C*°vg 37-O0Z.
OUTLOOK
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR FACULTY AND STAFF AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND AT COLLEGE PARK
JUNE 14, 1993
VOLUME 7, NUMBER 31
The W«hiwttw Post
Wnwesow. Maiich 3 1.1993 CS
P.G. and U-Md. Collaborate on Experimental School %
By Lise Leff
Wnftmfjfiw, PmL Sill! Wfrtr-
Prince George's County and the
Umvef iiLy ot Maryland are creating
3.n experiment I public elementary
school that will feature classes that
span several age groups and family
services such as health care and job
training.
School system and College Park
officials said they hope the school
v, ill become a model for educating
youngsters from diverse and eco-
nomically deprived backgrounds.
poriant to the needs of the very
young child, but families experienc-
ing difficulty often have no idea of
what is available to them." said Judy
Hover, director of early childhood
education for Prince George's
schools. "What makes this different
is we axe offering Lhe services at
the school."
Aa envisioned, the school would
pool the talents of professionals
from early childhood to higher ed-
ucation. Although it would he
staffed primarily by county teachers
and administrators, college faculty
in the Langley Park and Adefphi
areas, which have significant im mi-
grant populations. It ultimately may
serve the families of as many as
1,500 children between the ages of
4 and 11. It will be spread across a
complex of three buildings, two ex-
isting public elementary schools and
a former Catholic school that is va-
cant.
Preliminary plans call for the
Prince George's County health de-
partment to operate a full-time di ri-
le offering nutrition counseling, im*
munizations and infirmary care. If
The school's academic program
would be equally unconventional, in-
corporating many^f the hottest the-
ories in American education. Classes
would not be organized by grade lev-
el, meaning that students would
progress
based on a
students w
portfolios
teachers, r
members often are retained to train
lie school teachers and to review
curricula, but they do not usually
maintain offices or hold classes at
school sites, as they would at the
Adelptu complex, she said. Tlic-y are
providing us a laboratory setting and
access. We are providing technical
support and training for teachers. It's
a collaboration that benefits evtry-
<Effe lUmtfpi ruinm {Time*
'•'.et cutut Lean*
dent bodies of Langley Park-
McCormick Elementary School .ind
Adelphi Elementary School. The
two schools are crowded, Burch
said.
Hoyer said that although pans ui
the project could be running by this
fait, the program is likely to be
phased in over a few years. The
Maryland Board of Public Works,
. « SIMY. MAHCH 7. fWJ
side over
and studei
heavy am;
phy. art an
Remembering Justice Marshall
P6
. t U * K
UM pays tribute
to 'warrior' for
justice, diversity
In |928l TlHini}(>rw, HmftrtlMi
TCjrrlnj from Ulr ijujagftafig^.
.KTIUHfarr.
'■■ I-- <■ '■ ■■•:■ i somber crowd rrf obnul
" (HiKpIr KiUh^rrtl il Ulr r llajjrl ul Ulr
■i'l-i'
■ -J"rier Park curpiunrj
! he Utr Sunrrrnr L"i it lit jiurtiOe'n
I iff uTitl t*TKt .
itoberta OoIcp, pfrwdmi ?>f Uv
V:ri'iLiM* Bl (i h Kn surv JJi il riLkfr .\S*.«'i.H !■ HI.
-■■'1 rUr- iTlpcd Ofijanbr Lhr htvIc*
tm-nitrl! fiyuiUuiLwd ll* jjrvnijma hLic'ki
liwtiadiirvrtilhraqjtfiHiiJ^iulJ^
nJTeirti,
' '.Ka vmicnnf »tifr tw. wnrfced hi 1 it
I I if | J ;. H.;r ; . I ijj i fully a.| iiiH-t i jH' ll-
rtrvf rairv '-if ix-uplf U Ui& dlMN ity .
VirnJjB. Si inirudr tin] Lu liiyn Jof 'J**l
-Lvpraity 3lTtth«ln"l;Nwnfnrtrif wnrk
,ir ■■ is.ri{,-v hi Vir^rujl Vit iln^ur/lf. ml be ' i.»i-
unlay
Whfll 1 trill JCftubrl '. hr I .'(MVr'Mlv
4J Nnnln farolbw. [ ihoujfM Lrwl I »vw
.uUnilUMb bf railrf nil my ft. *nl p^tkiH-f
i-'-i ■■"■■"! »nri. " Hti >ny 1 eiwia. a tolKN
I^wyi r jj 1. 1 irtriflrWr' ui" l)l r .:iiiTr,-li'-.
fstuhy ' It »7jmT1 utiLlJ Lain' thai I inliint
m>' I* njt ! \-r: v W» ihuf I Mr ■»■■ irk ■ ■!■
lusutc Marshall'"
■% UnJEimoU- riaEtW . Marshal! M*! rMTfl
V !i |r I? .1 ! I'l.-M. ,n l ■"! Hh.,1 WU I rii-Fl [hr u> I
*Mtr I , nl^r^lf>H3r M»iylMut LiW
^IukiI Hi* ■■Limmuwd Tfr Hfward I'nnwMny
III WmRLT^Hjii 41 irl ipnrfu»JjMi ni thr hifh
■i| JiiieLuMn tfl'U
VtanJhoH wtv«J Ljai U*r muirm *
i iiiUm-sH ■ ■ iu(1 UA '2 I ytai* JJHl KUttlJ jIt
rSSl 'i-.l ,.|.,rir,in?,iiH|.'r.--iir.'MV :
J*frHJ
.D-M-fiiVil M«d->hili a> a isSLfrtnt IliiJ'Hv H th>-
I .;i11Jf- fw .-"ITu piJChtfl.
1 ft- waw a H-alTklT Whn lawrf hi* p£p ?1
N T HIlklI»aT OtH ajfUTVH kri|laSUf" Ukll
lllfntMl4EV " f "ontrp -^od
' liuffli-c MATihill ffiusM iihi^lcfuinn
i nmJfTi in puhht llkr :■■■■' riynyrnrnt i iC Eh*-
ntfiLi. pirtinlf^M. JJVJ prrUVtUflTd
Agnew papers
set for opening
Library to unveil collection
M unwil TruJ piipt-rs ui loriniT \l±e
Pjvmicru Spurn Aumiw at itj Crijjg fe
[ "ark i-jiiHpjis sonsnirrnw ivrieti ti
Itttvn ■i.-mJi:!h,l iL-unutn.r ^ then
1 Lrat limh .it The niiemotrs. ^"rnnil a^
Hcub -^uJ
TiiL'rolltctmn liht; ists of | .^ mll-
ii- hi \muvs .'lijlS .iitrnii I /.H K i ptvttia of
imTHi'dihiili) Ciinrrn Hrou-n. n U
brarv csrstH at u>p r.nk-sj,- p^t-k
enmpuf. KMtl Thuriiday
IrEL'tiFlktllrhrnJfKUntLTtsMr. Ap-
i tews i::irL"4rr Inim IVft3, whfji he
wmi i£nitnty envcuttve flf fluiliittinrr
f\iuhlv n Kj His TL-jiBiiiilLon .ts <iit:t
pr¥wtkii:l in EJcfnlhir i^"J jfier
1tk'fii,(irnj net CDfltO&T III it i^ltunjC ill"
Htwrw r:i\ -.■..>- 1 1 m
Ir t; irniii-iiiinte Thai rhe 4ru-
t£SUN
WEDNESDAY
wiieniuLlv accujuiiblVtoi resimr^hkir^
tinU *&&*&. \l<tti iiut ihv ponmiti
ih[ lK«i mJFI, a Im ii.nl U ItmJW :ir ■■,!■. i
■qti Kinrrnnicnl itt j13 le>fl> "
The coikcimn imih.^. rllJ be
hmisvdi tn The MarylrtFtJ Ronm ui thu
rtfcvnlly mmh^-HliJ McKelJlrl ' i
btnry. includes mH onfV leiicr'.. ve-
pnris r nt-wsfwiper clippmcrs yrtJ
Kun^wrttlen n4lV4* ball Uiltl^uat
LiL'm»i ■mtch djc ninnlnal cortQftrjfc
ceremontAl iturJ baUt pens
plagues. 'Xtr- Hmirtii ^iiiiJ.
"\St consiricr (lie ji«|n;r!. in K"
HOW tif <iur rrluSI iniSTTinm LrpLlei.'
tmns in The flrw tti" ™rwmal rit«f«
alHj INiM.mili ;-nr|lt|l_ ,. fa -[il-.l Th[J
vrsiirc L-iiLSiM'1nn ^hi-iilil rW nvatlrthlc
nj IWfiw i'Wr.
^It Aa;rlei.y «mp hf>m itt H:ltiHTKrle.
.irrL-ndLLl Jii+ins Mupktns C«lvirrt((>
and ntiived -t t.nv deum." in t^
Truni the l/iurarsilv q( BttUnfWU
He was elected rn.»»'ei"nor ui \lai"\-
i •!■«] in I'^rv. ".vinnintt uMealj .uv.i r»
itiminu thu Hllh Kepul'lkii" n-ivet
Sph'c flgfuew
ind r>akh;itLrn \aivt. Aiid -in 'ipiii Ihput-h*"
lac,
Twti iviirrt ulltT hi* elecimn, Mr
(Whv ^iii plucked 1'rnni -ihSLtiiis^-
h» F<n.-lLird Xixnn |n i un fur vrcc
presirlenl
The qutcat rise in tttitnKuil ^ftim-
itHinrw 'ivas KriflrrnvJ fiy .in imEtt
quicker fall.
In rcdvml uwrt in Bnlnmnrv ^ii
Ocl 10. i**",T. ^Tr .VfHww piewjed •«•
ciHTtcHfT I'l i*nu ciHinl <il LAMdihK <til
unci nicnrne lane* He fx-ntumflj ;i<
n'u-e prtsiLhMTi i lie Ww dm L'mkr
(urflraoi .j piun hbrtteln *ub ii'derui
UM gets new provost from Texas A&M
it iludanl Chary] Edward* bam har haM hi pftiyw during yejlfrday'! ?*rv1ca (or RHrnHM duvllc* Th(irij«oo Mprtnal
pnnct^j lw the I 'orLftituEion uf Ehr ' 'mt^d
SW*ii1 Arnfrwa wctp nyrh Titiill
"i. (.i,i... i..ni-.- -,iv:
iVwiOrisWiiiuim dtrmnf ih' <h*
mi- I ui- NviiTiMi-'i 1 ' ;:■.'! i i. ■ ■ i'i i
•(escribed ihs ju^Uet *f "a rnu{hcy
«rftnr' ' rlaud. in i hr Uhiftl-M JJdeii rUimrr
fjrfdQm jumi rquauty.'
Mm l^tqmnlfl. rT<^iciprn rn tl>
i r-,i i -j.- h>-i m ij^Jiiu; Prr-Ljw SwHry ■■•
iMmju*. i 4id HHaUftl *™ atilr io
' kuitfr Hh* ■'j'Mf in hy wurtfinc wtuhin il«
1-yiunUines
f f p ttfcl » HLtolif r i\t r» fjlo ILUiUfl —
lir kitMM rn)w itj ij v mil n-ntup ■■.■-■■ ►■ : i- ■■
tvmem f hJt " tifii i-vi'ii ciLu'k \n-- t'l'j
lur ji many ye;ir* ' Filam- nUd jjutl Irfbcui
■ hf ^y , flf m Jl l-L* jjwti ttarnf
ITlr KrV. '.l fl-|-'-i ' riii--„ L .. i . ,«<
■ptartl inns tftnt iitr pnwir i rl Erdr*iu,il" JhEf
ri| nEtl#r [hfat>fSlalannit Plr i-uNf]^
Usi> d*div*nivn prrwuNH mna " >»rr Trml
Tjylor -,hrp tifphKlnHcirTht'Tiibirk
[■"jtLiUji niiid Sialf Assoh'tinjim. ma the
M«>"lani! * ^r>|Frl t 'h^ir
HujriB ■-. ii' H ii :■ .■ W(Vh ^Trrlis Inr "lie
iMnpnt* nmrv^HpnK 4 riun'T nnd^HTfififr
■ ■.■KTiboy . said ilui "il 1 ttntmnam thn
»T in Jkf *uit JlMire MlT-hall » hT&r j- 'tv
Liv Douglas Birch
MWHb
Danlrl F"il Ion. 54 . dean of lhe Col ■
legt ol" Liberal Arts at Trxu A&M
University, will tocofT>! ihe second-
htatiingi
USA TODAY ■ FRIDAY, MAY 1 4. 1 993 ■ 7A
official at the jjnh
Tr5U> ■;! M fS rj"-
land al CsffiR
; ^rk. jnlwwffy
DftlCiaUi said yes-
terday.
tT" \jk>. J
1'rr.slrie I,! Wll-
Iram E. Kirwsn
■m ■* "-r-4iM
■mid Dr. Fallon.
"~ X jp
An ' :■■ '■'•<■' n r:i r r, [ ;i 1
psychokviast sntf
iT
rormer Tulbryiht
fe[Low. was chft-
Daniel Falkm
torfMj jfefc Paritj aon averv p(HJ-
Bn rrjijrctory.' br Fallon said yes-
tentiv. TlhdTlK H 'a HWtDg 1n a dTn-c-
tlo-ri that wrll allow it lo be o rudinnaJ
leader.
"We're ot ,1 particular mornrnl in
Ameiicati Tilsiory *nere Mli(herediJ-
Lrallon Is tjelng reshaped ~ he *a\d.
"Some unlwmiFea. mclucllii^ the
UnlvrniHyiH Marvland. have all op-
pDTtunlly lo a m' ihis mpment and
redefine what a university ought) to
fjr In a new eenngimy."
Dr. Klrwan eiedttfl Dr. Faton with
hnnsiin.i. nattonaJ nrroamLacn to Tex-
as AftM and helping to attract the
Busli presidential library to the 1> x-
3.1 scJiool. a crordln^ In Aolaiid Kl nC
a CoLlegr Park spokesman
pr. Fallon, who wilt atari In Juiy,
1 .■■i.;i- at : :.|h ll' Park, whh^h haa
24.000 undergraduates. 10.000
graduate ^ludenia and aboiil .'. irwi
full-time TatultV members.
Dr. rallonj was turn in Cartagena,
tijJrintita. where hts ^nratynatidla-
;her win Ihe national port ,-mri iMi
lather wasrhlcf titMftJt the naw.
Me came tb lhe United States al J,
rrnadugled rrQUi MtonUfCimcrv iM^lr
High School in Sliver Spring jnd
earned degrees f mm Antloch CnlEnge
and thrUim-eTsitynfVirgsnLa.
Asa pavcholnqisl. Dr. Falton has
ftmducted nrsenrch on learning and
rTXttleaUDTr
Ite taught al the University Ol
rjus^ekfeiri in &5nnariy and the State
UniversJiy nr New York in uiinaham-
tOdl. He was a dean and a prnle.saur
This highly-compressed and selec-
tive view of the university's media
visibility from January to late May
1993 is a sampling of the College
Park people and programs that were
highlighted hundreds of times in
local, regional, national and interna-
tional media.
This media visibility comes about
in many ways. The public informa-
tion staff communicates university
developments to news organizations
via phone, fax, letter and news release.
Faculty members with recognized
expertise are sought out by reporters
and writers across the country.
In preparing this report we've
sacrificed readability of the individ-
ual stories to give you a sense of the
diversity of news coverage. If you'd
like a full copy of any of the stories
included, please contact the Office of
Public Information at 405-4621.
— Roland King, director
Public Information
College dreams need to be financed, not deferred
IF only someone would mug
journalist Carl Rowan and
steal his million-dollar Idea,
h-- would be one happy man.
The Idea already has
brougjit In t!3 million from
businesses and universities
for scholarships ranging (rom
H.000 to tlOO.WO. They'll go
to SO Washington, D.C. area
high school seniors May IS at
a banquet with CBS'S Ed
Bradley as ctvhost
Rowan would Just love to
see leadership emerging in
other cities to use his Project
Excellence as a model for 0-
nanclng the dreams ot Afri.
can-Americana who can't af-
ford college.
But so far, no lakers. It Is
easier to curse the darkness
■Hi' -£ j!
BARBARA
REYNOLDS
COLUMNIST
than turn on the light
Rowan started Project Ex-
cellence, to honor brilliant
black students with scholar-
ships, after he wrote a scath-
ing column against altitudes
held by some black kids thai
excelling In reading and writ-
ing is acting "while" or nerdy.
The program started in
19S7. with S3 seniors and
$250,000.
Tills year, schools such as
Spelman College In Atlanta,
Depauw University in Green-
castle, Ind., Oberlln College In
Qberiln, Ohio, have started
partnership grants, through
which corporations pony up
the first f 15,000 and the
schools fund die rest
For the Irst dme, the Unl-
yerdJjjjLMjjJjlttnjlb funding'
unuonrreesTbooSs and a
1 10,000 yearly stipend upoo
acceptance to master's and
doctoral degree programs for
Project Excellence scholars
who earned undergraduate
degrees there. Yolanda Hen-
derson, from Largo. Md.. Is
the first Rowan scholar to
lake advantage of this
Businesses and individuals
who are funding scholars In-
clude the Fannie Mae Fouo-
datlon, the Cafrltz Founda-
tion, The Freedom Forum,
businessman Ken Boxley, and
the Gannett Co., which pub-
lishes USA TODAY.
More funds and visibility
for lhe scholars are needed.
As a judge wllh Project Excel-
lence since lis Inception, It's
pudlng for me to watch the
response of some media.
Menacing black youth with
guns easily make front pages,
while these black gems are
relegated to back pages, if no-
ticed at all.
And sadly enough, lor lack
of funds Project Excellence
must turn away more bright
kids than It can help.
This year 134 studenls.
some with perfect academic
grades, were rejected. "This
Is the must painful pari of the
program" Rowan rays.
What happens to the kids
society won't help? This
raises Ihe same question
Langslon Hughes once raised
in his poem Horfem: "What
happens to a dream de-
ferred? . . . does It dry up . . .
does It stink like rotten meal
... or does It explode?"
JU ->.= »*(*« QIOIMH-1 JOimK*l mLRSOtY MARCH* 1»3
Opinion
New arts center
a jewel for county
Ifs hanj 1 1> fcrnrk up BXrftflnQirt WW the slate $ irtftrocurtg a
building. espetrtalJy an S&1 milium hutlding hcjgtgtt in those
Kiilgh economic tunes. But the performing arts toniolejc pro-
posed for rt». I l n Hr,^rv of MzxArWrf jn L <_' P U eJe Part has 115
JtwtlUT.
The arts complex is a first-mle idea, ami should provt? a lovely
fealJier hi lh? uau far lunii "V uttni'rsityjind ih-p county.
The complex would be an educaUonaJ center Tor the schi>oj
us wirl) as a performing arts center far all or the MarylitrKl sub-
urbs, hn*tlng recitals, plays and! idance perfonnoncufl- tTht
Prutce George's i5>mplionj- Orchestra wnutd play there, for ex-
iuujih'. j It wf. HLlrj include -in HtMJ- in \ .OUO-sseat h nuccrt hall, a
i'U.i •-.-■.', reciLOj rmll, a tiOO-svat ihcm;r ^ntl I smaller "*?xpon-
TTH>nUWi L ' I healer.
The arts center \x meani tn reimplement but not compete
with HmtJTtiiB jui.Ii as rhe Kontirtly {Vm*7T and Wnlf Trap, vnd it
w-miild replace the campus.' Tnweri Fine Arw Building, & -i I -year'
i iid buJdihg with liMwy acoustics and a bam4Lke pertormajK'e
hall.
Enjirverstty aflktab say the corner *r»uld be !■■.. m> .\ ,.■ ..i'i
l.'nlversity Br»vkvar<l nuur Stadium Drtvc. »n whaT 1s now
fpchns practice tields. 3[ wnulr] he completed at lhe turn nf the
century.
The i iTi- j>^-x is being debated in the (lencrai Assembly h
which is being asked to aikrt $2, \l million hi plarinJng money. As
coiild be expected. mUd objcfEiuTUj hove smfbctd. But mm
seem target nuugh to impede [Jif project, ^p Jar, in fait, rhe ob-
jections are more like questinns
The first is the obvious one: Cart the :-t!iie at fat 'I thu ■■■ mut '
Well, the staie has already conunlued to spending 3 100 million
a year hi capital projects far the L-nhferauy or Maryland system
(not just in I'gUfge Park), and ihe arts center expcndiLutu.,
spread out over several years, would come out of that money, bt
the state changes its mind ami decides la scale hack rapnaJ
jtmii rt> at the urdverslly. tlTat's one thing. Bui u>ti lutrversity
nfneiak say the arts, center is a top priority for spending, and
note that the money iroost In the farm at nevenue bonds} is al.
ready budgeted
The second question rs *heiher the sdiool would be tieilrr
off rvnmcauiig th« eatttinf T«Wa inulrihm. T mvcrMn- rjAtoklM
say ihe pmposeiJ wtmpka woufa] rrjgg i& iniilion le?winan rerwF-
vikUmf Ta»es and the ■■lin-.r ■■^ii^inii'iiijo ni*eiied Ifi ddfOt 'ip
wtiheomparable facilities
Others- have asked if tin- PI lotuplex HijuJd luui >-iher art*
centers. But people in the huamirss kiv it cmild actualbr help bv
spumng an ovrrriit in|pre»t in the mrts. And ifii Ls drme nghl —
If the school KUc h w out to atid mvoEws comiraihiEv -avA siu-
dem arts groups — it could prnvjde an incredible bonsr. to iht-
.iTi ,- ■■ ii ll.ii.-i ti\>-
The rea3 btiuoni I me on mis project has it» mut:ii to do with
pnonties as dotbvrs and rraij. Builriiiiga performutg jrtst-om-
plex at the L"nrver*tty >p| Mar>-lajtd:, besides hetng doH'nsible
L-conomically. shows an appreciation M the arts mat is hnht
■tbl i. 1 . As Senate Ptesro>TLt l^uirnns V Mike Miller not ed: ' 'If nvi -
Lizaiinn is io prcAiiil. (hvrrsgi^t to he :\ furtisnn lheanak"
Tltc Tad that this emtBf -.vunki Ih- m Prlnre I'ii.-oiur ■■ (.\iunty
is icing nn I he cake ' 'Tins is a wonriVH'ul t ipjHimnuiv U *t I Vi wp
rT^trgesfiPunty." gimhed E'nnerMlv t J rr>iikiLi William E. Kir-
wan.
TTiat it is- We wish il much >upptm AtlMM^tF Ehai a UjU pWI &
needed.
UNIVERSITY
O F
MARYLAND
A T
COLLEGE
PARK
CLIPS ISSUE
Broadcast news media regularly cover
College Park developments and fea-
ture faculty, staff and students.
Throughout this report we will present
a sampling of coverage of the universi-
ty by the radio and television networks
as well as stations in Baltimore and
Washington during the first five'
months of 1993.
mil: \PHII trt, l?rri
SEEKING THE ROOTS OF
lenceiind «>ll"er utnv ticrftumtls lctl * l k'|^v.
Hui Bh»i if tlie E'l'wnirh i* *upprrssed.
Lnveaib&Mirs "r ih*? link het^wn niulmty
jnd i ■:■ .iw una thenwln-t rsiuiEhi in urn-
.if rii* ,nosi hiiuinvninnmiiit lit hn ihi-
-icif rvtinr mmmuTiLtv in vt-iirs. "T"hH -.tihiit't
lliis beCUTflt* mi fhilllll'jUh rnu'lTivt thi>l
j t-w n r:i L*l n it it rn i u i n*s m i *n ' ii itiv t'rv 1 1 in n
i many -trlMiiistl 'ill) inusriT t'ntirx Irtml
= i fit? Mrt L i.il sarni-rs hiivt' UiTNHim-til linilim-
| ii-al research I'rftrris as iiiiHli>L'tu;ilk uii-
i justified .tmi poBrtcaHj' imitivnieif. \iri-
| i-oti - Anifn^.i n sc tiDla rs ii nd uol 1 1 ic iii ns h i k'
parucularK incensed tlu»v fear thai l">-
*\iuse nl i he high crime rotes in inner ru-
les, blacks vrti I* 1 WTiWUJIv liraiuled as H
i»rr>up prn^nim med tor viiilenre.
The teitklash h» taken j lull In ihe
[usi venr j e valW ''edewl research Inl-
tW ~-^ 10 included liiolimical
ettiS° de ' ortagT 6 ^.^ d ■""''> scheduled
V0 V10S c0 nW^ . „ T s » n "", _ facW^ V " id) a puliticallv
STS.^^^S or^ V f al ge^tl cta weet W«- rrh: n., defend-
. lessen ^ u . Wi^ < r:, (S Bstta T ; tW mack in this
°Pr ..= povsoQ 6 '. >K rfl Titei|nv ^^pg hESltunr |a
to** 1 * 1
^^«?£S>>
5lD* r °-
■gSS 5
ty^
•larch ifj. L3»)
:i::fs
Pulling strings at Henson alma mater
jv MiXpnC^v R-'GLTSQn
.'. i •* '—C ■-
fnnh VT'IVthjIJ. a - rival CT ma-
-^r-,,.'iii -/i^JmnKpTF
The search for biological clues to crime is igniting a
brutal political controversy
Br AH ASTASIA TOUFEXLS
IT 5 VBOTBm TO MAKE EXCUSES FDR
violence. "Die mugger cam*? from a
broken home and was Irving to lift
himself out of poverry. The wife beat-
er was him self abused as a child. The
juvenile murderer was txposeu 1 ru
Mulfev L'rUe recnrdsaTid Trrmmnlnr muv*
ies. Bur do environ men [a I factors wholly
accuuni fur Eht- KVt&^veftNMd child who
(enures frogs? The teenager who knifes a
teacher? The employee who slaughters
workinaies wiih an AK-47 1 Can sucietv s
i\\* i-eally \w i-espon*ibie forall (he savage-
ry thai \s sweeping r Vm erica J Or rould
iome [KHiple be predisposed tu violenrt- hv
their «enes J
Umil recently, scientists had na gixid
way to explore such quest ions- and IN tie
incentive; ihe brae was seen fts «» politi-
tally inllammntor\ that it was best let!
alone But adroivces in (jent-tiis and bht-
cbcmistn haw aiven reseiirthefs neu
l<Mit!( tn search for hi nloui Cfl I d (BBS to c ri m I-
Millty. Thtiuiih answers remain a lotijj way
off. ad^'ncritfs ot the work believe science
reuU help shed light on ihe mots ol vto-
israntiable.
,i earlier efforts to
,tu i.Trmp AoWttUTVI^O, Itat-
.. pnysician [ esare Lutnbrnso claimed
that hlupiriii foreheads, jutting chins and
long arms were signs of bom eriminals En
The latins scientists advnnced the now rtis-
cmiwed n
khromuso
mal XT i
ajmingvi
Fresh
recocnith
0| the ci
threats. T
in The iru
The seeon
among at
and H i j i
m»n amot
Murr 1 1',:
knifed. s|
vear, 2.1 X
dustrialk
■vhuJi r:i
lessihan^
Thist
there ,\\"
^uch as [I
inequity
ture-rhat
£>■, N'evri
fence mmht |iarlly lie -Knedc.
iff nes pta\ a ftrie in many hehavtora
ders. incitrclinii ^hizophrenia .ind
depression, tn virimilk every hi
we look at, tfeiws have an inlluem:
Pfj-^m will l>ehave one way. jnoih
Sun Magazine
^MARYLAND'S
I
fi
'/e/^w coach
Gary Williams
k^r nt-k-Js help snii;ninR ncr arm
riHlL-Lhrr. anil l. jiuK WiloiV ■» juil
'h*! surma" Ep htlrf her
Ms Wrirox, who lua& ij^^isnv4
nmfip-.i - f* !rW tclcvismn r'rmiMm
■ SifaffW Sfrxti " strvut l^N*. 13 <.m£ M
iwur LriitruCtott who ftaW dflH Id
'tie CJnip-Lts wjlh Jane M^n^nn
alJi7* a( Murppcts CnMMf Jtm Hcn-
wn. ti lt*J a wMk.-lunic ^urkshofi in
pupptrrv. ThtworkiTmp. wiiictufiuls
LoJay -s a prelude In The Ural Jim
rfensea Award for prrtiL-ct? r-:i: 1 ■■■■-.-■i:
loPunp^Erv', Ed ht fltvcfl unJIUflJlv l"r
rht' ht' -! use ut puppcLt by a ITUilen L .
!■'"■■ ".sfL- JieriMin and fbr lh«
\luppn*ihcm.sffiiTs rhij rt^rkihnp
t 1 khinet m return jmi iheir n\ma
nutcr. Hup Munpec-j 14m ihcJf ^tuit
twre in ihe eflrly l^Hh when -t«m
Uciuufi met Jnne Nehvl =n a rnJt"
p«rv iJluss Mr Jkfis™ wns a Tresh-
nurt. Uttaa Nthel a 4-nior
With Miss .VePei as hi J Mflitsnt,
Mr Iknwn K-!:;in Sin hniE nhow.
"Stmanil rnemJj.in lMSSon rtRC
TV tl iV»ft 1 nvrminutp pnunitl
lhal ran HATCC Jai3y L once bhTlbre
The I luncley Bnnltitfv Report." untl
jpj m hejare STrvr Allen ■ L TuiU|hl
Shaw." Sume ■ , i ihe puppetii wvre
iT.tini:'. ' tmiunsol:' Muppt.1 crtar-
acrert thai tSOm H he krrnwn as Ker>
rnic ih..' KrvitJinJ G«i?a.
Mt Hcnsornwntontocrea.tr (he
wcll'kTMJwn eTiaracTers for ■"Sesarne
Srrwr 1:1 l«? in J. in lfi?fc "TTic
Muppirt ^how" |n '■••'''. Mr llen&ori
made "The Muppef ^tDVlc.'" Mknwd
by -! \ :iihiT muviejN ^■■trl- using irie
Mupper i:ha.rai:ierv Others, such as
-[jb^niiTh'in I«I6. trejUingan en-
(lfo HfeHtny ^L^rLJ.
He sold Jim lifn*un PnniinrMons
id Writ T)i-mh^ 01 I'ftW to move un iu
tnher pruj«rts. .<- :>jv-: j pkinned
r\' ww* Ear lbs ituppei^. hui ihcue
pUim were l-ue shutt Mr. Mtnum's
■.3>.:ji li uf I'nnipliL-iin-'ifii " r-UTi iticii
rmiRki. al aae iJ in Mb¥ i**0 crt-
■itft! liuaUhm-i as Ji^sraison-i or
children whu hadunm-rt up with the
Muppvis in cdUflTncs jrmiuEl th*
nlut*e rrwumed rhe Ji'.ith ni ihnr
cTt-Jior
The Tour instructors m the cam-
pus, wurkihop haw DfeCD worked
utih Iim Hrsir-in I T-hJi. n-. fV-r
yean^ *ni] ore oW hands a I MHltftDg
ihe MuppeTs.
M*rty Rt»rnnMn u (he hmly b*'
hutd ijiu rr> ■ upai?u>. Ihe ephemerai
dcpha.nl fmm 'Sesame ^IreeT."
Kjllhy Mutkn. who. in L¥7&. >wja lh>e
Thfl Laie „jm Hfln*on emrj ^irVJ
THE PRINCE GEORGE'S JOURNAL
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 2Q. 1993
THE SUN - Friday. March 5, 1993
UM Ubraiy to unveil Agnew papers
AsSOfiat cd rs tSA
COLLEGE PARK — The Uflf -
t of Maryland plana to unvejl
wraMroflfawtodl
trie papere of formi
he papers of former Vice Presi-
dent Splro T. Agnew on Monday
when It gives academic research'
era their first look at the memoirs,
school officials said.
Ttie entire collection consists of
] .5 million pages and about 1 .000
pieces of memorabilia. Lauren
Brown, a library curator at the Col-
lege Park campus, said yesterday.
The collection documents Mr.
Agnews career from 1962. when
he was county executive of Balti-
more County, to his resignation as
vice president In October 1973 af-
ter pleading no contest to a charge
of Income tax evasion.
"It Is unfortunate that the dra-
matic events associated with the
end of his vtce presidency have
cast Mr. Agnew In a one-dimen-
sion a I light." said Jacob Goldha-
ber. university provost. This ex-
tensive collection will, when fully
accessible to researchers and
scholars, flesh out the portrait of
this man, who had a major Impact
on government at all levels."
The collection, which wilt be
housed In the Maryland Room of
the McKeldln Library at the Col-
lege Park campus. Includes letters,
reports, newspaper clippings and
handwritten notes and other
items, said Mr. Brown.
■ County teachers merit UM fellowships
Six county teachers are among 26 selected as University of Maryland
MartJD^I^erte^^uatefe|lo^_to participate in internships at research
facilities across the stateTfiis summer.
The fellows, mathematics and science teachers at middle and high
schools, were chosen from graduates of the Governor's Academy of Math-
ematics. Science and Technology, the state's residential program to
strengthen the delivery skiUs of some of the Maryland's best teachers.
The Prince George's teachers are Joy Elliot of Gwynn Park High School
in Brartdywine. Ashley FVederick of William Wirt Middle School in River-
dale, Judith Kuhl of Suitland High School. Paul Sedita of Eugene Bur-
roughs Middle School in Accokeek, and Nancy Thompson and Doris Wat-
son, both of Frederick Douglass High School in Upper Marlboro.
The goal of the program, supported with a S 1 million donation from Be-
thesda-based Martin Marietta Corp.. is to boost the level of science and
math education by exposing teachers to new technologies tinder scientists
who serve as mentors.
— SCOTT ALW1N
Tin: ftsHLtcnw Pim
TiiiRSFw>,FSRBi\Ri I B. 1993
USA TODAY JANUARY 5, 1993
'WJR' changes name
to reflect coverage
Washington Journalism He-
up* is changing its nunc
Starling with Ok Mnich issue,
th* rnag&nne via be called
American /ournoium Review.
C-jr contem and rradership
is national" ays WJR Editor
Rem Rleder. "And at inU point.
the name # v« a false impres-
sion of what we're doing, So we
have Eo caEch up td ihe magp-
nne/i content."
tv; R Pre* jdeni Reese Qegh-
orn says several names were
considered, including rVotionoJ
Journalism Review and Mory
lend Journalism Rgvirw —
WJR 'a based in MafyJiod and
owned try the (Jniveniry of
Maryland's College of Journal-
ism But Geghora decided " pa-
Eianl" might lead 10 confusion
with National Journal and Na-
tional Review, and putting
"Maryland" in Ihe name didn't
malee it any broader than
Washington
or the magazine's 25,000
paid and unpaid cifculaHon 4
ES% a in ihe Washington area,
which includes pons of Mary-
MEDIA
land and Virginia,
Recent stones in ihe maga-
zine — founded In 1977 and
published 10 times a year— in-
cluded a critical look at how
the Los Aigefes Ttmes and
KNBC-TV covered the Leo An-
geles riots, and a profile of
tVew York Times While House
correspondent Maureen Dowd.
The only similar magazine ls
Columbia Journalism Review,
which is published bimonthly
and is aailated with Columbia
University's Graduate School
of Journalism. In paid and un-
paJd drcuLation & SLOW and ir
is also national In scope.
Both reviews are usually re-
ferred to by their Initials, Co-
iumhvx Journalism Review is
CJR and when its name
changes Washington Journal-
ism Review will go Trdm being
WJR ro AIR. Says fuederi "We
dofll sound Like a radio station
-P*r r.uy
NEIGHBORS
He Hits Books. Then the Road
Hk^hI Hotortl iimi br <nulT in -eji
wrt—S fpH M nrtf, I IT fnali ■'»,( '.
jir:i ■.h>Jiifc.* pu. lrpy^i'
in4 pit i ill r ,i ^ mi »i linNrnti tn hrl|l ~*1I\U
J,rih llllkl
fi^r.
Jwitt 1 i —I ElVnluBmi Jl y
A 4," Knihrtt* **d XtuArdmt i*k
< tn icrar in iKtrMhnt
MinrH «Kl 1|i*l *w? hr rV«.w " inrlir.1
ri rufjihim m i'im h- h- -r-Tii nmLiH"!
■ *hrt rt»Hr*i4r*!r rnHJVtH N« *WrtiI
■»i.i .Wnra .**i S-wlti i™*?™ t\<4 fHS l»
1|H ,„ W-»l <n rrrirv F-" 1t* Jri t* H--W- In art
"i-Srrtifioaiiri ih? purtm n
•*nii | t Urtnik >w i-V p
rim— i 1* Uttt. ,1 m in m t+*
If* tm.lw cnmfrrU'd Tfim if. V.v\«Ht *lrJ
*™nf He *«*li l-V trr-<ir-rj ,
i fi. MifiuMi R»lw4lpHl
i HutUxi l 1 1 .' tuK *nl|n*. th 2-
imlrfunimlJiiM^i". -Iwr*- f* »r* IV .15 1"
*tr en**. Th» r-'H -1j5 V r*tt irw (inin-
Ton fl'th* I'IhIU'H) i I '.t*fi,lw*( r
i'-nale '•* t*"**. ' ,| ***"* ,
OUTLOOK
OUTLOOK Is the weettty faculty-staff newspaper serving
the College Park campus community.
KatJlryn Costelio
Roland King
Judith 8,-iir
iohnFrlto
John T. Consoll
Keratin A. Nnteler
Al Oanoggar
Jennifer Orogwi
Vice President for
Institutional Advancement
Director of Public Information
Director of Universrty Public at i ens
Editor
Format Designer
Layout & Production
Photography
Production Intern
Letters to the editor, story suggestions, campus infor-
mation & calendar items are welcome. Please submit
all material at least two weeks before the Monday of
publication. Send It to Editor OUTLOOK. 2101 Turner
Building, through campus mall or to University ol
Maryland. College Park, MO 20742. Our telephone
number is (301) 405-4621. Electronic mail address Is
jfrlbt@umdacc.umd.edu. Fax number is (3011314-9344,
u
JUNE 14
19 9 3
CLIPS ISSUE
Two university graduate students were featured on the Cable News Network
(CNN) on January 4 concerning their discovery of mysterious "dark matter" in
a small group of galaxies (see print story, page 5).
THE SUN
People
THE SUN
TUESDAY, MARCH 30. 1993
cm
Sunday
Snapshots
APRIL I a. 1933
who ruck tmt t«aeil *Mcw-*merican kid*
Space losing allure after Cold War
T*ic*T*™d, Di*"^ Africa- ArTeri-
t-M/i efkadren in a doamuvkien naf^\ ■
□orhdcd tidnt bile/eat her.
Then Ihe puboaher made hn-«i
offer ihe cwkfrn r*fg*fc w wrtl*
*bnnk«'h«4Mn.
the ifory of ■ younti £rl who n
rvittit»xtwcri chlkJn-n to hrip
■•mcItt wnmin aha tH OWM U lU
TTTlnia us Uic irtlTijtne* of h«T
maths-, a n uULnef and Interior deeo-
ntw Mi Hurnprnry pursued an
In tctanl. evrnlui IN getting Fur jts*a-
(rr> Iran Stanford lAuwtfy In
OltfamU. Hrr wort: haa been ahown
ai :lrf Sisultiamiun, aw Chk.a^o Art
IrdlTiJEt And the Muneum of Mnrjrm
*|i!nVn Vrrt,
mjirtffln
I utt — And the IntdlA^ncT thrtl
cornea from my cuOlure.' she pay*.
She no* vpmdi rrwiy nrrtitnfia
Hi rwt >l wUnnlK hftW wart ■
-TFwtaUAjd tV«n Klnft'i
taje of a character who iavra ■ jpnJm Inm
tiUlofrt*.
im- L l-y«ar^ld iwiM — MrtnMnd Thai,
— hflvcpUircd a Unjr pan in ihe nrlttnenl
I his pxronri '<x* A
1 nerd to Hil*ftrta thai uriln the puNw^f "
xht *aya. r *hrthfi .heir rumn nlvwld br
on aa co-author* L
— MaxyCMcr
-><E HOtrraaiWRTJOUHMAL .■■tDNFSO*,* PJAVf, >*£|JIS
By Douglas Birch
Staff Writer
COLLEGE PARK — Roald Z.
Sagdt^v says the end of the Cold
War will fundamentally alter the
goals and methods of scientific re-
search by history's two most ad-
vanced technological societies.
The prominent physicist, who
for 15 years was the chief architect
of the Soviet space program, has
spent the past 21% yea rs as apro-
fessor at I he VHH^^^&m m
4BB S)3 as t h e founding director of
an institute there now called the
East- West Space Science Center,
Dr. Sagdeev (pronounced sag-
DAY-evj. was awarded the title of
Hero of Socialist Labor" In 1986 for
directing a multinational effort to
rendezvous with Halley's Comet
and became I hen -President Mik-
hail S. Gorbachev's chief science
adviser, tic moved to the United
States In February 1990 after mar-
rying Susan Elsenhower, grand-
daughter of Dwlghl D. Elsenhower
His research and writing spans
a host of subjects. Including plasma
ALGEW* (TRYV5TAFF ROTO
Roald £ Sagdeev. former chief architect of the Soviet space pro-
gram, is now a professor at the University of Maryland.
UM program helps Russians get technical training
By SAND* STONE
What ftnm sou * DmaJy Kdesitko about
MTwVplan mn Ihr f ru*n They hurt whe*av And they m*
+*«. Ik «*M lean hfc* w«hnt taillns Mt;
to Mdedihc's pan uf niaJcymai in FhasraL r* «■ wi
H«ili™iJkk-HL-r»ir!HtBK.i-4tCTlh™pfc. AndtfUa-y tn**. **
'nil uar inem," he iv-
Thr & r i»^^rtannrtfj)MOMTriE n *t£w1ur*™hmii
ui4 1 WW coder at the J&d <rf Jerry Thornpaon ft Ajbo
inUm in KmanSwi. "Anyone ear. ju* lata: 4 bnH frwfi
■■»!-■»' 'Ivn^iThdHiiaKaMriHhkfiL
Thr ci i sir* tt¥>}-*j*y adJUTban hfwr •frvrr nr 1 law*
during Ins m-frrek rat lo Ajiarelta a a fit ery from rh*
nvivcd I ftJttMH t hr ahar* nth hv wrfe And < \-vrw hJi]
'ULKhWf
"'Il'b i hua* Nnar.' L hf mj» "EWn Lhc tanTcat IfaM
imn**J' Uw jfomwrtCwwimhea; pMT kMtWi innnkl«
Mfk^JniLii**l^rt(uOfil?.iw HmIktt Ite.-am- tikt
(y fi>f tKtvurad wluciWrm Jlr'i «rt«ftg U * JTA, a ktuU
■!!«!"■ :■=-"!■: 'irn- ihai »p«ehltbin IP iv>jlf:n iji1*m*
HHohkv w n™ iX ■ licmn Ruaoan husnrsnni nen>
kM at MnMnnnp Uawty And Eta»fcno« tomp*ru« aa Htt
(rfallnlwn«jrfH*ifyl5rtfL'nJi*«^Crfb^Bpn*wivr '
hihd*d hy a a^OO.OOO pvit nrnm ih* US- tiJommil
En the [■» of patnhil Prw-narkrt n*c«™ ftfopoaed by
i RUSSIA, AS
Dmitri 5h*fflrtQV Interna ■■ 0\ icnvtry
Channal In B*lh*|df through th» Un<v»raity flC
Uirylinri Umy.nlty C&Meflu prt*jr*n>.
In ttiejaceol r f|orms
proposed by Russ i an
Pres i rJent Bo ris VeH si n .
the iniernsarB here to
grajp an understand ing
of American business
practices and take it
home.
physics.
Is your view of the
ggle in Russia be-
ent Yeltsin and the
People's Deputies?
very much that they
reach a compromise
I think there must be
[e In the political situ
l a new constitution
specify the role of ex-
egtslatlve branches,
ty parliament should
o have a new parlia-
leaccful way. through
THE SUN
II
m
THURSDAY
APRIL I. 1993
Ex-Terp Williams toes line
for school and community
By Atui Goldstein
M'Wiim
A atranq bond «i*A bftwetn Lcn
t"l nmnr and Wall WklJulinA i h ;»c gpzs
(at beyond tlw cuaEamiiy albifncy-
rllnK rrlalkmihlp tn prflf»alCnnAjL
■port.!, when? Ihr bultam line Dn a
ccntnul a inqufnliy 1h* nrm tlnk.
Elrtwrr iCTah of [9741 and Wll-
llAms [1993] earned All-America
iKTTKin pkyirlg bukMbaJI far Mjr,
Un/i E)ul tlKyabci Apourntly share
Ihr tr lief thai an j i fclnr ewe* m debt
of enlllLidc la thr cotlefte bid mm-
:iui iv rv Hut mjjpnr'tfd him.
And m EJmonr. a nlid pro for 10
acaaens brfonr altcndin^ Harvard
La* Srruol and brtoming q Th*r
Yorii prHcculor. will lake spctlal
pudn! Lcn^hi when Wllilama. a hlftli-
vi-niij nnfcle vllh SatmnienlO. Ii
honored a[ I he K I ruga' game ■* n h The
UTJUJitri^M f)ul\tt« for fslihltahlnfl
a 3125.000 scholarship fund for Af-
rican- Americana be f.ti alma mater.
I'm an alLomry. not in aajeni.
Post All StOf Stilr
StWT Lhe All -5Aai ti
In Ihr MQA i;hm*;fi T^udBji
ft*™*
Pkyw. leu
I".*
3haquilleO~r«eALDTl 19
71 I
Aan rajB ti nr-.-j ng Cbn i c j
J&l
Wan WtUtana. Kk. IT
J! 1
CTlililAUi lacHner, Mln 1 9
IM
«wj I'm my sriefllYi In rhwBlnf
*ha E work wllii/ wbd EMtkw. l)w
fxir>*r and dlmtor rtf Preccfrt
Spofta and Enlcftalnmrnl
-Wall It the nw loyal and rriMI
communKatlvf aUiklfj Tit tarn In-
uclvcd with He's a Icadrr. and he
S« WHUAII9. pjO. CtA ]
tec. I envy these guys. They have
tremendously, exlremely Interest-
ing work to do. For example, now
they have to discover the true his-
tory of Russia and the Soviet
Union. Or try to develop scientific
approach to economic and social
reforms.
Physicists vi
ants of themllfi
plex. They hav
every part of th-
ural sciences *
state contract:
now.
Q-. IS Yeltsin goes, is democracy
finished?
A.: No. I don't think so. [Con-
gress Chairman Ruslanl Khasbula-
tov and Yeltsin were standing em-
bracing each other on the
an international approach to spare
programs, high-energy physics or
to any expensive venture, for ex-
ample, the human genome map-
ping project [an elfort to identify ail
the genes in the human genetic
codef
Now we have no more taboos on
international cooperation, and ev-
erything will be much simpler. I
hope It will compensate for the loss
of money due to lhe end of lhe Cold
War. the loss of money for science.
And, of courae. we will no longer
feel hostages of the arms race.
§,: America has had trouble
attracting foreign support for the
$8 billion Superconducting Su-
percollider, a panicle-accelerator
being built in Texas. Why?
A.: It is one of the most impor-
tant projects in hlgh-enenjy phys-
ics. The reason It has problems is
that it was planned. Invented dur-
ing the Cold War.
Q.: Physics, arguably, has been
the most prominent science of
the past century. Will biology
dominate in the coming century?
A.: The whole history of science
Is a sequence of revolutions, of
bringing certain disciplines to the
top. The 20th century has brought
physics and space. Now we are en-
tering the era of biology, of biotech-
nology.
Medicine would be, of course,
the biggest beneficiary of the revo-
lution. The only problem Is. what's
happening now is the development
of more and more expensive medi-
cal treatments, procedures, phar-
maceuticals. At a certain moment,
we will have to ask the question:
Are we talking aboul eventual Im-
mortality or not?
y. : Some people are convinced
that the U.S. government is hid-
ing evidence of the existence of
UFOs. A few even claim lo have
been kidnapped by aliens. Did the
Scholarship
April 21, 1993 ' Thr Chronirlr of Higher Education
B
PI I 14
N.PHh'4 ■
Coimnmiitariaiis
Q.: Has thei
or scientists fn
other former Si
A.: if you lr
many people Id
slim fraction. , ,
ploph? bum™ ™w« / hen Ideas
who essentia II
group of people,
most active. Ih
the brightest pe
Outside Academic Arena
Sc lurhik iiijnh, Ifimitf ■*< -Hilar. nil -ink (list joints
■in Jf.mu lu^t llnr in li^i-s|Hciiiliti^i«tunfk
1hie^ J.*** la
.jllmf no ^nwnrani ti* pivilpr
*■? ■ vi« ..ml ■„«■ ilk e in a " hrt» 4\iwcfMrH "
*ilh rri,-n £nvriniiirnl, nhd m <wrlnJ i-i
tm\ [■■■■1' ■: .I pJn k>. jKe f'n -hUfp,! nflfM
evh«- 1 f en-nin lJ \thmfcii'- *bti hjiiAArd
1- T rlhcr pi> ItWU Ihi nr.'i.'liHm P "-ti-mmurp.
i.ii hi n .leenda
H-'HHhr t InHi'it ilitrmniMi ul pi >n ^rtil lhe
s^IhiIiii s uicsa lbe pwtd !■' ft ti^ * Hie motit
Ha DM Mm! i^iri! r rt - ( i urcl k-1 I f.-H h
t. .-II P." j ih - 4,'itfc' l i ill in.; h.M-i-il Ic h in
inhlii.hlij.t1 itclil-L ,i(Kt rwi^-r iih ii-ul if.
*nnn»ihnrti SnJ hinh (Vi^piTtr Mfribr
pi-'Mk. i|-.|i.a>'< r.Liiuli I' " .!"■(' Iip frnr pjr
«nti iww* i»hn" •* nh 1W1P *. hikihetp. mFumaJ
'ctykt, !■■ Ifjtth MnJrnPi a\tc ■.'••.•<, L ."-
T'-pia:" rcfiwip m fHirf F p'liln *.
Tlw < e^rtiWjrh'f 11 nm. an 1 ulrfii jI
ft* krttrltJ. Winkb-s
rmf 1IOKTIHHIIHV J<HJH*LAL WitLiHfiSfJrW APH1L7 I SSI
Now in the NBA, Williams still The Wizard'
By MARK STEWART
L | thkflk A IcH ill rniPklt-i Jmvr- nnn> a
drflUHlr jnnpKt,'' WlMfAJIW sAJCt "A Iph vf
thPt>[iir pWt*bh/ tildn'L think tliai *tmld
LANKAM- Thefrt* Wlaavn> p ny*
rwry day Uui nhr run ' ' dour hu-iiipihjnjj
njjjht" thai day.
Mrr son's gesturr lani Thunday nnH
■hai-p apohen vnhimea for th*i TJA/tlirLdaj
Z lhM BeCfad
Wah WUJlami, S£lA :■ * ■*.■<■ - -■■ --'ir.ri
twi-anv WaJl WUIlaniJ, philai
Ian wrrk wttrn hp and h» S*
King* t^ampifliea mme id to*7i , - -*■* ry [il]*itn
annual Capital Ctntn duel wfl OfiCfll-r.^ liT ai ^5, iVRj ,«^ » !
l*W11ntfc*rt| for WdttAms. whin* lean
tn m1> nu-Tra iju**iuns about. hU abiur/ n>
star i>p ihe NBA level. I Its niirnbr-rn at
Maryland aa a senior [20.S puma, j.8 re-
ImtindB, J. ft asacpla Bud ^ I Heabj were
Walt Wiiia
AT,diB*r«lly. rralij. *_ _ '"oter, fhd lfc *' ^5.(1(1/1 *
1»jlei !tp#nd ihtjif
-"hiJ uihrr lutunn. ,utI jJJ t
fy. dnafta The monr resputi.'
'.in* Mtprinti'fxi \ n ihemwh
rfi unolfr makr jikflA ilu;
frt aitd bVrter weipdii-in
And ntlur Amenities lor their
HJiteHf [iJniCrniTi
fi-l! '-V 1 1 h :■ n-.-i ivcnl rvi-n iw -nil thai.
The CnHlandi Hiptjn School graduate trt
up hla scholanhip ftuwt for muwiruy Ttu-
'ifrii.i nAMtruJarty Aineajn AjiLrrnc-ans.
Me couldn't caie le» whel her tirey can
iiu-.n. a jump ihg| aa ilumiy or dunk a
("ArifinbaJ Un f IphVih-rrf V hr ,-afi
TV leavf ihM up to she university, '
Williams utd. "t dJdrtT want Id make it a
lu*JcrltialJ KiubrnJvp. i *anl Id t . -■.■.-. k
iht» lot petiole *Iwj n**d an edur«lKHi
ti'm! jtrt- 1,- . h'lnptatiukrtvaJI
!.'i' ate fatiie
Will Lama i a #njp>> i n fi a rettufltatile
rncane waaon, uWptu miwnjl L6 (fimn
*n h • timknn fame m hka rtEhi Jutnd En
: -;i nmri he haa averajcrd [4.7 uulnu
Only thnpr twkfrn ran lop tlut — Sha-
quilLe O'NmI. nionta Htturnlhit .inri
I'hrtFiUan Laenn^r, ihr lirfl lhrrr players
.ii 1 1.- ■!?.,[! :.-..: :,jti
W^IBi^nBaholnea all nhaWal in Ihtee-
RpaVir | jFII and h mi-tpg
I don I Lriink I Itad t,» rededlcale my-
self [after the uiJtLrT |,' ' Wmtmna satd. t*.
ftmnH Co the broken leg h* mfTrnrd aa a
.ni-r at v. ■.'..•-, i :i :-!■ i "In anythiniT I do. I
try up be i hr brae. [ tried to rum Uut mta
a positive and a« ntywHf into tjw hm
PUSBibie ihapr 1 rrjukl I wstn id be nn*
■pr thr Kreal ptayer* m the- Irijfue. but E
jim don I sat that. I work and 117 t" at-
i'<tnn?&phthȣ,"
IrtdrrMd, thr K|n|(> have astnl * ba| .if
VrlUiana, and not |uat brratne uhey wrre
r-M'hk 1 ■'_■ 1 1 ■ r > they £01 him W|]han*
hab played . usi aboul every poaiUon un
Lhe tourt excrpt fwr center. AH.hoi.uth he
haa :-l ai. - - im>rr ai ■.!:■■ pom! Fecenlly
■aa Mr: ■ 1 !-hilini'-i-;1 knjufrd hjui Kture.
'Wr vr had a hiwti waou, and a U it
>i| people '. t,i1i[ ttiat u> 1x4 hctruj aUe io
Wj|-
IIIQEgRpif I.- <-■■ ■■ ■ 1 i>4 the 1 iMi-.ii. A4I
A MEASURE OF SUCCESS
Three years ago, Amitui Elzioni, a social
scientist who is a university professor at
George Washington University, and Wil-
liam A. Galston. a professor of public af-
t h caVBHaVHHHHHIBP"
lege FaW (tackled over lunch to take ideas
thai were percolating through various aca-
demic disciplines and draw them together
in a new "communilarian network."
"We made a conscious decision lo move
ideas outside academe," Mr. Galston
Mtrn t'lTml- \utKf ^volrq". ahnt
M ki.r Mil rhM,i-ni.;n:i. II..I! (IP THihU..
says.
■ )|ii* I*. uMa«i riridtr lhe tnfi he
rminrt m iatt Ideal. tl>M* >tf tin- tfruTt (Vnt
"^Ftffl pn>llril.'d!l lttblt| HltT ptMttlT?
TbbbbmTaT^
vt™t,nf rjrT.MmnP.^v IWJWr. h* Ri*:
■ I h ihr|r htfM 1"tei|pci ^ h^n* *rh nf
rrl N Bellih ahHl lim. ixIh-i Mffha^ hJ L
iiiirlprtUfcil en ith'iphn ML'hen Ihty tmnfrnnl
1^ 1
^mldmyer im.lUI pJOflfa * .vtuind Hie phhM
•fohfreijotiiB]tc*tie*4C?fca«nMtfj eajkani
A spjlf ul lather ICLrnl I«h*^ [h.U Iflhcl
nnl crime: Hin U*c ".lieeK*
aaal iibbI -'-- aaaar TiJ ■
liaMnali n ................. lM 1nflL iMifaj
a Vt hi>r ilu ihr^ I'.mr hv «itrirmll<u|"'
[■n h mhm nH APtan «henn nf wn-kt na>
fbt gjilHmilllnllfjUlw Icjiie h.tl vifftr
iT»puin.hHiTH- t hniki Livht ^ WttliiriJ
""■wur iif laaiMAV In r>irly l^t ihcv
fr.*crJ'1nr ,ni..' " Ih, KajnVt -t ftreWtr
1 11 '■■■ 1 1 1 1 . ■! J ■■ . i<. <;-. . 4 ,Hif tOiu
Imm' LF'rjrm-liiJi 1 1 mi- rcitt Pie**. Iwll,
'M ■ . fi • .ill l linttniinitiH 1.1 n itlrni. . f,ii et Ihil
lL,-r... 11:1: K M ■>' ■ ■ in .^rri. fi 1 rjir t ,tf
-■ ," Pho ■■ ■■' j tfinrh m 1-, ¥mshLnt-
rirmpw 1 M.rl -r,-. r ,r |i,..t> . ivj^, , lk .i
— it MlVir iIh'^ I'ttiifd j rtjlhirrn- i-jlliitt
rhllip Sttrurt^ IJV .<■...-.,. h- .-.„.! ..,.-,
■hia -i n-irtfl hi-iPliir l.iiiurirs. vh«J,. ciwn-
Ni-ifrrfV 1 1. ' rn 1 r- ■ in nt 1 .1I1I .1 ftflM
•niimilr*. jml ffhic f.n Pn ''FkltiiHP in nth
IWli>-4e telhiBr r^rhkh
Mr FlCMHIl Kl« pii--l rKnuinlU uui |j> f
\\ tu'ir 1 1 : ni ihe ■■■■-■!■ tn. puMpc
^J"irrf 11/ r ,.=1 ■..,.,..- ., ,.!-, :--|. 1 .1 »■, "a
iifnn'i «m.h n« M-fw^ I carpi's -,\w\ WiJ
ttWnimPnilaflKn InJCnJri " Iti nuNnhrt,
km 11 HiNrlrl'.lcjim s f nrh,.J phe ^.plfOfirt
WiiUam A CaHton. a ptvTbiuh at rh* u nP
t iinkn. \- ntuuirtc 1 *■ iak1 •.nfwi
^' <lh| ttfll Imv.pu.0 llh:t,i]i. n^h .m Jipjlrl
Maryfimt IHH CMKhHi and «thari 'fan*
IVrw^nl n iini.ii_h h"( L«mtirnril *ilh
H fialdhrt, |.-i. r=. ■•. 1 nl 1 Hi.irhH... t'»u*e
covphn^ nehrj and Pai|4irrblMHtlM at both
nihl LiiHHvpn-itiiit*. Mhh an. Mi m FL
tjood ooIkt aid eW nalaK* "
1 Km. Ii,. a huniri - - "^» - ■ I ..1 ihr llrpnrl-
IJjKlon and Ml 1-*Ih"H huVC tmtf Maiml
Mrtd 'J MKatbi ^™*l n-a» 1 vm -i h.M-
Ooiftt I il pThhc naBT^- :m t- m^« rminirip iif
u* IMM l.- Ih-r IVrihMi..lK r.in, Mi t i.,F
■1 *pfMhf 1dt^« ftvljtd ll.ii. 1 . .-!.„.
mihr I aaaaai iaaHaalabaaLaa ai p la.nrp,
■rlml; hi .1.1 a *<.1i ,i-.Mii'ifin ,4 oca-
^■m- tonRimoJ "tui hr Im heei btVitlI <■•
dak S tana Piralcnppjil . .,ni|!.,iiir. ., rnl Mi
'Tiaik^. fii-in llhC ^. -. « ilnr 1^1 MiJ<rl H
Ji 1 c* 1 lhe 1 mini M j| T • Itrf.rtmatHi*. AjHt-
lu-Hiiii. ihe eiaHMfmKi ABxn a IFn«:H
■y Mi . < iiliiim r* aevidaf ■*•> icjua y »™^i ■
le*> White rtnnri
■ i" ■»» -prhl ihe piiti'h'al «.imnsr Ikmamia
ill It-lhe l'li-uiJr-ml U- .J..r,vh|h m .I,lt
M ILuhfi lnlhtfi^rmknftJ'lht Ainctkia*
:., 1, 1 .1 1, 1, r,,ii- „,..i r ..H n»innuiftiliHi
fhrmutl -!n | r .,. Ir r - | .1 |i ( '. 'ii r|,. 1 1 , r| |i,)r 1 . V
1 himKll*. Ii-iT-Ii IHiSTil
1. ."ii. c-.-l.n-. 1
■^baipntanvhai .a" Hill t Imfun . heajin In nai
JUNE 14
19 9 3
U
CLIPS ISSUE
Government and Politics faculty member Linda Williams assessed President
Clinton's State of the Union speech on 'The Diane Rehm Show," WAMU,
Washington, on February 18.
The same day, Professor Thomas Schelling of the School of Public Affairs was a
guest on WMAL Talk Radio, Washington, discussing the State of the Union
speech, and on February 20 Schelling was profiled on NewsChannel 8, an all-
news channel carried by D.C., Maryland and Virginia cable systems.
I til fcWMMHhttal
Colleges widen the realm of careers ih
3v ' jrtura Henrv
_'SA TODAY
"r^uniunadv ;fte mte if
:nuinn for rounstton work-
■ nsr with foilegfr fludenta * tin
ire dca&led was: ^wychoJoKy
w social *tirk for Lriote wita
.'vnn ^ra&ienu: computer
prc^rimniiruj for irww usm|
*r;«iL'nair<. pfinutm for trie
mrnij iiTLflsureel.
'--■r^r: science, mam.
medicine or n^nnnn^
"But we now have hop*/
«ys Vinpm* W. Stern of the
American Association for trie
Aiiwncemeflt of Science/.
sjFim points m tfte Artwrv
cans with Disabilities act fll
SWO. which dmWs a ne* cate-
nary id (he Civil RJgho Act of
1944. Tne ABA toughens ami
frC Mfl e m the fed eru Refla.-
tHLitanofi Act or t97X
Ail cotiegea ire required !o
rnoite campuses actreftHCHe .«
wefl as provide UK special
textbooki, equipment and
personnel » swdenn with
disathiiEtes can have ejepen-
eoces equal to Ehetr pterv
For example, colleges
musi tiave academic ?m-
grarrg in accessibte feu 1 1 tUn e.
and tKiv cecnnolDgy. hire siajn-
Eanguage interpreters and
take other steps En ensure
tftai acanemic programs are
available to the disabled.
Also, thutte tmses must be
open to those wimdiaatuUiKs.
■Jfriai me new law means to
Stein a chat bud dm* smrv
ess and engineers cant be
easily derailed
Greg Fowler, an engineer
who is blind, tells, of the diffi-
culty be nadi 'flndlng people
who could read material :n
rtlStneenng. pnyscs" ^kJ the
other courtes he took during
the '?7'>s as an jnder^auu-
ue at Michigan Stale I'm ver-
iity and as a graduate sipdent
at Stanford University.
"I bis n ev er openly do
oxtrajed by anyone within
the university- -ays Fowler.
#0. who works if Osco Sv>
USA TODAY
§f§ NBC Apologizes for Using Device
In Staged Fiery Car-Truck Crash
NBCrroaAl
QW THE Aft jonn Soroson. wncae |uv*stbb rheujnanwJ anjnfts manes it nans to rnacn wme
iCMprwrt. BQftatqawjW aaSta as a 3J at ff* University of Maryland carnDus rac» station
vtded quadriplegic students
■tt Lab assistants, but only
3(Kt could promise access-
ok tabs or special equj pmenL
Only 16** couki offer a note*
-aJter. and only LM offered
to accommodate students
dun rkg tests.
► Studena wild disabilities
often were forced to ap-
proach professors. eipta;n
Ule nature of their d tsabiUaes
and suggest the adaptations
needed for the course. This
assumes, however, thai ttte
sudent already knows ihe
course and the laboratory
content wfttCn is rarejy the
ase, ' says the study
3jU Scale* .11 rector of Pis-
Services a t thj
50 vs
ieTToTteKed-over
12 years found gradual im-
provements in campus BOT*
ranment forsnidienCS with dis>
WFDNf.SJJA- T.t*V
school because of a suite re*
quirernem to perforrn cardio-
pulmonary resuscjtabon.
Post, unth 'a burning de-
Bre" to become a ns- f , cha-
inst has reapoJJed, hoping
Cbe ADA ill heti?
■".'m not jskint to de an
not askins 10 « i ?ur^on
I^e limited mv notions
thiru^ my JsaJii::-. *0u!dn
Interfere wiift/ 'le says.
ftenee Kirty. asssta
rector ror Disaoleo Student
Services ai Temple 1'iuverst'
tv. savs ?.■*,- ■?c^oot ".as rraa j
ntV. Nf:lV Y1WK J7Mi-S NAl fUNAL J-'fr/JMl. ATHtt. f(-. H».l
Gay Soldiers No Problem Elsewhere, Senators Told
WA5H1-4GTDN, April II ^ The
jfntF4 fert« otCHUdi snd AttHfalu.
-he iw m^nirr inifrf-aimrn i -mi
rna>L n^reflllj h|rrfl ifwiF bull Wl
moK-vuJt. iuvr iL4tf no nwilt preb-
lrra» ii « mulf. ithtiI f^*rt» tul<|
High Levels of Lead Found
In Water Serving 30 Million
ndtrd SJ ai n m il I
jr v I- j-.- tnrfrd M: wOhcuL L^e rr
>trHlnna, CMRtal rf*dirt££+ nukl
-raJr ■ii^-rti*tHvjt vduU phHn.m^. jnri
ihr Anwneui ■rntm tcrvicn khH
Jru«wr>[« ma ■ "wond-riEe fam."
vtuir "-»*m( dwi "cnivci cuwai
npr Ami r i lu CjJ nprf |MMi define*
zit rrcr-j3lii^| sr ■amlui *Mn-i i\«ihi.
ihe- vxpertri il 4 hrarui| of Uir- ^enair
' ■ p-i«1 Semen fsmmitirr ciurt Imtrd
1 hi I ihir enmirm pollcin w*rr Dtilp
n-KPHfr: oM lid mi||h1 IUI tftii iHig-
irtnt mmrnynlftf AfiKfwan mUtti fy
irianntn,
Tnry »bM mtrd ihn mviy w«utn
IhMaai
L«niErtl #xpnUl ■!» prMiMcd LmtS t wnri^r" Iv ■.JffflUrr Lhr jrftwJ liirn-
pmtH 1 til «*w " Ld Miultvf <-ourvutH "J ■miw .1 '.i
For Snuurr irync u l**m ibeu U'lsm^u Htm
BM f*ft*r*f»»i of iKfip armed _
f«t«. PIHII Df whtth (UllKlViml ^rftrrai Vmih-w. -ho niMaM -*i
tfr 3 « 1.1 1.1 1 rheiT ranti 11 m* » (Wdta *na»«eB*Bi mnkl mkm? th# Mnm
V-1«wrtJI* ilSV " '*" mtl i'*'V tQ a -"troThl rai* roftt
iMHii niliun. tor Kimnw. *»l M4j "*" *™«™ Lwrapwn inaw
MBC atLKbed rcnwtt controlled toy rocket
engines lc ihe CM truck to ensure tint it would
catch In il during the cr uh. An NBC *pofcuwL7m-
in utd the network had iKrecd td ply CM 'a
coiita in invesiigiiing the nutter.
E-'-n h- 1 m the day, Don Hewitl h executive pio-
duccr of CBS'a "SO HaVMaV »*W; "lfcu can do
inythtng in tekvuion— if you level with ibe av-
dtence. They knowtngry did vnEence to the Irulh,
and Hwy did not broadcast wh»! their viewer
though! they were teeing, Il \& hKooceivable
that ■--* ■■ ■ l-J if happened here."
~0r tHevuion, ieeing a beOeving ■ hk! Rub-
en Lichier. director of the Center Eur Media kod
Pubta Aflair*. 'If you set il up so people aren't
teeing what they believe they ate, they may nev-
er believe you again. IE you're nuking aide a fire
klarte, ywi ihould tell rour viewers that."
'Puiimi those little tparVlers under ihe rmrJi
. . . is pejiKtfaltng a fraud." uid StLphen Kluifi-
fnan h * (rltow at Georgelawi] Uni,veriiiiy L i Ken-
nedy School of Klhka. "It n rusi bcynnd the
pale-
In I heir annuunremenl East night, E'julrr uiul
fTiillipri frjd a xtrs df statements by tJM ami
said the network would not contest them. Plath-
hps uhI. lai eiaraple r that the staged Cliisri "wai
not represclitativr uf an *CtuaJ nidtiinpJLt £*i\
listnn" ind that NHC'a TepUcemeni of the ung-
inaJ ga.s njp caused a leak that CJjiJtribuled lis the
fire. *
NKC alsn did not diapuEe the *uto nukcr>
t'.>i'.lfntifi!i ihat ihe crwh toOk pb<c it a higher
ipeed than "Dateline' had fLinrved.
The yjunsallitiC LMMie ii nut whtlher the oldet'
mudi-l GM truks are Uti^Ev; an AllanLa jury laJ
week Sinh'lvd the tonbpauy \a pay $tQQ nullum
tu the fit enti of a 1 7^ year-old who died; hi a (i* r y
crash invulvu'ijj Mich k truck.
Nor is ihe issue whetl*r incendiary devices
are Uandird procedure in tafeiy lull. Vincent
Ehamugan. a professor at the _ym* - t J1 ^U
|*anaafe^jt r^parlment of Kire rrdlecuonT?n>
pSbBC 8jri tnj! "*hen you ire diking liri
tr sling, yon atwJy* use Igrtiteri. AH tire tesli USe
igniters."
The chief )Qunialailic question, aiulytti ■.-■■:
uj why ivnc failed to disclose that us drjuiuiic
crwh fiwtant involved the use at spjik-pntuV-
ing deutce*. An NFK" policy nunujl blalea Hut
"staging "I a-ny i.m i ss ;.r " -h - 1 ■ -r ■ i
One KDC ulhiiwl said (/inner »a^ tivt mu-
suited abuui the crash test but thai "lUlrliiic -
pruducer^ did nut cnishler it *Ljgiii>; Hit- ifli
cia| h who as.ked not to be nanied, xiiJ viewers
Were told that the viaih teu Was "uti^OelllifK' "
On the Nov. 17 broadcast, a (est car lh Ii-:!
inlo a GM iruck at wtjai NDC >ay» w« "jbout -In
miles per huiir," bul did not cause ■ lire, \httn\a
a second lest. ^h:th the pfdgtam uid ixcucrcd
at "around iltj miles per hquc," ihe fiM pukup
burat mto il.um*:,. ■ s^ene that was repityed ih
ski 1 * motion.
The auto uiiikir's invesEigdtidn 1----J- "!■ ' !'■■ au
at a detective >1 oi y. Afltr getting a lip lh,H NltL"
nad hi-! ■:■-■■■- 1 !■>■ >.* ; i engines iu the ■:;■!:. i\h\
■ <■■■■■ .I tO !<.■•■.::• Uie I. si: VtlHtki "IVnn'llHf"
said Ihey hvid heen jUifked JlhJ were w.i hrtiijjt j
avj[Lih!c;. but GM cnipto^ee? luuiid LltciiL Ur.lt
lhr H4tA\ Site, utttaidc lll(Lijliani'li!> k Jll-I pur-
eha*ed thetiv Hk company uid twu tuy in*ktl
engines were still taped tu Uiu chasui irf mic
"It ducsu't help that MUC apparenriy trini lu
hide Ihe tvhlrndc/ Lkhtc-r sJid ~W|k'i, I'-- v
want to do a slury. •.'- '-■ '\< ■■ puhltc's riLjhl to knuw.
When someone ^-anls to iiuxU ihe evuUiki,
tiny il'jne^'dll jujI Elbe any hig tulp»rjlh'iLi "
The CflMtunWjJ ha* inijrjli- at l|n- *H-I^titk
LlT[].Hll|ji 1 1 J: I A [,IJII. tmll-il tire, "tujl-lllv" ■ JUL I
ty horrified" ■■■■■ MiC vuiha unl "Wl ^e all
been told uvct and over agjuj. iw itatinN tin
basic rule n, if it un'l tup] '.riinx, y"u i.uni>i|
nuke il '■■■■!■. . . ■■ '
offi^H.1llf ilncTiminair i|imu ha-'
nnrxunlL Unru-m jrr no
:C*Hiirv. h^T
i*r- t -r fof ■ fiK-u-il pi jeJ wJo n ienL at
murwni, Mr HtHlu* uid '
rti "t} iHfiwwxuals are net aiiipwd cc
(UH (vmtMn utirti. melliienn *m* ■
■emiv mnuniHti
Urujm hat a umilar paUey or
iird luirrancv MrnHXTl. uf Uw
lor>- *rr rml sited 'tmH UWir W4uji
liftrhlstKin "1J ihri.r ortrnt p | |ijr* it-
eOffur IUHptH but Lhry arr W4 rjc«sU
pnrtkr -rtirhri drclKrrd (*y n
i^jKijni Tmm hiflft aecunil y
menll and prirrTl mmm*riC!i
'■'i'ifi-i ■ i.ruM Mi dinciea
pwllniH !>[.j r i ?r t-r i i(i draw up Ah
milMSry Cry July J 3 Thr wnur
mmlcr- hrld «>r!tcir mmlli orf hjcaruifj.1
'wfi r- '->Jjv ■. iKhh r
\rcnnl5cri^n Comrnillrc
m Vrdft&UiMf -hi'. rL nwili
^rifHifla cua Hay 1 >nd 1
wniki udiy i heitiflii PiKuud «t nM
fjjHneneer of [Drncn mUnary niib-
iFUtmrms. pn&* rnsm ihcit iw*kh
^'f* CCniWUHHLy ihtepr TlH ■#>
nrcu^wrrrill *nwncarw imHciti'
<r-r[ j .->iii':i-j.i ^rMTHiii J*n) i nHirrd
Arm* pmii -wtm nuve iludHd r-w-
AFPIL 1993
'Neat and tidy
lessons' on gay
soldiers are
elusive.
rftlJjtftl in nWKMiual bchaikar. thr >
miitm. fc rOufilctKl and i*amrd
■aainu (nivcmduei. ruher ih*n dn
■ it* 'teed." **id t> tJn^i _
■■Makf pTQt**w
lii DeiuiijTli And USC 1 '^fflVi'laiull
pnlfcy mfllurn cmi m huher pm'tty en
mdivKluB.1 ip^.L : . iImpi nil tnhltujir>
pcadiwn, inr czprrlr
if J I r.nncft MAdirri k
lltcir <Hrt\ ihihA. (injncul:y
bp 1l¥ Duir -i i-i i Ii ! »:*
FtiLi «w*n ui armed Eftrejd irtih rnon
IrtWOl peMiCrt-4. inc enipfftl Uid. rnnU
Uf inrn inj Lr-ctM'fil lift MM <nakU
■irnr nn^nuiwn kno*n mnna. dn
n "SMMdl-RaH ftnt*
Irrnrr ihr-i' hi
■n Iwrurku,
dwpiJ ■niir*d ui livmrj
1hr muin trw >-«n
have pBHWai hn*rvrr. kin lhr r--rrnl
flUXfietK (-1 in CjnMjj jnd Aui'r^lbp
iia iTKHMh* an« OlEa^a jlkWrdrHF
R)i»r>ualiiniiCaruMli'i*<rvif>-i ,:M.
ejutr. rjii ihe t»lpey fturtxe nmupdi*
earn 1 h»*r heanf frf ha rwaaHrrtn
cm on one- [h]r> rw jniiihrr ' Rrif
'l't hi'MrJl Watttrr. ihe enm nvimt
it of ■ :ri!l.i ■ Vt'm ■ < jii i.- I.
Tv«S. «d«d in an inirrn-irw lair w«fc
In AuilfaJia. ihr rt-uilm havr brm
UinilAf V*rsy n| Lhrdurr: TiLd^ucncr-i
S4TH *U«f BUM rftilHitrv nffitinin pnr.
d-i ifj ham not m*in .mr -j
"h h.i\ had *f ry liirn, n/ ' , '*fi na
rrajuci. i-n ihe ^Bhi n*iMijh«j >miR^ -he
Ikw pallor hjis bmfl in p|*rr. -nl
fiCTii iTIi?" irrnLkun. *hi> ihti tnnflin
remred *■ read of ihr Auvmiian
armed rrpnt^
tN"i¥ Hrf H.IH pnV4c in Uw I atu
tnih military a nd TQ.W m iha Auuni
itary ay eompan^ri, lhr nr jit
iinn p«j>te m Ae Mficn^m
awvac
Ol *t h* i ii- 4(Uwi n-^m
is.it FHhWiro Apfii a (*p» -
The? Arrnjr tw^an Jru-rt+1 L ' P'wCPtU
|aL>V .iBJin^i A h'(tt»l'. Jt'ti'.Mn)
> ler j(rn rtl who (Wrin^J hj* h*iw»-
M^^ii^tiiv ..hi vrrhrnd j- ihr nm :i
" priv by $mf mpn jnd *■ %lnan* n
W|"*irl(|(n
Better prosecution,
use of Kin? credited
9f Joyc*! PSC*
and Ron Taytor
hwdak Apm m. w.»- ElieBJnffliuinhitiriiiitB
THE STATE TRIAL
Trw lew Loa JtnailM ppIcp p*fciTa m^/0m0tH^tf$mJm* ■t» b »(n»i
n fiMfc. Lii* Dci^rr ia« upr*.
Eurwd^n ^u^^^^M^ ^^ ^ *iS. UdBt
mat Inr *p>f*in ii ji'ii iviriiFif
rvHV. tl ~
■ I IP II H ill
. rPHWFTn Ii eppi th4 im^rT*fr
WHY AM I SO TIRED?
i° u
,j».
.].-
(pSSi
l' 1 " ,C L, t^3 ,
3^
*o*L
h( „eoe» nS
W'« v
H»»
^ va ^ www
t:^>-
IHMS Phil
UULS[EU\Mt>H1
WAS^KNrjtJMWs
AHF >S^I\d
IINOUHI W 1 1 M s
rtrinv;>ui
UM\i HM i v\
i J' i \!H3li| l|
IWMttil SI!\I\S
LcRal eX|H-ns BTBBl jr*1rnla>i
Vrtdict m ihe Itsdnev KJnu OMttlCul
raclaJJr lilvente jury, ih'irr "vujur-
«li and csipc-nenetd" pnHtccui km,
dlrfEfdC mtHakr^ and lit? pracCu
Inn' drcuton hi pul King on the
vt and
In Situnan. the attorney tui .Sk(
fiacey Kaon, ttw nf ihe hmj pril^-e
ftrfl convicted vctlerilay of vhdil-
tnar Kma'i rtvil naJiEE, uid tn a irlc
t>rWi* intcfilcw rhjl he beli^Ti
"The aura p( ihe pprmf rwita" ■'!- ■■
ptayed a em n In Ihe Jury ii deeittan
rlut otbwr Lawyera dEiaireed "I
duuht Ehey *n r r€spondjnf to out-
lulr *Ofial firr nurr " uii.L K Kenh
t h rrxi p. e^ft" «■' i it '1 1 rrn .V-r ut the N a
tthfial Aiwctarion rrf inirmil rv
hnuw Lawyei*
The IfilbE vrrdkl — limlivp l^n
Wtltefa euHly ind |wp ml luilty -
|n4h.-nEri "Ihey lix*ed ai eweh Ue
■VndrtcvT indivMually" and mada
their decunni wi 'Vhar they it Ii the
iTacEP *v*r Mr Rripun uid
HoralilA 7umlH-ur.HKFrrpiJrnl
st Ihe Pacific l*giJ FoundatLon r
• a/reed. "The U S Rovern m tin
brought all at \u unlLmlipd re
XUiiJti IO I hl^ uk. »nd I hai hpii
(ac»f-,"hciatd "But I know ihe jiirr
wi» nn' runaway nnce [ **j indlvidu
all rul not eanvleled '
hJmin; K. J'iiT-i. dirtew C4iihprt
■f T Che H AAf P N'«»i DefrnK 4 Ed n-
cm font] Fund, uid the federal proa
t'.uvrts did a "tupreh - :,'•*• Iv .
had * hi ah treal iEand>rd rn cnrei
Thei' had lo thaw (hat onTlceri u^«d
exceuive fttttt and Ehai ihey m
'ti <'•.-■] In l]%r f^ir-vnT fnr cr''
M* Jonm anld Ihey proird Ihrir
u-Tir with Ihe pUllful upe of evi
on charava orc«HB>Hj HoeJrwpr King.
Tmliatlaaarji nTTU**TVwiarh> Wind ran ijm. i j i ui
«ra*i*l mr.b a d*adry wpnjht and picrtcu** lix« by an qPtgi uncter itetoi
otaulhoi^y
■ Ht toiavfaaaivtajigufrcAerafnHoiiiHu^
■PMpon, *pc«u(v* Ixca Uy ancAce* imdar ariar gl iuihwth/- "top a ^i*
pe«pjt hscort and twiner pn acewry Id awitT
daadh; waacon and Bxepwah* lon;e by an ofhear under oobt of authcrpiy
■ tffWm iaajW* PmmMt Mc< gJy on cnaroaa pf aaaaul wdi ■
dtatfy ■aapofiinij tang a Uw* pca»n*pcrt Thafwi iMaa^Bgad nd a
mainai wai dacmd tn ew ciwpd c* an*#*™pi i&abymoNcmi**}*'
cotar gl Brirwy
*.■■ ii ■■-■ and much belter decutatj
nuking in lermi nf wklenre and Ihe
ejdlinaj uf wilne^wa" In the federal
trial Hnn in lhr MBit Infll llul BC
qn H red Ehe nirkrr^ or mni! tharflt*
And Ihe fcJrml Jury wan itwtt
"dhver*c." "ort all white."
HjUhryn RluvII, a hucK,
fPjj^ er L m ■ F»
iury rrajrhed ■ diiTcrrni nmrlin™
with ihe **n*r fadi
In rlui uw, Mi Ruaaell said, the
'■ pmmr^Ul u>*» wBi much mum vL|irir
nil and much mure experienced.
Bid the Jury »n Invkinfl al ditfcrrai
evidence ihm linie Thit waa an
entirely newacEuf JuEut4 r and, run-
ertly. nn. I Ihinh ii ip. rrAjmipjMe ihji
Ihey rnrnle Ihe fnidLripia lhal Ihey did
not that I wainl surprised"
The mnarl impnfuni nc-w e*rldc7»ft*
ni.rimi 1 ! lealimmy; Ha Ruiaeli
utd She noted that one of thr
rntienTTi*. Er^vlrd aL iIjUt pyumil
ton win Ihat ihey rrlird h» much no
>'-.: m.|i.-..i.n,i- of 1he heating
"They in-r j ■■ - ■ ■ -- 1 were neJ able
tu hrl .'.••■■-.■ thai ne was a real per wn,"
denrr prcaenled In the tedenil irul
Mai damajtmfj
Sullen"! Charlea Aronheipj, **hu
odned m-iMiruL-i ihr buftn m
Kuipifttr. le*iifinJ ihpi EN- Injitr
let could only hanre cmne CrHi * ho
ion blow, not a fnll lo Ihe pnmnrt mi
defeme vnlnesji« wnd
Mr Satiman said he believe* rhe
vhlnMnpr -lhu-j-J aiTfleleni ntul
»inn" H have lAfittd >hr WfalCJ An
(undcntiFled Juror, miervievird it*
lerdayon KNftC-TV. «aid nf rheiape.
"that's IhuknUy whal eunvleled
ihrm"
I n I he BM trl*l, rhrre nf ihe fi^ur
defendants tesiLtted rtul c«ily * : - ""i ,
leatktled m Ehe aeeend tna] Mr**J4
hewai K^oaHpHi far anyihinp thai
occurred under hli pupri-viiitm
Asked d ^non would have ftrtti
belter olT tf hehwd nni testified. Ht
Sc*nlon aald he doubled It lie uid
he bchrvej Keen would havt been
Convicted anyway beeaiiH he w«p
"clearly respon'tMr" tnf ihe be*l
ma, wnicli came under hi* cum
'fill. NJ.4I' YOKK TIMtibt M'JViMl, AMt
!j4P"
d^ 1
tjP.aH
Tmt CwniiTiAf* Scnwct MoHtToii
The
Nation
A Badge Is
Less a Shield
When Police
Go Too Far
FtkUk AKll I, 13*1
UN Report Prompts Heated Debate on US Foreign Policy
Br n*.s*i **r
ttwral nf tl* US Foreign 3m4e* pjwJ
pHlant SKinvy of Haie. and Rkhard H
taecnUryotljuie
the ft™#J*n ada^naandJorL jUvbuig
lb* To Lr»k van mj wxt\
lonk far penpte on die ocaatde «Hh e
Swfwy of S'j*# Tnarrfl *^rt*pphrr ih-r faerbct ntikr exBwneae*." Mr.
fecK "rpfc appntMedi aa 1$ tmWmW t% K t ennv saya.
rneaatrHi In "rkanune Ihe iiwpleadnrai of w*
IW-^orp u erdi Tnrth 0aa>l HJail ffport C aa n pr 1 1 tmxwv apph ipatla^ mb
np ihn cTHuhtri *f IIS foreta> polley aad The eataavannn fca'l Ue uW m#j
tM oprrMfenn nt the US W pW— 4 at IbSiming up on the UH r ia au ta u
':^r- " dona On Capaint till. Rap. Ibaert
la iwrdiruUe, uhr tu »M *a i fa m 4 b< <ni (nj_nf
toohirm uiln Ihe 1 JW repoei'i *■
Tenia! dnpfecaekm. that tJS offlcajv b« I fcae ra Hi
Car ^ahmlann nUHarr dhrr trained and na^HaMP pud to
ranekd «na rntrnpuyjt «wrier baa cvr- in cavdacl a rrww nd IJS pcalrMM
ered It up b*esapaE the tS m Btadnir ronn E3 SJhruHar b^ 1* dedaasify
ff reaaal *ait def netnjt ™n«««»
He. QinHnfea Lf a ecnastjaan* wt!l hr druusd b? ihr 'jpr ivent, a
*wfe un »f C^vfBF Veat, a faeracf 4mine lw mj p ik#m] pair nj*.
uk One ol Ihe mnct eoflunthns qin^mma hr reminds, refn-rmi; to uV Maraj a irbrt
lhat wdl f«dnmt both OeiipeaK and Uv einip. "It *ps not in nur IntrrcA tp rlnae
Independent cemunlMonn h whether Ihe our ryr* In that m m pnbm #
hiMhiw Fhrtnrir Ftew^aji and HusiL ofltrUdg:
etfntaHuvt hy Latin Anterl- idnifapV ndtan thai cunecaaua.
US aid! nitCrtl Ahrams, nxn-rr u«DTam irtrr
In flahE B>errliia or ifrvaj Enmehen. lary Of P&t fnr tare Amenean JTpira. U>.
Thamaa Ekrrferahal. a Cenrpr WWh wtsdnl>r veTeri|(fat" In lUptpirUrt the
unir Mta4Mn iwmed force* - aad >hcndd «na>
of Ihe Hun Rusnben nf Ihe Truth Own {%■*■- in npptirt other mUiarlea in UV n>
mlarit«v«yiuSp^lnJiB*Wrw.theFi*UhF* pym. 'If n-r WPfurfr mlVd »*ir r tu- *"HIJ1
dnr ejepe-nenee ifwald lead the LIS ts awre •tnpld h»re wen,' he uces. TAii jld Hut be
ii auildlj aoT^niEX the huBauvmejtiu [me- a *\runry for Mman rhehur'
tteennf albea.
"I would hope thai nhal eomes out at Unaifaaiadat wswapweiaca mad*
lhla hi nrenejnajn chal our awetan nauer Flrenahd Aimmi, tbe oWfjeane; eadat
la btm, arrvnl wtvp. tfnldni by prtadptn* aril MBp a a a Tj of aiau tor rter Aawnran
wahfjpnwilpaiapnapBVK'PRiieaaorQqen iflaum. enmejarca thu US experience In El
Sehmsdor with Cualenula, wlfir ihe Orter
tfaocaul SiHearae tannv adaeaMnUnn dupeniptard ba 19TT. En
o> ell ataff dlradot fear LaMn Ameriea la Ota O^rnol* the hinnawrva>u tutanajrai la
bar Carter adjwrJatrattoa. aers twJ a ni *ii barf, he Mp
praahtdant (at the IS to lannPr *fha1 la- El Salvador vhanr ■* Burnt,
Sarndur ad oW nnfti la Uvrfof mrrl,' he rweaenfat.
*fhny pprcmt of 1ud haa Wi nriberlpH
The tdanaj^ a| the ntU* IFHrthwnda atrej, K h (he ee#y eourtry m Uati Anric»
Hall UhervAon HM4 drnwd, hi a bu-tr la aaafaj in mMitary, and it >s Un mJaat a jfr
awatt Ir.nr i>e 1 1 w i mi m of DV mpltarpL" brr fceVa."
U
JUNE 14
19 9 3
CLIPS ISSUE
Tokyo Broadcasting, the largest independent television network in Japan,
interviewed staff members and students at the university's minority job fair on
February 17 for an evening news segment on the job search process in the U.S.
TUeSO/W MAY 4. 1993 ■ USA lOt-At
NEWSWEEK USIAHH. IMS
.1/ £■__.. < IS S
THE JVEIV YORK TIMES, Tt-_-.30.-y. APRrL J7, ;»_
Science Times
Pf/M
The Angry Politics of Kemron
Pushed by black activists, an AIDS drug gets atrial Strange. Violent Plrysics
Born in the Death of Stars
with no inneunftiTHnL about (f»
i reatjafHf ■."• AIDS r^ ■. :j i ftwd [hi i * h*n
hu lutifTLti itiP»rfl waif™ Ijori withttny
-imouaU i»f alpha Miittitna. ■ drugr tntd
iLE t-»[|y Alfhrr _k___n. Lit Curat iddc UIV
r-*rr t_i__-_r --yntpignw . atip_ih#<il . etwr mi'
in-ifi» '.vhwuu rtinurum]
Sffft
•2**
LONG ISLAND HIT HARD: What once ws3 a oaaoWm place is now dangerous.' says Gary veg-
Jiartie. with his wife. Claire, or Westhampton Beach. Storms have destroyed homes in the area.
East Coast rebuilds
its battered shores
tors
By Jack Wllhams
USA TODAY
WESTHAMPTON BEACH.
N.Y- - From Cape Cod to
Cape Canaveral, the meretles
twins of winter have turned to
a spring of cleanup and repair
as residents up and down the
East Coast lake stock of terri-
ble damage to the fragile
shoreline and is beaches,
'This was one heck at a
stormy winter" says Stephen
Uathermao of the Urifcwyit ry
af tlwwtaBtfs jjaofamy rar_
Co astal Resea rch. "I dan!~
thin* any part or St? East Coast
has tjone unscathed"
Wont hit Long Island.
In Westbampton Beach, a
coastal homeowner's night-
mare — a pounding winter
storm — tore a half-mile j^ld in
the offshore barrier island.
Now. water surges through
iheoptnJng, pushing tides high-
er and, occasionally, flooding
parts of the mainland.
Since December. Ro homes
U
This was one heck of
a stormy winter. I
don't It-ill], an" — '
of the East Co
gene unscathc
99
-Stepbea L*i
University oi Mm
r-
damage, with waves remo^nnt;
significant quantities of sami
► To prepare for the tmsy
tourist season. Long Beacii.
N.C., town workers have
pushed up sand to repair
strayed, and hund'
era there and on th
are threatened,
Similar ttenaria
> At Dewey B
from winter
dermined cottage
washed out water
lines and earned .
sand. Beach and
plfniAned this sui
cost at 12 million.
> Misuuamicu
NEWSWEEK . JAMWRY
SCISNCE
Weighing
the Darkness
Unseen matter shapes
the universe's fate
For 60 years astronomers have been
weighing the u niverse — and com i tig up
short. The speed at w h ich galaxies spin
and the way ata re ciu m p both bin t tha 1 1 he
cosmos may lip the scales at 1 GO times more
than the total weight of oil the stare and
nebulae in the sky. So where are them
ing pounds? Lacking any better ideas, aa-
tronome rs i n vented' r dar k ' matter and as-
serted t bat 99 percen L of t he unive rse must
be in the form of invisible particles. Last
week reaearc hers a n no u need that they had
done the next best thing to seeing dark
matter they Had weighed sophs..
Since dark matter does not emit any kind
of light , i Is presence can be inferred only by
its gravity. Gravity is what the ROSAT
[Roentgen Satellite) detected last April
when it snapped X-ray pictures of three
galaxies, 150 million light-years away, be-
yond the constellation Cepheus. This trip-
let is veiled in a cloud of gas 1-3 million
nl low-diate untrue run . cod 1 hr _tf liVhl* .lt>
!»».j_.irw l4 i dwnf it- 1'nUnp *rr ainu-li-:
that a -! r-i x ™ ! iH iirrh mutnl i m< '_■-" * rut-*
TiiddrH I v fjev^qiK j f nwtrJl pnnif. Liui"
iivtn ih" p***«nii Hut rMrw -urninirj iJai
irviunniE. chui ena> bn tlur ■■mEn. *jv »
■nrjifr- lurwirJ
r ■-** icbwnptDntd at mfl Afruun innn-
"Ti ' -W-de*r jifaJ ini*Tl^n.ii
cur« ^o nifl ; T^V^'figpv,
e Phen
•US *£**?
%c on " u ' ct ateir J ,""*? fl >r
•"* Pr f° Sofl 'e-
KTbci^. * h
■ t lhf NdURuL Hl--r^
■U[«or M»Hh' SIH' -l.ll !i-l ■:'
L1«5 arriBfL I'hijr.rninri otiiliil
H ,n ny« to »«rft im j i nm k *? um
.1 ii'3 met Kueth. iiih-i-(i.it ■ •[ :hf
S'Aitvhi'hiufid K«»lirj Hrin-.il
r^rp^rrK Initiiuls Kdh'1 VAm
r] m ►.nniif ''tnt- ' r»"il I
aU. « '.'umiBina- "l^rt
- ■ .| Lit i hrw : ■ i-" 'ii- ■ i
itF Hl* iBiih-nt. -mtu
r-cft
law
i»|«-fH-H|ii|lttl
p ■' '-v I ij; 1-iKip I ll* I L»l
l1IHt. .%J J II11, Ml. (S*«_»:i
Help!
The shuttFe flnaily flew.
but the hek ague re<f U . S.
space asency fttW rweds *
boo i t from its old HvaJs
the Russians
j n* *upFf m*
j - 1« tyi iiJjr i iftif iM H ift i* <m<-
: Unonir ihv 'itrnpped ^nter-
pnises is Itntfrgnmiisti. ,i :iirmer
■sei H rct jp\ , >*mment nrket-iie^itm
j^encv tnd now the (Stftftaibiic ;
munutatmrer nl the Enerat^
iijcfcgt- iivi Enefgom^h-puwfT- -
mun Fi*[ix L'herki^' ""Eniwtsrife^
wfaen knuw ihjt >iur !wfum--uj?i ■
enfltnesiirenbout JOv^rs-insul
ot American >tnu*. ThU iwhflni- ,
osr> - is -itate iu The -in -nine ".r*
toukl use rhe mone^". " Si ^ould .
the Russian emnnmv ijh«r."« ■
ftji>ld ^atfd.e^fv- loniier he-io -j[ .^b.' 1
rile -iivift Lnun 5 Spa-cv S."!ftlC* n ^ Wf '
'..-:.: w- and now a onv c 3c:->t n \ * a ,
E_Ne Cwltyrattr at IttrrtaM; ^ *■
Hard currencv 1 is ^n sfittr-
tant The ruble is in ttouhle. and
there u near hvptrinJlation. Now instead <ji
philanthropic aid or threicn credit , Rn ^j i-a n=
can make mone> for themselves
billion suns. The gravity required to ton- < accurately, "It's, awfully nice to have a di>
tain the cloud is 12 to 25 times greater than ! rect result showing the amount of dark
that in the galaxies themselves, estrone*
mars from NASA, the V Diversity af Man
land and Arizona Stale University An-
nounced at a meeting of the American
Astronomical Society. To get so much
gravity, the three galaxies must be awash
in dark matter. 'The discovery, " says Da'
vid Davis of the University of Maryland
and NASA, "suggests that the universe
may one day halt its expansion."
Though theorists sniffed that they knew
all along t here we re gobs of da r k matter ou t
there, in fact it was the first time the
light-years across and an massive as 500 ' amount in galaxies bad been measured so
SCIENCE NEWS. VOL. 143
APRIL 10, 1993|
^mamLL
Theodore J. Rosenberg, a physicist al
the University ol Maryland in College
■ Park, suggests that the protocol's prohibi-
lians on waste disposal could dramati-
cally handicap some scientific projects.
For instance, the ban on disposing of
I batteriesi if enforced in all circum-
| stances, would prevent researchers from
ma tter t n one of i hese regions, ' says aatron-
om er Lawrence K rauss of Vale Un i veret ty .
The amount was right on the money: meaa-
urementa of bigge r cl uste rs of galaxies had
fou n d only two or three times as m uch da r k
matter as regular stutf, not the 10 to 20
limes that theory' predicts and the ROSAT
found, If other neighborhoods harbor simi-
lar amounts, cosmology's trend tea 1 theory
of creation may prove right: it's the idea
that after the big bang 12 billion years ago,
the infant unive re-e inflated wildly to some
10 trillion trillion times its original size in
about a sextillionth of a picosecond. The
inflation theory also says that
the ttrcmos is precisely bal-
anced between eternal expan-
sion and eventual co] la pae. One
day, the world will reach per-
fect equilibrium. The stars will
hum out and matter wi] | evapo-
rate i n to a whisper of pu re e ner-
gy. Born in a bang, it would go
out in a whimper.
The ROSAT weighed only
the dark matter; ttdirin l identi-
fy ct. Bad enough that E-J9 per-
cent of the universe is invisible;
worse, 90 percent of it might
consist not of garden -variety
protonsandneutronslas in peo-
ple and planets) but particles
ar Antarctic studies Face a chilling future
Mr Murda ^ t j1 ki n Ltw *GalEW*y |d
Viu.ir. n.-.i ■ eauld never liy
cllun lo the word bv&UUEui
tre-rie-d an an uland «km([ ihf rofl4t ot
r hr iMftn 4.fiiitiu?iii. this buiUlng tmn
nrr (own roniuli pi 90 ulLlJlarun build-
i nga romieettd by Urtett o( iluthy Mad
iim:i a r«itcd ntiworh ot heitcd ptp«
inilm iTDunrJ Ihr Oarmi ind nJiicrs
cirrylns water *«I HMfi hwn the
twHIrii -tummcrtimr ppvulal ion Ol 1.200
launching balloons to sludy the ozone
ttraniMnuiibuHwiK hole because the instruments on board
%£?£!$&£ ine1 ^* bfileri«. and metrdn) typ-
contincni i»rpHy untouci ically cannot recover them once they fall
The '■iaH'Tial M;ifn( [ t ^ f|-|g j^
(NSFt, wttlch rum t'5 !.!(«■ r<iui ins pn
AnitFcika. embarired ihret ye*rt ago m
1 130 m HJJan progriin la itorw lor LEk put
^vifuiiinciiMi -ilm in MtMurda tnd H
other riie* on ihr-rontineni "llyoutnink
hkMurOn Ik ■.irIv Ulh la xomeafK who
MMjrR fWWfS. an met** vtHcano. MtyHfr
In I989L even u emironnwnul Mfhm-
raiiOFli were AElBckJrqt NSF tar pollution
«i ihr mi i n U S- hue. in Arffenl in* lundv
never seen on Earth. Why? Be-
f- 1 use so many protons and n ■ - u ■
tjih would have produced
m uch more hydrogen a nd ot her
liith-i elements than astrono-
miTx find out there. But even
before physicists Kgure out
what the exotic matter is,
they've gone Copernicus one
belter: noi on 1 y are we not at I he
cen ter of the u niverse. bu t we ' re
not even made of the same stu If.
77//: WW FORK TIMES* TUESDAY, fANVARY II /°9.1
Shlnfng*
Wh&r»ltf»
LI^IVjmW^nuhlAJ'*^ 1
4hiKlfr*raf r iniT4l|rH#ftHv ..
D^A>y^ir«trwAvhHfpr. --
raTMh^thrtpinbO-AWaMvf^pIn .
Lt-irnlng Id unhid ltrow>ifa fer
iptct MMetMon utta^tv wdtt
■■[ Ictwi thttt Of plinic in
■IB 9am j-,utr ■ 1 1 hrU ti-rp ttwird
tf%hr.[ an i
ItHHtRf IH|bl \Kta dip — gr ml tf jii
jJTHjd ibmrd
Kdfi 1,1 1 iihnl lc Ihr Mir ir-rr
KI 11 1)1 CftpCTiRVWC f iilJrJ En*'
ot Balmitr. Lhi! VlU Ull Ult U»
._ r\0» i| a miriur th tpiCT 10 rttfeft
^ C T »* f *_-** ■« *■"*" <*- t-inK
^ I QCrf^ C j*. ff" « rtiimrt. Uw aiwwr
^ Ot T^rtrjVi * . ' " L| b* iptoTrf b*»i itmrtih
■p^Qt't 11 " ft ^a " v atlD i bug • *i r™n -diitucut Ait:
, tiitd^ m*Jm9aM& juM Ntm-CMifd pU^k film The
ff^lSid it*w?*S5w Dl "• ttv Eftt l««Wi^ »<
ittfH I o trill irf HWTll full
a%
ri»
.^v
toe-
■VDIIH *bW h4nd|ln«
I pLallK HI *f*T*. « HCp
opuin laffF Ulli U |>ro
„\f|, l»l|U« IN* Ml tiKILT
tiaf
miS?
LUd Ijmei E
nOwtt"
Vjr'kC UflUd tfiOM
iiill, w u «*- .. oc0P' e u.lli^» , " ■""«
j lO^^ 1 ^Hpt ^ VL-i^i^H ■• t,, ****** ^ ■l^™«» , ' pM ■ b*i trn«
e" _-.nl V**^ __^^I^^^H B li_i I110K1 Nl irt-irr 1. 1 -B-r-T-f i^-irir I hi-
Ss**
at hiph hi ifMce iu pect trver the
cuivaltirv erf Jfjiili r.dpliirr Mime ol
the Sun'a nyi a
!irk siJr. 1
In much (he ■jw *
btf wrdi ■ Mi in) Rurrot ttirriB iu
FefW-r j tpoi of lifht Ttuni ■ hrijr^hl
*lndo* hi i« ihe i' riiuiKi -tf hti raom,
tlH> ■. BU pul
Itrp. er-btiJTig miti ■:■/■« tbtnt E*rih
thaE uuU DrMM dtrlunri *ir*t
Hh lew i rf nlhnrd nmllchi
inn ^r ■;. lit* tcr oil
|J II fu l)r dkn*r ptUJKiiM Iili uf.
ppnv.Jptit iun*Mflt i
MM tritlmhi ol lisJliti tiLh feat Hi
1-i.nd Iwp.
Ii^h 1 ! bdun J'j':i-j. r-ipir-n'ii and f-.jr
**ii iii« i_.ijkjt.-_. Id did rir fncn, altow
nwrf -^ifhi-ii F-o-in c
«nd recowFry oprralidfll af.ir tuitu<
nd dtuuim like «anfaq
■rftSMM
A mnneniiifm sf ititf-awKUl csm-
i niT-i _irii_( j irr-i ti l-i ft
*<j UV 1 hu; NfO !r nrr ( i» ■_)
ny r Ii tpwiki* Inf ihf RiLrTut-wltr u_J
drniLiniLjjiiiuii Ihr [in.Jn- It uiitib
KHir i-UmilrJ _^9tfi^inifae. i
_ PffhinrtaRi art »
Wif ll_nt lin-ir Prop, mm 1 1 Hi the
pTGjtrl hopt a nKmifuil Inl will
HMD finamul MtfipSH Ti sun *>H
«n rump*™ fci i atid Ibr luuiwi f.rvv-
JUNE 14
19 9 3
U
CLIPS ISSUE
Washington radio station WTOP aired an interview with music professor
Domenic Cossa on March 13 in connection with his induction into the Acade-
my of Vocal Arts Hall of Fame.
A story on the Henson Puppetry Workshop (see print story, page 2) aired on
WRC-TV, Washington, on March 19.
! .M t ••■• -!-■
^k Modern Maturity February-March 93
^ Map makeover
Getting around the nation 's cap- tmm t
ital is a lot easier these days for
blind and visually impaired peo-
i pie, thanks to Joe Wiedel. The
University of Maryland geogra-
phy professor created high-con-
trast print and Braille maps of
the city's sprawling subway sys-
tem. "They give people with
low vision much greater inde-
pendence," says Karen Lubie-
niecki of the Columbia Light-
house for the Blind.
"Sighted 'people look at a
map and then pick up details "
says Wiedel. "The blind devel-
op the overall picture by going
over the map detail by detail."
Wiedel, who heads an inter-
national commission on low-
vision mapping, became inter-
ested after seeing a map for the
blind. "I didn't think it was
communicating properly," he
says. "I began trying to design a
better map, and I've been at it
SI)e;NeUfj|ork6func
s
fit.n ifUPh, ttWWDtMti *rttu ? ^
DEPARTMENTS
WJf3 irWJTOeJ lEC+lHOLCGV
TECHKNOWLEDGE
Testing Remote-Control led Robots for Weightless Work
Pool at University of Maryland's. Neutral Buoyancy Research Facility Ih/uhles as Outer Space
tad ■•" uatt
i 1 1 T.r Hiildinj
r.intfiui n *hi"
iffeat* -VnV ■ \tn Jrff. iwionnlMf, [*»J
A rrtl wiJ — hn- bench h.iii Th** ~i itw
■..■r>r ri Ibrcnrvil KIpC *«ei
llm bftftni .a! dnL thin* tfcr pral p*
"■i" 1 rnunurd H an iwi.rlfnrfll r>l nfp.41 *mt
L.-*tipinc» fi|<i](^iwni AnlHir ,r »niiiMti'
ipiIiiu? 3 ■ rim-ie ,LwiiJnlli-J urnrn a
haihWifli^ pa4lm« IwlraH iq *. .iha frit
ml air* u,Hj m*km
II* nt- *l ■ ...>l!k*»fi,.i.i *iu*lMV
rimul-jif.l rtriehllo.* fpjtlrLminfpl I:,
^ f-nrt ifc-cr tart iilha V» N-4 ikimnn
i-t l*p f-nnHph in «r*i rhe ntntrutaihtni)
nl ruU jU>r Upw4* intnali-'l hi hp hm^I in
■One !■* Mflwtl JHJim*«iTtm
S^A . .•nih.K.L.fnJ ll 7 nullum |- Phe
fi«4*<f rtrf^ilrii ttfckhVn,Uwb%(f
i- Ll"Tiil .it 'ni r n-J jl'H |Hr ,-T lm |i, |,^
prntraJ rPttu, rtta- } tar* in PV I 'nried Stnlr* .
**t (he IMh ivjrj ip Ihr *.*|d iVtVil *f. a
■inuitfirf't Il '--■Uiiifrnnl? imruedvarinl
m haw iru-imli nUhff Hiht -nprtific pnp
JPII*
|H [Uttd \P.n ilium* ^r 1hf |*t> tu-
■Vm ipnikf rrs unit >*t ip*nr HrkinKum
mm 1^ r " II..! in- -Mr-'. ■■-I I-.-. ....,;<
■ .1.1, itjh. Tlr.| I.. -Ii. ,"--,'.. lL h
Pn-iHWily ■■ iS< MMmhutclIk Inhume
■ ■I frehraanjrj , hr war" jihm r -I m ine the
cipjph i« I'liniii.f f*4, Nil umI) tltuinp
nlTS^PTi
In Lrt-4 jfir jri Mfl, he umih ird inly
ja m-iilr.il hwn>«qt i I-i'tJi I*i ir"C fi-mi
"■■■i'S MlvM-i,
lanl 1*-,hPi hw< hf*n '^^
"ipcim <i<ah he't ..I
■rady nwptVT irtln
Wrttl n™ ijnv
Mtpiiuah vim Hie
i. i.imr Ii-t - 'H-i li
CiniV Mil ftHjWrll
i hi. | He ij'.K - !•■ ■-• ■_■■ I
n Vb At -!■ ttp.<vnl Pin
in if he i r , \\u\ n imr ihaP w ilr"i I (WtJ '
Thf HuiUipipj il<Ti hlvt limit if^inl
Ffjiiirr* T<q iww . il"^ raw irf tJn - Irw Nnhl
ippi » Pwi r 1-w trtw4i mt kert ra lie unt
kii"t h 4p> |~-.i jftiL At udpTt Uipitki,
i V inwlnnri n n; *1 firip be hr»**r,\ up |.i i pv
■j*ftpT bhe prtri, iJnm ln*effd in
^11 HhfJ bind , llw-j ran fiti be Ui» r«J <T
diintlj H : .i '-I. ,
^^ Jkft H mmit nl .!,:■
tad
hMn AhJ in- LiPki.r
hr j.. . i i. * ■•■iii •
I'-mi HAU «-Jibiil
.1* fltin.!,.,,,.
^*. I" h.n ,1,r,|r ff
lf*1 r/h II nil <■! Ihr i|TlH*| 1 mri
in j bhv >-h •hnk hr uji jhn
IP* M*jlw^r»ilii v IrlmlpP.
iriM-m r !.■ 'I't* upiai
' l L ^fi'-i',' ip irxi a ' ■> Lil I
(Irnduale and
iindcrfiradufltes are
invohed in everything
frcim (Jfsi^n and
niiis1rurti<iTi t
Id diving in
Willi ihl? ItiliiiK.
'■■ 'S
I l-.l,',,,,.
*n.i iii.inipp^rPuip^iji
i nji "i ii ■■■ '■••• . In: uvuh
ii ii, « tehj* .Vi t , >TpJ
irw i-onlnJ Iff-l: Wr^
irhtm-rj i-fcifi
Ihr nrirr inJihr pj-nib
.■ ■... inl:i. rf .1 I-t 'I ■■!
V.I hl>.1M.'il fllll.riJiltl
njiiVni m Hlh II lifrrt
eif^i tmmnti irt --lit
lr«Mii'i» in ■» HlIi His
- fiMlPHttr^ III llw
P<»rr IMp and a ™
hfi nJ lunl K.;m>tf,j^ ppiui'ik niPHHUJirt
■iPtHlp Pin- pitilr pp. ran ii--.i|Til
Hi-sim Ink. i Pfini*r Lrtrimlpil ■ tutta
L.ilM S-fAMr tm nrtnl Hmmplnnil Hit
I lit j I.. .. I.l.p -il|, ||| I, ant "■'■ l
liLf P-iFililHif #h tim-HrpiiiNt hirKil ii"
Aliii'i iriiiiflol ■Itmch, unPrwJ. ii| luunf
v |iil iq j Jrii^.n
frmi. tiihl I 'nn i 'pp* pjif n a . ihw j it ih# mm
ifiMJ> i ilrsiifiwn
AnHhrt ifiin-n.il artfcii "( llv c ■->■■ --En ■■
■ppi p«i |l* r^i IlLp i(«h Ij.^i ctOLltril up
il i ■ "A I he ii mtpk Inl ut ii" Nil a I ftt
' I im'i iV .if.i - t, i iL;Mf j i k - ilnlr Hrf
hutlnllPf nil vunnnp up ntH nf thf
fMPjnJ.' I nr« nreila ** J
netmif nl <lif irikH^iH- a jfHiiiihLrfHi ih" ttic
LniFitv j nmiPT-r i't jh.pi|« hnHh 1 NASA
arn-i|i|^^Lllpi pJlmHI lA p4pnp II i>« l|p||l|t
■ ■liar ihHitriiHhn juil j In* ruhale
le-niifme 1. 1 "tip^nre* AVm bnfet h> tv
plik l-nt-f^' 1 liiM-|t<i i-r fll rl--™ 'Ii' I
||lp|p*nftl|ll IlUfl i. I I '. i
I J III-? lht ui j liil nit pn^4r ininy iP
ILS., TO CUT COSTS,
SEEKS RUSSIAN ROLE
IN SPACE STATION
SHARP BUDGET REDUCTION
Clinton Sees Opportunity in End
of Cold War to Save Money
and Cooperate in Space
Bv WILLIAM. I. BROAD
Ihr U\M\ iKn tin-* M, i n,lii"! .
tMnfllr nhn ttnni i ilpe k**ir llrLin ' l ' t >?il
IMTf I -I i i-k I r* i-'l"": »l%W|m "ill 'I
ilir fn"P|r. ll^nheJ in r-nf^ihulF PinnHh
*ip*1 mil kiimliiii'lnin, ph ■li.iihrj ml-
f. r -i PhiliHir inKiKi
Ni"*hr»f e|<e ir ■
kimlikl i"i(ik ith-il r
THE SUN'
The
end
SUNDAY.
J*NU*fhr 17 1993
Maryland
Maryland physicists find consistency amid chaos
Seeking to nil i' 1 ^, g 's of the na-
m "s m'"", nl . Oa n ' |C „rt\ ace project,
d> s,ra t^ lffl, i Bd NASA to
f*e v ve plan
iosed that the
mist ration insiructed the
St* 1105 ' .i^'nrv io cut the price lag for building
Study sheds tight
onjractaljotms
tjy tttuglu Bkftb
5WTwrtfT
t ite ftrn unw Lh*
HOC 01 mlQRI
n*. csnnci |c-
rffiwtih
Thr rrvin-.-'n -::r
wnrti puulllfhad in IhLt nrrli nil ■
uoei of Selene* m^dnt mi? mt
,Jji. help expUbn vhy TrylM:u^
y ckmen. fron
kX» to jjaiivp t
o Ci»*lJpf». Fit
"Thdr ut Fvcfywhen wr kafc
■nd iit atrvfauih/ in kD^panut tw
f**t prtnctpkc In Elw unmrrte,'
t*fcj onr iJ the pOrnlitf* Jrjfin C
Sarrim-rrT J the ApfdW I'hi+UTI
Libofifcry in Laurel. n A 1 hefn you
hc •omnhlra that uUquKraii. n
Mi** Ihrrr i runoatmenti] pttyHCt
A^n4 on i ti*t •* need in eonpfv-
"# IDUrh Orta. i rrVIX] TTMEUTfl-
er M the Cedhqp of Wdokef to Obkl,
. Samraercr and -Hi roJ
lt|. John ScnmMaTx Ir^tfalS and hia partner round that j(lvcn Ihe ri^bl tetnpent uir,
^erf'Sc-jm. rherfeAild pcrrfucti fneUlpiltrm wilh alierndimenskifi
AHhou(h (radii* rnij *
1all> randnnr (her ire actually
made up of the hjtk paflerri re-
pciEcd *I lihplkr >nd »m*lkr
he my j iaieU!t e phrto-
graph ra* Ute Ufaklaaiped n^rmblr*
in airplane photo of one of rta tn dm-
'hth mrmUea ■ ^raind-
Th< jfrermeiry *f Frpr^aK hai
tttFI. itueped for « crntury &ji im-
l» tene*t in nalural fraetal* h«i
emeeKed ait)' in the ;uM nupte af n. inns Ihe triiinn rV |hr hran to
decadn. aa compuirr ^lenttoi* f-rr- ihe rkm at nut nenu in riiMdpeake
iled i new nrid caded rluot Iheorj Bay to Ihr mulnf of fuel jnd *ir ir»
~ which. «l«led almply. la Che en(ipnrs
•ludy of vtry rrmptn pmcrr**. Before thif can Ka-pperv. vHrn-
The dbeonry bv J> SOcnmefei iJju* nf*d id prrdkE "hal kf-nJ of
inrllOr. Ou is tub* sHeneev «n*h no rhaollc proeei* will rrr*i* whai
lype af f racial Hupe
Ihctr And- So Or Sammtrtt ■nd Dr tMt iei
■inn tOuU hrtfj pnmiih: the in* ta out to Mudy ■ baste chauUr. ivsleni
b«!er : intirrU.ifKl rhafitK IWO«*a. to irt 3l Pliry nmhj prnilTt Pome-
P| :■ .'. ■'■ i H III'
ibxed
In i *fcI»
^ear.. ihe Tear
iOtUllotl (if «u
wnh Uny pac
i:l i-r-. ;!.-■ -■
iiudp- 1 rie wittr
-- !i1 ■' ■*::•-
l> Snmrne
call* hi* J hl(l"
UCfihl *ertlr a
nr-iuJtinn 'nu.1i
Mi" .ml It
ikl.pl:>: ii ii I
nni.J iJ.n |m>(
II 1 II hr *l
ytur rolTee/
"but ihe nrftlej
sprnr pumptns
VUTienlhey
THiRibm Inn
.'mm "hi.'vtP'i
eeuld peedrei :
rcflukJnc ihapi
In^ir itmp
world. "h.si m
deal [tut En f
eemeept rrf rj.
moee erjmpUea
InHarutanrJ
*twpe* pM h
lined, ncitjr In
ptrini har* xt
lenacM wtmti '
one dtmcniKrr
else. A ■. ir"f r
FTrenttRTP* Irrp
rrraPr *re^. h
THE SOU
Tuesday ,
SCIENCE NPA6
February 9, 1993
.■A"aUSHy 16 1S5.J
Measuring superconductor magnetic noise
rim new yarn n.wi-s, svtjday may i, jwj
Technology
Reviving Mr. Spratt's Flight of Fancy
Researchers granted
salmonella patent
Speaking of nasty bacterial ill-
nesses . . . ^^^^^^^^^^
Out of the University of Mary-
land at College Park and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture has
come a new testing procedure for
salmonella. Researchers have re-
ceived patents for a new sampling
method and a better way to grow
the bacteria in the laboratory.
The two have licensed the new
test to three companies. Including
Environmental Systems Service,
Ltd, of College Park, which pro-
vided the system to poultry and
livestock producers.
*i iupenjonduc lur *:itm electrical
LjrrCnl wftftuul rrtlirJincr It aim
vhkW* Knell (fu«i !hc cffeCT) Ol m «nel ic
Vm. In whje b it ti ptucftl hv ppeventirm
nuch ! e!dj :'?■■■:■ peneirilinj iato ila
interHH flut il Ihe rtlKlPical current ii
Irm hhffh or ir Ihp ipnlted masiretpc Field a
ki flic rrnlhf ilnjFiiJ. i lupercortducKir be
rtiA* IO nSiSt the dlLiw d CurmiL
?fon* -rfKarclirrt have uharrveeF
piteaiiiritjie, Ihourjh mintraeule. rein-
tanee in i thin, upe rconelLicti ng film Df
ytlrium tu rlum ropper Pxidc [uhnncd
inlEnllTn» lT*n*to"Brr — rvf n when ihe
ipplEro* Phafrifilf lield n «fPef«iy
■aw ■' ■■-
--■mt
titaa
24
. — i
*
21
JVM
I
-2-
IWtt
■H
rKID
'
ill
iW&k
VMelWoqd titA
'indhis
QMtnOWwn rrport Ihctr findiirgi in
Ihe Jul 4 Pn-rDOL MtVtl* LlTTTti
fpDfrhiirjL an cjCrfFvaE magntliC tteW
ifitin* TO penetrate a iijpercoirpaijclof
when the field e*ceeda a c« tii'ti eritKai
viJtte. Tht pefHLratpnij niaiielic lieHd
exiUa tiriihin Ihe *u pet Conduce or in Ihe
Joem or fcparair vnr fit** — whirlpool
Ol rl«<rlccurreni The nuin&eT of mot -
hen present dep*Tid* on the Ut eerji heJ
Ihe mien ettc rreldl
But reiearcher* hive t \<^ deiecied
WOtUCr* *hen Phe in|*tir«J munetK
! - ii I ii much In* than Ihe C rl i ' -■■■ value,
"Somrfirfletthe mag;ne»C Nn* wilt an in
with even Ihe — ufh"-n .iiiihuim .'." Eierd."
hvi Koper H. Koch of Ihe IBM Thonua
I vial win HcseajTh CenleT n YorkltMn
Heifhlj H\
VrrflilOCrd aFfd hil cowoTkeri .lPTHr
enily measured 1 he elecifical peuir^nce
l jmed hy Ihe rnof ion d iiolaled vertices
Rtfrtt otMitKVfi ta ntrfrK [/r?turt U U
aipaeiaEed wip^ iWects m a iijpercon-
d\"'i i no. Ihln I il n "The picHire we lirave n
tf-.iil ^hcre ane :•*>': FoHr-enrra;y plaCr*
where a vortex cap be.' HehfTood uy*
■H'f lher^nliri*;fjiet4 M dp3rPh,rjTiflicrne
to, Ute MfteT lliil peotfucri the nmpjnetie
till* ncNie" Thti pherajmeniin iin Lurn,
lead* to mtxtance Aiwi 3 measujabfe
voila*;e when ah fieclT icaJ cur renl llmvi
1 hrufjeh the tUalenal
"When we did the CaJeulauoni. we
reajj jed thai Ihevollites we were meai-
uhmj were incirditlv ipn^ll — io small
that wedLdn'l know nmal uiiiU IpllW*
Welliiood Hy*.
The r r if.vi^E.'i CaiflC up with "ffllHr'
aUovnit* - oAe.tiwuurrdth qi nit iftu-
vofl. where Ihe prehx ■attfj* rtowsenla
10 ■■ Theydidnl: realize that Ihe mter-
nahonal rjmfp charired wilh ■defitnnc
1he modern me'ric lyilcm had anE'Cp-
paled lufh a pcdii bil II y and adopced
appropriate rXehw* Uee UtMr}
nell^lkMid jnc In ■ eiHki^net have
already u*ecl a tptxiiA miEroicope 'm
detecti "-it nujtnrlic I n \<M to conJirm Ifut
voilicMaiepprienEirtlheiriaihprrt Ev
■trcrriMna the Te*t»lui10n ol Ihnr mipru
mcni. tt,r-f hope evcncjatli - ui locate
korl ire* and see how much an individual
vorlei move* around.
NATIONAL iJEOCRAPHtc:, DeceiBiber
By HOY FUNCHGOTT
afw%N tlw wall of Hinjh Schmiith-i
■ ■uTNct in Ce4fe*e Park, Md.
^k\\\W hanp:> a copy of an 1 vn ■ ^? i v
frtPin the editor or "ictrfflllre Amen-
.m. .hirdui J>jinj( an in-venior named
Ceenne: Sprail rrnm purtuing hi* lol
est idea ' ' We do fioc annw ot anywi*.' "
Iheeclrtor wreHje, "who would be likely
10 lake an mlefesl id Myint nrta-
chl/»«-"
Tar Mr. SchmtLlle. 1JI. Ihe docu-
ment provide 1 * prove- em-wrotj m-
spirilMn as he drumi up grami jnd
inveMrif s for his stad-up company.
Freewme; Airrri'L Bui Mr .irhmiti le
net an even ureaier 4«bt 10 ihe
in>rniof FTeewma,'s planes are
hased on Mr Sprat!'* uftuxual rack'
jrhn-wmt dmen, whKh predatn Ihe
*ufMl-wpng approach thai haa been
Ihe aviation Uirvdird sin*P ihe
Wrlghf fcrwhen Hew al Kitly Hawk
■niton
■TT«= technotogiy bmefn-, jir ml "
Mr. Schmuik utd- The jT-year-okf
tonnaT inilifary airplaTW
works from artjf Flee ai tnt'
'he slale-finantred
"business incubjrnr ' proktam s liter
llit. " J ff you ran in wrrpenne Jowti
InnH enough 1 a - xpla hi si ." be says of
his plane. ' ■their wiJ] be Eortwincrd."
So Tar. Mr Sehmmlr has penuad-
rd [rua Stale o< Murvland to ftive him
JMO.OM m grama and pnvalp mvelt-
nri io put up j cnot Si J fniHon
Freewtnu's dm|n, which has at-
tracted Utile inlemi wnce «r
sprair* imitai drawinKf. w» a nn
Kir wina Ernm which ihe plane a luse-
Ijpe runpji parollel 10 the jmund.
Like a ruler -mlancod Unmihwi*e
■1 1 mijt ihe rtfae «{ a tadlr, (he entire
■ iflfr, can piviH: up or Jown
The wm* drai«fl mAlMrt ihe p>arw
10 elirnh. Jfieend .md .tdjut] to
chjnjte* m sir tpp*d and wind condi-
iton* wrnii- ihe cabm rewaini reja-
itvRTy levl Thrnmh wind-lufm"!
lestk, modeTi and enpenmenlal
ntamned Aprcnlt, Fmrwrnt *m n
hai unewn Ihail Ihe Spra! I -sf vie wicuc
. the r [fetf 1 1* air turbufefKir? T
ofrermft i Sarnf. more camfemabl*
ride man a f inefl '*tna deiipjii
Fmwini hoere* to revive LFW m.ir
kel lor private. praprlJerdnven ree-
jTjpjocijI planci m Ihe neat year or
so. il plana to begin selllnft a Iwrv
passrns;er plane in ktl lomi for
JZ5-.-W0 or an aisem&led version tor
KMH
The small plane marhet hi* heen
chilled in rrcejrtt yean by co*tly flrov-
rrnnwnKerfittcuiion require mehla
and muEhmdliDctdDtuIr produCi'li'
ibilny Will The Ceiina Aircraft
Company, which once made half the
wortd's sTriill arrcrah. stonpecj mak-
ing two- and f J ouf'*raiers m :»».
CilinK Ihe conl mual tbre-al Of lUbllM y
problemi. evrn »rnm plaoea ihai
were made decade* earlier
As a result, Lhe run enl morfeet m
small private plane* — about M.DOfl
aalH 4 jT#r — ts mostly in used
aircraft Trie average plane is .'>
year* old and sells Mr %*0.VK, at turd-
tag IO fndunry est! m ales. The sea rr t-
ty of good used planes ha* driven up
prices, and their age has cwrrltfti! «l
lo raina. maihEenance cosu
Freewmi,, which Believes Hi drSijtn
ra ufrr lhan irFtdiEfotljl desiitni.
nopci thir telling owner-built kns
would avert many potential liahillly
prtJOPem*. Still, the company plans to
*ei aside a perrem ol trie revpnue
Tram each .tale Hi Iffta! reserves.
But even iT Mr tchmiUk?"* %*ty
sealer, ihe Freeorrd Mlt*\ *e» to
improve aalery in light airrraft, thai
would not assure marJiel prowesi
"V||| a reduce gusi re*.pcm*e - '"
aMhed Bruce Holmes, asstsiani direc-
1nr l or aeronauties al Ihr Nalwnnl
AeronautHrH arid iparr AUrnhmtro-
1 tent Lartpvlcv Research Center.
'fore. The question >b. will an 'iiduv-
try member Cake Ihe finahCtal n*k m
I « lo marten 1 "
A Steadier night With a Pivoting Wing
Frwriving Arrp^M hflt* dflvft*3pe)cl ptvctir^.-pfirrg proto^p* flircrafl ha*ed on fhn IffftflB tV a 'ictle-krw**n. Istn
t&m-csniuty IrrvvntDf nurnod Qvjt\Jtt SpTBl! Tbo [achoDlgcn/.. whJch dsmpens tTh* (IfoCli Ql air tfnt«rBn« r 1b
tn!ortddd La offer a. ufer and mtH« eornroruihpn ndd u>.in the conveniionfil fixed wincj
■TECH UPDATE
FDPiJUR MOHOfK
June 1951
Hen- FurvHcvii if V id- A firm (if cor-
EVLN Mr. Schmilile CdnCreJe*
IfMI wuraMi ihe hacking ol a
laraer Litmnanv. his droam it
unlihetv lo hteeorhe renin y etui
Freewi|ig jppeari 10 have hrnertiled
from a shifitng reipjlalnrv environ-
meni 1 -'-.I n»rcrmBfr Phe Federal
Aviation Adm iniavation sireamltrted
ill rerl iffcation pebectlure* fnr *maM
j reran, lander wlufh j new plane
mm? peeve Hi safeiy and airnrorthl-
Wa vender's
Reality Check
H.ViHT'iV FA— A thflu-
rm r * irlcui for a hi-perHide
afrrrafl ihape. lhe ojif
1 ;>'.■■- f n umlergolnK - 1 ■•■■•■I-
I teatfi id dei«rrt3ine
hoW IT UftFuJri fuhf ttnn J* a
TIM] v.4Mrt1 ptinr,
In If.- iiurt-et
Ma'teritirt'iH.'eTerh I pdatp.
tn*(rp H Dee. T
on d - <ihh ihorkHave. The
aircraft ■»oulil enjny a tre-
TrtrhtlrHla Ii Pi - Id tJrSit rtTiU
herrmne fl"* fcuipied 10 con-
fine the ■■! -k pressure to
the jibne s underside.
At NASAs UncfJey Re-
peirr'h Cehier. eng^rurjert
arc (\r--tin:\i out r hr prwtine
tt-avefin^r form vmh real.
plane arroiH rrntpnla. iiirh
jj eon tml -urface* and pip-
srlni Piileui
Th* 1j*nt^_rp-^Mrr hvf*
M*eij 31 Q^59BSBpaw«pL
jHtcntnpiitrr I'rno-ianq io
IMM
«nodM cvm diff*j irt cortoou/ailom i-.,-. ■ 1-
wfCfl rtHilK (iuntrCM lufWI,
cfeaign a aaverlrler jhapv
optim lied for Mifh-t m*d.
MaehintalJ then built a
■f»d"T.aTinel rnodel *ith varv
oui IhEerelianrfeacrle win*:-
I iiv«iMi--^^c P^ ~Hm
i
Lips, control Htrface*, caiH-
plel and engine parti- OF
e*pect*l interest it the -dd(.
Lion of cr*nk#d wlnftipf Lo
ImpreA'e I a : r ril atahuiLv.
Meanwhue. NA-A &0& \
U itunjirii; how iu mifgrau- -
frramjet englhej -nhi.'H '
ditnipLine; the w at'Tidinc 1
Gentle Monsrers of the Deep
Whale
Sharks
By EUGENTE CLARK
PhoLr>graph5 by DAVID DOUBILET
Out or the deep bun gloom our quarry emerges, all 10
i feet and ten Ions of it The giant whale shark is only 1
I few ■-'.i.'rls away-, swimming toward us. Photographer
David DoubUeL and his oaststati t , Gary Be II . iwi m Lo
portion themselves directly in IronLofLheoncDminE
fish, m) ihey can pboEagraphiuenorrnousrncruih working aj|t feeds.
[No real danger here becaiise, tncongruouily, this hufe shark feeds nn
plankton -mainly shnmplikc krilt-ajid small s^hoolinsj fish.) Rodney
y< r a shark naiuralisi. mon plots the dive time a* t swim toward this
member of Lhe species Rkincadun lypm — thp Lgra^esL fish In the
World -to study it up close.
As wc move in, Lh e wh aje ihrwlt begins to alter its cou,rse sli*;h Ely
ami \ry> dee per, the typtcal evasive behavior when divers approach
Because of its ajeat il« and the featureless blue tjackgroundof Lhe
ope n 5ea 4 the fish appear* En be flout! Elf in 1 pace ■ S wrimmi rtpj as fail aU
f can, IjUJl keep up With It. hut not for long
My hand trails down the masiive body, over Lhe thick, hard- Lec-
tured skin The shark feels almoii inanimate, like a wooden subma-
rine. To smy wiih il longer than 1 can by swimminf;. I propel mynelf up
tow an! il* dorsaJ n T he re | find 11 hind hold l/ndcr the '■ r .1 1 ling ed gr
Marine btoknrnl Eutu kii C l*PK . Proleiaor E men la al the (jWawMqurf
HfljPMli h" wnuen 11 M&kmm underva life far N aTIOMAL tltuCiwrHic;
The aulhur of I h ret books, she bj also a frequeni <onl n buh>r ft) ihe $acpely"s
Kholarly|ournat. RSflbutOI * F.srtoaATion Dives arouml Ihe world by
T>Avi n DoUBi LtT who live* In Npw Vurh Cn> . have vielrln I phnlo-graplts for
niafr -hnn W n*:cx:rtAPklf iflitte*
U
JUNE 14
19 9 3
Robert Park, professor of physics, was interviewed on the April 6 "NBC Night-
ly News" as part of a report on the suspected health hazards of electromagnet-
ic radiation from power lines.
CLIPS ISSUE
M to w.m.i. jnaan journal wkunksum, may a. mt
At a Crossroads; New Editor Is Remaking Time
As Weekly Seeks Its Role in Age of Instant News
l Tmtlrtitnl FYnm flfnf ftjr
Of, Hr. ■:;.:-, r^fliM lur i ■.<■■, <>■ ■,
?ir"iwnis cir tine v past: getting tanr
f.Vls. mfln bcrnrc th* ixmpi-lithHi gets
ii"i'i Mi'. I -=■-- -: iltustriHre report -
"•1IC- 1 HieitafW r-rriihs. Mr. OaEnn fay*.
I ■-.Hi I . maga; i.. lo be ■■ i .,■:■,.,!;
JW-joIf can't vn\i lo read. - '
He iull hi-. *ntt nil mil tor him. Slur*
1hr flwnjer. Ihf (ti-ifaune has iLlppnt
in import*!**: Mil d> Time Wnmrr s mas
Sivy rahl*. retwd tml nmfLr op*ralioni.
ThJj irurillrKriitl Al.iJmrr has been pain
IliIIv rinr uqiiir- Time MuralF mwJwd n
kra iin Sputftttltrf IWI Vflien Time bore
ifli* hninl rtt ■■.■!! WfeKtinM nt IN- liwfi-
jIl^flMvlEL ll^lhH.fl |d|..|||iin% nr.'nTlilLE IS
Trie jtlhrlihirW *nr»il »*s e: .
nr*mnEJzirtf3. eit>t(1 rn irmlers' iperial
n!!ci-Mh Rvrti lug rll> Mb WHJapHC,
NuNnf rjmitiLru i radrrsriip. nrp rein
vril I |f i|[ Mii'nLWl ¥■'* . *-lT1-F"i1 i»e .in*J>sis n In I
si hm#r writing,
Tftr KWH *-J* the news, wrettht
juenl much id trie past dm .id* Ln (111 h4
mhjI scitrdilnu , (p.irful lhey maid uctumr
nhsnfrtr imlrss thrymnilr changes.
ItohapLnE Ih* Wrtklle*
AI IP.S News ft Wnrlif, Report, cnair
nutl nwf ecilur-,n riuef Mortimer Zuckf r
nun rrlnnert «■■■■ mMdnr on serrtM.
flMH-jrintCtlVlBf journal km. Innfiftrf
its pH0nl and buslne** Cv»rrtKF and
|May«r it-miL HerJH on B xial ir*ndE rind
utaii.*hasiaa,n a: ^liJai ■ U £He Pnk rJun rih| * ■ *****
t*ib-n at [he Amenran I *$/)] at +l °wfS in
new. ftwsltf JourrHisli * ^C f/jp »i_ "i. PfOfeSCn,,
Ihc IW twnhlrnltnl cj< » r "tf it ||'.l. I"" "Ml
wfft^ihthrlniml^din-ii «<?/D/lia |W ^'^J/lftTrT
p-rhiniwrioFiifHIKT fl *; l,a 'nOl/Ji-ai, "
n ■ rkw .j tin* a rnisvin^ wtrer,
4Wnr1illlppvit J **°^0l]
f ?ini in April, Nrwawift *jn Iwa n n
fpnun I Mngsnih 1 t»i nJ- me ■ I Itvm \f
'Ktfi^ni r if rtlrtiff" imnM Ow PJimLfy't
l-'FfrM niajEaf.ifiM.Tinif *hH h IjK wmn a
"i i^ ■'■!.! I V-ifuJinr- AWLird In JW. «u mt
nmniiHiPff In iin^ rntnnry
V! r.-ir.«"; Slip
Hr-jiiphlh 1 , Tlmp has bnn lwi>-
l«in«1rml hy in lUhfrrislnE Trtpsiifflt,
1 lunpjii il still rurmnn nds, ^rmmit I lw India-
ii y \ hiicltrEE ,iii rile?, lift nrl pr"liK km.*
\hr hj^jw^i In "if limr Inr. sUhtr n<
marnM«iFS, roll Innr jIukH tH milLInn tn
1?Vi (* R3 million In l»*t, rmnvpftnt
nu«tr*1l7 tp l'"2 [VHHJik IE l»0W llw pftflj
ksdff fl r TliK 1 ^Vjirtr^r s maBdHii? pouD,
*Jmh iHn rnrlirfiT- S|»TrlS, ItlHMrHlMt.
U'p. fiwiunr siiiH'inry
ThlPtlKh TlttW «JJ| UK rrttM .i.1 rrVFIUte
unrt prehl j*t Ha mr^ Jitr Mill ih* tilghrsL
■■f mr Hurt nrft*
..ii i|i-. ;i.-. i--i.ii
i'l n-iEr* .;!.■■'■ m
mr fi-ir hk rhud
Mriijlvi j'^ar, nimp
Hit \ri\Avr m lht>
i-a.lrifin, Ttmf
nntH uunt.
■ ItfVURh IrpTSPlTMId
i\mjt j * Maj. Tlnw
- - ■■ -■■- — i ■ mm ad
1^KK- "f i-i'iffllRf 111
VMi-i Imtujlrv
^rwElnifr. Vfwi-
nfirhiivtlPS Nf*i
MdJiniTi^Kn. TlPir
imJod^llwiilipluliTiltiEhfr Kd rain And
"hiii it 1 1 1 inu it nmiunl rv> cmhuh try
unrv
Tli»p 1 ,■ irriih iinn ii.Ul into i h* p*i± ■!
iiiiMii 1 2 mlnkm. [fir ihod %>f tscnHfe
.inrttS.S. Se*%. *hlft« hiW bWMtcadj il
.ihrxil 3 z mlillcn &nd J.J Fnltlien. PtipB?-
iivijjf , fm- iv rail riw yean. 5(111. T1:lV»
- frritatlun li dinrn lrgm 4 fi Tnilikin in Ihr
Ola iWfc, when 11 wu «[WfuljiM]f
'■ini,h'.1 up fry discounted Dtfenand dec-
iMOfr FiveawkTi, surh as LelephntKi. Qr-
i ul.ilinn inprnred rmdetily Id (he second
li.iir ■■? ''"'J. jel nf*iHDnd salts Feb
'Klull ilr\p|(r Eh? nrw rrdrtliiL
rtic ftmprotTY
tHat redfUiTi «at Ihf futm3nft[r0n of
■ *<*fpine ftujiif e« m. NuBit benn wr>rn
mer In IWT. ih (hf mlihr il nn
• ir-ilM, l.ifuh ihe]
. ■: ;v-.| I. i , 1 1
i- ; - -■•- ■ - '■: '!■ i ■■ Mi^._ .
sticking rlnic in 'hi 1 previous vert's (n F
stiwi I r na>r Girding in drcLyiara wis ■
LW iiHli'iKinJcnr pJonyof its Juturc. *hu h-
Etnord, Mr. KmiEh ia.y&. iKi' renters
"wjimW news IhiE "cr. 1 n-.m-i TV. lih!
vaJiidi ihit nBtlonnl w«i and anaJxita."'
M Timr, Ur. Moller srt about mafcliu
lundnnn'rlal tharum vvm alter his i til
vil He luija" m rtlsnunllr Time's dec-
adrs Old ^j-strm. o( corrrtpcindenls nilnjc
cofy Tmrn bureau* m be re^THten In Wew
M truir^ij. hr pUBHdl hir rcpoclerSi tu
■fni*- fnin ihr hri'ld. IrcltELR Iheir wrtllni
i«h|f(] f h hrj n hut imminll HJ .
A ''■JWirtprryadi'
In J'W . ■« mrnl int a rrnif iif i|f grnry he
l«uiKhnt J "rriirip at UV m-iBrnnn*. "Wf
ha,vc pi pniifftil Time tfl <t*n: smElhimr
imir*rfl'|irsl Uuin '!,.■ :tmi.Li FTnfivalwns
(■rTiini- ilrriiiie>i|«-qViniJfi Utr Hulkr
ii hi Ht .1 |irraa Telr.ise irntrlltni *Mt he
i Mli'il i I *■«>>. ,i[.|-t ■.■ ■■ In n- mi:n f.i.ni
joiirnihsni," he Inlrvduevd seclioiu such
as Trtvti and LnLerYi?* and a moir
dramatic ei*mh Liu Lion of pltuUH end teit
for h\t M-..rk-i fi'rK Import *nl. ne Lin-
tpred wilP the traditional approach lo
neivs. Thr main lefd of Times: stories, he
saht. ' will mil be sn L'tHuralorj 1 repicgiiii
ii- ri uf r ii'nli.ir maLerial. The series will
deviHle mwe space la Ideas, lu mulvf fcj.
Lney Lin hate j putnt ur view. . . ."
Mr . Hiilln s ri.Ll.i-iirt viu.ld be Ti im- ■
allrartsiin Ed nursuln|E broad theme* End
trends, and sometimes cnsdiu - iwril^uni,
all Ln pursuit at hu Urarile dictum, (bat
Time should 'jo rutyonfl ilje ne.**-"
Hw tif hryriftd: A eoyit wi "EnV \n
mi was tfl r»IJ (*i Ihc (Vhlura (M enrU Ln
*VM amirs. "Whal n«i ^Ihvt TcJ U»
About Od?' explored Eljrns of ■ caVuie
rtSt in ih* c r r< in m V mr unLvtri*, frtn
wnen II repartrd Lmportan! news, Tim*
EcrrjeUmei seemed olf Ihe newi of Ibe
moment. Toe week of Hurricane Andrew,
Hie of the bLpjrst dnmeaUc ("uth or \WI.
Time itaftflred «i Hi ctjvcr inr (amine In
lub-Sanaran Africa Tunc pN the U.S.
disutrr rtlitlvi-Jy Kim rflfPRpp in ftEfil
piraittplu, vhLlr Ni*l*uk rah a dra
hulk and lenlilUf c£rve,f ilory. John
Srsrts. Tlmir'i drpillji nUMBlDi! tdhar.
U0I *,odnrw hSd HhrPldSf Uern rtrRMlfy
nrsfi eH>. and Ihr business side wis
nKhLJ'sajnnnedTlmf lw "n lop (dllWK,
"The prablem was Lhe ihtjrallPr wan -jiTT
lhe U'ws nut sharp, kK crlf|i<"
Wnlier ^upira. i Icrmef TLrci* snunr
vrllrr who la now Kvinin- -. 'Aim-' Itouse
■ mr" ■ | .i - 1 - -1 ■ i . '. Lfi.] stUI ■ -■ -■■ I ■ - 1 iik'. In
Time, r nilJi that vneo He LeH Newswrdt
ItcTime in tS87 he was aalmirsned. by Iki*
far m advance Time decided wnat was
ncwE. At Newsweek, lap cdllors Ttaulnrl>
ripped up sloty LliU Emm Mona» of
Tuesday and Ecailrrrd »l-HctS (0 coiif
Lair brpakir-fl stnrffi At Time, Mr. Sa
pirn soys, ' Lhe Monday or Tuesday story
ilal dMn'l chARgr much U (be wrrh
wen- or." Some major pnlHKAl iiorles
were iippiflifrtl by HUbrTi Ifl days In
kdvnnCt, "TtK prewj,*pe* ap(>ci»rhcanue
taken lo rifllenkwu D*trer1.'' Hr. Shapiro
«}>. ,L ftut rf (he twn, Lfi ortUlnly Betlrr
- ■» ni>wsmas]ailn* In be vUlknf ii> make
flf i ™" at llw l«t LTilnuLr inan
t. by Hr, Miller.
.i- Inf. edLLot Lt
^(tltetWlHYllllFT-
"V* fig TO? - iirwj weekly I
•■•'- '■■■'■- wu
-vrh ifiSeTraJly. bul
iniiu. . ►'.rial the structural
prnblema nf in... 'It said Time takes
UselJ irjoserhwsly, II iirnlj Irtj pontLflest-
Inj;, and wasn't rearblnaj an tiMience ilul
fvund il compellmi or ft urivncy or 1m'
oart," 5aysuneeieTullTe.
Whlfe admltllnf lhe task force was
critical or some ut bis innovations. Mr-
Muller says thaL "It didn't say lurn tdtk
the t lock, him Time into a rewrLLr nMga
rJne." The rLnxllnes' "wrre an enoor&c-
inf nt of when- we w(fe Already headiht.'"
tu- adds *> tf* Mrfanlf'iFin wtn mill
THE SUM
1 JedntfScJay , Fetrrtracy 3 , 199 3
USA WEEKEND ■ May 21 23, 1993
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Beach culture 101
A quick guide to tfte USA 's bat short bets this summer
B
I elecb tuui utaavi. wt'r
r id ecu, wbal 1o p«± 'tlM US* Mtfr
lliapflj t«Mli« »rc TEinnf, Uid OlflCt
♦w icft. re J ate a bov- Gnb jtimt sun and
us* w£EK£rrouxi ucMt roc me
■ailcTfiJI "tUl ?«yer» frtffll lAr AS»-
ot VottcrWl PiofcatHDiii. The
!.n W y * E J -Old Qcn.
wiiunt-- W#rt"F Sfi*iA (7*y W**i
V;iiU; Li^fVJ.'i .VtluehWO
"Qiffs iHOf toe tHUda irt ervtuu; n)d
yea uc itw lonly
'onaak, «
of (be ^Tk wul be a taai na-
Bxr. vyi C*J"d JUciu'i MfKlk iCBSkr
■aranp: wiapa. Cipn k«i"P M ^ below
UK loml. bHter ihorti. lUfMd H
]1|t l h, Ji *■' MMH II Jfl
Business Bulletin
A Special Background Report
On Trends in Industry
And Finance
Gtotp /liflnd Saw
"■yo bi| wa*fli or
■linctr-n'i eUTEDOi
. aqua-mitc
Pon>«>a idpe ngbc up
CtoiiAf iJtm (wd eULtor Kiiy (tbtcl bat
Study to follow Md. teens' drug use
PAYING TOO MUCH for consumer elec-
tronics is common, says a study from the
University of Maryland at College Park.
Using Consumer Reports data from 1982 to
1991, the study found a big swing from
high-to-low priced items. For instance, the
average camcorder price in 1991 was S906-
21% higher than the two lowest prices.
USA TODAY
THURSDAY. JANUARY 21, 1993
Eloquent words,
'masterful, subtle'
NEWSWEEK
^jsaaaas>asl
APKll.26, 1SU3
f'AHH10i\
Showing Too Much, Too Soon
What ever happened to jumpers and overalls?
By Douglas Birth
suflwrner
A study at yuuUhai arrested and
broughi to t Laurel detention •rn-
'.a found something sod bul not
surprising: afp,nETlc^n[ IcvpLh of
drug use;
Nine rjcrcenl of the boys and fl
pcrpCTlt of the glrlaj hrrjoigltl to the
Tnontfut J. S. Wtxitr Crti!dr«i L fl
Center v/fre round lo have used
orjoMnc in the prtvkxia. 72 hours.
urlrtc tola ahowed.
By contrast, a national survey
rjf high school senbGra h conducted
by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse in 1990. round 1.9 percent
reporting cocaine use In thtprevi-
cu30day».
Dr. Ertc 0. Wlah. dtrector of the
Center for Subotance Abuse Re-
search at the University of Wary'
land, found 17 percent oi the boys
and 10 percent of the #ris tested
nrwi 1 1 vr for aome utaaf.
Dr. Wtah and rescairther Thom'
as A. Cray studied 263 J^jv( n Ue of-
fendersi moat of them Baltimore
residents between the ages of 1 4
and 16. brought to the Waxier cen-
■ rr for ai variety of crimes from
m Hrt-SeTH ember a rid mkl- December
of tasiyear.
Youthful offenders
target of survey
The study. E he Urea of tts Wind In
Maryland, was designed to set a
benchmark for levels of drug
abuse among youthful offender?.
The levels were significant. Dr.
Wish sakd but about equal to those
foind among ehJdren and teen-ag-
ers arrested En most other major
eftlea.
Every three months^ L>. W[sh
said, a new sample of young de-
tainees win be imervtewr-d and
tested lo monitor tfuuigcs in levels
of drug use Tfito sunnmer, he said,
a simtiar prograrn will begin in Bal-
rlmarc for adult (rfTc rldera .
Among the 175 boys, 9 percent
tested positive for cocaine. 5 per-
cent for marijuana and less than 1
percent for opiates. Lnc ludlng hero-
LTL
Among lhe 88 girls. & prrrcnt
tested positive for cocaine, 3 per-
cent Tor marijuana and 3 percent
for opiates. One perem* tested pa»-
luve for PCP.
Dt Wish said his findings sup-
port other studies showing than;
while drug use has fallen among
middle-class high school ■.[::<lr-ni.H.
It remains stubbornly high among
inncT-ctty kids, rspedallv those In
trouble with the law.
I'm concerned that with the
drap In middle-class drug use, the
drug-abuse problem Is starting to
be back-bumered," !> Wish said.
'There Is a continuing drud abuse
problem among dlHdvanlaqed. in-
ner-city popuiauoris . that pollu-
clana lend to forget or ignore/
The study found thai most of
theoTfenders — fl4 percent oj ihf
bays and 7 ] percent of the girls —
were suil enrolleri In school
■What this means is that
achool-based prevention and inter-
vention programs really can reach
the*: hlgh-rtak youth,' Dr. Wish
*a*ft. 'We nerd piTjgrajna for these
kids both before and after the ar-
rest/
The researchers staged volun-
tary, anonymous Interviews fol-
lowed up by urine tests. In similar
studies, where academics con-
ducted interviews, juveniles urerr
found to significantly understate
their drug use-
J We thoughl by having medical
stan* ask questions that more tu
the youths would be truthful" Dr
wisri*aid
By Richard Benedetto
USA TODAY
one of lhe ftOftefl
was a strong begin-
OhviBHyerju!anindeoHj|Ew(i]rclo<b» I lhemeweo at tbaHyounsaaT.'' u*/» Cmivl
lOTrw/'STM'" rwd a jrtateye f«Ea* . Seefetdt. a prof(*»r *i the. L"qjvrr*uy uf
very cftrly ag*." hvi her nwther. ' Maryland'a Institute' tor Child Study
Alyie, TaJce the flirty enneaibk [be yovlla- I "That they're somebody'* liule l*y or 4*e
fulNow VorltorarikJrdDrftDte'uDl inlait gbject," !3lcve MaraJU, apnfeaaorafetiild
weea. Li law-tluof. tano-Ugrit nowered payehMEialysu at Use Vale Child Stuidy
"ell S.'.'-.irni topped wiih ■ frcuby wbite ' f>nWr arJd^h^ ." whsi: i in-k-.- ■K-h.m h-
"'poti" hti^use fnin her favor-
ite boutique, "Little Leeoen." —
OlnriB sMhSyml with tb* pnw
of any nubile Lolitn bound tar
thr d iscoiheque — ficept (he's
about i third the «i» >hf a
Bve and Lhree quArterm yean
old mnjr pn In," »yi her rn«nh-
erpmudty,
Acroai the counlr)'. a boom-
ini dliMren'a apparel enijr-
kei l* «eninf up miniature
vennna ot uurty adult soar,
varrMu*k.-1Hi|[£uinj!s.ndihfurv
St* vea Cu ba , aeajene r Leu- Anwear by Hal-
!■;"..'! New V nrk unn BpecLalizutf in clothw
for olrLi under (0. atlk W uwody nrhan
jhop*m L.A. and New Yort und to Hid west-
ern ma I In near Chicago and Omaha- At n
m-em. Halley lashtoq ihow, Ii uyr ™ noed
over the ensembles ideaibcal to the aJinty
black lain *nd cropped btouae Madonna
hod n-urn ihe ntgbt Lh'kinr uq "Sscucday
Ntehl Live." ~ Peopte went nut^
I for those little ,MjHunna ««it-
\ tlta — duy -;iuldn'[ ire: enouffa
.'[ them," said Cuba, who*
vhippiof up 'iwy Vetsaesv
sh" ouuita witb Eaux leoparn
rim for fall's kinderjannero.
President dinton's 1 4-mlnuie address.^
ifiatigural speeches in recent memory -
njng for hts administration, ^nniysts say.
Whetjier the speech Wednesday was the poetic metaphor of
fo re tng spn ng from hitler winter, his solemn pledge lo end the
deadlock and drift or his stark reminder that Americas botin-
ty still isn't shared by all, ejtperts agree he spoke with a spi ritu-
al eloquence that struck a poignant tone for a new beginning.
"It was one of the better inaugural speeches since Franklin
D Roosevelt's first in 1933. Whether it will be one of the greats
remains to be seen/" said R Gordon Hoitie of the Center for the
Study of the Presidency.
Hoxie rales Abraham Lincoln's two inaugural addresses,
and the first given by George
Washington and Roosevelt, as the
greats. Some also rate John F. Ken-
nedy's 1961 "Ask not what your
country can do for you" speech
near the top,
ainton s speech , i n phrasing and
delivery, was reminisceni or Ken-
nedy's, However, analysts say din-
ton's carefully chosen words were
Lhe right signals lo send for an in-
augural indelibly marked by twin
(hemes of genera UonaJ change and
economic renewal,
"II was a masterful, complex,
subtle, metaphysical speech,* »ys
irc nsotL Dn iversi-
mfinA froiiucaJ gggjjT
ii
By UQfK J-M. DtwTviorNt
BURNS: ainton speech
was very strong/
COHSUllIHGI
353G**
.tot*
""■Pot soi»f, .,,. ^ e eftf 11 w 3 e* » v , a \,o"
"•UVeB*.^ apTO^TT.vp tOT^^L
up « (Jlj™*'* *-l fiemun
•nmrvi . . :0 a lot t-i ihaouUltn
lTl3t«
■^ wr TDT nay llm A sampling afteduchDe '70s-
ah uiettr itsyfjitfjry. teenvttWfly fjiAfn^
BUSINESS WEEK/FEBRUARY 1
OH, WHAT A LOVELY
WAR GAME
(few* Allen's nil
1993
*■ Full 19KI, 1A
► Anatyste, 2*
rrw n »smirt ci?m*ii
t YtiHtt TJAffLS nruxsiMY, *fHU.
Parent & Child
Lawrence KtlTner
At a time of loss,
thoughts of
mortality.
TfPf
i inn in <r in| pan wt Uw illriTH li'TCDi
*«&**
■ U'hdt do AnirheanK
like to r|n mostt A ttwt
survey by t fie
AnH'ru'jms' l-seuf
Tillli' ] > 1'ir)r'i.t it1 I fir
I'mu-i-sitv f>r
Mii^i:,.|| ( nll^ '
[W ^Bked gjSoO
ndtills !n.\'.- much, on a
■ealB of Mo 1 0, they
enjtiy or dislike some
"200 everj-rlsy .-si-iivirn^
nkrt ona rat*s m perfect
iO f but MM* 9, 3,
corners clos«st. Nest in
[Xijuiliiriry- pEa>inu;ii
sport (9.2).doin^
d rt wi>rk i t 1 1 -• i— ■■ n i i< r 1 1 ■
musifr lO.Oi. jfoi.njfT.rj
bur* or 1 1 Ljif! i > rl ii L is
- • ■' ''i'-;:r:vrii.i
I:..:- in:.; (H.Hl H | .|,i;. r ,-..'
'.■.;■'; kids I ri> }, iiiikii,.'
vrilh or i ■ ■,■:■■ 1 1 1 : m to kiilN
r iifTnl <3w\nn ihr Drttt 14
i^ li'.lli.: SJ-i-j.-Pii-.r.
attending chtirch .•.)•■•'.
uikino/in a m^iclS.^I.
tits Least fftvflrttff
Goinji to an nuto rcpnir
shop 1 4. r) ) , follcnv^ I by
visit* tu doctors nr
dent i&ts ■ t ■ ■ . dornu: t ! i ■ ■
Isundn' ■ - : ■ and
ottsttfeug di&es (4.91-
W*i speml ntore tinit'
watphiinjIT i>uin
Si1ef]nJijfbtit tnjoyit
Ips!s(7.6>.Do
.\ Jin ; -:-M!i:. Like 1 ' i i ■■■>
jobsf Sururisinfriy, ire
tTijoy tvLirk as mut'h an
' ;i !■.::>■■; i ■■"•■
1V_1J>— but loss than
visit i nil friends (7.1).
>► divi' iiKlny, In-
ht* iini»- iiivtulitij:
In wrtiM hp rtik-
li-eiutini! eiwCTitrtt*
nTrniijp« jFi.stiy, tlic
Lffllfl ri'nin tlif avjtl
"ivitz. Sin i Ttii, n nil
-■uiMKiiiri, fstf ntivi'S
£<■ (enrfl Trom niili-
Ultllel^ :in- ntivitiUK,
' hi-] I. too.
thai Rtjo?. Allen &
I ■ I ■ ■ if* n ilir(u Li:n j k it
tjiivrl Ii Klliin-. pi
St'ivk-^ t 11.
"in i.l thai h«Mt>'.
liei4-\|ir't>h"| .,'!.' soi
dltttrritUtrta, Kim" pxnm
hie iliVinHin ikil i
liiMtvy titicks l--nl id
hrino nf \\jr
wonlrl rlitrp
F^iinim ||>:it n\\
iMiittil BjittrTi thai
w *n liav
to "
'heJri
■*'- ~ nffct 1 rr *™ ri ™"> *
U 1 ** Hi'- fii t«'r;il
iiic. Allii'lSipinU. [.Liu r
ill IIV|tniliiCS H ( h jtUT|hi|l:ir.
I Mt . Mini i 'linviiui.
liiAlj,^ of t-i<o|Li>iJ.ttinj;„ iin in rvmr^f**
I U -:il si rut ppy -sm t mg soiw i ■ ita*, cxitit-
iiir> in war fptWtfli tfivtiii' irdo leitnin
r"|iit'Si k nli]iu t h ath mnjitr jihiyt'i' in Ihrir
imlLi^try. Tfiry'iv i+ifjipi-tj with ilntpirr*
oti til" citliltiMiTos llti'y'ii' iMirtral'Thi!.
i WsiHr14iNig Mm fill-it Ht an iiti|jn rlani
siilr lM-m-fil.1 Tlu-ii. itflcr i-ai'h Irjim lavs
1*11* its | 'hin, a pyM$ "I wtWMlfil , *# witri
ji|ii'i^-ni iFii' inarfct't nlt^nlm fiotv uniili
tn Urn- Trth :t*-li. (foliktt lyjiiritlly last
and Carter WESBESSSBb aide.
She says the low-key oratory was
Inspiring in terms of lessening our
anxieties,'' and a good vehicle for
Hi nton to present himself "as a
competent person who under-
^^^^^^^^^^™ stands the time."
Presenting himself as a "charismatic go-getter" could have
triggered "anxiety, not hope," Sorenson says.
" rn~ James MacCregor liurns, FDR biographer and Williams
nT) ntimiWllfm Hi a Orrp tJmtg ml lnptv College historian, calls it a "very strong speech ... more
thoughtful than lissptraUonal'' He especially liked where Qb>
ton took on the "powerful" Washington establishment for "for-
getting" the people who sent them there.
While Bums was pleased with Clinton's reference to FDR.
he says echoing Roosevelt's call for "bold, persistent experi-
mentation" may have been the wrong message. "Some people
will feel that since RooseveU we've had GO years of experimen-
tation, and that it's now dme to . , , get on with the .fob." 1
Sen. Jay Rockefeller. ]>W.Va T says the speech didn't evoke
nijiiiN'-n ,^1^ cheers, but was "uplifting in its realism."
"He was asking the people to reach down and look inside
themselves, look ai their country seriously/ 1
Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn. p agrees lhe speech was
"spiritual," but warns that the real work lies ahead.
Leslie Phillips
it's Use nuirkt't tfani
IhaV? really |itM Ib^M^li
the wringer in IVhik Af*
ttrn'g games, workiirg up
lo 10 hours a iluy In r*?|j»
rewBt -every ciwturrw»t
•■■l':h''.'i' I: ■■■ i, !■■■! i-:>,-.
two |j<>o|>lr? ivorkinj; on
gnmes rull-tiTiie and per
fiaps a dozen ntlicrs wliri.
help wntJll the phonting
Lprc-Jik? (ml. To dale, U
fia, 1 ^ run ninr ftaiike^. at
prifrVS of $ZTfii.{MHt iihtl
Llfl |fs iKHllilll fur UlTVl'
fin fur in 10!*!,.
h fiiisiticsK mir? 3rfiitv
Or It-SJt. SHY* tJi'tH'l!* 1 1"
Tliiliiiith, wfio etuis the
fintt?. Alft'n |itt0lire an
head of the fHrateffj
Afi.ilysifi Cwotef in
MeUaii, V'h. Thihanll in
jji :STr-vnir Mttw vtferan whfl vmrk^il in
tin- f'onlni] InrflliLM-tn ,■ A^imu'v hiiil
bi'ailnl ihf rJtitii^il Wjir < k <illi'^ r * Hiilt-
tnry stmtegy de|ittrlmt-itl. He says tint
itt ImsiurBs, ;is in 11m- Riffltftry, thr liurtl-
r^utHaii u > iLvriiik^^p^ai^iia
'^; J
I flti'll
i !■!
I'm in ihr l'.h'h -m- I'm
did buy a triit'kiiiiiki*r—
tLii'l ilhjn'i lose a HJodnr's ivoiib nf rii^iix-
Uttslnpw rrmil olln'1' l nick nia kert.
'If nnOM% Dhow's tin tn li nil! i ii* thtit
irrinir' w^raLrktfi h ill phiy oul in ii^il lift
Itul llicy miiiliL n Tlic fiBAbV
fr^m -ii:"- \v-\i [^t-lfMfrA'iii^
niftriil wltat ynur ewtt|wiiiH*1 is j^ning I
do." wrp T-m Uitbanl. i - ■■! ■■ n :i I ntrkHW£Pf
of tin f'urjju'H IWt'itw SvHtwirt i.mup.
V b*ff« yoi/ IfktV t Hfr naiupitv uf MaivNurl
JtssimilUmiliKI i'n>mniihl ||ii)iii : i> t S.-|^ [limf. win
Ul_J| UUlLiuncad-— TTflI?Kie un:ij> ^
ttbtpti iicctiasi' "^oii rani htiOte a
I lhiitir> yon tU'Ver Uioiti^hl of."
JUNE 14
19 9 3
U
CLIPS ISSUE
Government and Politics Professor Roger Davidson was interviewed on April
25 concerning his views on President Clinton's first 100 days on "The Wall
Street Journal Report," which airs nationally on the CBS Television Network.
James Quintiere, professor in the Department of Fire Protection Engineering,
was interviewed April 27 on NBC-TV's 'Today Show" concerning his and fel-
low faculty member Frederick fviowrer's research on the Branch Davidian com-
pound fire in Waco, Texas.
• The Chronicle of Higher Education • Marrh 10. l u 93
For Nearlv Everv Kind of Feminism.
a Scholarly Journal of Its Own
THE WASHINGTON POST - 2/16/93
Signs may he the best-known
feminist journal, hut it's nut
the only one. Far from it,
Now lli].i\ s an academic journal ex-
ists lor just about every kind 9f
feminism.
Although l he growing prolifera-
tion of feminist journals minors the
fragmentation of other disciplines,
most feminist scholars seem Hi
think lhat diversity is a good thing.
Judith Butler, a professor of hu-
manities at I he Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity who serves tin the boards of
several feminist journals, notes
that scholars regularly publish in
three of the major journals. Signs,
differences, und Feminist Studies.
"It may be thai feminist scholar-
ship is not worried about producing
a unified conception of itself."' Ms.
Butler says. "Ilcan presume diver-
sity because it has found a place in
the academy,"
DEALING WITH SUSPICIONS
One of the new kids on the
block, differences, is devoted lo
feminist cultural theory Now in its
fourth year, different a is affiliated
with the Pembroke Center for
Teaching and Research on Women
at Brown University and is edited
by Naomi Schor and Elizabeth
Weed. The journal has had a repu-
Tut W*stn.<«tTn« Post
Style PI
'THE DILEMMA OF DIFFERENCE
Manv scholars say differences
has some of the best cutting-edge
feminist work, especially in cultur-
al studies. The "Phallus Issue, "
appearing in spring 1992, featured
articles on penis envy, the "Lacun-
ian phallus," and Arnold Schwar-
zenegger "What we're looking for
is any wort lhat looks at the dilem-
ma of difference in cullure." Ms.
Weed says, with gender being only
one category of difference. Unlike
many feminist journals, differences
has men on its advisory board and
its list of contributors.
Feminist Studies claims (he dis-
tinction of being the oldest continu-
ously publishing feminist journal,
having made lis debut in 1972. The
journal, which started with social-
ist leanings, is edited by Claire Mo-
ses and a collective of scholars and
is twsed at I he University of Marx
land- Like Signs. Feminist Studies
sees itself as an interdisciplinary
journal, publishing pieces on litera-
ture, an. history, psychology, and
even poetry and fiction.
"We published some of the very
hist articles about class and race
and even about differences of sexu-
ality." says Ms. Moses, a profes-
sor of women's studies. Consider-
ing itself the pioneer of !c
publishing. Feminist Siu.t
more willing to take inlel
risks, she says. The journal
ticularly interested in thee
debates nithin feminism
want to provide a forum for
lellectuul conversation ihul
ways pushed feminist scho
Redesigning
First-Year
Ti • • Trai
Engineering ^
Experiment Lets
Students Do More
By Brooke A, Masters
WuAmpoo Pm! Slit! Writer
At most colleges, stu-
dents in introductory engi-
neering classes sit back and
listen to experts describe
what engineers do. At How-
ard University this year,
freshmen in the School of
Engineering designed and
built portable shelters for
homeless people.
Divided into four- and
five-member teams, the stu-
dents met with homeless
people to find out what they
would want from a collap-
sible, one-person structure.
With a budget of $100, each
team designed and built its
own shelter.
On Friday, the results
were presented to the Com-
munity for Creative Non-Vi-
even payments for college students to be
mentors for younger students — is going to
four groups ol universities across the coun-
try.
Traditionally, would-be engineers are re-
to take advanced math, physics and
chemistry, and then engineering courses that
focus on analyzing existing structures, said
William S. Butcher, serjar engineering advis-
er at the foundation.
Original design work is usually postponed
until junior or senior year, he said.
'Traditional engineering courses . . . turn
students off. They come in all hot to be an
engineer, and then they find themselves
studying nothing but math and science,"
Butcher said. "Engineers are creating new
things, but how do you [let students] do thai
when they don't have much math or phys
One answer to that question is: simple
challenging projects such as one-person^
ters for the homeless. _______
At the University of Maryland at College
park students are making windmills. The
hope is that hands-on classes will draw a
more diverse group of students.
About IT percent of seniors who graduated
in 1990 with college degrees in engineering
were women, and 3.6 percent of engineering
seniors were African Americans.
In the ECSEL Project— short for Engi-
neering Coalition of Schools for Excellence in
Education and Leadership— Howard and six
other universities, including the University of
-HE NEW ; >■>*"•■ :.tss WORD AND IMAGE
Books of The Times
VHOSmtiAV, y.-ipnj .■>. ,*■>:■
The Black Family § Role in Society
By Laura Sessions Steep
* Pint Stilt W, ptrf
The New Score
On Piano Lessons
Teaching's Changed — For the Better
The spinster wi» taught far egg
money is brag replaced by 2 col-
lege-tnoned professional who charges
anywhere from 120 to S75 an hour.
Almost 70 pejtent of the 200-pHis
member* of the Northern Virginia
Musk Teachers' Aasoriabon. for ex-
ample, have a bachelor's degree in
music, and 50 percent have a mas-
ter's, [Ten yean age. 40 percent had
master s degrees, according to past
president Beth Ciaante .) The maionty
of association members teach piano.
CoUege programs in musk peda-
gogy, or the teaching of music teach-
ers, have mushroomed since the
1960s, says Manejine Uszfer. profes-
sor tn kevboard studies at the Univer-
sity of Southern California. U&zler
says as many as 150 schools now offer
bachelor* d*dree« in n-iuuc [>wiasofly.
60 offer masters degrees, and about
12 have doctoral programs. Ten years
ago, 90 people assembled for the flrsr
National Conference 00 Piano Pedago-
gy: last Oct'* attended.
r _ w _0l-& ,OD workshops
**° urt ito* P^ Jre ' *■ *****
I _ or\\0 Vl _.. H lilt *» < *di~ U™,rj
ByHCftBEHTIVirTGAIMG
tn hts classic *rudv, An American
Dilemma. ' jsubljsnerj +9 years ago.
CtmH! Myrc'ai #rm* that ihe proo-
!ems contronling JiSiirJi/aniagetf'
i-J.iLKi tn j Jijir-irwrn while society
pui a ipoke ihnniRh the wheels or
'Jrnwraev. Vei in* Swnfish (Totio-
misr. recognized that despite slavery
in-J iiiv^MMv. blacks neiprd lo hnirj
Enr country's social f.ibnc loqetrier
,a his chapter cm black family life in
he rurnl Sou ell. he said 'hit blacks
■ 1 J '-u.il up lhfir 0WH v miJ i-f OrJ$*»-
-ifijE 'ami Jy urganiutjons rnat were
amju^ive 10 social heajifl.
Now m "T^unbjnjj- Jarnhr^ [ jfl.
der, Aiuiffw BfflWjriQ ■ r«P«t*<J
nTack srM-i^:L^iBt. builds on MynJals
■*orV and offers his own sunprtsinsiy
jmimMic study JbOVI 4h? nnfr
itrmgrh and -- 1 n r: - 1 : i ■- of black rjiri-
1 lies Prrjt^gSQr ftitlinj^sh? v , ^ftairmaii
9j iJir ___\ smuic; KS55 - 1 '
rfe
As a frustrated pianist of
8. Linda Gutterman had
the courage to do what
many of us would have
Liked to have done when
we were young: She picked up her
musk book and ripped it to shreds.
She was sick of the C position, the
finger exercises, the uninspiring
tunes. "My mother got mad,' Gutter-
man recalis, "because I had a younger
suiter who could have used that took.
But J was very happy,"
Today Gutterman, 44, teaches pia-
no to children tn a sunny Arlington
studio, and what a difference a gener-
ation makes. Her younger pupils listen
to Beethoven before ever phyiug him,
and play him before ever reading a
note. They learn music theory
through games and. as they get older.
bang out tunes on Gutterman's digital
electronic ptano.
Any adufc over 30 who remembers
molding teachers and endless re**"
t ions of Tuer Ekse* w"'
pressed to _t^LS00^, < r gcW __tl_
terms-- U e t & _ „l ffllpP ^ 'Wfi
other (
Piano a \ W e V,: r xl\e
St-«fw«
Vie 1 " I, sa^HraiU
10
with 20 yt ^e'
isnolorigt n f
child bul to S>
"We're rx.
cert man.
children som
thing they can •
PoweU, an Ohv JrMI w
duceiheSuadu 6 e \\S^
[0 puna Hudent: * e „ mObi
Her colleague* \ea ve;> -«utHm-
al methoda of mua . ^rto i>ut phUoer>
phy, for Che meat part, "What we're
aiming for b id give (chiidrenj a
Lifeline appreciation for music * says
Bra dford Ciowan , chairman uf the ac-
daoned pbtio d^yamn or the Jmverst-
ly tn Maryland's miac nepan mi-iii.
To look at early training as just the
ability lo take a student In the hfghest
level is too narrow a view because it
leaves most people out.*
oa^ a
aMt.
workshops
t and rep-
ecesaary,
i^ rv their
ft . Lots
Ityat
1 the
^ecavise
vachers haw never had so
many methods and books with which to
win youngsters over. Usrier. author of
The We^Tempered Keyboard Teach-
tf (Schurmer Books), estimates there
are 100 different method books to
teadi elementary schoouVdiiklren and 25
or 30 for rneschooters.
Among those are classics such as the
John Thompson series which hasn't
changed in 57 years, flirt the maijoriry
of piano books today have been written
and illustrated for video-age kids. Their
dinosaurs and astronauts rival those
t!rp tjfwvgrartyqf MsryniTK i jnd vujl-
inij scnoiar in residemp 'ai Spelman
Collf^r in Atlanta, ttndi thai I^Ke
*hite striven on the tower nuifij of
^octety. blacks also wani 10 gain -n-
■ rv mm uHe American middle class
TTie riew bfjoJ*. 4 sequel lq hi-M L 3]aCJc
Famiries m ^'hite Amenta,'' pub-
lished m 19ttS.jr0f1tJnueSTil« .\rr,u-wr.\
ihai blnick familivs are bom survi.
von and mum 1 fr ^ecda ot 'heir
o*n rejuvenation
*
The central ides t*hmd 'Climbing
jncofj t Ladder" is ^Kplamed in i
pertepuve larrword by PauU Gtd-
dings. jn autrvor and a uiittiniipruCeS'
tor in the biath studies department ai
Princeton t.'ni^Triily Slw noies ihjl
*here a previous generaiim at schph
ir; Hi weakness in black tamiites,
•■'■"• lie* :rrr»*r:Hivri o| black --txznlo-
■*i*\s se^s resources utnesur .ma resit-
ience .HibroiTfjIly. rjljck Families
Ineu eo remain mud ibrvuHh slav-
etv. m.ir-v slave couples Mid lonm
marriages, and tne m,i|'"-ritv main^
u.jii'ri >,tJbi« nousehQ^ds. \u Gid-
Jings uvrues, "Indeed, much of Afri-
con-Amencon hisiory has been
ch4tvd by inr tteif rmmanan ni blath
r aiTi'i!fs iq live tbcir Hves loErlber
ijum tuning history jnd ^rx'iajojjiv.
found on Saturday-monung cartoons,
and fewer fines of musk pjf page mean
youngsters can mOve through a book
faster, giving them a quick .sense of
accfjrnplirihmeBL
Jim Edmonds, president of Foxes
Music Works in Falls Church, shows a
visitor the vaat amy of simplified
sheet music now available to children.
As soon as the Disney movie "Aladdin"
opened, he says r "rtJaddin* o a B fl pw i*
lions appeared for sale; me same
thing happened when Ihe musical
The Secret Garden" opened at the
Kennedy Center.
Wot everyone is happy with the
dinosaurs arid genies. "Our expecta-
tions have been towered,* complains
Claudette Horowitz, president of the
Maryland Music Teacheni Associa-
tton. Says Gutterman: "Mainstream
piano music is a little watered down
from what it used to be. 4 *
Instead uf rnauislreani books. Gut-
terman uses ones written for the Suzu-
ki method. First designed for ihe v-.nhn
by Japanese violiiust Shimchi Suniki.
the method now a tauxht to about
Climbing Jacob 5
Ladder
The Enduring Legacy or African-
American Families
By Andrew Billingsley
nMfjM«» Sim"* & Sctuuttr arm
"CltmbinR Jacoo'S Ljdder" <the utle
corne? trom the spirMuaE "Mt* Are
CltmbinK Jacob's Ladder "1 explores
the «inr* tjiacic flSiienence in ibis
fountrv The booh mctuites ibe evolu*
itOn of families freni tbeir unpins ,n
Africa, 1 h rough :be slave ir.ioe. ih*
I immrdiatelv Jlier s|av#rv. the
.essiuJ bLtch tjusinc^^
'U1 hen lie n-liJfk 4Cht
warittng,; p-.i'-iu'
-basses, ihc upward
.ors. ' He idds duH
ani itevs 'o rhe > rstt
'a mi lies, utir -opt-fn,
JJlCltlV.' H
Prqfwsor adtingsk
J 'Ji 1 - ;'•<. -n* ■:!:? (Or :
jttapUPilifv of black
ne discusses such m.i
parent : a mi lies, run;
imJ jbjnooneU dilkfri
rsn-Jiie prt^gnancn
■,iimes exist in alack
,UtS, it sn'c UUtle -
itianjly on ihe success
who have overcome
The AuihDr ts an mc
THE SUN February 22, 1993
UM to offer a master's
in tderx>mmunicatlons
Telecommunications ts a black
art that demands not only hard-
ware and software skills, but also
expertise In ever-shifting stand-
ards, a hundred different national
policies and a thousand undocu-
mented traditions.
Perceiving a void In traditional
Instruction In the field, the. '
verafty of Maryland at Coll
Far* p lans to offer a master's de-
gree program In telecommunica-
tions that will draw on four areas
of the university.
WIHIam Destler, head of the
electrical engineering department
at College Park, will head the pro-
gram, which is subject to final ap-
proval by the state Higher Educa-
tion Commission.
The growth In the telecommu-
nications Industry has been
greater than the growth tn the
computer Industry In the last 1
years," Dr. Destler said In discuss-
ing the need for the program.
The Idea for the program was
offered two years ago by a Digital
Equipment Corp. executive who
felt lhat many skilled technical
people still lacked an understand-
ing of the policy and regulatory
Issues that are critical In the field.
Eventually, MCI Communica-
tions Corp. and Bell Atlantic
Corp. Joined with DEC In helping
to develop the program; the three
companies have committed more
Saturdat,Jamar(23, 1993
Bahai Chair Filled at U-Md.
■ Suheil Bidi Bushrui was installed as (he lirst B.inn
Ch.iir (or World Peace during ."i ceremony Jan 1 5 i
the Center for Adult Education at the University c
Maryland at College Park.
The chair was established by the university's Cen
ter for International Development and Conflict Man
men hr> umies abom agement and the Bahai community of the United
ijntarmnaitntua States to promote alternatives to the violent resolu
; °™ <Snj°in rt Gm 'i"" °f conflict through conflict management, educa-
L^nrrnan 01 ine Joinnjon, development and spiritual awareness.
»Vo'wM > mV« 'opo Bushrui, an authority on Bahai affairs, is a member
,i jrmi jrm gained of the board of the International Temple of Under-
QEirLr nvr--ir-n_- m mr il W
BlacksflcrupvnMirer ..
-iiioni m ihe Tniltran «anmng
tettntHS. -uui riiu4i y
■. h rnment or anyotrwr
Or \i\ \mentin wcie
3ecau» milnary ;r
Waghington Tectinplogy
THlHSDAV,Kll r AJlT2fl, IW3
Degree In Technnlofff Management Offered
^etoasfyingtimllost
IN THE NEWS
Theater Scholarships
Offered at U-Md.
■ Talented high school and com-
munity college students may apply
and compete for theater scholar-
ships at the University of Mary-
land's College Park campus.
Creative and Performing Arts
scholarships will be given to five in-
coming undergraduate theater stu-
dents. The awards are full-tuition
scholarships renewable for up to four
years of undergraduate study.
The Theatre Patrons Association
will award two $1,000 scholarships
to theater students entering the
university as full-time freshmen in
1993-94.
Requests for applications for the
scholarships should be made no lat-
er than Feb. 10. For more informa-
tion or applications, call Kate
Ufema at 301-405-6686.
, [4 .
■■ ,t, i
U**Wl irflfpwwiurt i* **■ nP.tn p———tc-i
\ in*" i H-n-i ti
niirjcv i-i-wap
I* Hi- j in t*PjrfKrt*> ■
UtrJrNI "in* >1) pal linKr *hrt*n r*
|4fdltPW ■H>j1*'<ii*
Wui^NH H> pne-»« l^ji- ,pr iHr*l>
Hifii«inm ii<nn.-iQPi IM >". ™lni* tnmr
rl lA -* - "■-■Jrl ■! 1 11 ■."> | |1 r '
ifcaiiw iww. ii f"" ■--■"■■-
. it]i>H+^Hi r.jHif-fl'Wtlwml KlfnMi
£- »i-*» 'U.rf"-!^ rn
"I KShjutin nvt^Jtound m
l-V llr|(lYl V.1r)r4 rjTi^JjTW 1 !! M?r»fl <•> lM
PWdjIWIi m'P l(rwif» M»il i|-l"^ J hJIif
r^VvMVji to i^h l^rirnjlogj huuniii
M JftrHit Hrr*in4 r^rBtrhK 4if*wi—v*
.t IM i intmifl ( «niihi4 "»*
rjondl^-i W 3?* !'
If l^rrSlt,tH-A tit 1 UJ Tl ^-J7\ — irlff
Hunt *Hhm( 'tf Pu*Vj* 1 CPrmjuf in
awn* rjl muff hr 1h» rTuv»[m % •.\tK.r-
ii rmJirjfpH mi^ Hiwl^lPinK-ril 'inprj 'p
i.'ti-ti*"» 1^> tiUtt tVjrt a 1 •■'■I'h r-i n
""■tl Of WOut 139.000, r'n-fji-rl n.i.l
*n egm »« r«t tfTfr-Mi >te i*ff\i
^-,
-Hil F»
"ijrffll ir-r UrUI I 1 U<y WjHtjOl .*.
*-rt^ral lotiiMii
■H WIHUfl U irtO .n tmrv H»pfDi
e*n*« I 'Ili'lH
U-4 J>r*m i?.i* ni
unqpmi^ lrjf Ihi
.rit s'.-irf: ill |k
*gg*
"'Or,
;""•' Mr.
Wtai
TejMn- +- *iun m 'urh .ifwt u
* Scr-nol ni *iJm*»cnl Iril^'u
•i HiYirftt rrilieinli
■p in* ii>v M*jt
l|(" <ir"-J l***fl ■rvwifii tn 1st
*TJ -wwvfl+1 it \<r+# D,(P;1 Tt i *iM in
flfimhiKi^ est ■*.<!> a UPrfn* ffwufl "Imi
T»a" net
CflUf 1 '*^ *ii" rrw-'Jilr l^*H tMr^l*H
i-i#«H ,-r.lhirl ■n-fhUPhem nt nnhlri,-
rt*"i*m L iU'ruumri Fnrtl.piiiJrtrCt .n
rKrV<iir: •* *r "it*l
Chi" r'h.M'ij* itnrk rw^ '*4m- in H ti" 'it
. 'I. i-„r . ■ Ftltffi ■■■■■ ."iTrl^.iimwrr !■
'.DnHhTH JilF hO r1«jfn '-ruiill Tl fBIVLIIr
Mttmwn *rt»ti w*u^n rjHrHiH tiHhr
■4n,w" I .|Tf*|w.-
u
JUNE 14
19 9 3
In early May Roger Mclntire, professor of psychology, was interviewed by the
ABC Radio Network; WAJV1U, Washington; and WPBY, Madison, Wisconsin
regarding his research into the reasons students drop out of college {see print
story, page 10).
CLIPS ISSUE
Stephen Leatherman, professor of geology, was interviewed May 13 on the
"NBC Nightly News" concerning the problem of beach erosion and national
flood insurance (see print story, page 7).
THE NEW YORK TIMES OP-ED SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1993
rmiflsc*' w» '3 'WJ THE jUiV
OPINION • COMMENTARY
Race-Based Scholarship Programs
CoUeoaftirfc
In March R&rhard Riley- the new
secretary of the Department of
Education, wrote to til university
exoreaau^ hia support I
scholarship*. By doing
for
Pork Barrel in Low-Earth Orbit
Dy Robert L, Park
w
Wash [niacin
till* utUrf
space ba-
llon rvMfSB>
lirnrr
lor buil^iM
cut*, Hrick
I'lirr, ppcMdcnt Of Wonderworks m
I i*m Afl&k't, Is I'^r--! *.i\v,'. i ntw nm
ri'UE'l '.■.■ n,', i wjjrkt rn.il!'"; st'lllf
tnmlfls. slhIi as thr Star Shifi Fnicr-
piisr, Ehe Hint ■ : m ho . li also n. -.-
Ilie tiunk'!> trf Spare Station FrrtHlnm
rllBl NASA USPS Ifl |'.| --:i»';r.rs:i! I.lili--.
I Imi-' hrivp bp™ a Inl or Freedom
ItttdtsH ihr-u-nNilr^r Milium hl^ tuCL-n
MHfarifpwd llvrhme? In Ihp Fast nErtr
yplts Knrh lime ll war made MiiaH-
fi In rflnnmuMll r»r soaring ro^p
s n tvpn in iiyh n k«kt Hfea
NASA will pr-l Russian CtJOperaEiiPn on
thr prnijr-n, the Whhetimjsp •natj
FlPCduin to En* shumk Ittlm They
shiNilil *;|t?f (hemvlves ihp Irniibpr
mil ih»p i'"- Ma mm nijir ij;h(
)ljr big uparr sfallnn rpol rar I epp s
hL.. M I . ,.,, I| |f,,,..t.,i. .nv! |L,«..|ni-
jik 4 urn i nrrif l.iinNm very loudly aboui
I hi' liilpii ■-tip ink ^.nr Iticy know Epmw
rkw Hk? niojn-i «me to bring killed
Hie innvKUmi Is Rinwino, 1haJ In*
•Mmim i" ilt nrvrr he hulll — 1hai ll is
Irrlnp k--pl :divp iriprotuft- jinhs initio
dTUps*Pil w ttfy m f industry.
lln- tumble is. mi erne rnms iu
know wEijiI Sn-iri- SUirinn Froedum is
SUppor^d In tfri "ftp pan. folio* QUI'
lIpMlW lo thr *la T *," President Ron-
.-lit! Hrtpan said In a 1$U Sprrrh
fc*jft*H 1 IW njrrMfrsw nf fihw
■i ■- ■!! '■■■ t.jm jffiiir itf nUirjhfami
I In i- space 'J Hniii 1 1 1 1 1 l-.i
llw Alas. I nM-i.hi(i"i i c . mi i bended for
thi" stars, IF i s" destined fur Inw-F.nrth
mhll, .i "Tj"irm nf spsif kucrivl w^fh
(pr^H^Bf tm l^liltwl by i nn,r. ■ ■! . pi
Crjtllrp mlit^jtm^ The nnly IIHflR Vt*K-
dnm mipihi dlRi*WT <■<> n I ■--■ ia r>f hn-
it.iii wji'i-- [titwtl nvi-.l. .-..I hum
Russia'ii Ftpair Stoilhtn Mir
I nmifh'i! T>y The Bnvirl Mnbnn )iih,1
l-HtnrmHi*, jilh'i Mr Rocijqnn' aipPOfh,
Mil' has !- :. .i -IV I . .-li--l.il->:! ■. i»
njpJril tot (VVn yrars. C(hu aflciHJfl
tasmrmDUI-i haup |t?s|«| Ihfir endur-
iim-f hi i!n' Iihs-LIIh' i-rkvirimmf-tiL <i r
■^ 1 1 "i 1. 1- DUl Itn >\ * i n ■«-.< i J i . ii . ■"i.n>
|il|-.riicaT'itr.. h:iV" (jr»p(5 meBJ^CF 1 OrtCO
a^kpd lUl- (...■! |l|.r-| t1l-Al\ III Ml' Nl :■,■■■" I
■fVtS iflfno<- imiRMm whal Iherns-
rTFonaiii s cm Mil dnall day " thi-y Irv
in tiny nH*r>." t»r rpplJiNl
In iriFlh. ihfpr is Utile plw lo 4a in »
^parr slBlmn Wllb humini'- humping
Ahfml, ipnr-r plmlcri-ntl arr Ion itntla
ble lor hipjb- p r so I in Irm aslroiyinura} nr
1- -ii ill uhscfvatifrnn Ai»d rnpci'lalkiniK
fin Kpurc m^niifjrLUllliE Hirni'i] ■ h 1 1 m
br wildly option*) |r tlier*- ■-„'■ <[*■• n
ffliHW fliiii M miah-1 bppunsihlf inirtrw
morrprrf«t rrvsmK In t.fw*T Hul
afler Ifl yean oJ JrK*an:h. I| serins
XeTft ftravily has no plfnl m all on
erynlal .Rttmlh, i( Ii dnrs, Itw rryslals
n rt- m likely io hr *ti r h> as to lie lw| IK
Abnul all that M"-m n m-- nS 1 1 ^ ilinv :
■ ■■■■-■ii . uii-.i i. is io .....|.,,.. nu s .
Eugunna. I'hc awlut ffmwflni*rn-f". dl pm-
poPRI^ *f ythi le«t<rt«M( on LhP human
I ""!■■' - Ml-: 'i.ii il|ll| -Us. ■!*-■- ■ ■ r- n ■ ■ .,: •
nrrvp (Jtgnsni mn Md inimnire
lyslrfTI n-i| i.- ■■:.!. nol lo if mi
■'"■-■■'■ '■■■ ■ Theiw arp sriHJH'i P-rntHlrm^.
bnl It tt brt clrjir lhal .* - ■-.i-il.- tirlpbr
ijm(il" lor niiirirwr 1Q ynai* nrt|| mill
miM'h In 4na1 is .itrf-iiJv Known
NASA STPtcis In Jw innninr IM " nl
WtpTf kmetn* In rnjidui'1 cm humans On
Shutlle mii'-iM:!'. j| lUl I'limhl l.h
Miirjyinji; nllH-r hfc Inline A 1^1 IINiR.
51™ vidrofaped l,*Si ffllirli^i b^hu
mliiR m Tfiu (iraVHy NASA .■,-:. .|
1hal lhr jrllylish sorm^il nmlu^cl
.this wan, uilkpwftj by mudles of Ihc
n ■ ■*■' h -r '.i imc mold i ii ihnvt-« r i opd,
morr rcronlly, an rj<prnrarn1 In an-
swpp- wrml d NASA ptfSS tr-k-amr tUBeA
"a ba^Lr bhikO^ical quPtiicin: 1« graViiy
psspnilal 1o thr nurmal fprl it lull lun nf
frog etps and thn oj» ty (le^rhiruiirn I or
f-fOP.FL 7 " i;nt|Hilr';. en';. i-ivi-hJ In -.|m i
you KM be rellevn] pg Ifnrri, appear 1w
ba rmriii.-il NASA did mil indiral?
whtHwr ihc m ■ l| » ■>■ ■, r-frmpd rnfif u^^d
Ihls klori til injur mir-r inn uiH^n'E
tWH rtwap , I hp sIilii I Ep pTDJp !>1" i" f ^' I
mnro lhan tS hillnvl a yraT. ilttnog
wlnrli umr EC gpls of | about ■*
laimrhps Ihc nirrrnl spa*- p. *ift|inn
DPSigM wOUlc! i«]\KFT 1H '.Ehilllr- |lij!.|iiii
lor assembly. Ihat -I'.-ni up ntjiirrti
J3U htllLori pii| (nr slMJlllr rosls -
abnul $19 Em 1 1 ion innrp lhan NASA En
ftuord In lis lair-n roAL psiimatri Ar
tfjujinfinji irvrnE nrlnlp In Hus npits-
paper, adding rralisnr ntimliprs far
shutllo mLssirm^ wnuld morr LEian rlni!-
Wp eEm- sm lion's tirial i-ini f^iimalP
Mm-v eup MiH-lt wiib Mir ! KrHtilnh>d
Im liiinnli En iW^Mir-a wiisniHriidpii
EuiriPvl thf 'f M ilri L ni;r'fiij|Ti Frppftaim
Hnw ItH'V h&W jHn|ifrMiJ a rtiriiu.pl
Ewiwppii l : pi-rdrtrn and Mir-2. In IHp
UTPiinlrPirip. lhr-v an irrnidp ^Triippnn
Elm firsi Mir lit urtvHWP -*-ili a nnlr
b-nd rurreni y
AilJ HJri-|\nm lu n rinr,Pl Up n'J'^icn
l-rprdniii, Emwrvi'i. must fir lukm ipt
We have no
scientific need for
a space stat ion.
T
1 1 ■!- ■ . i ii lo huEkl a
paMtv Million, hovtwe,
li.irt 111 tin lo iI'p Wltll Pt
Ehrr ipipnce or Wbbjiju>
kti El INM in '■■in' i !'"-.■
visibJp ili-poniiiininm
nf American ■ ■-- m:.i ■■ m pn -. | ■.-■!
lEy En SJWfC af ^oWtipvp uiamrnl of llw
culilwjr WiiE' i En n.lhi-t^:!- i.r I Ell '.I,-. I
rl Union, (TrroViin is as ottMilrtr nv
an-niEwr P-51 bomber boBV
And wtial ■ ■ i ■- « >h> (tffiDaBHW!
i ■ i--.-- ■■■■.■■ ■>■■'■ with Anipriins pariftrt"-
1n IhP tjmfP sifllinu Japnr>, fannda
nod 11 Mir- I i u mm' .1 n tMUGHHf* I'll-!.!!
EhtIIs nl ihp sptH-r slatrim haw
wartipJ da i hlv uf 1 hr t OTPSitpupr¥-cs or
kfritlfl rlown UU# mlfiflalirmnl fwrl-
o* r Fs E |jpp| solat lhr tally re^iwMiv ftoin
Ehr papini-rfc MtfmbtTtf Innih lEk* 1 a
"■lj;ll nf : i !■■ f :! . I V.i-.. -I I M| i |. IO .■■(•.
w|ih ihi'ii own nAMMe prol>Epms
Im I ris Anfj-k'., In ii ft I h riEP nl Wim-
■ I .-.■-.- !■ t., |., • in fUM --■. ■nk mi .\
i\f* ^|kh(. M;Hmn fiiortrl sonai Jifti-r
J 1I1H' I. l1w OPUdluEP EnE T4AKA Tip
pimllirr a nrm rtesEgpp
In WashiMitrun. IEpp w'HUp ||<i»P*iP
ha^ EJuHfUrfiPH : i- NASA Adpnimslra-
inr. lijiiih'l ■ ; .i - -. to wj:rhi friWi ripr
RMMbMi in | hi rp ■ ■ ■ 1 13?. ill** nr-u. | ■ I ■ 1 1 ■-
I !,- -ii mm-; is ihpeLisy pari; lhr hnrd
[mi i is .-. -,i' 1 1 mii' why w jw Eicpinn pi
Nip hi:. pjnfnrjrM in pm ■>« i. ■ S13.
!i 11 I mi -Ml 1<( EtS r-'.. -• 1 -. I I
he imrdJed ihiL lhr depirtmenE
mlgbl Bonn reverse tKc poaEElon It
liad taken during th* Uu*h admml*
I ration. The let'ter wu henided by
many, and criticized try others, u
liavinjl legalized she ink V nee*
Ejued schcp]3npht[)t, Surh Lt not Ihe
cane. The lasiie of thr trgd Ul v of rore-
baserj flntinc|aj-ajd pnjgrami can be
aetfJed only try the court*
In -in important real ra.w, Pod-
berroJry v. Kinxcm. « ctnlltdftt Itu
been raised to Ihe LeftaJlty of a ri«-
baaed aid program . the Benjamin
Etanneker Scholsrahipj. At the Uni-
versity of Maryland at College Park
The outcome of th la case couUl go a
Ioiir way mwanl delermlnlng Ehe
Tale nf ail program* thai target achol-
arahlp rimd» lo merubcrt of a par-
ticular minority ftroup, Including the?
Meyertioff Program at the Unlveralty
of Marytand BpUimon: County.
Since 1068. each |iubllcunlveral'
ty In Maryland haa been under a
cojrt onJcr, inltlaEed try the CfTlce of
i:\vU ftlghla, to oeveiap rirograma to
produce student enrcMjcneritB mote
[import loniHrty reEaraentativeof the
Afrli .iri-Aiiirrir..din EjopularJon In the
mile as a whole- Similar mandalca
were given to all other states thai
Linfll the nEld-]y&Ui had operaEed
fpegjTgjiErd school ayiiema.
The Banneker scholarship pv.--
gram was created In 1973 as pari of
the unlvrrsJty's naponae 10 tnli fed-
eral mandate. In Its present form,
the program annually provides ap-
pnttlmaEely 30 four-year "full cost"
schola rshlps to black entering fresh-
By WILUAM E. KIRWAN
DtstriCt Court Challenging the Irgall-
ly of the Banneker program becairae,
since tie la not black, he *,aa not
allowed lo compete fur one of in
wholarahlDL
Laat npeing (he Distrtcf Coun
ruled that the ejdatence of Ene Ban-
neker program did noi Violate Ihe
taw bocauae. among other reasons,
the federal mandate to the Inatltu-
U«l n-malneil In dTctf. Mr. Pudber-
esky [Jien appeoled lo Che U.S. Court
of Appeala, i«hleh reversed the ded-
stcrn a.nri r^ijlod for Efw dlamanEllryg nf
the Banneker program unkesa the
university could demonstrate that
there were present efTFcla of past
dlscnmlnatlon. The university baa
now returned to DuUrtct Court to
piusLNl such a Cazsr.
Some may ask wby the untversfty
la prefjared to gjo to such lengths to
matntaln Its Banneaer program The
For ihe present
race based schalarsh ip
programs can promote
black participation in
higher education.
blacks, stereotypes that rontinue lo
adversely affect the academic per
farmince and lulurr well being "i
black studenls. As a conaeojuencr.
anaoiig the prtdDmlriam rthnkc and
racial groupa in Maryland, onlv
blacks remain urtdrr- represented oei
the College Park campus in oornparl-
son with their pr es e n ce m Ihe rocal
The BknnekrT students at CoUoje
Park graduaEf at an extraordinarily
high rate, roughly W percent <\\ncr
live Inception of the program They
serve as outaLanddng role models I'ur
all atudenta. most especially for oth-
er btack studenla Their presence la
an essential element In the diversity
of the campus And, aa their ranks
grow, Banneker alumni 9n an In-
valuable aid En recrulD ng other black
atudenls.
A mcaauTC d [he effeel^i^neas of
BauiFwker Program Is that laat year
the University of Maryland ai Colaege
Park ranked Jim In ihe naiEon
In 1 990 Daniel J, Pod bereaky ap-
plied fnr admlsBUon lo the university
and for a svholanhtp open to all stu-
dents that, like Lainneker, provided a
four-year "full eost" scholarship
baaed on academic" merit, Mr, Pod-
bereTky was adrrdlled la ihr imivrr-
ally but was not a warded a scholar'
ship. He then filed suit In Ihe US
tfitOHEBDAY, APBEt Z1 L Ifg
main reason Its dlirctly tied Co a moat
unfortunate aspect of ihe mslltu-
Uon'spaaL
L?n[J] Ehe 1 9SOs, [ tse unlwrafly re-
flESed ad ml ssion tP buKka — I ndud ■
ing. ll was widely recalled at the time
of his death. Thurgood EriaTshall The
state's long history of dlncrlmlruiilbn
In denying black cfllrena the right lo
attend lu Largest and academically
moat rivanced institution has had
an Impact on the social and eoonom-
lc well tjdng of many of the parents.
grandparents, leachera and fiuid-
arpte ccunseEora of loday's college -
aged bbwk student poputstain.
These consequences of past dis-
crimination linger on in the negative
attitudes some members of the black
community hold toward the univer-
sity. Equally regrettable are the neg-
ative stereotype* held by some non-
THE SUN
biack Lu the number of blacks rrcrfv-
log bachelor's degrees. One would
have though! such a result would
have led u> a odj (or emulation of Ihe
progrsm at universities aeroaa the
cOu 1 ■[ ry not an aider to dismantle ft.
Should the University of Mary-
land or any unhemiy continue race-
baaed ■cJaaarshlp nrugnun* indefl-
nliely? nbvlously not. Bui for the
present they should be allowed to
continue to use one of (heir mosi ef-
fertivr means for o^manstraElE^ to
blacks that today's universities ait
not what thry used, td be and [h*|,
with grrater participauon by blacks,
they can become even better.
We can all Look forward lo a day
when blacks participate In higher
education in raroportlon to their per-
cent of thr oranerall poisjlaEion. Then,
perhaps, special measures such aa
the Banneker piutnun will no. kmger
be required. Much as we might wish
It ofherwfae. thai day haa not yet
arrived.
WUUam E. rtlrwan la president rjf
at i^aiva itoim »i coi
OPINION • COMMENTARY
Partners in Space
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Tup TitwdCTW rrnr N'ltiH.Areii 11. 1«l
A Shrewd Investment
In Performing Arts
As dean pf t be coJ]*g* of arts
i puf hii ft iariit Ha, wruch utctudei
ihe departmetits of music, cheater
and dance. I would hke eo correct
sornc mi$petcepttons about rhe
proposed Center for the PerEorm -
i riB Alta Jt (he University .o f
Msaa aaaaJ IT B fi S p ^ r ' k ' _
First, the center u part of a
long-term and Jocig overdue effort
by the university to rebuild its
academic mfrast nscl urr.
In lysi the uncveraty's mascer
plan identified the need for new
da^sraom, studio, office and per-
formance space. But as of l$8&.
based on state planning guide-
lines. College Park remained
more than a miDion scjoare feel
ibort of space for these and other
academic funcEtofis-.
The Tawes f ii» Arts Building .
rtome to the departments of music
and iheater, and the Wnrid War
IJ'Vintage temporary' buildings
where dtnee is located, represent
some of the rttosi inadequate
housiing for arty of Colrege Psrk's
arf*lefnic programs.
Tawes Theatre, the principal
performance space* is not a the-
ater at all bul a cavernous audito-
rium with ternbfc acoustics and
poor sight lines. Rehearsal space
is grossly trjsuffkicnt- Many facul-
ty offices are no more than ctibi- '
cles with folding doors. That the
(acuity arid students have been
able to build an interna [jotu I repu-
lation for ekCeUrhcr in the per-
forming arts in the face of these
inadequacies is testimony to their
talent and perseverance.
Second, unlike Ehe Kennedy
Center or che Cearge Jrfason Uni-
versity Center for Ihe Performing
Ant, the College Park facility will
contain classrooms, leaching sfu-
dno, rehearsal rooms, faculty oi-
Tices and a library. Its perfor-
nHnce spaces — an &D0- to
l.uOO-seat concert hall, a small
recital lull, a 600'Seat proeceni'
um theater and small e^uerimett-
lal [heater — are to be used pri-
manty by music, dance and
iheater students. For them, public
performance* serve the same pur-
pose as lab courses or field work
For students m science aod engi-
neering— a way to apedy their
studies m a "real world" setting.
The center -ilso will afford great-
er opportunities fqf the faculty n>
ihare [heir talents -.vith ihns*-
Ehey teach and with I be communi-
ty Jt large.
Further, is pta rote as a perfor-
mance cenler. [be complex wp||
complement, rather than compere
with, performing arts facilities in
tbe ■•» The region is amply
endowed with large-wale penor-
man« center*, tn shorter supply,
though, are intermediate-six?.
acoustLcally refined ;x-r1iirm.inii'
spaces. The proposed comple?f
will provide such spaces, making:
tt poastble lo hear artists -n .1
rpbl:vely inCiniilc setting: "•
hiving to ftll fewer seats, it will
allow the university to showcase a
diversity of renowned but special-
ised performing artists.
The proposed cenler is large
and will, therefore, be expensive,
but with good reason. First, it
combines performance and teach-
ing space in one huilrfpng. Second,
H will house three large depart-
ments. To meet these needs sepa-
rately would cost an additional
130 mil l»o.
Finally, now is a good time to
build the center. Under Ihe
slate's capital budget, the univer-
sity will borrow the money and
repay it over the ZO^year life of
the bonds it sells. With interest
rates at historic lows, this is .in
ideal time to go into the bond
market- Moreover , because of the
iluggpshness in the construction
sector, bids should enme in far
lower than I hey would have a few
>r-.irvL ,:.-i£f .,--.. r [han possibly A few
years Irom now. Finally. con-
Mmctirja r^mect of this magri^
tude shoutd aid in the economic
recovery q| the region ihrough
additional jobs and lax revenues.
The proposed Center for the Per'
forming Arts a! ihe Univrrsiiv of
Maryiand aE College Pirk thus
meets ks^pecngniied needs for
more and better space for teaching.
K the state's flagship university. It
rsBxesents a shrewd -ind 'iirieiv n-
vestment uf hoih publk: and ornate
resources *od wdl hnng rnormou-.
benefits not rmlv to stPidents and
faculty at CoUege Park bui to people
pJuoughout our region.
—Robert Griffith
thi: ,vbw v(i»w tmm> NATIONAL rtt*
Catl&tj* Parir.
Jay Lcno. with charactcrlslEc
wrt. )abbed at possible Russian
partidpn tton in Space Station
Freedom with a )oke about 330 n 1 H ■
liar loUels with Od toilet paper
Joke* aside, can the Rusaiana
he*p us? The former Soviet Union
has morr experience with JOng-ourS'
Uon orbrtaJ manned space Flight than
we dd. tta ability lo put payloads into
OttHI Is oulalandlng. and other as-
pects of IIS space technology may be
of Interest JO US.
NA5A admtnlBl rater Den CoWIn
tt irdesagnlng the space station lo
radically reduce EEa cost. One avenue
being investigated ta the posajbte use
of Russian hardware KASA selected
the East- West Space Science Center
at the University of Maryland lo *a-
ordlnate Ehe esTort under the direr-
tkmofDr- Rja^ Sagdeev, A beam of
m lo
Facts, Not Species, Are Periled
By Julian L. Simon
KBd Aaron Wildavsky
l!
"t President 'iimm m ii-' ihp
Rio arenrd pnpmieci EaJlt-tlEsd
Cftdannered species, he Will
place sc Lcnli fie truth in grcttl 1
er danger .h;si-. .'i-ilin.-i. 1
species.
A fair readinRof Ihe.LVnikiEik-.Jji.i
sufluesis q rare of ■■•! ■= m t«f]|
uneEhOu^tinrJEh at jtrcal ns doom^av-
ers clBim. IE the rale wero ,in) lowpi,
*»™|ui »tT 11 sel ( would rwed 10 be que:*.
riartrJ.
The World Wftdtifp Fund ihe num
lirentulaaior at nlai m JonUI brodKri -
■'■•- and ihe eMIivclinn nf sppcirs.
frames Ihe essup in ihe V -nk- ■ 1
■.."Mi'. "Wpihoui flrpng a shot, wc
may kill one-fpflb uf all species nf liljc
'in I his planet m ihe tu-xi Id vi-ac-.
This asserdon is utterly wunoui -ui-
rnlplic unrJerpinmnE and runspnunppi
in ah 1 be pxisimfi pviuente.
Smh ^pOCStypdc clupmi ir r nspd
lu btudftpon Ehe Federal CunfHUIHH
for money and acpion A lon*-runnm«
Toni-roPSinR pilch from 'A'nj-EiJ Wild'
life Fund's prestdenr. ■■■;:■■ R
Tram. 0>» nben ho«« ihe orgamulmn
milled supiviri for rpiuthariraiton nl
tlw Endanj(Brrd Species Act hy EOEI-
mR Cnngeess Hue "some srpE>ntK1s
IwlJewe ihal Up 1o une million ^ophipi
if hff wpII Etprnrnp fxunci bv ihp i-rnJ
ipr this cpnlury" Unless novo rnnn'im <
'da ^methinfi..'*
Mr Train .iUiIhU ■'Whm w« -Jlk
iDnul IhP loss uf nrte millain >pei'l"S.
wr jre talkma, j-boui 4 ,-i..'. ■> l.i^*
■vnl) t nnseejuences lhal scipolp ■ aip
41-arrcly brjun mi i-r.--.h- The '..= ..
-tf iEw wnrltl rtwld ihe aliprrd drai^ir^
-sJIv if w* allow a mill inn specie* '■!
Ji sarineii r by ihf vrar ^'ODCI '
]he warnlnR ■* amplpllH^d hy ihp
■ ulicj-n r.
media n»c Washington Pu*i quuipd
the claim hi| j mo S mpthsotitiin enn-
siTV.mun hi«hi(ii-.». pliomas Luvefuy.
Jfval ^ p>ilcn1ial bicilnoicJl ininSlnr-
iRotwi -if iWp plnnei u»eq<uaiiMl per-
HJifn ^ini'P Ehe Jtiupprji r? rt*"e- nl 'hC
ulnnum " DtaHoil U OCCttr Ihe Pose
Mitt cilfd Harvard UiuveEsifVA Ed'
ward O Wilson. :i bluhi||iM. un "ihe
ItHlv our descendants .ire li'M^I HkflV
lu liirflive m* " Ihe pmuLinns heoind
Such swrepmc slJiemi-Elli cause pur.
ns j ns lo heEiPve 1 ha r r(ie mul Eer n too
imporrant io be subjericcj m Ehe
■i ;ii.|.ii'.r-. nl normal scpehce.
;'-:r-.- .-r-.mr r i:l '|!i.r ■'-..' Ipadinp bp-
Ulcq[1SES ill-.l ■' iMi'iL'l^i h-T-' '>n ■■■nr.
Claims about
extinctions are
total overkill.
t.nis ar* '■i .U!Hi ■ e ie»h Prntessor ^'il-
1*" and Scuuford Lniversiiy's P^ul
EhrlEcti, j EpbalofEPSI. actually hK thai
ftuvem DIMU "reduce eJio Mialro: hu-
man jtEiviiies" They *ani u* 'ro
L-c.isr 'drvelnpnnp' any mnre rcfalivr-
l\ 1 ml: 1 1 mi I:-- 1 1 1 .iml" \---i .ni-s-r 'every
npv. sbtnUpni« LTrtlrr bulll th lEw ran-
Enrnu i'h; 1 pftirra I evry swamp
l tanrrrtetj mio a nee ruunlv nr Khn-m
■ ii -r T!.. hi: Ipss hmdiversitv. ' '
Thr - mm 1.1 : -I - " 1 r i ■ - mi alt the 1 1 11'. 1
tlyptu- :m-et,iaiMS,i JJ-Vhook. The
SjPikmjr ,\\k r " Uv .1 coirserval 1OH Wnl*
11-1 '.i.i(r,.in Myer% Vlr MtVSfi s
wurk i«i ■ m e*o seoi BtHa t<rw h t>t r.
maied "xtinrlion rale uf kHnwri ^Oe-
■ tes nf .iiiiiit.iK t^iwppa ihe iriirs
EHQQ .imE IWP I.iIxhiI nne pvery lour
v-arii .ind ihe I'^unulrd rale Imm
innn mp ir*c prevail i.ibour nins j
•.farl
Mr MvE'rs .diruptly drn;irls Imm
1(Nn* 1M1JPKI rHimilEPH .md ROPS iri|
in'hjvlbai Mjmp seienti^Es have "hai-
■ni'i^'d I MraesoT 4 'h.n ihf I'SHJnCliQn
i.ii*- fiHiU itn* Haw M-aihiHl" ton
*pr<ii-* a year. Itu^ pure iunn.i" U ii'
.ii**!! .m mi|ppt E»mu iti nrp^iti »-t-
:;•:: I. :n n[ bpCl'ief, ■» '■ ■• IrtllT'jMlJ
and used bv V 1 M vers .ind M 1 ! .111-
[oy elk rhc kvm ior Hip :pnfmf m:ji*
«nrnrrdevervwh*TE^
In fjt-l. IV liftfttiy — .iltPT nn-
•L'erEinsi ,111 -Mimjir.^ npp-r I01111 iimip
J irfiuii- -■.;,;:!. iM — -aifl 'i. ■ f&#(S
■ i -.-i.i . . :■, m is.'tikplvm'i'.IU ' 'ii
iMCexlinruon dl 14 lu JO pCrdHI uf nl
species helure the year TOW.
Ur Uiivpfnv* i-utuic turn •'.irr.
wtu-rh h a pftounitmi ikw* jo--
Phan (he nbMpveu raif. ts pun- MMfr
uiurk Vet 11 Is wrJrlv published .mil
'-crnncuusly viewed js wtrnlil 11 Elii-i
I n ^tri kkn m ihe mid- 1 !»«'* m \e*'
ScipnlnE oiaa-Wim- Jrt rtew^Piiper^. :rt
Nwfc* .ind jE i."ontprTnreS. ]nnn <■! u>
tiavp .11 h imfninJ iEw iiimpJi'ir in-
wtK* rrf .'vidrme EtiT tor 1 unii ibji
lhr i-xLinclwo -n ^pniet ts nOina uu
rapkity — ur >'**-n jiuinp up .11 .ill.
Nil ..lie ti.i'. U ! ' CI 1 ! i"'iJ i-ur .!..i ■ !•
pjinn Vor Un* nnyone incd new n*
drnr? Lhai ^tiuld drnvoosiraie tnpni
DUincEKHi Instead, unttE retonllv, ihe
tm ilEMi^E -. -iiiiniHhj" ihp .ll.nm -iri-ipn-
ittnorrd thedatJ ih^iEitiuEk'^tti'nJinrii
I'iaini^
Dm rpci-nlly Ehe World CumsenMi-
■ ■ 1 in Coitui <jiutilrdu^l nn mtajirv nim
ihe p*ieni uf r'xtinciktna. "Troimai
l"i rni.'.;i,Mioi! .ind ip'.i i-/. F£xlpni
llun." El'CIV nun ir ■ k in-l.-. ■.:■■• ■'
mat The lilt vi knuwn pxtinrlam^ 1um
been ,tnd iimunui k » em Emj *pi^' i>h*
(hie wrtile Tun^l* "f ihe £nsTCfH
I "iicU Slates wpre rLilwcd mrr ei«i
MHUiauH in '1 n: ; ■■: .i" -- ] .
pert mi nl ifHfir irfltWWll "MriJH
l>ulnm ^tiis. .rfiUKinm, unlv ijlr''
fOresJ EilrdsMrnl Mm '
We jfp ileliiJiJilPU itiai IhiK -ih-hi—
■H imih. Hi4du> we irMAij;*ii w,ii> i|tjU
iv li n mi: im'h i.l.-
Prcsidenl ■ lnuim thnutJ \. •■*■>! \tm
.1 =11 un 1 *h nit -1 leniifn' .u.JH.-'-.^mi-nr V*
sfp- noi -Li^vMinK lEiJi he an Hi"
pikKsphpe ilnnBCr* HI *pp»-ir~*. Itui %■
<-rvnnr should Man Frnm iffl tHMW»rd
nfw nl the j.iiii-- iiml hteowsi iniuiEir
in ivlp iwditf iww mnrh nine ■■■■'
oprl-
lary-
Ihcy
tyof
and
cost
tyet
Jibe
f pt>
sign
ileal
0y RAMON E LOPEZ
hardware into the design 0/ ihe
space slaLJon. however, a inafor tils-
toncal mlleslone has been BnaaWd
The space age Is a child of ihe
Coltl war. bom of ranfrontaEtoiv
When the Soviet Union launched lis
first Baielllte In 1957 Americans
were frlghtrned: U tt could launch a
satellite Into orbit, IE could drop a
nuclear bomb anywhere on earth.
America wu no longer sale behind
Eta oceans. The race to the moon was
really a bout who would gain the high
ground of space. President Kenne-
dys Apollo and Mlnuteman pro-
grams were flip Sides, df the same
With Ehe ■■■ollFip-se ebI the Soviet
empire, many tt Ihe reasons for con-
frontation arid competition in space
have evaporated. This takes some
gelling used to For example. U-S.
Law still classifies many types of
spare-flight hardware as munitions
for which aperJaJ import and export
Ekxnsesjare. nmlal
Surprisingly the Strategic De-
fense Initiative Organl£anon haa
been qufck to sdjust. IE purchased a
couple of Russian Topaz II space nu-
clear reactors that may be used Eo
power electric ihrustcrs in ■ luture
test mlaatan The kata of buying Rus-
stan reacton to power * "Star Wars"
misaun would have been laughable
Just a few years ago. And so would
cooperation With Russian spare en-
gineers! on the crown jewel of the
American manned apace program,
the apace station.
We have much lo gain from this
kind of exchange. America and the
Soviet Union operated under differ-
ent sets of constrain ts as they [rterl
to solve many of the same problems.
not aurprtsliidy. ihe I
-ttijflsuAT, APRIL j
came up wtth different sets uf mlu-
ISons and IcchnofOgKa. By combin-
ing areas of strength, we could be
abte to do many things hetter and
cheaper. The space station may be
one of thoar thtngs.
Given (he g&pihal nature uf so
many proUems today, n ts possible
that coJlaboratkm In space may also
help drive collaboration on earth. At-
ler alL the perspective is rfearer f rum
space. Pictures sent back by ihe
Apollo spacecraft showed the earth
as a fragile blue sphere suspended In
Inky InflnLEy. The image provided a
Jolt to Ihe collective human con'
sdouanesa of greater long-Eerm sig-
nificance than the shock of the first
Scndet Spulnlk For Ihr first time we
BW ourselves as passengers On
Spaceship Earth Spare teehnoiof^ r
will play an Increasingly crttJcaJ role
In resource manage menE , pollution
control and commonteattons. We
should not forget lhal by helping
Russia market Ehe1h1ngs that Kdoesi
best, such as spare technology, we
help Ensure that Ehis great |and sitll
n in- 1 Mr -.Lnnert: nailpn continues to
ptay a construclEve rale En the world
It seems Inevitable lhal the Amer ■
lean and Russian space efforts will
become more intertwined We should
look Id (he future of space explorm-
llon as a common expr e ssion nf Ehe
human need lo expand our horrzons,
with all nations contributtng what
Ehey can. And if we look up fnlo the
night sky and see a space station
that rmbodfes that principle in ns
very construction, all the better.
■^i*j ■ Lrii iODAt
Managed trade can help
OPPOSING VIEW
Our trade deficit increased by $19 bD>
Uon Last year, and increasing deficiti
rcwJd bring a prematu re end to Ihe re-
covery, Some of our
tnoH imponant stko
cesses in rcdudtig the
trade deficit have
come from aprec-
ments specifying nu-
merical targets tpr
[-..: r !: .-.j 1,17 products
such as semiconduc-
tor!, and mobile radio
sy items. 1 process
now known as man-
■Wttl Lrade
Most of our definE
is with a few other
cu'j nines, in a few large industries. Man-
aged-trade agreements ivith these na-
tions could reduce our oven! dchcii by
at least 75% (163 billion}, create over I
million jobs and reduce uriemptoymeui
b> -inc perccntisc point Tax receipts
•vould rise and welfare spending wmdd
rati. Cutting the budget deficit by at least
S3 .7 MIL on the first yearn 172 bubon in
five yean, While budget dehrm dont
cause trade dcnciis, ending trade dclkits
can improve the budgcl siltiatiori,
The United Slates u, about io impose
lariOi on steel, which would eliminate
many imports. Other governments, are
likely to retaliate, A market-^hartne
agrtertirm lo end this trade dispute
could reduce trade tensions.
Trade rrucnagemeni must go be>ond
opening foreign markets. Thnx*quarters
of our deficit with Japan ii 1 tt the auto
motive sctwr. U^l manufacturers cani
penetrate ibe markel (n supply Japanese
assembly plants here because of their
dost itiauonsrupi with botnocountry
njppuen. Japanese firms should be re*.
quired to tneel much btgber levels of hy
cal content hoc, as ihcy do in Europe.
Free trade worts when market* are
Ceded. When they aren't, rules can of
im improve their performance Mm-
atrd trade is a brtlge between dintrcriE
markrt syitems. Wiih ll we can slop
■eSing Japan and other countries lo
make (heir markets lonk like ours.
JUNE 14
19 9 3
U
CLIPS ISSUE
On May 20 Roger Segalla, coordinator of the University Health Center's Alco-
hol and Other Drug Prevention Programs, appeared on WTTG-TV, Washing-
ton, and Prince George's Cable TV News discussing preventive and
educational measures to deal with student alcohol use (see print story, page 7).
MONDAY, MAY 3. 1993
DROPPING OUT: College students who live off
campus, work long hours or have fewer than two school
friends could be at risk of quitting, says professor.
ID.
Off-campus
living a top
dropout risk
By Tamara Henry
USA TODAY
Living off campus, working
long hours and having fewer
than two campus friends are
telltale signs of a potential col-
lege dropout, says a study by a
IjlMESiS Marvi^d osy -
a?oW^prDreS^^ ^^^
itoger Mcinore's survey of
910 students on the College
Park, Md., campus identified
predictors of whether a college
student will drop out Living off
campus is the strongest, poor
academic standing one of the
weakest Financial difficulty is
another major factor.
"Students consumed by
work and travel find the final
step of quitting college an easy
one — a simple schedule ad-
justment" concludes Mclntire.
The study specified students
were at high risk if they:
► Worked more than
hours a week.
► Paid more than 30%
their own expenses.
► Commuted eight minutes
or more from home to campus.
► Spent less than two hours
a week socializing on campus.
► Commuted more than 13
minutes to work rrom home.
► Had fewer than two
friends on campus.
Mclntire says campus jobs
and affordable housing might
help students stay in school.
21
of
Coping
The WAsniwrrw Post Monday, A run. 12. 1 993
Disabled Students Face
The College Challenge
Special Services Help Diem Handle Problem Situations
By Dave Ungrady
While searching for 3 college a
few years ago. John Benison
encountered an eye-opening
experience.
The Worcester. Mass., na-
tive had an interview with an admissions
representative of a small liberal arts college
in nearby Andover.
The representative said "he wouldn't ad-
mit me because they didn't want to be
responsible for my self-esteem when I failed
out of school," says Benison, who is legally
blind. "I Found it real surprising."
So Benison opted (or George Washington
University (GWU) in the District of Colum-
bia, a college be believes fits his needs. "I
was looking for a big school where I was
going to get individualized attention," says
Benison, a communications major. GWU
provides several services for the disabled,
he says, including allowing him to take
untiined exams and offering exams in large
print
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 declares
that no student can suffer discrimination
because of a disability. And a mandate of the
Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990
reinforces the concept of reasonable accom-
modations in education for the disabled.
As a result, conditions for disabled stu-
dents have improved dramatically over the
last two decades, and area colleges now
have offices that deal specifically with disa-
bled students. For example. Disabled Stu-
we brought students onto a college campus
that was so totally Utopian in regards to its
access and its total lack of barriers to be
dealt with," says Scales, who uses a wheel-
chair because he has been disabled by polio
since he was 18. "I'm not so sure that would
really be in the student's best interest in
preparedness in going out and living in the
real world."
Chris Powell's real world includes being
disabled by cerebral palsy since birth. The
22-year-old Takoma Park native started his
first semester as a math major at li-Md. in
January.
His tiny, on -campus dorm room is typical-
ly collegiate: A boom box sits atop his
bureau near a pile of fruit and jars of peanut
butter and jelly. A Redskins poster hangs
above a mini-refrigerator. A television is
placed near a desk filled with books and
notes.
Powell's life, however, reflects little nor-
malcy. Cerebral palsy is a disorder of the
nervous system that causes defective motor
functions. Powell has difficulty standing on
his own. He walks with a hop-snuffle. His
elbows, knees and wrists bend at the joints.
rgest group <
dents of any area college.
•When 1 came here in 1980, 1 looked
around and said, 'My goodness, how am t
going to go about establishing an effective
accessibility program with a campus as big
as this one,' says Bill Scales, director of
Disabled Student Services at U-Md. "Cer-
takly, it's been a struggle."
It's also been a struggle far the disabled
student.
Benison is one of more than 1 million
disabled students who attend American
post -secondary educational institutions, ac-
cording to HEATH, a District-based nation-
al clearinghouse on post-secondary educa-
tion for individuals with disabilities.
The school is doing everything it can and
generally the services are fantastic." Beni-
son says about GWU. "But there are still
some kinks in the system that need to be
worked out," he continues. "Not aU the
professors are completely aware of their
responsibility. It needs to be a 50-50 deal
with the student. It can't be all the responsi-
bility of the student to get testa scheduled.
A lot of [the professors) are unreasonable
■T VtOI TO* FCH T« WilV«*,TOl «»t
Cbria Powell c isrciin in ■ I.'- Md. parkin* lot,
preparing Tor lbs IBM Disabled Olympics.
During a recent school day, an attendant
stopped by around 8 a.m. to help Powell eat
brdakfast as he sat in bed. The attendant
later helped Powell wash and pack his. books
far Powell's only class of the day. Econom-
DAJLY REVIEW
APRIL 30, 1993
MESA TRIBUNE
APRIL 30, 1933
Figuring out who drops
out of college and why
■ Experts say problem
stems not from
academic woes but
lack of involvement
FnWrFAGE
By
ST AW IMfTTJl
The key to cutting college
dropout rales la providing nn-
campusjob opportunities and .t(-
■ordablr housing. aemrdlrMs lo
students at California Stale Uni-
versity. Hayvanf
The Idea refutes Ihr notion
thai academic trouble Is the
main reason behind students
dropping out of school and is
acuvllles are definitely more
successful. " said Chabot College
cDurLvlor Bill McDonatd. who
coordinates a program to help
students at risk at dropping out.
■■This Is true whclher It's work.
aihjeltcs or CKIracurriculara Like
drama .ind arts."
For Cat State students Jtgnesh
M Pleasa SBa Drop, A-20
Dropout study faults
off-campus living
By Not, Wriffhi gJMU .
T~rifiajni,CQj{ Nam 5*npc«'
COLLEGE PAflK, ttL-Ttefcej
UtClAtiriJI<7iuilF^(aT?^WC^[CSL»rrn-
vntinaj orKJjTipta job opponurattH
and affordable toiaing, myj b pny-
tlwfckfj pnrfaor who b» devised a
Dropout signs
TMc«fh»tort
Atw you m /M erf 'tiKOrrmg •
catty* dmfxyvt >
DOYGU . ..
1 J iv»j off ewmpu s ?
TV t ost. dMk>p«] by Roger Meb>
lire. I rsrcMagy IWl— l Ml the
pmbclcr*'' a. whether i cottage BLu-
dflii will drop out or remain to
Ud. 2 Tin*™., Mi* 20. tin
".- iji u-^i . L'o ■, Norn Shhi
Art y<3U ftl ii*h rjf iworjirag e, DrJege
<tvpa«? Tan* ffu last rod tndout
1 ytx- *n*nr*r yen, ro MUD Of mtXB
U? the new qunwra in* fflanetj? fn
rafjarry 1 DO pWra^E Itiil yni -a* rirro (Ml
Of ttdktg* WATi il. y** artsirvflri. me
pnOMfcaaaTy rjnjpi. ErJ SO pofOOnL If yini
*n*P yW *3 t *C J ***n Ju**-
Hera fOu *w* mn metttt owct of
txrv&ebrqamq*..
1 Dn Kll m 'VT -- TaTa •'. '
PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER
MAY 6, 1993
Personal Briefing
By Marc Sckogol
Off off-campus
■ College students who live ofr-L-iimpits,
work Iini^ hours and have [cw friends
are nit) re likely t<i drop mil, oven when
they're Joins w c)t n end e in leal I y. Thais
accord i ii g to a study conducted by
WtKttWifWtttkW^ ti psychology
protcssor Itoger Mclntire. "Those
sludents are so disconnected to the
college experience lhni it's nol too hard
for them to quit." savs Mclntire. "It's
easy In disconnect from something
when you're not strongly connected to it
tit the lirsl place."
I liu rainy. April £1, I1K1H I'ARItlH.l ItOtrUTt TWBN
University of Md. will host
Student Ag Day Saturday
8&m LS!_4^ljullur» •tudeflta | rom [ hc nninjnollj, |„ ronu3 M; lry
^SJ.llilii i UH i n i lL,?. : w«, R^^eo. wti, *.
11 ir Af! rViy nlwirn Iminr: Jirid
sl'nwilSil r'TH|H'tilii'|-; will l»" F-ftH
nt 9 n.irt. Saturday in the Rh«p
Nutrition Barn (Building 435A} —
Tormerly known na Hit i m-,h Deuti
— at the Mi-'ii'iviUc Agricultural
jTMForcri Outer- Ttn iheep con-
itiit winner will crunjule for gre-sui
champion pltowmnniihip hwwri
willi ihe othrr ilvetEcktk winners at
College Pm-li.
And Umv^nniy or Mary! and fac-
ulty mernlLien ond alumni — with
little or no pr«viouaf flhowfng; fxpf-
nenrc — will romp*l« at I p m in
a humor -fi Mti iwine Bhowmanflhip
mntcit
(]o\lt-g<G of AsrirnUure itudrnl
Tit tiwntrn* Prwt
Off-Campus Students
Found Likelier to Quit
By Lh IrffT
i hvp md w»rh nti r^nicni*. arc
-■ •<' i k'l. In ■! r ■■ ; oul (if collrcc
ihjn r in nsira.1 tc*. whu live in dnsnu
nil if-?. i-i| hnhl f ;\<-- *~i',\\?u * llStmi;
jEirUiwc of diwrv Ktording lo t
new «uctr h]f i SBibSL&A prufci'
HkT.
rSy^TipJckjiy rxo,«.wr f(oHf>T Mdn-
iBT.Birvrrtd 910 Cnftefr* r*irt «iy
tkm rat« focui on rmprovinit tlw
urrpir il Km o( hijth Nchonl otudrnls
brfurr tSty g«t Xo the Lmnwrsily
t-<il uficrtng remedial help to Ma-
it.nt* who irt At ri«k nf dropping
out OTicp Eritjf gtr there.
Itul dftordrrt]! to Mi N.tire. if raj-
1c pes want tn improve their reten'
Isvn riltci, they ihouM imprrjwe opr
porrmitteft lot student* in Hvc arid
work ii". '.^it.' ii- RrduSn^ thr
ptke of dorm laarm and nPti)Wid|i
ttudentft Iq pay part of iheir tuition
» school"*
l radi ti onal Student Ag. [>n.y SaLur^
day to remind tlitir peers and mva
resident* that farm nnimala are
i^li'l piTt of the ii:i:i'i >i 1 1 i ■'.' I
carnpua,
THe free event wiil run from 9
p.m. to 4 pfTr
Mart at ti vi ti« will b* held in the
livestock bimi ftrto, hehind the
[nititult for Fhyvical Science and
TecbrwIou b ml the inlmeetion of
RefHtita Dri ve and Fa rm I hnivfl
A typical country fair despite itn
urban artlirtf , A| i);iy will, feature
atudent competition in Titting arid
■howinf dnirj cailk, beef cattle..
aw>inc and aheep. Student Hdcrp
THE HONOLULU ADVERTISER APRIL 18, 199}
When the volcano blows
J A new study bwt!r!i versitv of Maryland
scientists found emissions from volcanic
eruptions cause warmer winters in parts of
North America and Eurasia while making
winters cooler in the Middle East,
During their studies, scientists analyzed
winter surface temperature data from 1883
to 1992 and correlated these with the 12
largest volcanic eruptions during this peri-
od. They discovered the eruptions in tropi-
cal regions caused the following winter to
be warmer. Eruptions in high latitude re-
gions resulted in warmer temperatures dur-
ing the second winter after the eruption in
Eurasia and parts of North America, and
winters were cooler than normal in the
Middle East.
According to the scientists, the changes
in weather caused by the volcanic erup-
tions result from a complex interaction be-
tween volcanic gas emissions and the
atmosphere. During winter warming, the
emissions create winds that bring warmer
ocean air over portions of North America
and Eurasia. The cooling is caused by
emissions blocking sunlight
F*mi>. *l,rM9tl C*
U-Md. fVoject Wins Spot in Clinton Youth Program
PlTh LUflpdi, ArE 1»t tttri tit I
afcjMig**;
md rotfex* MiKhntj a m =( 14
pn^ti the Cj4<b »djn»JUtnMJi»
wiil hod th= npnmrr m .: erhj ort
ih* WtlKc
. (UTuCrtUMl -nl The uirhmrf pnfttnti i <irvpi«
firtjjjrn try doroAfdUftf l."k ben-
rfiEa of wuiH wmrc
tTw 4 i wprtrrtut opponufiii »
(r*r tine t"niT*a-Hrr ^ VLwyUnfl tttii
id br pirt ■ i j ■■■
%\U r
■ 23 j
receive Jl.OOQoea (a we io*Md
IJh «hI it colkfc or circcr Una-
in*,
Ttw -r.WKi-t i OMMr Itjt Po-
irtatjJ LrtdrfHuta, wlHCfe m *l Ht$t i
A* j*n * me taajt aa a ~i Mtry
L«id Kudcfiu ifej 1 7 n IS nlf
ruvc nda-tinat aunnHf ttbt *o*tiaf
■Tin jiaer-Lii'r CEtddreB a Balti-
imjce The wubehi «d be tMad Ehr
Jrarunun *ife Mr thrw lifaor tnj
cini k'QaJrte credat Im iiinvLni j
■laeni by txut* rrofn ctw <&\t*t <^-k*» Etemnt. c
Lmd r Xe* Orteiu. Xewwt, Me*
Y«hX PkrbdetpauL Ked Ltkt.
Mra.. uti Delmf c. CKw.
ChfiloD fa it a t aaappl the idea >A
tOfrwnt Mvorrati lo tin ifuoct f"
OH MQMHtrr " U*j CdUrfC
nni Pretri«E WiQuni L tumji
T«V tUltUHOCa* fli rUhBuor^ *i U
CDordBHU 'h* wvrta te ti ptf'
Evrmcd by Ehr mHaflrni*. Tht Itttl
□a lAr, m. CrrK ff^rj, plug lo Mf
urnS3r*tftndJ.lilcEr,T!.rnLjf_i n
KUlf U 'bJUl't OnUncJt -rcjnir .
mi ie camEM md —B tctVolj,
rciH*i[ii| pLiairetJidi tnH aikrnt
rrafci. md tvief aif.
Thr nthrr (roup, Suranrr L" jrf i. ■■mn* will be
*i'J be leiponubte lor ^rovpi of
Inn whfufa HMt iHtdk Knot* -<H-
lUVlnrr* Thr TUHgnf; ■-.:.-.'": int3
IrJcD rrhbnf ind itUEfi v<Jii Eg jn|
i^HHUCE COftrtiUaHEf KrviiE prr^ccf*
aR[h ynHnrcE children.
The L'nmrvET « MurLurJ *jli
iwu-ord. f&iH.OrjD <o jdnwiaun
the proarun. In ■ddiDaa. the Co+-
^fC l^rH rarnpu* hi* CriJ<lhihefa t
Jl'SflOQ IpnT'irrar ifll*Urlhip ^\ m
■nil be jwnded ro om d :hr ,Ji
lEudefici jc the end of (he lununrr
■ f f Kl Swefuon. Lie — If r !
brccur. uid !hn <«tb EbcHiph Ehe
Rimmr r frown »ni net iw ifiiBY
fimguncrd yntj wtJctmt. h*r »1-
!i0r m* »lfrrfT rrmvrd ibm c rttrn
nrtl >-r -i-\ Ehr F*w-
anided iri-yif ...->(*■
rn« iirfr-i-s. iremirri — ■ ■: J m
nppi ^IBol. hLjh i(Jiqgl i^rUEMUEi.
ind yeuuf Mhilu wiEb iw ptevfliH
■-:!'" I -rV, M JliefUlIl| ' ■! -ur Spr-
luI itEenDoa mil be put ecj iitnti'
.,"H ttu4emi Jiom wied ae n waat
jnd CHIRK taKkenitfldl.
"■^V nil lnolt il rlVM 3f r'XHB |Cf>
.■ri ia [Enrrrv « •ndenbip 4ereK»-
■nrr.f, "he rjnd of onmintrT iron
Hkt fijir dgnr itradr uid hn ce-
■punuoar the* ire. itauE l.rirt «Ml
se j n-al nfi.'Swnwnavl,
The jcxjltfK 'rr mbntPOBj a
Mdcdrt benadr lV cthju.!«; ] ,500
rrfiufrfs and yn&t *bkt bn
tCEHl r JW COitmTr «E» ana Slrtr
ip«e (fi the 5«Muier of. S*rncs ttt
wup irarfjti 4i QiMarmt in June.
il Me end of the Kramer, [he pu ■
ixiPHHi ire lo CHrrcnc F« j "bub-
nui' mrh r>«riem £ Lntcn so Ehai be
>:jb ftcitf 'hctr ihfMffMi eci aeaunf t
Uf irr " ji "-■oil ict
Mrr- wru KWlf Miffs
SI'NIUl r , MrVI^WV J* J5VI
Pentagon Agrees to Delay a Reactor Test in Space
n> 'i-iiv.oiin '.urhiin.
I'l'iiinpiin t4ifir^lh. t*spnr#Uiin Ha
L 1 1 1 1 1 [i 1. 1 r r 1 1 -. hy H5l ronniripl fi. I| .|vr
.H-iml inrlrbf (ncal Mfijil mi mtimll^
.iiiv i iniUMirm^^mrJKPy NttH airmk-
■ii <r,,. mr (Ml i» nsrNi llv pVhr
wi mil f prtrt c. inn r«la i imr tn n w-\\ ihc
ili.mi"* flint IN" lr*( miljlil prcVurr
i. nli iii<.i. eh.nl rnmlrl i»u rtrrc wilh »
ir'aiiPirriir nl mb^-p v.nmiv
ltl" f r|fr i^tfai] W«i rrnthcii (,1M wci4
a'li-1 u (TiiTinm wilh nil nrfafi flic (■■.. mn-
^Mafl ptanrurs and <ulerKiSlt r.iiTiiftiif
wprhj ihr Rii^lan mack TnfWi 3 br li*»f
tw-atim ptlntiArd fnr uv in llj" JlSfj
rn-1 r r-aja., lrT i^n1 Itn- rpir-nu t.^i i-
ppftl nl | h^ niih.njry'i plan in nivr^i4-
f.ir. nr« frt 1iimi|< .e, 1*5 l»r (trrkpr n1 lltB.
f la-a. F i nil v tor mim If ertftft^ nionilorr;
1" -p,HT /nt) Pnf FtirHt-rllMnnri" prnfui]
iai-m ^v«<rrin»
Ihr .-.i-iinn TflitrrJ hr/pc* -tfi jh]I vhdea
fin an .inn- .-itijr vritpiiir-rpr nf ihf i"i^iie
bn'Hffll aflfiaHHIian *nd nfliinila of
ihr Braffglc l>l<-nv IniiralivF Ortflft-
Ir-.-lE^m. [br- ir.'iii.i'.':il- fl te l na MtS
wjMrli ntmiif rhr Urfrnie ^Vparlmcni
cnpiininiilv raFletf "Slar W*rn."
'.Vc nig , immHIcd [o mjihinf Ban
ihr tU| dnei mn InECrfCrF wiih .Tiry
aHrrviaimy mp^inn,'" -uiHf M.ij FrcJrr-
Ifli A T.pranlirw, an Army EHTirnUKi
frho mmm/gi tlw \part pa itf pru-
(tr.Tin frw ihe nip^^Jr pJelpav iay-p>ry
Mii|or I .'piflprrlno rniidr <ha* rhrnmrni nfi
n IrJrjtfiitnc irirrrview rriuriiljy ofipt-
.1 Itr- JtH*i'H1!(, ft| lh "
^ihtAi«lBfcaa
Roektl Purchase Delayed
irirtil it mgie 'I mirJi ^lupjy of pu,
r-nti.it prohfemv can be emmplr'iryt,
itlhaM) hythr iiibddknl ilte- y^nr. thr
PirtpiM will not VHIf* rtlt a«v ^ | ir-- tin
nir*^uifi rtlmm -PT fcltfi flnv ■TrmTrnrii In
buy ihc ■ '■ ■ '-:■■■■■ i,nniiiiiv> und
I Mf rnchc'i w a* in lv nun fijiwrf iw-^J
iihi'I'i lp"in in A nip' rir-,1 n i.Trnrrm
ttiHc <Lnh ■ppmnntflntiln iirc mndr t Jl
IM«|||J lif iliurr i"JIpr-tl^(vc in ali'TI" H*P
Akh-cV rfl Ii a i id p|ii- i > . i - 1 1 i Mslore- nr
rlnmnnlr ihr p I?* ul r.idi.tlNM tflifffer
fpNi L fm virrllilpn stlnJypru; tlw unJ-
^"■"['pi r\rrcr(.cii)il. ,i '^pnni re-^nrch
aniiljnl mi Ihr I -'r-dcral nut ul AEn^nran
SrltWJftR, & timiunmii \n h$ ti-d jttrxtp
Ih.n hftt n[H"iM^l the- ttijir F*nwd mm
Mr ilrh-iT^f (Jatifltm ■said the torn: nT
Ihr nH-rltriR iU^fMcJ Ih.t Ihr Penlji-
pTini "H hipihh lo .tr l UiTi fTMn1 h iEf Uif ns
Rariiatiort could
upset studies
of the stars.
* 10 one Hi I ■ or j nol her,"
Or l>m Q. Lamb, nn jsHuptiysnriFH
el Hit HnivcTntEy of tldc.t^n. said ht
nd ..lh- r . if li i \ whu had rni'.i."l
dhji-fiinn 1 ! rthihr irarHir if-H h.td rumr
ewfly I'rirnt the meeting fre||p>cj thai
lilllMii-.- '.-lini.th- 'ihi w.iii! Ii> 'In IbC
*f} »
h*, 'ii.iii nup'i o! Ihr Amcricjin .Mi i n
iHUPnkral Society'* hpjth cn^pfiy riftfrft
lyjics drvijipon, t>r. I nrrtb pained tfw
Itm (pnl)ln irfpjit-rdwii 10 ihr- pntyaptttd
FHKtor IC»I nl« wrr-k* afn He rtLctl
srlnillfic 'iijuifi .ind Ihr eHporleTHT
* 1 1 h i" .» i in-> RusFrinn '-I'l' •■ iMimc, in
*mniiw Ihal PJHJUrprrp wmikJ im-jf
ftrimii dl^HifhrnKriFi tn ihr vj-n^lhrT-
1nMTiii-na-nm; irf titih iplelhlrv n*, j 1 1<-
Amrila'tm t i"rn|WcnL jfJiminn i jy tfvu-i
vai or y. ihr Ocrm in Hflunt X-ray nlwi ■
vnl r*r y. Un* Rus^nti X-ra y amJ pn mrrtn
my rr.il' i t«{ajntj tlimJ rnnnv mitrrn
MlltherOrbpl Nufp^Trd
In i.tf;mpt Ifrtrtr oIjJ«ci ttiPH. ihp ^n-
I r run uipc i •- rinphaFrtrrd Ihnl itify dnl
rmi HvtudaarRy PppoM IrV missmn htil
rather #nr I'lMiirrnrrl ahmit thr T.nl
urc tn take mm rurmtnl flt |HP<ii;ihfy
HUvfr^r rf/etit on aUrwmimy (fwy
■■■,■>"'•! I full Uriah a Hivrf powerful
rmrhi'l, Ihr Initial JilltEudr »f the rear
Enr'9 in hM could he raised In 3,7lH miira,
Irnm Ihr 1.000 milt* IW* plrtnorrj M
ihr kittft ip r hn n rAiflJH lun imrrfrrritLr
*-dHj|il Ip** (,'ipertnilly *l rnnpt ihtfliiPUiVi
rtierj. *pipiJ
Al a Liinlrrmpp mt *ontr nurlrai
fHiwrr in Alhinjin h^h-. MM H |*n wprk 1 -
IIH/f h rii.tH .1 1 v i.fri' i.iH unci nnr:l>-AJ rn|ti
n«ii imitated ifwy wcr* *iiiin(,in
iJiKuH"; Ihr issue and perhaps Cfeii'
modify rHir mnshin The cmfercrurf'
adopted: a , ■ .!m Urn "nucle.ir
ei'hnotrtgy ihrruld Ijc UlH -n ft nunnrt
W ihai Inlrrfrrmcr wllh Spare ■u-prfiri-
ob}enlvC7i Li minlmiwd" The reMsltJ.
llrjn also .";.TtrJ that an nrrrrriaNr inlii-
Hon lo ih*- rproWfm <tttn "efearly
achlrvoblr "
Rtrssian p -m h ,M • i'hiht- r •■ ii-r^ii" to
rrajiflun* |lw VaetltiJli <r>al fhf rr>4clor
fUiPlif In- 1 ttraikJ drill I M rtrifthtwn , frhry
have ■:■!,] twci Iril reacinr^ in Ihr
American miliary and "ipor* m *fll al
fra*t roue mfpfr. ihos \m\wt. sorffy
' ha/d currency fur Ihr Husy1;m
|rtD., Q mjr
i but M.ijur Iriiainllni] uiwf I1r I Jnili
rumd lhal a| ihcr mf-eimfi ln»i *re* n
iNhc-umf rlrar ihni tmirr i^fwnrrll H
Uranium In Space
SOfTpt] sfTnenliaEFa Ibap Ihai
rarJislHrfl From n (OBl uvne; Iho
f lusiflpan-mado Topoz PSpOC*
pi.;li-|i.i ivillf.iitit.iminaLe
aF.Lronorrucci I nt^unj-ji ion s
Onply the foadw m a-Town. noi
lh? apMSqrntl
p*ittQ»ce»nlBlriJlng
. onri ch pd urinJurTi
dUiFPda fiHrT
rr^upied III Elrlrrmlnr If Ihtrr ts rra^rni
for rimrein Jitpcuf radiation jiurj, if
rlprre », Imp* rhr- encfciaNin enuld he
Ijrrifriii.tTj iTnm trtu*tn(i harm.
M prrfin renins for Ihe numtan rr-
m ippie by mid- *.u m mer, II in i>r,h i m HI be
pcwmhle In Eaunch itte fir?l \?u mission
in Infe 1445 ur early I99S
fj
JUNE 14, 1993
fceJ
CLIPS ISSUE
ABC-TV's "Nightline" carried interviews with College Park students as part of
a program on the effect of national fiscal policies on today's youth. The pro-
gram aired on February It.
THE S UN
FRIDAV
MAY 21. 1983
DELMARVA FARMER MAY 4, 1993
UMhigh
in degrees
to blacks
College Park
ranks 4th among
'white' campuses
By Thomas W. Waldroo
i continues to
tatca than do most
pTTdcffnlna.nl I v white colleges 1CMI
the country, aocurdtng to a Study f-
leased yesterday.
Codleoe Park awarded 710 barht-
lor'ji degrees id black aludenta in
1990 — the fourth highnt number
among all predocnmaritly while col-
leges naElnnaJly. atCATdlrig to Ehr
funvy by Bfoxk farae* In Higher
Education magazine.
The nirmbers reflect: the test yew
for which complete recorda were
available radon wide.
U. .of Md. ag alumni hand out honors at banquet
Overall, predominantly white
ssdiotaa are doing a 'much better Job'
npcnilUng black iluderi ta, laid Wll-
I ut m C Ok. mamgfrkg editor of the
rmgartiK 1 . TJue overall they fall short
In graduating them and retaining
nten*"
At College Park, foe example,
blacks made up about ID percent of
the si oderi t enrol I ment In ] 09Q. but
accdimtal for only 6 J percent of the
ftreduales-
Two ether mostly white Maryland
schools- also graduated large mini-
hers of black students, thr survey
showed. University College, the
stale's TOfitlrrulnfl education college
at College Park, graduated 504 black
students — ranking It 10th In the
nation Towson State University,
with 338 black graduates, ranked
number 37.
Overall, the lop 14 producers "f
black graduates were historically
htncJt collegea. Ehe survey found.
Morgan Slate University, wiih
796 Hack, graduates, ranked So. 1 3
on I he 1 1*1 Off hlFi[orU-al]v hlurk rn|-
teges. On that list. Bowie Slate Cm-
verstty ranked Mo. 40 and Coppin
State College ranked No. 42.
Al the graduate level. College
Park awarded the second highest
number of PhD* to blacks of any
university in Ihe country, trailing on-
ly ClfldK Atknla University, accord-
ing lo The survey.
Slecn G. Weslcrbcrg was given
ilic Meriionnus Service to Agricul-
lurc/ await) al [he Uaty-eJailyai Mm>-
UuiiQiiicicPitfk ag jluiiitu reunion
and n wards d r, rui cr held i n Col urn bra*
M-ir. I| lO
Wester beTg ti-el|>cd csuhtish ihe
Maryland AghculluTLiI Euticit ion
Fonndjiion and is regi.u'dcd as ihe
Uip resource Tor Ihe Maryl.ind model
for ag airrkuluiM, Me grew up in
ll.ihirn. ■!-. < \i\mi\ . grjuUiilmg I rum
MiDomigli High ScliiKil in 1954,
Ik yfddnaied front Ihe University
of Maryland in IftSS wtitiauagedu-
calion degree.
He worked at Slierwood Feed Mill
untd he reiurtied toiheulassrut'iu in
thu early 1970s. Hecnnentty scrvci
as ag dep.ttlntenl Lluirnian ai I fate
ford J unit.)i- Senior J Sigh School
Weslerberg and his wile r Naitey,
\\:--- in Ramfallslovvii.
Oilier awards presented a I the din-
ner included ihe Excellence in Ex-
tant ion Frog ranis aw ard to Dr. J ames
Hanson: Hxeellence in Research. Dt.
Richard Just; Excellence in ErtsttiaC-
lion h Dr, Richard A hems; outstand-
ing senior. Tracy Heamc and Wil-
liam "F-Vk'" H :n !!■,.■;,
Hanson, ft University of Maryland
agronomy and ag and resource ceo
noniics gradualc. works as farm
managemenl specialist al the
university's research farm in Upper
Marlboro. Me was uistrumefiial in
throe Maryland Extension projects:
the Southern Maryland Regional
Fanciers' Markel.Mid-AlliUilic Pro-
duce Ptojccl and Ihe PtoJilahle Agri-
LultureandC'lc;ui Environment Prti-
gram {PACE}.
Jiisl is an acelaitned researcher in
4% and resource economics- He
earned his Unciofaic ai ihe Univer-
sity of California Bert) FREDERICK POST MAY
Alter ns has been hi H
Of Maryland since I 1 ,
nutrition courses, F Fe w
Scholar in Kenya in ih
Heam is an anmiiil &
from EUckKt, Md. All
she will enroll al ihcfv
ginia Regional CoHej
nary Medicine.
Kainsey is a golf eo
men! major al the In-
plied Agncullure. He
Camp Hill, Pa.
7 ( 1993
■ THF PRINCE GEORGE' 5 JOURNAL TUESDAY. MAY 35, 1B<),5
UM doing good job of graduating blacks
Tin- 1 In iVjj ^ey iif *l4r yUii!l iiL i,'i±
Jul y Piu , | j tay t nil- L>r i hr 1 >o>i recri™
■ i i-i .mIh.! ■ bLu'k.- mf iuiy pa a ifa ml-
u.-i-ij.- whin' itihh't'fMEy biiw '<."■'!■
iuccurciiug [<i ji recanl "'■ ;■!,-■•■'■ "■■■
.■ituciy.
Th* uiuversily awnrdiKl 7 10 bactv-
aioVa] d e gm fi io bfatHt *UhdpnEs m
Ul'.tD. Ih*- friuttb'biKlii^S uumhwr
anning all pred^mi rkiinily white rat
lei;ea i..ii.u..ii'.v tctgrdHtui m the
itarvc| by Mtuvk Isbuea hi Higher
Kduoalioit inu^aaine. IDtfll was [lie
last ye*r fi»r wlikh euili|ilete reeurda.
w^re as^iblile
Marytulid iraiLtd only Si irill w-rn II-
ttntdsi University at Carhnndale;
K-.iLili.T-. Hitiver^iiy ai N*w :!!;-!■-,
wi»:k r N A ; ami Ibe Iliuvifr^iLj of
Stutli Cun.lirm ut (Vilouilna, lhe»ur-
VaJ fuund.
mi raifii umil t» be
-■t|Jy while in ti-
■i.lWilEuiiif
rccenl
bun
Culle
atody
nulcteg
PmirJr
leges Kruaatfw nmtxy i
tFLure.
' The tttttocr is b* ill i h rt us Lurge ^s
we w uiil'l Ilk* in* sw b^Nlmwarirtt, 1 '
Xirwan said "Hnl il i^rl:tanly | rn i-
vldvti ei»M mrjigtmci it fi>r mur |»it^li-
I nR mi itfarl nith wh.il we're * I* n 1 1 i!
PrrdiimlRunOy while ■. '" ate
■i : ■■ "liinrh 1 1. mi i jcih" -.- -. -'i.i:
hl.ii k stULhiiLt. hliiO Wilh.iiii e: Iui
managing edllur nf Hie uuigaainei.
"Ihn mtrafl ib'/y fall Amn. bg9wJb>
iijn-l-ilisui^l!«iii '
' I'utk. tur exattLUlt,
in |h r . i-r.r i if
<m, llllE
s %j
/#3^
rp f/o,
'^■.
ii -,»■.. OM/w * *d-
UJtLLTir>^1 h '''e g'!
I Ihh In ii ■ nalti.. ntle
Uinvrmhy, with ;l:iiHi,„ adu
.: , . I,.:.!..-! . :
th^nill. Ut* 1 Kit* 14 un-inceis ul
hlaik ■: .ii -s ■:■ ■ •■■■■ i ■ I ■ i ■- ' - ■ r i ■ - . ■ 1 1 -_
blat'k 1 1 -Isi-o--. ili^jturvi-y ftiund
Moroni Stale llnlviT^hv in Hilll-
mi>re. with Tt>li lilaik Rriiduales,
ranki'd 1 1 llh i m da- Jim Lif lii-.li irii .dly
black rulk'gLii Itmif Siali 1 1 Inivt^rNi-
iy was 40ih and i'i*|tnin Siuu- Cat-
Irtijft, aJcaa iEt tafllttuuRt, ranked 4 i ad
At the gradual!- k-M'l, Marylaihd ul
Vh t|k mi- I'^irk nvi-.nilt'd thf aacvKflV
hlghi-hl uuriiliL-r itf di»rli»raU's Un
bbjcJftp inl' any uiuv^ppLCy in ihe I'tiUO'
Iry, ii.,i"i.i: Avtfiy Marie AiLjIfIb Ullt-
vi'rsiiy aoran f 1 1 at 1 1 1 ihv ttna&ef
tin' HLtjHjin-r raf U h Li'ks grudajihig
fratn i ". illfEjL- r^ik ih ■.!-•!'. a futtc-
iltMhof Hw arca"» Lkini'iUvjiliirT. Tin.'
umvi-rMly hara+trfHir brfBenl n. the
mitun, .mil Mjry^iml has Ihr na-
Im « is M-vfrilli Lnj^n"J j*?u t'iiljjii- ul
LiLii'lih. 21 !i thwrill pLL'i'urchMi! |u
ihi-HiMnM.s t>iiDU«
THE dL'M - Tuesday, -Hay 13, 1993
Chung, Rather to anchor CBS News
Network denies
aiming at ratings
By David Zur&wik
TeJrrtatan OrftJC
Connie Chung will lain Dan
RAtrieT as co-ancnac of CBS H eve-
ning newt starting June 1. the
network announced yestcrday.
The debut of The CSS Evening
New* With Don Rather and Con-
rue Ctiungf will make Ma. Chung,
46. only the second woman to an-
chor > network > nightly newacaM.
Barbara Waltera co-anchored with
Harry fttawnef at ABC New* from
1876*0 1*78.
CBS News PreakJenl trie Oher
tJenied the move was a ratings ma-
neuvtr. Jiowever. CSS Newa is last
among Ihe three networks In at-
tracting young viewers and female
viewers. Overall, The CBS Eve-
ning Newa With Dan Rather" cur-
rently ranks No. 2, according to
A. C Nielsen ratinasi for the year.
With an 8.3 rating. It to a dis-
tant KCand to "ABC World Newa
Tottfghl With Peter Jtnntnga,"
Dan Rather and Connie Chung
■nswer questions in New York.
which earns a 9.6 rating {each rat-
ings point equals 921.000 TV
homes). Oaring in on CBS Is "NBC
Nightly News With Tom BrOkaw."
which cams an 8. 1 rating
'We picked the beat available
guy and the guy happened to be
Connie." Mr. Obtr said vestenlay
when Euk.ed If Ma Chung, a 1369
dilate of the jJnjverafty ol !>*Ur\ -
nd College oi JoumaHgm, w^?.
Irked Drrakise. srie wna a wnman.
When asked If she thqughi she
had been picked because □! her
gender. Ms. Chung said: I'm told
the answer Is no." The netwctrk al-
so announeed yesterday thai It wijl
launch Mi. Chung's prime-time
newsmagazine. "Eye to Eye With
Connie Chung." In June,
Mr. Rather, whose contract
wKli E7BS News stipulated that hr
anchor alone, said the decision to
bring Ms. Chung aboard was a
"coUeetlve" one and thai he was a
full partner In die process.
"I'm happy. I'm excited. And
know this," Mr. Rather said, 'tins
would not be happening if I dU not
want it to happen.*
Mr. Rather said he recently had
negotiated a new eon tract with
CSS News, which would keep him
at (he network "Into the year
2000." Part of that new deal in-
S«CB8.7A H CoL !
THE WALL STRE'TT JOLTWrU. MUMMY. MAV 1!1. ElflJ
ENVmONMIHT
— : — i — i — ^r
EPA Spending Is Off Target, Study Says
By Jut Bailey
And TrntmiT Nru, 1 1
Sf^y Bwnu'im ••! Tut i#*u stn»#rH- j Haaw
The EnY^rcnra rn Ul E^Ef cliofi Aecocr
saendi just an at m budjrn on uk avail
serloui poltuliori [tfOQlfrnJ white Uu resl
eoei to deal with lower-na c«iiamina-
tOTi. i siudy tieinr releaitd today run-
dudei,
Thtrepgn. by tbe Wuhinfton-bued
CertErr tot Rcxnnrt Ftccnomics. >tt
Setting Spending Priorrti
•tied! imt •■ r
■HkunHf
m^am„ M ™
c \4,
job ot u\-fi
:i undtr pra
pnontJei and a ^*" i t
rsplicll Jlwt
years try i laifel.
that didn'
-wSSS^u
ttve
it*
' c ^*
h-llaitm inftuilt budie -^■isfCJ''*,
barrel. Eequlnai in
Lhi|, while worOpwhtk t nO
iiKBT lerHUI fl-nvhronnw. , a fjO
report nuinialm. And l rasP* .-i *c-
lunili have cwiEnbHj'Mt . jm ifeney'j
met of sjwratinr (lulbuiEy by rrequentiy
lllinf lawtuju that rrsull in rotirt nrden
r>.if c me ilv EPA eo ipffid (fwftcy u entnte
ipKUIc law
Taeafencys Mrucnaai pitHartu leems
LDillkeLy EO Ew Cnrreded any Unw Ston &y
tiff OnkW .utminlslnlion. Thai could
matp ii Eotifh to fulfill nmrMirii pnmiss
'.I i vuUy i n [[.-! it 1 he EjovFrnmrnl s efforts
En pnum me fnvirwMiwni.
Simply boratmp «p#nclint on all frontf
isn't in ijpikfl. The preikJenE's pcDDOied
llsral ]«■ budiel actually tuU spcndHif iE
(he EfA, while, tot tnitanre. tncrtauiur
mjllHvi it The VntfrmU AironiuCin iiut
******
Space juunmuiniuon. wane budiet a
murhly EWtee Lhe 'lie of Ihe KPA'i.
TTh Genenl ".rraunUJis Afeney noted
last DenmbeT [hit white EAr SPA'* duties
lncreaml ^twnrnltr" in neent yean,
lis qperanni' hudgel. whrn adjuiied for
intuilan, u ftuck at the am? level ai m
1ST?.
The aErlKry ItseLT fisi Lrled in rweui
yean to set pnortttrt. unna; iti uubid^
Snrnee Adwiory Hoard io r.ink [ypei ut
polltiuofl by risk io human heal I h nr chr
rnvlmnmpnl Bui spending patlenu ore
IHH? rh.ink'd trenuie Ml [he r icul I >■*>
¥'v-\ needs M Lear ttp all the ■■■■.!■■
menial laws ind hmiw up wiih s reatnl
' law iftal Addr«in Dtiltutanli nn 4 prlorin
Area, business leaders have- formed an organization to help entrepreneurs. The ftraf mealing will he
held 5 to 7 p,m r Tuesday, May 11 at the FSK Holiday Inn. From left ajrw Gai] Guyton of Morgaun-
Keller ttic.f Carolyn Barranca of Barranea-OrTutl; Joe Welly of Mile* A Sio-ekb ridge, and Jock
McShea of Me3hea & Co.
Organization to help entrepreneurs
McrrUI Lynch.
In October IW5.. iocal bujuiEtsstnan
Jim Merkel cgnvloced a iroup of
business leaders tu discuss the pes-
iitjilities ml! creating an greyaniration
for f jHlermg entrepreneurihjp
The objective would be to facul-
Lynch
A sieeJihf commlttsa whlcb
includes Gail Guyton of Har'ao-
Keller lne. h Joe WeJty of Mats k
Stockbrldge d htiles Circo of Patapsca
Design; Jock McSbei of McShea k
tile, support and rfcogntze Co., Carolyn Barranca of Barranca
entrepreneujsrup within the Freder-
ick area.
The initial phase of Ihe program
have been supported by Dr Charles
Keller, director m the Michael
Dingman Center for
Knlrffpr^neurshtp at the JjaUBUdX-
Olfuti and Mr Merkel. af Merrd!
Lycvch. is developing a framework
lor lha organization.
Mary Ann Gam, head of the Snull
Business Development Center at
Frederick CoEnmurUly Col Lege, and
Donald B, Dale, direeiur of the
Frederick County Economic and
S*l Al.l Hi Sl^l-SS f '(tVSl;t,TAM
WASHINGTON ^JSLN ESS JOURNAL
QintDnomics: Still the entrepreneurs' best hope
Thii ntofmna, on i«y way io ihe
rtfTrce. I railed a vttn *urr =1 bumper
slicker which read ^Don'l blamr me, J
voted Tor Rudi " I ffinched 4t I won*
lered Will iny conscience rt»0fl require
me- to attach a sticker io my bumper am an
apology lo rnv lelluw illivtrs: "I'm ro
blame. I vrried forChnlon "
Kor -ul-, did I cole Tor Hill I'lintDn.
hal 1 worked acrtnnrly for hit eleciion.
Hesi de^ belie •, inn m his staled ^urtwi 'h*
America. I at| nlw convinced rhit he
underwood Ihe im pod a nee oTthe^mcTjf-
■ nt pi'*^i'i i- 1 1 iiipj n j .ine ^mall 1-< i : i n c<
Io the nalton'i revival. His iwo nffdt-
eesKiws. in my vicvt, did nut have this
andersianding :m ' ynons; companrei
wcrr largely ignored by Iheir rcspecEivc
administrniions
However, less than sis munlht after
the election, 1 am beginning 1o have sec-
ond ihoughis I am trill a firm believer in
il* STfi«rjil rmn^in'f? "f ihe ^ 'titittin
ptm: cmnng jobs vta iovesmvfni in
rebuilding i □ fraHniclunr, reducing [lie
costs of running government, and
increasing ■ i ■.-• on a population which
has grown to cupecl maximum public
services wiEb minimum personal lacri-
(let
tin fortu nalely , wilhina framewurik To
rttneb l subscribe. T ie« woie d>n|er
*igns for young companies By Extrapo-
lation, I see problems Tor the naliori
because these companies; are the engine
of economic growlh. having created
ihousands of jobs in dw past Few years
tdespiie ctegteci from cheit go^ernmenti
whrlc large Firmi have eliminated sever-
al million root
The danger signs t see pertain to Pjvc
specific areas uf ureal concern In young;
companies These Fall under the head-
ing! of investment issues, employee omJ
management Inceolivcs. creation of
enirylevel fobs, assistance lo
entrepreneurs, uirf paperwork
(ateslmeal It-soes; The Clinion
iminihiratn'n u njihl on with il( 50 per-
Crtii c^ptuln^jins hfeak on prolit made
by investors who botd jhx-li in imall
rirms ai lean ihtee yenr*. However, this
break applies only to slock m (innv
which have raised no more dian (JO mil-
lion in capital. Ai il standi, ibis wrll be
of greet help Io companies i n iheir early
stage oT liTe. Sul
compiames lend 10
gobble up money
when ibey bit iheiT
hypergrowlh slalt.
illinn.
1 w ould tncrta» ihe lax break io 1 00 per-
cent for investor* who hold slock for
more ihin seven years, in order 1o
encourage paiienee and investmenr m
long-verm g/oMh.
PertUipl * mote vexing problem in
this category perl aim IO peisonal
income las I am in favor of raising
Income taxes. However, 1 do not a^rre
with selecting. 4i • gftHlp, hig;h -income
individuals Eo hear Ibis burden. I am OU4
here io defend Hie M-h. bat 1 am con'
cerned about joung companies It is a
fact Ihn financiitiy successful
enlrcpfTTVtnin ite smong ibe most pro-
lific investors in olher new ventures.
Known a* "a n pelv ' ihcv contlltuie the
mosl likely {arid perhaps on ly) sourer oT
cipiti! for seed- and lotrtup-slage com-
paniet.
If their lanes arc raised si gni licani I f,
it is unlikely thai ihey will make up for a
loss in disposable income by reducing
iheir Ijfcdyles: ihey "nil simply reduce.
or stop, investing in smell enterprises.
This would he disastrous for companies
which einnol get bank loans and which
arc too ri iky for formal venture capital
fundi. My suggestion* Raise taxes, bul
spread the burden from mtddle c um up
— eicEude only 1he pOOf
Kmployre aad miui£.tmtnl Incrn-
tlvea: Young cnenpaniei find it diffkull
Io compete with established Firms fot
key employees L*n salines Tbey lack
money. Ihcrelone, ibe greatest linancial
aEirariion of an rnnrr>reneuriil firm ii
the possibility of ibannjt in its sacceai.
It's known as "a piece of the art ion" and
tt comes in the form of flock optkHU.
Among the less puhl wired iLems in the
("lintun plan ti ihe cons idem t too of a
charge ro corporate earning! aa iocen-
1ive Tiovk opOons This would dtscour-
.i"..- companies from using ISOi.
n'ldo k.!
r^oposed cbanaa
taxes Will
opltonees
nructure
try -level positiaasr A
Tocal pomi of Ihe C Mnion econoniFC pol-
icy Is job gtowin. One of ihe major de-
ments of this is ihe training ami
retiainmt "i people However, mstng
ihe minrmum wage talong wjili vuHimi
olhcr payroll bunlens] will have ■ nega-
tive effect Instead of binag, eqEry-level
workers from ihe welfare rolls or from
behind Ihe counter iL McDonald's,
American companies will eooliOIK to
rkr m out work to oversea* puntti where
employees work for lower wages .
Assistance re entrepreneurs: One of
(he few programs lor small butmesKi
which received ihe support or the past
Republican adminturaiiooa was that of
the Small Business Developmcni Cen-
ter! tSBDCs}. Federal binds are pmvid-
ed through the Smalt Basinet*
AdminisrnlkiR lo the slates for the pur-
pose of counseling and olher assistance
to small bustnesKTS The states, in mm.
pTOvidc marching funds and set up
SBDCs, usually with the assistance of
local uunersiiies
The program has bad some problems,
ihe ovon prevalent ooe being a ccmcen-
(ration on mom-and-pop businesses al
Ihe esoense of high-lech and manufac-
lunng ttanups — taose cooypaniei
wbkch stand Ihe best chance of creating
thousands of jobs, tt is probabty for ihis
reason that ibe Clinton admintsiralion
NEWS
Community Development Comma
sion, also have helped io the
development of the urga rural son
Speeifk goals for the organization
include initiating a mefitoring pro-
gram, sponsoring informational
tfiimijiri and creating a venture
capital trust lund.
Tha flnt semtnar will be held 5 lo 7
p. tn. Tuesday, May II al the FSK
Holiday Inn The topic will be
Financing opportunities for entre-
preneurs in 1993 For more ULforma-
linn call Mr Merkel 6tt-i?C*
APRIL 50. 199^
wants Eo kill ibe "iHlK' (Vu«7*ni Mm
■u'ulJ he a !^'[ihk nn i.ikr The concept
ut (he centers IF excellent and the ttmc-
ilire is in place. Instead Lir closing doun
Uic5l3tXkihePreilden1fhouldebanite
Iheir emphaiiMo ibnse vr^jng oimpanre*
which will be maj^r playeri in ■■■: eta>
•llOO — high>lech and manulactunng
Paperwork: Finally, lrl usaddces* j
no-cost, no-brtrnet. issue -- paperwork
Talk Eo any (ht t of a >ouug company
andaakabom tnv her greaiest problem 1
guarantee lhal in the 1op ihlee will be lire
crushing paperwntk which ■• demanded
by the government in order for the com-
pany 10 comply wilh policies and regu-
lations. Add io ihe volume of Lhe
paperwork Lhe compleiuly of (he Ihrms
All of this adds up to an incredible wavie
of valuable executive time, wbkh would
be bener jpent oo put mm g business It
should not be impossible to Cuttsolidare
all reauLalion* uhich alfeel small firmi
under the S8A jnd ro make ibe forms
less numerous jisJ less complei;
Kavmg slated m.v concerns. I rrtuvi kjy
thai I am still a believer in l7residenl
Glimon There is no doubt in my mind
lhal he wants lo help young, rmerging-
gnowtfi companies and lias no iniention
lo harm them L tm certain dial he mam-
lams the- eonviciioo of Candidate Clin-
ton: that entrepreneurial companies are
America ' ■ nanttmm hjtune
tJafoitunaiely, ihe Presidenl's tdvi-
tot* — wbo, from my vantage point,
appear Eo be policy wanks, lawyer*, and
academics, rather than experienced
businesspersons — arc providing htm
wiih advice which could do freii harm
to small companies and stymie the
growth of new venlures It is not too lale
to mterieci ibe thinking of ihe
entrepreneurial community into the
Clinton economic plan in order to make
that plan reflect the PTTsidenrs lolly
goals for ihe nation
Charla O Hilttr ji d\ft\ tur *tf )hf
DlMgfttiiH Cl'FfJer ftjr EntFTprfrvuniup
at T*r Maryland JiLTtrvrr Si-hiwl, -Um*
wtMrrr" "f fie '~jH9y MarTland
' 'Entncprrttfttr of ttu Tear " .\-*atd for
JlippeH rtj rUttrjtrrHrnrXkip
May 17, IWJ THE HC'lasNTebrr 3
President To Space Station: Cut The Fat Or Face The Axe
basis." says u ire Smotanity, dinfEOF
at l he renicr s »n iniomenial budeei -oriin-
Eles project.
Former EPA Lhlef William D HucHels
haus ertioei thai scnLimanl He says rbJ
agency would be beicer nil mtii .in um-
brella law. 'vVrmr funaresj thoukl lu ^
give the asency a lot more nettbtlnv. md
ihen exercise aversjghE.' ' he u ys.
Ph rrtpunM. Mike Vindenberr, ,i ^r-
n : :-r i<njrv jdviser 'ii ihe KPA. ^t'-s '■■■■
aernt y lavors all* ntlif dmerrissjunjtiv rft
pnnn«« when IJwy n>»li tu:^ m-UW>rn*e.
nut thatdutmrsois' j luhg 'ifirh t
ao'pnKess.
Heft rhan lair ISe hfA S
fiAw rm >" i*iw i>em t-tim
tit x i*i i l*ajia|aj)Bi
I In- kfStCB -r d n.-ii f -, nt«m [ir^tKCl.
w hivli upih'iwein it^nvKt lanaatH
ik-*icr in rWt, *-i1l l*v owlnjdn
vjntell.tiiL*i hj iTtHatusH umlew it
V.un t titv,' U|] * lilt hi 1 J IV* tkMf"
ilyn vtav it- . i- h i[i[i 1,-fii .ii.!- ikpkii
nh-m i.i'M v tii h-Jt . * h i H ii ut in l'H i
.ui. .-i ifc Njiut^wi a a w rtttiln aad
■:,-■-! Ailntini>l^giii<n
At iVbchfiiit Vtit Pte&tm Al
f i'.n . .1 H'K- rilili-. i Jiimxj 1 1 ■■■!.-!
lIljHxJ tn MjiulIiu^IU t'Llnuk-
ul K'^lllU-Uf!y l*ir»iikin lluik-^
Ven. t> wivltne «nh Irx: f^i
..-:■■■. (i ■ U . -i N Up I -| ■! HSBi ■-,.,. I- 1 I ;■
iJin.v rxhle^l l,-^i- U hi I W
'...:,,. .,-.i,\ Vf htss***.eii4hftiiia i><
>rantb< oam -tfKaal <*# * (<■*"
yi'Ji rxintl. Mjiiih^ in I'WJ Jinl
k jdnip tip Hi t|Lll . L ffh« 1 - n 1 il flu
iLdrnii hf \--i' lir dak?, .■!•■.!' v
l-ll'i 1. n ,. ,|.,.uk h. .-:■ |<..n Bal
hlJlihHi ik^C liFjTtkna rftxl ik-li'M
Whjl\ U-i j niiinp l K-f I-. I h Jl lK'
i-'-K -■' 'I.; -I ...,,,.. 1V :
t'Eiiit.* .kIii"I=i---i 11 .!-»- 'in
SICH *It ktaHOC -.I.ILhH kvj Ji,|H|Mri^
taaaf Iin * rruiuted uii»inn in Mdr^
di aa* adut'jied by prc^itmi jhI
liijninrjjhufis Tlui mi^iuft Ir-
Kr*tiMiildrf*i."Jnhit flir>
tUaa, [»i'MikislnL M.Km<; "tHk-utfr
juil dtraOM tfef ihi: tafiee <d ^-lirativ;
.ni.i iLvhlkjkt),^ 1- I- . ■•■!.! <mh
pseM ito M -■ i yi
l>l -.II- -J Ihe *nLKr UfethLM H ill J*V
(njinl^ fr kn „ mJw |mj nuitflluls
... -i hie ■ '. -i- - ■■ i-.-u- Ji 1 -■■■?- ■■>■
-Jul -VnJ. iL-lLi lii'c Hit L-UUina^t^
-■it ilk' -41.nl- sLduw ji j ^.teniirk
. 1 1 , ■ hi , ■•- ■ ■ 1 1 ■■ I -....- -.: Il ,- 1 1 - ; .-
j; 1 1 mp <■[ |uhHiii> k Ufa * liieh vtcq
nMiumina HtT*it*ime. t| UhluiV*
|h'hfn^-t<t I .m l^remtn. ifwia
□mo 1 ii Ihr Spkhe S^ n- m.^ |kut| ji
ll.s Njii.-iuI I<!l wjil ti fiPUiHul. b ;L-
i+isu | &r Mhvr Ermn itW I'jhmr
Du IiiJiIiUh.- if fwhlt, ikh:j , itmi
1 anlwrj lagadkjjl J K^Mry A lltntl, e* -
rciatKe vi L e pn-.i -U-H 1 . 1 H ^ i- ■'- ' - 1
li ^f nf 'klnlk-itK
M A" A |^1 1 21 IlKVltllg liI ihli
adsanMa [Mrn.1. irm- im-inJ^i . k-anl
|4illl| I... . |,i!l Si... J I I i.I. I.;, : ■■! I k
l^-.'f1'- -JJHMl.x1.lH | H ■ -i;i Ilk
lt , fR:ri«.TLljllV(S *,Ihi
■ I „ I I
f'fi OH I'tE: NT PANELIST
WT p*o*ioan( Qiarta*
Veil was appoir^ou by
1 "*• rV otjd li a Al i.li:-4!
■lh>Ml|L|L|[| j^.^bll^m ut iLk'll
il^lihi* ^Uli' F^Ltkil H* 1 - l4*thL
ituii '-. j LL'-i fiiii k-m .11.1 awful
-^IMY. Jjlimi It ar"** ftrfllp I.i
tew| Ihwiw tU- b*i^i in thu tmL
ii(nH"iJ) *hiil:Iv>Jj li.i.i,'fLH«l
i-s.-bc-uiJ
-,. I MV' ,.i
I'TtKuhihji ljlL-i> Kvn Fh-
up ihe NA3A itik-iica learn
thai du). hj«n!.r 'ih, j ■ lv
liiiq ji. had i-i 1he kraut *
laaagaity HAHl. wUdkd ""fpQ
Kct} unt*? ^*fylto*T^-£t the
ba jiih BioHcati Shwmjin*
se
0rb >iine £2
of th ^n s ;^'ys Pac i^
iH.Mum.p.ni.jiii. ■b.v _„. sc 'enr». • "BB tin,- S">a/
^,„^„, say s p ar . ™Bi it w, sti »ion Wa ' - *-
•vmtmamm. 'Wof^ a "ea,«/,. Pirate wi . iu.u,
hi™,j,.n.« ( ii . a '« to (j,_ . ■ "ite n, a „ - " e ad wi„ ** •■««
i>«mii»i*&«..««w ir. hw] C «'isf5 > , « prf} Wdfn
JUNE 14
19 9 3
O
u
CLIPS ISSUE
The opening of the first installment of the Spiro Agnew papers by the university
libraries on March 8 (see print story, page 1) was covered by Baltimore TV sta-
tions WJZ-TV and WMAR-TV, Washington TV stations WRC-TV and WTTG-
TV, NewsChannel 8 and Prince George's Cable TV News.
Boston Globe May 13, 1993
Milwaukee Journal May 5, 1993
What kidjs really mean when they keep asking why
I
By ttutwi F. Mdbt
i iiWT Kim TiKU ■rrrHmiR
Hjflrr you ever tail * eunver-
Nation like: thin with your |trr-
njb o i tort
Vbtki- "Mom, wiry dft ear*
- have wbecbv?"
Parent, MjrfiUy: h We$L «o
they fivn, pn,"
ChtH:"Whyr
Parent, with enthusiasm:
"Why Jo tlwy go? That's whnl
rani iu ! i : i. f places."
CNUr*Vtol rt
Parent, *jlh If sa i-fi t hlttftaJnv
"& peopfe ran |^ wber* "\ itWytt " .
Chili*
Firm
( i>;M.
Pin-nt,
w*"^h*-
statement that sham his apprwii-
tum "Isn't the sky beautiful whrn
hCa so brae?"
■ "WtaC "when" a* "w totw "
"Why* id one nf the find questions
children form. perhaps brvause it's
Iht? fftMWt t« viy But they use iL
even when what (JHf want to know
b *tal ar m, ht'n or where, according
tn T.awtnri.. ■ [in>fVss.ir j1 the Uni-
versity of Wtneunsin whose area of
research in early cognitive develop-
ment. He Oft """k* | W*P y™ J *
child dislin*-.' l v h » r*- he words.
ial hr is
»V
I fever a wo. ifW^ --
try parent |iali,
Nut only do your*
■Mna up -*h j»" b „ii 5 . . ~»>. ** . • - \S »" udl
MM t«t they «b.*^ VC t\° '\"- Jr, t™ . « \J0 * , •wl'to 6, •<-. Iwll imh tk> mmL< imri Ihi
to be » wOling to nipl {(& t\ OX" . . > „ op" *" Vft^ A it, *»/» flm*lopiiwnlal my
"Trtiyj-mtheyut ^\83"' ^.fA^' nO^ 9 \a \0"* U ' « tttfol BefrpWl of the I ' ni
Hi-rp.lhsn.ijwsl™® 1 * «lC*^' «A t**™ rt*^ t* 'f Manlnnd. "Tfiiii almott
maliimry.iurthndmijliy^^ k gO ^ a^* A^
abnul nomrthinj? else en [ii ^f, 1 trtC ^ *0\.»^ » ,1J1 ^
pvfn when -why" 1*1^°. fll(T y,* a* pg*A-
"PsTfnl* flnilil wye U*fm , W 1 ^ * -^ * hcd"*'k ftillrpe whii ?pe -
whyi* i lot of fnBtnitiwi ami A" , ,plhr^ in [inMIct tlri'elcipmtinE.
Dealing with the nonstop whys
Mure stnitepes Tor putting an
nd to pHrRm "vrhya* 1 :
■ Turn the tablm on a rnlld
m'f nuking the *amp i|UKti>rjn r»vrr
1 over "Why dy ^ou think you
1 r ^rmtr' Owe he pvp? yon an
'^rfays wJrTkfv,'" she prrKniwH-
* Rng?i(f your child in mlp-pLiy
inn" *Ynu br Bw mnmmy and I'll be
■he rhilrl who donsn'i umil t>i v^t':k
llu 1 .»:it l^t." TVk- Darv thfrprj ^
■ It> OK to ijrnLtre your ^year-
dd*s "whyn™ ifynu can Identify
them .i- f^rt *^ a monnln-icuf t)ir
rhikl i? engaged in in Tantwy i hi'.
■ I Strait your child with a. uuk
t*ftJr. itays Barnn - lilu- whi'ii it' it
■iii i-- tn n:" In bed, \ff do I chore nr
htimew-xirh. ,Slw offer* this rwpeinjw:
"Ytm've been asking n loL of DjtM»-
tfQnf tonight, tail MW It is bedfimc.
V»m can ask me two rrtoir 'whys 1 ami
then KSl Uith' Eu turn nut the light™
No matter bm [Lred or fhls
p = ..■■ ■■! yciu art by a eerie? nf *S»'hw",
Bariin ^nyn it'^ a rtiEytaJie to rut ofT
your child'n question* hy nayiriK Ndi
thin~?i H, "Thm> tnf^ugh! L, or "Ymir
nprstiunFi arc drivinit me nuts!"
"That semis a ternblo n- .-:-,.. >■ '
says SlnmfUi. *tt «.)'*■ ''You aren't a
■good conuniinicautr. Htnu tryiiijr."'
It also link... a. . ' ■'■! think that Sftk*
Injr qKmtiafW ED R0| fl j(P!mJ ihinu l[»
da. not a -ond *ay to ftnth--r infor-
matinn. In thin v.i«rki tbnl's h disus-
tnHin mef^uw to .M'i«l. SI mrniTi adds
tnftrad. Ery tbew Mjategii^ tu
piAC yuursclf a hir^k:
■ Be hncK'St in a vmy ItalV it-
P|ieftrul. "It'll hnpnrtanl to taA <pJ(*
tionh. antl you're joking aume n>illy
gimd nes, Ktftht nnu r . IhvUK^^ i
tte*d to cnncentralo nn driving."
* ('hangs? tln» NjlijecL "Yuu're
asking ;d Mil the ^ky makw me
think abmul Ihr day it Eumpd v>
Police officials argue
pro and con on gay officers
By FRANK A. AUKOfER
Aiihinntoa. IXT. — 1 .!■■■. d!B-
an f-rom bi( city police drpan
nicftti diugrecd W-tdnrtday on
-wtHtflet homaiexuals divtiptcd oo-
^raliom
They " ***« the House
s* 5 fe
Los Angeles Times Apr 28, 1993
OR. JOYCE BROTHERS
Iwoit^-'v/VS ;jl ■'
*aich ■Aheie l,. "3f / L
officen wtcc gav n [ciL..- **3 Vp
In ihc five years he v. a*
chariL.'. he uid. his |noup was ihc
most nroditctivc of any of the dc-
partmcnE's 2 " pjaioom
Currently, RibcFa Said, ihrcc Irs-
biam hn^e risen to ibe rank of
hcul man E a nd 1 3 pay^ and leshnru
have become sericants' or inspec-
tor?, m the deptnrnefi! Twelve
have Ncn swarded medals uf val-
or, lie aid.
"They h;i-.c truly gained six re-
ipntinftheirreUo'A'CinlcrrsBnd Ihc
tmnmiimty, not because of ihcir
■h-i il (lncntatton, but brL'ause of
ihcir pirfchrrrianceL - Ribcra «id.
Bui Edwaid Slreidmicr a Scat-
tic notice sergeant and president or
the Seattle Police Officers" Guild,
■aid that [in three oeosr^ns be had
liecn asked by female ofljt-cn to
negotiate for separate k*kcr rooms
K-tiniM' of unwanted advances
I'mm lesbian memben ml the dc-
paament
"Ai li-.^i nne wui'-i.in has told
-w thai she would feel mnce cum-
"banging clothef in the
J ^'°W '"' '"'-
9$t '-• e It- '•". "i|lht
*w$y~ ted m
to 'er.
Stftnv . partmetit
did nni keep \*_. u*i wsual
pterefence, and in ",m nod itt.TU.ii-
ed olTia-rv by Ailvcriising in gay
pubfirations and targeting homo-
sexual groups at job fairs
J "l bctievc ihc policy adopted by
our li v .it leadership was bated sole-
ly an the Iradilinnal liberal aeenda
which guidr-s our rleclcd ofTinats."
be %aid.
Another w.iciL-ss, nhii has con-
ducted fludifs of forcian military
Torres, told the n'mmmec rbat
[here had been ,i pc-wrai trend of
Obs^sive Jealousy Is Deadly Poison to Love
W
gravel inn if they cntild only an -
jvs-rr thf .|Ut*&k>n thai i* really
l«*ing a^«f," itaym educaEJnrid
jvycholnfrisi Jnpeph | jcwUm A
prr*sf hrmkrV kl »-hy?" may bp:
■ A rrueftttnn about safety, At
tbw age and cognitive level, a
chtk I thinks ittat *vwythinj; that
moves bun life, according to Car-
ol SeeTeklt, a profeswr of bumnn
df vt'lo|Hiwnt at_tbe Urtivgrsi tv u£
Itarylan d wd wt^e upecialty i* e;ir-
ly ebuji[bi«d dn-s-ch^jmcnL She
aajrs, * "Why (fw the vacuum
make noiwT" jdiyuld be bSBMat)
ed b* 'I think I his is tJn i* ncirl
I'm worrk'if ll"* pnng to hurt
me " " A gorhl r^junsr might be,
"Tbf r uh .l vacuum i» bud,
im't if* But it wiml bunt you."
Thihsi>ay,M*t2J,199.1
"Iff a bulling wrd. an atton-
tion-gettins worrlf Hgrcufl JinguL«
Naomi S BaTi-r» h author of "Growing
l 1 [i with Langiw-Fr: How Chihifpn
\xtkm lo Tnlk" (AHdisnrHWtwdpyl
What will malte paar rhikl nanny is.
not neccwarilv tlk- lament tt( ym\r
aiurwer hut Ubal you eontinue tu an
■rA'pr at all.
When a stTTfn of "whys" tn tx*-
pnnirtg to fm*trale ynui Baron wig-
gpsU turning your atwer into a
eonverMtioo That way. ymi stay *n-
gagpfl but defhxl the " , wbya;' , "Can
have whpHs m> tht'V can go places.
That maken me Ehink about trair*
bpeHLine they hove wheels, loo. What
else has wheels.™
While it i* only ihths mnally that
vm mil lake n prrwhofikrV "why"
important to gite just the right
amount of information, not too little,
not loo much. To do that, you need
ii] know your ehikls knowUtlge baw.
RefeAM says. Since that's cun.*innily
cfianging. the bwt thing L" do ts wk
"Nfhy" ynitrtelf-
"Why do yiiu thinV I he wnlrr
nimcf out of the fauestT
"Beeau.s4» theres a man in Lht?
.*tnk who lets it COOK out."
Ktnx ynu hnw what yrPLtr ehlld p
thinking. That helf* you rtnow what
tn answer That's a good ioVj„ but
it"-- nttt quilt right. Il enrm-s up oi]-.-r.
from the baflemenl Want to fttr
Thenrver we hear about
Lave, we almcm atwayi
hear about nvhjusy and
often jEmui envy litre's ,i chance
to t«l yow views irui ernripare
Chrm tn those of »me expcrls:
I. If a person w njffenng from a
ht of jealousy, there's realty nrjth-
mpr the individual can dn other
than run la the nearest pdychia-
tnst
2 You can almost always break
trie pattern of another person's
jealousy by discussing the problem
in a cool, rational way.
1 Jealousy and rnv» aft both
abnormal emotions,
4. Obsessive )eaJaiisy often crp ■
Bin the problem itai the person ks
atlempung Lo avoid.
5. Jealousy t? sure proof of urue
love.
ft If i man u die macho type
with oirt- fash icmed viewi About a
woman'i role, he's less likely to be
hraloua than a man who hold* more
liberal views and at 1 1 1 1 x\r-n.
Tl.F, WAiilllWTUN hrSl
mg a jealous spouse nr Eover of the
UTUlh. If the j* atomy Waa : a tally
urauunal. you'd need ouLsidr help.
1 FALSE. Feetingi of jealousy
and envy are normal. We've all
probably had moments in which
we felt tinges of both these de-
structive emotions. It is how we
tandle them, why we get them and
the degree with which we feel
them thai determine whether
ihey're wiilun the normal range
'. TRUrl People who have a
pattern of obsewive jealousy that
emits without any real basis often
lead their partner to be unfaithful,
(n thhi sense, irrauonal jealousy
can become a sell -fulfilling proph-
THE SUN
ecy
&. FALSE. Jealousy springs from
immaturity, a luck of trust and
excessive dependency upon reas-
surance from a partner. Far from
being a proof of lave, yealousy a
destructive to |Ove.
6 FALSE, A. man is much more
likely id be the jealous lype pf he
adheres to ngid xexual stereotypes
that alto* more sexual freedom to
men than women, according tn
Cre^ary White, psychology pro-
fessor at the J
7 FALSE. While's research
found that a woman is mote likely
lo be jealous l! the importance of
her relationship far outweighs any
other ispei-t of her it ft If a woman
gains all her self-esteem from her
man. she might he hrt trouble
S. FALSE Narcissists are bast-
cally insecure with a poor felf-Lm-
>ge and low self-esteem, although
they frequently seem to be the
opposite. Because of their prob-
lems, they lock: for constant reas-
surance from then porinem and
arc therefore more likely to be
peaJous lovers,
It you answered SBt of Lhe eight
functions correctly, you're better
informed than most on the mpie
'"R1DAY. MAY 21. 1993
The Crime Scene, in Miniature
IT'S NEVER TOO LATE
Dream is on track
after 40-yeor deki\)
COLLEGE rVUM - In 1563,
Dotun Full" tnr* cudJj *h*l
■hr "Mud in \\t* whrn ihr t* 1
in j rtrihinTHSt n^linrffl !h*1
(mm up Uttt br ■
AXhttJiflrt W* mam
- 40 rrt« lit tr ru
ItArHtaKk witrscki
A™iti am in*. The ao-jimr-skl
L _ jehr™bt#irt»k|Wid racrtmhtl " "
f jf txkw* *ejT» in mefatfy
iTMJuiliKl HiPRii ana but
■• ',1, ;,i;-.'|.- ! ri!.-ri-»-
kriaWaMi'
tin. FuSrt »»■ "not
TVfrr"»Ll"«"[ l fuj1 rf r--r " «H oumnhrs, bid «r ni-na,
HI Ftdtn. ■ 4a.i™-*M pHy-nW I> Swwiti lrfdfti„.
" "t Stand M Ik 'n"*p>n*lt4^ ("llUfru in Hlr The —..
vid turelupft* Ihrtf tttirft Uolwiitjr ^ li-ryla«t S^Vem t-r baidt *lth Uh qindkm. Tto*
TJtrtehrnwmmlhwinrteon- <h»n«liw. I*"W ». IIMM W»rT-
Lrtbuie rtf hb to In* Bvea anund to the need to pre**" again* Iht The 'm whal (« Hn Fulkr
igrivlMiahelwl mu.'«ittUr Snowdrn. a pkwwr tnjah (omA u™ n Uw Uiavrratty rf HaryltiKJ L™
It FidferttU. 111 thr ItaRI fl* bUekl tn UK Ml- ftmWlli Ann n*mtiU M •rhml In PaSlmort. tfhni thr wJI
■ hMwttrbSiHW- Bwfr«hl,ft t^V^nbrittmiLl 7 ™nrtn«w™k1nKta™rdbrr[p»l
uh* ■jtarrt dent >*e« V ih>^ ve die hot el 1 (bund uy kd FrtdbT rhai I
likr wflh prouOHrJTrwl +*rm Bust" «■ Bw wflrt nt |b™»- hS ■<
andvmt b>
In College Whodunit, Doll Homes Hold the Clues for Student Sleuths Philadelphia inquirer M ay 2, 1993
r Say dead behind the
mx Kore'i codnur h Hu
■ Ifctod iptKHsW en the wtO
bdM*dhhb TU ikni rmTla ■■■
aonrrhn hcvd had Stopped tadbng;
grvnbig the nvesbarpton with SO
anaafjaaajn tme of h» "****
Hur lhe char thai IMhl dte OM,
wruch tied the evidence 1ofrth*t . ni
thai the vmald-be mbbtr. who lav dead
on the other aide of the eeunler , had a
bullet wnamd n his back.
Thai, DrmiigjitQni laid tater. wu
the surest Rgn That the two men had
died in «A *■ i.-h.i njfp of fun&e that
akery Wfan *■ Ihc robber was
cnaJrotg hit geiavay. The
cooTjutrtce ^**e cJetk. itft
derecirvta ««c luded. puDrd out bia
pistol, ihtd lhe robber in the haek
and waa ahol in the head by ■
thoifwi blast when the wounded
robber fetaliated,
the fuui akuthi wfao erKked |hw
esse pojaewa neilher hadgn par guna L
they are Mudenti worinof mi tnUeee
degrees, AM the crane scene the?
were cafled to mveslipte ta m i dot)
botae , j oiwhfaol'iquare box thai
store ahootntil n nanuture.
Welcome to Crane Scene Catea.
Profettor Trramii Maunrlki's unique
fof entirt rodrae at [hc^kmQ^^of.
TcMEnribodetecliv^ wnth. (uri
Crullr*ef a Tra*eli wJta, the class ia a
|.tlli|wiun neme in delectree work,
orasdaaed la te»ca urtdergndoal*
crimiDotofy Undents hurt to twatrt a
rimr HHW foe evidence .
Kmrvlb. lit, a ipry-ul jjttH wvlb
the U.S. DepartnteoE ai Defenae and •
former umverdty pobce officer at
Coder Park, osed lhe dofl houses for
the firw time bm semester. The
Ton Primer, 21.ajca
in crsiDBial juaUce sod r.cie nf the
Kfnrmg drtr* Mm who sobrd: the
o»venience tloce puok, **W the
class pr ovidet liands-ofi ErawWg.
The textbook ta drrkled up in[o drf-
t IO.C*t I
Cutting through confusion on the ozone
lit Jtm Irhtjtn ~,,^,ti
i^ffiBrt»t*n « Vt)7|
A recent kpate ol oppartuily ctinfrklmg
r- ;■■■■ n-. ,ii>, .-.il tho 4Htnne inycr has k-d
it? -=i ifii- i i,m'ir;ti,r nNnii upc of Die
mocT irnifirtnni gfobnl environmental
fane*
In mid-April, The Waihimtluti H(Bl |Wrt>
Itsbvd. and IThc ItufHtrcr reprinted, o coTllto-
vcr^iol nnnlysis nf Ifir ozone I'.-in ih.nt . M .|
Ihr. "prfvhln'm npni'nrs lit ho w* h 1| on ibe wny
lo <irdnTlfili " Ik'^usiMTiM Hi ihtt year 20410. Il
Md. Uh- h >,*"»»» Iij^r — thni hniror*"!* eferU'M
■ d ajraii'vpHrrir gns rho - |if4i1w ts; hintrh imm
nlirnh 1 1 h| i.-q rudtattnii — ^tmiiid '-,mh Khiwty in
gel lltlckcr ugoin
Within a weefc, ttuwevor. n lenm nf 14
si 1 1- mi six issued a report tliol hppoiired tn
conlratdict Hint nnnlyals. Dccny in theoznnc
Ifiycr. they said. Ii.-k) R-nchrd record levels
wnrldwhic in late 1^2 mid early 199.1 - 2
percent tn .1 percent gretittf than at any
perltid since records were begun lo he kcpl
in 107*.
Wlini'-i suing BTil
Knr i»nt ihmg. Itn-siiifiesnreniH ascnnlrn-
£LE 'I.,,? M ■■!, ■ !!-!-
"iild be ,Mn ■'■ iht ■■■ve n1 in i
imriral I'niTl'^nl. ta
lanMf
-,f nandoilnpi r>it1 tin mm
ni «nii pdrti i oji-J h(
afifter* Ai a^obtid le^cl, howe^rr. 11 1i e&n r#"
nni # EHilluiflnl ihsi ■ a Ihftai io hn-r^ eVtljQTt
i-.i-niif-i and ;l b m nr,* hk io iri*";, riitjtt 11
W 3 " IfiB
N^nl. aa Inum* liriliti and tlihnaaoie nt L "';"t i T'tX*
tvfl? and wbwt- c roj". In ib» rtrn"~- " itV"**
ihK I'm Mihtii Rarlh **■ t t'lSTTt u
ai
ceo o if-r,
, T iitc
reduc
: neaT
. t>V w
t cU c6
«tveo
; ^r«^
reenl In EIktocssb
hnk dr^rl
IMjao alB ot KUrr
*n ThaihTjth u v U
recaaHona hr liaeii
ipEina iihd rnmmcrl
s4plt <tWUld pu1 uh
Tlhtj mir ^prndlnn
:>.■■ ara In
uliitrmbk-
can dd-ifbli
■ -nt i. r St i*n
a s
a .
, ,IV I
d. M atl
Ve
ve\s
iFh|t> „!r-; If ir.-
Irrnirall It |-nln<
■ a u r
■jUvrcsOl N-iwH-n ih. ■bad"
<>m irj ihv trin-iMd and Ihn
mild In Ihr ilriHnr*CM' 1
n Ulr rm1 estflUr IradP. I«C»
li«.aiiiin ih»ni- In Mmjitj ■
vr ill I h H r ru j Hi, n *i-1 '-10^. 1 1 T
9 tna6 e _,
be ih)
A esj^lAW sKinHaja n' • iSa f»und n -, :,
^^-r 1o iSc nqital'T and a* yno Hnerem^
Hinr illt'nilrr, \t.nm ill rm, i\n m ninOliiaiinnp *m
ihr Hjwtior ai nnnn n-- summer wimbj ■?,!•■<■
> ■■! ■ htftjnr r>Uv'.r nf I ■•: SI
Q: Itaa damDttD Iron HV-ll rrtdmilnn Sreh
dit UlTif htrd '
a. Vrs. Karmiknd C. Snllh, ■ srlenltH s1 Hie
I ,, i <■ el -.11 r '■' f nllFnriil.i :il ;■.,>-, i-. Ut', r.;
h*i ihuwr lhajl lhe i'»-hIi:, imri uf Hny "»
■ i ■.■■ |iia! r n ..^,. a- pihyinr'sniinii Wrt*
■ nt- aboji hittli
»5 ^*rHt» and ihe
, 1 \ *M v|«-ncy arc deir-1
ftii^T^iitLU ««t»hcinuvp
i trtfi XT® -relthM lb hi tanner
QH^ mMC May l«2. ihc Canadian jrowrnmenl
:«imi1 ■ iJnilt l.i^eriil f*if Ibe t*prCI»d
I.- 1 ,':■■ *' ■-■ : J ■■!.-■- ii-. r! I'nj.i; , Hi---, and
t>. at «- ibne tJ ber ihrcalt H* lhe taunt layer 1,
*; Sura aelieafaaj jpt enhsi ri,uik.iiiljf jn..
prrtiifl 10 rm l Id ft^eis ii[ u 1 1 ■ sfsTi si reraf I dial
iU IhrvuRSi 1 h. • ^1 r nHi-1 phcro They worry Uw
rxbaiift Ciiold dJiasfe ihr npms larcr
In hen ■: a ■■ ' -■ ■ :■ ihnl Htere is altlL ■ kri ibp"
*.kft"islt dorTI snikmanit ■.hinti the ■ipi»
p1ir>r StiJMi-inJ MiHer r a metfor-ihutn al
Oft *>.Tln n.^l Orealik and .Mni'v-i'luiN tJ
Willi lllwllaai 'NnKiO N Toll nj nrrirtWI"
u
JUNE 14
19 9 3