THE TUFTS DAILY Where You Read It First Wednesday, January 18,1995 Vol XXX Number 1 Galvin brings militay experience to position by JOHN O’KEEFE master’s degree in English from Daily Editorial Board Columbia University, and contin- General John “Jack Galvin, ued his military education at the US Army Retired, said of hts ap- US Army Command and General pointment as dean of the Fletcher Staff College and the US Army School of Law and Diplomacy, “It War College. He also did post- was an offer I just couldn’t refuse.” graduate work at the Universityof Galvin, who was appointed to the Pennsylvania. post last month and will assume Galvin is no stranger to the responsibilites of the position Fletcher or to the Boston area. He in July of this year, said that he is a native of Wakefield, MA and was very excited about the oppor- attended Fletcher on a year-long tunity to head up the nation’s fellowship in 1971 where he wrote oldest school of international re- abookonwhythe AmericanRevo- lations. lution began in Boston. In an in- Galvin, who has an extensive terview with The Daily, Galvin background in military and dip- said, “I have always been very lomatic affairs, will bring his ex- proud of the year I spent at periences and a unique perspec- Fletcher.” tive to the job. Although he is a Since the conclusion of his fel- career military man and a highly lowship, Galvin has maintained decorated four-star general, close tieswiththeHetcherSchoo1, The University appointed a new dean for The Fletcher School of Law of Diplomacy last month. -. Galvin said that his appointment returning frequently as a guest will not result in major changes at speaker. He added that, after Fletcher. spending 16 of the last 19 years of University selects general for “I don’t see my arrival as some- his life living abroad. he is now thing that indicatesa new Fletcher. looking forw”ard to returning to If Fletcher changes, it will be be- his home state. vacant post at Fletcher School cause we change our perceptions Havine taught at both West Gorbachev, Margaret Thatcher, by JOHN former general is currently a Dis- of the way we need to equip our Point andvthe Eniversity of vir- O’KEEFE and Helmut Kohl. students to meet the problems of ginia, Galvin said that he feels he Daily Editorial Board tinguished Visiting Policy Ana- Retired Army General John R. lyst at Ohio State University’s Following his appointment as the future. I don’t come crusading is well-suited for an academic at- Fletcher Dean, Galvin spoke of for new change or adherence to mosphere. Showing the connec- Galvin, afour-stargeneral and one- Mershon Center. Prior to that, he served as the Olin Distinguished Fletcher’s outstanding reputation old ideas,” Galvin said. tion between the military and time NATO commander, has been Professor of National Security at for education in international af- A graduate of the US Military academia, Galvin said “When selected to serve as the next head the US Military Academy in West fairs. “I’ve always considered Academy at West Point, Galvin you’re in the military, you’re a of Tufts’ Fletcher School of Law Point, New York. Fletcher to be in first place among was commissioned as a second teacher too.” He noted that he and Diplomacy. Following an in- ternational search by the Univer- The Washington Post once re- the institutions that educate people lieutenant in 1954. He holds a particularly enjoys working with for public service. In this country “young people who are on the sity, Galvin was appointed last ferred to Galvin as ‘‘aconsummate month to succeed Jeswald Salacuse soldier-statesman,’’ and he was and around the world, Fletcher is verge of beginning their careers.” known as an exciting place be- Having been decorated by 21 as dean of the country’s oldest recently cited in a Boston Globe editorial as “one of the most dis- cause the thinking and intellectual countries, Galvin brings a long school of international relations. tinguished soldiers of the Cold interchange here are done in an and distinguished military back- Salacuse, who served as dean War.” Galvin’s career of service atmosphere that is congenial and ground with him as he takes on for eight years, announced his re- has placed him in contact with productive.” his latest mission, as Fletcher tirement in September to return to countless world leaders and diplo- dean. full-time teaching on the Fletcher see FLETCHER, page 6 Tufts Provost Sol Gittleman faculty. Pending the approval of mats including Mikhail said of Galvin, “He has played a the University Board of Trustees, part in defining issues of our time, which convenes in February, including [establishing the mili- Galvin will assume the post on Tufts benefactor dies tary foundationsfor]the Gulfwar, July 1, becoming the sixth dean in the Patriot missile defense of Is- the school’s 61-year history. rael, the rescueof450,000Kurdish Galvin served as the Supreme of heart failure at 78 -- refugees in northern Iraq, East- Allied Commander in Europe and by ANDREA GROSSMAN part of the education process.’’ West negotiations on arms con- the Commander-in-Chief of the Daily Editorial Board Zimman’s contributions were US European Command from Harold Zimman, the Tufts not restricted to theMedfordcam- Daily nle photo 1987 to 1992,the five-yearperiod alumnus for whom the football pus. As a member of the United Gen. John R Galvin see GALMN, page 10 which ended the Cold War. The field is named, died of heart fail- States Olympic Committee ure on Wednesday, Dec. 14. He (USOC) in 1992, he made it pos- was 78 years old. sible for the University to present Major earthquake shakes Japan, As a student at Tufts, Zimman its proposal, which was eventually was a valued member of the foot- approved, to use a University- ball team and went on to captain - owned priory in Talloires, France disaster kills at least 1,800 people the squad for the 1937 season. KOBE, Japan Survi- gest quake to strike an urban area buildings left standing. as the headquarters for the Olym- (Ap)-- After graduation, Zimman vors with blank expressions wan- of Japan since 1948. Just outside Kobe, damage pic Committee and host families dered battered streets Tuesday in a Osaka, Japan’s second-largest seemed almost arbitrary -- a show- formed a successful publishing of US Olympiads. city that was supposed to stand up city and acrossthe bay from Kobe, room window at an auto dealership company, H.O. Zimman, Inc., Shortly before his death, the which produced programs for high USTA and the USOC awarded to earthquakes, their faith in tech- was also heavily damaged by the survived undamaged. Next to it, school athletic teams, collegiate Zimman for his outstanding ser- nology smashed by a disaster that 7.2-magnitude quake that struck four wooden houses collapsed. In athletic teams, United States Ten- killed at least 1,800 people. before dawn Tuesday. The wreck- the city, a five-story building had vice to both organizations. nis Association OJSTA) tourna- Elevated roads and bridges that age extended 50 miles northwest fallen on its side, and a seven- Zinman is survived by his wife ments like theUS Open and printed Japanese engineers boasted were of Kobe to the sacred temples and story bank building leaned over Helen, four children, and two materials for other sports publica- quake-proof were broken at crazy statues of the ancient city of Kyoto. the sidewalk. brothers. tions. angles, flung to earth by the force While Kobe was by far the hard- “I thought it was the end of the But he never forgot his alma of nature, crushing whatever was est hit, both this city, where tender world,” said 64-year-old Minoru mater and was very generous to beneath them. beer-fed Kobe beef gets its name, Takasu, whose house fell down Inside the Tufts Athletic Department, Motoristsperished as their cars and Osaka burned through the around him in Nishinomiya city, Features...... P. 3 serving on its Board of Overseers. AmericaOnlineisImkingforanIntemd skidded off the collapsing high- night from fires fueled by ruptured six miles from Kobe. He also was the major benefactor superstar, some interestingpet infodion, ways. Tracks and bridges for gas lines. ‘‘I survived by sliding into a of the Zimman Football Field at and the Featum Challenge returns! Japan’s famous “bul1et”trains were National police said 1,805 small gap.between a dish cabinet Ellis Oval and the Zimman Room damaged badly enough to be out people were known dead by and the wall,” he told the Asahi of the fitness center in Cousens of action for months. Hundreds of Wednesday morning, 1,036 were newspaper. “I’m happy to be Arts...... P. 5 thousands of survivors struggled missing and 6,337 injured. The alive!” Gym. The beginning-of-the-semester cap- toll was expected to rise as com- sule movie review is over half your to live without electricity, gas or About 100,000 people spent page, and a Boston concert is the rest. water. munications were restored. the night in emergency shelters in According to Rocky Carzo, di- Hardly a block in this industrial Nearly 4,000 buildings were Kobe, eating rice balls handed out rector of athletics, Zimman’s al- sports port city of 1.4 million people had destroyed, and hundreds of after- by rescue workers and sipping truism was “an expression of the ...... P. 7 Tufts Williams for the NCAA a house or building intact. Many shocks continued through the water trucked in by the fire depart- kind of quality athleticexperience ties night, forcing many to sleep out- he had at Tufts,’’coupled with his New England No. 1 ranking, andthere’s streets were reduced to piles of finally an NHL for Doug to blab about. rubble, leftovers from the stron- side for fear of further damage to see QUAKE, page 12 belief “that sport was avery strong .. ,age two THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,1995 THETUFTS DAILY Letters to the Editor Nadya J. Sbaiti that someone had written “GO HOME crimes against Asians are not well publi- Editor-in - Chief Movie brings racial CHINK! !” on my message board. Most cized partly due to the fact that the victims students couldn’t imagine that this would fail to take proper action. If correct proce- incident to mind.. . Managing Editor: David Meyers ’ happen on our campus. Rather than expos- dures are employed, then action will hope- Associate Editors: JL McHenry, JessicaRosenthal To the editor: ing this hate crime to the entire community, fully be taken. I or no one else should have Editorial PageEditor: RachelLevine The movie Higher Qaming struck a I chose to be “Asian” about it and try to to deal with this s**t, especially in the type Production Managers: Ryan Otto, Marc Sheinkin, nerve that reminded me of a racial incident Pratiksha Thakkar keep it low key. Well, I realized that it was of environmentjn which we reside. ., which OccTed dwi% ‘he lgg4 , a big mistake. By trying to ignore it, 1 in Lad Dell LA’ 96 NEWS orientation. The day after delivering my essence silently condoned this act. Hate Asian-American Peer Advisor 1993-1994 Editors: John O’Keefe, AndreaGrossman soeech for the Diversitv Panel, I noticed Assistant Editors:GayleBerkowitz, Karen Epstein

VIEWPOINTS Editors: Darrah Feldman, Remy Stem Israel allows Jewish settlements in West FEATURES Editor: Dan Tobin Bank despite pledge’toUS to halt them Assistant Editors: Laura Bemhein Annie Risbridger NILI, West Bank (AP)-- Israel has Butmuchconstruction isdone privately ment near Ramallah, Israel radio said. Sol- to legally circumvent the housing freeze. diers also briefly detained a Palestinian ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT continued to allow Jewish settlers to build Editors: Jay Ruttenberg, Joshua Davis, thousands of houses in the West Bank, Surveys by left-wing lawmakers showed minister and two top aides to PLO chief Michael J.W. Stickings despite apledge to the United States to halt that more than 2,000 homes were under Yasser Arafat. most building. construction in the West Bank last year and Much of the building is within easy WEEKENDER the Construction Association said it knew commuting distance of Jerusalem, in an Editor: Liza Cohen The building drive -- with an emphasis Production Manager: Caroline Schaefer on Jerusalem satellite settlements -- ap- of 4,000 currently being worked on. effort to shore up Israel’s claim to the city pears to be part of a land grab in the West “Ifwegoon withtheconstruction,it will, Palestinians also claim as their capital. SPORTS Bank before Israel and the Palestinians be proof to the Palestinians and to the Nili, a barbed-wire enclosed commu- Editors: Doug Katz, John Tomase, begin negotiations on the status of the world ...that we don’t really mean it when nity of red-roofed cement houses bordering Greg Youman we say we want to end occupation,” said two Arab villages, is only 15 miles from Assistant Editor: BenMargoles, Bill Copeland disputed lands next year. The government authorized the con- legislator Dedi Zucker of the Meretz party, both Jerusalem and Tel Aviv. PHOTOGRAPHY struction of 1,833 homes in the West Bank ajunior member in Prime Minister Yitzhak Its population has grown about 10 per- Editors: Judy Easterbrook in 1994 and 3,230this year, according to a Rabin’s coalition. cent in the past year, from 95 to 105 fami- Housing Ministry report released Tuesday. But Rabin said Tuesday that the govern- lies, settlement secretary Rachel PRODUCTION Rosensweig said. Many of the Jewish Layout Editors: Mark Lerman, Raquel Almeida The report said the government plans to ment never promised a complete settle- 128 Graphics Editor:Wenimo Poweigha accelerate the pace of building this year. ment freeze, and said some investment in settlements in the West Bank have grown C1assifiedsEditors:KatherineWinder Israel’s promise in November 1992 to continuing settlements would continue. He similarly. stop building in settlements persuaded suggested the Americans backed the Israeli With round-the-clock guiards to keep Washington to grant $10 billion in loan position. Palestinians out, settlers in close-knit Nili guarantees to Israel and paved the way for Palestinians havemountedaprotest cam- feel safer than city dwellers. Many don’t Dean J. Gendron peace talks with Palestinians. paign against the building, clashing with even lock their front doors. Executive Business Director The United States is supposed to penal- soldiers while attempting to demonstrate at Yellow bulldozers are paving a security Business Manager: MelissaTapply ize Israel by subtracting a dollar from the construction sites on nearly a daily basis. road around the settlement as part of gov- Advertising Manager: Isabel Cuervo Office Manager: Lyle Mays loan guarantees for every dollar spent on One Palestinian woman was injured ernment plans to fence in settlements be- SubscriptionsManager: Ethan Goldman settlements. In fiscal 1995, Washington Tuesday when troops used stun grenades to fore Palstinians achieve self-rule in the deducted $3 11.8 million. disperse a protest outside the Psagot settle- West Bank. The Tufts Daily is a non-profit newspaper, publishec Vronday through Friday during the academic year an( Iistributedfree totheTuftscommunity.TheDailyis entire11 Mexico sells bonds at key auction in an itudent-Nn;there are no paid editorial positions. The Dail! sprinted at Charles River Publishing, Charlestown, MA. The Daily is located at the back entrance of Curtis Hal it Tufts University. Our phone number is (617) 627-3090 attempt to revive floundering economy JUT fax number is (617) 627-3910, and our e-mail addresf isTDALYQEh4ERALD.TUFIS.EDU.Business hoursari MEXICO CITY (AP)-- Mexico’s bat- lion in dollar-denominatedbonds known as at 2243 points, rose to 2270 after the news J:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.. Monday through Friday, and 1:Ol tered economy survived a key test on Tues- tesobonos, a disappointing show that con- of the bond sale, before quickly falling xm. - 6:00 p.m. on Sunday. The policies of The Tufts Daily are established by thc day when investors bought all $400 mil- tributed to a 12.5 percent two-day drop in back to 2230 shortly after 1 pm. ditorial board. Editorials appear on this page, unsigned lion in bonds offered by the government. the stock market. Blanco attributed the wobble to profit- fndividual editors are not necessarily responsible for, or i~ The sale indicated that President lgreement with, the policies and editorials of The Tuft Mexico’s sudden economic slide led the taking by investors who had seen the mar- Daily. Clinton’s proposal of a US loan guarantee Clinton administration last week to pro- ket climb back from a low of roughly 1850 Thecontent of letters, advertisements,signed columns for Mexico has bolstered confidencein the pose a $40 billion loan guarantee program a week ago. “That is a pretty strong recov- :artoons and graphics does not necessarily reflect the opin on of The Tufts Daily editorial board. country as it grapples with a 33 percent to assure businessmen that investing in ery,” he said. Letters to the Editor Policy devaluation of the peso in the past month. Mexico was safe. The peso fell by as much as 40 percent TheTufts Daily welcomes letters from the readers. Thi The news boosted the peso, which etters page is an open forum for campus issues and com Tuesday’s bond sale will help Mexico against the dollar between Dec. 20 and nents about the Daily’s coverage. opened at 5.43 to the dollar and closed at meet other debt payments without dipping early January, shaking the confidence of Lettek must include the writer’s name and a phoni 5.28. The stockmarket index, whichopened further into foreign reserves, which had investors and forcing the government to iumberwherethewritercanbereached.Al1 lettersmustbc at points, rose to after the news rerified with the writer before they can be published. 2243 2270 fallentoabout$5.15 billionearlythismonth enact tough austerity measures. It has since Thedeadline for lettersro beconsideredforpublicatiol of the bond sale, but fell back to close at from $24 billion in March as the govem- recovered some of that lost value. n the following day’s issue is 400 p.m. 2209, off 1.5 percent, as investors took ment tried to support the peso. Due to space limitations, letters should be no longe han 350 words. Any submissions over this length may bc profits. The government is paying a stiff price: The slide led to massive losses for both !dited by the Daily to be consistent with the Limit. Letter! “Perhaps it’s too early to ring the bells, annual dollar interest rates of 19.74 to foreign and Mexican investors and shook hould be accompanied by no more than eight signatures. but it is agoodsign,” saidFranciscoBlanco, percent on the bonds, depending on The editors reserve the right to edit letters for clarity 19.75 stockandcmncy markets throughoutlatin ’ublication of letters is nor guamreed, but subject to thc director of analysis for the ARKA broker- their due date. Peso-denominated treasury America. Iiscretion of the editors. age in Mexico City. He said it showed .bonds,known as Cetes, sold at a40percent Letters should be typed or printed in letterquality 01 foreign investors are “a little more ready to iear-letterquality mode and turned in to the Daily’s office interest rate last week. The crisis occurreed as foreign invest- n Curtis Hall. Letters can also be sent via electronic mail tc participate in the market.” Before the crisis, the tesobono rate was ment slowed in Mexico this year due to ~AJ.LYBEMERALD.TuFTS.EDU,withall statedregu There were $941.5 million in bids for in the range of percent. increasingly attractive investment oppor- ations regarding Letters to the Editor still applying. 9-10 Letters should address the editor and not a particuh the offering, showing stronger-than-ex- This month, Mexico had $3.6 billion tunities abroad and concern about unrest in ndividuaL While letters can be critical of an individual‘: pected interest. worth of tesobonos falling due -- including Mexico. Amassive tradedeficitthen caused ctions, they should not attack someone’spmonality traits At asimilarauctionlast weekjnvesters million Tuesday. The Daily will not accept anonymous letters or per $9 12 demand for dollars, forcing Mexico to dip iames except in extreme circumstances if the Executive bought only $63 million of the $400 mil- The stock market index, which opened into reserves to support the peso. 3oard determines that there is aclear and present danger tc he author. The Daily will not accept letters regarding thc :overageof other publications, unless their coverage itsell Judge lets vets bar gays from their parade ias become a newsworthy issue that has appeared in the Mly. The Daily will accept letters of thanks, if spacc BOSTON (AP)-- A federal judge ruled parade through South Boston, did not im- they would again cancel the parade,” Wolf -6. but will not run letters whose sole purpose is tc Tuesday that a veterans group can bar mediately return a call for comment. Wrote. ldvertise an event. 1 When writers have group affiliations or hold titles 01 homosexuals from its St. Patrick‘s Day Gays marched in 1993 under a state Wolf, however, went to great lengths to mitionsrelatedtothe topicoftheirletter,theDailywillnotc parade this year because the event is billed hat following the letter. This is to provide additional infor judge’s order. Another state judge cleared say that he doesn’t agree with the exclu- nation and is not intended to detract from the letter. as an anti-gay protest. the way for them to take part in 1994,but sion. U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf said call- ClassifiedsInformation the veterans council canceled the parade “There is ... one message rllat this deci- All Tufts students must submit classif~edsin person ing the parade a protest against previous rather than let them march again. sion should communicate,” he wrote. repaid with cash or check. All classifieds must be submit. court orders that allowed homosexuals to The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to re- “Those who founded this nation were com- ed by 3 p.m. the day before publication. Classifieds ma) Is0 be bought at the Information Booth at the Campus march gives the South Boston Allied War view those rulings, which called the parade mitted to the principle that the proper re- bnter. All classifieds submitted by mail must be accompa. Veterans Council the right under the First a “public accommodation” that can’t ex- sponse to what may be widely regarded as lied by a check Classifieds may not be submitted over the Amendment to exclude gays. ihone. clude gays. Arguments are scheduled for bad speech is not to silence it, but to re- Notices and host & Founds are free and run on Tues- “The First Amendment has been held to April. spond to it with better speech.” ‘ays and Thursdays only. Notiices are limited to two per protect the rights of protesters to bum the In the case before Wolf, the veterans Wolf suggested GLIB find another St. mk per organization and run space permitting. Notices American flag and of Nazis to march lust be written on Daily forms and submitted in person. council filed a federal lawsuit against the Patrick’s Day parade in which to march. lotices cannot be used to sell merchandise or advertise through a community of Jewish Holocaust city, arguing that it couldn’t force the veter- Chester Darling, the veterans council’s lajor events. survivors,” Wolf wrote. ans to let GLIB into the March parade lawyer, said the group will argue before the The Tufts Daily is not liable for any damages due to 19 as ~pographicalmors or misprintings except the cost of the The First Amendment, he said, protects a condition of the council’s parade permit. Supreme Court that its parade permits al- mrlion, which is fully refundable. We reserve the right to speech “without regard to the truth or so- Wolf ruled in favor of the veterans. low it to tailor the parade to its taste. efuse to print any classifieds which contain obscenity, are cial utility of the ideas expressed.” fanovertlysexualnature,orareusedexpresslytodenigrate “If GLIB’S inclusion in the 1995 parade ‘We’re saying that the permit, once it’s person or group. A spokesman for the Irish-American were compelled, the veterans’ protest would issued, defines the street as ours for that Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Bos- be confused and muted; indeed, the veter- period, and we can march whoever we ton, which had wanted to march in the ans’ protest would be silenced because want,” he said. FEATURES Raining cats and dogs Cyberstars of tomorrow take note Some interesting info about pets America Online’s Greenhouse contest is for Internet experts by DAN TOBIN into article,you’re most likely one Daily Editorial Board by DAN TOBIN it takes? Are you the hacker who Daily Editorial Board deserves the title? Well, you don’t of the so-called “infopreneurs” that Doggy day care set up It’s rare to find the college stu- have to worry about being passed AOL wants and you’re drooling While the idea of doggy day care may sound silly to many, it may ent who isn’t an Internet user. It over because of age. “We’re look- with anticipation, dying to know :tually be beneficial to their health as opposed to letting them sit eems like the whole world is ing for the most gifted online tal- how you can take advantage of ome alone. ooked up to the ‘net (no word on ent in the world, period,” Leonsis this contest. You have three choices “Dogs socialized with other dogs usually extend their improved ihether the Surgeon General has assured, “whether this means a for obtaining more information. )cia1 skills to interactions with people,” said Dr. Petra Mertens, eclared e-mail a controlled sub- brilliant freshman at a small col- 1.Get into America Online and sident in animal behavior at Tufts University School of Veterinary tance yet). Whether you’re for- lege in the Midwest or an estab- access the keyword: GREEN- Iedicine. iarding silly Top 10 lists or start- lished multimedia division of a HOUSE. Mertens discovered this during an experiment in which two groups ngglobal thennonuclearwar, few Silicon Valley company.” 2. Call the AOL Greenhouse F shelter dogs were studied. The group that lived together were ave not yet travelled down the Still, don’t expect that brilliant hotline at 703-917-1800. lopted sooner, were easier to handle, and had fewer behavioral amed, yet silly -named, “informa- freshmen at Midwestern colleges 3. E-mail a request to roblems than the dogs housed individually. ion superhighway.” will receive preferential treatment. greenhouse @ aol .com The flip-side to doggy day care, however, is that a struggle over Andalthoughit’sfunandmaybe Now let’s say that, for However, unless you happen to adership is likely to ensue when a new dog enters an established ven useful, the Internet has yet to argument’s sake, you suddenly have amagical long distance server xk. Still, only four fights erupted among 109 dogs over the six erve as a basis for gaining recog- won the contest. Woo-hoo! Well, that allows you to call the 703 area ionths that Mertens’ experiment was conducted. Apparently, most lition or winning awards. No Os- what else do you get? (Well, be- code free of charge, you may find 3g fights result from human mismanagement. ars, Emmies, or Tonys. (The sides getting to boast around cam- it best to e-mail them. After all, if In choosing an appropriate day care center, it’s a wise idea to ’echies, maybe?) pus that you won and your friends you’retrying toprove your internet lterview the potential caregivers. Likewise, many day care profes- Until now. didn’t. Probably put something skills to the world, wouldn’t it be a onals may “interview”the dogs to find out whether it will fit into the America Online (AOL), a about it in your plan or on your smart idea to, oh, use them to your irrent group. henna, Virginia company offer- home page, most likely.) advantage? “For day care to work, all dogs must get along,” assured Dr. ng Internet services to over 1.25 “The AOL Greenhouse will “We have admired and at times icholas Dodman, director of Tufts’ Behavior Clinic. nillion subscribers since 1985,has provide the support mechanisms been astonished by the diversity Cats hate trees? .stablished a contest they simply to nurture the next generation of and wealth of online talent that A recent study has shown that about half of the country’s 55 to 60 *allGreenhouse. According to Ted online superstars,” promised had flourished throughout illion cats live exclusively indoors. According to Dr. Andrew xonsis, president of AOL Ser- Leonsis.Much in the way that big- cyberspace,” Leonsis concluded. owan, director of the Center for Animals and Public Policy at Tufts !ices, “we are looking to identify league record labels, movie stu- “We want to lead innovation wher- niversity School of Veterinary Medicine, “this figure... is much he online superstarsof tomorrow dios, and book publishers offer ever it happens. We also want to gher than most of us would have suspected.” md reward them.” And so the race funding to help develop new tal- give back something to theInternet Do cats hate trees? Or is there more? jegan, with computer nerds all ent, America Online will provide community that has helped to fuel Some cats adapt more easily to an indoor environment than others, wer the world racing to be de- a limited amount of “seed equity the growth of interest in all online lys Catnip, Tufts’ feline-oriented newsletter. Yet cats raised out- :lared king. capital” to fund new ventures. activities. The Greenhouse pro- )ors may not even be able to exist inside. When choosing where to In fact, the response has been Worried that you’re too much vides us with a new vehicle to do ise a cat, concerns for health and the cat’s natural instincts some- ,ooverwhelming that the deadline of a trouble-maker to be chosen? just that.” nes play polar opposites. or entry was pushed back to Janu- Fear not. That may even be the So if you think you’re up to the “There are four keys to longevity in cats,” said Dr, Franklin Loew, uy 31,1995.AfteralLAOLdidn’t best prerequisite for the Green- task, or if you’ve got a little bit of :an of Tufts School of Veterinary Medicine. “One is luck; two is vanttomissoutonanyrisingstars house. “We seek people who can spare time, get an application and .oper nutrition; three is health care, including proper vaccinations; hat hadn’t heard about the con- break the rules of today’s online send it in by the end of the month. id four is keeping out of harm’s way.” est. Sofar, over5,000individuals services and create online sites Who knows? You could even end And keeping cats inside usually cuts down significantlyin the “out ind groups have requested the that will just blow people away up as the next Nedry. (You know, *harm’sway” category. Still, a press &lease from the Tufts Office 3reenhouse application, 90 per- with creativity and innovation,” the gravitationally endowed guy communicati6ns offers the following as guidelines to help your :ent of them downloading it over said Leonsis. It sounds as if hack- from Jurassic Park.) Except you it: neuter it, vaccinate it against feline leukemia virus and rabies, :-mail. ers are most definitely welcomed. probably won’t get killed by dino- veitacollar, keepitinsideatnight, andcheckunderthehoodofyour So, you think you’ve got what Okay. If you’ve read this far saurs. ir before starting your engine. Some cats hide near automobile igines to keep warm, so beware or you’ll have a plethora of pureed issycat. The Features Challenge is back! Welcome back to Page 3, home 3f the one and only Features Chal- Chuck Grodin snags lenge. Whoomp, there it is. Or as they’d say in France: Whoomp, voila. Regardless, the ivay this own show on CNBC works (as if you couldn’t figure it NEW YORK (AP)-- You take Everything changed, said 3ut for yourself) is that we give amaster ofthe put-onlike Charles Grodin, whenletterman, alarmed you a goofy-looking picture and a Grodin, who can string you along at the news, plucked Snyder from variety of captionswhich look like like wash flapping in the breeze . CNBC and awarded him the cov- they’d sort of fit the situation. In .. what do you do with a chap like eted after-Dave berth. reality: just something to make that if you’re a li’l 01’ cable net- Thus did everybody win: you giggle during (insert work based in Fort Lee, N. J., with Snyder got what looks like a pro- :lass name here). a nightly slot to fill? motion; Grodin inherited the If you’re not too dumb, you put easier, less-stressful CNBC hour a. The winner of the fashion show HIM on! that Letterman lured Snyder out for tackiest Hawaiian shirts. This, CNBC has done with the of; and Letterman averted the famously droll star of the threat of Grodin as a rival. “I’m b. A rare shot of a man with five “Beethoven” filmsand “Midnight sure he will deny it all,” Grodin legs, five arms, and two heads. Run,” now taking a hiatus from noted. his movie career to host a talk How that Chuck Grodin car- c. Peeking in at a new Olympic show that began last week. Live ries on! Yet here’s a yackonteur demonstration sport for ‘96: the Fort “Charles Grodin” who’s sufficiently above-board New Triathalon consisting of from Lee, drinking, golfing, and preparing a can be seen at 10 p.m. EST Mon- that he confesses he’s not always day through Friday. certain when he’s serious and luau. “I would prefer to do this than when he’s not. to be a movie actor,” Grodin said “I really do think about it,” he d. Be the ball. Nanananananana- during a recent debriefing at leveled. “but to tell you the truth. nana. CNBC headquarters. “Counting I’m really not sure.” the commute, now I’ve got a four- e. How PresidentDiBiaggio spent Imbued with this refreshing his winter break. hour day.” He didn’t say if CNBC honesty, Grodin’s show has a picks up his mileage, but he simple-as-pie format: a long in- f. In early August, Giantman and sounded serious anyhoo. terview segment, then a musical some friends ran amok around There to the story, was more of guest. campus. You can see Goddard Grodin’s opening course. On Chapel in the background. show, only hours before the slot’s “It’s supposed to be like a little previous occupant, Tom Snyder, dinner thing,” he said. would begin his own new talk show in the uptown neighbor- But it kicks off each night with hood of CBS, Grodin told viewers Chuckdoing his hangdog, slightly he originally had planned to do a putqut brand of verbal riffing. THE TUFTS syndicated late-night hour -- a It’s spontaneous story-telling on demanding, big-time project to the order of a Regis Philbin or, go up against the likes of Jay Len0 yes, that Snyder fellow. Funny, and David Letterman. freewheeling and sublime. page four THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,1995 1 AN R,A,?

0 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Do you have @)spirit? Are 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -0 0 0 ? Do YO~Jhave the to-devote to 0 0 .. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Do you warit to make a 0 0 0 0 .I.. **vi!.: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 Are YOU willing to have some 0 0 0 0 000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

January 18 7:OO p.m. South Hall Lounge January 23 4:OO p.ni. Asian Aniericari Center 3 Start House January 25 7:OO pni. Carniichael Hall Lounge January 26.3:OO p.ni. Hispanic Center 3 55 Talbot Avenue

All interested studerits are welcome at all sessioris. You nwst atterid a sessiori to apply. Sttidefits who are planriirig to study abroad duririg the Spring semester should atterid a Deceniber sessiori or call our office at 627-3238. Applicatioris are doe February 3. 1995. I Wednesday, January 18,1995 THE TUFTS DAILY page five ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT A brief look at the winter movies you might have missed

b MEMBERS OF THE sonably funny, except for a smat- ~DITORIALBOARD tering of bathroom humor (how No doubt you all slept your many laxativejokes can an audi- ways through winter break and ence stand?) that is too offensive did not get to do half of what you -. tobe laughedat. Like Jim Carrey’s other movies, this is the kind of Film show everyone says they’ll never see... and then rushes out to see it. & Review - JLM I I Little Women planned on, including catching In case you’ve ever thought all those flicks whose previews that the days of talented Holly- you would see on TV during ex- wood actresses are past, you need ams. Never fear. The Daily has togoseethis movie. WinonaQder compiled capsule reviews of the and Claire Danes give especially season’s best -- and worst. Now fine performances as Jo and Beth that you all are back and have so March, and all of the other major much more time on your hands, characters are believable and im- you can run out and finally see pressive. Surprisingly, the most them. wooden performance belongs to Dumb and Dumber Susan Sarandon as Marmy, who This film’s blockbuster status serves her function as a mouth- is somewhat frightening. If this is piece for feminist rhetoric with- what the American public wants, out going beyond the obvious. and the movie industry gives it to This film is often character- them, then we all should run and ized as “a women’s movie,” but if hide. The best thing one can say men can be dragged to see it, starring as Jo March. - LM talented directoralnewcomer,and face of forcible removal by psy- about this movie is that it could they’ll probably enjoy it. If you’d Legends of the Fall has settled for what is ultimately a chologists misconstruing her lin- have been slightly more stupid. rather rent, try theoriginal 1930’s One of the latest releases of the work of unrealized potential. guistic isolation for mental defi- It’s pretty harmless and rea- version with Katharine Henburn season, this Brad Pitt epic checks Centered on the campus of the ciency. Dr. Love11 and psycholo- in at just over two hours. It’s hard fictitious Columbus University, gist Dr. Paula Olsen (Natasha to get a handle on what it’s about the film addresses the challenges Richardson) strugglewith the dif- from the previews -- there are Old and interactions of individuals ficult decision of whether to in- West scenes, World War I shots, tossed for the first time into a troduce Ne11 to the modern world, seagoing ship panoramas. and (of multicultural environment. How- and Ne11 all the while struggles to course) a clip ofa love scene. And ever, the actions of one particu- be regarded as a person and not a yes, they do manage to fit all of larly impressionable dolt of a scientific novelty. - JCD this into one movie, and yes, it freshman ignite a volatile series does all make sense. The elderly of incidents that before long Immortal Beloved Indian that narrates the film never plunge the campus into division This is the type of movie that explains the title, but the soothing and opposition. stuns you with its breathtaking sound of hisvoice keeps you spell- Higher Learning is more dis- cinematography and tear-jerking bound throughout the movie. appointing for its failure to attain score so that it takes several hours This film has been nominated greatness than for any explicit to realize that it is but a mediocre for four Golden Globe awards, deficit. But to its credit, the film work. This over-compensation and deserves to win every single logs in outstanding performances will only fool the fool, so to speak. one of them, plus a few Oscars. by Laurence Fishburne, Ice Cube, Brad Pitt stakes out his territory and Omar Epps, and while the Imtortal Beloved is the pas- as a fine dramatic actor, Anthony film falls short of its intended sionate story of Beethoven’s life, Hopkins continues to increase his mark, its message is sobering and or more particularly, his numer- range, and Aidan Quinn suffers its objective is admirable. - JCD ous love affairs. It is entertaining, in silence. If you can’t find any to be sure, and even interesting, other reason to see it, go watch the Ne11 and therein lies the tragedy. The kid from E. I: turn in a great per- Starring J&ie FosterandLiam potential for this tale to have been suasive performance as a Neeson, Ne11 constructs a fasci- utterly Captivating iS reduced t0 a grownup. - JLM nating plot of incidental alien- sniveling, hackneyed plot with a Higher Learning ation and the trauma of environ- “~rprise’’ending fiat canbe spot- John Singleton’s latest cin- mental readjustment. Foster’s ted a mile Off. The Score, while ematic effort encases a potentially characterization of the linguisti- unoriginal, being mostly corn- stunning premise in a disappoint- cally isolated Ne11 is fascinating Prised Of Beethoven’s VmPho- ingly unsuccessful veneer of at- and convincing, illustrating the nies, is nevertheless beautifid. tempted profhdity. Though en- striking divisive capacity of lin- Gary Oldman gives his role as the joying a powerful and talented guistic incompatibility. great composer much passion, cast, the film’s overambitious LiamNeesonportraysthecom- strength, and sensitivity, in one of breadth of scope undermines its passionateDr.JeromeLovell, who the best performances of his ca- principal message. Singleton stumbles upon the isolated Ne11 in reer. -- NJS seems perhaps a little too com- a remote cabin, and fights for the fortable with his reputation as a preservation of her rights in the see FILMS, page 13 Boston returns for two benefit shows at House of Blues by GREGORY YOUMAN While only one original mem- band’s self-titleddebut album was After the check presentations, tastic version of “ForeplayLong Daily Editorial Board ber of the band, guitarist Tom released, he nevertheless is still the band got right back to the Time” that drove the excitement It’s been such a long time. Six Scholz, remains, the innovative talented, whipping through su- music, beginning the set with the level in the building through the years to be exact. But when Bos- heavy guitar sound of Boston en- perb versions of “Peace of Mind,” rock ballad “Amanda” before the roof. ton took the stage at Cambridge’s dures. For thetwoHouseofBlues’ “,” and “Don’t band finally hit their stride with Boston then came back and shows, original lead singer Brad Look Back” in the first set. Fran “Walk On,” which featured in- played “Smokin, ”’ “Feelin’ Sat- Delp lent his unique tenor to new Cosmo took the lead on “Surren- credible guitar solos by both isfied,” and “Something About singer . The mix was der To Me” and “Livin’ for You” Scholz and Pihl. You” as encores before Delp cov- Review before the two combined with But the solos were just begin- ered John Lennon’s “Merry Xmas Delp, one of the few genuinely Scholz and guitarist on ning, andthe bandrocked through (War is Over)” while the entire House of Blues for two benefit nice guys of the a bluesy Christmas tune. an all-guitarversion of“The Little crowd swayed together as one. showsin mid-December, it seemed scene, was most accommodating, The set, which did not include Drummer Boy.” The set ended The band plans to tour this as if the band had never stopped letting Cosmo have the spotlight any talk or banter with the crowd, with Cosmo attacking the ballad summer playing outdoor venues, touring. to himself for all the songs per- ended with an extended version “What’s Your Name” and Delp but are still unsure as to whether For a group-- that made its name formed from Walk On, the band’s of “” that delighting the crowd with a fan- Delp will join them. playing sold-out shows at Boston newest release. The two even had theentire crowdsinging along Garden, performing for an invita- shared vocals on a few songs, with Delp. Now, withMichael Stickings as an tion-only crowdof 200 might have highlighted by an impressive ren- The concert was a benefit for seemed like small potatoes. How- dition of “Rock & Roll Band” in two Boston area children’s chari- Arts editor, you’llreallywant to ever, the 200 fans may as well which the two tenors alternated ties as the band donated $5000 to write arts, so call himup (and try have been 20,000; the excitement stanzas with great success. both the Globe Santa and Opera- to sound intelligent). and noise level remained steadily While Delp has advanced in tion Christmas, an organization Call627-3090or powerful from the first note to the age and cannot hit the high notes that provides toys for needy chil- last encore. that he once did in 1975 when the dren. faxus at627-3910. page six THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,1995

General Galvin is names new Fletcher dean after big- international search FLETCHER the current geopolitical environ- University Provost Sol Cold War society.” Evans said that Galvin has “a continued from page 1 ment. ‘We need people who can Gittleman, who was on the search According to Andrew Evans, tremendous public presence,” a Galvin has stressed the vital understand a situation; think it committee which appointed Associate Dean of Fletcher, Galvin strong orientation in academics, importance of Fletcher’s mission through, come up with an accept- Galvin, said, “The University and was one of 66 individuals who “fantastic management experi- in the post-Cold War era. “That able solution, and work it out. the Fletcher School are extremely were considered for the position. ence,” and “terrific interpersonal mission will grow because the These are the qualitiesthat Fletcher fortunate ‘to have someone with Evans said that Galvin’s name slulls.” Noting these strengths, world has become more intercon- teaches,” Galvin said. this magnificently diverse back- appeared on several nomination Evans said that Galvin “stood out neeted. But at the same time, the ground to shepherd the school into lists from alumni, faculty, and vis- far and above all of the other can- world is also more complex, more ‘It is important that theFletcher the next century. His distinguished iting scholars. didates.” unpredictable -- and so many School be seen as a place from military career and his work in the places are potentially unstable,” which come people who have both areas of leadership, diplomacy, Of the 66 individuals, eight he said. a broad scholarly background and history, and strategy are a potent were brought to campus for infor- Evans summcJ up the feelings According to Galvin, there are a knowledge of how the world combination that will serve mal interviews with administra- of the search committee when he not enough people who are trained works -- and not as a school that Fletcher well as it educates a new tors, faculty, and students. Five, said, “We are so fortunate to have to be articulate on the myriad ques- produces policy administrators generation of leaders to address including Galvin; were brought this man [as the next Dean of tions and issues that will arise in with a cookie cutter.” the sensitive issues of our post- back for formal interviews. Fletcher].”

IMiner Hall I Experimental IWednesday January 18 I I I College Course Bulletins Available Ex College Office, Miner Hall Registration A non-competitive event,...., Not first come, first serve....

Shbbat Dinner at the gezv %lhlCenter,

Services at 6:OO p.m. Dinner at 7: 15.

We’ll see you there. Dinner reservations are necessary- by Thursday the 19th. Call Hillel at 6274242. Wednesday, January 18, 1995 THE TUFTS DAILY page seven SPORTS NHL ready to resume Salem State next for No. 1 ’lhfts But Yzerman and Hatcher await trades Jumbos top Middlebury to tie Williams for top N.E. rank

next three years with a pathetic by BEN MARGOGF I Middlebury, a home game that last week ind a half have been collective bargaining agreement. Daily Editorial Board I‘ Tufts controlled from start to fin- great.” , Enough about the damn collec- The Tufts men’s basketball ish. His absence tomorrow means In-the Jumbos’ victory over tive bargaining agreement already. team is number one wiW&*bullet. that other players will have to step klidtJiebuq: McMah6n lkd”4he It seems like every sportscast and And a bum ankle. i vi team with 26 points and l5 ke- tlewspaper in the country has con- ’ “Obviously it hurts,” said se- bounds. Chad Onofrio had 15 This Week in Eeritrated on the actual agreement ‘ nior Chris McMahon, who leads points and nine assists. Holden and have forgotten that the season the team with 22.6 points a game. scored 11 points and Sullivanhad is starting in a mere two days. “It changes the complexion of our eight. The Boston Bruins are wish- team. There will be more outside Everyone will have to excel ing that the abbreviated season Boosted by a 7-1 record last shooting and guys like Jeff Holden against Salem State on Thursday, could be delayed another week or semester, and an 82-72 victory and Joe Donroe will have to con- and then again at Trinity on Satur- two, as defenseman A1 Iafrate and over Middlebury on Saturday,the centrate on rebounding and hit- day if Tufts hopes to keep its lofty winger Cam Neely remained side- Jumbos moved into a tie with ting the open shots.” ranking. lined with injuries. Neely’s situa- Williams atopthis week‘s National Holden started at small for- “I love it,” said McMahon tion seems the more desperate of Collegiate Athletic Association ward in place of Will Riordan about the poll. “It’s a nice accom- the two. With 48 games being [NCAA] New England Division against Middlebury and will be in plishment. crammedintoonly 103 days,Neely UI poll. Tufts will play its first the starting lineup against Salem “But still, it’s too early to think is likely to miss more than half of game as number one against Sa- State. Sophomore Dave Sullivan about. The only polls that matter the B’s games. His absence, and lem State Thursday at 7:30 in will start in place of Emmert on are those at the end of the season. the trading of Joe Juneau, leave Cousens Gym. Thursday. I’m sure our heads won’t get too the Bruins short in the offensive But the Jumbos will do so with- And they will have their hands big.” end of the rink. out Eric Emmert, who was injured full against the Vikings. Another trade, this one sending against Middlebury and is out for Salem State beat Tufts 88-71 rifts 82 Middlebury 72 Glen Wesley to the Hartford eight to 10 days with a sprained last season,andiscurrentlyranked Whalers, coupled with Iafiate’s ankle. sixth in New England. “They’re Tufts Jumbos uncertain medical condition has “Salem State is going to be a an athletic team,” said Sheldon. FG Fl’ Rcb. Min. M-A M-A 0-T A F fi left the team a little short in the big game,” said Tufts coach Bob “But they’re not as deep as they ullivan...... 23 3-6 I)-o 0-7 0 3 I defensive zone. Luckily, Raymond Sheldon, whose team has won its have been in past years.” ‘unniyham.... II 0-3 2-2 1-1 2 I) : I5 IC0 1-2 3-4 0 1 1 Bourque should be well rested last 16 regular season games The Vikings (8-2) were deep ...... II 2-5 OM 1-3 n I 4 ...... 6 0-0 44 0-1 0 I 4 when the season actually starts. against Division 111 opponents. enough to beat Colby, however, a 4 61 0-0 0-0 0 I I Inothernewsaroundtheleague, “Andit will be tough without Eric. talented team the Jumbos narrowly ...... I 0-0 0-0 04 0 0 I 35 6-17 2-2 1-5 9 2 l! the Detroit Red Wings, Wash- But we’re a program, not a one- defeated last semester. 3 u-0 ow n-n o 0 t ington Capitals,and several other man team.” One factorthatcould helpTufts 24 4-5 1-2 0.2 I 4 11 IcMahon ...... 33 9-15 2-5 2-15 4 4 24 teams have been in contact re- Emmert, whois averaging 15.6 is the shape Sheldon’s team is in. aydak...... 211 3-7 0-0 1-1 0 I 5 garding the eventual homes of points and 6.7 rebounds, was in- “Everybody came back from break 5 2-3 BO n-n n n 4 9 3-6 0-1 3-4 0 I d Steve Yzerman and Kevin Hatcher. jured in the first half against in shape,” said the coach. “The (XI 32-7212-18 14-16 16 19 81 FFZ ,667:3-point gods: 6-13. ,462 Both perennial all-stars, each has Iden2-3,Rngsddc I-2.0nofrio 1-1. been pretty much told that they ionroe 0-1. Riordan 0-1. Cunningham @I). Team ebounds: 3. Blocked 2 (Sulivan. Michel). Tum- will not be returning to their re- vers: 13 (Holden 3. Sullivan 2. Michel. Donroc. spectiveteams. There was arumor iglio. Rionlm. Onofrio. McMahon. Ragsdnle. mmen). Steals: 8 (Onofrio 3. McMahon 3. circulating that the two teams uniiingham 2). would reach an agreement that Middlebury Panthers would basically swap players, but FG FT Rcb. Mia. M-A M-A 0-T A F Prr it now appears that a third team 36 5-19 2-2 1-5 4 1 15 will likely be introduced into the 36 5-15 on 3-6 7 n 11

mix. 8 1-2 0.0 1-3 1 2 2 Look for this deal, and several 19 1-1 on 2-6 n 2 2 &r ...... 26 5-7 5-9 0.2 I 4 15 others (Brian Bellows and several ~r*ovic 18 6-8 1-7 3-7 n I 14 other players are also reportedly rguson ...... 28 1-3 0-2 1-3 I 3 3 iegsman 4 1-2 0-0 2-2 0 1 2 on the block) to be made in the 14 2-5 1-5 4-5 I) n 5 I 200 28-6611-27 21-46 16 17 72 next week or so. After that, teams .FT% ,407;3-point goals: 5-16. .31I

will have to start thinking about hnwost 3- IO, Bianchi 1-4.Vuckovic I ~ I, Poulos 0 , Team Rebounds: 6. Blocked I (Cusskr). Turn the playoff run. em: 18 (Prcnevost 4. Poulos 3. Cussler 3, Lasek 2 ~ffcy2. Bianchi, Vuckovic, Ferguson. bicgsrnan) sals: 6 (Poulos 3. Vwkovic 2. Boffcy). 32 40 .. 72 LOAoRams leave town ...... 41 41 .. 82 250 for dome in St. Louis NCAA ST. LOUIS (AP)-- Eight years Rep. Richard Gephardt, and other iew England Division I11 after losing the Cardinals to Ari- officials then signed an oversized Men’s Basketball Poll zona, St. Louis became the new “relocation agreement.” home of the Rams today. “I have waited and wanted this 1. ‘Mts University (8-1) The Los Angeles Rams, wooed day to happen for a long time,” by one of the most lucrative deals Gephardt said. “Let me tell you, 1. Williams College (I 1-1) in sports, are leaving bankrupt we proved together the naysayers Orange County for a city that lost wrong. I am confident professional 3. Western Conn. St. (11-2) its first NFL franchise because of football is going to be a huge suc- lack of fan support. cess in this town.” 4. UM~i~s-Dartmouth(9-3) This time around, the city is When Rams owner Georgia offering a new domed stadium and Frontiere, who grew up in St. 5. Babson College (9-3) incentivesthat could give the fran- Louis, took the microphone, she chise a $20 million annual profit. was met with cheers and applause. 6. Salem St. (8-2) The Rams were projected to lose “I’m overwhelmed,” she said. $6 million playing in Anaheim “I don’t thinkl’ve been this happy 7. Trinity College (8-1) this past season. since the last game we won.” “Today is a great day for this Frontiere said she planned to 8. Colby College (8-3) community,”St. LouismayorFree- meet with each player and their man Bosley Jr. said at the long- families and said she knew they’d 9. Colby-Sawyer (10-2) awaited news conference.“For the be anxious to move. Junior center Eric Emmert (34) will sit out with a sprained ankle last nine months we have been The deal also calls for Missouri on Thursday night when #1 Tufts hosts #6 Salem State at the 10. W.P.I. (9-2) working around the clock trying to businessman Stan Kroenke topur- hmbodome..- bring NFt football to St. Louis.” chase part of the team. If the league approves, pro foot- ball will return for the first time The city assembled the ulti- since 1987, when the Cardinals matecarepackagetoluretheRams, THE TUFTS DAILY left for Arizona. who were 4-12 last season. It in- “The St. Louis Rams -- how cludes apotentialof $20 million in sweet it is,”Bosley said. “Today is annual profits. The Rams will get the day that the dream of a team of a $260 million domed stadium to our own is now a reality.” play in, a $15 million practice Bosley, former Sen. Thomas facility to prepare in and a cushy I TheDaily newspaper of 1 Eagleton, who headed the FANS $250,000 annual lease that won’t Inc. effort to lure the Rams,U.S. cut into profits. Tufts University page eight THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,1995 USDA says the GOP reforms might harm WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Agriculture Committee, saidTues- Republican push todismantlefed- day that he supports keeping food era1 nutrition programs threatens stamps and other nutrition pro- farm incomes, grocers and the ru- grams at the Agriculture Depart- ral economy, the Clinton adminis- ment. tration said Tuesday. It previously The Clinton administration’s Communication8 and llledia Btudiee Program had it sought to portray the pro- study showsthatsomeoftheGOP’s posed reforms as an assault on traditional supporters -- farmers, hungry children. agribusinesses and rural commu- In an analysis of the GOP’s nities -- have a stake in the out- proposed welfare overhaul, the come. Until now, its criticism of Agriculture Department said the the plan has focused on its impact legislation would slash federal on low-income families, particu- spending on nutrition programs larly children. by nearly $31 billion over five According to the study, the years. As many as 6.3 million low- welfare bill would ultimately mean Regiutratlon on Ulednesday, January IBth, U:304:30 income Americans could be less money available to support dropped from the food stamp rolls food purchases and agricultural Experimental College, 10 miner Hall in 1996, the department said. incomes in three ways: by cutting The consequences of such deep overall nutrition spending;repeal- cuts, USDA’s report suggests, in- ing USDA’s authority to donate cluderising health problems linked commodities to school lunch pro-. to poor diets among low-income grams, food banks or other feed- 0 EXP 50CQ mass CommunicatSons, bmrernment, G the Law Americans, particularly children, ing programs; and allowing states pregnant women and the elderly. to give poor families cash instead Thuredaye b7. The department also warned of coupons or vouchers that must that retail food sales could quickly be used to purchase food. fall by as much as $10 billion, a As food spending declines, the reduction that would be felt on report said, the losses would affect EXP 51CQ International mass Communications farms, in factories and in grocery earnings of food manufacturing 0 stores. Theoverall economy could and distribution firms. Agricul- Tuesdays 740 Pm lose as many as 138,000 jobs, the tural producers would also suffer USDA predicted, but rural as farm prices and food sales America would be hurt most. tumble. The Republican welfare plan In the short run, the department . wouldconsolidateadozen federal said the block grant plan and a $5 0 EXP 52CQ / CQ 1h30 Children and media nutrition programs, includingfood billion reduction in spending could stamps, school lunches, meals on cost 126,000 to 138,000jobs, the mondays 3:5046: 50 wheels for the elderly,and supple- majority in the food sector. In the menta1 feeding assistance for long run, the act would reduce women, infants and children, or employment in farm production WIC. by 15,000 to 45,000 jobs and out- Spending on these programs, put by more than $1 billion. which serve 45 million Americans Food processing and distribu- every month at an annual cost of tion sectors could lose 28,000 to about $40 billion, would be capped 83,000 jobs. and returned to the states in alump Dr. Larry Brown, director of. 0 Bprlng 1199 ElIB lnternehlpe a sum. The states would receive Center on Hunger, Poverty and $35.6 billion in the first year. Nutrition at Tufts University, said Also, the entitlement status of the proposed cuts come at a time food stamps would be ended, when researchershave established Qtudents lntere8ted in Internships Contact meaning that the program would strong evidence linking even mild Busan Eisenhauer no longerexpand automatically in undernutrition to learning impair- times of recession. More than 27 ments in children that can last a 13 lliner Hall, ext. 2007 million Americans are on the rolls lifetime. today. “For people who are concerned GOP leaders have promised a primarily about the productivity vote on their welfare reforms by of the work force and the competi- 0 EXP NICQ Communlcations Internship Academic Credit! early spring. They expect a tough tiveness of the U.S. economy, fight over the food and nutrition making more poor children hun- b1ockgrant.A key Republicanlaw- gry is not the way to go, which is maker, Rep. Pat Roberts of Kan- what the block grants would do,” sas, the chairman of the House Brown said.

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Welcome, oh welcome back to the glorious Light on the Hill, Tufts University. Welcome back to long hours of studying in the din at Wessell, to tiptoeing past puddles of vomit in the dorm hallways, to take-home midterms, to the Tufts Police, to Nancy DiBiaggio, to the cold (sort of), and to The Tufts Daily, where you read it first. I Wednesday, January 18,1995 THE TUFTS DAILY page nine

PBSpoll is newest weapon in the effort toprotect funds ,- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pub- funding increase, 35 percent would !which did not cover public radio, American people to send them It can’t be replaced bY a corn- lic TV stations, trying to protect like to maintain funding at current had a margin of error of plus or more tax money?’Gingrich asked merCial Operation ‘‘any more than millions of dollars in federal fund- levels, and 13 percent favored re- minus 3 percentage points. at a news conference Tuesday. aPublic library can be replaced by ing, tested a new lobbying weapon duced funding or no funds at all. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, PBS put the total cost of the WaldenBoOks,’’hesaid. Tuesday: a poll that found most Three percent had no opinion. R-Ga., who wants to eliminate all poll at $5,000, but said it was ApublicTVcriticalsoattacked Americans favor continued tax- The telephone poll of 1,005 federal funds to public broadcast- impossible to determine exactly the Poll for giving respondents payer support for public televi- people was conducted Jan. 5-8 by ers, attacked PBS for spending how much of that came from tax- only three choices on the question sion. Princeton, N.J.-based Opinion money on the poll. payers. of PBS funding:more, the same or The survey found 49 percent of Research Corp. for the Public “I mean, what is PBS doing However, PBS President Ervin less. those interviewed supported a Broadcasting Service.The survey, using tax money to lobby the Duggan said 86 percent of the “If it Was a choice between money for the poll -- like public cutting PBS and food stamps, support for public broadcasting in would People be saying the Same general __camefrom non-congres- thing?’ asked Laurence Jarvik, sional sources, such as individu- directorofthecenter forthe Study als, companies and foundations. of popular ~U~tUre. So, presuming that Congress The center is a Private group You can still enroll in the Supplemental Health Insurance Plan for 1995! provided the rest of the funding, that has supported federal cuts, taxpayers kicked in $700 for the saying the Public broadcasting Enrollment for the coverage period starting 1/16/95 begins now. poll. community suffers from waste, “If they would quit spending elitism and mismanagement. AfSordable Student Premiums -‘Start at $96 for coverage thru 813 1/95 the money on polling and spend Gingrich and other Republican Increased Coverage - Adds $1 50,000 coverage to the Basic Student Plan the money on privatizing them- leaders in Congress have called selves, they would find there is a for eliminating federal funding for Flexible Payment Options - Mastercard, Visa 8z Personal Checks accepted goodmarketforthem ... they would the CoPration for Public Broad- do fine,” Gingrich said. casting. But Duggan said privatization CPB receives more than $20 To enroll, pick up an enrollment card at University Health Services or is another word for commercial- million each year from the federal call The Chickering Group at 800-966-7772. ization. government. It doles that money “Take away public out to individual stations and broadcasting’sseedfunding, starve groups including PBS, a distribu-

~~ it financially of its only venture tor of programming, and National capital and you force it headlong Public Radio. IT’S EXCITING.. .. . into the alien world of ad agencies Of public broadcasting’s total IT’S MUSICAL.... and costs per thousand and mer- income of $1.79 billion in 1993, IT’S UNIVERSITY’S chandising, rather than the world the last year for which figures are TUFTS of teachers and historian sand com- available, 14.2 percent came from munity volunteers,” he said. CPB . The law forbids public stations PBS spokeswoman Karen from airing commercials and en- Doyne said the poll results would gaging into other commercial ac- be provided to lawmakers on Capi- tivities. tol Hill. “We thought it would be Public broadcasting gives useful at a time when public TV is Americans who can’t afford or at the center of a funding contro- don’t have access to cable televi- versy,” she said. sion and computers an array of Last week, dozens of public news, entertainment and educa- TV and radio station executives ional services at no charge,- were in Washington pressing law- JEWISH Iuggan said. makers to protect CPB funding

Joodstock leather ottom backpack: A CONCERT AND SING-DOWN FEATURING Regular pdce: $36.98 SALE PRICE: $29.991 University wool blend Hat; JEWISH A CAPELLA GROUPS FROM ti& Slena consort attache case: Regulor pdce; $42.98 Regular pdce: 512.99 UNI VERSI TIES A CROSS THE NORTHEAST SALEPRICE s29.991 SALE PRICE $9.991 4V Sport plold flannel shirt w/ hood MV Sport crewneck sweatshirt: md pouch pocket: Regular pdce: $37.98 Regular pdce: $24.98 SALE PRICE $27.991 SALE PRICE S23.981 4V Sport nylon hooded fleece TDK floppy dkkettes... 2 pack wlth frc wd reverslble jacket: carrying case: %! Regular pee: $57.50 Regular pdce: $2.49 SALE PRICE: S44.W SALE PRICE: $1.791 p3?+bc Of IK 2 pock 90 min. oudlo cassette tape: 8 pack AA Energtzer batteries: SATURDAY Regularprlce: $7.99 @PO4 Regulor pCe: $2.59 SALE PRICE: $1 .99! SALE PRICE $5.991

IoyRunner Factcentre Eastpak Bandito backpack: pdoted student organizer: Regular pdce: $36.98 JAN 2fst 8:OOpm . Regularprlce: $15.00 SALE PRICE: $29.991 SALE PRICE $9.991 @ THE GRANOFF FAMILY HILLEL CENTER AT TUFTS At the UNIVERSITY For tickets call Adam @ (6 17) 627-3242 Bookstore! %$ Tickets: Students and Seniors $3 *O 4 5- (Free for Tufts Students) dcL .j,r Community Menmbers $5 +*kp or.. page ten THE .TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,1995 -- General takes over at Fletchei continued from page 1 him in his new role. He explained The Committee on Student Life that as a senior officer in the US trol, US military operations in Army he was involved in many of is now accepting applications for [Africa],humanitarian support for the political aspects of the mili- Central and Eastern.European tary, both domestically and diplo- nations, and the crisisin Bosnia.” matically, dealing with the Penta- , In June of 1987, Galvin was gon, Congress, and the,State Des i-ippointa Supreme AlliedCom- partment. ‘‘~positiod took ab ‘kinder for American and NATO much political knowledge as the$ korces in Europe. He retired from did military knowledge,” he said. The Wendell Phillips Award the Army in 1992 when he was When asked during the inter- appointed as a professor of M- view with The Daily what he con- *. tional security. Galvin is currently sidered to be his most significant .. a serving as a visiting policy ana- achievements, Galvin cited his lyst at Ohio StateUniversity. He is efforts to reshape NATO after the Chairman ofthe American Coun- Cold War and his work in bring- “he Wendell Phillips Memorial Scholarship is one of the two prize scholarships (the othex assigned cil on Germany and a board mem- ing about reductions in both to Harvard University) which was established in 1896 by the Wendell Phillips Memorial Fund ber of the Center for Creative nuclear and conventional weap Association, in honor of Boston’s great preacher and orator. The award is given annually to the in Europe. junior or senior who has best demonstrated both marked ability as a speaker and a high sense of Leadership and the Insitute for ons public responsibility to the campus. Defense Analyses. Even today, Galvin said that Last year, Galvin was dis- he serves, along with former US The award consists of a cash prize and will be presented in March of 1995. Nominations may be patched by the US State Depart- Secretary ofstateHenryKissinger, made by any member of the Tufts administration, faculty or student body. Self-nominations are ment as an envoy with the rank of on a committee that continues to encouraged. Please note that the award is Qpen to Seniors and Juniors onlv, ambassador to assist in negotiat- negotiate armscontrol agreements ing an end to the crisis in Bosnia. with the former Soviet Union. Nomination forms may be obtained at the Dean of Students Office in Ballou Hall or at the While in Bosnia, Galvin spent six Referring to his experiences in Information Desk in the Mayer Campus Center. months on a mission for Secretary awidevariety ofcajxicities, Galvin of State Warren Cristopher ex- said, “There’s an aspect of all of Nomination forms must be submitted by 4;OODrn Fridav. .lanuarv 27. lees, to the ploring how Muslim and Bosnian this when I come to Fletcher.” Office of Student Activities, Room 110 Mayer Campus Center, 44 Professor’s Row. Croats, once sworn enemies, might form a joint command fol- Galvin said his goal for lowing a negotiated peace settle- Fletcher is to continue to “attract ment. the very best people and to turn Galvin said that his military out the very best people” in the experiences will prove helpll to field of international relations.

SPRING ’95

Women’s Studies Courses for Spring 1995 Anthro 185 Women, Religion, and Power in Africa Shaw English 92C Hitchcock: Cinema, Gender, GERMAN.112 Ideology Edelnan English 147 American Women Writers Matsukawa English 1921 Girls’ Books .. C. Flynn English 192K How the Body Means L. Shohet: FAH 196 Cassatt, Degas, Manet, Morisot B. White INTENSIVE German 75 The Grim‘s Fairy Tale: ELEMENTARY GERMAN Ideology & Politics C. Nelson History 71 Modern Africa J. Penvenne History 181HS Stereotyping and History, 1600-present H. Solomon Phys Ed 50 Self-Defense for Women S. Wachsl.er One whole year in one semester. Philosophy 48 Feminist Philosophy N. Bauer Thorough introduction to the basics of all four language skills. Psychology 55 Human Sexual Behavior 2. Luria Small class size. Poli Sci 179GP Gender Politics in International Relations L. Brandas Sociology 126 Contemporary Feminist Social Thought A. Russo Meets in 07 and 27 Blocks Sociology 188 Domestic Violence J. Ptacek Spanish 108 Latin American Women Writers J. Netchhsky WS 72 Introduction to Women‘s Studies R. Johnson If you ’missed’ German in the Fall, catch WS 190 Senior Colloquium R. Johnson up now! WS 194 Senior Project An opportunity to begin a new language in mid-year Courses offered in the Experimental College and selected seminars . in various departments may count towards the Women‘s Studies Interdisciplinary Minor. For information about the Women‘s Studies Interdisciplinary -3- I We’re back, Minor, contact Professor Ronna Johnson, Center for and we’re bad. Interdisciplinary Studies, 628-5000, X2955. We’re the Daily. I There is no escape.1 Wednesday, January 18,1995 THE TUFTS DAILY page eleven Attention: Seniors

The following organizatipns will be recruiting on-campus during Cycle 3 February 2-24, 1995.

Analysis Group Andersen Consulting Bankers Trust Beth Israel Hospital Bloomingdale's Quickie Courses are Bolt, Beranek & Newman Cambridge Technology Group back! Coopers & Lybrand Cooper Neff & Associates Eastern Bank Enterprise Rent-A-Car & Leasing Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Fidelity - Equity Research Fidelity - High Income Group This is your opportunity to add a First Oak Brook Bancshares Flashpoint little fun to your course Fund for Public Int. Research Gillette schedule ! Green Corps Integral, Inc. ~, ..I Japonica Partners John Hancock

MBNA New England 1. Mintz Levin Myers Holum Pick up an application and sign up at the Info Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Oppenheimer Booth ! Available Thursday, Jan. 19,1995 PSDI, Inc. PTCG, Inc. RS Carmichael, Inc. Show & Tell Sphere/Town of Greenwich Sverdrup Teach for America Teradyne Testa Horwitz & Thibeault Texas Instruments Toronto-Dominion Bank Vectis Corporation Vivid Technologies, Inc.

Resume and cover letter (optional) deadline: 5:OO p.m., Thureday, January 26, 1995 at the Career Planning Center.

Complete job descriptions are available in red binders at the Career Planning J.. Center, as well as On Reserve at the Wessell and Lufkin Libraries.

Recruitment Orientation Meeting8

If you have not yet attended a Recruitment Orientation Meeting, but would like to participate in on-campus recruiting, the' following meetings times are available: Thursday, January 19 at 7:OO p-m., Large Conference Room, CC Tuesday, January 24 at 7:OO p.m., Large Conference Room, CC PICK A PLACE UNDER THE SUN

. .AFRICA EUROPE ASIA CENTRALAMERICA Internships Language Programs Study Tours

Scholarships Available

Division of International Programs Abroad Summer Programs Office, 119 Euclid Avenue . Syr'acuse, NY 132444170 1800-251-9674

D APtMCSMcollheUSMFS3Vk8 - ig!J ig!J ndyowsldsForrrtrr ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT FOREST FIRES 11' pagetwelve , THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,1995 JaDan make causes damage QUA^ 1 continued from page 1 Kobe, said they were using tem- porary beds and appealed for sup- ment because so many water lines plies including oxygen. were fractured. Television showed dramatic Many fled their homes with scenes of people buried in nothing more than scanty night- crumbled debris awaiting rescue clothes. and bandaged victims speaking of “I brought no food with me,” the horror of an earthquake.In TV Ofice ojProfessiona/ and Continuing Studies said a man interviewed by Japa- footage from Osaka, the face of a nese television as he huddled near woman was visible in the rubble. Positions available: a fire in a garbage bin in a parking “I’ve been sitting in a small lot. “But someone gave me food. space here,” she cried out in a We’re all sharing everything.” feeble voice. “But my mother has Takarazuka, Ashiya and Awaji bad legs, and can’t last much Island were also damaged in the longer.” quake, which occurred a year after At another family’s house, a a magnitude 6.7 quake killed 61 son looked on in anguish at his people in and around the mother’s body, crushed beneath Northridge area north of Los An- the rubble. geles. People with blank expressions Starting immediately The shaking lasted about 20 wandered the streets of Kobe, seconds and snapped vital life- wrapped in blankets against the lines to western Japan, cutting cold. Gfor sprirzg semester) hundreds of miles of rail service In one rare show of emotion, a that is the transport lifeblood of young woman drove up near some many workers here and knocking friends, opened the door and fell usy office needs 2-3 individuals to handle a high out power and telephones. out of the car crying. Elevated highways collapsed, Dozens of fires still were burn- B volume of telephone calls and mail requests for crushing vehicles underneath. A ing nearly 24 hours after the 545 bus sat perched on the edge of a a.m. quake. Next to one, three fire program information and materials that come in daily fallen section of highway. trucks were parked, its firemen The devastation shattered standing by helplessly because the from prospective continuing education students. Posi- Japan’s belief that sophisticated quake had cut water supplies. tions require excellent telephone and interpersonal engineering would enable its newer At acommunity center in Kobe, buildings and roads to withstand a where about 30 neighbors were skills, a positive and professional attitude, and good maior quake. spending the night, the only light I_ Already, criticism was being cakefromtwocandleson thetable. memory for details. Duties include other office tasks, voiced about prevention and res- One middle-aged man refused cue efforts. to come indoors. including data entry, xeroxing, filing, on-campus deliver- “I think rescue measures have “I don’t want to go inside a been very slow,’’ said Tokyo Uni- buildings,” he said, shivering “It’s ies, and bulk mail preparation. versity professor Osamu Koide. “I cold, but I would rather stay out- think there was a lack of quake- side than in a building that may preventive knowledge.” collapse on top of me again.” Following damaging earth- Anold woman wearingablood- Starting Salary: quakes in the United States, Japa- stained bandage looked drained nese experts had confidently pre- of emotion and broken by strain. dicted that roadways in this coun- “My family was crushed under- $6.60 per hour; 8-12 hrs./wk. try would stand up to even a seri- neath the house,” she told Japa- ous quake. But sections of several nese TV, speaking in a toneless major expressways collapsed, as voice. Opportunity for one such didmany modem buildings. Some The quake was centered 12.5 overpasses buckled like an accor- miles under Awaji in the Inland individual to continue working hlI-time >.‘ dion. Sea, the Central Meteorological Osaka, a major financial hub, Agency said. in the summer at a higher salary ($8/hour). suffered significant damage. The Bert Matzeck, a Canadian c temblor shut down the nation’s freelance photographer who trav- second-largeststock market. eled to the island, said it looked Stocksof insurancecompanies, like a war zone. He said dazed Call 627-3562. which will have to lay out large survivors were wandering in the amounts to cover damage, took a rubble. for Anne Marie. hit. Initialdamageestimatesranged The country has been rattled by Ask from $10 billion to $20 billion, a series of strong quakes since saidPatrickHoganofSmithNew Dec. 28, when a quake with a Court Securities. magnitude of 7.5 jolted northern The quake’s full forcewas taken Japan. by Kobe, 20 miles west of Osaka Kobe is not considered a major andashipbuilding and steel-manu- center of seismic activity, though facturing center. It is the gateway several active faults run through for 12 percent of Japan’s exports. ‘the region. About 8,000 Americans live in Huge pillars of smoke rose in theKobe-Osakaareabutnone were --- the sky as hundreds of fires raged reported among the casualties, the in Kobe. Cars trying to get in or U.S. Embassy in Tokyo and State out jammed the severed roads and Department said. bridges; ferry service was sus- None of the 11 nuclear power pended to outlying islands because plants in Fukui, 84 miles northeast docks collapsed. of Kobe, was damaged by the Authorities at the main hospi- quake, a Kansai Electric Power tal in Ashiya, between Osaka and Co. spokesman said. her 6tt A Pal Smahtd! Wednesday, January 18,1995 THE TUFTS DAILY page thirteen Movies galore FILMS continued from page 5 Ready To Wear (Bet-a-Porter) Director Robert Altman’s lat- . est film bears his distinct touch: that quirky, tongue-in-cheek, somewhat selfdeprecating humor that threads all his works, from The Player to Short Cuts. And, as usual, he has amassed a large, star-studded cast, including Julia Roberts and Tim Robbins -- two of Altman’s pet actors, Sophia Loren, Christy Turlington, and Tracy Ullman, all of whom give decent, even funny performances, but none of which are particularly noteworthy. Kim Basinger gives a hilarious portrayal of the phony, opportunistic TV commentator who is covering the Paris fashion scene, and wouldn’t know zip- pers from Velcro. The movie meanders for most of its duration, with several Altman-ish stories going on si- multaneously, that, at worst, make you smile at the absurdity of the whole superficiality--as no doubt Altman meant it to -- and, at best, will leave you rolling inthe aisles. It is a weird, meaningless movie, one you will wonder why you lity‘s Equity Research Department is very busy these days. With depart- bothered to see but can’t help tal aFets under management totaling more than $136 billion, Fidelity liking anyway. -- NJS is lookingfor research associates. The Equity Research Associate will initial- ly assist an analyst with industry analysis and data in order to gain industry and company knowledge. He or she will then be assigned a group of PAX companies comprising a subsector of a specific industry and will work closely with the analyst to analyze stocks, companies, and industries.

ET FideIi2y Investments@

Fidelity Investments is committed to creating a diversified environment LUX and proud to be an equal opportunity employer. The Tufts Daily... ”A delightful romp.” I I

You must Re-Register your organization every semester, including this one, ’in order to be eligible for YOUR SENATE FUNDING and to participate in The Student Activities Fair!! All organizations can Re- Register in the Student Activities Office in the Mayer Campus Center from 8am-4pm, Monday through Friday.

YOU MUST RE-REGISTER BY FRIDAY, January 27, 1995

The student organization fair will be held on January 30, 1995 ...... 11:OO am 4:OOam.

SPACE IS LIMITED TO THE IST a QRGANlZATlONS

2 ,age fourteen TEE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,1995

The10 commandments OF cbe Daily's business

.-

1. Thou shalt baing display ads in by tl-wee o'clock tu10 days beFoae chey aae supposed to KUTX 11. Thou shalt bRing c.lassiFied ads in by cl-mee o'clock on the day beFoae they aKe supposed to mx 111. Thou shalt baing payment with thee, OK thy ad shall not aun, - lv. Thou shalt NOT submit a carneRa-Ready ad on --c coloaed papea. .. V. Thou shalt LuKite leg My. VI. Thou shalt not get TCU Races iF chou aKt FKOIT-I an

-* 1- . .. OK .. academic depaa-nnmc. GReek oaganizacion, 1 ._. . 1 . t .' %. , . VII. Thou shalt aeseive the back page well in advance.

& v111. Thou shak ask FOR inseRcs ac 1eas-c CUIO rueeks in advance,' FOK OUR publisheKs have scaingenc RequiKernei-k .. on chis subject. IX. Thou shalt submit thy ads betmeen nine am. arid s@ p.m. on weekdays OK one and si7 p.m. Sunday, because chose me che houas OF the business oFFice. >c. hdon 'Sacciadays me Rest. ., ..

.. ,. .

... Wednesday, January 18,1995 THE TUFTS DAILY page fifteen Gingrich political group raised $236,000 after election WASHINGTON (AP)-- A PO- Charles Keating his start in the Jesse J. Thompson, a real es- at the federal and local level. millions each year on education, litical committee headed by House savings and loan business. Keating, tate developer from Charlotte, Since 1991, it has been regis- training and candidate develop Speaker Newt Gingrich raised convicted of fraud in a much-pub- N.C., and his wife, Sylvia, each tered with the Federal Election ment, and contributors to those nearly a quarter-million dollars licized case, is serving a 12-year donated $lO,OOO. Commission as a federal political non-federal activities are not re- after November’s election. sentence in federal prison. “I think it’s a great organiza- action committee that donates to strained by the contribution limits In its first public disclosure of Lindner has been a prolific po- tion and I think Newt Gingrich is a candidates. and disclosure requirements of non-federal financial supporters, litical donor for years. During the tremendous leader,” Thompson federal law. GOPAC on Tuesday identified 243 1994 election cycle alone, he and said. “It does a lot of training for ’ A pending FEC lawsuit con- individuals in 47 states and Puerto his companies donated more than prospective candidates, The tends that GOPAC violated fed- Rico who contributed a total of $300,000each to the Democratic money, I think, is extremely weil eral law by not registering earlier. Tuesday’s disclosure marks the -$236,417last year between Nov. and Republican parties. spent. A lot of the new Republi- The federal campaign contri- first time GOPAC has identified 14 and Dec. 31. Lindner was one of 14 indi- cans in Congress can give credit to butions and expenditures GOPAC voluntarily the financial backers The largest contribution was viduals who contributed $10,000 GOPAC.” has been reporting regularly to the of its non-federal activities, al- $55,000 from Carl H. Lindner, a or more to GOPAC in the six weeks GOPAC, with Gingrich as its FECsince 1991,however,account though several newspapers last Cincinnati financier who controls after the GOP election sweep that general chairman, operates much for only a small portion of year obtained internal GOPAC American Financial Cop., an in- ended 40 years of Democratic rule like a national political party, with GOPAC’s total operation. documents identifying many of the surance company, and who gave in Congress. accounts to finance activities both The committee also spends group’s biggest conGbuto;s.

IlClassif ied! 2lassifiedsClassif iedsclassif ieds **RESUMES*” StarUng Immediately Body fat distribution Persona’s Services LASER TYPESET Mature, responsible person to and risk of breast cancer study needs Sun. JanPro-Cholca 22. Anniversanf Rally of Roe vs. 1 $25.00 -396.1124 babysit a happy 9 yr old girl. Car is a Af-Am & Cauc. fem. 18-35, non- wade decision lega~iziiabortion. Impressive LaserTypeseIResumes, must. Mon,Thurs. 4-7pm;Tuea230- smoking, no estrogens, non-veg. Meet at Boylston T at 1:3Opm, walk Balloon Travel Sprlng Break featuring computer storage for fu- 530. W. Medford near Winchester/ $100. Call 6366176 ext. 1. to Boston Center for Arts, 935 ‘95. ture updating. Your choice of Mysticlakes. Pk ca11483-1135leave I MEET JACK NICHOLSON Tremonl. rallv at 2m. TrippadwtestoCancun.theBaha. MEDIA INTERNSHIPS Eegii your fimmaking career today I typestyles. including bold, italics, message. Interested in intaming for academic with original cec bullats, etc. on Strathmore paper. an doc- Have your cover letters done by us Child Can, needed credii this spring or summer in Tv/ ftbramgthe 3oM anniversary Of the radio, film, print, or PWadvertisihg? ExGollege. Info mwIii is tonighl to match your Resumel One-day after school for our daughter age 6. setvice avail. 5 min from Tufts. (Mem- Flexible dayshours. Also need a ConIact Susan Eisenhauer, Com- ai 9:30 p.m. in the NN Studio. ber of PARW Professionalhoc of babysiier for occasional weekend munications & Media Studies, Miner 777’s. call Jon 629-9702. Ex~ll-ige.lnfomeetingkJan.18 --- ..‘.‘. Hall, Ext. 2007 ASAP, or cometo at 930 D.m. in the TUTV studio. Or. Resume Writers. Call for FREE ‘Re- eves for our two daughters. Car an I sumelCover Latter Guidelii. needed. Call 646-4261 if interested informational meeting Friday, Jan. J- if you miss the meeting, call JM ai 20 12 noon in Latge conference 629-9702. ““TYPING AND WORD- Also, word processing or typii of in either position. at Good luck with your class, I am 84 student papers, grad school appli- Rm., Campus Center. proud of youf Me PROCESSING SERVICE c BeAnRA? 396-1124 caIions. personal statements. the- Summer Opportunities Applications due Febdrd. Four Student papers. grad school ses, muniple letters, tapes tran- ataco-ed Jewish residential camp in HEY YOUlll are theses, laser printing. Fax Sewica, beautiful Catodin Mountains of PA Register today for Ex-College mandatory sessions are left: Jan. 18 applications. personal statements. scribed, at 7 p.m. Jan. 23 4 p.m. transcription,resumes, gradu- etC. CALL FRANCES AT 396-1 124 (1 hr. from Wash D.C.). Love of Summer Opportunities Coursee. RegisWion is in Miner South; at tape MA RESUME SERVICE Hall. classas begin today1 Stad House; Jan. 25 at 7 p.m. in ate/faculty projects, multiple children, teens and camp life essen- At co-ed Jewish residential camp in Carmiiel, Jan. 26 at 3 p.m. 55 letters,AMCAS forms. Thorough tial. Excellent salani DIUSroom and beautiful CatoUin Mountains of PA Talbot Ave. Call 627-3248 for more knowledge of APA. MLA and Chi- TYPING, ETC. THE board. Capital Camps: 800-927- (1 hour fmm Wash, D.C.) of All Dally puwnnel 4825. Love So good to see you all again, wel- info. cago Manuals Of Style. All docu- PROCESSED WORD 3954004 ChikllWI. teens, and camD life eS- ments Laser Printed and spell- Professionally prepared student pa- sentia~.and board.kcellent CAPITAL salary plusCAMPS: room wme back, and by the way there’s a are Do you Ilke to work with kids? meeting on Fridayattheusualtk. EXCOLLEGE REGISTRATION checked using WordPerfect 5.1. pers, distinctive resumes and cover ~. - continues all week in Miner Hall. Reasonable rates. Ouidttumaround. letters. tape transcription, mailing ChildcarecenteroneblodtfromTufts 1(800)927-4825. looking for substitute & PT teachers. Kat0 Don? miss it don’t miss it don’t mks Senring Tufts students and faculty lii. etc. All work is spell Chec~eo a. for 10 5 min from Tufts. CALL amlpm available. Experience with ExperiencedBaby8ittSrWanted Da Imention you’rethecooke& yrs. and proofread with FREE report kids preferred. $7/hr. Call 626-3891. Don? worry, we have an eternity to FRAN at 396-1124. (Member of cover. Or~e-sIop business merof- Some afternoons, eves for 7 & 5 find dates for Gala. JL NASS-NationalAssociation of Sec- fering: Faxsenrice, copies. business Catering Positions yearald. 6 min. from campus by car. retarial Services) MA WORD PRO- cards. binding, private mailboxes. 1 chef/manager for catering and re- $6 per hour. Call Jon or Ma:641 - -* My lrmS penguin CESSING mail forwarding, notary, lamination, tail store. 1 all around person for 4166. See, I put you in the Daily finally. I Housing passport photos, packaging and prep, function, delivery, 1 dish- missed you over vacaIon but your shipping. Conveniently located at washer/cleaner (after school hours For 1995 Summer heinousness had ended. Ilove you. 422 Salem SIreet (Route 60). CALL OK), also need on call prep and Counselors sougM for unique, pres- tigiousco-edchildren’scamp.Spec- Love, David 2.4 & 6 Bdnn mt. I 395-0004 function staff. Be flexible, motivated energetic. Salary $6 and up, de: tacular, pristine location, coastal on Ossi& Rd. Avail. Juhe 1, good Maineonbothfreshlakeand~cean. R’8 t0 b tMck conditions. califor more info at 942- ORAD SCHmL APPUCATIONS pendii on experience. Call 666- EXPERTLY TYPED (Law, 3663. Specialists needed for 30 actiii: 7625, Maria. Medical, Business) trip leaders, equestrians, photogra- Room for Rat -96-1124-9- - - . .- . LIFEGUARDS phers, WSI swimmers; tennis. gym- Birthdays ~bdrmhMret,W&~ofTuftsI Are your grad school applications nastics. basketball. baseball, la- Lifeguards needed at Me Melmse .-- empbyee. Full access to all & piled high on your desk? Are you Wanted YMCA. Flexible hours. Please call crosse. golf, riflery. and sailing in- -Bwg.r tb, inc kitchen. VCR and color Tv. wondering h0wyou;re going to fit all Aquatics Director for more info. structors; archers, fisherman, Since we missed you on the 2nd. $300 a month. Call Wendy at m, your info into those tny spaces? Are Melmse YMCA 6654360. kayakem. canoeists, naturalists, here is your official. in print happy 627-3213. you concerned where you’ll find the spring Break 95 matine biologists. visual, musical, birlhday message. Hope you invite America’s #l Spring break Com- Looking for Childcam dramatic and martial artists; usovertowatchthePt3ncessbride panyl Canam. Bahamas or Florida. v) or out of my home for my 2 yr. old waterskiers and windsu rfers... to soon. We love you. kemi and jon A MEDFORD BED & R&m pmfessiilly tvpesat and 1 10% lowest price guarantee. Olga- m Mon and Tues from 1330-530. mention a few. Intewiew in Cam- BREAKFAST laser printed on high qualii papeR nize 15 friends & TRAVEL FREE1 call shari q629-2409 m Somerville. bridgeavailable. lnquireearly. Sal- Elegant. wandhomey. h” NOneed to fret- Call FRAN at 396- Call for our finalized 1995 party ary sIruUure dependent on age, a mile from campus. Breakfast In- 1124 a specialist in making your Schedules. 800-95-BREAK. Childcan, person noodd adivii expertke and experience. cluded. Single: $50/night; $275 applications. personal statement. ior 7 yr old boy Tues andThurs Call (617) 721-1443. weekly. Double: sGo/nigM $325 230- and resume as appealing asp- 6pm. Car needed. References re- ~eekly.MI or ~indaat &. siMe. quired. Wbr. Please call Nancy or I Events Lany at 396-7874. .-- iaee sixteen . THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, January 18,l .' Doonesburv BYGARRYTRUDEAU.- A round Campus

Today Programs Abroad Students returning from study abroad: academic advising Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson meeting. Coolidge Room, Ballou Hall, aF MI LIFE, BUT YW MAKE 9:30 a.m. WIN A LOT OF UP YOUR I'M NRITING A FICT\ONAL PARTS CWEN1 ow UFE? AUTOBIOGRAPHY.

Okay, we know, it's called the Dai/y, but it's also the beginning of the semester, and we're also human. by Bill Amend

How AM f SLJPP~SEDTO MERE ARE JUST Too fW0 LET ME GET THIS b AUTHIS HOMEWORK DISTRACTIONS! HoW AM I STRAIGHT -YOU Keep an eye out for LESS WAN Two WEEKS SUPPOSED To STAY FocuSEDl WANT ME To SUST HOW AM I SUFlbSFD TO 6'C STAND HERE AM0 IFW the next few issues MOTIVATED?.' How AM I GLARE ... DotiT WFDSED TO EVW MiMK MIND. of the Daily ABOUT ScHoolWoRK?! Friday, January 20th Tuesday, January 24th Thursday, January 26th And we begin truly daily production on Monday, DILBERT 8 by Scott Adams January 30th.

THE COMPANY HAS DULLRUSH? ISN'T HE THEY'RE DECIDED TO COMPETE I WHO FASTER Thanks for your patience. Y THE POLITICIAN 2 WENT SNORKELING AND THAN I THINK WE. 3 GOT KILLED BY A THEY CAN OLN I THIS. 1 SEA TURTLE7 LOOK. j 4 The Daily Commuter Puzzle Y ACROSS 1 Urges 5 Garden bloom 10 Elevator sign 14 Blow a hom Weather Report 15 Hand covering 16 Toledo's waterfront TODAY 17 Against 18 Special techniques 19 Mentally well 20 Folded handbill 22 Cuddled 24 Charge 25 Petal perfume 26 Banners 30 Game of chance Partly SUMY 34 At that time 35 Corn serving High50; Low:40 36 Wanton destruction 37 Lamprey 38 Went inside TOMORROW 40 Small bill 41 Clergyman 43 Help 44 Small bird 45 Religious groups 46 Militaly forces Yesterday's Puzzle sohred and war 9 Put in place equipment again 48 Warms 10 Ruin 50 Garland 11 Spoken 51 Opposed 12 Port or sauteme Cloudy 54 Unmarried 13 Requirement persons 21 Meadow . High:45; Low35 58 Not of the clergy 23 Dish of greens 59 Welcomes 25 Money past due 61 Sword handle 26 Paces 62 'Hawkeye" 27 At that place 63 Brilliance 28 Sacred object 64 Comfort 29 Dine Quote of the Day 65 Genuine. 31 Rose feature 66 Displays 32 Principle 67 Sketch 33 Signs 36 Olympic winners DOWN 38 German citv 1 Includingothers: 39 Edge "We live under a government of men and morning newspapers." abbr. 42 Morally correct 2 Departed 44 Put on the 3 "I've - serer scales --Wendell Phillips 4 Add starch 46 Affix 5 Accord 47 Some grown- 52 Strong wind 56 A Lanchester 6 Coin opening UPS 53 Opera 57 Menu offering 7 Head . 49 Fire residue 54 Cabbage dish 60 Worldwide 8 Happenings 51 Winged 55 Fibber workers' gp.