newark girls win glasgow

20
I I Newark girls win Glasgow . track title/lh Godwin, Smith win Newark City Council seats Election '87 Newark City Council has two new members - Hal Godwin and Allen Smith - following Tuesday's municipal election. ington Trust Co. in its downtown Newark office. Municipal Building, Godwin said, "I really can't believe I'm going to get a chance to do this, Godwin defeated Anita' Puglisi 465 votes to 342 in the 1st District, while Smith unseated . veteran Councilman Orville Clark 145 votes to 95 in the 4th District. Each man earned a two-year tenn. Louise Brothers, incum- bent 2nd Da.trict councilman, was unopposed in Tuesday's election and also gained a two- year term. "I dreamt of someday being able to work with Newark government. This is like Christmas morning, and I can't wait to get on with it," he said. Both Godwin and Smith are Newark businessmen, and both serve on the board of the one- year-old Newark Business Association. Godwin owns several automotive businesses on South College Avenue, and Smith is employed by Wilm- Smith said Tuesday night that he feels "pretty good" about the results. Having been involved in one city commis- sion after another for more than two decades, he said, "I'll just carry on what I've been doing for the last 20 years.'' Godwin thanked opponent Anita Puglisi for the manner in which the closely contested race was run. The Puglisi camp, he said, raised a "very serious" contest which forced people to consider the can- didates catefully before mak- During an impromptu press conference in the Newark Easter bonnets . .. in-again hats are ( ever-popular in the springtime by Nancy Turner As a child in church, did you ever sit in the pew behind a well-to-do matron spor- ting a grand piece of headgear? One of those hats with the incredible fusion of feathers and fur? · And when no one was watching, did you ever direct the slightest jetstream of breath toward those feathers to make them quiver, providing enough entertain- ment for the duration of an Easter Sunday sermon? Hats, caps, berets and bonnets have eb- bed and flowed in the great sea of American fashion, an on-again off-again love affair which has left us with something of a "headipus" complex. According to several not-so-mad hat- ters, after a decade of caplessness the tide for toppers has turned and is once again high this Easter season. J.J. Hat Center of New York City has a stock of more than 15,000 men's hats, and has covered the heads of Harry Anderson of "Night Court," Mickey Spillane, Elton John and David Bowie, among others. Manager Thomas Pyle is confident that "hats are back." "It isn't a trend just for one season," he said. "We have steadily increased sales over the past five years and expect this favorable fashion climate to continue. "Of course, we have always sold hats to the more mature, conservative men who never stopped wearing them. But recently we seem to be appealing to a new, younger generation which is discovering the fashion hat for the first time." Pyle said the 20-to-40 year olds fonn a "lost generation" which is just rediscovering the hat. "In general," he said, "it seems people buy a lot of hats that they see on televi- sion or at the movies, like the Indiana Jones fedora or the Bogart styles. The wide-brimmed Panama and imported straw boaters are favorites, also." James Regan, fashion director of ac- cessories for Macy's, is just back from a preview of the European fall collection. The women's hat market is somewhat flat right now, but he expects innovation on continent will spur things here. "This season our sales of ladies' hats have yielded to a very strong trend toward other hair goods," he said. "Although we are featuring our customary Easter hat collection from famous designers, our caseline has shifted to ornaments like gros grain bows, tor- toise shell combs and 'Our of Africa' styles." See BONNET /18a INDEX FACT FILE Newarkers ........ 2a News .............. 3a Schools •..• ...... •. 6a University ......... 8a ·Conununity ....... lOa Entertainment .... 14a Churches ......... 16a ()pinion ........... 17a Sports ............ lb :Lifestyle ........... 6b Forces ............ 7b ......... 13b One of Newark's most important and influential "residents" is the University of Delaware, now in its 243rd year as an educational institu- tion. The University has: • More than 18,600 students, of whom about 14,000 are undergraduates. • A high number of incoming freshmen - nearly one-third - who are ranked in the top 10 percent of their high school classes. • A total of 106 undergraduate ma- jors, 74 master's areas and 41 doc- toral fields. • A student-to-faculty ratio of 17-to- 1. • More than 65,000 living alumni. ing a choice. "I think a contest like this is not customary in Newark, but does much to promote good government," he said. Godwin said he sees a number of important issues facing city government, and one of the first he wants to tackle is an adjustment to the water rates charged residents of Wllllamsburg Village. Because the multi-home con- dominium complex is on a single water meter, residents there must pay the highest water rates possible under the new city rate structure. The two-tiered rate structure was established to encourage conservation but, being on one meter, people in Williamsburg Village will be charged the highest rate whether or not they conserve . Concerning broader issues, Godwin said he is interested in ensuring a safe water supply for city residents and in deal- ing with Newark's traffic pro- blems. "I want to keep a close eye on our water supply," he said. "I think it's pretty vulnerable. We need to improve the Safeguards.'' District 1 Godwin Puglisi District 4 Clark Smith Rediscovering hidden treasures on Main Street by Jeannette Picanza Walking down Newark's Main Street, it is possible to be f.allow- ed- by someone wearing ·a fish around their neck and a rather larP,e "Moon Roeket'l sandwich. . But not to fear. There has been no invasion. In fact, these sorts of things have been going on in the city's eclectic downtown shopping district for some time. Main Street is an ever- changing panorama of specialty stores, many yet-to-be- discovered in its infinite nooks, crannies and alleyways. Take Floundergraphics at the top of a staircase over the Na- tional 5 & 10. The catch of the day every day in the small, one- room gallery- owned by "sole" proprietor Laura Spencer - is fish neckties. Hanging around the necks of penguin dummies are a sampl- ing of Spencer's hand-crafted flounder ties, each silk screened and quilted from patterned, striped and colored satins or fake snakeskins. Spencer's line of fish ties in- cludes several species: the lemon dab, the common dab, the tie-dyed turbot and the formal flounder. As well, she has reeled in the lines of other fish tie artists from sea to shining sea and has casted her gallery's walls with sch90ls of the artwork, prints and jewelry of fellow fish artists. Across the street from Floundergraphics stands a little card shop that is far from run-of- the-mill. All Cards Wild at 65 E. Main St. carries a variety of off beat greetings, including one showing a cold-stricken Tyran- nosaurus rex clutching water bottle and Kleenex and bearing the caption "Take two Volvos and call me in the morning." Other card collections include punk and rock-n-roll babies, as well as decked out pets. The store also offers "punk flam- ingO!'' writing pa(4er, "Jetson" buttons and zoo-loads of stuffed animals. Recrossing the street and passing by the Wilmington Trust driveway, it is possible to spot an Easter bunny or even Scarlet O'Hara exiting a side door at the road's end. A sign there directs the curious up two flights of stairs to the large, attic-like Grand Illu- sions Costume Co. There sit racks of hoop skirts, pirate coats and fuzzy and furry outfits of every description. Hundreds of hats from the heads of harem girls, policemen and jockeys are posted on ceiling beams, directly above total head masks of Miss Piggy, Kermit the Frog and the Fightin' Blue Hen. Grand Illusions costumes everything from school plays and costume parties to com- munity theater performances, according to owner Maurice S. Whitlock. The rental costumes are available for· from $25-$40 per day. A hop and a skip - for those who rented the bunny suits - towards Jimmy's Diner brings the shopper to the small, cottage-like Highland Heritage shop owned by Matthew and Margaret McConnell. One step up to the tartan carpet takes shop guests across the rolling north Atlantic to Scotland. Highland Heritage See MAIN/18a KEEP POSTED City plant sale The 5th annual City of Newark plant sale will be held next week in the parking lot of the Newark Municipal Building, 220 Elkton Rd. The sale will be held 9:30a.m. to 5:30p.m. Wednes- day, April 22 and 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, April 23. Available will be ornamental grasses and perennials, in· eluding day lilies, hosta, plumbago, rudbeckia, sedum and cor- eopsis. Proceeds of the sale help defray the costs of maintain- Ing the city's nationally-recognized traffic islands. Christina school break Christina School District students will begin their spring break Friday, Aprlll7. The break will continue all next week Aprll20-24. Classes will resume Monday, Aprll27. ' Income tax time This is it, the day of all days. April 15. Federal income tax deadline day. If you haven't completed and mailed off your tn forms, you'd better take the day off, sharpen your pencils and charge up the calculator. . . ,} ' : . .:

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I I •

Newark girls

win Glasgow .

track title/lh

Godwin, Smith win Newark City Council seats Election '87 Newark City Council has two

new members - Hal Godwin and Allen Smith - following Tuesday's municipal election.

ington Trust Co. in its downtown Newark office.

Municipal Building, Godwin said, "I really can't believe I'm going to get a chance to do this,

Godwin defeated Anita' Puglisi 465 votes to 342 in the 1st District, while Smith unseated

. veteran Councilman Orville Clark 145 votes to 95 in the 4th District.

Each man earned a two-year tenn. Louise Brothers, incum­bent 2nd Da.trict councilman, was unopposed in Tuesday's election and also gained a two­year term.

"I dreamt of someday being able to work with Newark government. This is like Christmas morning, and I can't wait to get on with it," he said.

Both Godwin and Smith are Newark businessmen, and both serve on the board of the one­year-old Newark Business Association. Godwin owns several automotive businesses on South College Avenue, and Smith is employed by Wilm-

Smith said Tuesday night that he feels "pretty good" about the results. Having been involved in one city commis­sion after another for more than two decades, he said, "I'll just carry on what I've been doing for the last 20 years.''

Godwin thanked opponent Anita Puglisi for the manner in which the closely contested race was run. The Puglisi camp, he said, raised a "very serious" contest which forced people to consider the can­didates catefully before mak-

During an impromptu press conference in the Newark

Easter bonnets ... in-again out-agai~ hats are

(

ever-popular in the springtime

by Nancy Turner

As a child in church, did you ever sit in the pew behind a well-to-do matron spor­ting a grand piece of headgear? One of those hats with the incredible fusion of feathers and fur? ·

And when no one was watching, did you ever direct the slightest jetstream of breath toward those feathers to make them quiver, providing enough entertain­ment for the duration of an Easter Sunday sermon?

Hats, caps, berets and bonnets have eb­bed and flowed in the great sea of American fashion, an on-again off-again love affair which has left us with something of a "headipus" complex.

According to several not-so-mad hat­ters, after a decade of caplessness the tide for toppers has turned and is once again high this Easter season.

J.J. Hat Center of New York City has a stock of more than 15,000 men's hats, and has covered the heads of Harry Anderson of "Night Court," Mickey Spillane, Elton John and David Bowie, among others.

Manager Thomas Pyle is confident that "hats are back."

"It isn't a trend just for one season," he said. "We have steadily increased sales over the past five years and expect this favorable fashion climate to continue.

"Of course, we have always sold hats to

the more mature, conservative men who never stopped wearing them. But recently we seem to be appealing to a new, younger generation which is discovering the fashion hat for the first time."

Pyle said the 20-to-40 year olds fonn a "lost generation" which is just rediscovering the hat.

"In general," he said, "it seems people buy a lot of hats that they see on televi­sion or at the movies, like the Indiana Jones fedora or the Bogart styles. The wide-brimmed Panama and imported straw boaters are favorites, also."

James Regan, fashion director of ac­cessories for Macy's, is just back from a preview of the European fall collection. The women's hat market is somewhat flat right now, but he expects innovation on ~e continent will spur things here.

"This season our sales of ladies' hats have yielded to a very strong trend toward other hair goods," he said. "Although we are featuring our customary Easter hat collection from famous designers, our caseline has shifted to ornaments like gros grain bows, tor­toise shell combs and 'Our of Africa' styles."

See BONNET /18a

INDEX FACT FILE

Newarkers ........ 2a News .............. 3a Schools •..•......•. 6a University ......... 8a

· Conununity ....... lOa Entertainment .... 14a Churches ......... 16a ()pinion ........... 17a Sports •............ lb :Lifestyle ........... 6b Forces ............ 7b ~assHied ......... 13b

One of Newark's most important and influential "residents" is the University of Delaware, now in its 243rd year as an educational institu­tion.

The University has:

• More than 18,600 students, of whom about 14,000 are undergraduates.

• A high number of incoming freshmen - nearly one-third - who are ranked in the top 10 percent of their high school classes.

• A total of 106 undergraduate ma­jors, 74 master's areas and 41 doc­toral fields.

• A student-to-faculty ratio of 17-to-1.

• More than 65,000 living alumni.

ing a choice. "I think a contest like this is

not customary in Newark, but does much to promote good government," he said.

Godwin said he sees a number of important issues facing city government, and one of the first he wants to tackle is an adjustment to the water rates charged residents of Wllllamsburg Village.

Because the multi-home con­dominium complex is on a single water meter, residents there must pay the highest water rates possible under the new city rate structure.

The two-tiered rate structure was established to encourage conservation but, being on one meter, people in Williamsburg Village will be charged the highest rate whether or not they conserve .

Concerning broader issues, Godwin said he is interested in ensuring a safe water supply for city residents and in deal­ing with Newark's traffic pro­blems.

"I want to keep a close eye on our water supply," he said. "I think it's pretty vulnerable. We need to improve the Safeguards.''

District 1

Godwin

Puglisi

District 4

Clark Smith

Rediscovering hidden treasures

on Main Street by Jeannette Picanza

Walking down Newark's Main Street, it is possible to be f.allow­ed- by someone wearing · a fish around their neck and munchin~ a rather larP,e "Moon Roeket'l sandwich. .

But not to fear. There has been no invasion. In fact, these sorts of things have been going on in the city's eclectic downtown shopping district for some time.

Main Street is an ever­changing panorama of specialty stores, many yet-to-be­discovered in its infinite nooks, crannies and alleyways.

Take Floundergraphics at the top of a staircase over the Na­tional 5 & 10. The catch of the day every day in the small, one­room gallery- owned by "sole" proprietor Laura Spencer - is fish neckties.

Hanging around the necks of penguin dummies are a sampl­ing of Spencer's hand-crafted flounder ties, each silk screened and quilted from patterned, striped and colored satins or fake snakeskins.

Spencer's line of fish ties in­cludes several species: the lemon dab, the common dab, the tie-dyed turbot and the formal flounder.

As well, she has reeled in the lines of other fish tie artists from sea to shining sea and has casted her gallery's walls with sch90ls of the artwork, prints and jewelry of fellow fish artists.

Across the street from Floundergraphics stands a little card shop that is far from run-of­the-mill. All Cards Wild at 65 E. Main St. carries a variety of off beat greetings, including one showing a cold-stricken Tyran-

nosaurus rex clutching water bottle and Kleenex and bearing the caption "Take two Volvos and call me in the morning."

Other card collections include punk and rock-n-roll babies, as well as decked out pets. The store also offers "punk flam­ingO!'' writing pa(4er, "Jetson" buttons and zoo-loads of stuffed animals.

Recrossing the street and passing by the Wilmington Trust driveway, it is possible to spot an Easter bunny or even Scarlet O'Hara exiting a side door at the road's end.

A sign there directs the curious up two flights of stairs to the large, attic-like Grand Illu­sions Costume Co.

There sit racks of hoop skirts, pirate coats and fuzzy and furry outfits of every description. Hundreds of hats from the heads of harem girls, policemen and jockeys are posted on ceiling beams, directly above total head masks of Miss Piggy, Kermit the Frog and the Fightin' Blue Hen.

Grand Illusions costumes everything from school plays and costume parties to com­munity theater performances, according to owner Maurice S. Whitlock. The rental costumes are available for· from $25-$40 per day.

A hop and a skip - for those who rented the bunny suits -towards Jimmy's Diner brings the shopper to the small, cottage-like Highland Heritage shop owned by Matthew and Margaret McConnell.

One step up to the tartan carpet takes shop guests across the rolling north Atlantic to Scotland. Highland Heritage

See MAIN/18a

KEEP POSTED ~··.

City plant sale The 5th annual City of Newark plant sale will be held next

week in the parking lot of the Newark Municipal Building, 220 Elkton Rd. The sale will be held 9:30a.m. to 5:30p.m. Wednes­day, April 22 and 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, April 23. Available will be ornamental grasses and perennials, in· eluding day lilies, hosta, plumbago, rudbeckia, sedum and cor­eopsis. Proceeds of the sale help defray the costs of maintain­Ing the city's nationally-recognized traffic islands.

Christina school break Christina School District students will begin their spring

break Friday, Aprlll7. The break will continue all next week Aprll20-24. Classes will resume Monday, Aprll27. '

Income tax time This is it, the day of all days. April 15. Federal income tax

deadline day. If you haven't completed and mailed off your tn forms, you'd better take the day off, sharpen your pencils and charge up the calculator.

. . ,}' '.~~·~ : . .:

2a

ice Schreyer ing watch over University's

voluminous special collection

by Nancy Turner

There are scholars who would agree that the world's most valuable treasures are not always made of gold or precious gems. Sometimes they are simply made of paper.

Treasures like a copy of "The Emancipation Proclaimation," signed by President Abraham Lincoln, Walt Whitman's first edition of " Leaves of Grass" and even a letter concerning mystic religion that was writ­ten William Butler Yeats are but valued possessions of thjMJrql,veJ:si1:y of Delaware's

and others like a direct link to

heritage and help to understand the

stimutlation behind the of masterful illustrators.

has been the Library's

S~~l!~~e!~~:~n"~ since June ;... r . The skilled and her staff of pro­

fessionals are dedicated to the preservation of more than 100,000 rare books and 500,000 manuscripts.

Books are chosen for the col­lection if they have rare qualities of being first editions, special printings, or carry historical inscriptions. Collec­tion manuscripts usually con­tain correspondence to or from important authors, or revisions that help us to better unders-tand the personality of a par­ticular writing from the first moment of thought behind the idea to its final printing.

The collection also features maps and a few graphic art

prints of historical value to our area or which have a connec­tive research value to other printed materials of the depart­ment.

" We feel that not only are we responsible for making these materials available to the scholars of today," said Schreyer, " they are equally im­portant to the scholars of the future . There is a curatorial and a custodial role to our job and that means preserving t~e collection from whatever en­vironmerV;al hazards possible.

" This flcility was set up with special environmental controls because we know that modern paper disintegrates at a very rapid pace. This is because of the acids that are used in its production from wood pulp. We cannot prevent the deteriora­tion, but we can slow it. down by maintaining materials at a proper temperature and humidity.

" We have books in the gal.lery that have been printed in 1520 that look as fresh and crisp as the day they rolled off the press. On the other hand, we all remember the paper­back that we bought to take on vacation last summer that now looks as brown as we did com-ing off of the beach.

" The reason is that until the Industrial Revolution, paper was made from pure linen or cotton rags that were left to decompose and were then macerated into shreds. It was an all-natural process with no chemicals added, just linen rags and water. Around 1750, advances in printing technology made it much faster and cheaper than ever before and there was an increase in de­mand for written material because of a new rise in literacy. The one element lagg-

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lng behind was paper. It was very expensive, and frankly, there were only so many cotton rags in the world.

"In the mid 18th and the 19th cxentury, there was a riot of experimentation on everything from wasp's nests to plant fibers by people trying to make cheaper paper. Finally they settled on wood pulp, driven by the newspaper industry's hope to fill the public demand for daily information and skyrocketing circulation. It was discovered that wood pulp could be chemically broken down. An acid was used to help the paper accept ink. Un­fort~tely, this acid still being used, continues to react long after the paper leaves the press and ~ the reason why we see our mtK!ern paper break down more'.t:apidly than centuries old linen paper.

"Therefore, much of our modern paper holds the seeds of its own distruction from the day it is made. This is a pro­blem facing librarians everywhere and we are all ac­tively seeking ways to address

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the issue of deterioration and preservation.''

According to Schreyer, the most danger to a book comes from the environment's wild swings of temperature and humidity fluctuations. Although the average family does not have a climatically controlled library that can maintain the recommended 50 percent humidity. and 68-70 degree temperatures, books should alway be stored indoors under similar conditions and never in a garage or attic.

On May 15, Special Collec­tions will feature a Hogarth Press exhibit. "We have one of the best Hogarth Press collec­tions in the country," said Schreyer. "The Hogarth Press is the press that Leonard and Virginia Wolfe ran in the base­ment of their home. They began it as a hobby press and because they were so much at the heart of the Bloomsburg group, they published many first editions for friends and writers of the 20th Century like E.M. Forster and T.S. Eliot. The artists of the period like Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant

=11,1817

and Roger Fry often Illustrated or designed the books."

More than anything, Schreyer enjoys connecting -· literary treasures with resear­chers who are looking for special bits of infonnation. Before accepting her present position, she wrote "The History of Books: A Guide to Selected Resources in the library of Congress" to help other researchers in the evolv­ing field of book history.

Schreyer was born in New York State and graduated from Barnard College in 1968. She received her master's degree in English and Education from Yale University and her doc­torate from Emory. She also has a master's degree in library service from Columbj.a University. ~

The young librarian presently chairs the rare books and manuscripts section of the Association of College and ,. Research Libraries, a branch: of the American Library ·~ Association. She also chairs file board of directors of the · American Printing History ·· Association.

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We Care Inc. to establish

.~ .. McD House '·: Newark businessman leads effort

We Care In Delaware has been granted a license from the ~cDonald's Corp. to establish a

• 'Ronald McDonald House in nor­them Delaware.

We Care In Delaware is a local organization comprised of parents of children who are ter­

. !;llinally or chronically ill, physi-· .. clans, and other interested in­

dividuals who recognized the need for a Ronald McDonald House.

.. •. The house provides temporary :· housing for seriously ill children :: and their families while the :. children are confined to, or · visiting nearby hospitals for

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In addition to supplying hous­ing at a reasonable cost, a Ronald McDonald House pro­vides emotioanl support to the parents and siblings of sick children.

In the next several months, ~ We Care in Delaware will begin ~ its fund-raising efforts. Ground­: breaking for the house has been ~ set tentatively for fall 1987. The ·: House will be built on land leas­: ed from the state on grounds of : the Emily P. Bissell Hospital, 1 located at Del. 41 and Hercules : Road.

The idea for a local Ronald McDonald House originated with several different people at about the same time. Local McDonald's restaurant owner Leonard Dukart and Dr. Michael E. Norman, director of the Department of Pediatrics at The Medical Center of Delaware, questioned the possi­ble need.

Backed with facts and figures, Norman involved The Center's Junior Board and Dukart enlisted the support of other Delaware franchise owners.

Other interested individuals were included in preliminary meetings and several trips to tour the Ronald McDonald House in Philadelphia and Baltimore were taken. Before long, A.I. duPont Institute, the Junior League of Wilmington, and parents of children with ter· minal or chronic illnesses, many familiar with Ronald McDonald Houses in other cities, were brought together with the original core group to form We Care in Delaware. Dr. Robert Doughty, physician-in-chief at the Institute, and Norman have been working together to coor­dinate the involvement of both institutions.

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Silverline Limousine Service A full set vlcc :u.<ury Uafl sport.aHon com p any cateri ng to torporate and pers onal client• . We provide personalized service lor your e very need. Our cars are equipped with professional chauffers, color TVs. AM ·FM cassette units, video lape machines . fully s tocked bars

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The Independence School Is Expanding

In September 1987, The Independence School will open its new Early Childhood Division providing quality education fo r students ages three / four/and five in our new 10,000 sq. ft . facility . The independence School will also begin a planned expansion in grade one adding a third section in September, 1987 . The Independence School is also expanding its Extended Care program to include a twelve-month "business" calendar schedule . Extended Ca re is open from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday - Friday to all students enrolled in The Independence School. Applications are now bemg processed for all grades beginning with our Early Childhood Level I for three-year clds throu gh students entering grade eigh t. While many of our classes have a wai ting list, it is best to contact the sch ool direc tly regarding an v openings.

The Independence School 1300 Paper Mill Road

Newark, Delaware 19711 302-239-0330

·DON'T HUNT FOR VALUE! Come See Us!

SCHLITZ

rf.:/~n~~ses ..... $749 PIELS DRAFT case . • . . . . .... .. .. .. .. $499 HUNGARIAN WINES 750 mi..

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·. 4a

Girls Clubs opens drive

for $1.8 lllillion New Newark facility plannP-d

Girls Clubs of Delaware has opened a capital campaign to raise $1.8 million for construc­tion of a new center in Newark.

The campaign, entitled "Breaking New Ground for Girls," will run through June.

The new facility will be con­structed on a 4.5 acre tract at the intersection of Wyoming Road and Library Avenue. Land was made available by the Univers i­ty of Delaware.

Designed by Samuel and Vic­torine Homsey Associates, the

- 26,000 square foot building will include space for both Girls Club activities and for a state­licensed day care program.

The day care program will of­fer slots for 150 children ages six weeks through five years. Also, there will be after-school care facilities for a n additional 300

children ag~s six through 18. Included in the building will be

a kitc hen and full -service cafeteria, s well as a gym­nasium.

Classrooms will open onto playing fields adjacent to the building.

Girls Clubs is constructing the new center because of the grow­ing need for programs for young people in northern Delaware.

The orgamzation has been ac­tive in Newark since 1973, and the new building will replace the local club's former sit in the West Park Place Elementary School. That building was reclaimed for use by the Christina School District .

Newark fund raising efforts are being led by Shirley M. Tar­rant and Robert L. Teeven.

Protestors off to D.C. Newark area organizations

are planning to participate in the Saturday, April 25 national march in Washington, D.C. to protest U.S. polici~s in Central American and South Africa .

Buses will leave Rodney Square in Wilmington at 7:30 a .m . and the University of Delaware's Perkins Student Center on Academy Street at 8 a .m .

Bus tickets cost $8, and are

available from the Newark Food Cooperative or by calling 368-4854 before Wednesday, April22.

Buses will depart from Washington at 4 p.m.

Local sponsors of the national march ar·e the Delaware Com­mittee for a Free South Africa, Delaware Nicaragua Network, Pacem in Terris Central American Committee and the Community-Labor Action Com­mittee .

WORSHIP SERVICES MAUNDY (HOLY) THURSDAY

APRIL 16 EUCHARIST 7:30P .M.

!Nurser y Provided)

GOOD FRIDAY, APRIL 17 NOON PRAYER 7 p.m . TENEBRAE

!Nursery provided I ALL WELCOME

Newark United Methodist Church 69 East Main Street, Newark

(302) 368-8774

•Crabs •Clams •Steamed Shrimp •Oysters •Scallops

•Alaskan King Crab Legs •Live Lob s ters

Every Monday Sr. Citizen 10% Discount

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Phone Call Orders Accepted I NEW HOURS : Mon .-Thurs . 10-7, Fri. & Sat . 10-9. Sun . 12-6

UNION HOSPITAL'S PROFESSIONAL "WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM"

STARTS TONIGHT! Don 't miss these FREE introductory meetings:

Wednesday . April15, 7 PM Thursday, April16, 7 PM

LE AN FOR LIFE Our w eigh t-loss par t•crpan ts a1e not put on a d tet !Jut ate taugh t healthy ea t ing behav io1s and food management s~ ills t h at~.an be adopted tor d hi e time o f nutrttionally sound and sustamed we•ghttoss

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The Delaware Institute of Martial Arts Honoring God & Country

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• Physical Fitness • Se lf Defense • Perserverance LOCATION : Fairwinds Christian School

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Off U .S. Route 40 For Info. Call322-8855

WHERE THERE'S A NEED, THERE'S A WAY.

THE UNITED WAYO

The NewArk Post Aprill5, 1987

NEWS

Newark businessman Robert Teeven lends a hand to push along the Girls Clubs of Delaware capital campaign. Steering the local fund raising effort is Shirley Tarrant.

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Apri115, 1987

BICENTENNIAL CALENDAR

• May 17 - The annual Newark Memorial Day

• ceremony and parade will be held. The ceremony will be

• held on the University of Delaware Mall and the parade,

• this year with a bicentennial theme, will move east on Main Street.

• June 1-14- The Earl and Countess De La Warr will visit Delaware. Their visit will coin­cide with a special project in which the Magna Carta will be displayed through the state. It will be on view in Newark on June 9 at the University of Delaware's Daugherty Hall on Main Street.

• Sept. 18-20 - The Delaware Saengerbund will incorporate its annual Oktoberfest into the bicentennial celebration. Oktoberfest will be held in the Saengerbund clubhouse on Salem Church Road, and will feature a tribute to the memory of Baron Friedrich von Steuben who was invited by Benjamin

- Franklin to leave Germany for America to help train the col­onial army.

. - CIVIC FILE

) 6 I ·

Delaware ......•...... Freedom's First

The NewArk Post, in con­junction with the Newark . Bicentennial Commission, will be publishing a bicentennial calendar regularly. If your school, church or organization is planning an event to coincide with the 200th anniversary of the Constitution and would like to have it included, please call 737..0905 or write: Editor, The NewArk Post, 153 E. Chestnut Hill Rd., Newark, DE 19713 .

Bay Head :· :: Meeting Hardware & Marine

•Williamsburg •Prints-Frames :: .: Civic League Gifts· flags •NOS Charts •Sport Clothing •Fishing Tackle •Boat Trailers

Paint •Johnson OB's •Lawn· Boy •Zodiac •Boston

~: The next meeting of the Civic •. League for New Castle County :;... will feature talks on county ::::. water supply protection and on :_.:.- programs for the mentally :. retarded. :~ The meeting will be held at 8 ·.- p.m. Tuesday, April 21 in the

:- New Castle County Police Head­•· quarters, 3601 N. duPont ;. Highway . • : Bernard L . Dworsky, ad­:: ministrator of the Water :: Resources Agency for New Cas­~; tle County, will explain proposed :: measures to protect water supp­:. ly and quality . :: Kristin Boyers of the State :: Division of Mental Retardation :- will discuss group homes for the : · mentally retarded. • A coffee half-hour will begin at : 7:30p.m.

:Flea market ~ewark Oaks-Todd Est : A flea market will be held . : Saturday, May 2 by the Newark ; Oaks-Todd Estates Civic : Association. : The event will be held 9 a.m. to : 4 p.m. in the parking lot of Kirk : Middle School. Rain date is May - 9 : . Cost of a space is $6. For : reservatk ''· call 368-9924 or 368-.: 9263.

•SERVICE DEPT. Whaler

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•Square Table 2 Leaves

•Sideboard •Child's Dresser & Bed

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At . 213, Georgetown . MD

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~~ f\ fl . , College Square ~; \J ~ Shopping Center ~: ~· Newark, DE

~~ \ J (302) 368-3380

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.­.• .• .•

.• ::

DOLLARS AND SENSE By Charles E . Kennard

Question : How do I decide where to lnvut my money and wbat are some of tbe com­mon mistakes! aboald nold?

Answer : The first thing you must do is know why you are investing the money. In­vesting is a means to an end - Identify the end and then look for a suitable Invest­ment vehicle that will get you there. People generally make two mistakes when Investing. First, they will b~y a product and then try to fit the product into their Investment plan. They do this primarily because of how they are being approached by salespeople, or by media advertising which Is almost always pushing product first . As a result most people tend to buy financial products haphazardly without good planning or coordination with all their goals. A second mistake Is people often upect something from a financial product that it is not designed to give. For uample, If you buy a certificate or deposit, you should not expect long-term capital appreciation nor tax advantages. Every investment has Its own characterlatlca, but can usually be analyzed in four areas :

~ : :~: :;~~~·~~!o~~~~~~~~e 3. Are there any tax advantages

~~::hye:: ~~~=~~~~~frf:/~~~P~~~~~~~~:~t goal, and a time frame, e.g., a new house In five years, retirement In ten years, a trip next summer, you have to Iden­tify your risk propensity. How do you feel about taking rlaka with your money? Would you sleep at night If your Investment dropped 10%? 50%? Do not kid yourself. In ordertogeta high return , you have to take more risk . Nut, pick the Investment that will help you reach your goa land will fit your rlak profile . We will look at some general Investments In the next column.

Delaware Financial Advisors, Inc.

100 Chapman Road P.O . Box8118

Newark, DE 19714 302-731-7350

.­.• .. ·:..,_ ________________ __.

The NewArk Post Sa NE\VS

'Tippy Trash can' debuts at West Park Clean and Green Committee hopes to increase anti-litter awareness

"Tippy Talks Trash," a new five-minute slide-tape program designed to educate youngsters about the problems of litter, will have a special preview at 1 p .m ., Wednesday, April15, at the West Park Place Elementary School, 193 West Park Place.

Produced by the City of Newark's Clean and Green Com­mittee with assistance from the Christina School District, the slidetape features Tippy the

Trashcan, a character developed for the Clean and Green Committee to increase awareness of its efforts.

Attending the preview will be school officials and students in the second grade class of Sheila Wright. The students are featured in some of the pro­gram's slides.

"Tippy Talks Trash" was assembled by Wright and John

Brennan, a University of thequalityoftheCityofNewark Delaware Public Service by reducing litter and graffiti. Fellow. The slide-tape program These activities have included discusses where litter comes distributing litter bags, pro­f r o m a n d e n c o u r a g e s viding additional trash recep­youngsters to help by putting lit- tacles in the City and coor­ter in its place . dinating the efforts of volunteers

After the screening, Tippy will in special clean-up campaigns. visit with the students.

Organized in 1985, the Clean

and Green Committee works with various groups to improve

" Tippy Talks Trash" will be made available to the Christina School District for use in its schools.

Annual city plant sale opens next week Perennials such as day lilies, major insect or disease pro- The sale will be held from 9: 30 The 5th annual City of Newark

plant sale will be held Wednes­day and Thursday, April 22 and 23 in the parking lot of the Newark Municipal Building, 220 Elkton Rd.

hosta, plumbago, rudbeckia, blems. a .m. to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, sedum and coreopsis will also be Proceeds from the sale are us- April 22 and from 9:30 a .m. to 3 offered. ed to help defray the cost of p.m . Thursday, Apri123.

The plants being sold are divi- maintaining th~ traffic islands, In case of rain, the sale will be sions of perennials that have which have received national shifted to Thursday and Friday,

Available will be ornamental grasses including fountain grass, reed grass, ribbon grass and miscanthus.

been growing in the traffic recognition. April23 and 24. islands around the city. In Purchasers are asked to pro- For details, contact the general, they are tolerant of vide their own boxes in which to Newark Department of Parks drought conditions and have no carry the plants. and Recreation at 366-7060.

•HOME IMPROVEMENTS

• VACATIONS

• BILL CONSOLIDATIONS

PHONE 737·7800 NORTHEAST LOAN

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NEWARK, DELAWARE 19711

An announcement

of very little interest to

homeowners. 5.9%-*

A great rate plus a great rebate** -.:-----------, 1 yes. I would like more information on a Mellon Home 1 Mellon Bank is now offering our Home Equity Personal Credit Line at the very little rate of 5 .9';;. guaranteed for 90 days from the date yo ur credit line is opened.

Mellon is a lso offering a vet·y interesti ng rebate of closing costs up to $350 on our Home Equity Pet·sonal Credit Line. And while other banks may offer you one of the above. or a choice of one or the f1 ther, Mellon offers both-no ifs. and's. or but 's. This should make choosing the bank for your home equitv credit line exceed-ingly easy. - .

Should you need more incentive. remember that the interest on home equity lines. or a portion of it. is one of the few deductions remaining under the tax reform law. So when you use a Mellon Home Equity Crt>dit Line for home improvements. college tui­tion m· to refinance debts at a lower rnte it 's like h~wing a rich uncl t>- Unclt> Sam- helping you with the intt>rt>st payments.

To take advantage of this spt>cial offer. or to get more informa­tion. stop by any Mellon office. mail in the coupon or mil us at 7:l4 -0263 in Dowr and 1-H00-323-7105 in all other areas.

At Me linn. J..'l'l'llt ralt.':< and J..'l'l'ilt rebatt•s are impm·tnnt parb of qualit .v han king.

I Equity Personal Credit Line. I Full :\ '"'"'

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• · tllrt•r .n .lll .tblt• t.•r ,1 lunth•d nnw •'lllh'\\ . h t Ph~H ~ ••n h t 1!1t•r , .. a!•'~'~ t " '' '''" ' '''·" ll• •nt t ho• 1\.th·

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Dial the Mellon Home Equity Personal Credit Line: 734-0263 in Dover and 1-800-323-7105 in all other areas.

AFS e

In search ·:

:: of host families ~. ~

for four students Pencader chapter program

The Pencader American Field Service student exchange pro­gram is seeking Newark area host families for four youths in­terested in attending American

general. She is practicing the tea ceremony. She, too, is a non­smoker.

• - high schools next year. ' The youths are described as

• An 18-year-old boy from San Juan, Argentina. He has an older brother and a younger sister. A non-smoker, he enjoys listening to music, traveling, playing volleyball and cycling. He collects cards and stickers, studies English after school and corresponds with friends.

'

' .. ,

follows : • A 17·year-old girl from

Zurich, Switzerland. Her family was previously involved in an AFS program in Ecuador. Her interests are piano, swimming, movies, concerts and reading. Her English is good and she is a non-smoker.

• A 16-year-old boy from Soest, West Germany. His in­terests include soccer, friends, cinema, computers and reading books and magazines. He is a non-smoker and has had six years of English.

• A 16-year-old girl from Kyoto, Japan with a Korean background. She is interested in reading books, writing poems, creating dance and sports in

The host families will be pro­vided a 10-month experience in international relations without leaving Newark. The primary requirement to be a host family is a sincere desire to open your home to a young person from another country.

Pencader AFS serves families in the Caravel Academy, Newark High School, Christiana High School and Glasgow High School attendance areas. For details, call Beverly Stoudt at 368-9354 or Leanne Steel at 453-0362.

SCHOOL FILE

Land . Citizen Bee finalist

Harold Land, a student at Newark High School, has been named a finalist in the state Citizen Bee contest.

As a finalist, Land is the win­ner of a $100 U.S. Savings Bond.

Land will compete against 15 other finalists May 12 at the Delaware Technical and Com­munity College Terry Campus in Dover. There, two students will

· be selected to represent the state in the national Citizen Bee finals in Washington, D.C.

The Citizen Bee is sponsored by the Close-Up Foundation in conjunction with the Delaware

, , Department of State and the J?epa.:;tment of Public Instruc­tion.

Bancroft Math League

Christina School District students from Bancroft Elemen­tary School captured three first place awards at the state-wide Math League competition held last month.

The school's fourth, fifth and sixth grade teams each placed first in their region. Honored were fourth graders Nathaniel Smith, Frank Green and Aman­da Funk; fifth graders Pushkor Mukerji, Richard McDowell and Matthew Marchioni; and sixth graders Christopher Owens, Patrick Kent and Subash Paramaswaren.

Students will be honored dur­ing a Math League ceremony Tuesday, April 28 at Smyrna HighSchool.

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Quality,Parts at Reasonable Prices" ...... -............................................. . COUPON

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Worth $2° 0

towards a purchase of $10.00 or more. $2 $2

THERE'S NO HUNTING FOR THESE EAS.TER VALUES!

~~~·

The New Ark Post

SCHOOLS

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9.97 Annual Ryegrass . 25 lb . bag . Fast germ ina.ting. Economically priced. Quick to establish .

2.99 Hyponex 3 cu . ft. pine bark nuggets. *40c rebate on up to 10 bags, rebate doubled when ac ­companied by this ad .

Jcilie) ~6

~ Fertilizer Spikes Fertili zer ~likt>~

2.22. 2.22 Jobe ' s ® evergreen spikes . 5-count .

Jobe's ® tree spikes . 5-count .

1.'17 Black mulch film for weed -free garden ing . Keeps soil warmer for ear · ly plant growth . Holds moisture . 4K50'.

1.44 Grass shears with sharp 6-i nch blade for trim ming lawns around trees, shrubs and near patios .

~ ll t,

Aprtl16,1817

st. Mark's High Scbool student Joe Rago pre~res to press during the school's fund raU.Ing Uf. tatbon to benefit tbe Blue­Gold All-Star Football Game and tbe state's men­tally retarded citizens. The spotter Ul Tony Glenn. The Uftathon raUied about S3,000 towards the school­wide goal of •10,000.

Sale Starts Wed., Apr. 15 Thru Sat., Apr. 18

7.97 Turf Supreme. 31b. box. Highest quality lawn seed mixture . Year round green color. For sun and partial shade . Permanent lawn begins in 5-7 days .

Flowering Bulbs Spring & summer flowering bulb assortment .

10.97 Hyponex weed 'n feed. 28-3-7. 5,000 sq . ft .

... Jcil)c~

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Jobe's ® fruit tree Jobe's ® rose · spikes. 10-count.

spikes. 5-co unt .

4~97. Super K-Gro ® 20-lb . lawn food, 27-3-3 fo rmula pro­v ides vigoro u s growth Covers 5,000 sq . ft.

4.77 Select -A -Spray hose nozzle .

D el u~e 4·position dial for spray pattern selection .

Jobe's Tomato Spikes . 36·count . .... 2.22

0 f ~ -- ~

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99~ 20 oz. bottle B&S 4 cycle oil. For your lawn mowers, garden tillers and garden tractor .

6.97 Sphagnum peat moss retains moisture, enriches soil. Use as soil conditioner, mulch . 4 cu . ft .

:~ *15,11187 The NewArk Post 7a

'Christiana High

OEA chapter honors The Christiana High School

chapter of the Office Education AQociation won 21 awards and $8,000 in scholarships during the annual state leadership con­ference held April 1-3 in Wilm­ington.

The Christiana High chapter was named state Chapter of the Year, and won first place honors for chapter yearbook, promo­tional display and international expression.

Chapter members won 13 first place awards. Sadagah Hassan­El won first place and a $4,000 scholarship to Delaware Technical and Community Col­lege for information processing, and Heidi Prusinowski won first place and a $4,000 scholarship to Goldey Beacom College in shor­thand transcription.

other first place winners were: Christopher Sipe, medical applications and economic awareness; Scott Bowers, finan­cial specialist; Dawn Campbell, ! · verbal communications; Sheena

• Coley, proofreading and editing; I Scott Bowers, Dana Aiello, Jen-

nifer Frick and Chris Schneider foli entrepreneur team; and Dana Aiello, Scott Bowers and K~n Peisino for financial

;. analyst team.

:: Four second place and four :: third place awards also went to :: Christiana High students. Earn­:: ing seconds were: Susan Scerni, ;1 administrative assistant; :; Christopher Sipe, information :; processing; Robert Pritchard, .; business math; and Sheena Col­:: ey, Dawn Campbell, Sharon ~: Anderson, Cheryl Daniels, :; Susan Scerni and Jennifer :! Frick, emblem building.

:j Third place went to: Taffi :. Kotowski, information process­~ ing; Ken Peisino, economic :. awareness; Christopher Sipe, :· proofreading and editing; and •. Jennifer Talley, student of the ~; year.

:; Also, Christiana Hfgh OEA t: member Jerry Huber was •, elected New C~stle County ~: re"gtonal director to the state

association.

SCHOOL ALE

Newark High

Jazz Ensemble honored The Newark High School Jazz

Ensemble earned a rating of superior at the Brandywine Jazz Festival on April4.

The band also received the best section award for its brass section. Outstanding soloist awards went to drummer Chip Vagenas, saxophonist Eric Hirsch and trombonist Randy Lazeration.

Newark High will host a jazz festival at 7 p.m. Fridav M 0 " 1

Christina

AU-State Chorus Twenty-seven Christina

School District students have been named to AU-state Chorus.

Selected for the senior high school chorus are: Chad Nelson, Caprice Thompson, John Briggs, Lisa Douglas, Shannon Price, Allison Sharpe, Sharon Taylor, Deborah Dresden and Sheila Jackson.

Chosen for the junior high school chorus, in its first year, are: Tasha Booker, Shannon Boyer, Dana Corbett, Ann~t~ Dilks, Angela Olsen, Trlcla Ramsey, Kelly Rawley, Adrianne Reynolds, Jeremy ·schwer, Kenneth Sobolewski, Christine Volpe, Kelly Davis, Heather Gosnell, Jessica Nardo, Brian Reph, DeAnn Reule, William Webb and Tanya Word.

STS Host families

Student Travel Schools is seeking host families for Scan­dinavian exchange students for the 1987-83 school year. ·

For jetails, contact Johnna Burroughs at 328-2639.

Newark High

Musicians recognized Newark High School students

Andy Barrett and Jeff Ger­shman have been presented outstanding musical achieve­ment awards by the Delaware

Music Educators Association. Barrett earned first place

honors 'after being selected to AU-state Choir, AU-state Jazz Ensemble and AU-state Band.

Gershman won second place for his performance In AU-state Orchestra, All-state Band and AU-state Jazz Ensemble.

Awards were presented dur­ing the DMEA banquet April4 in Dover by Donald Rittenhouse.

Both students were also honored March 20 during Newark High's guest artist con­cert. Gershman was presented the Louis Armstrong Jazz Award and Barrett was award­ed the Semper Fidelia Award.

Also at that concert, Pamela Beasley was recognized with the John Philip Sousa Award.

Winners

Constitution essay Six students attending

Newark area schools were among 487 Delaware Valley youths named 'winners in the Strawbridge & Clothier Con­stitution essay contest.

They are: Megan Ward of Kirk Middle School; Karen Kayatta of Holy Angels School; Shi vika As thana of In­dependence School; LaTonya McAllister of Sterck School for the Hearing Impaired; Christina Jensen of Gauger Mid­dle School; and Michael Er­mann of Shue Middle School.

Winners at the Individual schools will now compete at the county level for a $4,000 college scholarship. There are 37 school­level winners in New Castle County.

School winners receive a $50 U.S. Savings Bond, a shirt, a certificate and an invitation to march in the Grand Federal Procession in Philadelphia on Sept.17.

Broadmeadow

Honor student

Bill Denton of Bear, a fifth grader at the Broadmeadow School . in Middletown, has achieved high honors for the third marking period.

To gain high honors, students must have a grade average of 95 percent or better.

.­,.. This will tum

your home into · aloan.

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For the cash you need, apply now for a Home Equity Loan at First Federal Savings Bank. It's easy and there's no fee. And if you forget your pen, have one on us. For more information, call 421-3579.

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8a The NewArk Post April15, 1987

UNIVERSITY

Down on the farm University Ag Day celebration will he held April 25

• Want to pick up some inexpen­l:live pepper plants or flower flats? Would the kids like to pet a piglet? Is dad interested in learning how to build up a ter­rific backyard turf or how to brew beer at home?

All these activities and many more demonstrations and displays will be featured at the

.1l2th annual Ag Day, Saturday, April 25, from 10 a .m . to 3 p.m. at Townsend Hall, site of the University of Delaware's Col­lege of Agricultural Sciences on South College Avenue.

Coordinated by the students of the college, Ag Day is open to everyone and most events are free.

In addition to petting small farm animals, children can ride ponies or make seed pictures.

The whole family can observe a livestock show and witness a sheepshearing, a cattle judging and a milking demonstration. A beekeeping demonstration and a poultry di~play are also plann­ed.

The food science club has prepared the beer making demonstration, and the hor­ticulture club will sell bedding plants and houseplants from the greenhouse. Bread baked by the residents of the Farm House and Ag Day t-shirts will be on sale. Balloons at 25 cents each will abound.

Hayrides that tour the univer­sity farm are free, as is the technical advice on soil, turf and garden problems provided by extension master gardeners.

The master gardeners also plan a three-part display featur­ing container gardening, raised bed intensive gardening and standard vegetable gardens. In addition, they will hand out in­formation on creating red, white and blue annual gardens to mark the anniversary of the U.S. Constitution, as well as in­formation on vegetable garden­ing with children and vegetable varieties for Delaware.

Soil testing bags for homeowners will be available at the soils exhibit. The bags cost $4 and the results are returned to the homeowner in about two weeks.

Food will be provided for the hungry by two student organiza­tions. The Alpha Zeta honorary fraternity will sell chicken

Harpsichord to be dedicated The University of Delaware's

new harpsichord will be dedicated by Dr. Larry Peter­·son, associate professor of music, in a concert at 7 p.m . Monday, April 20 in the Amy E.

·duPont Music Building, Amstel ·Avenue and Orchard Road.

The harpsichord is a French single keyboard instrument with

. two eight-foot dispositions of str­•ings. 7 Its was constructed by Willard Martin of Bethlehem, Pa., and

' has a sounding board decorated : with flowers and insects on a ; dead tree which bears new : growth. That is a traditional : mark to symbolize the dead : wood coming to life when the : harpsichord is played. : Peterson will be joined in con· cert by Douglas McNames, cellist, and guest artists Carol Brown, Billye Brown Youmans and Debra Field.

Brown is principal flute with the Delaware Symphony Or­chestra. Youmans, of Chat­tanooga, Tenn., and Field , 'soloist at First and Central

Presbyterian Church in Wilm­ington, are sopranos.

The title of the evening's con­cert is " The Art of Embellish­ment." It will begin with lute ayres from the plays of William Shakespeare, with both vocal and instrumental embellish­ment developed by the perform­ing artists.

Peterson will play a set of Renaissance keyboard works from the Fitzwilliam Virginal collection that display original embellishment that has surviv­ed in manuscript.

Next, Field and Youmans will perform solos and duets from the 17th century that have sur­vived with embellishment used by performers of that period.

The first half of the concert will conclude with the singers performing Handel's cantata " Nel dolce" with embellishment developed by the performers.

Peterson will embellish three Scarlatti sonats using his own embellishment. The final por· tion of the concert will be solos and duets sung by the two sopranos with embellishment

from Handel's oratorio, " Judas Maccabaeus. "

One of the major trends in music training and performance during the last 15 years is the recreation of music of earlier eras using the performance practices and instruments associated with the music of the era, Peterson said.

Much of the music of the Renaissance and Baroque eras, he said, was merely a skeleton for the performers to elaborate and embellish upon.

Peterson has a special interest in recreations, and has taught both Youmans and Field. He will be teaching in residenc~ at the University of Georgia, instruc­ting vocal and instrumental students in embellishment and in understanding articulation of music based on dance forms.

Peterson will conduct an orientation to the harpsichord promptly at 6 p.m. Following the concert, the audience is invited to come on stage to see the in­strument and its decoration.

The concert is free.

, I , -----,

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I • •

BEAR , DE 19701 PHONE 322·1029

barbecue dinners, and hot dogs will be vended by the Future Farmers of America.

Members of Delaware 4-H clubs will fingerprint children at their parents' request. The prints will be placed on file with the university's public safety department and the Newark police.

Modern agricultural machinery will be on display in the Townsend Hall parking lot. An information booth will be staffed to answer questions about the university's College of Agricultural Sciences and careers in agriculture.

Townsend Hall is located across from the Chrysler plant in Newark. Plenty of free park­ing is available. Ag Day petting zoo 1s always popular.

N A N C V JOHNSON

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Aprill5, 1887 The NewArk Post 9a UNIVERSITY

Luce Foundation grant $40,000 awarded for U.D. art history graduate students

The Henry Luce Foundation in New York City has awarded $40,000 to the University of Delaware to help support outstanding doctoral students who are preparing dissertations in the field of American art history.

The University is one of only seven higher education institu­tions nationally to receive a grant from the foundation under a new program designed to en­courage young scholars in the area of American art.

Those schools recognized for the quality of their instruction and their commitment to American art scholarship, in ad­dition to Delaware, were Boston, Columbia, Stanford and Yale universities, the University of

Michigan and the City Universi­ty of New York Graduate Center.

According to foundation Presi­dent Henry Luce III , the "University of Delaware is preeminent among those institu­tions providing quality graduate education to young scholars in American art .''

Under the grant, individual fellowship awards ranging up to $10,000 will be administered by the University's Department of Art History, in support of disser­tations on American painting, sculpture, prints, decorative arts, photography and other disciplines of the visual arts.

The art history department plans to award up to three

fellowships this spring and one or two in the fall, Dr. Wllliam I. Homer, H. Rodney Sharp Pro­fessor and department chairper­son, said. There are currently 65 graduate students in the depart­ment, about half of whom are doctoral candidates.

The fellowships are to be used solely to allow recipients to make major advances toward completion of their disserta­tions, and are not to be used for tuition or to defray overhead ex­penses.

The new fellowship program is an outgrowth of the Luce Fund for Scholarship in American Art, begun in 1980 and directed at about 40 museums throughout the United States.

U.D.'s fightin' fungus .Researcher hopes to control the 'mushroom gnat' · It reads like a Sigourney ~ Weaver thriller. Alien fungus •penetrates the creature's body, : grows inside and, two days later, emerges from it feet, kill­

: ing the creature and releasing : more deadly spores in the pro­• cess. •. However, this gruesome : scenario could save the ·: American mushroom growing ,: industry $4.5 million a year and : may, eventually, have applica­; tion for the dairy and poultry in­;: ~ustries as well. :: ; The fungus, a new species :: ~iscovered by University of ·:Delaware entomologist Dr. Clif· \ ford B. Keil, offers a promising ·".way to control the Sciarad fly or :;-t•mushro·om gnat " which :: causes problems for 'mushroom ::growers in both the larval and ~.adult stage. < Keil, an assistant professor of .. insect genetics and physiology :: and an associate of the Universi· : ty's Agricultural Experiment •• Station, discovered this fly­.• killing fungus while researching -ways to reduce insecticide costs. Efforts to control the Sciarad fly cost the mushroom industry $9 million a year.

The fly first shows up in the larval stage, where it creates problems by degrading the mushroom compost, "making it a soggy mess," Keil says.

When the young fly emerges from the peat moss casing on the compost, it is apparently struck by the ballistic spores of this fungus. " The spores or conidia have an enzyme package that dissolves the cuticle or outside

covering of the fly," Keil says. "The fungus then begins to grow vegetatively inside the fly , fill· ing it with mycelia."

The fly desperately tries to reach a high point, often a mushroom cap, but the fungus inexorably grows out of the feet of the fly, sticking it to the mushroom cap. Then the fly dies, the fungus reproduces, or fruits, releases its spores and starts the process again, he ex· plains.

The goal of Keil's work is to in­troduce the spores earlier in the crop-producing cycle producing a new, non-toxic kind of control for adult flies. "It would be safe - no crop contamination - and we could reduce the toxic sprays on adult flies," Keil said.

In addition to saving money, reduced use of pesticides would also provide a safer work en· vironment in the mushroom

houses and reduce the concerns about residues and run-off from pesticides, Keil says.

But the key to success is pro­duction. Keil says he is hopeful that companies that supply spawn (mushroom stock) to the industry will become interested in producing this killer fungus. "These medium to large in­dutrial microbiology companies have both the sterile facilities and the technology," he says.

There are 4,000 mushroom houses in the total U.S. market with strong mushroom in· dustries in Pennsylvania, Delaware, California, Texas, Michigan, Florida and Georgia. Each year approximately $9 million is spent on pesticide con· trol, but Keil predicts that use of this fungus could cut this amount in half.

Easter Serv.ices JOIN US IN WORSHIP

SUNDAY, APRIL 19 6 a.m. First Service of Easter

with Paschal Fire (Rear Park ing Loti

8, 9:30 & 11 a.m. Celebration of Easter

(In the Navel ALL WELCOME

NEWARK UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 69 East Main Street, Newark

(302) 368-8774

APRIL

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If you haven't filed your taxes for whatever reason -a problem, a question, lack of time, or some other delay, call us. An extension may be a viable solution to this situation. No matter what the pro­blem is, our staff of highly qualified accountants can help you.

We can offer you professional, courteous advice at an affordable price. Let us work hard for your money!

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all the ~r•te stuf • office supplies •

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May Not Be Available

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES • PRICES EFFECTIVE APRil 13 THRU 19, 1987 • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS

RITE AID PHARMACIES NEWARK, DE

*400 Peoples Plaza Pharmacy Phone: 834·0532

*Park And Shop Shopping Center Pharmacy Phone: 368-1614

*103 Newark Shopping Center *23 Liberty Plaza Pharmacy Phone: 737-5115 Pharmacy Phone: 453-1337

Rt. 40 & Salem Church Road, Bear DE

, • , • • I • t • # • I • # I ., f t •, t r' 1 r I • o 1 1 o o 1 • • \. r r • e

. ' '· :I

10a

YWCA Spring regt. tration

The Newark Center YWCA, 318 S. College Ave., is accepting registration for its second spring session which begins the week of April26.

Offered will be arts and crafts, kidaerobics, teen aerobics, slim­nastics, modern dance and swimming lessons for children and adults.

Registration will be accepted from 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays, and 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays. For details, call 368-9173.

WalkAmerica

March of Dimes The March of Dimes

Delaware State Chapter is organizing its fund raising WalkArnerica '87, to be held at 9 a.m. Sunday, April 26 at the Delcastle Recreation Area.

The course is 30 kilometers -about 181h miles - long. Par­ticipants can walk alone or in teams.

South College Avenue ost is $25 and includes collar

and lea 'h Registration is due uy Wednesday, April 22 and class size is limited. Cal1451-8965.

Bingo

Newark Soroptimists The Newark Soroptimists will

hold a fund raising bingo festival from 7 p.m . to midnight Friday, April 24 at the Newark Senior Center, 300 E. Main St.

Admission is $2 at the door. Proceeds benefit the Newark Senior Center.

Gardening

Welcome Wagon

A home gardening seminar will be presented by the Delaware Extension Service at 7:30p.m . Thursday, April lo at the Newark Senior Center, 300 E. Main St.

The program is sponsored by the Newark Welcome Wagon Newcomers Club. It is open to the public .

Clinic '. For details, ·on tact the March

of Dimes at 73'7-1310 or 737-2680. Registration cards are available at 1ocal7-Eleven stores.

. , .. .. ' ., , .. ' .. '

~ : ;f!,

"' .1 .

"' ~. ·' ,J

~ .. .. .. ~ , . .. ·' ~ ·' •. ;,.. .. .. ~ ·!

.• .. ~

4-H D og training

A nine-week dog trainfng course will be offered by the New Castle County 4-H and the Guiding Paws 4-H Club from 6:30-7:30 p .m . Wednesdays beginning Apri129.

Sessions will be held in the field behind the University of Delaware's Townsend Hall on

Administration Position Sales e xper ience prefer ­red , not required . Wi ll train . Looking for mature professional , attractive in · d ividual not afraid of long hou rs for b i g mone y . Please apply in person at Rte . 40 Nissen , U.S. Rt . 40 , Perryville, April 16th , 1987 between the hrs . of 4 p .m .-9 p.m. only .

JESUS CHRIST IS LORDI

Celebrate His Lordship at NEW LIFE

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP •A family church .•A charismatic teaching center •A world outreach center

2712 Old Milltown Rd ., 'Wilm ., DE (Kirkwood Hwy. to Milltown Rd .

turn left at the Jesus Housel

(302) 999-1800 Rev. Ernest W. Beers, Pastor Services: Sun . 8:30 & 11 a.m .

Wed . 7p.m .

Ministry to alleges: Nuraery· Children· Youth

J~~:~~ t~r~ ~~ o I d g r iII · and clean it · up. Keen Propane . . can help with its full I i n e o f r e p I a c e- ---...----ment parts.

Freedom From Smoking An American Lung Associa­

tion Freedom From Smoking clinic will be held April 20-May 27 at the Newark Emergency Center. 324 E. Main St.

The seven-session program provides individuals who have decided to quit smoking in­formation , encouragement and support.

Meetings will be held 7-9 p.m. April20 and 27, and Ma y 4. 6, 11, 18 and 27.

The fee is $35. Por deta ils or to register , call the ALA of Delaware at 655-7258.

406JNew Ca stle Ave .

W il m ing1on ,

Admln iatral hte Offices

101 Rodgers Rd . NtwCes tle . DE

13021594-4551

DE 19899 13011594-4545

CU RTIS AVE & RT . 40

EUuon . MD 21921

392 4554 or4555

The New Ark Post

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90"-CCP23-15 White 4'2"x3' 1-15/16" $39999

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30" ·C25·20 White 7'9"x5' 1-7/8" $59995

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Rockwood

'Spring's tlw Thinl-{'

A spring plant sale will be held 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, April 25. at Rockwood Museum, 610 Sttipley Rd., Wilmington.

Available will be plants typlcaUy found in Victorian g~rdens, as weU as herbs, wtldflowers and shade-loving p\!lhts. Admission is free .

During the plant sale, visitors will be able to take guided tours of. ; Rockwood's landscaped gatdens and manor house every heur from 9 a .m. to 2 p.m. Cost o(::"the garden tour is $1. Admis­s~ to the manor house is $3 for alults, $2.50 for senior citizens aful $1 for children 5-16. Children under s are admitted free .

:aockwood Museum is ad­niinistered by the New Castle dunty Department of Parks aild Recreation. For details, call 511-7776.

Troul Unlimited

'fishing Pennsylvania'

• The Delaware State Chapter of Trout Unlimited will hold its annual spring meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday, April 27 at the Ashland Nature Center near Hockessin.

Paul Nale, former executive director of Pennsylvania Trout Unlimited, will be the guest speaker. He will speak on "Fishing Pennsylvania Trout Streams with a Fly Rod and a Spinning Rod."

Nale is a biology teacher at Pleasant Valley High School in Gilbert, Pa. and has been editor of Pennsylvania Trout magazine.

Admission to the meeting is rr:ee.

Miniatures

$how and sale ;The First State Miniature club

wjll hold its lOth annual show and sale on Sunday, April 26 at

Brandywin~ Terrace, 3416 Philadelphia Pike, Claymont.

Included will be dollhouses, bmcrouml>, vignettes and hand­cralt d miniatures . Show hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m . Admission is $3 for adults and $2 for senior citizens and children . No strollers will be allowed.

Seniors

Biennial convention The Delaware State Council of

Senior Citizens will hold its bien­nial convention on Wednesday, April 29 at Dover Air Force Base.

The convention will include discussion of issues of interest to state residents over 60 years of age . Also, there will be election and installation of state officers.

For details, contact Norma Shaw, state president, at 368-3169.

ONES 'Wildlife Heritage'

Naturalist Allen J. King will present his film "America's Wildlife Heritage" at 7:30p.m. Monday, April 20 at Cokes bury Village.

The film depicts cranes, horn­ed owls, bull elk and loons. It took King 10 years to complete.

The program is sponsored by the Delaware Nature Education Society . Admission is $5. For details, call 239-2334.

YWCA Summer day camp Registration is being accepted

for the 14th annual summer day camp sponsored by the Newark Center YWCA.

Cost is $50 per week for children ages 4-8, $55 per week for children ages 9-12 and $60 per week for children ages 13-15. Discounts are available if more than one child from a family is enrolled.

Space is limited and early registration is suggested. For details or to register, call 368-9173 or visit the YWCA at 318 S. College Ave.

The NewArk Post

COMMUNITY

215E . DelawareAve. Newark . DE

311-4104 SUNDAY

ChurchSchool 5:45 MorningWorship 11:00 YouthGroup 5:30

THOMAS LAZA .. ·,tnor OurStnlc:n,orlh i•W.,kAre:

~::~·~i .. '~!: F!;':iit l lblt Study 10.4Ct .m MornlngWorth lp,

Ttdd~r'•Church , Ju nlorChurc: h , TtuChurc:h

7•00p r . . f•en ln1S•n lc:.

Apri115, 1987

While not on the track, Glasgow High School run­ners (from left) Lisa Zasowskl, Gina Foreman, Beccah Melahn and Trlcla Miller soaked up the sun during Saturday's Glasgow Invitational meet.

Photo/Butch Comegys

A Guide To Area Worship Services CHURCH 292 Wut Main Streit

Nework . DE GRACE EVANGELICAL

FREE CHUIICH Meeting at Skyline Middle

SchooiiSkyline Dr. & linden Hill Rd .l

U5a .m. BibleCiasses 11 :00 a .m. Worship

Rev . Gregory L. Hullinger PutoriTncher

ITh .M.. Dallas Theological Seminary!

Of Sunday Service 10:00 A.M . Sunday School 10:00 A.M. Wed . Testimony

Meeting 7:lOP .!III

Church School 9:15 Nu• .. tyA'I•II•ble

Worship Service 10:30 The Reverend

Dr . Robert l. Lowry. Putor

UNIT All IAN FELLOWSHIP OF NEWARK

420WilloRd . 1011 Park Plocel

10:30 Sundoy

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Summer Worship 9 A.M. Communion

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~~fti: Children 10

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Aprllli, 1817 The New Ark Post

Thomas D. Burns

Burns

Soroptimist award Thomas D. Burns has been

named the 1987 recipient of the Newark Soroptimist Youth Citizenship Award.

Burns, the son of Mr. and Mrs. A.H. Burns, is a senior at William Penn High School.

Daicar

Caring for elderly

Eva Daicar, director of the University of Delaware Adult Day Care Center, will discuss ef­fective strategies for com­municating with a disoriented person during a meeting of Families Caring for Elderly Relatives on Tuesday, April28.

The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. at Calvary Baptist Church, 215 E . Delaware Ave. It is open to the public.

Families Caring for Elderly Relatives is a program spon­sored by the church and Delaware Cooperative Exten­sion.

Puffins

Audubon Society

Stephen Kress, director of the National Audubon Society's Pro­ject Puffin, will discuss " Bird Islands of the North Atlantic" at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 23 at the Delaware Musewn of Natural History in Greenville.

The program is sponsored by the Delaware Audubon Society. It is free and open to the public.

Since 1973, Kress has directed a project to reestablish a colony of puffins on Eastern Egg Rock, a small island off the coast of Maine. Because of its success, Kress will be awarded the Rolex Award for Enterprise in Switzerland shortly after his local presentation.

COMMUNITY

Archivist

Genealogical

Delaware State Archivist Roy Tryon will discuss the holdings of the Delaware Archives during a meeting of the Delaware Genealogical Society on Tues­day, April21.

The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Library of the Historical Society of Delaware, 505 Market Street Mall, Wilm­ington.

Senior Center

Weekly schedule

The Newark Senior Center, located at 300 E. Main St., has scheduled the following ac­tivities :

Thursday, Aprill&

9 a .m ., ceramics. 10 a.m. , legal aid; Choral

Group; discussion. 12:30 p.m., duplicate bridge;

membership meeting. 1:30 p.m., dancing; Scrabble. 7:30p.m., Alzheimers support

group.

Friday, ,April17

9 a.m. , bowling at Blue Hen Lanes.

9:30a.m., shopping. 10 a.m., Signing Group. 1 p.m ., Senior Players.

Monday, April20

Pocmont Lodge trip. 10 a.m., crocheting instruc­

tion; knitting instruction. 11 a .m ., exercise. 12:30 p .m ., canasta; movie

matinee. 12:45 p.m ., bridge.

Tuesday, April21

9 a.m., bowling at Blue Hen Lanes.

10 a .m., Bible study; enjoy­ment bridge; listening strategies class.

12:30 p.m., 500; Tuesday After Lunch program on life skills with the Fantastics 4-H club.

Wednesday, April22

9 a .m ., chess. 10 a .m ., art class ; needle­

point. 12:30 p.m ., pinochle. 12:45 p.m ., bingo.

Activities

Newark Parks & Rec The Newark Department of

Parks and Recreation has scheduled a variety of activities

in coming weeks. For more information or to

register for programs, call 366-7060 or visit the department's of­fice in the Newark Municipal Building, 220 Elkton Rd.

Activities

• Family hayride - A family hayride wlll be held at 5:30p.m. Saturday, May 2, with the wagon departing from the Dempsey Farm on Corner Ketch Road. The ride will be followed by a hot dog and marshmallow roast. Br­ing beverage. Cost ranges from $3 to $8, and children under 2 will be admitted free. Advance registration is required. Rain date is Saturday, May 9.

Courses

• Prenatal exercise - In­structor Marjorie Denney will lead exercises designed to offset the common discomforts of pregnancy and promote muscle tone and general fitness. Ses­sions will be held 7-8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays from April 28 to May 21 at Downes Elementary School on Casho Mill Road. Cost is $16 for city residents and $18 for the general public. Physician's approval is required.

• Basic archery - Basic in­struction in the ancient art of ar­chery for youths 10-14 will be held 10-11:30 a.m. Saturdays, April25 to ~ay 16 at Rittenhouse Park. Students will learn the parts of the bow and arrow, shooting commands and safety rules. Cost is $18 for city residents, $20 for the general public.

• Tennis. - Spring tennis courses are being offered, and will meet May 18 to June 15. Cost of the tennis classes are $14 for city residents and $16 for the general public.

Trips

• Pocono whitewater rafting - Saturday, May 23, with depature at 7 a .m . and return at 8 p.m . Cost is $48 , for city residents and $50 for the general public.

• Ringling Brothers circus -Thursday, June 4, with depar­ture at 5:45 p.m. and return at 11: 15 p.m. Cost is $12.50 for city residents and $14.50 for the general public.

• Philadelphia Phillies versus New York Mets - Sunday, June 28, with departure at noon and return at 5: 15 p.m. Cost is $11 for city residents and $13 for the genera l public.

Help needed

• The Department is in need of playground supervisors, playground leaders, junior leaders, tot lot leaders, volleyball coordinator, baseball umpires, scorekeepers and volunteers. For details, call Thelma Muire or Sheree Emer­son at 366-7060.

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ENTERTAINMENT

:.

OperaDelaware to stage 'Fidelio' Beethoven's only opera, 1

"Fidelio," will be presented in English as the final opera of the 1986..a7 season by OperaDelaware. The opera will be offered at the Grand Opera House May 9, 15 and 16 with curtain each evening at eight.

This is quite a coup for our local opera company. Except for the Metropolitan Opera, OperaDelaware is the only company in Amer ica presen­ting a full production this season.

Wilmington's own Stefan Kozinski will conduct and has prepared the English transla­tion to be used. He has even modified the orchestration for the Grand Opera House per­formances. Stefan is currently assistant conductor of the Spokane (Wash.) Symphony

·- Orchestra. His conducting has ; ; · thrilled audiences on both sides ~:: of the Atlantic. ~; Dugg McDounough will :.:: return to direct the Beethoven :;~ opus. Newarkers may ~::; recognize Dugg in yet another ~.:~ way. He is married to our ·-; Kathy Ciesinski. Dugg directed ~:.· the OperaDelaware :-:· " Cinderella" which was so well · received here. :~ There is quite a challenge of-

fered to a set designer by the • very limited stage at the Grand

- no fly and no wings ! • OperaDelaware has engaged

David Gordon for the sets . Mr . Gordon has risen to the occa-

sion. All those top flight people,

and I haven't even gotten to the cast yet! That may give you a clue as to the type of per­formance I am expecting! The " Fidelio" cast includes Bretta Lundell as Leonore; Christoph Forssman, Florestan ; Marcie Jellison, Marselline ; Stephen Owen, Pizarro ; Leroy Lehr, Rocco; James Longacre, Jac­quino and Stephan Kir- · chgraber as Fernando.

Bretta Lundell is a native New Yorker who received her musical training at the Mozarteum in Salzburg and at the Accademia di Sant Cecilia in Rome. She has been a fre­quent radio performer and has appeared with opera companies in Philadelphia, Tulsa, Rome, Naples and created the role of Judith in Joyce Barthelson's opera " The Devil's Disciple."

Christoph Forssman is a Norwegian who has appeared with many opera companies across America in such roles as Don Jose in " Carmen," Calaf in " Turandot" and Canio in " Pagliacci."

Marcie Jellison recently per­formed Papagena in OperaDelaware 's " The Magic Flute." Other roles have in­cluded Susanna in " The Mar­riage of Figaro" and many per­formances at the Dan Theater Workshop and the 92nd Street Yin New York. Welcome back !

Stephen Owen has a wide

lmpres$ions ~ ,.\, From A Rooftop "" Spirits & Entertainment

Live Band n !Featuring "S!~~~~LEf~N~" Music Videos Sensat ional Atmosph ere

r---- COMING TO IMPRESSIONS:

April "Heartland" May "The New Time 25th

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COME SPEND A NIGHT WITH U ! Main Street Rising Sun Must Be 21 or Older to Enter • 10 Required

Jacki Sorensen'sAerobic Dancing

AEROBIC DANCING A Progressive Course

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12WEEK SESSION

begins APRIL20-JU l Y 10

NEWARK WILMINGTON Geo . Wilson Center. Rt . 896 Aldersgate Church . Rt . 202

M / W · 7:00PM M / W . 5 & 6:15PM T / TH · 9:00AM

Ntl. Guard Hdqtrs .. Sherwood Park T / TH · 5:30PM

You may ~eg ister for the lull 12 week session or spli t the session 7 weeks • Part I, Aprol20 to June 5 and / or 5 weeks · Part II , June 8 to July 10.

GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE

l fl~~ FOR INFORMATION / REGISTRATION , CALL

d:_ISA' 854-2383 ASK FOR NORMA -

THE ARTS by Phil Toman

variety of credits in opera per­formance. He was an Eastern region audition finalist for the Metropolitan Opera in 1984. Some of his favorite roles are in " The Tales of Hoffman" and " Rigoletto."

Leroy Lehr is a Metropolitan Opera audition winner and grant recipient from the Mar­tha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music. He was featured in the CRI recording of Ars ento's " Jonah and the Whale." Heap­peared in the American premiere of Gorecki's " Coper­nicus ."

As OperaDelaware continues to draw audiences from wider and wider areas and since this is one of only two productions to be offered of " Fidelio" this season, tickets are becoming scarce items. If you would like

to be in the Grand Opera House for this special event, may I suggest you calling OperaDelaware or the Grand box office at 652-5577.

This is an opera the whole family can enjoy. The story is a very positive one and thf music -well, it 's Beethoven.

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THE GRAPEVINE

by Ed

Miller

April 15th, 1987

Wine rarity - a 202-year·old bottle believed to have been owned by Thomas Jefferson - brought $56,000 at auction this winter. Our third president bought quali ty wines for h i~ .~?ntice llo home.

New " game" in some Paris restaurants: the sommelier serves the wine with its name obscured; guests are challenged to name it . Loser pays lor dinner. says the ru le.

Wine trivia board game will be available nationally soon. Costs about the same as three or four good bott les of wine. (We're belting on the win e. ~~~ learning tool .)

Fru it-flavored wine beverages are com ing in hom Italy, made from vinifera wine flavored with natural fru it. Peach and raspberry were the J~~t:alllavors .

Natural go· together: California avocado salad and crisp , cold Chardonnay wine. If you 've mashed and seasoned the avocado into guacomole to serve with chips, choose less-austere Sauvignon Blanc.

What wine goes with dinner7 We' ll help you choose the most enjoyable bottle at Peddler's Pub .

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April 15,1987 The New Ark Po t 15a ~: · · ____ ..._ ______________ ................ ._ ...... .._ ________________ ........... f . ~-----------------=E:.:...N:..:.T..::.:ER:.:..:T~A:.:...IN....:.;_M,;_:.E~N..:...:T....:.;_C..::.:A-=L::=:E.:.....:N=-D.:....:A:.:..:.R _______________ _ ~: Theater ~:. • · ' Quad, " an original •. comedy-drama about college ::. life by Scott F . Mason, will be

staged April -16-18 by E-52 Stu­:; dent Theatre in 100 Wolf Hall on ~: the University of Delaware cam­

pus. Mason is a U.D. student who last year earned good reviews for his works "Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner" and "Murder on Cue." Curtain time is 8:15p.m. for all shows. Tickets cost $3 and will be available at the door .

• "And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little," a play by Paul Zindel, will be staged April 24-25 and May 1-2 and 7-9 by Newark's Chapel StrePt Players in the playhouse at 27 N. Chapel St. Directed by Ernie Sutton, the play tells the story of the tor­tured relationship between three sisters. The cast includes Susan Cinaglia, Marlene Hummel and Lynne Smith as the three Rear­don sisters. Also , Renee O'Leary, Don Pruden, Tom Spence and Deryn P. Verity. Tickets cost $7 for adults and $4 for youths under 18 Call 368-2248.

• " Twelve Angry Men and Women," an adaptation of the award-winning Reginald Rose teleplay, will be staged at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, May 1 and 2 by the Limelighters of Glasgow High School. Tickets cost $3 for adults and $2 for students and senior citizens and are available from cast members or at the door.

• OperaDelaware will present a new production of Beethoven's "Fidelio ' ' in English May 9, 15 and 16 at Wilmington's Grand Opera House. Curtain time for all shows is 8 p.m. Stefan Kozin­ski will conduct and Dugg McDonough will direct. Tickets cost $15-$25, $6 for students. Call 652-5577.

Music • University of Delaware con­

certo winners will perform with the Delaware Symphony Or­chestra at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 16 in the Amy E. duPont Music Building, Amstel Avenue

: •. and Orchard Road. Concerto :~: winners are: Sue Peo, Victoria

Ann Wells, Evan Wennerberg, Michelle Lofthouse, Esther Norvell, Suzanne Spangler, Karen Dilly, Susan Uibel and Chris deBarbadillo. The concert is free.

• The Delaware Chamber Or.· chestra directed by J. Robert King will present. its final con­cert of the 1986-87 season at 8 p:m . Friday, April 17 in the auditorium of the Tatnall

School, 1501 Barley Mill Rd., Wilmington. Guest soloist will be trombonist Dr. Donald Jay Hildebrandt of the University of Delaware. Tickets cost $4 for the general public and $2 for senior citizens, and will be available at the door . Students under 18 will be admitted free.

• The Delaware Festival Chorus will perform Mozart's " Requiem" at 8 p.m. Friday, Apri117 at St. Peter's Cathedral, 6th and West streets, Wilm­ington. Judith Roberts Higbee will be guest conductor, and Suzette Tenhet will be organist. Soloists will be soprano Delynda Johnson, mezzo Sandra Fine, tenor Kt.lneth Beard and bass Thomas Hurley .

• The Boys Choir of Harlem will perform at 8 p.m . Saturday, April 18 at the Grand Opera House in Wilmington. tte pro­gram will feature mus i b;, J.S. Bach and Giovanni Pergolesi, as well as spirituals and contem­porary songs. Tickets cost $12. Call652-5577.

• The Belgian flute-guitar duo of Jean-Bernard Barnabe and Eduardo Lomonte will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday, April21 at the University of Delaware's Amy E . duPont Music Building, Amstel A venue and Orchard Road . The concert is free .

• A concert to dedicate the University of Delaware's new harpsichord will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, .April 20 in the Amy E. duPont Music Building, Amstel Avenue and Orchard Road. The program is free.

• The Gewandhaus Orchestra of Leipzig, under the direction of Kurt Masur, will perform at 8 p.m . Wednesday, April 22 at the Grand Opera House in Wilm­ington. The orchestra, which traces its roots back to the time of Johann Sebastian Bach, will perform works by Beethoven, Siegfried Matthus and Samuel Barber. Tickets cost $20 to $31. Call652-5577 .

• Country music star Johnny Cash will perform at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Friday, April 24 at the Grand Opera House in Wilm­ington. Cash, the son of an Arkansas cotton farmer who wrote first hit " Folsom Prison Blues" while stationed at an Air Force base in West Germany, will be backed by June Carter, the Carter Family and the Show Band. Tickets cost $20 .50 to $24.50. Call652-5577.

Art • " Creative Concepts," a fine

arts show featuring Newark area artists, will be held through April 30 in the Country Gallery

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at Wilson Station, 250 E. Chestnut Hill Rd. The show will feature works by Charlu Schill­ing, E. Jean Lanyon, Phyllis Torres and Charlotte L. Rupp.

"Art Peaces," an exhibi­tion of sculpted images by Debbie Hegedus, is on display through April 23 at Gallery 20, 20 Orchard Rd. Gallery hours are 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, and by ap­pointment. Call368-3643.

• "Alphabet Zoo," an exhibit of calligraphy works by Karen Luoma of Newark, will be on display through May 2 at the Newark Free Library, 750 Library Ave.

• "Art Peaces," an exhibition of sculpted images of "the often ignored and silent people" by Debbie Hegedus, will run through April 23 at Gallery 20, 20 Orchard Rd. Hegedus works in paper, plaster, fiber wood and stone to create images which evoke compassion in the viewer. Hours are 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, and by appointment . Call 368-3643.

LI\NDMARK BAPTIST CHURCH Meeting in the Grange Hall

at Glasgow, DE on Hwy. 896

Pastor Jack Spencer Landmark Baptist is a church with a heart for ... Featuring:

Meat & Seafood Plus our Soup, Salad and

Dessert Bar

The Truth of the Bible lost Souls Fellowship People New Castle County and Especially You!

SERVICES SUNDAY SCHOOL

10:00

WORSHIP SERVICE 10:45

ONLY S795

REGULAR MENU IS ALSO AVAILABLE!

Phone for Reservations

• Recent works by award­winning artist Phyllis Torres of Newark will be on display through April in the Newark Municipal Building, 220 Elkton Rd. Torres' work is characteriz­ed by the use of iridescent color, and ranges from the symbolic to the whimsical. ForM ore Information Call302/3&8-3&0&

301-287-8141 U .. S. ~t. 40, N_!)Jth .Ea,st,.MD

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16a The NewArk Post April15, 11117

CHURCH ALE

Easter services

United Methodist Newark United Methodist

Church, 69 E. Main St., will offer special services during Easter week.

Maundy Thursday service will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 16 in the nave. Eucharist will be offered, and nursery will be available.

Good Friday, April17, will in­clude a noontime prayer service and a 7 p.m. Tenebrae service. Nursery will be available at the evening service.

Salem UMC Easter programs

Salem United Methodist Church, 469 Salem Church Rd., has scheduled three special events during Easter week.

A lenten drama entitled " The Promoter" will be offered at 7:30 p.m. Maundy Thursday, April 16. It will be presented by Ron Corbett and Richard Mor­ris, and will be followed by com­munion.

Four services will be held on Easter Sunday, April 19. The first will be at 6 a .m. in the rear parking lot of the church. The others will be held at 8, 9: 30 and 11 a.m. in the nave. Nursery will be available at the latter three services.

An Easter sunrise drama is scheduled at 6 a.m. Easter Sun­day, April19. The drama will be presented by the Salem United Methodist Youth.

Carrying the cro88 in last year's Good Friday walk.

Following the sunrise service, there will be a breakfast at 6:30 a .m. Tickets cost $3.50 for adults and $1.75 for children, and are available from members of the Salem United Methodist Men or from the church office , telephone 738-4822.

'Way of The Cross' walk Friday Our Redeemer

Local Christians to gather for Pike Creek Valley services

Special services

Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, 10 Johnson Rd., has scheduled special Easter week services.

Maundy Thursday worship will be held at 7:30 p.m. Apri116, and will emphasize the institu­tion of the Last Supper.

The choir, directed by Diane McKinley, will sing "Ave Verum Corpus" during a Tenebrae ser­vice at 7:30p.m. Good Friday, Apri~17 .

Worship on Easter Sunday, April 19, will be held at 10 a.m. Communion will be offered. Choir anthems will be ''He is Risen" and "With a Voice of Singing."

An Easter brunch will be held at 11:15 a.m.

Easter services

Christiana Presbyterian

Special Easter week services have been scheduled by Chris­tiana Presbyterian Church, 15 N. Old Baltimore Pike.

A Maundy Thursday service of Tenebrae and communion will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday, Aprill6.

On Easter Sunday, April 19, . there will be a family worship service at 8:30a.m . followed by a pancake breakfast in the Hall Building. A second worship ser­vice will begin at 11 a.m.

Nearly 200 Newark area residents will take up the cross for a three-hour journey through the Pike Creek Valley at noon Good Friday , April17 .

The annual " Way of the Cross" program will begin at noon at White Clay Creek Presbyterian Church on Polly Drummond Hill Road, and will end about 3 p.m. at Skyline United Methodist Church, 3100 Skyline Dr.

" The three-hour Way of the Cross walk brings Christians from all over the Newark area together in a time of remember­ing and experiencing Jesus Christ's walk and death at Golgotha ," said the Rev. Thomas P . Donnachier associate minister. at Ebenezer United Methodist Church and an organizer of the event.

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Walkers will leave White Clay Creek Presbyterian Church following words of welcome and opening devotions.

They will be invited to help carry an eight foot wooden beam cross, which reminds them that "Jesus was forced to carry his own cross," Donnachie said .

Meditations will be held at 14

stations: Noon and 12 :20 p.m., White Clay Creek Presbyterian Church ; 12 :35, Polly Drummond Hill Road athletic field ; 12 :50, entrance to the Village of Drum­mond Hill; 1:05, Etta J . Wilson Elementary School entrance ; 1:25, Drummond Hill Pool playground area ; 1:45, Parish of the Resurrection ; 2:20, Timber­view and Videre roads ; 2:40,

Skyline United Methodist Church.

This year, Donnachie said, more time will be spent at the Parish of the Resurrection sta­tion. "The purpose is to provide more worship time for those who only join in this segment of the walk experience," he said. " In addition to the stations, a brief meditation will be shared."

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SOUTHERN STATES 800 OGLETOWN RD.-NEWARK

738-0330 MON.·FRI. 8 AM -6 PM ; SAT. 8:00-4:00; SUN. 11 :00-5:00 -

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April 15, 1917 The NewArk Post 17a OPINION

:·Growth p roves troublesome issue here..---------- --, : One of the most troublesome employers to build in Delaware, (!JJ'!;e r .issues facing Delaware in the county struggled to find an ~l- L ·- J _ 'general and the Newark area in appropriate place to put them. 'fll11!/JtJf111J!flf!J}; particular is how to balance the H 0 usE Sl DE 7 ~ need to preserve open space and Finally, we are recognizing ~v_ l - _/ control overcrowding of roads, that "development" and land e/IJ)(_i(;

. sc~ools and other public ser- use, roads, schools and open vices while encouraging the space must all be coordinated. economic growth and the jobs Each must be carefully planned that come with economic for if we are to provide the jobs growth. and economic vitality our people

Every time we see a new of- need and the kind of envlron­fice complex or housing develop- ment in which we choose to live, ment going up, we know it's work and raise families. good for the community from The House Land Use and the standpoint of jobs and Economic Development Com­economic growth and the v~tali- mittee under Chairman Steve ty of area businesses, but aF the Taylor has been conducting a same time we know it wilt add thorough review of the com­further pressure to our roads prehensive land use plans of and our schools. j each of Delaware's three coun-

We also know that ever~piece ties, as well as many of its of ground removed fro open municipalities, including space by development ca never Newark and Wilmington. When be recovered and we know we this review is completed, the have very little open space left. Committee will attempt to come

In Delaware, we have tradi- to some conclusions about how tionally delat with school issues the state can help the counties locally, while our countries and municipalities to coordinate determined matters of zoning these plans among themselves and land use and the state has and make sure that before handled roads. While the state development is approved, mat­

.•development offi ce urged ters of roads, schools, sewer and

by Steve Am.ick

open space are carefully con­sidered.

It is vitally important that we do this if we are to preserve the good aspects of life in Delaware for the future .

If you have any ideas about how we can do a better job of planning and controlling development in Delaware, give me a call. My number is 738-0215.

Two quick notes: If you know of any elderly person who would benefit froma supervised day care program, why not call the Elwyn Institute at 658-8860? This

is a program for elderly persons who need some medical help, but not in a nursing home. Fees are based on ability to pay and transportation is provided.

Also, if you or a group to which you belong, would like to come to Dover to see how the General Assembly operates, give me a call. I'd be very pleased to show you around Legislative Hall and make sure you get to see the Senate and the House in session, perhaps meet the Governor, etc.

State Rep. Steven H . Amick represents South Newark's 25th District.

Proudly Presents CRAFT FAIR MAY FAIR

Saturday, May 16, 1987 9:30a.m .-2:30p.m .

Over 40 local artisians will display their crafts for sa le. The Craft Fair will be inside and held rain or shine . The school's traditional May Fair will be held in conjunction with the Craft Fair. Food and all kinds of games for all ages will be part of the May Fa ir. (In case of rain , the May Fair will be held on Sunday, May 17th from 1:00-5:00 p.m.)

So Come On Out To

The Independence School on Saturday, May 16th for family fun and local crafts

1300 Paper Mill Road Newark, Delaware 302-239-0330

location: On Paper Mill Road 1/ 4 mile west of Limestone Road (Rt. 7)

State l.ands new developinent director It's a long way from Kearney,

Neb., to Dover, Delaware, . but Delaware's next economic • development director has his roots in the farmland of Nebraska.

Along t e1way, _Dale Wolf h':'s had an press1ve career m agricult e, and for the past several ears has been head of the Du nt Co.'s billion-dollar­a-year gricultural chemicals business.

That makes him an interna­tional businessman, because ful­ly half of that business is overseas. What's more, Dale is a salesman of exceptional ability.

In a few weeks, he will assume responsibility for the Delaware Development Office, at a time when 'Ye are placing increasing emphasis on international trade, agriculture and the use of high technology in food processing and packaging.

I'm sure that Dale Wolf is looking forward to the challenges of a new career. But I'm also mindful that after a successful career he could as easily have decided on a com­fortable retirement.

Instead, he decided to share his talents and experience with his adopted state - he has call­ed Delaware home for over 30 years - by entering into public service.

This state has been lucky in this regard. There are countless examples of men and women who have concluded fulfilling careers in business and industry and then started new careers by making a contribution to our community.

Some are part-time volunteers, some take on full­time responsibilities. Many are native Delawareans, but just as many have moved to Delaware

'101 Main St .• North East, MD

287-81~

130 E. Main St .. Elkton. MD Rt. 40, North East. MD lAcross from Counhouse l

398-2990 287-8150

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Ail condition~ng , power steenng , pow· er bfakes. tinted glass, pulse wiper. spot1 mirrors, rear defogger, AM ·FM atereo w111'1 teak end ac•n Slock

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@ FIRST PAYMENT*

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1ST PAYMENT DUE IN 30 DAYS!

~ ~~a 0~ ~elK

323-3026

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STATESIDE by Gov. Michael N. Castle

and liked what they found here. I've said many times before

that Delaware couldn't afford to buy all the services volunteers provide - because the value of their contribution is so great.

Nor could we afford to com­pete with private industry for the services of talented and ex­perienced business executives like Dale Wolf or his predecessor, Lou Papineau .

Fortunately we don't have to, because they are so often willing to share their good· fortune with a community that welcomed them and offered them op­portunities.

I'm looking forward to work­ing with Dale to secure Delaware's economic future. He brings a wealth of ability and ex­perience to the job.

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18a

BONNET /from la However, he added, "Right

now • Europe ia stirring the fall market with some of the most innovative hat styles 1 have seen in years. They are show­ing fantasy couture that has been translated into the moderate price range.

"We are seeing cookie cutter shapes, Russian togue styles and upturned, rumpled felt looks rerniniacent of the Charles Dickens chimney sweep characters. ••

• Many of the new European styles, Regan said, "contain a cheerful element of surprise."

One such cheerful surprise was the addition of a colorful flower to a traditional bowler hat, a witty hat trick which received favorable attention from buyers.

While skeptics refuse to believe that hats will return to the mainstream of fashion in a big way, it is difficult to predict trends. And hats have played an important role in hwnan dress since they were first used in barbarian rituals long before the birth of Christ.

In America, the hat-making industry was an important part of the colonial economy and in fact alerted England to the growing power of her North American subjects.

According to Leonard E. Fisher, author of "The Hat­ters," Americans were making about 10,000 hats per year by the early 1730s and were in fact becoming rich at the exoense of

MAIN/from 1a

stocks authentic wool sweaters colorful kilts, pewter, silver and even bagpipe parts.

Although known to many Newarkers as primarily a sweater shop, the main customers of Highland' Heritage are in fact members of the hun­dreds of pipe bands across the United States and Canada.

Getting hungry after a full morning of shopping? At a stomach's grow\, most people could name their favorite Main Street eating spot but one that is truly "out of this world" is Jack Lundy's.

At Jack Lundy's, lunches star the "Moon Rocket"

their Engliah counterparts. London hatters eventually

protested, resulting in Parlia­ment's 1731 Hat Act which pro­hibited the exportation of "hats of felt, dyed or undyed, finished or unfinished" from America. "No one ... paid the slightest at­tention" to the act, Fisher wrote.

Into the 19th century, the American hat trade was filled with a motley, bohemian crew of masters and apprentices who migrated from town to town in search of gainful employment. An 1890 publication, "Baltimore Hats," told of the stem master hatter Jacob Rogers who flogg­ed miscreant shop boys.

Even more harmful than dif­ficult masters were the in­sidious effects of the hat mak­ing process. Continuous inhala­tion of fibers caused respiratory illness, while ex­posure to mercuric nitrate -used in making felt - caused chronic mercury poisoning.

The latter illness was characterized by severe per­sonality changes, depression and mood swings and was com­mon enough that Lewis Carroll made reference to it in the Mad Hatter character in his 1865 classic, "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland."

Somewhat safer was the millinery trade of making bon­nets for ladies, although the in­dustry often made use of child labor and overworked employees at little pay.

Hat making in early America centered on a natural resource

(frankfurter, swiss cheese and hot pastrami), "Jupiter's Jum­ble" (chopped liver and pastrami, tomatoes and onion) and the "Saturn Supreme" (lox, cream cheese, tomatoes and ~nions). As a side dish, there are

Mooner Beach Fries." After a celestial journey it

might be time to relax under 'the sun - or at least the modem equivalent.

Tropic Tan at 165 E. Main St. offers five tanning beds to keep its customers healthy looking year around. Browning while feeling rather exotic among the beach scenes hung upon the walls can range in cost from $5 for a single session to more than $100 for six months.

Still in the tropical frame on mind, the wanderer can head back out into the fresh air and

LOLL'LPOP f'A.8K'LON

OUTLET 450 Peoples Plaza, Glasgow, DE

(302) 836-1580 ladies' Sportswear

Sweatshirts & Sweatpants

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Ribbed Skirts & Pants

•10° 0ea .

Great Selection of Easter Bunnies

and Easter Toys

Cards, Candles, Brass, Glass, Jewelry: Crafts , Decoys, Dolls,

Tmware, Baskets

Hrs. : M·Th . 10-8 Fri. 10-9, Sat . 9·8, Su~ . 12-5

The NewArk Post.

COVER STORY of a young nation heavy with woods and streams - the beaver. It wu the first choice in hat making matertala, · followed by rabbit, wool and other animal fibers.

Panamas became popular about 1831, and the claaalc straw boaters came into vogue in 1885. Top hats and bowlers followed, with Homberga and derbys becoming fahionable about 1900.

American women gradually replaced the Mary Stuart face­framing bonnets with Madame Vlrot's French styles with cascading ruffles, bows and Dowers on corded silk hats.

The well~ressed man in the first half of this century was likely to have a serviceable selection of hats .for dally wear. And by the 1930s, the fashionable lady was being seen in the pillbox and pancake styles.

Americans treasured their hats through two world wars the Korean Conflict and evecy presidential admlnlstration from George Washington to Dwight D. Eisenhower.

But when the handsome young John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts took the reigns in 1960, he did so without a top­per. American men noticed the curiosity and followed suit, and by the 1970s hats were virtually abandoned.

Women continued to wear their hats through the 1960s but did so with reluctance a'nd inconsis.tency.

By the late 1970s, hats began

find fresh apples, bananas and oranges at the streetside fruit stand of Rashad Sadat.

·maklnl a comeback, at least tbe Weatem stylea. Following tbe release of the film "Urban Cowboy, .. 'tbere·wu a rhinestone's glimmer of hope that the llttle doggies on Wall Street wo.uld chuck the dark

Visit

Aprilll, 1117

suits, buy Stetaona and start ba k est b it bel looking more like the Marlboro • c w w ere onged. Man. · Alai, hats h4ave not yet made

Metropolitan fans, however, 100n jumped off the band waJlon train and sent the style

~ aU the way back but hope springs eternal in the mllllneey abopa of America and who knows, this may be the year.

~ake a fr.esh look at Rattan for Spring. The Ambiance Collec­tion of f1ne rat~an from the Orient combines natural beauty and w1de selection of durable fllbrics.

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Sadat, who imports his wares daily from Philadelphia's markets, wears a "Get Fresh" pin as he mans the shop near Newapt Newsstand.

The afore provides a variety of games, activities and materiel. For history buffs, there are shelves of games recreating the strategies and tactics of wars past. And for those who enjoy role playing, there are game sets from "Star Trek" to "James Bond."

Br~;h~·~ 14~~ . Showcase Gallery ' auer .1

FURNITURE ·

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REG. tHG.96

So ~e next time you visit Main Street, put on your trench coat and magnifying glass and look for some adventure in the stair­ways and back alleys. There are plenty of buried treasures to be found.

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