THE BATTALION TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1979 Page 9 the )rtant in- m. in n the ation, >ns of 321, onitor Poitier ives a 'or the erview inter- 11 Inc, s Inc, Hor- istruc- ) Co, ments, eak on n” at 8 at the 350A, ere will rents of al meet- 30 p.m. 261, G, Dial a teacher’ regins United Press International jjjHADELPHIA — Mom and ^aren’t the only ones Philadel- area students can turn to for with their homework, w, they can dial a hotline that put them in touch with a ier. e program, called DATA Line ijal A Teacher Assistance — is ived to be the first of its kind in Country. And it’s designed to I parents as well as schoolchil- |te program was launched Feb. | the Philadelphia School Dis- and currently is staffed by ad- strators and curriculum alists until enough teachers are niited. o days after its inception, educators manning five tele xes in the school district’s gical Library were swamped lore than 200 calls, st of the calls were about matics, but they ranged from dons on the atmosphere to animal has the longest gesta- Beriod. Lt last question was received nathematics teacher Dave ams, who after determining the r was serious, eagerly an- fed: It is the elephant, which gestation period of two years, pugh the question was not in :ld, Williams expressed delight le was able to answer, having itly read about an pregnancy of ants in a “contest on trivia. ” (Williams pushed his luck no ier and quickly handed the (lone to science teacher Ron i when the caller’s next ques- lAlAU | j ea ] t f ro g’ s gestation tells the s a point p.m. in just n productii it how mu would hai d. p present were two language sachers, one teacher of foreign iges, a social studies teacher le coordinator of the program, jiDrossner, who also answered ntary language arts and math- cs questions. bssner told the teachers they ^ \/ no * to ^ ve t ^ le answer to a .Ay 5in but g° through the pro- 0 if how they (students) can go getting it.’’ dng throDfl ne of the educators expressed y about being stumped, but eeling soon gave way as the oil authori ame in. Mingroni, a language arts 1 teacher said he inititally ;mbargo p a little hesitant because you :d the AlaA know what kind of expertise e improvijbe asked to give.” he was able to help with all )HI0 S ' jfcons he received, and felt the naldson -Pence was “gratifying.” .laskan tnwucan feel a sense of relief be- able doaljthey (students) have been able stments A an an swer,” Mingroni said. Img flick tyovokes Prudhoe eline ha< in the p^ IDUSTIll „„„ ass( i product Teaks of violence ixes estricW ice said Saturday that Marvin lattheW ied at Palm Springs Desert t factorin' ‘tal where he had been in crit- lis yeart" condition for several days. He , once in the head Monday L j. r * n § an apparent gang- ' hght at the Palm Springs ‘-in. inoic ternadf it is ill^ pring >ean s hs fi,eplac» ftND iNf 0 ITON i an Aliij Standard ( velopitsp field and*- jperatingt! sessmeni: dditionald st be made: 11 _ violence utry’s unliili :ently-pa®f United Press International :s only to JIM SPRINGS, Calif. — A man saidt^ar-old youth died Friday night ishot wounds to the head, the Jd fatality linked to showings of Warriors,” a film about gang re in New York City, njm has been associated with >ss the to to come, be big the moC .. Alaska- Suspects were in custody. ^ unrelated incident the same ■ n Oxnard, Timothy Gitchel, entura, was stabbed to death between white and black outside Mann’s Esplanade er, which was also showing Warriors.” e movie has since been taken t the Palm Springs and theaters. 1 e w York, 12 males, aged 16 j Were arrested Friday for a p 10 . 3 Times Square subway , °“Ce said the 12 had just ,? rom seeing the movie. L he Warriors,” made at a iidfU .rarklion, gangs from L ? ci ty gather for a meeting sin ii ^ ea< ^ er of all the gangs is sinated. ^ a^ arr ^° rs ’ 3 Coney Island r *V sas P e cted and the film . , e r r flight through New u way system to their home I L^ s showing the movie in Ueb S ® ronx an d Queens s reported numerous , c °nfrontatio tween I eein g the film. ^Oiv you know i e Press International j t j s a ^ ne n °t a species of rent name given to several i| species caught young and n packed in flat cans for "^nsumption. ■ Hey, Laura With a birthday banner hung from the fourth floor of the Academic Building last Thursday, TK wishes his friend Laura a happy birthday. Battalion photo by Colin Crombie V&SlL shop AFTER STUDYING, STOP IN FOR SOME FRESH DONUTS OR A FLAMEBURGER. Our donuts are made fresh all day long (open 6-11 Mon.-Sat. Closed Sunday 3310 S. College 822-4096 Last of 8 scrolls deciphered Christian doctrines revealed United Press International BERKELEY, Calif. — The last and most complete of the Dead Sea Scrolls discloses remarkable, new evidence about the origin of Chris tian teaching on sex, marriage and divorce, a Biblical scholar said Sun day. Called the “Temple Scroll’’ be cause much of it deals with recon struction of the temple in Jerusalem, the newly published document sets forth a code of be havior forbidding divorce and polygamy. It also supports celibacy by banning sex anywhere within the walls of Jerusalem. The new scroll is the last of eight well-preserved documents found in a cave near the Dead Sea by a Be douin youth in 1947. Seven other scrolls were deciphered and studied during the 1950s, but the Temple Scroll was not uncovered until Israel seized Arab territory in the 1967 war. The scroll was found in a shoe box hidden under the floor of an Arab shop whose owner was involved in purchase, of the earlier documents. During the past 10 years it has been carefully unrolled and deciphered by Yagael Yadin, the Israeli scholar who is now deputy prime minister. It has not yet been translated into English. It is the longest scroll found — 19 pages stretching 28 feet. Prof. Jacob Milgrom of the Uni versity of California helped Yadin in the restoration work. “In my opinion, it is probably the most important scroll,” Milgrom said in an interview with United Press International. “To begin with, in this scroll, God speaks in the first person. This puts the scroll in a spe cial category. You are dealing with revelation. His authorized word.” He cited the declaration in the scroll that anyone “aspiring to live within the shadow of the temple in a permanent state of holiness must be leading a single life.’ It forbids sex ual relations anywhere in the entire city of Jerusalem. The document also “forbids the king to take more than one wife and says he may not remarry as long as she is alive,” Milgrom said. “The implications are obvious. Divorce is prohibited. “We see for the first time that the views of marriage and divorce which were expressed in certain tenden cies within the Gospels of the New Testament can be traced to teach ings of this sect, which antedates the time of Jesus by at least a century and a half.” The scrolls were found near the community of Qumran, occupied from about the middle of the second century B.C. to the time of the Roman invasion in 67 A.D., by a fringe sect within Judaism” which had gone there to escape the “pol lution” its leaders felt had afflicted Jerusalem, Milgrom said. :x»c :xk: :x»c cMOumdcCA NOON-SEVEN 75c bar drinks 40c beer NORTHGATE (Next to the Dixie Chicken) •Xfcf *K ■ >w— MW XV MtC ,k=?5 Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega ’74 mim If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . 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