Starvation Fund · To - UDSpace Home

advertisement
VOL. 95 NO. 28
UNIVERSITY O_F_DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE
Starvation
Fund
·
To
-
Canvassing
through
dormitories for four days last
week,
two
students
voluntarily assembled several
hundred dollars in individual
donations and created the
largest single gift to the
University Starvation Relief
Fund. The students, who
asked to remain anonymous,
estimate that they went to
nearly
two
thousand
dormitory rooms.
Their efforts swelled the
fund to $607.42 as of
Monday afternoon, donated
by scores of contributors.
The University Starvation
Relief
Fund
has been
established by The Review in
an effort to keep some of the
world's hungry people alive.
Contributions to the fund
are to be channeled equally
through the Salvation Army,
the
United
Nations
International
Childrens
Emergency Fund, and CARE.
Earmarked solely for the
of
food,
the
purpose
donations will be sent in the
name of the Pni.VE'~"Sitv of
Delaware Community.
According to a recent
estimate by UNICEF, the
fund at its present size will be
able to provide 1,000 thirsty
and malnourished children
with a supply of milk (three
glasses a day) and vitamins that
will last 80 days.
Donations were provided
by a large number of
individuals
and
several
student
organizations,
including
the
Central
Fraternity Government, Phi
Kappa Alpha fraternity, Tau
Kappa Epsilon fraternity, and
the University of · Delaware
student chapter
of the
American
Institute
of
Chemical
Engineers.
In
addition, the Student Center
Council has offered to
contribute to the fund half of
this week's receipts from the
Saturday
Night
Flick,
"Friends."
To facilitate the university
community
in
making
contributions, the Review has
extended the deadline and
will accept them through this
Wednesday at the Review
office, 301 Student Center,
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and
from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Contributions will also now
be accepted through the
campus mail until this
Saturday, and should be sent
in care of The Review (301
Student Center). A special
account has been established
at the Delaware Trust Co. to
handlE' th(> Fund , a"!il <'hPri<s
should be made out to the
University Starvation Relief
Fund.
To the right appears a
partial listing of the names of
those who contributed as of
Monday afternoon. Alii of the
donations that were received
by the two students (who
labeled themselves as the
DGF) were anonymous, and a
letter they have written
appears among the names.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1972
.$600
Food--a precious commodity.
--Contributors--
Marie Hyatt
Phi Kappa Alpha
Anonymous
Coach Harold "Tubby" Raymond
John Bingaman
Betty Jones
Marvin Hummel
Anonymous
Nicholas Mangino
Santa Claus
Stan Long
Anonymous
Dave Williams
To Continue the McGovern Hope
Lisa Lindecamp
Lee Spiker
John Beall
Anonymous
Anonymous
Dave Stroble
American Institute of Chemocal
Engineers
Student
Chapter,
Univco~"<;i .. • 0f Oela-"';"l ' P
''
'"\J
'
Tio.1othy J. Mokrdsiewicz
Lorie Grosskopf
Justin Hyatt
Jess and Judy Rightmyer
Barbara Aiken
John and Kathleen Tarbell
Central Fraternity Government
Anonymous
Paula Johnson
Violet Dawson
Burleigh Cooper
Larry Conforti
For Compassion
Anonymous
Bill Mahoney
E.A. Nickerson
Don Davis
Sue Rosenberg
Ken Robinson
Ray Wilson
Anonymous
Mimi Boudart
Student Center Council
Roy Wilson
Anonymous
Anonymous
Larry Hanna
Steve Zeron
Tom Crawford
Karin Stearns
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Howard Weldin Ill
Sharon Kingston
Anonymous
The
residents
of
Pencader
J--collected by an anonymous
student.
Alan and Wendy Udall
Anonymous
Karen Modugno
Diane Kestner
The Review
•t:l,
cri:J5·crossed the entire campus,
collecting funds money for the
Starvation
Fund.
All
money
co llected by these students was
anonymous.
Dear Contributors,
The IDGF organization would
like to take this opportunity to
express its gratitude to all of you
who have contributed to a very
worthy cause. Indeed you have
gi ven mankind another glimmer
of hope in a very troubled world.
You have expressed the belief
that it is more blessed to give than
to receive. You have represented
the spirit of Christmas.
Thank You,
IDGF International
Review Staff
Designates
New Editors.
Sophomore
David
Hoffman
was
elected
editor-in-chief of the Review
O)l Friday by the newspaper
staff, becoming the youngest
editor since 1968. Hoffman, a
Wilmington resident, is a
political science major and is
currently
serving
as
a
co-photography editor.
The editor-elect plans to
concentrate
on
a
"diversification
and
intensification" of the paper's
commentary and reporting
about campus issues, in
addition to community, state,
and national concerns.
"We have an increased
responsibility to the student"
he commented. "One of our
primary objectives this year
will be to make them aware,_
that they are not isolated
from the rest of their world."
Hoffman also added, "The
past year has ·demonstrated
what we are capable of doing.
'I'll~> "f''\. <;I aff has ~'~ ~trong
poLenLMI tor growth, and we
fully expect to go in that
direction."
Also elected on Friday was
former lay-out editor Lorie
Grosskopf, AS5 to the
position of managing editor.
Grosskopf, also a sophomore,
is an English major and
Newark resident.
Concerning
new
her
position,
Grosskopf
(Continued to Page 3)
Allocates Money For Student Leaders
UDCC Funds Winterim Retreat
By LORIE GROSSKOPF
The UDCC (University of
Delaware
Co-ordinating
Committee) wound up the
semester Sunday night by
appropriating $19.75 for
room and board expenses to
each of 15 to 20 persons
participating in their one
credit
Winterim
retreat
project.
Staff photo by John Martinez
THE COUNTRY-ROCK MUSIC of Poco blasted Delaware
Fieldhouse Sunday night, but despite an excellent performance
gate receipts were low- the concert may lose some $6,000. See
stories and more pictures on pages 22-23.
Dick
Jolly,
President
Trabant's assistant who has
been working in the Office< of
Student Affairs, outlined
final costs for the weekend
program which would include
members of the SGCC,
committee chairmen and
those serving on the vice
president's
undergraduate
cabinet. He stated that
"transportation" had been
"approved," but room and
board payments of nearly
$20 would have to be
handled
by
individuals
themselves. Jolly pointed out,
however, that the UDCC was
allowed
to
appropriate
money
for
"leadership
training" if programs were
approved by two-thirds of the
student government.
Members turned to Bob
Dike, AS3, treasurer of the
UDCC, for a financial
statement. His only response
to questions was, "The
money is here."
John
Flaherty, newly
appointed
nominations
committee chairman, strongly
opposed
the
discussion
favoring appropriations for
'members to "feed their
faces" on a weekend "binge."
He proposed that the student
government instead give the
$500 to the University
Starvation Relief Fund.
important to improving the
workings of the general
council. Charis Dunlap, HE3,
Commuter
Association
president, stated that it
would be a time to better
relationships
between
members and to clarify such
things as clauses in the
constitution, bylaws and
amendments.
The Winterim project has
been planned for January 5,
6, and 7, and will be
conducted at a YMCA camp
near
Downingtown,
Pennsylvania. The whole
point of going off campus to
discuss
the
university
government was questioned
by Greg DeCowsky, AS3. He
The
suggestion
was
quickly cast aside. Voting
members felt
that the
weekend retreat the first
week in January would be
This is the last issue of The
Review for the fall semester.
The Review will resume
publication after Winterim on
January 30.
(Continued to Page 2)
Last Issue
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 2
City Meter Maids Meet
Respect, Warm Greetings
By MIKE DINSMORE
If you have ever uttered a
muffled curse upon finding a
yellow or red summons
hanging from the door handle
of your car, or if you have
ever laughingly called them
"lovely Rita," you may have
wondered what Newark's
meter maids are really like.
Accompanying one of the
city's three meter maids on
her beat proved to be an
interesting insight, not only
into a day in the life of a
meter maid, but also into the
culture that is downtown
Newark. (Yes, Virginia, there
is a downtown Newark.)
Shirley Richmond has
been a member of the
Newark Police Force for
almost six years. Her exact
title is Special Officer, but
she admits laughingly that
"everyone calls us meter
maids."
BEAT
Starting out from the
Newark Police Station, the
beat encompassed the entire
Gallery Features
-Prints, Macrame
Prints, sketches, macrame
and · other
two
and
three-dimensional art objects
are being sold by a group of
local artists daily, except
Sundays and Mondays, from
1-3 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. at the
Phoenix Center, 20 Orchard
Rd. now until Christmas.
The new gallery and sale
has been set up by a group of
Newark artists in response to
the need for local talent in
the community to have an
outlet in which to display and
sell their work. The Phoenix
Center has given the group
the use of their upstairs living
room.
According
to
Kersti
Keane, the chairman of the
group's board of directors,
after the demise of the
Newark Gallery, which was a
small exhibit on Main St.
"run by two dedicated
women," the group "saw the
need
for
the
whole
community, and not just the
university community to have
a place to expose their
work."
Sweatshirts
$450
The exhibit, which has
been in existence since
October, has "sold quite a bit
and sponsored quite a few
artists in the area." Keane
noted that the enterprise
hopes to engage in both a
regular sales exhibit, and also ·
a one-man show either
monthly or bi-monthly. One
such one-man show will
possibly be scheduled in
January. "We want it to be
more than just a gallery; a
statement about something
should be made with art. It
should be a living thing."
A BREAK
The
Newark
Police
Department has been giving
out these friendly warning
notices instead of parking
tickets in the downtown area
si nee
Dec.
4,
which,
according to Richmond, is
the earliest they have ever
started.
Normally,
these
warnings are not given out
until about 10 days before
Christmas. This year, said
Richmond, "the chief (Capt.
William Brierly) wanted to
give people a break."
According to Lt. George
Getty
of
the
Police
Department, this courtesy
will be extended on Dec. 15
Artists who would like to
use the gallery to display
their art should contact
Matilda Tompson, manager of
the non-profit enterprise, at
255-4378. Keane stated that
one-man
exhibits
are
welcomed, adding that "we
try to keep the quality as
high as possible, but other
than that, there are no
restrictions as to what types
of art will be accepted."
,
(Continued to Page 10)
Foofl.an iersey
$500
ONLY AT
LIS'
,;
•
--....~''
I
I, I
•. ·..._#I
I
46 E. Main St.
New•k
length of East Main Street,
with several trips to side
streets which had meters.
Dressed in a stylish blue and
grey winter uniform with
black boots and blue and
white hat, Richmond received
many friendly waves and
cheery
calls of "Good
morning," as she made her
way up Main Street.
A red 1971 Volkswagen
parked outside the "Poor
House"
was
the
first
overparked car encountered.
However, instead of writing
out a two-dollar ticket,
Richmond reached into a
bright red drawstring bag,
brought out a red warning
notice with an attached
candy cane, and placed it
under the windshield wiper.
The red violation flag was
also up on the meter by a
blue
Volkswagen station
wagon outside Western Auto.
As Richmond placed another
warning under the wiper and
walked off, the familiar
sound of a VW horn was
followed by a grateful wave
and smile from the woman
driver of the red Volkswagen
as she drove by.
I
.......
DECEMBER 12, 197
Student Government.
been a
(Continued from Page 1)
said that the purpose of the
retreat could be achieved on
campus in a conference room
at Pencader much more
cheaply
with
members
staying in dorm rooms and
eating with meal tickets.
In
response
to
this
argument other members felt
that they should get aw-ay
from
the
university
atmosphere
and
campus
pressures to discuss plans and
improvements
effectively.
The proposal then came to a
vote and the money was
appropriated
unanimously.
The
few
voices raising
opposition were not recorded
because they did not hold
voting privileges.
Following
this
appropriation the University
Starvation Relief Fund was
brought to the floor. At the
last meeting of the student
government on Dec. 3, the
council had "recognized the
fund
and
pledged
its
support."
Mike
Yates,
AS5,
president of the College of
Arts and Sciences, moved to
give a $200 donation to the
relief fund.
Dike emphatically stated
that the government did not
have the money to give to the
fund in lieu of future
expenditures. Such expenses
as a newsletter, SGCC's
general
elections
next
semester and their already
passed appropriations for
their weekend project were
examples cited by Dike. "We
must consider our priorities,"
he said, suggesting that they
lie on campus and witliin the
organization.
One member brought up
the point that the council had
given
$500
to
the
Bangaladesh Relief Fund last
year. Saul Gilstein, BE3, then
took the floor. He felt that it
would be a mistake to donate
money to the fund and that
last year's contribution had
• •
mistake. He, too,
stressed the fact that the
council
should
consider
spending priorities.
Flaherty exploded and
emphasized that ii the
council could afford~ to give
money
toward
their
own projects that they could
donate a sum to the fund.
Nancy Emig, NU3, replied
that
if
students
were
interested in giving to the
collection that they would
give individually.
Yates ended the discussion
by making his proposal. No
voting member volunteered c.
second, so the motion was
denied. Dunlap stated that
they would wait until next
semester to see how the
council stood financially
before gtvmg to a fund
sponsored by a campus
organization.
Other areas discussed at
the
meeting
were Jed
Lafferty's new position as
president of the councils
charter flights, and individual
council reports.
The new president said
that
Harry
Temple's
resignation as SGCC leader
had "caught him off guard"
and he called for clarification
of many of the government's
projects that were currently
in the planning stage.
Lafferty, AG3, said he had
discussed the Rathskeller
with President Trabant, who
had mentioned March 1,
1973 as a hopeful date for
the student bar's opening.
Steve Ervin explained a
program still in the workings
to incorporate a travel bureau
on campus. Dean Raymond
Eddy, of the Office of
Student Affairs, has been
working with students on a
separate proposal for such an
institution
involving
the
entire university. Plans for
combining
the
two
investigations with profits
going to the SGCC was
proposed.
DECEMBER 12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware,_Newark, Delaware
Pers~nality Spotlight
0
~
0
D1verse Life Educat!y?a.~~/
"The only way to get an
education is to get involved."
Doug Stephenson, BE3, Jives
his academic life on this
theory, and it seems to be
successfuL
Stephenson is manager of
the musical group "Canyon."
But he is not li-.ited to this
one interest. He numerates
other activities: an avid pilot,
chairman of the student
advisory
board
to
the
Director of Residence Life,
member of the Special
Interest Housing Committee,
and part-time worker at the
desk in Christiana Commons.
Stephenson is now taking a
free university course entitled
"Group One: An Evening
With ... " He has a double
major. As he says, "History
because I like it and Business
because I have to do
something when I get out of
here."
There will come
a time
soon, Stephenson admits,
when he will have to make a
decision. "Canyon," with its
burgeoning popularity, could
become a full-time job.
. Whether-to stay involved with
them or with his other
interests is the question.
MIXER
Explaining his duties with
"Canyon,"
Stephenson
declares he is bookkeeper,
p.r. man, business manager,
recording
engineer,
and
"scapegoat."
Review Editors.
(Continued from Page 1)
commented, "The Review has
come a long way in the past
year with respect to campus
coverage. and nationwide
standing
among
other
newspapers. We will not
only endeavor to progress in
these areas, but we will try to
better relationships among
individual members on the
staff
and
among
the
departments."
After consultation with
the
outgoing
editors,
Hoffman has appointed the
following
editors:
Ken
Robinson, AS4, news editor;
Cathy Birk, AS5, features
editor; Gene Quinn, AS5,
sports editor; and Larry
Conforti, AS6, photography
editor.
"We will be seeking to
emphasize in our reporting
the student's right to know
about all the issues on this
campus," said Robinson.
"Input from all segments of
the university community
will be encouraged so that the
Review will be able to better
serve the diverse interests and
needs of its readers. Students
with problems, ideas for
stories or simply complaints
should feel free to contact
members of the news staff or
drop by · the office." The
remainder of the staff
appointments
made
by
Hoffman are:. Larry Hanna,
AS5, assistant news editor;
He points out that the
individual who runs the
equipment at a concert is
usually easy prey for the last
classification. For example,
he said, the person who
controlled the speaker system
at last year's "Bread" concert
would have had that problem.
The
"instrument"
learned through trial and
error, through experience.
"Canyon"
has
made
several promotional tapes and
the group is working on plans
for a record. In August, they
made a tape for Vanguard.
Thirteen songs were recorded
in 3 hours
"An album," Stephenson
Doug Stephenson
Stephenson plays is the
the
soundmixer,
combination mechanism. He
has to have an ear, to know
"what sounds good," to
comprehend . the acoustics in
a given room. There is no
course to be taken. It must be
• •
Don Davis, ED4, assistant
features editor; Steve Smith,
BE6, assistant sports editor;
Steve Zeron, AS6, and John
Martinez,
EG5, assistant
photography editors; Sue
Rosenberg AS6, and Debbie
McCulley, AS6, art directors.
The new staff will take
over their new jobs at the
beginning of the second
semester. Winterim will be
utilized as an information and
training session for the new
editors so that they will be
able to more effectively
accomplish their new duties
when the Review resumes
publication.
Hoffman announced that
he hopes to encourage the
development
of
more
journalism courses besides the
two already in existence, and
to devise an Integrated
Learning Semester for the
members of the staff.
Another innovation which
Hoffman hopes to implement
is the creation of positions
for
approximately
five
contributing editors who will
specialize in investigative
news and features stories.
The four positions which
remain to be filled are that of
business manager, advertising
manager, copy editor and
Jay-out
editor.
Hoffman
hopes to fill these posts by
the end of Winterim.
Staff photo by Dave Stroble
says, "is nothing more than
promotional materiaL It's a
(Continued to Page 28)
Business Majors
The positions of business
manager
and
advertising
manager are still open at The
Review. Any business major
who is interested in applying
for these positions should
come up to the Review office
at 301 Student Center or call
738-2648. If no one is there,
leave a note or call 737-9756
and ask for Dave in I 06 or
call 737-9678 and ask for
Lorie in 209. Fringe benefits
are available. Responsible and
dependable
persons
are
needed.
PAGE 3
Faculty To Allow
llS .Experiment
By KARIN STEARNS
The Integrated Learning
Semester will be a definite
experimental
academic
alternative .for students next
fall, it was learned last
Thursday, following an earlier
joint meeting of two Faculty
Senate committees.
ILS will allow in-depth
study of an interdisciplinary
theme during a regular
semester. The semester will
be
divided
into
two
seven-week blocks so that
students can concentrate on
one theme for each block.
Credits given can count for
either
major or group
requirements.
Both Senate committees,
the
Committee
on
Undergraduate Studies and
the
Committee
on
Educatiomil Innovation and
Planning,
"were
very
favorable about this kind of
experimentation
and
scheduling," according to Dr.
Barry Morstain, director of
Academic Planning and one
of the original developers of
the ILS program. Morstain
added that the committees
decided,
upon
a
recommendation
by
Dr.
Stephen Salsbury of the
Undergraduate
Studies
Committee, that a two-year
experimental period would be
more beneficial than the
original one semester. He said
they felt it would be better to
look at the impact and
effectiveness
over
an
extended time period. This,
however, does not preclude
intermediate
evaluations.
''There will be reviews of the
experiment concurrent with
the implementation of ILS,"
said Morstain.
According to Dr. Robert
Stegner, chairman
of the
Committee on Educational
Innovation and Planning,
"unless the Senate asks for
Senate-wide discussion, we
have no plans at the present
to
take
it
(the
ILS
experiment) to the floor of
the Senate." Therefore, from
the viewpoint of the Senate,
at this time, ILS is "a good
idea"
and
"will
be
implemented
on
an
experimental basis" in the fall
of 1973. Stegner explained
that
the
two-year
experimental
period was
recommended "because it
will take that long to find out
if it's going to work."
Morstain emphasized that
"ILS is only going to get off
the ground now if there is
student support. We need to
get a better idea of how many
students are interested in
what ideas or get their ideas
on other themes." He feels
that faculty members also can
help by talking to their
advisees about ILS and by
taking a few minutes in
classes
to
discuss
it.
Approximately 15 students
have indicated an interest in
helping to actually implement
ILS at this point, noted
Morstain.
To Morstain, the most
important aspect of the ILS
program
since
intense
discussion of it began three or
four months ago is that
students,
faculty
and
administrators have worked
together in a short period of
time to come up with an
alternative. "There is a good
mood of cooperation on
campus among the three
groups. People are open and
receptive to the discussion of
the academic experiences of
undergraduates
and
alternative
academic
experiences
of
undergraduates,"
Morstain
explained.
Seeing the ILS program
through
its
four
trial
semesters will be "like a
Darwinian survival" according
to Morstain. "We expect
rough edges but we also
expect more leeway in
workinl! it out."
Teaching Skills Explored
By TOM GREER
A sampling of 20 university professors and
instructors and 20 undergraduate students were
asked if they were satisfied with the teaching
proficiency at the undergraduate level of the
university. The results show mixed reactions.
Most professors interviewed felt that their
students seemed generally pleased with their
classroom instruction. But most concurred that
although the primary purpose of the university is
to "promote the intellectual growth of its
students," there had been relatively little
emphasis given to the quality of teaching.
It seems that there are several barriers to be
overcome on the road to better teaching.
The first obstacle is the question of
promotion and tenure. All but four of the
professors interviewed believed that publication
is the primary criterion by which faculty
members are evaluated by the administration.
They concluded that the reward system
encourages an emphasis on publication, rather
than teaching.
In the words of one history instructor, "the
thing is to play the game, to teach without
researching is to court perishing." Yet half of the
professors remarked that through research they
became better teachers in the classroom.
Several of the professors were optimistic,
indicating that the demand for publication had
eased noticeably in the past few years. Yet when
they were asked what would happen to a faculty
member in their department who refused to
publish, their answers were the same-he would
probably not be granted tenure.
Another problem facing reformers is that
graduate students are taught how to research, but
not how to convey the knowledge they have
learned to a classroom of students. Some of the
professors said that their departments have
programs for the supervision of graduate
assistants, but there seems to be no overall
high-priority program to improve the teaching
skills of instructors and new additions to the
faculty. "This is not an educar·on department,"
one chairman said.
(Continued to Page 27)
DECEMBER 12,
REVIEW, Un
PAGE4
OUR MAN HOPPE
Spending Student Dollars
for Unnecessary Facilities
Added to the list of Winterim projects last Sunday was a proposed
1-credit UDCC project, "Values, Lifestyles, and Interpersonal
Communication," in which various student leaders will gather to, in
essence, iron out organizational problems. The weekend retreat to a
camp in Pennsylvania is intended to foster better relationships among
students in the organization so that in the future, petty arguments
and disagreements can be avoided in the course of the UDCC's work ..
One area which is sorely in need of clarification is the organization's
constitution and bylaws. UDCC members have admitted that they
are often unsure as to what the Constitution prescribes in a situation
or even under which constitution they should be ooerating, since the
change in student government form earlier this year.
Theoretically then, it can't be denied that a group session such as
the one which UDCC wants may be very beneficial. However, the
logistics of the project are debatable.
The UDCC's appropriation of $19.75 per person for room and
board for the weekend means that as much as $500 could be spent if
the anticipated ·maximum of 25 persons attend the retreat. The
source of that $500 is ultimately student tuition. Is it fair to the
student body to spend their money when the UDCC could use
facilities which exist here within the framework of the university and
which could be used at practically no cost?
Winterim provides for intensive study of any subject, away from
academic pressures, away from organizational pressures and most of all
at no extra cost to the student for room and board on campus. The
UDCC project participants, in seeking a better understanding of
student government at the University of Delaware, could accomplish
their objective just as well using the university's resources. While it is
probably true that some money would inevitably be needed even on
campus, to dole out $500 of student money for a camp 50 miles
away does not appear to reflect the UDCC's avowed purpose of
serving the students.
Cheers And Jeers
Jeers: to
the Board of Trustees for again refusing to allow Review
reporters to attend their semi -annual meeting this month. Let' s hear
it for openness.
Cheers:
to all members of the university community
contributed to the University Starvation Relief Fund and ....
who
Jeers: to
the voting members of the UDCC for not contributing and,
as one observer noted, feeding their own faces instead of the starving
children they refused to help.
Cheers: to Poco for a great concert.
VOL. 95 NO. 28
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1972
Editor-in-chief ....•.. .... .. . . . . . . . . . ...•.. .. . . . . .... .• ... ... . Karin 1. Stearns
Business Manager .. ... . . . . . . . . . . .. ... . . . . . .. .. .. . . . . . . . . . .. .. ... . R.A. Bobzin
Managing Eeli't or . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .•. . ..... . .. . . . . . . . . .. ..... ...••... Ray Wilson
Executive Editor .. .. .. .... .. .. •...... . . . . . • . . . . . • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . Mimi Bouelart
News Editors . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .... .... . .. . . .. Roy Wilson, Ken Robinson
Features Editor ... . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .... .. Paula Johnson
Sports Editor •.. ..•. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... .... . ... Roger Truitt
Photography Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .• . . . . . . . . Burleigh Cooper, David Hoffman
Layout Editor . .. . • . .. . ..... . .. ... .. .... . . ... .. .' . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lorie Grosskopf
Copy Editor •.... •. . . . . . .. . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cathy Birk, Larry Hanna
Advertising Manager •.• .. •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •. ... . . •. .. • . . . . . . . . . . • . . Joel Smitli
National Advertising Manager . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tom Crawford
Assistant Sports Editor •... ....• .. ... . .... . .' . ... .. .. .•.•.. ... . . . . . . Gene Quinn
Circulation Manager •.. . •.. ... . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . .. .... . . . . . . . . .. . John Anklin
Advisor •••. ... • .. .•. . •.. ... .. .. ... . . . ..... ... . ... •. . . . ..... .. E .A . Nickerson
Secretary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . •... . ... . •• .. .. •..... Martha Toomey
Art Director .... •..•• . . ... .... . . ... . . . . . . . . .•... Sue Rosenberg, Debbie McCulley
Reporters: Donna Bell, Barbara Carter, Don Davis, Jim Denny, Mike Dinsmore, Nick
Fox, Peggy Gelhaus, Terry Godby, Larry Hanna, Susan Hertzog, Carolyn Hodgdon, Stan
Howard, Sue Isaacs, Allen Jacobs, Jeff Kreshaw, Rob Kling, Joan Koster, Mark LaRose,
Michael Lewis, David MacWilliams, William Mahoney, Rhoda Mast, Bill Mead, Karen
Modugno, Jackie Nye, Barbara Paul, Bonnie Pease, Aletta Shrewsbury, Steve Smith, Dave
Stroble, Patti Testerman, Jerry Tulley, Brad Wisniewski, Vince Wood, Eel Wrightson.
Photoraphy Staff: Larry Conforti, David Corbishley, John Martinez, H. Brooke Paige,
Chris Petroski, Dave Stroble, Steve Zeron.
Published twice weekly during the academic year bY the undergraduate student body of
the University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19711. Editorial (738-2648) and business
(738-2649) offices located at 300-303 Student Center.
Opi~ions expressed are not necessarily those of the university community. Advertising
rates are on request. Subscriptions are $6 per year.
Entered as second class matter, December 13, 1945, at the Newark, Delaware Post
Office, under the Act of March 3, 1879.
National newspaper advertising sales handled through the National Education Advertising
Services.
It's Hard To Care
L - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - B y ART HOPPE
For more than a month now the
front page has talked of peace. For
more than a month now the diplomats
have advanced and retreated in a ritual
as stately and unhurried as the mating
dance of peacocks.
And for more than a month now on
page eleven or fourteen or twenty-four
there has been a brief daily story about
shellings and battles and our continuing
bombing raids-- the heaviest of the
entire war.
"American B-52 bombers yesterday
dropped another 1200 tons of bombs
on Communist positions.... "
I find now that I glance at this brief
daily story on page eleven or fourteen
or twenty-four-- I glance at it and turn
the page.
How hard it is to conceive of the
explosive force in 1200 tons of TNT.
How hard it is to envision the blinding
flash, hear the eardrum-splitting roar,
feel the agony of torn flesh, smell the
stench of death.
How hard it is to care.
*****
It's been ten years now since last
cried. I remember the day well, It was
the day 83 people were killed in a plane
crash. It was the day my dog died.
The dog was old and sick and in pain.
I carried him down to the pet hospital
in my arms and gave him to the young
veterinarian. I patted the dog one last
time on the head and told the vet to kill
him and walked out with the
unstoppable tears flowing down my
face.
I didn't weep for those 83 people I
wept for my dog. The dog had lived in
my world for fifteen years. I didn't
know any of those 83 people. They had
never existed in my world . Therefore,
the fact that they had ceased to exist
affected my world hardly at all. I ,
couldn't weep for them.
I've thought about that day often. I
think that we all live in our own little
worlds. I think the real world out there
exists.only when it touches our own.
I care more about my weight than I
do about the starving in India. I care
more about my tax bill than about the
jobless in the ghettoes. I care more
about my leaking roof than the
thermonuclear bomb.
I believe that my own little world
comes first-- not because it should, but
simply because it does. That is the way
of things. And because that is the way
of things, I believe my first task is not
to save the real world, but to save my
own.
My power to erase the misery and
i injustices of the real world is virtually
nill. But my power to make my own
little world a better place is
immeasurable.
I know I must care about death and
suffering in the real world. I must try to
care because every time I don't, I
callous over a corner of my soul. Every
time I don't, I make my own world a
slightly less decent place in which to
live.
But now that our leaders say that
peace is just around the corner, how
hard it is to care.
*****
So the diplomats continue their
intricate maneuvering, the bombs I
helped pay for continue falling, and the
human beings I never knew continue
dying-- dying now for no good reason at
all.
·
Surely these pointless deaths now are
the most tragic of this decade-old war.
Yet so inured have I become in that
decade t.o the suffering of others, so
hardened to their pain, that I can now
callously flip the page.
I wish I could weep again. I wish I
could weep, not only for what we are
doing to them, but for what we have
done to my own little world.
I wish I could weep. But how hard it
has become to care.
(Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. 1972)
Readers Respond
Fairness .of Negative ·Grading
To The Editor:
I think by now most people realize
the inherent unfairness of the negative
grade of F. To use an oversimplified
example, student A and student B take
the same courses--15 credits worth. In
addition, student B takes another
3-credit course so he carries 18 credits.
Both
students
study
the
15
credits-worth equally and receive
identical grades for these courses.
Student B only reads 4 chapters and
attends just 3 lectures for his extra
3-credit course and so he fails the same
number of credits but student A has an
A average; student B, a B average (due
to his 3-credit F). It looks as though
student A is the superior student yet
student B actually has more knowledge
(4 chapters and 3 lectures worth).
Grades are meant to predict capabilities
of a student, yet the F grade (as shown
above) fails to do so.
In the real world, people at "lower
levels" of the system (policemen,
mailmen, , etc.) use a little disgression in
performing their duties. If they
followed " the book" word for word this
society could hardly function. Often,
policemen stop enforcing a law before it
officially
discarded
through
is
legislation. By the same token,
professors (if they believe that the F
grade should be abolished) need not feel
that their hands are tied by the
administration. Simply, don't give Fs.
What harm would it do to give an F
student a C or D? Or arrange for the
student to drop the course?
It would please me to see professors
perform
more
mental synthesis
regarding student problems in the
academic community. All professors (by
their very position) have succeeded in
the academic environment, so it would
impress me if they showed more
concern for students still going through
the process.
Tom Bauder, AS4
See Page 8 For
More Letters
To The Editor.
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
DECEMBER 12, 1972
r----""Dubious
PAGE 5
Distinctions--~
Richard Nixon
The Quarterback Sneak Award
Norma Handloff
Defeated
contender
Representatives
· (or
U.S.
House
o(
The Impossible Dream Award
Dr. Arnold Gordenstein
American Studies chairman denied tenure by the
English Department last spring
The Dead End at Every Turn Award
Harry Temple
SGCC president who resigned
The Gone But Not Forgotten Award
Jean Westwood
Ex chairwoman of the Democratic national committee.
The "Seduced and Abandoned" Award
The University Administration
The Buying Something You Really Need Award
.4 view of the lounge area of John M. Clayton Hall, the university's mz:itimillion dollar conference center.
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
6
DECEMBER
J972: A Tranquil Campus.
FEBRUARY
Pencader
finally
opens... Dupont Co. strips
topsoil along White Clay
Creek ... AMS students form
an SGA Ad Hoc Committee
to investigate Gordenstein
Case ... Nader's Raiders
challenge
the
Delaware
Student Lobby to become a
public
interest
research
group ... Report on university
women
recommends
balancing the faculty sex
ratio...
Trabant
places
RathskelJer
at
lowest
priority ... William Kunstler,
Chicago lawyer, calls for
radicalism ... Norman Mailer
gives a subdued performance
at Carpenter... SCC stages
social event of semesterStudent Center Day .. Kevin
Freel
resigns
as
SGA
president.
Review Staff Photos
MARCH
Mitchell Hall assumes
Woodstock nation mood as
Ken Kesey urges students to
political activisim ..Newark
Coalition forms on Kesey's
suggestion ...Minority group
proposes
complete
restructuring
of
the
university ...SGA Ad Hoc
Committee publishes a 14
page
report
o-n
Gordenstein. . .
Newark
Coalition holds convention in
Newman Center, George
Wolkind chosen as mayoral
candidate . . . "Bread"
entertains
in
the
Fieldhouse ...SGA approves
$103,14 7 budget in less than
two
hours... Board
of
Trustees begins investigation
of feasibility of a university
law school. . .In referendum,
students choose proposal A,
College
Councils
with
coordinating council. . .City
says no to write-in candidates
in
April 11 municipal
elections...
APRIL
AMS students picket in
front of Memorial Hall for 13
days
in
support
of
Gordenstein ... Water
no
problem, Christiana Towers
will open on schedule ...
Room and Board rates
raised ...Sypherd Hall stages
People's Free Concert . . .
Room custodial service to
end next fall .. .SGA's "Fall
1971 Course and Teacher
Evaluation" gets good and
bad notices. . .Hundreds of
students wait all day to sign
up for Christiana...John
Holt,
noted
educator,
criticizes American school
system ... Harry
Temple
captures SGCC presidency . ..
War protestors rally in NYC
and Newark.
MAY
Early morning firebomb
attack
strikes
Trabant's
Hullihen Office...Delaware
State Legislature to vote on
bills which will lower the age
of
majority to 18 ... Ag
professor
killed
by
Metroliner... Faculty chooses
between UDFT and AA UP to
determine their bargaining
agent . .First
edition
of
"Delaware Literary Review"
contains student fiction and
poetry . . .John K. Galbraith
lectures to packed Mitchell
Hall
on
the
technostructure ...AMS
students
camp overnight on the
-Mall ... Newark
revises
election
procedures
to
include
write-in
candidates...Provost Shirley
approves SGCC's $97,288
· budget.
SEPTEMBER
Rathskeller,
discount
record shop, massive voter
registration drive to head
S GCC
agenda
this
fall. ..Summer report shades
new light on case of Arnold
Gordenstein,
American
Studies head who has denied
tenure last June by English
Department ... AAUP, faculty
union,
begins
salary
negotiations. .. Presidential,
statewide, local candidates
open
headquarters
in
Newark ...Security
installs
$250,000
central
alarm
systems-STARS . .. RHA
changes
image-leases
refrigerators
to
become
financially independent ... 11
Israeli
Olympic
team
members are murdered in
Munich ... Resignations anger
staff
in
art
dept.
controversy ... crowded
dining
halls
anger
students...Board of Trustees
to consider establishing law
school. ..Guest in Residence
••
Program begun . ..Commuters
get needed refuge, COMA
house opens...Sypherd hosts
2-day concert...Dining hall
workers complain about
wo rking
con d it ions,
dirtiness . . . New
provost-Campbell, reviews
decentralization
plans...Planned Parenthood
to locate in Laurel Hall
REVIEW Un
of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
But Some Still Fight The System
(Continued from Page 6)
basement ... New state law
modernizes
apartment
code ... Lettuce
boycott
comes to campus.. .former
JFK press secretary Pierre
Salinger
appears
at
Carpenter...
OCTOBER
Maintenance
backlog
29,000 hours behind ... Police
seize · grass in biggest haul
yet. .. Gordenstein
defense
rebuffed ... SGCC Approves
Budget unanimously ... Dorm
monitor
finds
stabbing
victim ... Ag
prof Sasser,
claims bias in contract
terms ...Theater
presents
thirties musical-"Dames at
Sea" ... Leak of tapes angers
Art Staff... Handloff blames
duPont
for
avoiding
debates ... Attempted
rape
occurs
in
Gilbert
Complex ...Student Affairs
Monthly opinion poll probes
students' perceptions... Food
Service
adds
more
employees... Coalition
to
unite students, faculty ... Nixon signs Revenue Sharing bill
amid
chants, cheers in
Ph illy ... McGovern
seeks
Nov. 7 Mountain top at
Cheyney
State ... Teach-in
speakers urge peace, change,
McGovern ... Professional
staff considers AFT ... "Deep Throat" stirs controversy in
Newark ...Sasser finally wins
three-year contract. .. Hens
whip Temple in blinding rain,
28-9 ... Lack of funds plagues
congressional - candidate
Handloff. .. Agnew
hits
protestors, lauds GOP at
Wilm. rally ... Pat Paulsen
offers
suggestions about
"how to survive the next four
years." ...Secrecy
cloaks
mock elections...
defense
thwarts
Villanova ... Nixon wins in
landslide,
Tribbitt
wins
governship, Biden gains U.S.
Senate seat, Republicans
maintain majorities in both
houses of state legislature
Learning
. .. Integrated
Semester · offers freedom,
learning alternatives...World
famous
anthropologist
Margaret Mead hits U.S.
lifestyles ... Recent
middle
states evaluation of university
cites
both
progress,
problems ... "Flash Cadillac
recreates
50's
rock
atmosphere .. ,
DECEMBER
Trabant
requests $16
million in state funds ...
Winterim head predicts 5,000
students
will
enroll ...
Professional
staff rejects
U D FT
as
bargaining
agent ... Hens win first place
in- AP,UPI, and Lambert Cup
polls, reject Boardwalk Bowl
bid ... Vice-pres. for Business
and Finance Randolph Meade
resigns ... Arts and Science
dean still not selected.
NOVEMBER
Gordenstein
defends
record in rebuttal. .. AA UP
chiefs urge new budget _... Dr. Arnold Gordenstein continues a year long struggle with the
priorities .. ,.Sargent Shriver English Department to win tenure and autonomy as an American
lambasts Nixon record at Studies professor. He was denied tenure because of an alleged lack of
New
Castle
rally ... Hen research ...
... Students rally in New York and Los Angeles to ask again for
an end to the war...
. . .George McGovern wages an unsuccessful presidential campaign against Richard Nixon. He calls for
America to "come home to a new moral leadership ... "
REVIEW, University
PAGE 8
of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
DECEMBER 12, 1972
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - R e a d e r s Respond------------____,
Week-End Movies
To The Editor:
It seems that everyone
bitches about this university
and its rip-offs, but the worst
one is a weekly activity, the
week-end movies, that is
sponsored by students, alias
the Student Center Council
and the Student Activities
Committee.
The latest example is · the
disastrous non-showing of the
film, "The Owl and the
Pussycat," Saturday night.
The circumstances revolve
around the fact that the sec,
in order to rake in money, at
times
orders
classy
cinemascope films, and in this
instance forgot to requisition
a cinemascope lens.
An
hour-long
search
availed only in riling the
audience, and the film was
never shown. The SCC is not
supposed to be perfect by
any means, but they have
"forgotten" the lens before.
In their monetary interests,
they have managed to make
many mistakes. Several times
which I recall from personal
experience,
they
have
even forgotten to bring the film
until reminded.
The blame, however, falls
No Contribution
To The Editor:
Does
our
student
government have the right to
spend
our
money
in
contributions to charity? I
say no and commend our
government for recognizing
this fact.
At Sunday's
meeting the UDCC after a
con troversia I
discussion
decided not to make a
contribution to the Review's
charity fund drive on the
grounds that this would be a
political move done with no
knowledge of whether the
majority of the students were
in support and also more
basically that this would not
serve the students and
therefore violate the purpose
of student government.
It helps restore my faith in
student government to see
people
who
are
more
concerned with financial
responsibility
than
with
spending our tuition money
to support their
favorite
political causes. Thank you.
Curtis D. Bauman, AS3
on
whatever
luckless
projectionist is sent from the
Instructional
Resources
Center to show the film. The
errors of this organization
always ·seem to fall on the
projectionist or someone in a
similar position. I doubt
seriously that the sec will
improve their record in the
future, but it is about time
they took the blame. IRC
neither deserves nor wants it.
The students who go to
these films are justifiably
angered. The people who
sponsor these films should get
up off their collective asses
and do something.
William J. Zimmerman,
AS4
SCC Shows Progress
To The Editor:
Unfortunately,
the
Student Center Council's
films programs have lost
much of their credibility this
semester. Four of our films
have been delayed or lost in
the mail. Another film was
shown out of order because
the film distributor numbered
the reels incorrectly. Last
Saturday's film, "The Owl
and the Pussycat," couldn't
be shown . because security
apparently misplaced the
special lenses needed for the
film.
Although most of these
film problems were beyond
our control the Student
Center Council apologizes for
many inconveniences caused
audiences this
to · our
semester, and
is doing
'Starving Student Leaders'
To The Editor:
On Sunday, Dec. 10, the
UDCC
approved
the
subsidizing of a
3-day
"leadership conference" for
members of the UDCC and
the Undergraduate Cabinet.
This conference would be
held at the Brandywine
Valley YMCA Camp in
Downingtown, Pa. According
to Dick Jolly, intern in the
President's office, expenses,
including
meals
for
conference participants would
approximate $20 per person,
with about 20 persons
expected to attend, fora total
of approximately $400. This
allocation also went against a
long-standing precedent of
not funding food for student
organizations.
At the same meeting,
a motion to allocate $200 to
the University Starvation
Relief Fund failed to receive
a second, due to the fears of
some UDCC members that
SGCC funds were not
sufficient to allow such an
expenditure.
We deplore the confusion
of priorities leading to the
allocation of SGCC money to
the
"Starving
Student
Leaders Fund." We hope that
as they feed their own faces,
our "student leaders" think
of the starving children they
refused to help, or indeed, of
their own starving College
Councils. The decency and
responsibility of leadership
demand no less.
John Flaherty,
Vice President, ASCC
Michael Kavanaugh,
Vice President,
Commuter Association
Greg DeCowsky,
A&S Councilor,
Div. of Speech and
Communications
everything
possible
to
improve the situation. True,
there have been many
mistakes, but if one looks
back on our film program it is
evident
that
we
have
improved
our
programs
immensely.
Four years ago the film
series was shown in Wolf Hall,
an auditorium seating only
300 people. There was only
one showing of our Saturday
series
which
frequently
consisted of quite dated
films. No advance tickets
were available and there were
many security problems.
Since that time we have
moved both series to Smith
Hall, always provided at least
two showings of our Saturday
night film, made advance
tickets available, provided
better security, published a
films poll and films brochure
each
semester,
acquired
cinemascope lenses and have
managed to keep our Sunday
Cinema series free. Quite an
improvement in four years.
We are also working on an
experimental film program
and are pushing for a larger
auditorium on campus.
I would also like to remind
the University community
that these programs are run
entirely by students who give
much of their time to plan
and run one of the best
university film programs in
this
area.
Although
sometimes
warranted,
criticism alone does us little
good. We are not servants to
this campus but people who
are anxious to improve the
life of this campus. Of course,
any constructive suggestions
are always welcome. If you
are interested in helping
improve our programs feel
free to write, visit or call the
Council
Student
Center
office, room 306, Student
Center,
738-2428.
Any
constructive input or help is
appreciated.
Nanci Howe
Student Center Council
Please note that all profits
from next Saturday night's
film, "Friends" will be
equally divided between the
Review Relief Fund and
WHEN's Marathon. Everyone
is encouraged to come and
help support these two
worthwhile causes.
FINAL WARNING:
PERFORMING ARTISTS SERIES
STUDENT SEASON TICKETS
88 STUDENT SEASON TICKETS
REMAIN UNCLAIMEDI
Because of the heavy demand for tickets to the
MARCEL MARCEAU performance on January 31,
1973 - any student season tickets still unclaimed by
1:00 p.m., January 31, will be RESOLD!
The Box Office will open for MARCEL MARCEAU at
1 :00 on January 24. It will be open from 1:00-5:00 on
the 24th, 25th, 26th, 29th and 30th and from 1 :00 to
curtain time on the 31st.
UNCLAIMED SEASON TICKETS WILL NOT
BE RESOLD UNTIL 1:00 ON JANUARY 31st.
.!!!:.
Prices
r;;;;::Thurs.
Wed. & Sat. Mats
Fri. & Sat. Eves.
Sun. Eve.
$1.50 $6.50-6.00 $UO
6.50 5.50-5.00 4.118
8.50 1.50-1.00 &.110
10.00 9.00-8.50 1.51
S~'!CI I.~ ST~Coh" p;o~
TLfS_& NEJ. hE Si
~~ ~t! :
'I:. • . ~ 2 15_
ll,. :"'· ..,
r':'t'..,..;
· . .... · "~·A
•..• o ... . J ...
<t
~!'Jd· ~ntd iiO"~'fl'i! t''ttl~ 1 ~· · ~·~·· •
~· Bo• Oll,,t . Mc~t tht<h er;· 1 ~t... •.
"t".,
ilton 's Bicycle C
AT SPENCE'S BAZAAR-DOVER
674-9792
/
DECEMBER 12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
Residence Halls
Residence Halls (except for Christiana To~ers) will close
Friday, Dec. 22 , at 12 noon. Students must leave their residence
halls within 24 hours of their last examination. Those students
who are canceling their rooms at the end of the first semester and
who are not involved in a Winterirn project must vacate their
rooms by 12 noon on Dec. 22 ,
Residence Halls will re-open for Winterim students on Jan . 3 ,
1973 , and for the second semester on Jan . 25 , 1973. Room
changes for the second semester may not take place until the end
of Winterim.
Residents who desire housing during the recess period (Dec.
22-Jan. 3) must notify the Office of the Director of Residence
Life at 313 Hullihen Hall in writing prior to 12 noon on
Thursday .
J.udicial Forum Decides:
Students' Rights Important
By DAVE STROBLE
to discuss judicial systems in
general and to respond to the
question:
"Does
the
university need a judicial
system?"
Among the conclusions
reached during the two-hour
informal exchange in Clayton
Hall was that the university,
through its judicial system,
should be concerned with
protecting the rights of
others,
and
not
with
enforcing moral codes on
individuals.
When the discussion began
it was quickly agreed that one
of the purposes of a student
judiciary system is to combat
academic dishonesty . The
panel then focused on the
other areas over which a
system
should
have
jurisdiction. Some panelists
agreed that a university
community is different from
an outside community, thus
creating the need for a
separate judicial system. This
was countered by the opinion
that
the
only
thing
differentiating a university
from any other community is
the
issue
of academic
dishonesty, so that any other
matters could be handled by
civil authorities just as well as
by the university structure.
A six-member panel of
Student
Court members,
faculty, and administrators
participated
Thursday
afternoon in a Judicial Forum
BUSINESS MAJORS
The positions of BUSINESS MANAGER
and ADVERTISING MANAGER
are still open at The Review.
Any business major who is interested in .applying for these positions
should come up to the Review office at 301 Student Center or call
738-2648.
If no one is there, leave a note or call 737-9756 and ask for Dave in 106
or call 737-9678 and ask for Lorie in 209.
FRINGE BENEFITS
RESPONSIBLE & DEPENDABLE
PERSONS NEEDED
EDUCATION
In refuting this viewpoint,
Ron Nimmo, AS4, a member
of the Student Court, pointed
out that the purpose of a
student judicial system is to
educate rather than to
punish. Students who come to
the university mature at
different rates, he said, and
contact with the system gives
them a chance to mature and
undergo
an
educational
process by teaching them to
accept the responsibility of
their actions.
UNIVERSITY TUTORING SERVICE
Thes e departmental s upervisors can put students in touch with qualified tutors.
Tutoring costs $2 per hour; t he Univer s ity pays one-half the cost for s tudents
r e c e i vi ng 25% to 5D% financial aid, the total cost f or s tudent s receiving 50% or
mor e aid.
AGRIC. & FOOD ECON.
AGRIC. ENGI NEERING
ANIMAL SCIENCE
ANTHROPOW GY
ART
ART HISTORY
ATijLETICS (Varsity)
BI1!LOGY
BLACK STUDIES
BUSINESS ADMIN.
CHEMISTRY
DRAMA & SPEECH
ECONOMICS
EDUCATION :
1
Currie.& In s truc.
Educ . Foundations
Prof es s . Servic e s
ENGINEERING
ENGLISH
ENTOMOWGY
GEOGRAPHY
GEOWGY
HISTORY
HOME ECONOMICS
LANGUAGES:
Fr ench
Gennan
Italian
Latin-G ·eek
Russian
Spanish
MARINE STUDIES
1-14.THEMATICS:
Elem. Educ. Math
Other students
MILITARY SCIENCE
MUSIC
NURSING
PHILOSOPHY
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
PHYSICS
PLANT SCIENCE
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PSYCHOLOGY
SECRETARIAL STUDIES
SOCIOLOGY
ST/,T. & CC.~. SCI.
Prof.
Prof.
Prof .
Prof.
Prof.
Prof.
Prof .
Prof.
Prof.
Prof.
R. C. Smith
E. N. Scarborough
w. C. Krauss
K. J. Ackerman
G. Noc ito
J. S. Crawford
I . C. Wisniewski
S . D. Skopik
C. A. Smith
J. S . Shellenberger
Prof. B. J. Haslett
Prof. E. D. Crai g
234 Ag. Hall
057 Ag. Hall
029 Ag. Hall
186 S. College
104 Reci t. Hall
335 Smith Hall
Delaware Fieldhouse
309 Wolf Hall
043 Memorial Hall
210 Purnell Hall
105 Brown Laboratory
28 W. Delaware
412 Purnell Hall
738-2 511
738-2468
738-2524
738-2796
738-2244
738-2865
738 •·2723
738-2609
738-2897
738-2555
738-1247
738-2777
738-2564
Prof. W. B. Moody
Prof. A. J . Magoon
Pro f. J . P . Gaynor
Pro f. R. L. Nicholls
Mr . L. A. Arena
Pro f . D. F. Bray
Mr. E. V. Bunk se
Pro f. P . B. Leavens
Pro f . G. J. Duggan
Ms . F . K. Smit h
303
2ll
134
2 36
401
247
209
104
318
302
Hall Building
Hall Building
Hall Building
DuPont Hall
Morri s Li brary
Ag. Ha ll
Elliott Hall
Penny Jlall
Memor i al Hall
Ali son Hall
7 38-2331
738-2 324
738-2321
738-2735
738-2 389
738 - 2 526
7 38- 2293
7 38- 28 54
738- 2860
7.38- 2647
Ms . C. Ha r ker
Pro f. J. C. Dav idhe i s er
Prof. R. Zaetta
Mr. A. 0. Leach
Pro f . E. M. Sl avov
Prof . I . Domi nguez
Pro f . R. B. Biggs
4 37
44 5
41 6
449
440
420
101
Smith Hall
Smi th Hall
Smith Hall
Smi t h Hall
Smi th Hall
Smith Hall
Robinson Hall
738- 2749
738- 2597
738 - 24 52
738 - 2596
738 - 2589
738- 2580
738- 2842
Prof . W. B. Moody
Pr o f. T. J . Kear ns
LTC H. E . Fearing
303 Ha ll Building
216 Shar p Labor ator y
20 Military Lab .
138 Old College
337 McDowell Hall
24 Kent Way
103 Carpenter Spor ts
232 Sharp Laborator y
147 Ag. Hall
465 Smith Hall
224 Wolf Hall
010 Purnell Hall
406 Smith Hall
101 Smith Hall
738- 2331
7 38- 2653
738- 2217
738-2594
738 - 1255
738-2380
738- 2261
738 - 2660
738- 2531
738 - 2355
738- 2271
738 - 2562
738-2598
738 - 2712
Ms . Susan Anderson
Ms. C. R. Carnahan
Prof. K. A. Chan do
Pr of. J. C. Tnvo
Prof. B. J. Kelly
Prof. J . H. Miller
Prof. A. L . Morehar t
Mr. J. E. Schneider
Prof. S. M. Levin
Ms. J. A. Cox
Prof. S. Nohara
Prof. L. H. Jones
PAGE 9
TUTORillG S01VICE COORDJNATOP - Prof. T . J. Kearns
216 Sharp Laboratory - 738-2653
1
Classes
Classes for the rest of the
week run as follows: today
classes as normal; tomorrow
(Wednesday), go to' classes
you would normally have on
Thursday; Thursday is a
reading day; and Friday
begins the frrst day of final
exams.
John Thompson, AS3, also
a Student Court member,
further
argued
that
a
university is indeed separate
from the outside commu.nity,
and that civil courts recognize
this
fact
by
allowing
universities to handle their
own internal affairs. He
stressed that the judicial
system is based on student
and· university values, and are
thus often different from
outside communities, placing
reformation and education
above punitive measures.
Some examples were cited
- by Thompson to illustrate the
way the university system
operates. The case of a
student accused of shoplifting
from the school bookstore
would be handled by the
Student Court. If it were a
repeated offense, however, it
might be turned over to the
civil authorities. In any case it
is up to the party bringing the
charges as to whether action
is taken inside or outside the
university. In the case of a
serious offense, such as a
narcotics
violation
on
campus, the civil courts
would prosecute. Thompson
noted that the state attorney
general questions university
involvement in criminal cases
of this nature.
The
discussion
then
focused on the role a
university judicial system
should play in regulating
individual
behavior.
Dr.
James Soles, of the Political
Science Department, argued
strongly that the student as a
consumer of education does
not want the university to
interfere in his personal
lifestyle by enforcing an
institutional moral code. All
the student needs is the
protection of his own rights.
Thus, sanctions against theft
~hould by strictly applied,
feels Soles, while sanctions
imposed
on
personal
consumption of al_cohol serve
no purpose.
PROBLEMS
Soles
continued
by
asserting that a student
judicial system should handle
academic problems. At this
university , he said, there is no
method
of
settling
student-faculty
conflicts
(Continued to Page 25)
'.
14DID
10% DISCOUNT
SliCE
. "CASTLE MALL"
10 am · 9 :30pm *Sun . 12- 5 : 3"0
737-5702
WITH U. of D. J.D.
(Not applicable to
sales items)
FOR TilE
,&BSOLUft
BEST IN
SOUND!
Speakers Decry
Plight Of latins
By JEAN NEMETH
The Free University ended
its project entitled "Power
and Powerlessness" Thursday
evening with a presentation
and discussion session by
leaders of the Spanish-speaking
communit y
in
Wilmington. "A Stranger In
His Own House" was the
theme of the discussion
presented by "La Raza
Unida."
"La Raza Unida" is a local
organization composed of
various
Spanish-speaking
groups- South and Central
Americans, Mexicans, Puerto
Ricans,
and
Cubans.
Throughout
the evening,
attempts were made to
illustrate the plight of the
Spanish-speaking community
Io cally,
nationally,
and
internationally.
The presentation was led
by Robert Calabazana, who is
associated
with
the
Wilmington
Housing
Authority.
Calabazana
provided a profile on the
Spanish-speaking Americans,
poir.ting out that "the
common denominator is our
~pan ish language heritage."
He
explained
that
Spanish-speaking
people
make up 5 to 7 percent of the
United States population, the
second largest minority group
in America.
"Although some of us are
doctors
and
other
professionals, far too many of
us are poorly paid laborers,"
Calabazana said . He went on
to condemn white America's
stereotype
of - the
Spanish -speaking
people
Himself
a
Mexican.
Calabazana expressed concern
that
so
many
white
Americans see his people as
continually taking siestas. He
lashed out at those who see
Spanish-speaking people as a
lazy,
humble,
and
unproductive group.
Calabazana explained that
racial discrimination is an
all-powerful force employed
by "Anglos" to keep the
Spanish-speaking people from
receiving their full benefits as
citizens.
"Discrimination
against our people remains an
obstacle," he said. Calabazana
ended his talk with a plea for
a united national movement
of Spanish-speaking people.
"As Americans, we plan to
exercise our full rights," he
asserted .
Frank Rivera, formerly of
the Latin American Center in
Wilmington, presented his
thoughts in a talk entitled
"Por La Razon 0 Por La
Fuerza." ("By reason or by
force.").
According to Rivera, the
Church
has
played
a
significant role in exploiting
the Spanish-speaking masses.
Relating a short history of
the Puerto Rican people,
Rivera attempted to show how
the Spaniards used religion to
justify their exploitation of
the people through slavery.
By telling the natives to
follow the dictates of the
Catholic Church - to be
humble and content in their
condition - Rivera illustrated
how many of the atrocities of
slavery under the Spaniards
were committed in the name
of religion.
(Continued to Page 20)
Candy Cane Warnings.
(Continued from Page 2)
to include all one and
two-hour parking zones. This
is mainly to "give the kids a
break before they go back
home." Students should be
urged, however, not to abuse
this privilege.
Richmond said that vety
few people have been taking
advantage of the Police
Department by leaving their
cars in a metered parking spot
for an extended period of
time. "Most people are still
putting the money in, and
they've all been pretty good
about it." However, anyone
who
deliberately
takes
advantage of the courtesy
would probably receive a real
ticket after a certain amount
of time.
BANTER Farther on up East Main
Street, an
amazing thing
happened. For almost a full
minute, no traffic roared by;
there was almost no sound or
movement. The wind, brisk
until that moment, died
down, and the beauty of .
silence
befell downtown
Newark for a fleeting instant.
However, the instant was
brief, as a truck roared by,
shattering the silence and
breaking the spell.
ContiQuing on, Richmond
reached the western end of
her beat near the Deer Park,
then turned around and
returned down the south side
of East Main, all the while
returning the friendly waves
of
and
cheery
smiles
downtown Newarkers.
The National Five-and-Ten
lunch counter provided a
break from the late morning
cold as Richmond stopped by
for a cup of coffee, an
everyday routine. A friendly
banter was started with the
waitresses, and Richmond
helped "John," who is
"around eighty," with the
BRANDYWINE VALLEY FRIENDS
OF OLD TIME MUSIC
FOLK MUSIC
SUNDAY
•
cryptogram from the New
York Daily News. Richmond
recounted that John has been
having morning coffee with
the meter maids every day
since she has been with the
force . After a brief scan of
the headlines, back out onto
the beat.
CHALK UP
The meter maids work on
a rotating shift, walking for
two weeks and driving for one.
Driving consists of operating
a three-wheeled, three-speed
Cushman "buggy." The meter
maid who is driving usually
takes care of the outlying
roads.
The normal work hours
are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., and
one of the three works Friday
evening and Saturday.
The "Special Officers"
often are called upon to
perform duties other than
giving out parking tickets.
These duties range from
raising the flag in the morning
to searching female prisoners.
The starting s:.1lary for the
meter maids is "around $100
a week."
Every
Wednesday
morning, the meter maids
may be called upon in
Alderman's Court to testify
on parking tickets which have
been challenged. Many people
challenge their tickets and
"quite a few get off." When
asked whether people erased
chalk marks which were
pIa ced
on
the
tires,
Richmond said that it was
done often, and that the
meter maids could "usually
tell" when the chalk had just
been rubbed off. She warned
that there is a stiff fine for
those caught doing this.
university
students that
"most of them are pretty
decent," and she could not
remember having any trouble
from t~em. She also added
that the Newark Police
Department
would give
people a break by not
ticketing their cars if they
broke down, " if they would
only call." She said that this
would keep the car from
receiving a ticket each time a
meter maid went by.
When asked whether she ·
waits by a parking meter with
just a minute left on it to
wait until it expires, she
replied with a definite "no,"
and added, "Even if one
popped up in my face f'd
walk right by."
Richmond chose this line
of work because she felt
"that it would be interesting,
and I like to meet people."
She is married and is the
mother of four children.
Her day begins at 5 a.m., when
she . gets up to get her
husband off to work. The
rewards of her job were easily
seen on the brief walk
through
Newark.
The
camaraderie between the
people of Newark and the
meter
maids was very
obvious. "We make our
enemies.," said Richmond,
"but I think we have many
more friends than enemies."
op~~:n~lng
WE HAVE:
* DECEMBER 17 * 8 PM
NEW LONDON COMMUNITY
CENTER, ROUTE 896 ·
(across ,li·vm Christia11a Apts.)
HEAR: DELAWARE RIVER PORT AUTHORITY
.,
JUST DREAMING?
NAME . . .... . ... . . .. .... . ..... . ...... . .. , . . . .
is entitled to a discQunt of 10% on all purchases
lly "1'/w Hill I!, /,eitdu.~"
:~
•::S
4377 KIRKWOOD PLAZA
WILMINGTON, DEL. 19808
DAILY
10·10
SUNDAY
12-7
36 EAST MAIN ST.
:~
: .~
·Ill
501 Market Street
Wilmington, Del. 19801
12 West Gay Street
West Chester, Pa. 19830
Open Daily 9-5:30
Friday Till 9
4377 Kirkwood Plaza
Wilmington, Del. 19808
*FALCON
*A TALA
*GITANE
*FUJI
*PARIS SPORT
*COLUMBIA
*REGENCE
NORDFRANCE
*ASTRA
*PEUGOT
AND OTHERS ...
OPEN WEDNESOA YS
& FRIDAYS 'TIL 9 P.M.
Dream of diamonds magnificently set
in 14-karat white Or yellow gold.
Dream of tiOr.ious ring comfort.
STUDENT DISCOUNT CARD
OPEN DAlLY
9-5:30
FIR DAY TILL 9
CHRISTMAS GIFT
. TEMS WITH COUPON
AND STUDENT I.D.
*
(old time fiddle music)
SOUTHBOUND
(lradilvllal blu egrass)
MIKE HUDAK (audo harp & dulc em er')
501 MARKET STREET
WILMINGTON, DEL. 19801
12 WEST GAY STREET
WEST CHESTER . PA . 19830
20% OFF
CAMARADERlE
Richmond feels of the
open to serve you.
-refreshments
members-free
non-members donation· $1.0
CARD MUST BE PRESENTED UPON PURCHASE ANC
SIGNED BY STUDENT TO BE VALID.
RHODES DRUG
STORE
WHERE
THE BEST BIKES ARE
Our parts & servic departments are now
will present an evening of traditional
at the
DECEMBER 12,
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 10
Daily
10-10
Sunday
12-7
QHAI
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
DECEMBER 12, 1972
Oliphant.
• •
PAGE 11
On The Issues
Season's Greetings
Stop The Presses
~'77:1--~·A•, _c,.;.
''t-KC"''~:..A'l..!
·,.-rt<.!R RC -
a~~r
'UNWRAP? . . . EVERY * ' ' ' THING??'
'ONE MORE TIME-ARE YOU READY TO REVEAL YOUR NEWS SOURCES?'
United We Fall
last Stands
'JUST A lUNCH OF INDIAN MILITANTS, COLONEL CUSTER-GIVE 'EM II US FARE ~ND. THEY'LL·
ALL GO AWAY QUIETLY •••
'OK, FILL OUT THESE FORMS AND SUBMIT YOUR PROPOSAL FOR REORGANIZING
FEDERAL BUREAUCRACY IN TRIPLICATE. WE'Ll CONTACT YOU IN DUE COURSE.'
Forming The Club
'HAVE YOU BEEN RE-SHUFFLED YET?'
. •. AND THAT IS WHY WE CALL IT A CABINET.'
DECEMBER 12, 1
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 12
WINTERIM WEEKLY SUMMARY-
capitalized titles
Department
AG.& FOOD
ECONOMICS
AG. SCIENCE
Faculty Sponsor
Elterich, J.G.
Lomax, Ken
Webb, Jerry
~ust
be used on registration forms with project number.
Title (Description)
Project
No.
No.
No.
Credits Students
Cost
RURAL/URBAN INTERACTION/W EUROPE
Seminars and field trips on study tour of Western
Europe.
01-46-776-10
1-3
25
AGINEER WINTERIM TOURTo acquaint students with testing, research, design,
construction, processing and distribution of Agricultural
Machinery and products.
COMMUNICATIONS IN GOVT/INDUSTRY
Series of one-three day trips to communications-oriented
businesses and institutions. Present paper at seminar on
last day of Winterim.
01-50-776-10
1-3
20
$203.00
01-52-776-10
1-3
10
$150
$453.00
ANIMAL SC &
AG BIOCHEM
Krauss, W.
Haenlein, G.
Fowler, R.
Runnels, T.
Martin, J.
ANIMAL EXPERIENCE AND CARE
Practical experience in care, handling and management
of dairy, livestock, poultry and laboratory animals. All,
one, or a combination of animals may be chosen with a
minimum of 40 hours actual experience for each credit
hour claimed.
01-51-776-10
1-3
25
-{)-
ANTHROPOLOGY
Holsoe, S.E.
DEPTH STUDY SWAHILI/KENYA
An Old Swahili Town· Lamu, Kenya: A Study in Depth
of an African town by residence and involvement in
small research projects.
02-03-776-10
3
10
$749.00
ART
Siroto, Leon
PARA-ETHNOGRAPHIC FILMS
A showing in the evening of four commercial films that
rna ke
ethnographic
and
ethnological
points,
interpretation of films by students.
02-03-776-11
Ritter, H.
CULTURE RESEARCH PROJECT/EUROPE
Individual research of various cultural offerings in
Western Europe including museums, theatre, etc.
02-06-776-10
ARTISTS/CRAFTSMEN IN LONDON
U. of D. students will visit the studios of outstanding
painters,
sculptors,
designers, ·
printmakers,
photographers and craftsmen in London.
open
none
3
15
$500.00
02-06-776-11
3
10
$373.00
PROBLEMS IN CERAMICS
Studio_ . open for . student-initiated projects under
supervrs10n of expenenced student assistant with final
critique by Prof. Spinski.
02-06-776-12
1-3
30
SILVERPOINT DRAWING
Prep~ratio':l of _variou~ silverpoint drawing surfaces and
drawrng wrth srlverpornt, goldpoint, and platinum-point
on the above surfaces and commercial papers.
02-06-776-13
2
7
Shurtleff, Bryon
PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB WINTER PROJECT
Two portfolios and/or a group show on : The beauty of
Winter Delaware; Technology and social change and the
domestic Winterim Projects.
02-06-776-14
3
13
$25
Mooz, R. Peter
AMERICAN PAINTING AT WINTERTHUR
Analy'sis of American painting through documentary, art
historical and technical methods. Each student will
research and X-ray an originaLpainting at Winterthur and
prepare a report in the form of a catalogue entry on the
picture. Trips to conservators studios will be made to
Washington, New York and Philadelphia.
02-05-776-10
1-3
8-10
$70
Boord , Robert L.
DISSECTION OF THE RHESUS MONKEY
Intensive dissection of primate body to learn significance
and relationship of structures and to gain appreciation of
the complexity and beauty of form.
02-08-776-11
2
6
$13.95
Acunha, J.
Cook, John
Spinski, Victor
Tanis, Stephen
BIOLOGICAL
SCIENCES
BLACK STUDIES
BUS. ADMIN.
BUS. ED.
Smith, C.A.
Buckmaster, Dale
THEORY BUILDING IN ACCOUNTING
Students will examine the nature of a general theory of
acc:o~nting, ex.amine alte_rnative methods of theory
bu rid rng, exam rne the prrmary theoretical accounting
models, and attempt to reach agreement on a general
theory.
02-09-776-10
EPS OF THE ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
In depth study of how earnings per share are calculated.
03-58-776-11
Donnelly, H.J.
RESEARCH IN INCOME TAX
Individual research in income tax.
03-58-776-1 2
llyas, Mohammad
Sparks, Peter G.
BUS ED SECONDARY SCH PRACTICUM
Student will contact a cooperating teacher, make the
necessary contact with school administrators, perform
tasks _assisgned by the cooperating teacher, evaluate the
experrence.
SCI APPLICATION ART CONSERVATION
Trips will be made to conservation studios and
laboratories located in Washington, D.C., New York City
& Philadelphia for the purpose of studying first-hand the
techniques used in the conservation of art objects.
03-59-776-10
02-10-776-11
$10.35
11
03-58-776-1 0
Blum, James D.
'">
CHEMISTRY
AFRICAL CULTURAL SURVIVALS
African cultural survivals in fhe social traditions of New
Orleans Blacks in the areas of religion, music, magic,
food customs, ceremonies.
1-3
1-3
2
0-3
$20
10
$238
none
8
none
open
none
5
5-6
none
$45
J
DECEMBER 12, 1972
CHEMISTRY
CHEM.ENGR.
CIVIL ENG.
COLLEGE PARALLEL
(Georgetown)
CRIMINAL JUSTICE
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
Trumbore, C.N.
Katzer, James B.
DRAMATIC ARTS
CANCER OF THE SEA
Experimental
study
of virus infection, genetic
composition, and environmental influences in the
polluted aquatic environment. Full-time with seminar
participation.
3
02-10-776-12
S02 CONCENTRATIONS IN NEW CASTLE
Correlation of state measures and independently
measured S04 concentrations in Southern New Castle
County with sources in the area usi~g at_mosph~ric
dispersion model. 1 credit for non-engmeermg maJors
only.
5
$10
10
0-1
05-70-776-10
none
Olson, Jon H.
Petty, Charles R.
CONTROL EXPERIMENTS
Develop some useful demonstration experiments for Ch
E 401 using existing laboratory equipment. 1 credit for
non-engineering majors only.
05-07-776-11
0-1
6
none
Olson, Jon H.
APPLICATIONS OF COMPUTERS/CH E
Develop skills in formulating and solving chemical
engineering problems with computers, mini computer
technology, control and dynamic simulation of reactors.
1 credit for non-engineering majors only.
05-70-776-12
0-1
5
none
Wang, H.
Preslan, W.
HYDRAULIC MODELING/LEWES HARBOR
Laboratory testing of a 50'x50' hydraulic model located
in Lewes, Del. to determine optimum design parameters
for new Lewes Harbor to be constructed.
05-69-776-11
0
5-8
$90.00
Richards, Rowland
STRUCTURAL SAFETY SKI LIFTS/VT
Studying past failures to initiate a formal record of such
events and thereby help pinpoint possible causal
relationships.
05-69-776-12
0
10
$125.00
Richards, R.
ADIRONDACK WINTER EXPEDITIONING
Environmental consciousness to acquaint students with
winter expeditioning techniques, and in particular with
winter travel and camping in sub-alpine environments.
05-69-776-13
0
15-20
Rhoades, Richard
Haas, Kenneth C.
Cown, Scott
Paul, Richard A.
CURRICULUM
& INSTRUCTION
PAGE 13
STUDIES IN THE SHORT STORY
Intensive reading in the short story to enable student to
dec ide whether the intent of a story is effectively
realized and worthwhile, and to weigh one story (writer)
critically against another.
·
BRITISH APPROACH TO CRIM JUSTICE
Evaluation of the relative success of British Heroin
maintenance system as measured by three criteria: ( 1)
percent change in addiction rate; (2) percent change in
addict crime/rate; (3) effects on organized crime
activity.
COMPARATIVE CRIM JUSTICE/EUROPE
Two primary emphasis: Study of Nazi War Crimes (Paul)
and stu.dy of Criminal Justice Education in Southern
European universities (Cown)
15-16-776-10
$145.00
none
6
2
02-11-776-10
3
10-15
02-11-776-11
3
30
$338.00
$383.00
Vukelich, C.
OPEN ED CLASSROOM TOUR/EAST US
An investigation of open education primary classrooms
in the U.S. with emphasis upon comparing classrooms
along various dimensions.
04-64-776-16
3
20
$75.00
Crouse, R. J.
PRACTICUM TEACHING MATHEMATICS
Curriculum development tasks, individual and small
group instruction, teaching assistance, keeping a daily
log of activities.
04-64-776-19
1-3
12
-o-
Hagen, Frank
URBAN CLASSRM MIDDLE SCH PRACTIC
For a period of three weeks, the participating students
will be engaged in the active process of transforming a
traditional urban classroom to an open classroom.
04-64-776-20
3
10
-o-
Crouse, R. J.
IMPLEMENTATION OF A MATH LAB
Help a secondary mathematics teacher set up and
implement a mathematics laboratory at Talley Middle
School (grades 6, 7, 8).
04-64-776-21.
1-3
4
-o-
Knight, Carlton
EL ED PRACTICUM MIAMI PUBLIC SCH
Students will teach full days for 2 weeks in one or t~re~
Miami urban elementary schools. Cape Kennedy, M1am1
Sea Aquarium, Everglades Nat. Par_k, the Keys, the
1nstitute of Marine Science, Okefenokee Swamp, etc.
will be visited and instructional materials gathered.
04-64-776-23
3
12-14
$190
Stauffer, Russel G.
SPEED READING
To improve rate and versatility.
GO
$10
04-64-776-24
Wilker, L. J.
PROBLEMS/THEATRICAL PRODUCTION
Structuralism & Problems of Theatrical Production.
02-15-776-10
3
35
Rabbitt, Michael
DESIGN/CONSTRUCT THEATER LIGHTS. Design and
construction o.f theater lighting system.
02-15-776-11
3
5-6
$-0-
Wilker, L.J.
CHILDRENS THEATRE TOUR DEL/MD/PA
20 day tour to elementary schools with performance to
20,000 children.
02-15-776-12
3
8·
$-0-
King, Nancy
Brabner, Joyce
WORKSHOPS IN WOMEN'S THEATRE
Workshops in Women's theatre for all women. Lynn
Laredo of the It's All Right to be a Woman Theatre
Troupe will conduct a five day workshop in
improvisational and consciousness-raising theatre.
02-15-776-15
3
30
none
Hepburn, Andrew
FILM AS A SOCIAL INVESTIGATION
The use of film to show contrasting society in which we
live.
02-15-776-16
3
4
none
Hepburn, Andrew
TOUR INVESTIGATE ACTING/TRAINING
Travel to and study of 5-10 acting trainiprograms in 400
mile radius followed by planning of a new acting training
program at U. of Del.
02-15-776-17
9
$35
DRAMATIC
ARTS
DRAMA·
COMMUNICATIONS
ECONOMICS
DECEMBER 12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 14
Hepburn, Andrew
PROGRAM AT AMERICAN ACADEMY
Designed to bridge the gap between educational and
pr~f~ssi~nal theatre training. 70 hours of professional
trammg m theatre arts.
02-15-776-18
3
5
$450
Wilker, L.
Wilson, R.
BLACK DRAMA WORKSHOP
02-19-776-19
A drama workshop that ends in a production of a major
black play (Day of Absence).
3
15
none
Lurie, J.R.
TOUR THEATRE COSTUME FACILITIES
Tours of university and professional costume facilities
and costume rental houses to see how they function the
equipment used, personnel employed, and to view' the
job possibilities in this area.
02-19·776-20
0-1
10
$85
Anapol, Malthon
A WINTERIM TV SERVICE/CAMPUS
Student originated programming, equal in quality to that
of any small market educational (public) broadcast
operation.
02-15-776-13
3
50
-c-
Adams, Mary C.
AUDIENCE DEBATE TOUR/BRITISH UNIV
Students in other disciplines may participate in tour.
02-1 5· 776-14
3
2-10
$638.00
David, Wilfred
THE ECONOMICS OF BUSING
An analysis of the private and social costs and benefits
of busing. Reading & discussion· 1 cr. Research & report
• 2 crs. Research & paper· 3 crs.
03-60· 776-1 0
1-3
15
none
David, Wilfred
RADICAL ECONOMICS
A criticism of the neoclassical doctrines and a study of
the alternatives. Reading & discussion · 1 cr. Research &
report • 2 crs. Research & paper • 3 crs.
03-60· 776-11
1-3
15
none
Brucker, Eric
BANKING IN DELAWARE
Bank regulation and structure in Delaware. Reading &
discussiQn · 1 cr. Research & paper· 2 or 3 crs.
03-60-776-1 2
1-3
15
none
Craig, Eleanor
CONTEMPORARY READINGS/ECONOMICS
Seminar discussions of 3 books from a selected list of
current Economics works.
03-60-776-13
10
none
Connelley, L.
Agnello, R.
ECONOMICS OF THE COASTAL ZONE
Economic aspects of the coastal zone; analysis of
policies & problems. Trip & discussions & .readings· 1 cr;
plus research & report • 2 crs.; research & paper · 3 crs.
03-60-776·14
10
$7.50
Hunt, Joseph
ECONOMICS OF PROFESSIONAL SPORTS
Seminar based on readings and research. Discussions
with player rep's, club officials and sportswriters.
Consult sponsor on requirements for credit greater than
1·3
03-60-776-15
1-3
15
none
1.
EDUCATION
ED. FOUND.
ELEC. EGR.
Link, Charles
RESEARCH TOPICS IN ECONOMICS
Directed econometric studies in the field of human
resources. Examples: relationship of training, sex, etc.
on achievement in the professions.
03-60-776-16
3
4
none
Latham, W.R.
ECONOMICS OF ZERO GROWTH
Simulation of the economy under conditions of zero
growth. CreditS to be determined by consultation with
sponsor.
03-60-776-17
1-3
10
none
Crouse, James
Kepka, Edward
Schulz, Lynn
CIDOC/CUERNAVACA, MEXICO
Mexico: Study of Institutional Shape and Dominance.
Seeing-is-understanding travel in Mexico as a means of
assessing the ideas of such persons as Ivan lllich, Paul
Goodman, Herbert Marcuse, etc.
04-64-776-10
3
30-35
$400.00
Murray, F.
Martuza, V.
Mosberg, L.
ED INNOVATION/TEACHER ED ENGLAND
Educational Innovation and Teacher Education in Great
Britain. Investigation of British teacher training
programs including observation of classes, joint seminars,
student teaching observation, etc.
04-64-776-11
3
30
$299.50
Archer, J.
CROSS CULTURAL RESEARCH ENG/SCAN
Research post adolescent personality development
Eng., Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden
04-64-776-12
3
10
$400.00
Townsend, E.J.
Edward, Richard
COMMUNITY SERVICE EDUCATION
Involvement in community agencies as a volunteer. 1
credit • min. of 30 hrs., 2·3 credits· volunteer hours and
paper concerning community work. (Deadline for
registration· Dec. 15).
04-64-776-22
1-3
50
variable
Magoon, A.J.
Interviews, visits, observations in public schools,
Pennsylvania and choice of locations in Vermont.
04-64- 776· 14
1-2
5
$25.00
Morstain, Barry R.
SOUTHERN BLACK COL VOTING TREND
To analyze the voting trends of newly registered voters
(ages 18-21) at twelve different black colleges in the
southern US.
04-64-776-25
3
Partain, L.
RUSSIAN TECHNICAL TOUR- Visit sites and study
details of scientific & technical development in U.S.S.R.
05-71-776-10
0
15
$700.00
Taylor, T.
AUTO MECHANICS FOR BEGINNERS
Automotive analysis, diagnostics and repair with
emphasis on hands-on experience. Credit only for nonengineering majors.
05-71-776-11
0-2
150
$10.00
Lutz, Bruce
REACTOR SIMULATOR/DIGITAL COMPUT
Investigation of feasibility of using a digital computer in
conjunction with a reactor simulator.
05-71-776-12
0
5-6
-c-
Rossmann, George
PHOTO PORTRAYAL ELEC ENGINEERING
Description of undergraduate and graduate programs and
research with pictures. Film and developing furnished.
One credit for non-engineering majors only.
05"71 -776-13
0-1
4
none
.
,
$110
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
DECEMBER 12, 1972
ENGLISH
DeArmond, A.J.
NEW TESTAMENT
New Testament. Supplement regular course in the
English Bible.
02-16-776-11
Safer, Elaine
TUTORIAL IN MILTON
Tutorial in John Milton; 10-20 page essay . .
02-16-776-12
Weygandt, A.
ENGLISH/AMERICAN OUTDOOR ESSAYISTS
Study of English and American outdoor essayists.
02-tG-776-13
Breuer, H.P.
MANN/HESSE/CRITICAL COMPARISON
Mann & Hess: A critical comparison.
02-16-776-14
Brock, D .H.
RESEARCH-COMPANION TO BEN JONSON
Careful study of selected works by and about Ben
Jonson and assist in compiling general reference book on
Jonson.
02-16-776-16
Black, W.
Newman, F.
Henry, George
N.Y. THEATER TRIP/SEMINAR/LECTURES
Project built around 3-night stay in N.Y. with lectures &
conferences.
02-16-776-17
Mell, Donald C. Jr.
18th CENTURY ENGLAND IN NYC
Visiting museums, seeing The Beggars Opera, hearing the
Mozart and Bach Societies.
02-16-776-18
.1-2
$-o-
8
15
2
$15.00
20
6
$-o-
1-3
30
$110.00
2
10
$103.00
-
02-16-776-19
1-3
10-12
$439.00
AMERICAN SOCIAL
Individual readings
differences between
both nonstandard and
DIALECTS/SEMINAR
and group discussions of the
geographical and social dialects,
standard.
02-16-776-21
2
20
-0-
B easley, Jerry
PROSE WRITING TUTORIAL
Practice in various forms of prose writing (expository;
fiction, etc.)
02-16-776-22
1-3
3
none
Hull, Gloria T.
FIELD STUDY- THE NEW BLACK POETRY
Study of the new black poetry and its aesthetic; field
study of the impact of this poetry in the black masses.
Includes a free university-style poetry reading &
discussion; compilation and evaluation of the field
research data and experience.
02-16-776-23
1-3
20-30
$1
Moyne, Ernest J.
EVALUATION OF ENGLISH TEACHING
Evaluation of the teaching of English, includinq the
working out of evaluation procedures, the preparation of
an evaluation questionaire, etc.
02-16-776-24
1-2
20
none
Barrett, Gerald
PERSONAL CINEMA/DREYER-WELLES
A study of the careers of two of our greatest film makers
who were able to make artful statements in spite of the
commercial pressures of their selected genre, the
narrative feature.
02-16-776-25
1-2
20
$9.40
Finnie, W.B.
ARTHURIAN/MEDIEVAL TUTORIAL
A study of selected Arthurian or other medieval works;
the number of credits to be determined by the scope of
the paper written for the project.
02-16-776-26
1-2
6
none
Robertson, H.A.
THE MECHANICS OF THE YEARBOOK
Cu!flulative analysis of the yearbook as a comparative
literary publication utilizing the various techniques of
representative yearbooks from both the University of
Delaware and from other institutions.
02-16-776-27
1-2
20-25
none
Nickerson, Edward
REPORT ON CAMPUS CHRISTIAN MOVE
Write and publish a newspaper dealing with the activities
of the christian movement in all its phases.
02-16-776-28
2
15-20
$15
Farrell, Mary V.
TUTORIAL IN WRITING SKILLS
Providing practice in controlling written patterns of
organization, grammar, mechanics and spelling to meet
academic standards.
02-16-776-29
0
15-20
none
READING/ATTENDING 6 MODERN PLAYS
Attending lectures, selected outside" reading, evaluating
plays.
02-16-776-20
2-3
20
$65.00
COMPUTER APPLIC. TO INSTRUCTION
Readings, discussions, field trips concerned with
computer assisted instruction, computer assisted testing
and computer managed instruction.
04-64-776-17
1-2
10
$51 .00
BRITISH NEW TOWN PLANNING/ENGLAND
British New Town Planning; field examination and
comparison with American New towns.
02-19-776-10
1-3
10
$370.00
02-19-776-11
1-3
10
$3 79.00
Finnie, W. B .
Arena, Louis
(ENGLISH
COLLEGE PARALLEL)
Lemoncelli, R .
FOUNDATIONS
Yens, D.P.
Uffelman, R.
Rees, P.
Bunkse, E.V.
GEOGRAPHY
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Albrecht, J .C.
GEOLOGY
HEALTH SCIENCES
OPEN
0
THE IDEA OF A UN IV/EUROPE MODELS
First-hand study of British, Dutch, and French
Universities: their curricula, modes of learning and
teaching, student life, etc.
Halio, Jay L.
GEOGRAPHY
PAGE 15
STUDY~MEDIEVAL_ CITY LANDSCAPES - study and
explorat1on of med1evaJ patterns in modern cities in
Germany, H~lland, and Belgium.
BIOLOGY & GEOLOGY OF CAVES-TRIP
Speleology - Seminar investigatioof the biology and
geology of caves and a field trip exploration of Virginia
and Tennessee caves.
02-19-776-12
Sheridan, R .E.
MARINE GEOPHYSICAL/BAHAMAS
Marine Geophysical Cruise to Bahamas
02-20-776-1 0
Pickett, T .E.
Kraft, J.
GEOL. & NATURAL HISTORY/SO. E NGLAND
Geology & Natural History of Southern England. F ield
work at White Cliffs of Dover & other areas.
02-20-776-11
Mooz, Elizabeth
MED TECH/PRE MED/PHYS THER TOUR
Visitation to Health Care Delivery facilities in Delaware
and experience in terms of preprofessional in health
related field . Individual medically-related projects for
medical technologists, physical therapists, and pre-med
students.
07-86-776-10
1-3
15
$100.00
12
$150.00
3
12
$3 70.00
2
20
$10
OECEMB~R
REVIEW, University of Delawar.., Newark, Delaware
PAGE 16
Curtis, J.
Schwartz, S.
HISTORY
CALIF/HIST SOCY TOUR/MEDIA GROUP
Tour of colleges & universities & the Calif. Historical
Soc. presenting a media program.
l ~. -4 972
02-23-776·10
2
6
$220.00
Price,Joedd
SPAIN: MEDIA WORKSHOP/DC TOUR
Creative, visual study of Spain. Each student will create
one slide-lecture. Trips to National Archives and Spanish
Embassy in Washington, D.C.
02-23-776-13
2-3
10
none
Curtis, James C.
Schwartz, Stanley
AMERICAN HISTORY THROUGH MEDIA
Students will learn the rudimentary techniques of
audiovisual production, do photographic copying,
process their own film, mount slides and record audio
tapes. Retreat to Camp Tockwogh in Galena, Maryland.
02-23-776-14
2
18
$25
Fleming, E.
Sherwood, Bruce
DOCUMENTING 18THCENTURYODESSA
A research study of the structures, crafts, economics,
and life-style of an 18th century population by
first-hand encounter with structures, artifact-objects and
original documents.
02-23:776-11
3
20
$50.00
Beer, John
Sam, Jeanette
WOMEN IN SCI/SCI FOR WOMEN
Seminar investigating· the relationship ~etween wo_meo
and the scientific, technical and medecal professeons;
past, present and future. Field trip to resources:
Washington, N.Y., PHIL.
02-23-776-12
0
10-12
$74.00
HOME EC.
CHILO DEV.
Strattner, M .J.
SOCIALIZATION lN YOUNG CHILDREN
Assist with data collection for pilot research project.
06-78-776-13
3
6
none
HOME EC
McCabe, Sandra
McCreary, Eva
TOUR INSIDE FOODS INDUSTRY
Tours and discussion related to the research processing,
marketing and service of food, as conducted by business,
industry, and government agencies.
06-80-776·12
2
37
$25
Morris, Lowella
Smith, Frances
THEATRICAL COSTUME/OPERA WKSHP
"DiDo & Aneneas" opera production with Drama &
Music Oepts. Students will research, design and produce
costumes.
06-84-776-12
1-3
40
Rasmussen, A.l.
Eyman, Alice
Peterson, Georgia
Eyman, Alice
McCarty, Charlotte
McCarty, Charlotte
Little, Louise
McCabe, Sandra
LANG. & LIT.
2
10
MULTI-LEVEL TEACHING PRESCH LAB
Participation with 4 year old or 5 year old children in
the U of 0 Preschool. Levels of participation will be
based on past experience and demonstrated expertise.
06-78-776-10
1-3
10
AIDE/WILMINGTON DAY CARE CENTERS
Serve as a Teachers' Aide, in North East Area Partners or
Kingswood Community Center.
06-78-776-11
1-3
12
PRACTICUM YNG CHILDREN/FAMILIES
A participation experience with young children and
families for the non-Child Development major.
06-78-776-12
2
CULTURAL FOOD HABITS/INTERVIEWS
Guidelines for finding information about food habits of
a selected group in U.S. Student will combine readings,
interviews, etc. into narrative description. (Jewish,
elderly, Puerto Rican, Cuban, etc.)
DIETETICS PRACTICUM/HOSPITAL
Students work in hospital to obtain exposure to clinical
dietetics
and
food
systems
management
and
inter-relationships of various departments.
6
06-80-776-10
12 ·
none
$-0-
$5.00
none
$5.00
06-80-776-11
3
8
$10.00
0-2
30-50
$450.00
0-2
20
$460.00
MUSEUMS/CHURCHES/CHATEAUX/FRANCE
Cultural visit of France
02-18-776-10
TRAVEL/STUDY TOUR/WEST GERMANYSocial meetings with Germany U. students. Concerts,
museums; etc. including East and West Berlin.
02-21-776-10
Gilgenast, T.
Wiley, Marion
STUDY TOUR EAST/WEST GERMANY - with major
emphasis on East Germany.
02-21-776-11
0-2
20
$432.00
Cole, Bennett
Page, Richard
Alvarez, Roman
DiLisio, L.
MOTORCOACH TOUR/MADRID - ANOALUCIA - to
principal cities of Southern Spain and back to Madrid.
02-38-776-1 0
0-3
30
$448.00
CULTURAL STUDY TOUR/RUSSIA - tours of
museums, theaters, universities, cities; mini-course in
Russian language.
20 CENTURY LAT/AMER SHORT STORY
(I, cr) Reading of selected short stories from the
textbook. (2 cr) All short stories plus two oral reports.
(3 cr) All short stories, two oral reports plus On!! term
paper.
02-35-776-10
0-2
20-30
I
$700.00
02-38-776-11
1-3
2-8
-o-
COASTAL ZONE ADMIN U OF MIAMI
Comparative study of Delaware and Florida Coastal
Zone laws and regulations through joint seminars with
faculty and students of the Ocean Law Program,
University of Miami.
08-89-776-15
0
10
$2.62
Mangone, Gerald S.
I
06-80-776-13
Donaldson-Evans, M.
Watkins. V.
Steinback, M.
McNabb, W.
Harker, C.
Dominguez, lvo
MARINE STUDIES
DEVELOP STUDENT RESEARCH JOURNAL
Develop format, policies and review procedures for a
jou rna I composed of reports frm FN 613 research
projects.
none
Taylor, J.E.
TROPICAL MARINE FIELD ECOLOGY
Introduction to the Fauna and Flora of the American
Tropics ( 10 days), Research Problems Individual, Last
I 0 Days.
08-89-776-11
3
10
$250.00
Klemas, V.
Dunlop, Edward
POLLUTION DELAWARE RIVER BASIN
Remote sensing techniques, sample analysis, and
published data will be used to map sources, dispersion
and effects of pollution.
08-89-776-10
3
8-12
$50.00
Born, John
MARINE BIO REFERENCE COLLECTION
Goal is to obtain specimens from coral reef communities
for a teaching reference collection. Camping out of cars.
Boat field trips.
08-89-776-13
2
6
$145.00
.
REVIEW, University of Oefaware, Newark, Delaware
MARINE
STUDIES
MATHEMATICS
MECH. &
AERO. ENGR.
MILITARY
SCIENCE
_,
Church, T .M.
Myers, T .D.
MARINE ECOLOGY OF PACIFIC COASTS
Coordinated literature survey, tide pooling, and diving
study into man's recent impact on total ecologv of So.
Calif. coastal zone-one week of Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, one week camping in Baja Mexico.
08-89-776-12
2
6-12
$340.00
Taylor, Jonathan
S/A ECOLOGY: WINTER/REHOBOTH BAY
,
Collection of Specific data for callibration
summer-time model of Rehoboth Bay.
08-89-776-14
3
5
$80.00
none
2
open
· none
02-26-776-12
1-2
open
$6
05-73-776-11
0-2
15
in-state $48
out-of- $96
state
05-73-776-12
0
15
$19
POPULATION DYNAMICS
Development of deterministic and sto!=hastic models for
the growth of populations.
02-26-776-10
Bellamy, David
PSEUDO-GROUPS
A discovery-style course on pseudo groups.
02-26-776-11
Michaels, S.J.
HOW TO GAMBLE IF YOU MUST
A strategy for the game of Blackjack (one of the worlds
most widely played Casino games) based on the Edward
Thorp's book "Beat the Dealer."
MACHINE SHOP & MFG PROCESSES
Costello, F .A.
60 hr. Manufacturing Processes Course at Del Tech
Comm. College North Branch including training on
lathes, milling machines and other machinery. 2 crs. for
non-engineering majors only.
Danberg, J.E.
Greenfield, I.G.
AERODYNAMIC PRINCIPLES
Objective: To introduce basic aerodynamic principles of
airplane flight and provide in flight demonstration of the
principles as well as introduction to preliminary flight
training.
Kingsbury, Herbert
ENGINEERING RESEARCH PROJECTS
Engineering research project of student's choice.
Feret J.M.E.
05-73-776-1 0
ADV MILITARY PARACHUTING/GA.
Advanced Military Parachuting. To qualify students in
the duties and responsibilities of a jumpmaster.
USE MILITARY PARACHUTE/GA.
Use of the Military Parachute.
Feret, John
Kiser, Billy
PROJECT ORIENTATION/FIELD TRIP
Visits
to
Ft.
Bragg,
N.C.; Ft.
Knox, Ky.
and Ft. Sill, Okla. to investigate the role of a junior
officer in the combat arms.
INTRODUCTION TO ARMY ELECTRONICS
An introduction to the US Army Electronics Command,
and equipment developed by the Electronics Command,
Fort Monmouth, New Jersey.
Blackinton, D.
Carnahan, C.
King, J.R.
King, J.R.
King, J.R.
Manglass, Betsy
02-27-776-10
PRECISION TECHNIQUES DRILL TEAM
Fundamentals an~ development of competitive drill
techniques and routines. Emphasis on Precision Trick
Drill Movements as contrasted to basic Military Drill.
TRUMPET SYMPOSIUM TUTORIAL
Series of lectures by nationally known
specialists on trumpet techniques.
02-27-776-12
10
1-3
RESEARCH ON EARL V JAZZ BANDS
Research and extraction of materials related to early
( 1900-1920) jazz bands.
EXPLORATION SCH HEALTH SERVICES
Students will have the opportunity to observe various
school health programs and the personnel involved in the
"clinical setting."
$148.00
5-10
$110
02-27-776-13
12
$75
02-27-776-14
60
02-29-776-10
JUG BAND OF EARLY JAZZ DAYS
Research into early jazz music - practice and perform
once on pre-classic jazz instruments - Kazoo, Gut
Bucket bass, Banjo, Washboard, jugs, etc.
$109.00 -
4
trumpet
COMPREHENSIVE MUSICIANSHIP
Studies in integrating all aspects of music.
CONCERT TOUR BOSTON MUS. ED. CONF.
Symphonic Band will spend four days on campus
preparing a concert for the Eastern Division Music
Educator's National Conference, Jan. 19-22, 1973 in
Boston, Mass.
-o-
10
0
02-27-776-11
Feret, J.M.E.
Brownfield, J.R.
NURSING
open
Wolfe, Stephen J.
Brownfield, J.R.
MUSIC
of
02-29-776-11
2
02-29-776-12
02-29-776-14
1-2
02-29-776-1 5
09-91-776-10
0-3
none
30
$-0-
25
$-0-
57
NONE
8-10
none
8
none
3-10
none
Benner, M.
DiCecco, B.
COMMUNITY HEALTH PROS/SEMINAR
Video tapes and seminars to discuss community
problems relevant to nursing. Topics covered: Abortion,
Mental Illness, Suicide, Crisis of Old Age, etc.
09-91-776-11
1-3
20-40
NONE
Juras, L.A.
MULTIMEDIA INSTRUCTION/FIRST AID
Through use of filmed demonstrations, guided practic.e
sessions, and programmed workbooks, the s~udent IS
provided with solid first aid training in an e1ght hour
course. Red Cross certificates were awarded on
successful completion of this course.
09-92-776-12
0-1
10
$5 .00
Freed, Carolyn
CARDIAC NURSING CLEVELAND CLINIC
Experience provided in cardiac catheterization, cardiac
surgery, and cardiac intensive care.
09-91-776-13
3
5
$75 .00
Oglesby, Madelynn
IN DEFENSE OF NURSING RESEARCH
A series of faculty-student informal dialogues on nursing
research. Topics for the dialogues will be selected by
participating students and faculty. One hour's credit
offered (P/F) for attendance at all dialogues, scheduled
2-4 p.m. every Tuesday during Winterim, in the
Commons Room (207) McDowell Hall.
09-91-776-14
open
none
Gift, Audrey
ADVANCED CORONARY CARE
Learning experiences will be provided in a~scultation,
arrhynthmia interpretation, and pharmacological aspects
of coronary nursing.
09-91-776-15
2
$6
3
- --
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 18
NURSING
Moser, Dorothy
APPLIED BASIC NURSING CONCEPTS
Each student will spend a minimum of 30 hours during
Winterim as a volunteer in an area of his choice in
Wilmington Medical Center hospitals and will participate
in seminars in the College of Nursing to relate the
practical experiences to introductory concepts of
nursing. (Registration deadline 12/15).
09-91-776-16
2-3
open
none
Kennedy, Dorothy
NURSING/MENTALLY RETARDED CHILD
Role of the nurse with mentally retarded children.
09-91-776-17
3
8-10
$45
Kee, Joyce L.
TRAUMA NURSING
Students will spend one week or 40 hrs. in the
emergency room caring for patients with traumatic
injuries. There will be four hours of class.
09-91-776-18
6
none
Juras, Lilliam A.
CERTIFICATION/MULTIMEDIA 1ST AID
Selected students who have completed the Standard
Multimedia Red Cross First Aid Course will participate
in the teaching of the course under the direction of an
Instruction Trainer.
09-91-776-19
Franklin, Virginia
NEUROLOGICAL DIAGNOSTIC STUDIES
Observation of diagnostic procedures involving spine and
brain with stress on radiological aspects of patient care
and assistance with visual aid programming of such for
dial access system.
09-91-776-20
Manglass, Betsy S.
ILLUSTRATED NURSING TECHNIQUES
Illustrating Nursing techniques, procedures, and various
tests and equipment u~ing 35 mm slides.
Kazmierczak, F.
PHILOSOPHY
DECEMBER 12, 1972
1-3
09-91-776-21
8
none
5
none
10
none
none
EXPERIENCE IN SURGICAL NURSING
A I 0-day experience in the hospital in which students
will have the opportunity to follow patients through the
surgical cycle-with planning and evaluation conferences.
09-91-776-22
3
4
Harward, D.
SCIENCE FICTION AND PHILOSOPHY
Study of philosophical themes (ethics, social philosophy,
philosophy of mind) in major works of science fiction.
02-31-776-12
1-3
full
--o-
Boorse, C.
RADICAL/REACTIONARY VIEW ACAD
Critical discussion of classical views of education and
their recent radical critique, with some special attention
given to the function and value of philosophy in
particular.
02-31-776-13
1-3
open
-0-
Norton, D.
Ross, D.
THE PHILOSOPHY OF TIME
Studies of the nature of time according to major
philosophical schools, with attention to the psychology,
esthetics, and sociology of time. 1 credit r'li>"'';n 1nd
class participation. 3 credits major paper
02-31-776-14
1-3
open
--o-
Tovo, Jerome
Davis, Angus
FILM & DYNAMICS OF PERCEPTION
The project involves the making of film that will serve as
visual illustration of the philosophical problems of
perception.
02-31-776-15
3
6
none
Haslett, D.
..
[ ;
PHYSICAL
. EDUCATION
Neeves, Robert
Billy, Paul
INTERNATIONAL & AAU WRESTLING
Covers area of wrestling used in AAU and International
Competition. Acquire and use those skills of freestyle
and Greco-Roman wrestling.
10-93-776-12
COLLEGE SWIM FORUM/FLORIDA
Students will be exposed to various forum activities: (1)
outdoor training in a long course pool; (2) movies,
lectures and panel discussions by leading coaches; (3)
participate in east-west swimming meet; (4) meet and
speak with many world and national class swimmers and
divers; (5) participate in a water show.
10·93-776-13
MileS', E.
WKSHP MODERN DANCE BALLET/JAZZ
Workshops in Modern Dance Ballet and Jazz will be
presented by Lida Nelson Smith, James Jamieson and
Anna Marie LeQ.
10-93-776-14
Rylander, C. Roy
GYMNASTICS
Gymnastics for the individual with skills beyond novice
level to develop routines on apparatus and free exercise.
Rylander, C. Roy
PRACTICUM/PHYS OCCUPA THERAPY
Students wi!l. wor~ along with a therapist in order to
bec?me fa!"1har w1th what the profession is like and to
see 1f physical therapy is the desired profession.
2
$430.00
--o-
10
$208
25
--o-
20
none
I 0-93-776-16
2-3
3
$39.50
2
open
none
25-30
none
THEORIES IN WEIGHT TRAINING
The purpose of this study is to allow the students the
opportunity to life weights and at the same time analyze
and compare their philosophy in weight training with
that of others.
10-93· 776-1 7
Hannah, R. M.
APOCALYPTIC/PROPHETIC MANUSCRIPT
An e~tension of last Winterim's study to include
Histoncal and Cultural information and bearing on these
writings. Two hours per day in the classroom and
additional outsid~ reading and written material.
10-93· 776-18
PHYSICS OF TOYSSome toys are used to illustrate some fundamental
concepts of physics.
25
I 0-93· 776-15
Rogerson, Ronald
Woo, S.B.
60
I 0-93-776.1 0
Rawstrom, Harry
•I
PHYSICS
SKI EDUCATION IN AUSTRIA
Intensive instruction by best teachers in Europe for
complete novice, through advancec;t. Visit Vienna;
Salzburg, Univ. of lnnsbruck, and Munteh.
02-32-776-10
7
$-o-
DECEMBER ' 12, 1972
PHYSICS
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 19
Herr, Richard B.
FLARE STAR PHOTOMETRY/MT CUBA OB
The 24 inch diameter telescope and photoelectric
photometer at Mt. Cuba Observatory will be used to
monitor known or suspected flare stars for sudden
outbursts of ultraviolet light.
02-32-776-11
Halprin, Arthur
FASTER THAN THE SPEED OF LIGHT?
Recent scientific ideas on faster than light particle
motion ( 1 cr.) and development of instructional film (2
02-32-776-12
1-2
8
none
10
none
CfS).
POL. SCIENCE
PROF. SERVICES
Natha"n, James
PSYCHOLOGY
SECRETARIAL
STUDIES
SOCIOLOGY
THE POLITICS OF THE FUTURE
Readings, discussions, films, lectures organized around
the study of alternative political futures in cities, nations
and internationally.
02-33-776-11
Palley, Marian
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION IN HIGHER ED
Federal guidelines in Women's Rights for educational
programs. Research internships with Health, Education
and Welfare and the American Association of Colleges.
02-33-776-13
Boyer, William
Lewis, Jerome
Mackelprang, A.J.
PUBLIC ADMIN/POLITICAL ACTIVISM
This is the theme of the January 25-26 regional
conference of the American Society for Public
Administration held at Clayton Hall Conference Center
at U.D. Students must read one book on the public
services, attend the two-day conference, and write a
paper on the conference.
02-33-776-14
Reynolds, H.T.
ADOLESCENT SOCIALIZATION
An analysis and report on a questionnaire given to junior
and senior h ig_h school students on political ideology and
efficacy.
02-33-776-15
Oliver, J.
LEGISLATIVE INVOLVEMENT
Researching issues and otherwise helping legislators on a
state and national level.
Newton, James E.
AFRO AMERICAN PERSONALITIES
An experience to acquaint students with Afro-American
personalities and their contributions to American
Society (on campus).
Worthen, J.E.
VALUES/LEADERSHIP/INTERPERSONAL
Jan. 5-7, with a 3 hour seminar for evaluation to be held
during spring semester; a course to enable members of
UDCC to consider their priorities, evaluate different
styles of leadership and learn communication skills.
3
10-30
3
$403.00
15
-o-
15
$80
---------
open
none
3
20
none
02-33-776-16
1-3
5-25
none
04-64-776-15
2
25
-o-
20
·04-64-776-26
PERSONALITY /LATERA LIZ AT ION/BRAIN
The nature of hand, foot, eye, and ear preferences will
be studies in their relationship to various cognitive and
personality dimensions including hypnotiziability.
02-34-776-12
3
24
none
Cicala, George
McLaughlin, John
INTELLIGENT EYE/ILLUSIONS ETC
Construct materials to produce stereoscopic pllenomena,
"Op" art and/or other Illusions, then find the stimulus
conditions most relevant in producing the phenomena.
02-34-776-13
1-3
20
none
Duchnowski, Albert
PSYCH RESEARCH & SERVICES IN ED
Students will participate in on-going research projects
and/or observe psychological consultation in Head Start
and public schools. Paper required.
02-34-776-14
3
6
none
Guy, Evanelle
Cox, JoAnn
OBS/SECTY SKILL/TRAINING/ENGLAND_
Observation · of office skills and training procedures m
England.
03-61-776-10
3
10
$338.00
Shoff, Patricia
SECRETARIAL STUDIES PRACTICUM
Student will be working full-time on a job approved by
the sponsor. There will be a self-evaluation, a follow-up
by the sponsor to the employer, a log prepared and kept
by the student.
03-61-776-11
1-3
15
none
Washington, Esther
DESIGNS/MATERIAL DATA PROCESSING
Elementary concepts of data processing explored.
Knowledge of hardware necessary, etc.
03-61-776-12
10-15
$6.00
"1
Wiley, Sarah M.
BASIC TYPING
The course is designed to provide students with basic
typing skills and knowledge. The primary goal will be to
help students research a skill level that will enable them
to do their own typing (e.g.---term papers).
03-6 1-776-13
0
36
DiRenzo, G.
ITALY/GREECE STUDY OBSERVATION
Study and observational analysis of the contemporary
societies of Italy and Greece in -a historical and
evolutionary perspective.
02-3 7-776-11
3
15-20
WHO PICKS UP THE HITCHHIKER?
Attempt to test hyoptheses concerning the attitudes and
salient social characteristics of drivers. Assess the
exchange expectations of participants.
02-37-776-13
~
$19.75
Gordon, J.
Schwermer, Jurgen
..
02-33-776-10
Rich, Daniel
ll
PROF.SERV.
EDUCATION
BRITISH PACIFIST LEFT/ENGLAND - Project will
visit with leader~hip & aid in library acquisition project.
none
$500.00
l ..
o~3
open
variable
PAGE 20
DECEMBER 12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
SOCIOLOGY
STAT. &
COMP. SCI.
TEXTILES & CLOTHING
Nohara, Shigeo
BOREDOM AND SOCIETY
An
examinatioof boredom
(nature, causes and
consequences) as described in sociological literature.
02-37-776-14
1-3
10
$3
Khalil, Hatem
APL COMPUTER SEMINAR
A seminar on APL emphasizing its practical application
in science and engineering.
02-39-776-12
0-2
20-30
$10
Khalil, Hatem
PL/1 WORKSHOP
A hands on approach study of PL/1 sponsored by the U.
of D. ACM student chapter.
02-39-776-13
0-2
20
$10-15
Weaver, J .W.
ECOLOGY VS. FLAMMABLE NIGHTWEAR
Lab investigation of non-phosphate detergents with
flame retardant finishes.
06-84-776-10
1-3
6
$-0-
0
20
none
Interdisciplinary Projects
COMPUTING CENTER
EDUCATION
HOME EC.
Seltzer, Jack
FORTRAN PROGRAMMING
.
Presents lang~age const~ucts and terminology. Includes
_ proble'"!l solvmg exerc1ses and experience in coding,
debuggmg and program execution.
Eubanks, Vukelich,
DeCapua, etc.
URBAN ED WILMINGTON P-RACTICUM
Allow students a chance to appreciate problems &
practices of classroom, to develop observation &
teaching skills, etc.
E_D PSYCH HE SOC SEXUALITY COURSE
One to three credits in biology, education, home
economics, psychology, Or sociology can be earned by
assisting
in
the
review and
evaluation
of a
multidisciplinary course of study and instructional
materials for a new course, The Foundations of Human
Sexuality, to be offered for the first time in the Spring
1973.
'
Stegner, R.
Finner, S.
Settles, B.
Zuckerman, M.
05-71-776-14
04-64-776-13
3
220
04-64-776-18
1-3
8-10
-o-
1-3
20
$418.00
20
$350.00
ENGLISH
DRAMA
Bennett, R.B.
Snerman, D.
02-16-776-15
ENGLISH
SOCIOLOGY
THEATRE TOUR LONDON ENG/DRAMA · attend
performances and explore numerous kinds of dramatic
activity and meet persons involved in this area of
London's cultural life.
Gates, Barbara T.
VanTil, Sally
DICKENS & LONDON POOR THEN & NOW
A first hand look at Dickens' London & the London of
the urban poor today. Discusslons with famous scholars,
social workers & visits to social welfare agencies, tours,
museums, etc.
02-16-776-10
MUSIC
DRAMA
Keenze, M.
Sherman, D.
Rabbitt, M.
INTERDISCIPLINARY OPERA WORKSHOP
Rehearsal & production of two on-act operas.
SOCIOLOGY
ANTHROPOLOGY
HISTORY
Scarpitti, F .R.
Schwartz, N.B .
Price, J.
SOC/ANT/HIST RURAL/URBAN SPAIN
Rural-urban
contrasts
in
Spain
&
h istory-jnte.rd isc io linary.
SOCIOLOGY
LANGUAGES &
LITERATURE
Scott, N.P.
Huffman, H.R.
STAT. & COMP.
SCI/COMP. CTR.
Carberry, MaryS.
Smith, C.
Carberry, Mary S.
Kite, J.
'
"The Spanish preached brotherhood, but they
raped our women, our convictions...and tried to
keep us down. Religion has done more damage to
the Spanish-5peaking people than good." Rivera
was careful to explain that he was not attacking
the idea of Christianity, but rather those religious
leaders, then and now, who preach brotherhood
and then tum their backs to the ill treatment
given to Spanish-5peaking people.
The following speaker, Efrain Martinez, of
the Vocational Rehabilitation Center in
Wilmington, reviewed the educational and
manpower difficulties of the Wilmington
"Hispanos." "The main problem in our society is
education... we can go nowhere without
education," he said.
Martinez' remarks centered around the work
that Vocational Rehabilitation has been
attempting to accomplish in the city. "We are
trying to help the community to become
rehabilitated
socially, economically, and
educationally." He commented that although his
office has tried to accomplish its goals in the
community, the current policies of President
Nixon concerning all types of social legislation
have hurt the endeavors of the organization.
An alumnus of the university, Jaimes (Chico)
Hijar, of the Model Cities Program in
Wilmington, focused his talk on the political and
economic arena. Hijar pointed out that in
Delaware there are only six businesses operated
by Spanish-speaking people, and that the average
income of most of the people is only $4,000 a
year. Hijar explained that discrimination keeps
the Spanish-speaking people from obtaining
better jobs, and that many of the people are
confined to service jobs at the Wilmington
02-29-776-12
3
35-50
$-0-
02-37-776-10
1-3
30
$500.00
SEMINARS & TRAVEL IN BRAZIL
Seminars and tours in Rio de Janeiro and four other
Brazilian cities.
02-37-776-12
COBOL PROGRAMMING
Presents language constructs and terminology. Includes
problem solving exercises and experience in coding
debugging and program execution.
ALGOL PROGRAMMING
Presents language constructs and terminology. Includes
problem solving exercises and experience in coding,
debugging and program execution.
02-39-776-10
Spanish Speaking Community...
(Continued from Page 10)
Spanish
Medical · Center and assembly line work at
General Motors and Electric Hose and Rubber
Company.
Hijar said that as long as the people are poorly
educated, they will not be given better jobs. The
language problem, explained Hijar, is foremost in
keeping the Spanish-speaking people from
receiving a good job and a good education.
"White people have not taken the step forward
to learn the Spanish language," Hijar asserted,
while the Spanish-speaking people are forced to
learn the English language in order to compete
minimally in the schools.
Hijar pointed out that Representative Pete
duPont met defeat when he made attempts to
push a bi-lingual education program through the
House of Representatives.
out that
black and
Hijar
pointed
Spanish-speaking people constitute more than 50
percent of Wilmington's population. He
expressed distress that some political leaders use
the minority groups to get elected and then
ignore them. "They have a lack of identity with
the people when they get into political power"
he said.
The presentation ended with the remarks of
Juan Guitierrez, a businessman in the Wilmington
area. Guitierrez, who has been in the United
States for only twelve months, feels that the
Spanish-speaking people are "very discriminated
against in the United States." Although he has
started four businesses in the area, Guitierrez
asserted that most of the Spanish-speaking
people are confined to low paying jobs. He said
that he is striving to open , up managerial and
other business jobs for his people "but it is
difficult to find help since many people don't
trust the Spanish-speaking people."
$15.00
1-3
02-39-776-11
10
$648.00
20
none
20
none
Trustees Increase .
Student Fee Rates
Resident and nonresident
fees were again hiked by the
university Board of Trustees
at their semi-annual meeting
on Saturday, marking the
second time in as many years
that the fees have been raised.
Resident graduate and
undergraduate
fees were
Movie Refund
increased by $50 per year,
from
$475
to $525.
Nonresjdent graduate and
undergraduate tuition was
increased by $150 per year,
from $1,350 to $1,500. Fee
increases
will
become
effective beginning with the
197 3 summer session.
According to university
officials, rising costs was the
reason for the fee increases.
All those holding tickets
for "The Owl and the
Pussycat" may obtain refunds
in the Student Center Council
office.
SHEAFFER'S
WALLPAPER-PAINTS
ERT SUPPLIES
r.>S\Jbs
asteaK~
C)
PICTURE FRAMING
77 Main St., Newark, Del.
368-0507
Park In Rear
pill.C~
fREE DELIVERY
737-J105
~ prw~- 2-
Accul.,st.
DECEMBER 12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 21
RHA . Referendum Characterizations Make Good Theater
Excellent
'Virginia
Wool_
f':
Slated For March
By ED WRIGHTSON
By LARRY HANNA
The Inter Hall Assembly,
lacking a quorum, passed
three
bills
by
general
consensus
and
executive
order last Sunday night.
IHA Bill 20 resolved that
the RHA hold a referendum
for approval o.. its proposed
new constitution during the
week of February 25, 1973
provided that notice of the
event is published in The
Review issues of Feb. 20 and
Feb. 23 and that copies of
the proposed constitution are
posted in all residence halls
no later than Feb. 19.
IHA Bill 22 resolved that
the RHA hold its annual
elections for the offices of
president and vice-president
on Mar. 12 and Mar. 13,
1973, with elections for the
remaining offices taking place
at the April 1, 1973 meeting
of the RHA.
President Mike
Brady
explained that the rationale
for holding the elections on
those dates was so the new
president would have a
chance to get organized over
the spring break, which starts
Mar. 19.
The third bill (IHA Bill
21) pledged the RHA's
THIS WEEK
TO~:f
EXHIBIT· . Prints by
Lakeside Studios.
Room
201
Smith Hall from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
BASKETBALL· Delawar.e vs.
American University. Gamet1me IS
6 p.m. at the Field House.
.
CONCERT· Satori Woodwmd
Quintet. 120 Smith Hall at 8:15
p.m. FFee.
TOMORROW
L£CTURE·
"Transcendental
Meditation:
Its
Benefits and
Scientific Research on lt." 202
Evans Hall at 1 and 7 p.m.
LECTURE· "The Physics of
Water" presented by Prof. Walter
Kauzmann
of
Princeton
University at 4 p.m. in room 101
Sharp Lab.
LECTURE·
"The
Marine
Environment" by Dr. Thomas
Myers,
assistant
professor of
biology presented as part of the
"Man
and
His
Planet"
series.
Room 007 Hall Building at 7 p.m.
FILMS· "Comedy of Terrors"
and "Road Runner" cartoons.
7:30 and 9:45 p.m. in 140 Smith
Hall. 75 cents with I.D.
THURSDAY
SEMINAR·
"Environmental
Law."
Speaker
will
be
Dr.
Stephen
Sussna,
director
of
Stephen Sussna Associates of
Trenton, 8 p.m. in the Ewing
Room of the Student Center.
DECEMBER 16
CONCERT· BuddY Rich: 8
p.m. at ' Dickenson High School,
1801 Milltown Rd., Wilmington.
Tickets are $4.00. For ticket
information call 998-5509 or
Dickenson High School.
FILM· "Friends." Shows at
7:30 and 9:30 p.m. in the
Rodney Room of the Student
Center. Cost is 75 cents with I.D.
DECEMBER 17
FILM·
Sunday
CinemaVIsconti's "The Stranger" (France
1968). Free with I.D. 140 Smith
at 7:30 p.m
DECEMBER 18
FILM· "Davey Crockett" at 8
p.m. Pencader. Free with I.D.
DECEMBER 19
FILM· "Ski Party" In the
Rodney Room of the Student
Ce~~ft,.:t H80~~E- F.;~: ~~~~~a~e
chapter of the American Red
Cross will sponsor its annual
Christmas tea and open house at
the Chapter House, 910 Gilpin
Ave. In Wilmington.
DECEMBER 20
FILM • "The Blob," 8 p.m. In
the Grey Stone Building. Free
with ID.
JANUARY 11
The women's volleyball team
will
attend
the
Eastern
CHampionships
at
Catonsville,
Marvland on Jan. 11, 12 and 13.
support for the "efforts of
this university's residence
halls and their governments
to procure milk machines for
the benefit of students living
on campus."
Treasurer Paul Sears stated
that problems in procuring
the machines have centered
on
the
administrativn's
complaints that they have not
proved profitable enough
when installed in the past and
the reticence of dairies to put
the machines in "unprotected
areas."
In
connection with the
proposed
NACURH
convention, IHA member
Mary Cushing announced that
the
planning
for
the
convention
and
a
simultaneous industrial fair is ·
currently being organized as a
Winterim project.
Room
assignment
committee chairman Rich
Holmquist
assured
the
meeting that "no one at
Residence
Life is even
considering pushing a room
lottery down our throats next
semester."
Refrigerator
committee
chairman Chip Harris warned
that refrigerator bills must be
paid by the beginning of
Winterim or the appliances
will be repossessed, and
stated that students will be
liable for refrigerators left in
their rooms over Winterim.
Secretary
Debbie
Aptt
suggested that the latter
problem might be sofved by
having
all
unattended
refrigerators placed in a single
room where they could be
more closely guarded by
remaining dorm residents.
Edward Albee's "Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf"
opened at Mitchell Hall Dec.
7 and is running through Dec.
14. If you have any free time
at all go and see it. It is
extraordinary.
Although
"Virginia
Woolf" has some of the best
put-downs, verbal barbs and ·
innuedos this side of a
political campaign, the heart
of the play is not the
dialogue. To make "Virginia
Woolf" succeed as good
theatre, the actors have to be
able to react. The reactions of
the actors to dialogue and
action is where the drama will
succeed or fail. The director,
Ron Timmons, did not allow
his actors to let down when
they
weren't
speaking,
consequently this production
was excellent.
This need for reacting is
most easily seen in Honey,
played by Jenny DiLegge.
Honey is a totally guileless, .
insipid
creature.
Her
character is not developed by
dialogue, but rather by her
reactions to
the
other
characters'
actions
and
speeches.
At the mention of the
word "fuck," she nearly goes
into convulsions from her
repugnance of the word.
Later, after four or five
brandies, being called "Angel
Tits" doesn't even faze her.
Then either from her drunken
stupor or from her stupidity
she fails to realize the mortal
battle between Martha and
George and joins ini!hanting
"Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf" while dancing around
Martha. Her look of childlike
indecision on whether or not
to join George followed by
her delight in dancing were
moments of very fine acting.
DiLegge is just as good
when speaking. After George
tells everyone why Nick and
Honey were married, Honey
becomes enraged. DiLegge
did not let the anger mask the
pain and hurt at her trust
being
broken.
Although
DiLegge was a little shaky at
first, by the end she was
nothing short of superb.
Edward Albee has never
been accused of writing about
the nicest of subjects. He has
often been called vulgar,
indeed, two members of the
nominating committee for
the Pulitzer Prize resigned
after "Virginia Woolf" was
nominated in 1962. Due to
the passing of ten years and
in no small part the cast, this
production was far from
vulgar.
The only major fault of
the
play,
besides
the
unbelievable quantities of
alcohol consumed, is that the
play peaks too early. By the
end of the second act the
audience
is
already
emotionally entangled and
Photo Club
The photo club urges all
members to attend its fina~
meeting, to be held Thursday
at 7 p.m. in 005 Recitation
Hall. Those who will be
unable to attend the meeting
should call Vick at 658-1545.
ready
for
the climax.
However, there is still another
act.
The early emotional peak
is partly Albee's fault, but
also Timmon's and the cast's.
George, as played by David
Watson, is a little too cynical.
Hence, the early bickering is
too brutal. This is, however, a
small criticism of Watson's
interpretation; it was a
consistently
excellent
performance otherwise.
Jane Bray played Martha.
To say she was flawless is not
a gross exaggeration. It is no
small feat to make the
hateful, masterful Martha
into a thoroughly defeated
woman:
Bray
did
it
effortlessly.
Nick was played by Jeff
Prather. Prather was just fine
except that whereas DiLegge
excelled when she wasn't
speaking, Prather was a little
weak in this aspect. He
seemed at times to be
conscious that he was on
stage performing.
Before the play opened
Timmons promised a slightly
happy ending to the play. He
delivered on his promise for
two reasons. First, the play
was just so good that
everyone had to be happy for
the cast and the director.
Second, George and Martha
seemed
to
express
contentment despite their
hate-filled arguments. The
past was forgotten, the
present and future became
the only important times. Or
as Rod McKuen has said,
"Where were you last night-never mind. The room is
warmer now."
rash No. 34
[
Rip-Off Rhapsody Blues
BY BILL MAHONEY
The Keg Phantoms had appeared suddenly and invisibly out of
the depths of the earth and with them came an unbroken string
of disappearing kegs rivaled only by certain earth tremors and
bankrupt breweries. Kegs disappeared into the night never to be
heard from again along with the deposits Nobody had e\!er seen a
Phantom and the location of their headquarters was as secret as
their nefarious goal. And so the Mob's plan went into effect on
campus.
The next night found six half-baked characters sitting around a
keg of the rapidly disappearing brew. Inside the keg sat Looie the
Crossbow with various and sundry signaling and tracking devices
including two paper cups connected by string and a homing
pigeon with skis for Arctic work. But the most effective device
was a fresh cheesesteak from a local eatery that was guaranteed to
leave a trail of grease for miles and a stench identifiable outside
the twelve-mile offshore limit.
As the six sat either insilent contemplation or alcoholic stupor,
the lights flicked off and the keg disappeared into the night and
all points beyond.
"We've got to follow them quietly so they never suspect a
thing," whispered Eddie.
"Somebody light a match. I can't see," croaked Dennis the
Luger as he tripped over a sleeping racoon.
Billy the Bomber lit a match and slipped on the grease which
he deftly ignited.
.
"They'll never suspect a thing," groaned Eddie sarcastically as
a trail of flame left the room in search of a good meal.
The six left the room following the fiery trail as it wound
through dorms, alleys, automobile assembly lines, and ten-car
pile-ups. The keg moved quickly through the darkness with the
sextet in close pursuit. '
After an hour of seemingly endless wandering, the six came
upon a blank wall wh.ere the trail of burning grease stopped. They
were standing in the center of a construction area of the campus,
flanked by menacing tractors and bricks of compressed cheese
that exuded the faint odor of rotting logs and month-old fondue.
"We lost them, boss," offered Mike the Claw as he kicked
away a couple of fierce-looking otters.
"Look, here's one end of the telephone hook-up!" said Eddie.
"Help!" shrieked the paper cup.
"We'll get you, Looie. Now, where are you?"
"Down below. And watch out for the booby-traps."
Billy the Bomber stuffed a pocketful of grilled cheese
sandwiches under the walland lit the fuse. Within seconds, there
was a huge hole in the ground, caused more by a cave-in than by
the sandwiches which just frizzled and gave up the ghost.
The six scrambled down the hole and came face to face with
enough shoddy props and grotesque bozos to put a Japanese
science-fiction film producer into an ecstasy of giant flying
asparagus and mutated gelatin with U.N. aspirations.
As they entered the dimly-lit subterranean headquarters of the
Keg Phantoms, they were set upon by rabid pandas and killer
parakeets that they defeated with knife, garrote, nerve gas, poison
darts, and finally the most boring exchange of riddles since the
inception of the income tax form.
A hand appeared out of a nearby keg and shoved the barrel
straight up towards the ceiling. An explosion followed and a
geyser of carbonated cola blew up through the dirt roof sending
kegs flying in all directions and rendering everything useless with
mud.
The Mob picked up their two kegs and left. The Keg Phantoms
sat down amidst the rubble and passed around a flask of tea to
drown their sorrows as a Metermaid ticketed the remains of the
Carbonated Cannon.
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 22
DECEMBER 12, 1972
Poco's Music Blends Country And Roclc
Poco: a musical dictionary
will tell you it's a term
meaning "a little." But that's
a rather absurd way to define
the incredible powerhouse of
good time music generated by
the country-rock band of the
same name.
efforts, especially on songs
like "Early Days" and
"Settlin' Down."
Furay's plain, white guitar
contrasted
with
his
multi-colored jean patches
and a red and blue football
shirt.
Sunday night's Fieldhouse
concert was rightly billed as a
hoedown. Poco's bright vocal
harmonies and beautifully
executed instrumental work
created an atmosphere of
easy listening which this
campus hasn't experienced in
a long time. The band's
enthusiasm was infectious,
spreading out fro,m the stage
and into the audience of over
2,300, which responded with
hand-clapping and standing
ovations.
Paul Cotton played his
black, Gibson electric with
exceptional skiH and control,
producing both soft, country
back-up and the screaming
notes of his extended solo
work. Schmit and drummer
George Grantham provided
the group's melodies with a
strong, driving rhythm.
It's difficult to pinpoint
the
source
of
Poco's
excitement. Unlike many
bands, this is a total group
effort in which each of the
five musicians contributes
equally to the sound. Bassist
Tim Schmit and guitarist
Richie
Furay
are
the
backbone of Poco's vocal
Text by Ken Robinson
Poco's
unique
sound
derives mostly from the pedal
steel guitar playing of Rusty
Young.
He
concentrates
intensely on his instrument,
his face almost deadly serious
at times. But the enormous
talent of his music was always
pure joy.
During "Consequently So
Long," a song featuring the
typical Poco sound, a group
of about 10 people rose one
by one in front of the stage
and began rocking to the
music,
to
Furay's
encouragement and great
'delight.
There was perhaps fifty
feet of clear space between
the stage and the first row of
seats. By 10:15, this area was
a sea of rocking, swaying
bodies. Everyone was on their
feet now, even up in the
bleachers.
Despite
the
contagious enthusiasm, the
Fieldhouse's
acoustical
deficiencies did not go
unnoticed by the band. "It's
like an airplane hanger in
here," commented Schmit.
Poco's flowing harmony,
tight
musicianship
and
distinctive stage presence
seemed to make the hour and
a half show move all too
quickly to its conclusion. At
10:40, the group moved to
the front of the stage, joined
arms around shoulders and
took a deep bow.
"Thank you for letting us
make music for you tonight,"
Furay said. And then Poco
disappeared, failing to return
despite thunderous applause
and calls for an encore.
Like their song, it was
"such a good feeling."
Staff photos by Steve Zeron and John Martinez.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~s~
I~
I
PROGRAMS FOR WINTERIM STUDENTS .
FROM THE STUDENT CENTER
*SIGN UP NOW IN ROOM 107 FOR THESE SHORT COURSES
~
~
I
~ ;,~~~:dN~~~~~· ~~~~~;;:~~:~~: Lm~~~;~~~~:~;,~,~~~~.~~~'~"' '"' Lm~~'~,~~~~-~~~m~~n~~:~~,~~'· •nd ~~
~
I
~
~
~
~
~·
~
~
~
~
I
molds and colors. Five 1112 hour c asses on
Tuesday and Thursday evenings in the S.C.
7:00-8:30. Registration fee: $ 4 .0°
p~tterns, how to u_se different kinds of yarns.
F1ve P/2 hr. sess1ons meeting Monday and
Wednesday,
3:00-4:30
in
Pencader.
Registration fee: $4.00.
strategy. Emphasis on practice and shooting
rath_er tha_n textbook strategy. Five 1•12 hour
sess1ons m S.C: games room Monday &
Wednesday mornmgs. 9:00-10:30. Registration
fee: $2.00.
*SIGN UP NOW IN ROOM JOO FOR THESE BUS TRIPS
JANUARY 5
LONGWOOD GARDENS,
BRANDYWINE
RIVER
MUSEUM,
and
THE
HAGLEY MUSEUM. Bus
leaves S.C . at .9:15a.m.
returns at 4 :30p.m. $3.00
includes all admissions and
bus ride.
JANUARY 9
A GREAT DAY IN D.C.
Afternoon at the National
Gallery of Art, FBI, or
The
Smithsonian.
A
twilight bus tour of the
I eading
monuments,
memorials & government
buildings. Dinner at The
Plumbery (meals $3-$6) .
Tickets
to
a
new
productio n of Thorton
Wilder's "Our Town" at
the Arena stage. Bus leaves
S.C. at 12 noon, returns
approx. 12:30 a.m. Cost
of $5 .00 Includes theatre
ticket and transportation.
JANUARY 16
JANUARY 18
AN
AFTERNOON
IN
THE
FRANKLIN
INSTITUTE AND FELS
PLANETARIUM
IN
PHILADELPHIA.
Bus
leaves S.C. at 12 noon,
returns at 5:30. Cost of
$2.50 includes admission
and transportation. Special
discu ssion
1/15/72
on
astronomy by Dr. Richard
Herr
.
AN
AFTERNOON
AT
WINTERTHUR AND THE
BRANO NEW MUSEUM
0 F
NATURAL
HISTORY.BusleavesS.C.
at 12 noon, returns by 5
p.m.
Cost
of
$4.00
includes admissions and
transportation.
JANUARY 25
P H I L A D E L P H I A
ORCHESTRA, Ormandy
conducting.
Bus
leaves
~
I
~
~
l#.
ft
~
~
~
~
~
~~ss~ss~ss~s~::~~J
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
DECEMBER 12,1972
PAGE 23
Poco Concert Loses $6,000
Sunday
night's
Poco
concert,
costing
nearly
$13,000 to produce, will lose
somewhere around $6,000
according to Bob Dike,
treasurer of the University· of
Delaware
Coordinating
Council.
The concert, sponsored by
the
Student
Activities
Committee,
had
an
attendance
figure
of
approximately 2,300, far
below what had been hoped
for by SAC. According to
Dike, Poco may be one of the
last big concerts to be held at
the university.
"The big groups cost too
much," said Dike. Poco .cost
$9,500, while Jim Croce, the
concert's' warm-up act, cost
only $500. According to
Dike, the size of the
Fieldhouse is one problem,
since some groups refuse to
play there. Mitchell Hall,
another possible location for
concerts,
is
apparently
difficult to obtain.
Dike feels there will now
be an increased move toward
smaller acts in university
programming, and pointed
out that the Poco concert was
not heavily supported by
University students.
The losses on the concert
will be absorbed by the SAC
Risk Fund. However, the
fund, established nearly three
years
ago
by
the
administration, will be almost
completely depleted by this
concert, according to Dike.
The fund had originally held
$20.000.
BAHAMAS
8 days
(during Winterim)
JANSEL COURTS APARTMENT -HOTEL
also:
• ACAPULCO $259
• JAMAICA $209
$279
•LONDON
•HAWAII $299
$159
··DISNEYWORLD
• CANADA-LAURENTIAN$ SKI RESORT
Holiday Inn Hotel
includes Airfare; Hotel; Meals
llikai Hotel
Sheraton Olympic Villa Hotel
Many other trips availablel
for information call: STAN LONG 738-1704
512 CHRISTIANA WEST
*plus 10% tax and services
Rates quoted are those in effect at time of printing and are subject to change.
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 24
Bl<lET5
Census Report
The Census Bureau earlier this month estimated that the
American population reached 209,298,000 by Oct. 1, up 159,000
from Sept. 1. The population was up 1.7 million from Oct. 1,
1971, or 0.8 percent.
Stamp Glue Safe
The government says that no matter how many stamps you
lick for your Christmas cards they won't harm you. Dr. Robert
Shaw of Ipswhich, N.H. asked the Bureau of Printing and
Engraving last week to warn persons to use something besides
their tongue to moisten the glue. He said there were unknown,
unregulated chemicals in the adhesive and germs on the stamps
from people who handle them.
Plimouth Fire
A two·alarm fire extensively damaged the reception building at
Plimouth Plantation last Friday night and caused a loss estimated
"in excess of several hundred thousand dollars." Plimouth
Plantation is a re·creation of the original Pilgrim settlement.
Target Agnew
Kevin McDonough, 23, of Heritage Farms was fined $25 last
Thursday for throwing a tomato at Vice Pres. Spiro Agnew when
tht Republican leader spoke at a Rodney Square rally on Oct. 26.
Ironically, McDonough missed, hitting a post and a Wilmington
policeman.
Parallel Lives
Lynn Costlow and Chester Ludlam have a lot in common.
They were roommates and electrical engineering majors at the
University of Texas; they married on the same day without
knowing it; they were employed by the same company in Dallas;
and now work for the same firm in Phoenix. The two men and
their families live less than two blocks apart.
Wigs Off
A United States District Court judge has turned down a
request by five National Guardsmen for an injunction permitting
them to wear wigs to conceal their long hair during Guard drills.
Judge Robert F. Chapman said that the men had entered the
Guard to avoid active service at a time when the country was at
war. "They cannot pick and choose the military regulations they
wish to follow," he stated.
Welfare Recipients Up
The number of welfare recipients increased from June to July,
while expenditures decreased slightly, according to figures
released by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
About 16,000 more persons received public assistance payments
in July than in June. Total expenditures declined about $13
million during this same period. The decrease was attributed
chiefly to a drop in medical assistance payments.
Feeling Up To Par
Walter Bergovist of Skelleftea, Sweden is living proof that golf
can become an obsession. Warming up for a game, he was bitten
by a snake. Bergovist called an ambulance, received a serum shot
at a hospital and returned to the course. He shot the round in.
78.
THE
GAY
COMMUNiTY
OF
THE
UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE needs the
support of all gay brothers and sisters on
campus. We meet every Wedn. .ay evening at
7:30 .in the Episcopal Center. For information
call: KAY EDWARDS, 368-9702·, RICH RYAN,
322-3674, or JIM GEORGES, 738-4589. Or
write: P.O. Box 4633, Newark, Delaware 19711.
DECEMBER 12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
Trend Haircuts by
University Judicial System.
(Continued from Page 9)
Guys
&
Girls
Now In Newark •I
Wed., Thurs. 11 to 5
92 E. Main St., Newark
1000 West St., Wilmington
Call 658-4400
anyday for both locations
(such as a student who feels
he has been graded unfairly),
and in this respect the
university lags behind other
institutions
in
the
administration of justice,
according to Soles. There is
no university committment
to academic problem solving,
he maintained; the Office of
Student Affairs has no power
in affecting the "sacred
student-faculty relationship."
What is needed, Soles said, is
a university "ombudsman,"
or complaint hearer, who
FEMALE ROOMMATE
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
for a two-bedroom
townhouse.
$60. a month plus phone and
electrict. 368-3359.
would have the power to
mediate in student-faculty
conflicts.
The judicial system at this
university is unique in one
respect, pointed out Marsha
Duncan, assistant dean of
students. It is one of a very
few in the country that have
complete and final power, to
the extent of being able to
suspend students. At many
other schools the judiciary
can recommend such severe
action to the administration,
but here the seven students
on the Court are empowered
to suspend at their own
discretion. Soles, who was
advisor to the Student Court
two years ago, feels that the
student judges are quite
responsible and fair, and said
that they were the best
decision-makers
he
ever
PAGE 25
• •
worked with.
Duncan, who organized
the program, explained in an
interview afterward that the
purpose of the Judicial
Forum was to provide an
"opportunity
to
share
concerns" about what a
judicial system should be. She
said that the idea originated
in September when the
Committee on Student Life, a
body composed of students,
faculty, and administrators,
undertook a review of the
university's judicial system. It
was decided that a groupdiscussion of judicial systems
in general would be of value,
so members of the judiciaries
of the other colleges in
Delaware and the University
of Maryland were invited to
hear the panel and take part.
EXCHANGE
THIS WINTER RECESS,
TWA HAS THE BEST WAYS
TO DO EUROPE
YOUR OWN WAY.
TWA. IF YOU WANT GREAT CITY
AND SKI PACKAGES.
Cities like London, Paris, Rome and Amsterdam. (Only with TWA can you leave when
you want.) For example, for only $50.00 plus airfare, you can get 7 days in London.
Including a room with private bath, breakfast, four tickets to the London theatre, free
admission to six discos and much more.
Or, there are our Great Ski Packages to places like St. Moritz, Zermatt and Innsbruck.
Like for only $68.00 plus airfare, you can get 7 days at St. Moritz. Including chalet
accommodations, breakfasts, transfers, taxes and tips.
TWA. IF YOU WANT TO
GO IT ALONE.
Only TWA gives you Stutel pass.* A coupon booklet that gets you a room and Continental
breakfast in a guesthouse or student hotel in any of 52 cities for only $4.30 a night, no
reservations needed. Plus tickets good for meals, concerts, bullfights and much more.
TWA. FOR THE ONLY
FREE BONUSES WORTH OVER $40.00.
Fly to London or Paris on TWA (whether on a tour or on your own), and we'll give you a
coupon booklet worth over $40.00 offreebees. A free membership and drink at an "in"
London club, free motorcycle rental in Paris and on and on. Plus hundreds of dollars worth
of great discounts.
TWA. FOR THE ONLY FREE
CREDIT CARD AT AGE 18.
It's called our Getaway* Card. With it you can charge airfare, TWNs Great City and Ski
Packages, Stutelpass, meals and much more in Europe.
For more information, including TWNs free Winter Recess Brochure, stop at any TWA
counter or see your travel agent.
TWA
*Stutelpass and Getaway are service marks owned exc lusively by TWA.
Duncan pointed out that
some of the issues that were
covered during the Forum
were matters that had already
at
this
been
resolved
university when the present
Student Judicial System was
implemented in 1970, but
added
that
they
were
significant in a general
discussion of the topic, as
well as being of interest to
the visitors.
There are no plans for any
major revisions of the
Student Judicial System in
the near future, said Duncan,
thus part of the purpose of
the Forum _was simply to
exchange ideas with the guest
schools. Duncan also said that
another Judicial Forum, to be
held in conjunction with the
University of Maryland, is
being planned for next year.
Dr. Mary Adams,
of the department of Speech
and Communication, acted as
moderator.
LL®WOO~·
IJ~·.!)j ~ -!JJJ'J.
J~.!..!. J!JtJ !J.iJ-;j
Guaranteed lo fade
every lime they're
washed - ftve, ten.
ltfteen t1mes and
moce - from what·
ever ong1na1 color
DECEMBE~
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
PAGE 26
DOWNTOWN
NEWARK
SUNDAY HOURS
11 AM-5 PM
llN
~
11 AM-5 PM
THESE OUTSTANDING MAIN STREET
MERCHANTS OPEN TO SERVE YOU
HAPPY HARRY'S MURRAY'S TOGGERY EAGLE FURNITURE
POOR HOUSE NATIONAL 5& 10
SHARRAH'S
NEWARK CAMERA
WESTERN AUTO PEGGY CRONIN
BRJ\UNSTEINS
MUSIC HOUSE LEE'S ORIENTAL
CARD CENTER
M&M CLEANERS PILNICKS
TAPE HUT
GIRRARD DON GREGGOR
TOWN & COUNTRY
POST HOUSE
LES' RHODES
McDONALD$
HALL'S KIRKS
INDENS
VERA'S NEW ENGLAND PIZZA WYNN S
DISKAY
STONE BALLOON
NEWARK NEWS STAND
JIMMY'S DINER
I
. NOT OPEN
-
SUNDAy~
OPEN NIGHTLY 'TIL 9
SAT. TIL 5:30
M&M CLEANERS
WESTERN AUTO
-STONE BALOON-OPEN
.
.
·~~1~Y··"". ~~
.
/
We're making
NewarkYour kind of ·
town
* * *
. . ..:.:..... .... . ·
•••• • .1'
~~
.,,, ,· .~-::·:·..::.
...........-
".JJ8.~< A~~{> ,
... .. ,)~.~
.~.·..
(\ .
.. . ·.·- ·· 1 -~
·.':(/·.,
I \·>:;-;: .: ...
·.·.:.;.:.=.;:·:
stREEt 4tt~
A.~
-,
~
~~:~ u~;~ersity
of Delaware
.
C/f4.trs
students
A JOYOUS HOLIDAY
StASON
.·
'
.· ...·;:/·. . · --·Santa arrives
down Main Street
December 17
........
~
~
~
* * *
12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
DECEMBER 12, 1972
Teaching
Effectiveness.
.
on classroom technique.
(Contonued from Page 3)
"Most fa~uity members
want to improve their
classroom
technique,"one
chemistry professor said.
"The question is one of
feedback."
Several instructors in the
English
and
economics
departments said that they
had been aided in their
teaching approach by student
evaluations of their course.
Several of the •departments
have faculty monitors who sit
in on classes, and offer
suggestions to the instructors
Most of the students
interviewed felt that their
views on curriculum and how
it is taught should carry more
w e igh t
with
the
administration.
Of the 20 students
interviewed, 15 felt that
faculty promotions should be
based in part on student
evaluation. "I pay money to
go here, and I feel that I
should have more voice in
making decisions of this kind,
but I don't know what I can
do about it."
Of the 20 students
J-~~£
f>'.V '- NA"l ~ 0 N
~Ac;
A
-:L~aN Htl-L ..
~\tC'E O"F
Send Gr•ffiti to AL KENNARD
762-1193
•oo ..HILADEL .... IA "IKE
Allnation
Ulr hannt:a CQDP~D'
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE ltiO'
interviewed, 12 felt that all of
their instructors for the
semester
had done an
adequate
job
in
the
classroom. Of the remaining
eight there was a wide .
disparity of results, but only
one student said she was
actively concerned with the
problems of poor teaching,
and was prepared to take
action to ameliorate the
problem.
campus briefs
. . ''.·· .:.:
Winterim Flight
Exam Flicks
There are still I 0 seats
available on the Winterim
charter flight to Frankfurt,
Germany. Costing $158, the
flight will leave Philadelphia
at 9 p.m. on Jan. 2 and will
return to that city on Jan . 23
at 6:25p.m.
All those interested should
contact Mrs. Helen Rachko of
the Bank of Delaware Travel
Service at 429-1245.
Here is a listing of "films to flunk-out by" in case exam week
isn't funny enough already:
On Dec. 18 "Davey Crockett" will be shown in liS Pencader
Dining Hall at 8 p.m.; "Ski Party" will be shown on Dec. 19 at 8
p.m. in the Rodney Room, Student Center; and on Dec. 20 at 8
p.m. "The Blob" will be shown in the Grey Stone Building. All
the flicks are free with an ID.
N.Y. Theater
Students going on the Winterim theatre trip to New York City
from Jan. 18 through 21 will meet tomorrow in room 120
Memorial Hall at 4 p.m. The first fee for the course, S30, will be
due at the meeting; the entire cost is $110. Contact P.ofessors
Black, Newman or Henry for information.
..
DO YOU HAVE.
Clerical skills?
free time?
DO YOU NEED.
money?
a job?
"For F11hion With s,ark ...Smut Sa1ta'a Silo'
·
1lJ BiiOP"EiR1Y;~~ CHRIBTMAB
FAMOUS MAKE
POLYESTER
CO-ORDINATES
PRINTED TOPS & BOTTOMS TO MATCH
NEW SHIPMENT JUST RECEIVED
REGULAR $12.00 to $24.00 VALUES EACH!!!
SIZES 8 to 10
EXTRA SIZES
32 to 38 SLACKS
32 to 44 TOPS
FAMOUS MAKE
FAMOUS MAKE
POL VESTER TOPS
JUNIOR SIZE
BLOUSES
NEW SHIPMENTS ALWAYS
Many Styles & Colors
ARRIVING!
To Choose From.
All new prints
All machine washable
Slightly
irregular
$
399
ALL PERFECT DUALITY .
PAGE 27
• •
Charity Flicks
...
Zeta Sigma Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, the national service
fraternity, will sponsor a showing of "The Cincinatti Kid"
tomorrow at 8 p.m. The film, starring Steve McQueen and
Edward G. Robinson , will be shown in Room 130, Smith Hall
and general admission is 50 cents.
All proceeds from the movie will be used by the fraternity to
purchase Christmas baskets which will be distributed among
needy families in the Newark and Wilmington area.
If ·the answer to these
questions is YES, we can
help. Use your spare time
for profit.
SECRETARIES STENOS
TYPISTS
CLERKS
r~triiiilr~
Carol Sing
Call: PEGGY 738-1766
' - - - -- aft_!r_6 P..:.M:____ _ ____..
An international carol-sing will be held on Dec. IS at 7:30
p.m. in the auditorium of John M. Clayton Hall.
It will feature foreign students singing carols of their respective
countries and other students singing carols in foreign languages.
T
~STONE
BALLOON
Package Store
· -NEW-
complete selection of
FAMOUS MAKE
POL VESTER SLACKS
SETS
Regular $55 to $75 values.
All machine washable.
New sh1pment just received .
Sizes 8 to 18...
Some % sizes in group.
Slightly irregu lar.
mad•far
may
ar •xc:hanfi•d fl'am naw until ~
oiAI\Uili'Y 2 1 t!l7~
~
CHILLED WINES
(Come see our new coolers)
Almaden-Gallo-and all imports
COLD BEER
-LIQUORS368-1931
% AND% KEGS IN STOCK
·Nex_t to the Club-
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Qelaware
PAGE 28
DECEMBER 12, 1972
Stephenson Leads Versatile Life.
(Continue~
from Page 3)
ticket." Artists receive only
10 percent of 90 percent of
the list price of an album, he
states. Groups make their
money fn travelling, in live
concerts. Stephenson enjoys
the travelling "Canyon" has
done, which is accomplished
by using two vans. "It just
suffices to say trayeJling is a
good time."
For its record, "Canyon"
hopes to perform several of
its twenty-two original songs.
Everyone in the group can
write and arrange music, and
can play more than one
instrument. All play the
piano. Stephenson remarks
that before he got into
"Canyon," he played clarinet
and sax. He was learning
guitar, but when he heard the
group, "I felt ashamed to
even pick up the instrument."
He has been working with
"Canyon", since November,
1969. At that time, there
were two members, Bill
Russell and Rick Hamilton.
Hamilton and Stephenson
had known each other in high
school. Stephenson arranged
for "Russell and Hamilton"
to play at Goldie's and the
group was on its way. Later, a
flutist and a bass player
joined the group, then a
celloist. The name "Canyon"
came from the flutist, Carlos
Alejandro. "We like to think
our music has as many facets
as a beautiful canyon"
Stephenson says. The group
came up with the name
"Humble Pie" before there
was one, but rejected it. They
wish to add "A percussionist,
not a drummer" to complete
the group.
PERSPECTIVE
While listening with a
critical ear to one of
·' ' C a n y _o n ' s' '
t a pes ,
Stephenson notes the group's
versatility. There are "Sweet
Corrie," the fun song;
"Haze," the warm, kind love
song; and the "real heavy,
thought-provoking" lyrics of
"Wonder is the Darkness."
All the musicians in the group
want to be professionals.
Stephenson
comments,
"Music is so much a part of
everybody's life in the
group."
Returning to his other
activities, Stephenson recalls
two Winterim projects he
took part in. He and 6 others
investigated co-ed living at
other colleges. Their report
aided in the establishment of
co-ed dorms at the university.
He is enthusiastic about the
new, various lifestyles which
students are -~xploring. He is
trying out Christiana this
year, and has lived in two
different dorms. "Lots of
people grow up, go to
school, live here. Their circle
of friends expands just a little
bit, but not much ... But how
much of the world do you
actually know?" Along these
same lines, Stephenson would
like to see more of a "give
and take attitude" between
professors
and
students.
"When was the last time you
invited a professor out to
dinner? How much of the
.professor as a man do you
know?"
~tephenson
around me." By working for
change within the system, by
constructive
criticism,
feels he can make
" one less problem," and even
one less is significant .
Before going home for vacation
!
i•
16 Academy St.
(Next to Mr. Pizza)
OPEN 9-6
TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY
HAIRSTYLING APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
CompJete line. QfR K IJair care products.
Stephenson cited freshman
seminars as a got'>d sign that
this closer contact can be
developed. He is enthusiastic
about the Integrated Learning
System (ILS), which may be
tried next year. For example,
he said, instead of being given
a finance course, a student will
be given the problem - of
operating a business, and
there will be practical
experience integrated with
the more conventional type
of learning.
Working with "Canyon"
and being involved with the
changes in the university have
given him "a little more
perspective of the world
~
~
•
:• stt STEVE vs.McQUEEN
:
:•
•
:•
•
•
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
:• 'tt
THE
~ CINCINATTI KID
:•
8 pm 130 SMITH
•
: GENERAL ADMISSION
•
e
PHI OMEGA CHRISTMAS FUND
sponsored by : ALPHA PHI OMEGA
NATIONAL SERVICE FRATERNITY
i•
:
soc :••
~: ALL PROCEEDS GO TO THE ALPHA
•
.:•e
:•
:
•
:
•e
e
•
······~~·························
It
*
····················~~.~
70 E. MAIN ST.
WEDNESDAY
DEC~ 13
*
·ACADEMY HAIR STYLES :*
*
Drop in for the LARGEST SELECTION of books, magazines,
and ~ewspapers in the state. We .also carry watchbands, pipes, a
full hne of tobaccos, and many other items.
the Olle and o nly
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
·
-. VISIT-
NEWARK NEWSSTANDTHE READERS SUPERMARKET
NEWARK NEWSSTAND
..
.~.... ~······················· *
SWIM JAMAICA Sl69*
Lay 1n the sun. shop with the ISlanders. and walk
to the beat of a calypso band for a fu ll 8 days and
7 n1ghts.
SKI VERMONT S93
The best sk1school1n the east offers a week of fun.
w1ne. and fnends. Beg1nners and experts welcome.
SWING FREEPORT $169* WANDER EUROPE $190
Explore. tour. or JUSt wander. We'll take you to
Europe and when you're ready. bnng you back.
Th1s IS our specialty. from transportation on the
b1ggest airlines to passes on the smallest tra1ns.
Ski the Austrian Alps. K1tzbuhel · Valley. Weekly
Ba~ed on Quads. Pnce excludes tax and t1ps. Chnstmas
departures on KLM '289 complete (room. plane.
week departures may be h1gher
transfers).
For information or reservations cont act your local representative.
Share the excitement of jumping casinos by n1ght
and relax on the whitest of beaches by day. Exactly 8 of our days and 7 of our n1ghts.
STEVE O'BRIEN
738-8245
or
NATIONAL STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICES (215) 561-2939
2025 Walnut Street Philadelphia. Pa. 19103
Open Monday Fnday 105 30 Saturday 11 5
Grapplers Win.
•
Swim Winners .
•
/
(Continued from Page 32)
(Continued from Page 32)
standout Art Statum.
Delaware's JV's rebounded
from their opening defeat by
shellacking the 'Pard cubs,
32-8. The Hen grapplers will
now be idle until they
compete
in the Wilkes
Holiday tournament Dec.
27-28. During Winterim,
Delaware
faces
five
opponents, including Pitt,
Johns Hopkins, and Virginia
away and Rider and F&M at
home. The Hens meet Rider
Jan. 20 at 12:30 p.m. and
F&M Jan. 24 at 7:00 p.m.
Delaware 28, Lafayette 13
(varsity)
118-Mike O'Brien (L) def.
Frank Wright 7-5.
126.Chris Mellor
(D), and
Robin Munn drew. 5-5.
134-Dave Heath (L), def. Mike
Macey 8-3.
142-Jeff Buckworth (D), and
Jim Vokel drew, 4-4.
150-Gary Whetzel (L), def.
Craig Carter, 6·2.
158-Randy Mulhern (D), dec.
Larry Gasda 9-5.
167-Nick Martin
(D), def.
Orlando Caprio 15·7.
l77.£d Janvier (D), pinned
John Yerkes in 4:50.
190-Pat Mulhern (D), pinned
Art Yu In 3:03.
Hwt. Dan Morgan (D), pinned
John Standish 5:38.
FOR
candle$ cards
gifts
jewelry party goods
THE CARD CENTER
and
THE CARD CENTER
HIDEAWAY
SS E. Main and Across The Street
Delaware 32, Lafavette 8_ (JV} _
118-Dave Pollock (LJ, aer.
Chris Macey 8-2.
126-Bob Heisler (D) def. Bob
Buzanian 13-10.
134-Brad Rice (D) def. Brad
Alley 2-1.
142-Bob Baker (D) and James
Simas drew 1-1.
150-Ron Johnston (D) def.
Mike Carey 3-1.
158-Gienn Ebel (L} def. Steve
Wilson 4-1.
167-Dave Granville, (D) won
· by forfeit.
177-Vic Leonard (D) won by
forfeit.
190-Tom Gorman (D) def. Dan
Miller 8-0 .
Hwt.-Tom Downey (D) won
by forfeit.
1 --·'
MAN!! •;iiwl GOT IT AND
GOT IT IN ABUNDANCE
Ed Janvier Delaware's 177
lb. wrestler, registered his
second pin of the young
season Saturday in leading
the Hens to a 28-13 win over
Lafayette.
Trailing were Ed Hitt and
Brice Kell, both of St. Joe.
Ron Kane won his second
event, the 200 yd. butterfly,
with a time of 2:15.
Delaware's Ray Benecki was
second and Steve McNulty of
St. Joe third.
Bob
Shaffer
became
Delaware's
first
double
winner, notching the 10.0 yd.
freestyle. His time of 50.5
bested
teammate
Dan
Haworth and Ron Ferrik of
St. Joe. Ron Kane returned
to take his third event for St.
Joe with a 5:37.7 in the 500
yd.
freestyle.
Delaware's
Mark
Bennet and Ray
Benecki also placed in the
event.
Rick Ostrand was the
second double winner for
Delaware by way of the 200
yd. breaststroke. His time of
2.34.6 won the event, Greg
Wiech and St. Joe's Dan
Duffy finishing second and
third respectively. Chas Roth
totaled 181.1 points in the
three meter diving to emerge
STOCK UP FOR
CHRISTMAS AT
I
r'
GIFTS GALORE ...
WRAPPED AT THE STORE
OPEN NIGHTLY TIL CHRISTMAS
AND SUNDAY 12-4
WYNN'S GIFT SHOP
40 E. MAIN ST.
• •
as the Hen's third double
winner.
Roth's
only
opponent was Ed Hitt of St.
Joe.
The 400 yd. freestyle
relay, the meet's final event,
went to the Delaware team of
Nick Conway, John Masserik,
Frank Evans and Larry
Bertolet. They clocked a time
of 3:44.3 to win.
In an overview of the meet
Coach Harry Rawstrom noted
that "St. Joe's Ron Kane
deserves a Jot of credit."
Kane emerged as the sole
triple winner.
The swimmers face a long
practice period till Jan. 10
when they host Bucknell. In
the only other home meet of
the Winterim schedule the
Hens face Temple University
on Jan. 24.
Skaters.
• •
(Continued from Page 30)
click and the defense became
almost impenetrable. Two
quick goals in the first two
minutes by Pat Monaghan
enlarged the Delaware lead to
7-1. Eric Copeland and Dick
Page assisted on the second
Monaghan goal. Drexel scored
their second goal at 11:05 as
Mike Sweeney split the
defense and fired it home
from ten feet out.
Acerra
continued
the
Delaware onslaught at 12:45
as he got behind the defense
on a pass from Dick
McAllaster and cleanly beat
Drexel goalie Jack Kemple .
Bouchard connected for the
fourth time at 13:50 from
Copeland and Lloyd put
Delaware in double figures on
a slap shot from the point
with an assist from Chuck
Weikert. Delaware outshot
Drexel 28-12.
In the JV game that
followed, Drexel topped the
Delaware jayvees 6-4 .
The varsity's next home
game is Friday at 10 p.m.
against the Mainline hockey
club.
GOOD;fiEAR
TIRE CENTER ·
•
FEATURING:
TIR~S
BATTERIES
TUBES
CUSTOM WHEELS
BRAKES
TUNE-UPS
SHOCKS
MUFFLERS
ALIGNMENTS
All Students Receive Big
Discount With ID
Chestnut Hill Plaza
46 E. MAIN ST.
NEWARK
Newark, Del. 731-1150
Next to Gaylords & Shoprite
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
DECEMBER 12, 1972
Floor Hockey.
•
•
(Continued from Page 31)
soon turned into a white
team scoring binge. Larry
Henny (Rodney A), Jim
Magee (PKT), Robin Roberts
'
(SPE), and Jeff McBrearty
(PKT) each knocked in a goal
in the last period for the 5-l
final over the blue.
*****************************
Staff photo by Larry Conforti
DEY ASTATING--Delaware 's Gene DeMichele takes one of the Hens' 28 shots on goal Friday night
in a I 0-2 romp over Drexel, while Dick Page looks on. Ron Bouchard tallied four goals for the
winners as they.upped their season mark to 4-0.
Hockey Record Upped To 4-0
Bouchard ·Leads Skaters In_10-2 Romp
By JEAN LACROIX
Ron Bouchard's four goal
performance led the Delaware
ice hockey club (4-0) to a
devastating 10-2 victory over
Drexel Friday night in the ice
rink.
Bouchard opened the
Basketball Tickets
Students may pick up
tickets for home basketball
games at the Fieldhouse on
the day of the contest. ID's
must be presented along with
tickets for admission.
scoring for the fourth game in
a row as he stole the puck
and waltzed in on Drexel
goalie Don Massano. This was
the only goal of the first
period as Delaware failed to
cash in on their many
opportunities.
Drexel's downfall started
in the first few minutes of the
second period under a barrage
of shots. Gene DeMichele
made the score 2-0 on a
at
3:04.
perfect
play
Bouchard fired home his
second goal on assists from
Charlie Acerra and Terry
Copeland at 4:22. Copeland
followed three minutes later
with a goal of his own on
assists from Acerra and Steve
Lloyd.
Drexel finally got on the
scoreboard at 8:09 on a
point-blank shot by Jean Guy
Caputo. Bouchard's third
goal, the first hat trick in
Delaware history, stretched
Delaware's lead to 5-l . at
11:52 with an assist from
Acerra.
Delaware continued to
completely dominate the
game in the third period. The
offense's passes started to
(Continued to Page 29)
ONCE, A KNIGHT PREPARETH
TO WASTE A DRAGON,
WHEN HIS HAND WAS STAYED
BY A PROPOSITION...
.
AND THEN WORKETH ON
HIS FIRST COMPLIMENT
F-OR MANY HOURS .. .
BEFORE GOING OFF TO
COURT TO WIN TH E HEART
OF THE KING'S DAUGHTER ...
••
•••
•••
•
•••
•••
•
It
CHALLEN -GE
FOR THE·
•
•
It
It
BOLD:
• THE MAN WHO WEARS THE PILOT WINGS CAN
: LOOK _FORWARD TO RESPONSIBILITIES THAT
It
It
It
•••
••
••
It
It
It
ARE GROWING ...
A REAL CHALLENGE ...
PLUS INITIAL PAY OF $9,800.00 EXCLUDING A
PAY INCREASE EFFECTIVE JAN. 73.
BE A PILOT OR NAVIG.ATOR IN THE
UNITED STATES AIR FORCE!
Contaet
TSGT Bob Summerhill
It
It
It
It
It
It
1t
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
It
: 738•:i81:i
:
It
It
*****************************
THAT PROMISETH WARM
COMPANIONSHIP THROUGH
THE COURTLY GRACES ...
ENTRANCED BECAME THE
.KNIGHT, AND HE PURCHASETH
THE KIT FOR THE TWO
6- PACKS OF SCHAEFER
BEERE HE CARRIED ...
Schaefer Brew eries, N ew York a nd A lbany, N .Y., Balt i more, M d. , Le h igh Valley, Pa.
w
0 0
p 1'1 fl
fV'
DECEMBER 12, 1972
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
Cagers Dump Engineers. .
(Continued from Page 32)
season, but Billy Sullivan did
not see action because of a
case of mononucleosis and
will be out of the lineup for
about a month.
"I still don't think we've
played a smoothe offensive
game," said the Hen coach.
"We haven't run our fast
breaks as well as we can and
we haven't completed our
offensive plays."
The Hen frosh bombed the
Lehigh frosh 76-57 in the
first game Saturday. Bob
Ryan tallied 16 points and
Brian Kenney netted 13. Paul
Gibson and Ed Atman added
10 points apiece.
Delaware
takes
on
American University tonight
at 8 p.m. at the Fieldhouse in
•
their last game before finals
and their first real test of the
season. The Eagles downed
the Hens 84-68 last year and
have
center
Kermit
Washington returning, who
averages 20 rebounds per
game.
"They have a real super
team," said Hickman. "They
have two real good guards,
two good forwards, and
Kermit Washington. We'll
have to put a super effort
together."
Archers
Fare Well
In Tri-Meet
Staff photo by John Martinez
SOPHOMORE FORWARD Ken Lukhard lets a shot fly over
Lehigh defenders Paul Hartzell (right) and Norm Liedtke. The
Hens face American. University and Kermit Washington tonight at
8 p.m. at the Fieldhouse.
Delaware's Archery Club
won or tied for first place in
four of five divisions last
Monday in a triangular meet
with visiting Cumberland
County Community College
and Atlantic Community
College.
Bill Shields of Delaware
tied Charlie Bockhorn of
ACC for the top spot in
Mens' Individual competition
with 286 points of a possible
300, while Barbara Sieg
captured
the
Womens'
Individual honors with a
score of 250.
The Womens' Team crown
went to Delaware (686/900),
but the Hen men placed
second to ACC, 831-799.
In
the Mixed Team
division, Delaware's four best
scores totaled 1032, bettering
runner up ecce by 83
points.
Delaware's contingent of
seven men and five women is
coached by Joan Entriken.
Bob Nack scores off a drive against Hal Lambert (left) in the
Hens first MAC win of the year over Lehigh. Delaware's record
now stands at 4-0 with the Hens scheduled to meet American U.
for the last game before finals.
Starr ,.hotu 1,_,. Jol"' .1/arlull':
Floor Hockey ·Cops Interest;
Stars Battle In IM Finale
By BONNIE PEASE
The pucks were flying last
Friday night. The scene
wasn't the ice rink but the
front gym of Carpenter
TH"NK YOU, STUDENTS, FOR YOUR
PATRONAGE
DURING THE FI'RST SEMESTER
We wish all of you a safe and very Merry Christmas
and a happy and prosperous New Year.
NO DELIVERY
"The
BETWEEN
Best
One In
Newark"
SEMESTERS
.U.\
~
BJ
U
~ ~i~
HECK OUR
FRONT WINDOWFOR
WINTERIM
~,___SPEC_IALS--J!
PI TIT~
We must also give you some more unfortunate news.
Rising food costs have made it impossible for us to
keep our present high-quality menu at our current
low prices. Rather than compromise our integrity, we
must raise our prices to maintain the quality of the
meals you buy from us. The increase is effective
January 1, 1973. We regret this action and assure you
the price rise will be kept to a minimum.
-20 ACADEMY ST. NEWARK,
368-8761
D~L.
• ·To
.......
.
•
Sports Building . The game?
Floor hockey.
A new addition to the
men's intramural program,
floor hockey attracted 11
participating teams during the
season. And many more
watched from the sidelines
intrigued by the new fast
moving game.
The teams, representing
both dorms and frats, played
a 10 game schedule which
was completed last week.
Sigrha Phi Epsilon went
undefeated and copped the
championship
with
10
straight wins. Alpha Tim
Omega "A" team placed
second with an 8-1-1 record,
Sypherd's 6-3-1 record gave
them third place, and Sigma
Nu ended in fourth place
with five wins and five losses.
Those hockey pucks flying
around Carpenter last Friday
were propelled by the flashy
hockey stars in their grande
finale All-Star game. In the
clash between the blue and
the white, the white pulled
off a 5-1 victory. '
The white scored first in
the opening period on a goal
by Dick McAllister (SPE) but
they weren't ahead for long.
Ernie Wakeman (SN) was
given a five minute penalty,
leavjng the white team down
a man. The blue team took
full advantage of the situation
and Mike Sweeney (Russell
A) slapped the puck in to
score on the power play.
What seemed to have the
potential of an exciting battle
(Continued to Page 30)
PAGE 32
REVIEW, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware
Hen Five Pounds Lehigh 82-57;
Hosts 'Super' American UTonight
By GENE QUINN
It looked like a basketball
game-- for one half, at least.
It even looked like an
evenly-matched
basketball
game-- for the first ten
minutes. Then Delaware quit
monkeying
around
and
pounded Lehigh 82-57 for
the Hens' fourth win in as
many games.
Both teams got off to a
slow start with the first score
coming on a Wolf Fengler
jumper after a little more
than two minutes. The Hens
were in their usual zone
defense and the Engineers
started with a man-to-man,
trying to take away the
Delaware shooting game.
"They were playing us
tight, especially Bob Nack,"
said captain Rich Hickman,
"because they know he's our
primary offensive weapon."
The Lehigh defense was
stingy for a while, but the
Hen defense checked the
Engineers for the entire game.
Lehigh shot less than 35 per
cent from the floor as the
Hens cut off the middle.
Delaware took control
midway through the opening
hall when Nack and Hickman
connected on a couple of
shots and a fast break
situation. That flurry was
preceded by a blocked shot
on the Lehigh center Hank
Wisniewski by Sherwood
Purnell that the Engineers
remembered for the rest of
the game. After 12 minutes·
of play, the Hens had a 22-16
advantage.
"Sherwood had two or
three blocked shots and if
you can do that early they
look for you," said coach
Don Harnum.
Lehigh held on for the
remainder of the half and
Delaware took a 37-24 lead
to the locker room.
"I was really kind of
surprised that we dominated
the game the way we did
after the score was 14-14
(9 :30 left in the first half),"
said Harnum.
The Hens jumped off to a
much quicker start in the
second half and gradually
built an impressive lead. The
Hickman-Nack
guard
combination continued to
produce Hen points with
Hickman leading the breaks
In Skinning Leopards
Consecutive pins by Ed
Janvier, Pat Mulhern, and
Dan Morgan in the- final three
weight classes clinched a
28-13 wrestling victory for
Delaware Saturday night over
host Lafayette College.
The Hens managed only
two draws in the first five
matches; but then, beginning
with Randy Mulhern's 9-5
triumph at 158, swung the
momentum and reeled off
five straight wins. Nick
Martin,
a
co -captain,
accounted for the other
Delaware victory with a 15-7
decision in the 167 pound
weight class.
Co-captain Chris Mellor, at
126, and 142 pounder Jeff
Buckworth were involved in
draws.
Buckworth's
opponent, Jim Yokel, was a
former Pennsylvania state
high school champion.
Delaware's record now
stands at 3-1, while the
Leopards dropped their third
3 Notch Double Wins
"Continuing their good
start"
Coach
Harry
Rawstrom's
swimmers
swamped St. Joseph's College
Saturday 81-31. The Hens
boasted three double winners
in individual events.
The afternoon meet , held
in the Episcopal Academy in
Philadelphia, saw Delaware
start by taking the 400 yd.
medley relay. The team of
Steve
Pleasants,
Rick
Ostrand, John Masserik and
Larry Bertolet turned in a
winning time of 4:07.7.
In the 1000 yd . freestyle
St. Joe's Ron Kane beat
Delaware's Ray Benecki and
co-captain Nick Conway in
11:30.5. Kane became the
only triple winner of the
meet for either team.
Shaving fractions off their
times, Delaware swimmers won
(Continued ~o Page 31)
Hens Score 3 Falls
Mermen Rip Hawks;
By STEVE SMITH
and Nack driving underneath.
"We went out there and
worked hard to make it look
easy," said Hickman, "but it
wasn't an easy game. We
never really blew our way
out. We inched our way out
the whole game."
Hickman and Nack each
scored 16 points and Fengler
scored 15. Wisniewski and
Paul Hartzell totalled 15
points each for Lehigh.
Harnum cleared the bench for
the second time in the young
the next three events.
Dan Haworth claimed the
200 yd. freestyle. Ron
Ferrick of St. Joe and Frank
Evans placed behind the
Haworth time of 1:56.0.
Co-captain Bob Shaffer's 22.9
was good for a win in the 50
yd . freestyle. He bested
teammate Chas Roth and
Steve McNulty of St. Joe.
The 200 yd . backstroke went
to Steve Pleasant's 2:19.4
pace. Frank Evans finished
second and St. Joe's Joe
McKenna placed third in the
event.
The 200 yd. individual
medley was won by Rich
Ostrand in 2:15.7 , Steve
Pleasants and Steve· Neuser of
St. Joe finishing second and
third. A 180.45 point total
won the one meter diving
competition for Chas Roth.
(Continued to Page 29)
straight match without a
victory. The falls scored by
Pat Mulhern and Morgan were
especially promising since
both are just rounding into
form after competing in
football.
Lafayette is coached by
former NCAA heavyweight
boxing champion and Little
A II- American
football
(Continued to Page 29)
[Hen-S-coop
Staff photo by John Martinez
NOT THIS TIME-- Hen center Wolf Fengler catches the
Engineers' Bob D'Agosta off guard on a jump shot in Saturday's
win over Lehigh, 82-57. Fengler scored 15 points and held
Lehigh's center scoreless in the second half.
ReflectiOns
' - - - -- -- - - - - - --
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - B y ROGER TRUITT-
This column concludes my journalistic
venture into intercollegiate athletics at this
university. It is only appropriate that I should
share some of the opinions I have formed during
my year as sports edito_r of The Review.
During my five years at Delaware, I have never
played for a varsity team. Consequently, my
observations reflect sport from the press box, the
post-game lockerroom, and the player's dorm
room or fraternity house. In many respects, I
don't consider this a limitation. In fact, the
distance farthest removed from participation
may yield the most unbiased analysis.
First, I have a great deal of respect for the
-university's athletic department. The personnel
that I have been associated with is first class,
from Dave Nelson down to the assistant coaches. I
think the department suffers from the
non-realization by most that it is a department of
this university. It is merely a subsection of the
grand bureaucracy that a university community
incorporates. It is not all-powerful; in fact, its
budget severely limits its autonomy.
Still, many expect impossible things from the
department, especially in its control over
intercollegiate athletics. Pressures to upgrade
various programs within its jurisdiction and to
add new sports have been met with resistance. I
must admire the conservative restraint exercised
by the department. It has not been easy in the
face of criticism. In years to come, Delaware's
slow but progressive intercollegiate athletic
development will be buttressed by a firm
foundation that will not be easily undermined.
One problem the department must face in the
near future, though, concerns its image.
Presently, it would prefer to project the
Delaware program as low-key where the student
is supreme. While this approach is idealistically
honorable, it will be hard to maintain if present
trends continue. The complexities and pressures
of intercollegiate sport today force the
student-athlete to make compromises and
readjust priorities. The days of a chemical
engineer participating on the athletic field,
returning to excell in the classroom, and
graduating in four years are indeed numbered.
Another facade the department needs to
reject concerns certain scheduling practices. The
last two years have been the most successful,
cumulatively record-wise, in the history of the
university. Delaware teams have averaged two
wins for every loss. On the surface, this reflects
glory on the school and its athletes. But a close
examination of some schedules reveals obvious
padding, to the point of forcing athletes to
compete in as many as three games or meets in
one week. It is true Delaware faces limitations in
its scheduling in terms of prior commitments and
agreements. Still, where possible, the "no
contests" should be shaved from the schedules if
the student-athlete's welfare is truly being
considered.
The student-athlete has received most of my
attention during the past year of writing this
column. In many respects, he represents what I
was never able to achieve on an athletic field. I
revel in his glorious moments and share
the frustrations of his defeats. I find it hard to
criticize in print a person who plays the game for
the singular purposes of enjoyment and
fulfillment. I don't know of any athlete who has
used this university as merely a stepping stone to
a professional contract, nor any who is being
reimbursed well enough to invoke my jeers upon
his failures.
There are those of you readers who are
probably tired of hearing how well Delaware
athletes have performed. But the only
measurable remuneration they can receive for
their efforts is through the reporting and
extolling of their feats. Toward this end, it has
been a pleasurable and rewarding experience for
me to perform this service for you .
Download