1- ). Administrative Hearings Maintained Council Upholds Options for Students Accused of Code Violations By KATHERINE WALSH The Council on Student Judicial Affairs which has been evaluating the administrative hearing clause of the Student Judicial System has decided not to abolish the clause unless significant problems in the hearings are presented, said Dr . Edgar J. Townsend, associate dean of students. As it now stands a student charged with violations of the university Code of Conduct has the option of an administrative hearing conducted by the dean or the associate dean of students, or of appearing before the eight-member Hearing Board, composed of students, professionals and faculty . Had the judicial policy been · revised, students accused of code violations would be reqqired to appear before the Hearing Board, an option not readilv utilized by students in the past. In a meeting of the council last Friday, the sub- committee, set up to discuss the hearing question, deemed abolishing it unnecessary. The members did decide, however, to have students who had participated in the system last year and fall semester, evaluate it as it now operates. An evaluation form is scheduled to be drawn up and distributed to · past . participants this spring. Some alterations in the · current guidelines of the Student Guide to Policie_s, published last September, were also discussed at Friday's meeting. The number of times an accuser in a trial fails to show up for a scheduled hearing · was limited to one failure to attend. If the accuser fails to show up for a second time, charges would be dismissed. The change came about as the result of questions raised by one case that went through three scheduled hearing times until actually heard . Another clarification to be made in the Student' Guide to Policies involves the elaboration of the definition· of "certified mail" as it appears in the policies concerning notification of · charges. It was also decided that tapes of a hearing will now be erased three months after the decision. This was formulated to prevent a backlog of tapes and allow utilization of those no longer needed . Townsend explained that because the Student Guide to Policies are updated each academic year clauses will continually be changed and clarified. In further business, the council elected a new chairwoman, Jill Huber, a senior criminal justice major. Nicholas Subashi, this semester's chairman, will graduate at the end of the semester. New Undergraduate Poli_cy Lowers Graduate · level Rate By RACHEL SUSSMAN Full-time undergraduate students with 12-15 credits may now take graduate level courses for the same fee as undergraduate level courses. The flat rate tuition charge is $470 a semester for Delaware residents and $1037.50 for non-residents to all courses: Supreme Court Refuses Desegregation Case This policy was implemented in September "between the provost's office, the treasurer's office and the president's office," according to President E.A. Trabant. By KRIST A REBANE The Supreme Court has refused to hear an appeal brought before it by the State of Delaware and nine Delaware school districts opposing the desegregation analysis plan to combine Wilmington School District with 10 other districts. The court refused on November 29 to review the case "for want of jurisdiction." The original desegregation order was issued last spring by a three-judge U.S. District Court. At that time the district court ordered that secondary grades county-wide have a 10 to 35 per cent distribution of black students by September 1977, and that primary grades have the same distribution of blacks by September 1978. The court also directed the plaintiffs to submit plans both for intra- and inter-district desegregation. . . The case was appealed to the Supreme Court on grounds that city and suburban school districts should not be combined and that a 10 to 35 per cent quota was not acceptable. At the present time, Wilmington and one other school district have a majority of black" students, while the other nine districts are more than 90 per cent white. The Interim Board of Education was put in charge of drafting a desegregation plan by the U.S. District 'Court, and is composed of 13 local school hoard representatives. Newark School District, · with approximately 17,000 students, and the Wilmington School District, with over 13,000 students, each have two representatives on the Interim Hoard. The other nine districts each have one member. To ' help board members formulate a desegregation plan, the Interim Board has established 16 task forces to concentrate on such areas as curriculum, instruction, . finances. and transportation. Staff, administrators, and faculty members of the affected school districts serve on the task forces and are appointed by the board. Each task force is aided by a citizens advisory committee, made up of • parents, students, and community people. Also working with the Interim School Board on the desegregation question is the Citizens Alliance for Public Education. According to Betty Lewis, one of two chairpersons for the Alliance, the organization is an "umbrella" group · composed of community people, educators, civic leaders, and parents. Thirty organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Delaware School Board Association, and Parent Teacher Associations (PTA), plus 150 individual members make up the Alliance, Lewis said. Lewis said the three goals of the Citizens Alliance are to maintain and promote quality education, promote citizen involvement, and peaceful implementation of any court ordered desegregation. The Alliance's first (Continued to Page 10) CONTRIBUTIONS ARE TRICKLING in to the Starvation Relief Fund, but the community has a long way to go to reach the $300 goal. Donations will be accepted at The Review office, B-1 Student Center. from ) 0 a.m . to 3 p.m .. t The over-15-<:redit charge also applies regardless of the course level taken. In-state students taking over 15 credits will be charged $17 and out of state students will be charged $40 . 50 per credit hour which is half the undergraduate credit hour rate. Part-time undergraduates are not affected by this policy change and must still pay the regular graduate course fee, said Paul Becker, assistant treasurer for Revenues and Insurance. Confusion among students concerning this policy may have resulted because this semester's student worksheets with instructions for calculating the amount of fees a student owes the university, were distributed prior to the change, Becker said. The worksheet instructed full-time, undergraduate Delawareans to pay $45 per credit hour for graduate (Contlnueol ta ,.._10)

7: Administrative Hearings Maintained

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Vol. 100, No. 26 University of Delaware, Newark, -Delaware Tuesday, December 7: 197 6

DELAWARE'S NEW MOTOR Vehicle Code permits right turns after a stop at all intersections unless specifically prohibited. This modification adds yet another sign to the growing forest at the corner of Delaware and South College Avenues. (See related story page 1-).

Administrative Hearings Maintained Council Upholds Options for Students Accused of Code Violations

By KATHERINE WALSH

The Council on Student Judicial Affairs which has been evaluating the administrative hearing clause of the Student Judicial System has decided not to abolish the clause unless significant problems in the hearings are presented, said Dr . Edgar J. Townsend, associate dean of students .

As it now stands a student charged with violations of the university Code of Conduct has the option of an administrative hearing conducted by the dean or the associate dean of students, or of appearing before the eight-member Hearing Board, composed of students, professionals and faculty . Had the judicial policy been · revised, students accused of code violations would be reqqired to appear before the Hearing Board, an option not readilv utilized by students in the past.

In a meeting of the council last Friday, the sub­committee, set up to discuss the hearing question, deemed abolishing it unnecessary. The members did decide, however, to have students who had participated in the system last year and fall semester,

evaluate it as it now operates . An evaluation form is scheduled to be drawn up and distributed to · past

. participants this spring . Some alterations in the ·

current guidelines of the Student Guide to Policie_s, published last September, were also discussed at Friday's meeting. The number of times an accuser in a trial fails to show up for a scheduled hearing · was limited to one failure to attend. If the accuser fails to show up for a second time, charges would be dismissed.

The change came about as the result of questions raised by one case that went through three scheduled hearing times until actually heard .

Another clarification to be made in the Student' Guide to Policies involves the

elaboration of the definition· of "certified mail" as it appears in the policies concerning notification of

· charges. • It was also decided that

tapes of a hearing will now be erased three months after the decision. This was formulated to prevent a backlog of tapes and allow utilization of those no longer needed .

Townsend explained that because the Student Guide to Policies are updated each academic year clauses will continually be changed and clarified.

In further business, the council elected a new chairwoman, Jill Huber, a senior criminal justice major. Nicholas Subashi, this semester's chairman, will graduate at the end of the semester. •

New Undergraduate Poli_cy Lowers Graduate ·level Rate

By RACHEL SUSSMAN

Full-time undergraduate students with 12-15 credits may now take graduate level courses for the same fee as

• undergraduate level courses. The flat rate tuition charge is $470 a semester for Delaware residents and $1037.50 for non-residents to all courses:

Supreme Court Refuses Desegregation Case This policy was implemented in September "between the provost's office, the treasurer's office and the president's office," according to President E.A. Trabant .

By KRIST A REBANE

The Supreme Court has refused to hear an appeal brought before it by the State of Delaware and nine Delaware school districts opposing the desegregation

analysis plan to combine Wilmington School District with 10 other districts.

The court refused on November 29 to review the case "for want of jurisdiction."

The original desegregation order was issued last spring by a three-judge U.S. District Court. At that time the district court ordered that secondary grades county-wide have a 10 to 35 per cent distribution of black students by September 1977, and that primary grades have the same distribution of blacks by September 1978. The court also directed the plaintiffs to submit plans both for intra- and inter-district desegregation.

. .

The case was appealed to the Supreme Court on grounds that city and suburban school districts should not be combined and that a 10 to 35 per cent quota was not acceptable. At the present time, Wilmington and one other school district have a majority of black" students, while the other nine districts are more than 90 per cent white.

The Interim Board of Education was put in charge of drafting a desegregation plan by the U.S. District 'Court, and is composed of 13 local school hoard representatives. Newark School District, · with approximately 17,000 students, and the Wilmington School District, with over 13,000 students, each have two representatives on the Interim Hoard. The other nine districts each have one member.

To ' help board members formulate a desegregation plan, the Interim Board has established 16 task forces to concentrate on such areas as curriculum, instruction, . finances. and transportation.

Staff, administrators, and faculty members of the affected school districts serve on the task forces and are appointed by the board . Each task force is aided by a citizens advisory committee, made up of • parents, students, and community people.

Also working with the Interim School Board on the desegregation question is the Citizens Alliance for Public Education. According to Betty Lewis, one of two chairpersons for the Alliance, the organization is an "umbrella" group

· composed of community people, educators, civic leaders, and parents. Thirty organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the Delaware School Board Association, and Parent Teacher Associations (PTA), plus 150 individual members make up the Alliance, Lewis said.

Lewis said the three goals of the Citizens Alliance are to maintain and promote quality education, promote

citizen involvement, and peaceful implementation of any court ordered desegregation.

The Alliance's first (Continued to Page 10)

CONTRIBUTIONS ARE TRICKLING in to the Starvation Relief Fund, but the community has a long way to go to reach the $300 goal. Donations will be accepted at The Review office, B-1 Student Center. from ) 0 a.m. to 3 p.m .. t

The over-15-<:redit charge also applies regardless of the course level taken. In-state students taking over 15 credits will be charged $17 and out of state students will be charged $40.50 per credit hour which is half the undergraduate credit hour rate.

Part-time undergraduates are not affected by this policy change and must still pay the regular graduate course fee, said Paul Becker, assistant treasurer for Revenues and Insurance.

Confusion among students concerning this policy may have resulted because this semester's student worksheets with instructions for calculating the amount of fees a student owes the university, were distributed prior to the change, Becker said.

The worksheet instructed full-time, undergraduate Delawareans to pay $45 per credit hour for graduate

(Contlnueol ta ,.._10)

Page 2 _ ~ . ..: REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, De_laware _l?_ecember 7, 197 6

W~-~n yq~-'~e .IOoki~g foi.gifts, theres···no :Other· stOre quite like ·us

'

' '

' '

Gifts for him and her r

I I I

I

• 'I ~ I

I

I

. . -

. '-

-----·

-~::: -:-.-:.---..:.:.:::. :=

OPEN LATE EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 :00 STARTING MONDAY, DEC. 13TH ON MAIN STREET. 368-7012

)

December 7, 1976 REVIEW, UniversityofDelaware, Newark, Delaware .._

Page3

Smorgasbord of Good Humor in Poor Taste By PAUL MENSER

Though the show's taste ranged from questionable to poor, All You Can Eat" gave its audience a good helping of satire to chew on.

Mitchell Hall's stage was literally glutted with garbage . 1n -concert

at Thursday night's benefit for WXDR. Tinsel, paper plates, celery stalks and banana peels clu!tered the area . from crud-crusted corner to comer.

Looking lil~e the looters of a Goodwill store, the band easily fit into its grubby surroundings. There he was, Toby Celery, barefoot, bass guitar in hand, shimmering ' in a baggy, silver jumpsuit.

Attired in black leotards and Christmas tinsel, Bam Bam Rubble indifferently surveyed the audience from behind his drum set. Three guitarists, two pianists, the Mondo Hot Pants Orchestra featuring Rocket DeRavioli on Sax, and the Fabulous Oysters Choir, in equally absurd apparel, stood poised for the count.

"One, two, three, four" and lead singer Alby Damd strutted in, shooting the curl on a wave of rock and roll music.

Who were these looneys? Were they just another 'bump band?" What were they trying to prove? · "Rock and ·roll is growing old-and choking in the wooden hold -of painted dolls who don't grow old," they raved, backed by a beat to

Stoff photos by Duane Perry

THE HEAVY METAL NAZI, A/by Damd from Alpha Centuri crones with Norme DeP/ume (above) about the invasion of the Earth . While (right) Kid Hollywood belts one of his more boisterous numbers . Bam Bam Rubble (below) was just enthalled with the entire concert by All You Can Eat in Mitchell Hall on Thursday.

prove themselves wrong. For the next two hours,

"All You Can Eat" attempted to put down just about every subject that got in its way. Sometimes the satirt~ was scathing. Sometimes it tried to be.

The first two numbers dealt with how Americans love to consume. "America, urination" delivered' yet another tired jab at the "Buycentennial," while ·~The Dance of the Bivalve Mollusks" bludgeoned that not-so-great institution of the modern world, Howard Johnson's. Endless film footage of garbage flickered on a screen in back.

The plot (a term used loosely l thickens, however, when the Heavy Metal Nazi Blues Band, from Alpha Centuri, with Norm DePlume on lead vocals, , invades Earth.

The master race from outer space arrives in giant silver zucchinis with plans of world domination . Seeking raw material, they rob a sperm bank ("Somebody Robbed the Sperm Bank"l and develop a spawn of new-age rock star prototypes.

From this point on, the revue took off with merciless parodies of every "artist" who has polluted the radio airwaves this decade.

His "Rocky Mountain Highness," alias Thermus Aquinas Mertz in blonde wig and gold rim glasses, urged the audience to "light a match for peace," then explained how he was just rolling in "whole wheat dough ."

Gooni Mitchell, portrayed by Kid Hollywood in Bohemian drag, sang her sequel to "Woodstock" and, altering her previous words, sang "we are nitwits - we are bozos."

The hip poetress of avant-garde rock, alias Alb'y Damd, looking strikingly like Patti Smith (chestwisel in his "cult figure" .tee ~hirt, gave the real dope on how "Karen Ann was at an alcohol and downs party,

Bob Zuckerman and the Rolling Blunder Revue urged everyone to "free Jimmy 'Hurricane' Carter." Then the band changed its tune as Bob doffed his folksv garb, grabbed his electric guitar, and suddenly he was "Born to Re-Run." In his Bruce Springsteen parody, Mertz stapled together every · well-known Asbury rock riff and then was ignominiously abducted on a motorcycle1 which rode up the aisle and straight out the back door.

To combat the Nazi's breed of rock and roll, Earth unleashed its secret weapon, and out of the deep-freeze crawled Kid Hollywood. The events on stage became chaotic. The band pelted the audience with celery. Taking its cue, the audience responded by throwing them

back and the air was filled with flying stalks.

The show ground itself out and then encored with "In the Hall of the Burger King," respectfully dedicated to Newark's late McDonald's.

Throughout the show, the band was never less than tight. It accurately reproduced the sounds and styles of each pop star it parodied. The vocals were audible and the words generally intelligible.

The proceedings on stage were chaotic at times, and part of the audience walked out at the end bewildered and numbed by the whole crazy scene.

Like the celery it showered on its audience, "All You Can Eat" could be bland at times. At the right times, however,

. celery can ~ very tasty.

REVIEW,_ University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware December7', 1976

UNtVIRSITY TUTORING SERVICt - n-. ...,_.._., ......,._. cen put otU<Ien& In touch with ...,ufletl tutOrs. u..........,_. tuton- pel4 •2.50...,. hour, lhe Unlvenlty peyo __,.H the coot for otutlento ,....vine 25% to !10% fl-1•1 el4, or the totelceot forotutlents ............ !10% or-. eltl • ..._.,,. tuton ohoultl •loo confliCt theM oupervloon. AGRI. & FOOD ICON.- Prof. R.C. Smith, 234 Ag. Hall •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • 738-2511 AGRI.INGINIIRING-Prof.E.N. Scarltorough, 057 Ag. Hall •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2461 ANIMAL SDINCE-Prof. RoHrt Salallury, 045 Ag. Hall •••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••• • 731-2521 ANTHROPOLOGY-Prof. K.J. Ackerman, 116 S. College ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2796 ART-Prof. D.K. Tela, 104 Recitation Hall •••••• · •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : • •••• • • 731-2244 ART HISTORY-Prof. J.S. Crawfor~ 335 Smith Hall •••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 731-2165 ATHLETICS (Vanlty)-Prof.I.C. Wlmlewakl, Del. Fleldhou .......................... • • • • 731-2253 IIOLOGY-MI. Wendy Groce, 117 Wolf Hall •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• _. ••••• •• • 731-2211 BUSINUS ADMIN.-Prof. Angello DIAntonio, 221 Purnell Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2962 CHEMISTRY -MI. A. Gl!_ney, 104 Brown Lab •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 731-2461 CQMMUI\IICATIQNS-tt\1. J. Harrington, 201 Elliott Hall •••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • •• • 731-2777. ECONOMICS-Prof. E.D. CraiA, 412 Purnell Hall •••••••••••••••••• : ••••••••••••••••••• 731-2564

IDUCATIQNa Currie. & lnatruc.-Prof. J.A. ~(own, 304 Hall Building ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2331 lduc. Foundatlona-Prof. L. MO.IIerg, 211 Hall Building •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2324

ENGINEERING-Prof. T.W.f. Ru ... ll, 137 DuPont Hall •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2403 ENGLISH-Prof. LA. Arena, 401 Morrla Library ....... ; ............................... 731-1161 ENTOMOLOGY-Prof. D.f.lray, 241 Ag. Hall •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2526 GEOGRAPHY-Prof. E.V. Bunk .. , 201 Rolllnaon Hall •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2294 GEOLOGY-Prof. P.B. Leavena, 104 Penny Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2569 HISTORY-Prof. G • .May, 316 Kirkbride Office Bldg ••• :. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • !31-2119 HOME ECONOMICS-Mra. C.V. Ieiber, 101 Allaon Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2301

LANGUAGESa french-MI. VIrginia Watklna, 431 Smith Hall ••••••• , ............................. 731-2591 German-Mr. P~ul Donovan, 443 Smith Hall • • • • · 738-2597 ltallan-Ma. E. Mangone, 413 Smith Hall ••••••• : : : : : : : : : : : :: ::::::::::::::::::::::731-2452 Latln-Greek-Mr. A.O. L-ch, 449 Smith Hall ••••••••• · ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2596 Ruaalan-Prof. E.M. Slavov, 440 Smlth Hall •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2589 Spanlah-Prof.I.,Domlnguez, 420 Smith Hall ............................ ; •••••••••• 731-2510 Swahili-Prof. M. Kirch, 444 Smith Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2595

MARINE STUDIES-Prof. R.I. Blgga, 107 Rollinson Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2142

MATHEMATICS: • Elem. Educ. Math-Prof. J.A. Brown, 304 Hall Building ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ••••••• 738-2331 Other atudenta-Prof. E:J. Pelllcclaro, 209 Sharp Loll ................................. 738-2653

MILITARY SCIENCE-MaJ. P.T. Kozak, Mechanical Hall •• 4 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2217 MUSIC-Ma. Ro .. mary Killam, 309 DuPont Mualc Bldg ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2577 NURSING-MI. E. Stude, 305 McDowell Hall .................................. , •••••• 738-1257 OCCUPATIONAL EDUCATION-Mra. A. Hathaway, 206 Willard Hall ••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2561 PHILOSOPHY-Ma.lmperatore, 24 Kent Way ••••••••••• , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 731-2359 PHYSIC_AL EDUCATION-Prof. J. Pholerlc, CarDenter Sporb •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2261 PHYSICS-Prof. J.H_,_MIIIer, 232 Sharp Lab ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2660 PLANT SCIENCE-Prof. Don S. Croaaon, 147 Ag. Hall •••••••••••••••••••••• , •••••••••••• 738-2531 POLITICAL SCIENCE-Prof. G. Hale, 203 Smith Hall •••••••••• : • •••• , •••••• , •••••••••••• 738-2355 PSYCHOLOGY-Prof. F.L. Smith, 223 Wolf Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2271

.SOCIOLOGY·Ms.~a~ ~~od, 322 Smith Hall •• , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2581 ST ATISTICS/COMP. SCI.-Prof. T. Kimura, 461 Smith Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2712 THEATRE-Prof. B. Hansen, 109 Mitchell Hall ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 738-2207 TUTORING SERVICE COORDINATOR-Prof. C.E. RoiiJnson, 302 Memorial Hall • • . • ••••••••• 738-2296

Right Turn on Red Added to State Code

By JEFF MARTINO

"After four months of enactment, Delaware's revised Motor Vehicle Code is still greatly misunderstood by the populace," said Lt. Lawrence Thorton of the Newark police department's . traffic division.

The most widely-known part of this law concerns "right turn on red after stop." The new law states that a vehicle may turn right after stopping wherever there are no signs prohi.biting it.

The old law said that this was permitted only where signs. specifically allowed it.

Senate Bill 619, which was signed into law in August, ctmcerns this law and others designed to bring Delaware's Motor Vehicle Code more in line with the Uniform Vehicle Code, an attempt to standardize the country's vehicle codes.

The following is a partial list of the sections contained in Delaware's new law:

~.. HAIR STYLES · . HIS& HERS

· _- Reasonable Prices

CENTER BARBERSHOP NEWARK SHOPPING CTR.

366-9619

1 l Right and left turns - In . addition to the right turns on

red, the new law also allows left turns on red from a one-way street onto another one-way street. Neither turn on a red light is permitted where the turn is· controlled by an arrow.

2) Passing and overtaking - Passing on the right is now permitted under new conditions. An example is when a vehicle is turning left, another Yehicle may pass him on ttie right on the shoulder.

3) Bicycle operation - In general, a bicycle is a vehicle and is subject to all of the rules of the road.

The vehicle code update ha~ received favorable reaction from the police. Thorton said the code "was a good idea" and so far has caused few problems in Delaware. The few problems that do exist stem from the fact that this code is not practiced in all 50 states and that a lot of people still don't know the law. "If people knew the law,. everything would move along smoothly," Thorton added.

For more information about Senate Bill 619 contact the Delaware Motor Vehicle Department, in Dover, at ( 1) 678-4421.

SWINE FLU ·INOCULATIONS , 2ND DOSE FOR THE 18-24 AGE GROUP

The U.S. Communicable Disease Control Bureau in Atlanta, Georgia has determined that the age group 18·24 years will need a second dose of Swine Flu Vaccine. Following the first dose, individuals should have developed 60% immunity to the virus. After a second dose of vaccine, they should have developed 85·95% immunity.

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1~5 P.M.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2-6 P.M.

Therefore, the Student Health Service, in cooperation with the State Board of Health, Nursing College Council, Pi Kappa Alpha and Kappa Alpha Psi fraternities, and the Emergency Medical Team, will be offering the second or booster dose of Swine Flu Vaccine for those individuals between the ages of 18·24 on the following dates:

RODNEY ROOM, STUDENT CENTER

RODNEY ROOM, STUDENT CENTER

NOTE: At least one month's time, give or take one or two days, should have elapsed before receiving

the second dose.

In addition, students, employees and their dependent/spouse age 18· 60 who has not receive the Swine Flu Vaccine at all may do so on the above dates at the Student Center.

If you are unable to get your vaccine at the University of Delaware clinics, there will be two other clinics held in Newark on the following J!ays:

I

~ THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 4-9 P.M.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 4-9 P.M.

JOHN R. DOWNES ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ON CASHO MILL RD.

OGLETOWN MIDDLE SCHOOL ON BRENNAN DRIVE

Students and employees who need a second or booster dose of Swine Flu Vaccine may receive the injections at these clinics.

,v ·"' ... ~... , . C! I ... - - · -. -, ,.. _, ":: c

_Dec~r7. 1976 ~EVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark. P,elawar~ __ ,.. ~ ·z ... - PQge5

retrospect Palestinian Nation Proposed

A proposal for a Palestinian state will be negotiated by Arab diplomats next year in an attempt to reach a settlement in the Middle East. The talks will suggest that a state be established on the West Bank of the Jordan and in the Gaza Strip which has been Israeli territory since 1967.

Palestinian officials report that the idea of such a state has now been accepted by all the majoc-- groups in the Palestine Liberation Organization. Involved parties are currently preoccupied, h!)wever, with deciding exactly who would control this state.

Unemployment At Yearly High The United Stat~s unemployment rate for the month of

November rose from 7.9 per cent to 8.1 per cent-the highest level reported this year.

Statistics correlate the cause of the increase with layoffs of adult males, a sign of economic deterioration, according to experts.

The economy might subsequently need some stimulus from the federal government early in ~77, commented President-elect Jimmy Carter, but he declined to be more specific until the new year.

Vance and Lance Join Carter's Team Cyrus R. Vance and Bertram Lance have been chosen by

President-elect Jimmy Carter to be Secretary of State and the head of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) respectively.

The appointment of Vance, an experienced negotiator and "troubleshooter" during the Johnson administration, is expected to reassure the world community of the stability of American foreign policy.

Lance, a Georgia banker and member of ex-Governor Carter's administration, is expected to take an active role in reorganizing what Carter calls "the wasteful, bloated Washington bureaucracy."

Carter Shuns Wage Power Control Presiderit.:e\ect Jimmy Carter announced Saturday that

he would not seek "standby authority" from Congress to impose wage and price controls.

This statement represents a major policy reversal since, during the campaign, Carter s~id he wanted this authority but would only use it in extreme circumstances.

Carter said the reason why we would not seek such authority at this time is because the "spectre of controls" may force businesses to raise prices before such controls could be put into effect. This, he said, would actually raise inflation and thus be self-defeating to the purpose of wage and price controls.

Marley Wounded In Shooting Bob Marley, one of Jamaica's tc:tP reggae singers, was

shof Friday night along with three other members of his band. '

A group of gunmen broke· into his home 'in Kingston, Jamaica and shot Marley in the left hand. He was released Saturday while the other three remained hospitalized in satisfactory condition.

Police believe the attack was politically motivated and placed Marley's house under heavy guard following his release from the hospital.

Marley had previously lived and worked in' Wilmington.

Cold Cash Litters Highw~y Seven million dollars in coins and currency was spilled·

across an Illinois highway last week when, a Brinks armored truck overturned and cracked open on the icy road. ·

The injured driver and three guards were listed in good condition in a nearby hospital. The money was collected hurriedly and rushed to safety at a Chicago bank where it, too, was listed in good condition.

Americans SeP.m Satisfied In the first global public-opinion study ever taken,

Americans appear to be more satisfied with the quality of their life than are most people of the non-Communist world.

The poll, conducted by the Gallop organization, found that even among the "lower economic groups in the United States," satisfaction levels for the items tested are higher than the national averages in the developing regions of the world.

Complied from Dispatches

Tuesday, Dec. 7 CONCERT - The Jazz Ensemble

will perform at 8:15 p.m . in the Loudis Recita,l Hall of the Amy E . du Pont Music Building. H. William Byerly will conduct the program which is free and open to the public.

THEATRE - "That's Absurd!" sponsored by the E-52 Theatre will be presented in 014 Mitchell Hall at 8: 15 p.m. Admission is free.

BACCHUS - Professor William Martin of Rice University will discuss "Sin In the Afternoon," the cultural phenomenon of soap operas, at 11 a.m. in Bacchus. Free and open to the public, it is sponsored by the departments of history, women's studies, communications and political science.

INTERNATIONAL LUNCH- Food and program on a Puerto Rican theme will be sponsored by United Campus Ministry at noon at 20 Orchard Rd. This will be the last such lunch of this semester.

EXHIBrr - Gallery 20, at ~ Orchard Rd., is having the "Winter Craft Show and Sale" through Dec. · 24, Monday through Saturday,11 a .m. to 3 p.m. Admission is free.

EXHIBIT Contemporary ceramics by Dick Hay, an associate professor of art at Indiana State University, will be on display in the West Gallery of the Student Center.

EXHIBrr - Members of various Delaware art organizations will present a holiday art exhibition from 8:30a.m. to 9 p.m. in John M. Clayton HaiL It is sponsored by tbe Division of Continuing Education.

EXHIBrr - Sculpture students of Stephen Antonakos will exhibit their works in tbe Christiana Commons art gallery.

SYMPOSIUM - A symposium concerning desegregation will be held in Christiana Commons Meeting Room A at 7 p.m. Sponsored by the Black Student Union and Christiana Residence Life.

K ........................ ·.···-················ .. ' : . ·. ' ~

J THESE @ • • • • ~ ltAYS ~· : '"~ - :-···········································~~

NOTICE - Auditions for "Shaping Up," a play for children by Nancy King, will be held at 7 p.m. in 215 Old College. No experience is necessary, everyone is welcome, and the only requirement is that you can move well .

NOTICE - The Delaware Tax Institute scheduled for today, has been relocated to John M. Clayton Hall . Phone 738·2214 for more information.

MEETING The Christian Charismatic Fellowship will meet in the Kirkwood Room of the Student Center at8 p.m. Anyone is welcome.

Wednesday, Dec. 8 THEATRE- A requiem for Martin

Luther King Jr. will be performed by the Black Theatre Workshop at 8 p.m. in Bacchus. Admission is free.

CONCERT- The A.Jumni Choir will perform in the Loudis Recital Hall of Amy E. du Pont Music Building at 8:15p.m. Free and open to the public.

PROGRAM - A program of dramatic readings on freedom and protest entitled "For What It's Worth" wil(be held in 014 Mitchell Hall at 8 p.m. Free.

MEETING - The Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in 112 Memorial Hall. Officers for the coming year will be elected.

MEETING - There will be a meeting for anyone interested in joining the Jaycees in 031 Memorial · Hall at 8 p.m.

MEETING - A meeting of the Young Democrats will be held in the McLane Room, second floor Student Center, at 7:30p.m.

LECTURE - A ·free, pubhc lecture on "Population: Decision Making" will be given by Norman H. Dill and Frank Hagen in 007 Willard Hall Education Building at 7 p.m .

SEMINAR - Dr. Yi-Chun Chang will speak on "Dilemmas in China and United States Relations" in 004 Purnell Hall at 7:30p.m.

COLLOQUIUM- Dr. James Mehl will speak on "Superfluid Vorticity Thresholds" at 4 p.m. in 131 Sharp Laboratory. Refreshments preceding the colloquium will be in 225 Sharp Laboratory.

NOTICE - A Christmas boutique entitled "Scrooge's Stocking" will be held in the Kirkbride Room of the Student Center from 10 a .m . until a p.m .

NOTICE - Auditions will be held for "Shaping Up," a play for children by Nancy King, in 215 Old College at 4:30p.m . and 7 p.m . No experience is necessary.

Thursday, Dec. 9 COFFEEHOUSE A free

coffeehouse featuring "Saxon Teakwood" will be held in Rodney A·B at8p.m.

PROGRAM - Dr. J,ames Soles of the university's political scienc~ department will discuss the new presidential administration at 7:30 p.m. in Lane Hall's lounge. Free for all interested students.

SEMINAR - A free physics seminar entitled "Neutrino Transport in Collapsing Stars" will be delivered by Professor Sidney Bludman of the University of Pennsylvania at 3 p.m. in 217 Sharp Laboratory.

NOTICE - "The Stories of Christmas," an ice show by university skating classes and area skaters, will be performed at the Delaware Ice Arena at 7:30p.m. Free and open to the public.

NOTICE - "Scrooge's Stocking," a Christmas boutique, will be held in the Kirkbride Room of the Student Center from 10 a .m . to a p.m. Handcrafted gifts will be sold.

Eveats to be advertised Ia Tftse Days slleald be 111'4Mlpt te tH Review office, B-1 Stadeat Ceater. Deadllaes are 3 p.m. Wedaesdays fer FrWay's issue aad Z p.m. SUdays fer Tuesday's issae.

PERFORMING ARTS SERIES

PHYlliS lAM HUT DANCE COMPANY

at MITCHEll HAll

RESIDENCY ACTIVIT,ES

1. Dec. 9-Beginners Master Class: 1 :00 p.m.

Performance Saturday,

.L'~'-L,C'"-ember 11 at

8:15 p~m.

2. Dec. 9-Lecture/Demonstra­tion: 4:00p.m. ..

3. Dec"--1 0-lntermediates Master Class: 2:30p.m.

CALL 738-2204 for more information

ALL OPEN FOR OBSERVATION.

MITCHELL HALL STAGE.

Mitchell Hall Box Office Open from 1-5 p.m. Weekdays. 738-2204. $4.50 Students. $5.50 General Public

-V<\ jflli J. 1E ~ Of you SECUR& 1t\£ HAU..$ AND '-"1L:ll'~l'fV -- 'BbG~tYI ~T'S YOUR CHAIR OVf:R. ~E[?£ .:

Editorial----------------

4n Old Car fltoe John Worthen, vice president for

Student ; .Hairs and Administration , once · compared now-closed J.F. Daugherty Hall (Greystone Building) to an old, inefficient car that isn't worth its upkeep.

Many students, however, prefer to think of it as a priceless antique, neglected only because its owners are unaware of its worth. Aside from being the most aesthetically pleasing building owned by the

' university, Daugherty Hall was, until its closing during the summer of 1975, "home"­to both international students and the University Commuter Association . It was also the home of the old Rathskeller, one of Newark's most popular watering holes for students before its abrupt termination . It is currently the home of old chairs and mattresses, which the university stores there.

With plans for a new student center being discussed, student interest in reopening Daugherty Hall has been renewed. ·Indeed, the reasons for ·· a. new student center-another Scrounge and additional meeting rooms for student groups-could easily be served by the Greystone Building . The building 's location is ideal, since the proposed student center would be located within a few hundred yards. And , most importantly, Daugherty Hall already exists. To reopen it would save four to five years and several million dollars.

The official reason for Daugherty Hall's closure was the old administrative standby , insufficient state funding . Supposedly, the university was to save over $5,000 a year on utiliW costs by closing the · building . As it turned out, the City of Newark had been

Tuesday. December 7. 197 6

footing the electricity bills for the facility since the university bought it, and that disclosure prompted the installation of electric meters in university buildings, at the expense of several thousand ~ollars. So the university saved precious little capital by closing Daugherty Hall.

Many students felt the real reason had something to do with the Rathskeller, which drew community criticism and led to a re~ evaluation of the university 's alcohol consumption policy. Interestingly, now that most of the students who frequented the Rathskeller and fought for its initiation have since graduated, the Undergraduate Cabinet is investigating the possibility of reopening the building, with reopening the Rathskeller a low priority.

Whethe~ the Rathskeller reopens or not, we fail to see why the entire ~uilding should remain do t mant. International students and the commuters have been pleading 'their case since the building originally closed. Though it might not make the best possible student center , it certainly makes more sense to use the existing facilities than to undertake a mammoth project such as a brand new student center . Structural modifications.and insulation to cut utility costs would cost far less. And the · Greystone Building is already popular with students, who might not feel comfortable in a new, expensive facility.

We strongly urge the Undergraduate Cabinet to support the reopening of Daugherty Hall. If they do not , we expect them to have good reasons f_or junking a valuable antique.

Letters Vol. 100, No. 26

Jeffrey C. Gottsegen managing editor AI Mascitti editorial editor

Carol Trosatto editor

Joseph Marsilii business manager Mary Ellen Payne

advertising manager

The Review welcomes all letters from the · university community.

Opinion pieces from ~:a~~r:!i!.dito; ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·~ ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·: ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ': ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ·. ~~G~i~~c;,~ sports editor .. . ... . •...•.••••.•.....•......... , .... . ....... . .. . ..... Susie Vaughan

knowledgable persons are also encouraged.

photography editor . . .••..... . ..•........ .. .. .. ......... . ... . .. . ... Henny Ray Abrams copy editors .•....• . . .. ...• .. • • •... . ...•.... Tom Bierbaum, lynn Frankel, Katherine Walsh

k:~~;a.!di::'.o·r · : :: :' : : : :: : : : : : : : : ::::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : : : : : : : : : : : : :: : . ~~";:~hlc~~~~e~ art director .... . .. .. .. . ......... . ... . ..... . .•.. .. ....•....... . . , ...... Koren Corson assistant business manager ......•.• . .• .. .•. . .• .. .. . . . .•. . ........... Robert H. Podems assistant advertising manager .... ; ....... . .. • . . ... . •.•. . ... . ...... ... Joanne Hammerer assistant news editors . . . . .... .. ...... •.•.. ......•..... .. ... . Tim Biringer, Cari DeSa0t1s assistant features editor . .. .. . . . .... .. . . • . • .•. . • .• . • .•.. . .. ~ . . . . ... .. .. Elaine Caliendo assistant sports editor . . . .. ... . . .•.. . .......•....... .• . • . .. .. .. . · .... . .... Alan Kravitz classified advertising manager . ..................... .. ........ ... .. .... .... AI Mascitti circulation director .... ; .. . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ .. .... Rick Reis

Published twice w .. kly during the academic year and once w .. kty during the Winter S.iolon by the otudent body ofthe University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19711.

Editorial and business oHiceslocated at ... , Student Center. Phone numbers: 731-2771. 731-2772,731-2774. luolneso hour., 10 a .m . to 3 p.m., Monday through Friday.

Oplnlonsexpre••d do not neceuarlly repre•nt tho• of The Review staff. Advertising rates available on request. Subscription price: Sl per year.

Suloocrlber to the College Preu Service, 1764 Gilpin Str-t. Denver, Colorado 60201. National aclvertlolng handled thro"llh National Educational Advertlolng Services, 360

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All letters and optnton pieces are subject to editing for clarity and condensation.

They must be typed on a 60-space line and submitted to the Review offices in B-1 · Student Center by 3 p.m. on Wednesdays for Friday's issue and % p.m. Sundays for . Tuesday's issue.

December7, 1976

...-----Our Man Hoppe-----.

The Cost of Life By Arthur Hoppe

The government is now trying to figure out what each of our lives is worth . And this is certainly a sensible thing to do if you are a government. ·

The problem came up when the Labor Department said the steel mills should spend $241 million on anti-pollution devices as this would save the lives of 240 steelworkers .

But that came to more than a $1 million a life and the White House's Council on Wage and Price Stability said this would be "inflationary." So it looks as though 240 steelworkers may have to give their lives in the battle for fiscal stability, which is surely as good a governmental cause to die fo-r as any .

The council admits, however, that it isn't sure exactly how much a life is worth to the government. It says the government should come up with "some standardization" in order to incrf;:ase governmental efficiency . That makes sense.

If I were the government, I'd set up a simple means test. Take a welfare mother with five children . It's going to cost the government a good $10,000 to feed, clothe, house and educate each of those children until they're old enough to support themselves snatching purses.

Under ev~n the most rudimentary means test, the life of that welfare mother isn't worth a plug nickel.

The same holds true, obviously, for hardened criminals, hippies drawing food stamps and American Indians. (The Indian Claims Commission alone costs the government $1.5 million a year and what have the American Indians ever done for the government?)

This shouldn'tbe taken as a slam at American Indians. Actually, it holds true for most minority groups such as Blacks, Puerto Ricans, what-have-you . Being the last hired, the first hired and the least culturally assimilated, members ,of minority grou~ tend to be poor .

If isn't that the lives of t-he poor are worthless to the government . It's worse than that. The poor a re definite liabilities . So are the very rich .

Now you'd think a rich man spending $100,000 a year on­this and that and thereby stimulating the economy would be an asset to the government . You 're forgetting inheritance taxes. There isn't a millionaire in the country who isn't worth more to the government dead than alive.

So if the government can ask 240 steelworkers to lay down their lives for fiscal stability, there is surely no reason why millions of other Americans wouldn 't gladly sacrifice theirs in the _even higher cause of makinl! this a better, more efficient government all the way around .

Think of it! We'd have nothing but ·hard-working, gainfully-employed, tax-paying , law-abiding, government-loving citizens . Oh, how proud the government would be of itself! If there is..a.government.

Som·etimes I have to remind myself the government exists only in our minds, a fiction we made up to protect ourselves from others. Then it, 'in turn, created further fictions for us to believe in .· For example, it assigned arbitrary values to pieces of paper and called them money.

And now if wants to assign arbitrary values to our lives based on those arbitrary pieces of paper . It will want us to believe this fiction, too.

This time I think I'll pass . I don't know about you, but I'm priceless.

(Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. 1176)

---Readers Respond--To the campus community:

Undergraduate students are charged flat "full-time" tuition for between 12 and 15 credit hours regardless of the c o u r · s e l e v e l undergraduate · or graduate, at the following rates:

"Delaware students" $470.00 Per Semester.

"Non-Delaware students" $1,037.50 Per Semester .

Credit hours over 15 are charged at one-half the undergraduate credit hour rates, regardless of the course level, as follows :

"Delaware students" $l7 .00 per credit hour.

"Non-Delaware students" $40.50 per credit hour.

E.A. Trabant President

December 7, 197 6 REVIEW, University of Delaware, New~r~. Delaware Page7

.

Craig Discusses Delaware's Financial Status By LISA BLUEMENTHAL per cent state sales tax has

"Delaware is not going to - been ~ugg~sted. . default," said Eleanor Craig, Cra1g sa1d she beheves that assistant professor of a_ two per cent tax would not economics and volunteer y1eld any net revenue adviser to governor-elect because businesses would Pierre S. duPont IV. then be forced to leave and

Craig counsels du Pont on locate- in the states whi~h the state's economic issues have a lower tax rate. Cra1g but explained that she doe~ s~id, "We h3:ven't come up not instruct him on financial w1th any solutions yet." matters concerning the "The state is not going to university. default. There's no possible

Recently Craig said she :-vay that can happen. The~e has informed du Pont of 1s a lot of money m "alternate sources of Delaware," said Craig. revenue for Delaware." To There has been difficulty on increase revenue, the state b o n d . . s ~ l e s a n d must cut expenditures or b~nd-ant1c1pat1on not~s, but increase taxes, she said. The that_ can be remed1ed by problem is which taxes ha_vmg banks buy them, she should be increased without sald. decreasing the tax base. . When ~sked ":hat duPont's Among other things, a two f1rst maJor p~oJect would be

EXIT ON MAIN STREET

Would Like to Wish You a

Merry Christmas and a

Hap,pyNewYear

STUDENTS ALWAYS-RECEIVE A 1 0% DISCOUNT OFF EVERY PURCHASE WITH STUDENT I. D.

59 E. Main St. Phone: 368-7087

i ~·

as governor, Craig described the consolidation of roles of finance administrators, "Presently, there is no one in authority to evaluate the money status." Only the governor, she explained, approves or disapproves of budgetary intent · and effectiveness.

Craig is the head of an advisory committee for du Pont. This committee includes several other university people: Dr. William Markell, chairman of the Business Administration Department, Dr. F.rancis· Tannian. professor of urban affairs, and Dr. Kenneth Lewis associate professor of economics. Craig said, "I try to involve other university people in the committee . Du Pont knows we have good talent here."

When du Pont needs advice on economic issues. Craig said he calls her. Lately, she said they have discussed problems of revenue and expenditure. Before du Pont attended a briefing on bond issues in Dover, he asked Craig to be there for consultation.

Craig teaches public finance and utilizes her knowledge concerning the state budge~. She includes her outside advisory work "just when it's relevant." She has brought about 30 students to "fairly high-level governmental meetings" during this semester, she said.

Craig said she feels that du Pont will be a "super governor. because he is level-headed and realistic and he loves Delaware." He

has been in the U.S. Congress for six years so he knows politics and now has his chance to finally activate his ideas, Craig said.

Now Open on Main St. in Newark. ...

DELAWARE MICROSYSTEMS I.NC.

•Computer Kits and Systems from OSI •Electronic Parts for the Computer Hobbyist •Books on Electronics & Programming

92 East Main Street #1 (thru side entrance & up the stairs)

Phone (302) 738-3700

Evenings and Saturday Hours Only Mon.-Fri. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

ARE YOU BORED WITH YOUR PRESENT LIFE?

BELMONT HALL (an alternative to traditional dorm life)

is HAVING AN

0PENHOUSE Thursday, December 9-6-11 p.m.

203 W. Main St.

Spaces available for spring semester, so drop by and visit us.

J

Sun-N-Snow·

WINTER SESSION TRIP_S SKI VERMONT from $99 o

Jan. 2 to 9 Jan. 9_ to 14 Feb. 27 to Mar. 4 Mar. 6 to 11 Mar. 13 to 18

SKI QUEBEC Jan. 2 to 7 .. Jan. 9 to 14 Feb. 27 to Mar. 4 Mar. 6 to 11 Mar. 13 to 18 Mar. 20 to 25 Mar. 27 to Apr. 1 Apr. 3 to 8

Ft. Lauderdale Dec. 26-Jan. 2

fl . 0

• 0 0

from $169

from$175

For more information contact: John Records

Student Information Center 738-1276

0

.P.ddjjl _______ • __ •• ------- -J , ., . .J'l ,~'·,.J .,·~·· t , ,, ,.;.~.r, ,·,.!" ,~,.· ·,:.:)•,·:., --_. • • -. -- --·------ - . RE.VJE.W,-UrUv.enlt.y 4f l:>eleweFe, Newerk7 9elewere- - - - - - - - - - - • • • • - • • • • • • • • -

Housing Problem Explored By LINDA PROSKOW

The imbalance of availab'te campus housing for male and female students, which has resulted in an apparent shortage of female room accomodations, was discussed at Sunday's Resident Student Association (RSA) meeting by Edward F . Spencer, associate director of Housing.

According to Spencer, when the university opened in the fall, there was a waiting list of 286 students, approximately 60 males and 226 females, in temporary housing.

The small waiting list for males, said Spencer, allowed the transition of males from temporary housing into regular housing within 2-3·weeks, while females have had to remain in the "extended" housing.

"The vacancies in all male dorms (created by the small number of males requesting housing) cost students money," said Spencer, "because housing has to charge extra to cover the cost of the vacancies."

To help balance the situation, Spencer suggested that there be an alterat¥ln in residence halls that would provide between 50 and 100 additional beds for females .

Consequently, Spencer proposed four alternatives to the RSA so the RSA could make a formal recommendation by the end of Winter Session. The recommendation proposed by the RSA would be initiated in the fall of 1977.

The first alternative, said Spencer, would require changing an all-male residence hall to an all-female residence hall . According to Spencer, this change would provide

approximately 110 beds for females . However, Spencer feared that this

alternative would present "too much of a change" in the existing residence hall arrangement. Also, Spencer presented the problem of deciding which residence hall to transform.

The second alternative presented by Spencer would involve changing an all male hall into a co-ed hall . This situation, said Spencer, would "cut down on the impact all at one time" by providing 50-60 beds versus the 110 beds provided by changing an all-male hall to an all-female hall.

Spencer said that the risk in this situation, however, was whether or not enough females would be attracted to the co-ed hall. Regarding the feasibility of a new co-ed hall, Spencer reiterated the problem of which hall to convert.

Another alternative, said Spencer, would be to change one of the six co-ed hall's already in existence to an all female hall. According to Spencer, this proposal would present a "step backwards" in the current dorm situation because it would mean lo06ing one of the co-ed halls.

The fourth alternative presented by Spencer was recommended by the Residence Life Advisory Committee. This suggestion said Spencer, would involve altering the male-female ratio already existing in the six co-ed dorms.

According to Spencer, t~e 50-50 male-female ratio would be changed to a 40 males to 60 females ratio. Spencer said that

{Contlnu ... to Pa .. 9)

Desegregation Talk Slated University and public school officials wiJl

discuss school desegregation at a symposium in Meeting Room A of the Christiana Commons at 7 p.m., tonight.

The symposium, spons(jred by the Christiana Residence Life and the Black Student Union (BSU), is designed to serve several functions, said Deborah Jean Fisher, president of the BSU. · Its purpose i$ to make the students on campus aware of the Wilmington school desegregation case, to define what desegregation is all about, and to elicit students' feelings and attitudes toward desegregation," said Fisher.

The speakers· panel will include Dr. Joseph Johnson, an administrator in the Wilmington

public schools, Major Morris, director o{ the university Desegregation Institute, Barbara Spencer , of the Wilmington Manpower Program, Ella Bell, a student teacher at the university who currently has two children that are being bused, and the moderator, Agnes Green, executive secretary of the university Minority Affairs Board.

Fisher- said the panel members have b~en given a set of questions. Each member will have a short time to answer the questions and react to the answers of the other panel members. The panel will then entertain questions from the audience.

The symposium is free and open to the public.

EFS Rock Missing from Morris Library

A glassy purple and lead-colored rock was discovered missing from a glllss display case at the Morris Library Tuesday, according to Dr. Peter Leavens, associate professor of geology.

The rock, composed of two cubic-shaped crystalline minerals, fluorite and galena, has "historic and aesthetic value," according to Leavens. It is about eight inches long and weighs a couple of pounds, he said .

· The top of the case was jo'stled open due to loose screws which have now been fixed, Leavens said . He added that "a substantial reward will be offered by the geology department for information leading to the return of the mineral, no questions asked ." Leavens can be contacted at 738-2560.

Bartol Foundation to Move to Campus The Bartol Research Foundation of the Franklin

Institute will move its headquarters to the university in mid-1977. The arrangement will form a Joint Graduate Program between the university's physics department and Bartol.

Bartol is known for its contributions to astrophysics, nuclear physics, and surface physics. The Founqation has field stations at the South Pole, Antarctica, and Greenland and has a solar telescope and an atomic particle accelerator. _

The Joint Graduate Program will provide a wider selection of research topics, advanced seminars, and courses. The university will award graduate degrees for work done under the program.

Bartol will move to Sharp Laboratory.

Top 10 College Women Contest Five hundred dollars, your picture in a national

magazine, and a trip to New York City. Sound glamorous? Those are the prizes for Glamour magazine's 1977 Top 10 College Women Contest.

College coeds all over the country will be competing in Glamour's quest for ten outstanding women. A panel of the magazine's editors will select the winners on the basis of their acaaemic record and-or community and on-campus activities.

February is the deadline for submitting applications, so interested women should contact the Office of Information Services, 148 South College Ave., telephone 738-2791, before theo.

Phone DIAL for ~elp Anyone wishing to discuss personal problems he might

be experiencing, should remember that DIAL is a non-profit community service organization which may help. . .

Trained volunteers answer phones and deal with problems such as loneliness, drugs, depression, family disputes and so on. Located in Wilmington, the free, confidential service's number is 738-5555.

Thurs. • Fri. • Sat. ~11 p.m.

Late Shows •

at the

State Theatre

~>!§ember 7.1 '97 f • REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Del,aware c, =ti ~-· ;c t···~= ·•!! . .- . 2

RepOrters Wage War on Mechanical Meanies By BRUCE GARRABRANDT

Two fears are common to 1 every Review reporter. One

is a _nagging feeUng that he will look into his bathroom mirror one morning and see no reflection of himself in it. The other fear - by far the most terrifying - is that his mind will someday crack into little pieces while doing battle with the twelve typewriters in the Review office.

A gift from the graduating class of 1992, these typewriters began exhibiting peculiar behavior shortly after the death of President Coolidge. Granted they are old, and allowances should be made for arthritic keys, faulty carriages, and similar ailments. As antiques, they have also earned the right to be sluggish and uncooperative at times.

But ' advanced age has nothing to do with the way these machines conduct themselves. They are just plain mean, and the kind of abuse they dole out to Review reporters is cruel and inexcusable. It is nothing short of a conspiracy on the part of the typewriters to smother the free press and turn the reporters into gibbering idiots. Perhaps an illustration will make this more clear.

It is Wednesday afternoon, and a reporter has just entered the Review office to type up his storv for the next issue. We will call the reporter "Joe." We will also call him "doomed," for the typewriters are going to have a gay time unraveling the sturdy fabric of his sanity and twisting the individual strands of it into a mental noose.

Let us say that J oe has only twenty minutes until deadline. Within ·these few minutes his story must be typed and submitted to the editor for final approval. If, for any reason, he should fail to meet this deadline, Joe

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will receive a severe reprimand from his superiors : he will be Jed into the back room and shot. Happily for the typewriters, these make the ideal conditions under which to launch their gruesome attack on the reporter's nerves.

Poor Joe's knees go weak as he stands alone in the cold and hostile atmosphere of the Review office. Clutching the rough draft of his story in both hands, his face beaded with sweat, he glances meekly about the room and quivers with apprehension. The typewriters are against the wall, lined up in a row like so many soidiers, each baring its white keys at him in a kind of sadistic smile. Joe takes a deep breath, swallows hard, and prepares to meet the challenge.

The typewriters chipping away at

begin Joe's

mental foundation by having him indulge in a little game called "Which One_ Works?" The reporter must hop from machine to machine in search of one that will do something more than just sit there and glare at him . Interestingly enou__gh, all the machine!;i have been recently greased and cleaned by a professional, and pronounced in good working order. Well, _ they may be in good working order, but right now Joe has a deadline to meet and the typewriters know it. The keys stubbornly refuse to operate. Having fun, Joe?

Five minutes and seven machines later, our reporter at last comes upon a typewriter with keys that ac:;tually-respond to his touch. His eyes fill with tears as he gratefully places a sheet of paper in the carriage and settles back to begin typing. He manages to finish one full

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line of print before the typewriter suddenly decides it would be great fun to devour the lower half of the paper. There is heard a horrible grinding and gnashing of typewriter gears, and our reporter looks on helplessly as his paper is slowly but efficiently sucked into the machine. The loud "ping" of a typewriter bell signals the end of the first round, and Joe retires to his corner -visibly shaken.

When he- finally works up enough courage to remove his hands from in front of his eyes, Joe looks up at the clock and bites his lower lip. Ten minutes until deadline. He scurries to another typewriter and bravely resumes his task.

This time he succeeds in typing two full paragraphs of copy without a hit<:h. Confident that the worst is now behind him, he mistakenly decides to whistle

a little tune while he types. Like a snake charmed by the soft melody of a flute, the typewriter ribbon _ responds to Joe's whistling by slowly unwindirrg itself out of the machine and onto his lap.

This proves too much for his jangled nerves to handle. With an anguished cry he leaps· upon the machine and starts cramming the wad of ribbon down into it, blubbering quite an array of obscenities as he does so. The macliine springs into action to defend itself.

The keys rush forward and together they pin Joe's hand against the carriage, beating it mercilessly with every letter in the alphabet. The typewriter spits out yards of ribbon and decorates him with it like a Christmas tree. Not in a holiday mood, the reporter curses the machine violently while he fights with his free hand to extricate

(Continued to Page 16)

... Housing Problem (Continued from P-I)

this would provide 66 additional female beds.

Another positive aspect of this proposal, said Spencer, is that it would be possible to alter the male-female ratio in the future, if needed.

One problem with changing the male-female ratio in a co-ed dorm, said Spencer, would be whether or not there would be overcrowding of .the lava tory facilities for fem~J~-

Spencer told the RSA that "it really does not make any difference which way we go", but a change is needed.

The RSA said they will

discuss "en masse" the alternatives proposed and decide on a solution during Winter Session.

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JEALOUS GOD, VISITING THE INIQUITY OF THE FATHERS UPON THE CHILDREN UNTO THE THIRD AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HATE ME: AND SHOWING MERCY UNTO THOUSANDS OF THEM THAT LOVE ME, AND KEEP MY COM­MANDMENTS." From the Second Commandment, Exodus 20:{;,6.

Perilous It Is Indeed to a man's well being In this life- to his peace, his reputation, his best Interest - to do wrong. Possibly the wrong doer may not suffer himself, yet most certainly his children, and his children's children will pay the penalty of his misdeeds. Man Is un­doubtedly so constituted, whether regard be had to his physical, social, Intellectual, and moral nature, as to make him a happy being. The right, the unperverted use of all his powers and susceptibilities would not fall to secure to him a high and continual state of earthly happiness and prosperity. And not only Is the human machine Itself so fiHed up In beautiful harmony with the same benevo~nt end. Every jar of human happiness, every arrest or curtailment or extinction of It, Is the fruit of transgression or perversion. The violation of a natural law Is as sure to be followed by retribution as the violation of a Divine Law. The history of Individuals, families, communities, n11tlons, is full of such retributions! -

The domestic peace and prosperity of the good old patriarch Jacob was sadly marred. He Is compelled to become, at an early age, an exile from his father's house - to flee before the aroused wrath of his brother- to suffer a long oppression and wrong In the family of Laban, his kinsman; and no sooner Is he relieved from these domestic af­flictions, than suddenly he Is bereaved of his favorite wife- Joseph Is violently tom from his embrace by his own sons - and at length Ben­jamin, the only object on which the affections of the aged father seemed to repose, must be yielded up to an uncertain destiny, and his cry Is heard: "All these things are against me!"

- David was a good man, yet he sinned a great sin. And his sin was of a domestic character. And how grlev_ously was he afterward afflicted In his domestic relations. His subsequent history remains the sad memorial: The Voice of God announced, "The sword shall never depart from your house!" His son Amnon raped his half-sister Tamar. Absalom, her brother, kill~ Amnon! Later on Absalom usurped his father's throne and drove him out, etc., etc. Yet David was a "man after God's heart" - a man after God's heart In the way he repented and accepted the severe' judgment of God, reminding one of the words of Job: "Yea, though He slay me, yet will I trust Him"

Pilate, vacillating between the monitions of conscience and a miserable time serving policy, delivered up Jesus to be crucified. He believed Him to be innocent; yet that his own loyalty to Caesar might not be suspected, he did violence to his own conscience and condemned the Innocent. He must secure his friendship to Caesar, though It be at the expense of the most appalling crime. But how miserably he failed! And there was In the retribution which followed a striking fitness to the punishment of the crime. He hesitated at nothing to please his Imperial master at Rome. Yet but two years afterward he was banished by this same emperor Into a distant province, where, In disgrace and abandonment and' wlth a burden on his conscience, which was the burning steel, he put an end to an existence which was too wretched to be borne!"

"Be sure your sin will find you out!" He th.at confesseth and forsaketh his sin shall find mercy."

"BE SURE YOUR .SIN WILL FIND YOU OUT!" - Numbers 32:23. "IT SHALL NOT BE WELL WITH THE WICKED."- Eccleslastes8:13. "AS I HAVE DONE, SO GOD HATH REQUITED ME." - Judges 1:7. "0 THAT THEY WOUU) CONSIDER THEIR LATTER END." -

Deuteronomy 32:29.

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Page 10 REVIEW, Uni'(ersity of Delaware, Newark, Delaware December 7, 1976

... Supreme Court Refuses Desegregation Case ' IN THE SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS ...

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undertaking, she said, was preparing a proposal for the Interim Board on how the commun'ity can get involved in the decision making process. Out of seven recommendations made to the board by the Alliance, four or five have been carried out, Lewis said.

The Alliance publishes a newsletter, sponsors program~ . on desegregatio?, and prov1des resources to the community, Lewis said.

Another group that provides community information about desegregation on the grassroots level is ihe Delaware Humanities Forum, which sponsors a coffee program, according to Dr. Jeffrey Raffel, assistant professor of urb~ affairs at the university. The coffee program l)rovides speakers

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for discussion groups of 10 to 20 people on four desegregation problems, he said. The four topics are: understanding school desegregation, effects of desegregation, roles parents can play in the desegregation process, and legal aspects of desegregation, Raffel said. The speakers are mostly faculty members of the university, Delaware Technical and Community College; and Delaware State College, he added.

Three desegregation proposals have been considered by the Interim School Board to date. One plan would maintain present school district boundaries, with an intermediate authority responsible for assigning students to schools to conform to the ~0 to 35 per cent quota imposed by the District Court.

Another plan would divide the Wilmington School District and then combine it with suburban districts. The county as a whole would be divided into 5 or 6 districts rather than the present 11.

The third proposal calls for combining the present 11 districts into one district, with five area-wide superintendants who would advise individual school boards.

"Every one of the plans has political implications," said Raffel. Under the intermediate plan, Raffel said, school districts would be able to maintain present faculty and administration and keep their neighborhood identiies. However, because curriculum and student policies would be standardized, "Why have district line?" he said.

In a county-wide school district parents might feel they have no effect on

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decisions; Raffel said. Such a large district would be inefficient and unwieldy, he said. Some people, Raffel said, are opposed to this plan because less personnel might be needed and present school

. district employees could lose their jobs.

Breaking up Wilmington School District and re-combining it with other districts would mean that people who won the lawsuit would "have their school district destroyed," Raffel said. "Blacks would lose representation" in school districts they now control, such as in Wilmington, he said. Some suburban parents like this plan, - he said, because it "keeps the idea of small districts close to the people."

Raffel said that "there is no magic" in the 10 to 35 per cent figures the U.S. District Court ordered. ···Twenty per cent is the approximate percentage of blacks in the area," he said. He said he thought the court chose the range of 10 to 35 per cent because "not every school should be 20 Per cent" and that "five per cent is too small - the blacks- would feel outnumbered."

The Interim School Board plans .to submit a desegregation plan to the Delaware Department of Public Instruction by December 15. The department will make a recommendation to the Delaware legislature, who will present the final desegregation plan to the District Court.

• •• Rates (Continued from, ... 1)

courses and $34 for undergraduate courses. Non-residents were required to pay $108 per credit hour for graduate courses and $81 for undergraduate courses .

Many students were unaware of the new policy, however.

Tom Fatula, a senior majoring in Agricultural Sciences, said he was not aware of the change and commented, "In our department we've been changing some .600 level courses to 400 level so we wouldn't have to pay extra money, but how do I get my money back?"

The students who were unaware of the policy will have the money credited to them in their accounts, said one secretary in the Accounts Receivable office. She said that students may receive cash refunds . ·

The overpayment may be credited to a student's spring semester bill which would eliminate the red tape involved in getting the money back to the student in cash, said Becker.

De~~mber 7, 1976 REV!EW, U!"iver~ityof Delaware •. Newark, Delaware Page 11

Surveying Campus. Christian Religious Groups ly MARK ODREN

Editor's note: This is the first in a series on religious groups on campus:

To every university student, campus life represents many different things; an escape from parental propriety, an extension of adolescence or perhaps, with the present job

· situation, a degree in one's chosen · field of possible unemployment.

But for the most part, college is the oppgrtunity to experience different lifestyles and attitudes.

Students will use any source to help keep their mental, physical, and spiritual strength. For students involved with one of the inter-denominational Christian organizations on campus, this strength is the personal r~lationship with Christ.

The present Christian campus organizations, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Navigators, Campus Crusade, and Christian Charismatic Fellowship, focus their attention on small informal meetings between members to explore their life with Christ. The need for this many organizations stems from the varied goals of the individual groups.

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, with 170 to 200 members, is an international campus organization which· was introduced in America from England in 1946. According to. its constitution, · the group dedicates itself to the encouragement of "spiritual growth of Christian students ... and to help the Christian student integrate his faith with his academic environment."

Rev. Will Metzger, staff advisor for Inter-Varsity, stated the group's first priority; "We believe · a person's own daily relationship with God is the most important thing ." Speaking from the Fellowship house at 125 Delaware Ave., Metzger clarified what he · feels is Inter-Varsity's role on campus. "I see . our position as glorifying God to build a Christian community." •

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Inter-Varsity members create their Christian community through prayer, Christian fellowship, and small student-led Bible study groups. The groups are based upon a descending pyramid structure - students of one group are the spiritual leaders. of another group. These students in turn are, leaders of still another group. This involvement with the spiritual growth of others re-enforces the idea of the Christian fellowship or what· Inter-Varsity student president Ed Miller calls, "our basic and personal approach to evangelism."

· Involvement with the surrounding community is the second priority ~ of Inter-Varsity . Besides sponsoring a Winter Session. ~ourse in ohilosophy titled "Christian Theistic Ethics," the fellowship offers a study center with Christian philosophical literature and a tape library · for any interested students. Recently on the mall, they performed a short skit, "Creation, Uncreation, and Re-creation," a pantomine which Metzger said was intended "to make people aware that · someday they must face God." In an effor-t to fulfill the needs of the commuting students, Inter-Varsity initiated a commuter Bible study in the Student Center on Wednesdays at noon. Metzger summarized the Inter-Varsity programs as trying to help people with their intellectual needs as well as the spiritual ·ones. "It can't be one or the other, it must be both," he said.

While Inter-Varsity was originally established as a. campus organization, the Navigators was founded in 1933 as a Christian organization for sailors. It has since spread its roots to all the armed services and college campuses world-wide

and is an international missionary fellowship dedicated to teaching th( word of God. President Kevin Jones stated the "Navs" goal on campus is to make available to all students the chance to find out what Christ has to offer.

"We're not going to grab you, throw you against the wall and tell you, I've got something you should know." remarks Jones. "We're emphasizing the making of disciples of Christ...to teach others to teach others,'' be said. -

Involvement, not formal membership, is the key word for students associated with the Navigators. There is a core of some 35 students who regularly attend the Bible study groups and the weekly workshop sessions at the Navigators' house, 301 Chapel St. The stressing of informality within the organization enables students to concentrate on their life with Christ and the teaching of his word. The degree of involvement with the Navigators as a group organization is left up to the individual, said Jones.

"It's the individual who's important," commented Jones, "A person needs to be a Christian."

While the Navigators emphasize the making· of disciples of Christ, Campus Crusade is actively involved .with discussing their Christian beliefs with students on a one-to-one basis. Tom Rice, lay director and full-time staff member, sees the organization as a "movement to share with students a life with God ."

Founded in California, this international organization wants to involve students in a personal relationship with Christ as the focal point of their lives through prayer and the similar Bible study groups existing within other organizations.

The membership, roughly 200, extends ' from the contacting of individual students on a one-to-one basis and sharing with them a small booklet titled, "Have You Heard of the Four Spiritual Laws?" The booklet compares life with and without Christ as the center. Rice remarked that when he sees someone sitting in the Scrounge, he will introduce himself and his club affiliation, and present his Christian beliefs to the person, inviting. any comment or reaction they might have. While there are some who adamantly refuse to listen, Rice claims that "99 per cent of the people we contact have more positive than negative reactions."

For those who might be turned off by regular church worship, Rice adds that, "we don't press regular church attendance, b1,1t the eternal

.self that Christ radiates and controls."

means the ~tressing of "the holy spirit as life giver and the · liberator of people." It originated among Christians in the last ten years when churches encouraged a stronger emphasis on fellowship" within the congregations. • • It's attributed to the holy spirit," Cook stated. "It's put a whole lot of life into the once dry, dead services."

Emphasizing the informal element of small bible study groups and Christian fellowship, the 30 members of the fellowship concentrate on the interaction between every . individu.al with their spiritual needs. "The group is pretty close-knit," commented Cook. "We don't feel we should put pressure on people to come to our · meetings. We're there if they want us."

Presently Christian Charismatic Fellowship is involved with a series of bi-weekly seminars featuring guest speakers and

Differing . from the discussion, on Wednesday long-established Christian nights at Kirkbride Hall. The g r o u p s , C h r i s t i a n · seminars are designed to Charismatic Fellowship is a express outside opinions of

.. newly formed group with no_ Christian fellowship and the nation a I a ffi I i a ti on. spiritual growth of a life with Originating last spring, its God. goal is to provide "a place When asked what the most for Christians of charismatic important Christian belief is background to worship and to in today's 'Yorld, Cook grow spiritually," according summarized that "we believe to student president Bob that Christ was resurrected Cook. and that it is a historical fact .

The term charismatic This fact is very important fellowship, Cook continued, today."

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EmplOyment, t.Jriemployment 'Mystery' Explored By TINA PURINE

"Learning should be an ongoing thing," said James O'Neill, assistant professor

. of Economics, to a sparse group during an informal discussion about education and the job market. O'Neill and Dan McNeal president . and general manager of Anandale, Inc. spoke on "Unraveling the Employment Unemployment Mystery" last week in the Kirkwood

Room of the Student Center. O'Neill explained that "it's

a misconception to say that one can be over-educated." The advantage college graduates - have over vocationally trained persons, he said, is the option to go into a variety of job areas.

He noted that unemployment figures do not fully explain the situation. He said that many women who have completed four years of college do not desire to work

a 40-hour week and do not bother to look for a job because employers wa~t to hire full-time employees . O'Neill defined these people · as making up what he called "hidden employment." These people are not counted in-the unemployment figures, he said.

O'Neill commented that more human resources could be tapped by employing two persons to work part-time as

SCHMIDr'S._

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Let's hope it sticks this time.

opposed to one full-time employee.

However, McNeal explained that once an employer hires somebody, he takes on many responsibilities. "After 90 days you're sort of 'married' to an employee," · he said, adding that the employer's . job is made' easier by hiring fewer individuals.

O'Neill agreed that once a person is hired, the employer has an obligation to him. On

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the other hand, he said that employers should have the option of firing incompetent employees.

McNeal said "the business climate is becoming more specialized." He added that the more education one has in regard to his specialization the better his chances in the job market.

Some skills are disappearing due to increased automation, said McNeal. "I can see companies getting smaller." ' O'Neill described

education as a "dead-end" field. "We are still producing functional illiterates," he said.

In contrast, McNeal explained that he felt the field of teaching was wide open. "I can see the demand increasing for private teaching. To me, tutoring is one of the occupations that is going to grow."

Just because you are trained for one particular vocation and can't seem to find a job, according to O'Neill, does not necessarily mean all the options have been explored. He suggested checking over the -Occupational Outlook Handbook to· examine the opportunities available. Students should not be "blind" about the job outlook in their field, he said.

"I think the key is being able to get along with people," said O'Neill. "No matter how much education you have, this is important. Hopefully, you will find something that you enjoy doing. You have to live with your job for a long time, and job satisfaction is very important." he said.

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Undeclared Maiors Increase Uncertainty About Job Market Spurs Initial Indecision

By BRIAN DOWNIE Growing uncertaiilty about

jobs and an increased awareness of available academic options seem largely responsible for a 33 per cent increase in undeclared arts and sciences majors· this fall, said Judith C. Gibson, coordinator of the College ~f Arts and Science Advisement Center­(CASACl .

"There is clearly concern with the job mar:ket," said Gibson. "People are seeking more information about careers." An increasing number of students have discovered that they "do not want to get locked into programs until they are well-informed and ready to do so," she added .

Enrollment figures show that 1,433 students, or about one-fourth of all. arts and sciences majors, registered as undeclared at the beginning of this semester . This compares with 1~1 undeclared students last fall . This fall's rise in undeclared majors was coupled with a much smaller 2.3 per cent increase in the total number of arts and science majors .

This increase can be attributed partly to the f~ct that "students are becoming more sophisticated in using the university's resources," said Gibson. "They are more aware that there is enormous academic flexibility at the university."

"Some students deliberately choose to be undeclared so that_~hey feel

freer to explore many more areas," she said . Others, who wish to enter academic programs that are temporarily closed, are using the undeclared _major option as a "holding pattern ."

The advisement center deals with a number of confused students. ·"Many students are feeling the pressure to make ·a decision about a major," said Gibson. "We hear a lot of 'I don't know what to do.' "

Gibson estimates that about one third of each entering class is undeclared and that about a third of these declare by the end of their freshmen year. Few students ·remain undeclared

after their sophomore year. "The college urges students to have declared a major by the first semester of their junior year," said Gibson .

Located at 164 S. College Ave., the center has taken on additional roles since its inception in 1972. Its present staff of ten advisors includes five students. Besides advising all undeclared arts and science major:s, the center also provides advisement for all incoming freshmen and part-time matriculated students with majors in · the college. In addition, the center has a liaison program with high school guidance counselors .

Photo Trips Plqnned · To Investigate Nature

By CHRISTOPHER ELLIOT

Spring has always restored life to the chilled spirit of the student. Quite often one's dreams are that of spending spring break in Lauderdale lying on the beach soaking sun and sucking suds. However, for those who want a change of pace but still want to go to Florida this spring, the Division of Continuing EducatiQn in conjunction /with Temple University Continuing Education Center, have put together a series of bird photography seminars .

The first trip will be from Feb. 7-11 and will visit the Everglades, Corkscrew Swamp, Loxahatchee refuge and several islands. Three subsequent trips will visit the same areas from Feb. 21-25, Feb. 28-March 4 and March 7-11. Each excursion will cost $100 excluding meals, travel and_ lodging. The fee covers the university's planning costs, and the cost of the instructor.

There are car . rental-motel packages available. ·Although primarily a photography trip, anyone who is

(Contlnu.,. to Pa .. 16)

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_Page 14 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware Dece~ber 7, 1976. .

Cabinet Seeks Way of Re~opening Daugherty By MARTIN GOLDBERG

The primary goal of the Undergraduate Cabinet committee looking into the possible re-opening of Daugherty Hall is "to decide how we can open Daugherty without costing the university too much money," said Suzanne Moore, assistant to the vice president for Student Affairs and Administration . She ' spoke at the committee's second meeting, last Friday.

The committee listed possibilities for .the use of Daugherty Hall, suggesting it be made into a centrally located student center, a place for a food service, or housing for ogranizations and clubs . Commenting on suggestions of a food service, Raymond Becker, associate director of Food Service,

stated that some dining equipment has been removed from the building and that it would have to be replaced at the university's expense. -

However, the committee did not list the re-opening of the Rathskeller as a major priority for consideration.

The committee raised the question of whether or not the building will meet state and city housing codes. Adding to that, Moore said "the building is not designed to be a very good student center." She also said that, prior t~ the closing of Daugherty, the city was not charging the university ·for the electricity used in the building. Now, the city is aware of this and the univers\ty will be billed for electricity used in Daugherty.

APO on-campus

The committee discussed adding more professional staff with an interest in Daugherty. Moore, however, said that Dr. John Worthen, vice president for Student Affairs and Administration, appointed the professionals to the committee because he wants objectivity in the

decision. She said he did not want to bias the decision by appomting proresslomils who had previous involvement with Daugherty Hall.

· The group Then listed the interested parties as research representatives who would be invited to pre&ent information to the

committee. The meeting concluded

with a decision to submit a final report to Worthen Qn March 15, 1977. The group plans tu invite Dr. Dean Lomis, international student advisor, to their next meeting to discuss his views on Daugherty Hall.

Christm_as Card Delivery

December 6-18 Collection boxes at all Dining Halls

Staff photo by Henny Ray Abrams THE FUTURE OF Dougherty Hall remains uncertain. A committee of the Undergraduate

Cabinet is investigating the possible re-opening of this once popular social center.

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December 7, 197 6 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware

Laurel's After Hours Club A Visit With the Night Nurses at the Health Center COMMUTERS&

OFF-CAMPUS STUDENTS:

By BETH MOORE Hall is somewhat lively, with It's the middle of the students chatting with

night. .. it's quiet. .. night visitors or sitting around in nurses at the Health Center the lounge. There is a are making their rounds in horrible television to watch the seemingly silent and usually other patients corridors of Laurel Hall. playing cards or smoking

The infirmary after hours cigarettes . And of course is such an empty looking, ther-e is a constant noiseless place . Not at all conversation going "Just like the bustling. crowded, think of all the work I'm antiseptic scene it poses in missing" and "What are you the daytime . The doctors, in for?" technicians, receptionists, Blanche Moore, who works and office-hour nurses have the afternoon to ev~ning shift all gone home by 5 p.m . during the week, is a Those who remain are the comfortable-looking woman, few in-patient students and able to make you feel at two nurses . , home within a minute of

From 3 p.m . until 11 p.m ., u•cc•ua15 her. One of the most the second floor of Laurel responsibilities of

illlfli

Staff photo by Duane Perry

IN THE QUIET corridors of Laurel Hall at 1 a.m ., night nurse Virginia Johnson goes about her appointed rounds.

her job is determining whether or not a student needs more care than the Health Center can offer . "Then is only so much we, as nurses, can do for the students," said Moore. "The student may not even need a doctor, but.. .if the student looks sicker than we can handle, we have Security take them to · the Newark Emergency Center."

When a student comes to the infirmary after hours, he or she is usually sick enough to stay . The nurses encourage the student to come if they feel it would be more comfortable for them and to make sure something very serious is not wrong . The whole attitude is one of "better safe than sorry ." Moore said, "we are here to help the students. I really wish the kids had a better opinion of this place ."

As the evening progresses, the patients usually fall into bed early . A change of shift occurs at 11 p.m . and the nurses exchange information on patients, drink coffee and talk about their homelife for a while . By midnight, the 11 p.m . to 7 a.m . nurses are left with the handful of sleeping patients to themselves . "It's quiet, but we keep ourselves occupied," said Ruth Ethridge, who works the nocturnal shift during the week along with Virginia Johnson.

Most nights are filled with paperwork, needlework and checkiqg on the patients . However, some nights get very hectic . "The busy times seem to come all at once . The place will be quiet for nights at a time and then Security will bring in two or three students all at once," said Johnson.

Usually, one of the nurses stays downstairs, answering the telephone or working on some papers while the other stays upstairs with the students . Except in the case of a possible concussion, when the patient must be awakened every hour, the students sleep through the night ~very quietly . Security

(Continued to Pap 161

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Page 16

.. .Infirmary's Night fContlnuecl from PagelS)

comes around twice a night to check up on the place and the phone cracks the silence at spurted intervals.

As sunrise draws near, the nurses star t a temperature-taking and pulse-reading · from room ~ llie

semi-cranky .students with gentle coaxings. The halls grow lighter and the noise increases. The phone rings. more often . Students scuttle to and from the bathrooms. The night nurses go horne and-with them goes the slow pace and comfortable silence of Laurel Hal(

... u.-.... ,,. Js 'lt . , l·,

'ilL ,. 'I c;"

l?f!ibf."•' J'," r!·•u-11· . I fll1l. 1 I •l, 'l"lj£"' '"1~ j

Ji 1o •.1 "f. "!ni·f~ .,

Where It All Began. Starring

Joan Baez ·Joe Cocker Country Joe & The Fish

Crosby, Stills & Nash Arlo Guthrie· Richie Havens

Jimi Hendrix· Santana John Sebastian· Sha-Na-Na

Sly & The Family Stone

Staff photo by Henny Ray Abroms

"LET ME WIN, but if I cannot win, let me be brave in the attempt." This was the oath of the competitors in Delaware's Special Olympic Swimming Tournament. Above, two winners toke time out with Delaware's Blue Hen to catch their breath.

, Ten Years Mer· The Who

\

Sponsored by Keith Handlin 's o_doptive physical education class, the meet was held in Carpenter Sports Building on Saturday with 80 participants from eight schools throughout the state. ·

WOODSTOCK: A FILM BY MICHAEL WADLEIGH • PRODUCED BY BOB MAURICE AWADLEIGH-MAURICE,LTD. PRODUCTION IRI RESTRICTED GilD I TECHNICOLORD•-eoonmu.!'::.!~0 ._, ___ ~......,.__

... Nature Photo Trips Planned fContlnuecl from Pap 13)

strictly a bird watcher is encouraged to come since the sightings should · be spectacular.

With the help of these trips making it to June shouldn't be too difficult . The university has planned a super-adventure for the summer. Alaska-hiking with backpack in the Kenai National Moose Range.

eagles, black bear, kenai moose, caribou, mountain goats and wolves in . their natural environment.

6:30 & 9:30 ~·· & Sat.

STATE THEATRE If you can't swing the trip to Florida, then perhaps you should consider the May 1-3 trip to· the Smokey Mountains, planned by the university. This trip is for wildflower photography and will consist of six half-day hikes along the Appalachian Trail and surrounding areas . The fee for this trip will be about $20 again excluding travel, meals and lodging.

Te<hrucoior®

O..t.,bvt~d by Wo''"'' B<osO A Wornet CommvntCotiOf\S. Compony

Nightly at 7 & 9 p.m. Final Night Thursday

The instructor for ,all of the trips is Henry Lloyd Bunker IV, who is a noted photographer of bird habitats . Bunker's work ~ is supported by the National Geographic Society and the U.S . Fish and Wildlife Service.

ARROW· TRADING POST z ~ ~ 0 ~ ~

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Jewelry By: Rob Eisenberg Louis Andrew Gordon Beggs Cor/Tosh Wolfgang Lictner ,

Custom leather Work on Premises ...... •Also-Baskets, Gourds, Ponchos,

Sweaters, Weavings, Clothes, Pottery · Horseshoe Lane, 54 E. Mclin St. Newark, Del-302-453-8385

This trip is from July 14-21 and will be conducted by a registered guide along with Bunker. The 'trip promises to be a Walt Disney adventure come true, with opportunities to view and photograph

All of these trips were planned by the division of Continuing Education and are offered on a non-credit basis in - the · interest · of personal .... enjoyment. For further information contact Edwin Crispin, a program specialist in the Division of Continuing Education, at 738-ll?l.

... Waging War fContlnuecl from Paga 9)

·himself from the tangled web of black trimming.

Some time later, we find Joe sitting quietly on the floor, a strangely placid grin playing across his face, his. eyes staring blankly at the militant typewriters that surround him. Black dye from the ribbons covers his face and hands, giving him the appearance of some minor character from the musical, "Porgy and Bess." The typewriters have scor~d

- another triumph. Joe's spirit is broken beyond repair.

Any stories Joe may attempt in the future will most likely be telephoned to the Review office from a

padded room at Laurel HaU, '"" where he, along with the

other victims of typewriter a-ssaults, now spends his ·days in such quiet pursuits as crayoning and collecting bits of string. . Those reporters who wish to retain their mental stability in the Typewri~er , War must unite and face the enemy boldly, with heads and spiked clubs held· high . It's time to show these machines that we mean business. Should this final confrontation fail to turn the typewriters from · their barbaric ways, we can at least take comfort in knowing we are able ' to outrun them, so long as we don't trip over the ribbons .

NEWARK NEWSSTAND 70 E. MAIN ST.-368-8770

WHAT ARE YOU DOING IN 1977? WE'VE GOT CALENDARS FROM:

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Sons of Marvel Origins

Tolkien Rolling Stone Dirt Bike

Plant Lovers Mating Game Club

Bod Guys Fitness StarT rek Manual BluePrints

·Puzzles li .,,, ;.: -'". -,

Star Trek Playgirl Wotership Do~n

Boogie Down Ar izona Hiwoys Mister

$10,000 anti $100,000 WINNIRS IN NOV. AU LOmRY GAMU

Concor Dance

~~

December 7, 197 6 Page17 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware

Survival Techniques for Finals' Frustration. · the book down and walk can indeed be d1sheartenmg. ByBRUCEGARRA.IISI!.~NDT while studying. This around awhile to calm Concen.tration can be

·The Finals Study Marathon procedure will retard lip themselves down. (A rousing improved during study _by will soon be upon us. Once movement and give the game of ping pong or football closing the eyes and leanmg again, a semester of reader a charmingly faithful, helps to work off ste..am and forward until the head rests countless facts, numbers, docile look. put one back into the mood gently in the center of the and ideas must be brutally Reading every word on the for some good, solid opened book. This not only forced-into the tender folds of page is laborious and studying. Or, better yet, wait forces blood to the head, the brain. The process is unnecessary. Learn to until the following morning invigorating the brain, but usually characterized by "skim" the printed material. when you can start refreshed also takes that valuable h o u r s of ruth 1 e s s Begin by eliminating all and renewed). energy used in t5eeping the ~emorization, a desperate articles, prepositions, and Students who spend hours head up and channels it into rehashing and subsequent any words with less than six of intensive study at their the mental process where it confusion of the learned letters. Y~ur reading time desks usually find can aid in concentration. material, and a v1c1ous will be cut in half. ·Soon you themselves reading page Now turn out the light. Harsh caffeine war against the will be able to exclude after page of information and lights only distract from your Great Tempter, sleep. adjectives and adverbs as absorbing none of it. The . thinking. Darkness is far

Preparing for fiJ!als is no well. Continue the process of eyes move across the pages more conducive to effective easy task, but the job can be elimination until you are colorless gas'! Could it lead but the mind fails to register study. made less grueling if you reading only the nouns and to more serious · mental anything the eyes see. This Pleasant dreams. learn how to discipline chapter titles. These contain problems? yourself. An application of the most meaning, and are {\sking such questions the following simple reading usually all you need to know should make you eager to techniques should do much to for an exam. read the chapter and find out make your studying a more Look carefully at the titles what the author has to say. productive experience. of chapters. What kinds of Some students get so excited

Never move your lips or questions do they raise in after asking themselves follow along the page with your mind? Do the titles give questions. they have to put your index finger as you read. any clues as to what the Mumbling or touching each chapters are about? word slows down the reading For example, let us open a process. Only the eyes should science book and consider be used in studying the the following chapter title: printed page. Practice sitting "Photosynthesis and Carbon on your hands when you Dioxide Fixation." Examine read. Mumblers are not it and ask yourself questions. advised to sit on their What is photosynthesis? Why mouths, as this places a does photosynthesis have a great strain on the eyes and fixation for carbon dioxide? may result in their becoming What causes anything to permanently crossed. Try have an obsessive and · holding a shoe or rolled p o s s i b l y u n he a l t h y newspaper between the teeth preoccupation with a

STUDENTS PART-TIME

Work for National Newspaper Company in local Newark office.

Shifts Available

9:30-1:30 . 3:20-6:20 6:30-9:30

Call Mr. Roe after 3:30

453-1454

The Review Classified B-1 Student Center Newark, Del. 19711 CL-ASSIFIED announcement OSU--Rabbit Season Report: Over the Limet--Deacon, Archie, Ralph, Curt, Michael Lee, Under Age Game-Wussy; Over Age Game-Stick; No Ammumtion-­Doctor, Carrot, Mikey.

Position available for coordinator of Student Information Center. Applicants must be availallle Spring ~nd Falll977.. Kl_lowledge of campus functiomng and actlVlties helpful. Apply at Student Information Center. Deadline for application& Dec. lOth at 6:30 p.m.

Europe 76/77 .. ABC Student/Teacher Charter Flights, the cheapest way to go. Global Travel Service, 521 Fifth Ave., N.Y. 10017 (212)379-3532.

Coffeehouse Sound System (small) available for rent. Contact Mark Laubach 738-1819 for details.

Don't bah humbug. Instead visit Scrooge's Stocking Dec. 8, 9 in the Student Center 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

available F1orida- Ride for one, Dec. 18. Deej, 368-{)753.

Gifts for the giving at Scrooge's Stocking Dec. 8, 9 in Student Center, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Need fast, efficient typing done. Call 453· 1754, 731·5851.

Qualified riding and dressa11e lessons. Reasonable rates. TransportatiOn can be arranged. Call Pam Rash 366-1477.

HAYRIDES 328-77.32 Papers typed. Fast, efficient. Call738-7867.

NEED TYPING DONE? CALL737·3557.

PORTRAITS FOR CHRISTMAS. INEXPENSIVE. CALL MIKE 737-0452.

for sale Four Oak Chairs, table, bookcase,. headboard, antique icebox, more. 368-{)753

Handcrafted Xmas gifts at Student Center in Scrooge's Stocking l>ec. 8, 9: 10 a .m. to 8 p.m.

Part of a two-year membership to Kirkwood Fitness Club--Will be transferring in January 77 to another college, so must sell as soon as possible. Hurry- dOn't miss a great chance to a healthy future. Call Jeff, 731· 7501.

Pioneer PL 12-D turntable, BSR TD-85 8· To everyQne: Happy Holidays and best of track tape player, Onkyo TX 220 4-ehannel luck on exams. Alpha Omicron Pi. matrix rec., 2 speaker cabinet. 737·9128.

J .O. - To my friend from Gilbert AlB Adding machines, printing calcs, record-a- laundry room: HappyBirthdayonMonday. call, and Sanyo!hone ans. machines, spirit duplicators an supplies, check writers. Killer and the Kid: Chances are very good Typewriters bought and sold, liberal trades when the time is right. It's your bid. SS's . ana discounts, fully guaranteed service. Master Chg., BAMC, WSFS, and budget Blind Date£--Thanks for a great time. plan. Modern Business Machines, 131 E. GilbertF. Mam St., Newark, De. 19711, 737·2345.

Apologies to all from down under. Typewriters· Olympia Smith Corona, Adler, Remember things are never what they ISM, Olivetti, and Royal. New and used, seem to be.' For the benefit of the "t.L"-l'm liberal trades, full demo and fully still waiting~ guaranteed. Master Chg., BAMC, WSFS, . and budget plan. Modern Business · To my heavy-handed scarecrow : Here's to Machines, 131 E. Main St., Newark, Del. elevator rides and stumbling past narrow 19711,737-2345./ doorways at the end of long hallways. PS-

It's never too late, you know. I'll ';>e aroundif

Susan of Pencader E. .. Are you interested? H

To Daryl's Secret Admirer, slight confusion over who you are. I was mistaken for you! Please resolve this situation. Another "T's date."

D-Anytime! - Roomie

Good Luck, L.M. Gus!

Ding Dong the Witch is dead? Not quite. She and many more creatures from the dark come alive Sunday, Dec. 12, 7:30 p.m. m Bacchus. ·

KEITH- Friday's paper screwed -up Jour initials--it really was meant for you-KC . An optimist observer.

HI-Speed - Schwinn Letour with gold Regina you think you might. . .I wasn t killed m 13·24 free wheel. Hardly used, new condition. ·d t kn 1 11 For the ohone call of vour life. call 366-9~ $l50. 999-0079. · either car acct en 'you ow· · · evenings and ask for Joe Vests. This is real.

To the blond, bearded cutie who works at perverts anddroogies cl!!i after ii p.m._ · For Sale: 4 tickets · Flyers vs. Capitols at HDH Mondays-"We've got our 'eye' on h Capital Center. Sunday, January 30, 1:30 you!"Yoursecretadmirers. Belmont is having an open ';guse on ~durbe

p.m. lOth row seats. 8.50 each. 738-4167. •---------------, ~~re:iJJ~li~i~ t~!r%,0~0P ~~\r.ou "'F,...or-:Sa;;-;-le-:-;:F""IV""E;:;-ne_w_4:-·"'pl,...y"'ti~re=-=s-c. 1;:;3"" .'$:;;12:;;;0~s::.-et, $25 a piece. Call 738-4167. His existence of obscurity: soon would turn

g~ to one of fame. His btrthday we would STEREO-BSR turntable, 2 solid state s e celebrate with chocolate cake and speakers, AM·FM receiver, tape deck, cellophane. excellent condition, great price. Call Bob 737-7476. if not in leave your phone number, I will definitely call back.

ANTIQUE SHOW and SALE, Dec. 9·12th, Castle Mall, Routes 72 and 4. Newark. Free admission.

lost & found About Thursday: Keep the$$$ but PLEASE return my glasses, pictures, the rest. No questions asked. 4th Floor Resident.

FOUND: a sweet way to commune ann share. Friends Meeting for Worshtp 9:3<1 every Sunday, United Campus Mmtstry, 2J Orchard Rd., Tel. 368-1041.

LOST: Scrooge's Stocking

FOUND: Scrooge's Stocking at the Kirkbride Room in Student Center Dec. 8. 9 from lOa.m. to8p.m.

PERSONALS '

Mernee-Roses are red; violets are blue. I'm getting desperate, how al)out you? L<>ve, your senile friend.

~eview

Blassi/ieds

Fred, Grrrrrr to you too, YOU WOLF!

Listen, we want you should g!ve to the Starvation Relief Fund. It wouldn t hmt.

L<>ve & Kisses to our stud RA. Dave Small, 300 RHA on his birthday. L<lve, S.W.G.H.H S.

To our favorite foreign midget (H.R , Fridge, Rosie, Honorable roommate-what ts your name anyway??) Good luck on your first basketball game. We'll be rooting for you! L<>ve Martha and FLEX.

Boobs and Balls--We miss your faces--Love, Your 2 favorite ex-5quire chicks.

To V.F. in Bkl/442: Where were you last Friday--you missed a great oppor~unity ! But I'll give you one more chance--thts tune you picli the spot-I'll be waiting to hear from you!

Personal problems? Need a listener? Call DIAL 738-5555.

Embarrassed me, Sorry but it was a lon.g time no see, you hit me hke some tacky saktl I just never realized till too late though, best wtshes and thanks.

Send your ad to us with payment

Rates: 5C/word per Issue

roommates Male roommate wanted for partly furnished apartment as soon as possible. Contact: Mike 731·5912.

Female roommate needed for second semester. Park Place. Own bedroom $68/ month rent. Call731-8612.

Female roommate needed to sha_re two bedroom Paper Mill apartment wtth two other girls. Call731·5278.

Female roommate wanted by same to share furnished apt. in Sandy Brae, $110/month and approx. $7 /month electric and phone. Available after Nov. 30. Call Kathy after 5:00, 368-0474. .

2·3 male roommates needed to share expense of apartment at Rehoboth Beach. Delaware ior Summer $77. Contact Frank "'l&-9319. DKB room 105.

Third roommate wanted for 2-bedroom apartment near campus. $70 a month plus utilities and phone. Call Jeff at 738·2771 or leave message.

wanted Wanted-A room in a house or apartment near U. of D. Call 322-4374 and ask for Brad anytime.

Handcrafted goodies from Scrooge's Stocking Dec. 8, 9, Student Center, 10 a.m. to 8p.m.

TOY/TRAINS in your attic? Turn them into cash. Call368-4204 after 6 p .m .

BOZOS! Calling all clowns! The gibbering idiots who conceived and initiated The Review's answer to Looney Toons, namely Review Classifieds, are lll()Ving on to a bigger and better mental health facility. So what you ask? So this, turkey-we are seeking a new goofball to carry on in the somewbat demented Classified tradition. Don't think its all fun and games, though. The person we're looking for ~ust have accounting experience, t~pmg a~d marketing ability, and an orgamcally ferbl.e imagination. H you think you've got w~t tt takes (whatever that is) call The Revtew, 738-2771, to set up an interview.

Coordinator needed for Student Information Center. Prefer person knowledgeabl~ ll'!out campus functioning and achvthes. Apphcants must be available Spring and Fall 1977. Ap_ply at Student Information Center. Deadline for applications Dec. 10, 6:30p.m.

Kenwood 6400 AM-FM Quad receivers. One year .old, under warranty. $300 or best offer. Call Dennis, 366-9116.

To select members of ATO: No, we don't have your flag but your detective imagination WliS excellent. :roo bad the talent show was Saturday nite, not Friday

Wanted: PeoQle <i.e., human beings, not Wanted: One or two female _roommates to scholarly drudges). to live in Belmont, the · - share two bedroom Papermtll apartment. university's "Honors House." Call Sue or Pat 737-4161. nite. 303 Harrington B. .._ _____________ _.

'

/

_PagelS REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newa• k, Delaware December7, 1976

... Skaters Win Seventh ~ ...........

a backhand.er. paSt Rutgers goalie John Skibin.

Bouchard then took the game into his own hands: ~oring the next two goals. He finished his three-goal hat trick at 7: 15 of the period, and tallied his fourth of the night eight minutes later while teammate Mark Henzel was off the ice for tripping.

Freshman center Mark Delany finished the scoring with four minutes left in the game. Delany's unassisted goal came when Henzel was 'still serving his penalty.

"We 'ust wore them down

165 E. MAIN ST. NEWARK, DE.

MEXICAN COAT SWEATER

Heavy 100% Wool

0

in the third period," said Bouchard. "We had 57 shots on goal (compared to Rutger's 22) for the game -that's a lot of shots for the goalie to stop and the defense to clear."

The victory was the seventh in a row for the Hens following the team's season opening loss. The Hens are 1-0 in conference play as this game was the first of four home games in the premier season of the Mid-Atlantic Hockey Conference. The next home game is Friday night at 10 p.m. against Penn State.

Wisniewski Picked For Olympics Delaware's Mary (

Wisniewski, has earned a spot on the 19-member U.S . volleyball team which will prepare for the World Cup next fall and the 1980 Olympics in Moscow.

She was named to the position after a tryout" in Pasadena, Texas over Thanksgiving vacation . Wisniewski received a telephone invitation from Scot Mose, the coach of the All-East team which competed against the Chinese earlier this semester. Mose received his · go-ahead from the Olympic volleyball coach_,_ Arie Selinger.

At Delaware, Wisniewski was one of the key players in a 24-9· season and a third-place finish in the Eastern Regionals. She led the team in serving average, spiking_ average, number of kills, and number of perfect passes. "This year was her biggest improvement. She was very consistent for the team," said coacn Barbara Viera.

In making the national ' team, Wisniewski has

committed herself to three-and-a-half years · of preparation for Moscow. It will mean six hours of practice, four days a week .

The reason for forming a national team so early is to prepare for the competitive Japanese, Chinese and Russian matches. Their

·teams practice year-round and . are composed of seasoned veterans.

Wisniewski will be traveling to Pasadena at the end of this month. She'll spend the spring semester

and the summer getting ready for the World Cup in the fall. Meanwhile, her studies in physical education particularly athletic training and paramedics . will be completed at the University of Houston. In addition, housing and a part time job partially financed by the city of Pasadena, will be provided.

Swimmers Top F&M Hens Prep for Rival American U The Blue Hen swim team destroyed Franklin & Marshall

Saturday, 72-32, in what was almost a practice for this Saturday's meet against American University .

Bruce Vickroy led the Hens with a 1:52.8 first place in the 200-yard freestyle and a 50.8 first in the 100-yard freestyle. He also anchored the Hens' successful 400-yard freestyle relay team.

According to Delaware swim coach Harry Rawstrom, "Len Weber swam an excellent leg on the 400-yard medley relay, and his 2:09.7 winning time in the 200-yard butterfly was very good. I hope to see him break two minutes in the butterfly by the end of the season."

In the diving events, Bill Dally was the only Hen to place, taking a third in the one-meter required dive and a second in the one-meter optional dive. F&M's John Milkonian was the top diver in both events . . .

Brian Murray and Sam Nucha took firsts for Delaware m the 200-yard individual medley and th~ 200-yard breastst~oke respectively. Reid Stoner also took a first for the Hens with_ a very good 2:08 in the 200-yard backstroke. Freshman Dave Emich took a second in the 200-yard freestyle and also swam on the Hen's winning 400-yard freestyle team.

F&M's Zach Richardson won the 50-yard freestyle in 23.3. Junior Mike Dressel took second place for the Hens.

Captain Paul Bernardino, who holds the sch_ool records in distance swimming, won the 500-yard freestyle m 5:14.7.

"We kicked them," commented Bernardino. "We gave a lot of different people a close look so we'll be able to pick out our strongest lineup for American U."

Bernardino continued, "American U. doesn't have good divers so we'll probably start out with a 14-point lead. Still the meet will be very close, and we'll have to swim our best times to beat them." ,

The Hens haven't beaten American U. in the past three ' years, and two of those losses were decided in the last event, the 400-yard freestyle relay. American U. will have the home advantage as Delaware, now 2-0, will go to Washington Saturday at 2 p.m.

December 7, 197 6 REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware Page 19

Wrestlers' La.fa.yeue Tournament Effort Disappointing Delaware's young mat

squad opened their season Saturday with . a disappointing showing at the Lafayette Invitational Tournament, placing seventh in an eight team field . The Hens were white-washed in

the lighter weights but took two third and two fourth place finishes in the heavier weight classes.

"We approached the tournament with better expectations," commented

. coach Paul Billy, "but it was

Perdue Chicks Recover To Clinch IM Spiker Title

. . By CHRIS DONAHUE

After losing their first game, the Perdue Chicks rebounded to take the next two against the Black .Student Union 1 to win the women's intramural volleyball crown last Thursday.

The Chicks took it on the beak in the first game losing 15-6. But they quickly got on track to win the next game 15-l over the spirited BSU squad. The deadly service of chick Jill Burns keyed the victory by reeling off nine straight points.

Although the final victory by Perdue was decided on a ten-minute limitation rule, they still had a convj ncing 13-41ead to gain the set.

Perdue player Sue Badger felt that the key to their success in their 7-0 season was a "total team effort."

In playoff action that took place two weeks ago, Alpha Chi Omega had to go 1hto sudden death overtime before besfing Perdue Chicks 1-0 to capture the women's broom ball crown.

The victory capped an 8-0-2 season record with no goais scored against them . Alpha Chi goalie Karen Kendig's 11th shutout couldn't have come at a better time, since the game remained scoreless at the end of the three regulation periods.

- "It was a very even game," remarked Alpha Chi player Barb Aiken.

But shortly into the three-minute sudden-death period, Stephanie Lipcius took a pass, and after carrying it around the final Perdue defenseman, drove home the decisive tally .

The final standings for women's archery saw the Perdue Gold team on top with 411 points, Perdue Green next with 353, and the Thompson Tarantulas were third collecting 344 points.

In co-ed archery, Thompson 006 1 finished on top by garnering 539 points, with Schmens II in second at 515, followed by Schmens I at 493. -

Intramural supervisors wish to remind all those who are participating in meri's and women's Winter Session intramurals to have rosters in by 7 p.m. tonight for women, and 3 p.m. tomorrow for men at Carpenter Sports Building.

A five dollar bond and a referee is required from all teams. Rosters for men's intramurals basketball next spring must

be in to Carpenter by Dec. 16 at 3 p.m. or they will not be accepted.

++++++ Last week it was erroneously reported that Sypherd

defeated Phi Kappa Tau to gain sole possession of division one in Competitive floor hockey. Actually, Sypherd and Phi Kappa Tau played to a 3-3 tie, and placed them in a tie for first with

_!..ambda Chi Alpha at 4-0-1.

J

DELAWARE SPORTING GOODS

"Athletic Shoe Specialty Shop" AND ACCESSORIES .

A COMPLETE LINE OF

"NIKE" SHOES ·-Track-Training-Jogging­

-Basketbaii-T ennis-Casual--.. Volleyball-Shoes

"ON AN OVERALL BASIS OF THE TOP 30SHOES, "NIKE" WAS #J."

"RUNNERS WORLD" -OCT. '76

92 E. Main St. Between Braunsteins & Shamrock Printing.

Phone 368~ 1653 Authorized Nllce Deafer

our first match and some wrestlers weren't competing at their normal weight classes."

Kelly Collins placed third at 158, defeating Bill Wilkie of Penn. 7-3. Collins described Wilkie as being "tough on his feet." The Hen junior kept his opponent on the mat ~~~ rode to ~ictory. The tw~ ~~sUers. w1ll face oft agru\\ ~qext Saturday as the Qualters invade the Fieldhouse, in what should be an exciting rematch.

At 190, Gregg Larsen also placed third by beating Joe Monica of Army, 8-5. Ironically, Monica had beaten Larsen in the first round, 3-2, but Larsen wrestled back and got his revenge in the consolation finals . "Monica rode my legs and ankles. He's a good leg wrestler," commented Larsen, whose margin of victory came on a near fall when he cradled his opponent.

Co-captain Joe Severini ( 1671 and freshman Mike Morris (177) placed fourth . Severini lost to Franklin & Marshall's Meyers 7-3, then won twice in consolation bouts, only to be edged by Meyers again, this time 4-2, in the consolation finals . l\1prri~,J ~ho . ~\~<3 'thad to wq~s.tle ~a<;l11 &JMough ~w~sol!ltion~. Pi}mttd >~Jair of EA~ J-.~}rowi~b~~g m, 5:27 be~Pfe __ Jq~ngU\, \~~~ls .

'i'h~ ~atmen .. mrf'l re as well m the lower we1g ts. At 118, John Iredale defaulted his first round match because of a knee injury, but according to Billy he won't be out of action long.

Mike Zarroli wrestled well at 126 but didn't place. He lost to eventual champ Bill Shoemaker of East Stroudsburg 5-0, and to Lafayette's Keck 1-0. Co-captain Mark Bastianelli never got on track at 134 as he lost both his matches.

Dennis Carr (142) and

Harold Hill (150) both won first round matches but couldn't keep up the momentum as they lost their next bouts. Carr looked good in the first round as he quickly flattened his foe for a fall in a minute and a half.

Heavyweight Joe Booth pinned East Stroudsburg's Pete Katinowski at 3:35 in the first round. Princeton's Ed Sifter then did the job on Booth, pancaking him in 4:53.

Bastianelli summed up the feelings of the team when he stated, "We didn't do as well as we could have, but we have a good bunch of guys and we'll put it together."

Though no Delaware man · made it to the finals, Billy

was optimistic. " Many wrestlers who did - not compete Saturday because of weight or condition problems, will compete later. We will get physically stronger."

••• Delaware Dunkers Now 0-3 (Continued from Page 20)

And the absence of Hen rebounds also eliminated the fast break, forcing Delaware into a slower game.

by Purcell· and guard Mark Mancini kept the Hens within striking distance fo r several minutes, Delaware was in serious trouble when the long bombs stopped working .

Midway through the half the Colonials began to pull away, outscoring the Hens 25-6 in one stretch, and giving Delaware its third

"When we stopped running that really killed us," said Rainey. "Hall and Anderson are good players, but if you've got them running up and down the court a lot for the whole game, they'll get tired and that helps."

George Washington's rebounding edge paved the way for some fast-break baskets of their own, and it allowed them to take 58 per cent more shots than Delaware in the second half.

Although some accu-rate outside shooting

loss. · "Right now we're just not pushing the ball

down court fast enough," said Forrest. "We've got to discipline ourselves ."

Purcell, who_ was Delaware's high scorer with 22, agreed. "For us to be effective we've got to wear down our opponent and run, run, run. Otherwise. we're in trouble."

REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware December7, 1976

Photo by Saul Kravitz ~ODNEY WASHINGTON TAKES a 15-foot hook shot late in

Saturday's game. The hook banked crisoly into the cords for I

two of Washington's four points.

ECAC Honors Three _,

The East Coast .Athletic · Conference named offensive tackle Dave Fritz, linebacker Gary Bello, and quarterback Jeff Komlo to the 1976 All-ECAC Division II football team Friday.

Komlo earned one of the top three honors by being named "Rookie of the Year."

Senior Bello was called "one of the best captains Delaware has ever had" by coach Tubby Raymond . "We must give him credit for much of our team unity and leadership," he said.

But Fritz was surprised by the honor. "I never gave it a thought that I might make it, especially when you consider I made the weekly honor roll only once," he said .

The weekly All-East cit.ation named Bello four times, Fritz once, and Komlo three times during the season.

Bello was cited for his eflorts in the Citadel, William & Mary, Villanova, and Maine games . Consistently leadin~ the defense, Bello made nine solo tackles and assisted two others in the Hens' 17-15 loss to Citadel. In the 15-13 victory over W&M, the 6-foot, 210-pound captain accounted for 11 solo tackles, five unassisted tack-les and an intercepted pass in the 24-24 tie with Villanova. In Maine's 36-0 shutout he got nine solo tackles, assisted on eight others and contributed to three quarterback sacks.

Fritz, who is being scouted by several National . Football League teams, was cited for his North Dakota effort when he anchored an offensive line that "blasted holes wide enough for a coach to run through," one player said. The powerful 6-3, 240-pound pulling guard contributed to the 519 yards the Hens garnered in the Sioux victory .

Komlo engineered a fourth quarter . scoring drive connecting on five of ten passes for 63 yards and one touchdown in the Citadel game. In his first starting job, Komlo completed ten of 16 passes for 201 yards and scored twice in the triumph over Temple. ·

The 6-1, 190-pounder was also cited for his effort in the Maine game where he maneuvered three touchdown passes and completed seven of ten passes for 126 yards, including a 42-yard touchdown pass.

Komlo's statistics show 61 completions in 120 attempts for 970 yards and four touchdowns. Averaging 15 yards -a completion he also rushed for 111 yards and ten touchdowns -the highest total in Delaware history.

/

Colonials Topple Hpopsters Hens' Home Opener Tomorrow Night

By ALAN KRAVITZ

WASHINGTON, D.C. Delaware's basketball team remained winless with away losses to Drexel on Thursday and to George Washington University on Saturday. The Hens will have their first home game tomorrow night at Delaware Fieldhouse at 8 p.m, when they host LaSalle .

Against Drexel, Delaware led most of the way, with Drexel keeping the game close with uncanny outside shooting . Then with three seconds left and the Hens trailing 78-77, a close-range shot by co-captain Bob Cook failed to drop through, and the game was lost.

"After I made the shot I was sure it would make it," recalled Cook . "It came off of my hand perfectly and it hit the backboard in just the right spot. I was so confident it would drop that I started setting up for defense. But the hall just popped out of the basket."

In Saturday's George Washington contest, the heavily favored Colonials used a strong second half to down the Hens 96-76, after Delaware fought to a 40-40 stand~off in the first half .

The Hens raced to a 10-0 lead, as the. newly-installed fast break performed without a hitch . Emanuel Hardy contributed six points in the spree while Cook chipped in four . "I think we're capable of playing the whole game the way we played in that first spurt," said coach Ron Rainey .

George Washington closed the gap on the shooting of forward Les Am~erson.

Nicknamed "high rise" because of the 6'4" junior's ability to place a good portion of his forearms above the rim, Anderson would repeatedly take a pass near the basket, soar high above his Hen defender, and convert the jump shot.

After Anderson had scored four straight baskets this way, Dennis Purcell did some scoring of his own to keep the Hens even with the Colonials, moving inside, faking his defender up in the air, and taking a short jump shot.

The Hens were also limiting the Colonials to just one shot each time up the court, with Dave Forrest grabbing seven rebounds in the first half and Brian Downie and Purcell each snaring three .

In the second half, the rebounds stopped coming to the Hens, as they were out-rebounded 32-10. This was the result of two changes in GW's strategy. The first was the insertion of the Colonial's high-altitude unit. This consisted of Anderson, 6'-10" Mike Zagardo, and 7'-2" Kevin Hall.

The second factor was that G W used a zone defense which placed each defender in a better position to grab rebounds limiting Delaware to just one shot. While on offense, however, the Colonials were able to clear the boards and often get more than one chance to score.

"Second half they were getting all of their offensive rebounds. They'd get more than one shot, that's .what beat us," stated Forrest.

(Continued to Page 19)

Skaters Rally To Ice Rutgers By JOE BACKER

Team captain Dan Bouchard scored four goals to lead the Delaware ice hockey club to an 8-4 come-from-behind victory over visiting Rutgers in their first conference game Friday night.

The Scarlet Knights skated to a 4-1 lead in the first period as Dave Salter tallied two goals to lead the visitor's. attack . A rare penalty shot was award~d at 9:47 after Hen defenseman · Gordie Johnston pulled Tim Fox down from behind as Fox was bearing down on

Delaware goalie Stu Dixon on period by Bouchard and · a clear breakaway. Chris Savage.

The Rutger's forward Trailing 4-3 the Hen capitalized on the offense moved into high gear opportunity as he beat Dixon as Pat Monaghan tied the on a high wrist shot to the game at 5:46 of the final goalie's right side. session on a power play. The

"We really came out flat in goal was Monaghan's' second the first period," said of the- night and his 13th of Bouchard. "We had to pick the ·season to keep him as up our wings more and Delaware's leading goal tighten up on defense . We scorer. were in a hole, and didn't It took the Hens 43 seconds want to get deeper." to forge into the lead when

With Rutgers reverting to a Bouchard accepted a long defensive game, the Hens lead pass from Charlie responded to the challenge of Acerra, ducked around the playing catch-up by scoring lone d~fenseman and slipped two goals in the second (Continued to Page 111

.. ·. : . > : . . . ·.:

. Sta;f ~h~t~ b~bavid Randall Keeler .· .•

DAN BOUCHARD sets what proved to be the winning score against Rutgers goalie John Skibin during the third period.