U DNLY A week for packed “The atmosphere is Four-day symposium will feature speakers, panels what’s really by PETE SA” arrive at this moment.” senior military officials,” he said. remarkable. Daily Editorial Board Tickets for the symposium go “The atmosphere is what’s re- Students will be High-ranking politicians, mili- on sale today in the info booth at ally remarkable. Students will be getting scores tary generals, leading scholars, the Campus Center, each costing getting scores upon scores of national security officials,profes- $lO.“We’vetriedveryhardtocut hours of interesting debate and upon scores of sors, and students will come to- the cost down for studentsto come discussion.” hours of gether on campus to discuss the and enjoy this,” he said. Among the speakers sched- interesting debate future of democracy. Ann Elizabeth Mayer, associ- uled to speak during the five-day and discussion. “ Following months of intense ate professor of legal studies at symposium are Martin C. Lee, preparation, the Education for the University of Pennsylvania, chairman of the democratic party Public Inquiry and International praisedtheEPIlCsymposium, say- in Hong Kong; Richard Nuccio, a - Sherman Teichman, Citizenship(EPIIC) program will ing, “The symposium ambitiously State Department official stripped Director of EPllC present its annual international stretched participants to address of his security clearance after re- symposium April 2 through April issues of general importance to vealing CIA involvement in mas- Daily tile photo

6. the human race in termsthat could sacres in Guatemala; and former ~~ ~ ~~ ~ Entitled “The futureofdemoc- be intelligible to educated human- presidential candidate Michael ship with the people and with the composer Chick Corea. “Corea racy,” the event will combine the ists.’’ Dukakis. subject matter.” learned about it from friends in the work of Tufts students enrolled in Describing the speakers fea- “Lee is a microcosm of what The event has a global vision National Security Council. He EPIIC, and that ofprogram direc- tured in this year’s symposium, EPIIC is all about,” Teichman said. while maintaining a focus on foundit to bean intriguingforum.” tor Sherman Teichman. The con- Teichman said, “It is avery eclec- “He was present at one ofthe most eventsathomeintheUS,Teichman Teichmanaddedthatthe musician cept for this year’s event was cho- tic, intentionallybroad forum.” He remarkable moments in the con- said. “It is an intellectual celebra- “will provide a improvisational sen by faculty and students last emphasized that, despite the di- text of democratization.” tion about a very potent subject,” evening ofjazz.” year, Teichman said. versity of the speakers, the pro- Noting that Dukakis spoke in he added. StudentsenrolledinTeichman’s “We’ve been working flat-out gram is very disciplined. theEPIICclassthisyear, Teichman The event will also feature a class will also present their work forafullacademiccycle,” hesaid. “We have Pulitzer Prize win- added that “he is coming back musical interpretation ofthe sym- “It is remarkable and gratifying to ners, former politicalprisoners,and because of a sustained relation- posium by reputedjazzpianistand see EPXXC, page 15 Change rnach led .university0. begins0 project 0 U Students spoke and they wereheard. Following the studentsurvey conducted to save water on campus by LEAH MASSAR graded until May 20, after students leave, Senior Staff Writer however, because contractors have had South Hall over spring break. Due to a campus-wide water conserva- problems accessing the areas which need “Students were complaining about a tion project, showers, sinks and toilets in work resulting from the set-up of the resi- lackofaccessibilityofchange machines,” dorms and academic buildings are being dences. said TCU Senator Gab replaced with new models designed to save Before deciding to extend the project to responsible for organi water. the entire campus, a pilot project was per- tion of the change machines. The improvements,which Energy Man- formed in Wren Hall last year. Explaining the results of the survey, ager Betsy Isenstein says are almost 80 “The water savings were actually a bit Mozes said, “The top two things that percent finished, are being performed by better than we expected,” Isenstein admit- came up were the shuttle hours and the change machines.” H20 Matrix, a contractor that has done ted. Mozes said the Senate decided that Carmichael and South Halls would be the most similar projects at other universities, in- This year’s project is expected to create convenient locations of the machines for uphill and downhill residents. Previously, tbe cluding Boston University. a 17 percent reduction in domestic water only campus change machine was located in the Campus Center. “The toilets are being re-engineered, use, which includes water used in bath- “People can use it for laundry service, vending machines, phones, buses,” Mozes low-flow shower heads are going in where rooms but not dining halls. It is also ex- said. “It’s going to benefit everyone.” they weren’t, and faucet restricters are be- pected to save the University 1.9 million According to Mozes, MacGray Laundry Service, whose contract with the University ing installed,” Isenstein said. cubic feet of water per year. is up for negotiation at the end of this year, donated the two change machines to the Explaining that most of the work in the “The estimated payback for the project University free of charge. academic buildings is complete, Isenstein is 2.7 years at the current water rate,” The installation of the change machines was co-sponsored by Tufts Association said the major dorms were upgraded last Isenstein explained. of South Asians, the Sophomore Class Council, Vice President ofArts, Sciences, and week, during spring break. This week, work Thus far, Isenstein said that feedback Technology Me1 Bernstein’s office, Dean of StudentsBobbie Knable, AssociateDean will be done on the smaller houses, and any from the campus community has been posi- of Students Bruce Reitman, and Director of Dinning Services Patti Lee. problems that arise in buildings that have tive and that everyone has cooperated with already been completed will be fixed. -Lauren Heist Latin Way and Hillside will not be up- see CONSERVATION, page 15 College Pizza using oints, but problems abound byLAURENHEISr chase food, and Sacca said many students Daily Editorial Board have been confused by all of the rules. College Pizza, the first ofthe four businesses to be using Sacca said that some of his drivers have the Merchants on Points System (MOPS), has been flooded been complaining because students who or- with calls since the system got underway over spring break, der food on points have not been giving any College Pizza’s manager Ron Sacca said yesterday. tips. Tips must be paid in cash and cannot be “It’s getting really tricky now,” Sacca said. There are added to the points. many restrictions for students using their points to pur- Other problems have arisen from the fact that students have been ordering food with- out saying they would be paying with points, How to use points and then telling the drivers when they arrive off campus: that they want to pay with points, Sacca said. Despite the numerous mix-ups, Sacca said I. Phone the restaurant weekday evenings after7 p.m. he is glad that College Pizza is using points. and weekends fiom 1 p.m. until 3 a.m. “The thing is it’s a stepping stone. At least we 2. Say you are paying with points. got it rolling.” Practical jokers have prohibited Espresso 3. Give your name and campus ID number. Photo by John O’Kcefc 4. Pizza from also offering food on the points Place your order. Point of interest to points off campus: Espresso’s Pizza. 5. You will be given the total cost of your bill. system, Espresso’s manager Anthony Salvato 6.Present your Tufts photo ID and be prepared to sign said. Lee said she was at Wing Works yesterday, and their for your order at the time of your delivery, Salvato said someoneremoved the fuse from Espresso’s staffshould be trained sometimetoday. Studentsshould be 7. Tip in cash, as tips cannot be included in your points modem on Friday night. “We were pretty busy in here on able to use points at Wing Works, “by the weekend, if not total. Friday night,” he said, adding that he thinks that a customer a little earlier,” she said. must have stolen the fuse sometime during business hours. “And then [with] Inn we’ve run into some com- When all the restaurants are equipped with the “Hopefullywe’ll be up and running tomorrow,” Salvato munications problems,” Lee said. She added that dining points off-campus systems, we’ll provide a clip-out said. services has been dealing with the manager’s daughter to reference to stick to your phone with rules, and phone Patti Lee, director ofdinning services, said that the other fixthe problem. numbers. Check the hi& for updates. two restaurants on MC?S, Wing Works and China Inn, are “Hopefully they’ll be ready soon,” Lee said. in the process of getting the points system operational. age two THETUFTS DAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997 THE TUFTSDAILY Clinton’s knee injury delays P.O. Box 18, Medford, MA. 02153 (617) 627-3090; Fax: (617) 627-3910, [email protected] Online: http://www.tufts.edu/as/stu-orghftsdaily trip to Mexico, Latin America Dan Tobin Los Angeles Times-Washington itinerary, Clinton expressed frustration to aides about Editor-in-Chief Post News Service his physical limitations on the trip. WASHINGTON-President Clinton,crutches in Since returning from Helsinki, Clinton has kept a Managing Editor: Karen Epstein tow, announced Tuesday that the injury to his right light schedule. He watched college basketball Satur- Associate Editors: Bill Copeland, Gregory Geiman, Amy Zimmet knee had forced the postponementofatrip to Mexico day, caught up on some reading Sunday and stopped NEWSEditors: Pete Sanbom, Lauren Heist next month and a more-expansive Latin American by the Oval Office for an hour and a half on Monday. Assistant Editor: John OKeefe visit in May. He had his frst full working day Tuesday, but partici- VIEWPOINTSEditor: Jason Cohen The scheduled trip to Mexico for April 11-12 is pated in only one public event. Assistant Editor: Alex Shalom now slated for May 6-7. The broader tour of Central Doctors say he will need crutches for about eight FEATURESEditors: Laura Bemheim, Annie Risbridger, Katie House and South America, which had been scheduled for weeks, and aides say he is just beginning to get Assistant Editor: Merredith Portsmore May 6-13, will be divided into two parts. Regional comfortable with them. Worried about becoming ARTSEditors: Jay Ruttenberg, Cara Maniaa, Pomsak Pichetshote summitmeetingsinBarbadosandCostaRicawillgo paunchy during his immobilization,the aides say, the Assistant Editor: Dara Resnik on as planned during the week ofMay 6- 10. Visits to president has begun a low-calorie diet. He is also WEEKENDER Editors: Abby Schwartz, Alexis Rivera Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela will be put offuntil participating in twice-a-day therapy sessions with a SPORTS Editors: Sam Erdheim, Marshall Emhom Oct. 12-17. physical therapist. The hour regimen includes an Assistant Editors: Gregory Youman, Jordan Brenner, Vivek Ramgopal Clinton, speaking to reporters at a White House upper-body workout, stretching and flexing his in- PHOTOGRAPHYEditors: Susan Habit, Rony Shram ceremony to announce a new crackdown on health- jured leg. He will soon add water aerobic therapy to Assistant Editor: Kate Cohen care fraud, noted the difficultiesof navigating South his routine. ONLINEEditor: Mike Weissman America on a bum knee. White House spokesman Michael McCurry said Assistant Editors: Jeff Borland, Heather Diaz “Among other things, we’re going to Argentina the president is not in pain and has reduced his and Brazil,” the president said, holding his crutches. medication to only extra-strength Motrin. He had Pratiksha Thakkar “They’re big countries. There’s going to be a lot of been taking a pain reliever his doctors prescribedthat Production Director moving around and I need a little more physical is sold under the brand name Ultran. Production Managers: Haley Stein, Amy Rutenberg mobility. Besides, I’m going to ride horses and do “He feels some stiffness from time to time,” said some other things and I’m not quite ready for that, as McCurr, who added that an orthopedic surgeon has LAYOUT Editor: Pamela Abrams Assistant Editors: Doug Clancy, Gabriel Safar you can see.” been monitoring Clinton’s recovery. In the White Tuesday’s foreign-travel postponents were the House, adjustments have been made to accommo- GRAPHICSEditors: Wenimo Poweigha, Josh Goldblum latest indication of how the March 14 surgery on date the First Knee. Rugs have been taped down and COPY EDITORS: Judith Dickman, Andrea Benoit, Alicia Lerman Clinton’storntendon isalteringthepresident’ssched- furniture moved in the residence to ensure wider Neil D. Feldman ule and affecting how he carries out his duties. The passage ways. Executive Business Director trips to Mexico, Central and South America will be the But such alterations can do nothing to soothe the first of his presidency, an effort to improve relations psyche. Clinton’s biggest injury frustration, accord- Office Manager: Sanitha Narayan between the United States and its hemispheric neigh- ing to McCurry, is “not being able to play golf.” Advertising Managers: Abby Krystel, John Gendron bors. So postponing them is not insignificant. “I do worry about how he’ll be feeling a month Receivables Manager: Pamela Mills But moving Clinton around is “a production,” in from now,” said a senior White House official. “At The Tufts Daily is a non-profit independent newspaper, publishec the words of one senior White House official. The some point, he’ll really be moving around but he [ondaythrough Friday duringthe academicyear and distributed fref president requires a wheelchair and crutches and won’t be able to play golf. The real thing it has the I the Tufts community. Business hours are 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., Mondaj cannot travel by helicopter. The White House al- potential to do is frustrate him down the road because rough Friday, 1- 6 p.m. on Sunday. The Daily is printed at Charle: ready has canceled some US travel. he’s a very active guy. He already feels encumbered iver Publishing, Charlestown, MA. Upon arriving in Helsinki for last week’s summit just being in the White House.” Editorials appear on this page, unsigned. Individual editors are no1 with Russian President Boris Yeltsin, Clinton had to But for the White House, the upside is that it xessarily responsible for, or in agreement with, the policies anc be lowered to the tarmac on an airline cateringtruck, makes the president’s schedule easier to control and librials of The Tufts Daily. The content of Letters, advertisements then his wheelchair was pushed by Secret Service gives officials an excuse toturn down invitationsand pedcolumns, cartoons, and graphics does not necessarilyreflect thc agents into a specially fitted van. Accustomed to events they would prefer not to accept. “It’s easier to inion of the Tufts Daily editorial board. keeping a brisk pace and fitting in teisure time on his say no,” the official said. LETTERSTO THE EDITOR Letters must be submitted by4 p.m. and should be handed into thc aily office or sent to [email protected]. All Letters musi lclude the writer’s name and phone number and must be venfied bj Helms might allow chemical le Daily. There is a 350 word limit.The editors reserve the right to edil ztters for clarity, space, and length. For the full policy on Letters tc le Editor, contact The Tufts Daily. weanonsI treatv4 to come to vote Los Angeles Times-Washington Helms, sitting at a student’s desk in the front row, Post News Service grinned and flashed a thumbs-up. WINGATE, N.C. -Senate Foreign Relations Com- In her prepared text forthe “ Lecture” mitteechairman Jesse Helms, R-N.C., standingnext at Wingate Tuesdaynight, Albright said some people to Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright in an- findher cordial relationswiththeconservative Helms Employers could foot other meeting of their mutual-admiration society, “puzzling. They wonder what we have in common.” signaledTuesdayhewill allow an internationaltreaty She noted their manifest differences: he is from banning chemical weapons to come to a ratification. rural , she was born in Prague. “He’s bill on student loans vote in the Senate. a Republican and before I became a diplomat and had Helms, who has been using his position in the all my partisan instincts surgically removed, I was a College Press Exchange dents,” said Saunders.“In the past. Senate to block the treaty, still opposes the pact and Democrat,” she said. NEW YORK- In an innova- the state and federal governmeni Tuesday called it “overrated.”But he said he may be Helms is a square-dance man, Albright continued, tive approach to dealing with sky- and parents all were helping stu- willing to let it go through as a result of arduous while she has “done the Macarena, and unlike Vice rocketing student debt, NELLIE dents pay for college more than negotiations with his committee’ssenior Democrat, President AI Gore, I actually move.” MAE, the largest nonprofit pro- they are now.” Sen. Joseph Biden, Del., over “2 1 different issues.” She said the key to their good relations can be vider of student loan funds, has Under NELLIE MAE’S pro- “Therewillbenoproblem with itifwecontinueto found on the first page of Helms’ book, where he drafted a proposal yet to be ap- posal, employers could take some negotiate as we have been doing for the past few wrote that “being an American in the 20th century is proved by Congress in which of the debt burden off students’ days,” Helms said at a joint news conference with the greatest fortune that can befall a human being.” employers could offer student shoulders by offering a loan-re- Albright, whom he invited here to give a speech. “If Albright, a refugee and immigrant whose un- loan repayment on a pre-tax basis payment plan as part of the both sides will sit down and be realistic about it, there abashed patriotism appeals to Helms, said that while as part of a benefits plan. company’s benefits package. Foi is a very real chance of approving the treaty.” they do not always agree, “We both understand that “Because there’s such a prob- instance, an employee would be Helms and Albright talkedtoreportersgatheredon our ability to debate differences freely and without lem with student debt, businesses able to set aside pre-tax income in the lawn behind a stately old former antique store that fear can never be taken for granted. We both believe should take a stake in it because a special account to be used exclu- is now the Jesse Helms Center, a foundation partly that the concept of individual liberty set out in the students are paying so much for sively for student loan repayment. funded by Taiwanese contributions that will house American constitution remains, after more than 200 their training,” Diane Saunders, Or, an employee could choose stu- Helms’ Senate papers. He has donated his papers to years, the world’s most powerful and positive force vice president of communications dent loan repayment over benefits nearby , a small Baptist-affiliated for change. And we both agree that if our freedoms and public affairs for NELLIE such as life insurance or dental school that he attended when it was a junior college. are to survive through the next American century, we MAE. “It’s time for the corporate coverage. Despite their political differences, Helms and cannot turn our backs on the world.” world to step in.” Albright have developed at least in public a warm Helms would not have expected Albright to tem- In 1996,morethan50percentof Companies also could choose relationship of easy banter and respect for each per her viewson specific issues to accommodatehim, all US students borrowed money to match student loan repaymenl other’s views. Helms, typically a bitter critic of the and in her lecture Tuesday night she did not do so. to pay for their undergraduate or dollarsat levelssimilartoa401(k) Clinton administration’sforeign policy, warmly wel- Forexample,shecalledonhiscommitteetoapprove graduate education. That’s partly plan, in which an employer may comed Albright’snominationto be secretary ofstate a 1979 UN-sponsored Convention to Eliminate Dis- because college costs increased contribute 50 cents, for example, and presided over quick and painless confirmation crimination Against Women, a pact Helms opposes. as much as 200 percent between for every dollar the employee hearings for her. “When it comes to the rights ofmore than halfthe 1981 and 1994,outpacing inflation pays. The political odd couple spent Tuesday together, people on Earth, America should be leadingthe way,” by more than 250 percent. touring local businesses, meeting community lead- said Albright, who has instructed American diplo- Experts also attribute the loan According to Kevin Boyer, ex- ers and students and proclaiming their esteem for mats around the world to make women’s rights a surge to the 1992 Higher Educa- ecutive director of the National each other. central focus of US foreign policy. tion Act, which expanded the fed- Association of Graduate-Profes- When Laura Welsh, a Wingate student from “Around the world appalling abuses are being eral student loan program and al- sional Students, it’s only a matter Beckley, W. Va., asked Albright during a classroom committedagainstwomen, from domestic violence to lowed more students to borrow oftime before student loan repay- session what was her “toughest negotiation” during dowry murders to forcing young girls into prostitu- even larger sums of money. ment becomes abenefitthat gradu- her tenure as ambassador to the tion. Some say all this is cultural and there’s nothing And simply, “more of the onus to ates seek when they start theirjob during President Clinton’s first term, Albright paused we can do about it. I say it’s criminal and we have a borrow has moved to the stu- search. a moment, then replied, “With Jesse Helms.” responsibility to stop it,” she said. Wednesday, March 26,1997 THE TUFTS DAILY page three Features Go on-line to find good eats Wookin pa nub New website provides dining guide for Boston area Let me just set the record straight about my biceps. They don’t exist. byTONYKAHN New York, Boston, Chicago, San eatingmethods, well-known chefs, If you didn’t already know this, you could have found out on the Ft. Senior Staff Writer Francisco, and Seattle areas. The and links to other sites through- Lauderdale beach last week where I bent to peer pressure and sported, In May of 1996, CyberPalate site plans to continueto expand its out the World Wide Web. ofall things, a muscle-shirt. I guess it legally has to be called asleeveless LLC introduced CuisineNet, the geographical scopes to include The Cafe is an entertainingand shirtwhenIwearit, whatwithmy heinouslackofpumpitudeandall.But definitiveonline dining guide and the top 50 US markets, providing interactivediscussion site, featur- you’ll be happy to know that chicks really dig out-of-shape, goofy- culinary resource.Accessible fiee- in-depth information on each. ing writers such as Irena Chalmers, looking dorks. Especially when they’re half-naked on the beach. of-charge on the Internet, Restaurant Central was created MarjorieIngall,andMelissaClark. That smell - is it sarcasm or my SPF- 15 Ocean Potion? CuisineNethas revolutionizedthe as a guide to meet the opinions, Here, everything from the institu- Yeah, the Tobinator ventured to sunny ole search for a good restaurant by needs, and budgets of consum- tion of tipping to herbal tea is Florida for a wild and crazy Spring Break last week. providing interactive access to in- ers. By evaluating every detail of discussed. The Cafe also includes The kind you see on MTV, the kind the frat guy down depth information on restaurants, the restaurant ex- a live chat the hall always seems to have, the kind that gives food trends and customs, and in- perience from seat- I room with a parents gray hairs in places that they shouldn’t even ternational cuisine. ing comfort to res- varietv of cu- have hair. I was out for fun, sun, anda couple of hons, According to CuisineNet ervation policies founder and President Kian-Lam and even the view p- but alas, like the Buckwheat song, I was wookin pa nub in all da wong taces. Even with my kickin’ tan and Kho, “CuisineNet is the first ser- across the street, my rockin’ good time, the search for vice that provides such a range Restaurant Central provides un- Alice Waters and restaurant crit- Misadvenwes love in all the wrong places was not and depth of information in the precedented access to an in-depth, ics 1ikeEricAsimov.SusannaFoo, nearly as fruitful as Juicy-Juice. food and restaurant arena.” up-to-date view of dining that ex- author ofthe James Beard award- Day One: Five Indianagirlsdanc- Less than one month after the ceeds food critics’ narrow taste winning cookbook Susanna Foo PinDentistlyI official launch date, CuisineNet and stagnant paper guides. Chinese Cuisine, and owner of ing in the courtyard. Train, G. Love, and I make our move, stopping first to accept pink bunny-ears from a announced that Magellan The site includes two search the renowned Philadelphia restau- gentleman nearby. We dance and chat and ridicule our cardboard ears Internet Guide had given the site tools, “Express Search” or “A la rant of the same name, has led a and, as good ole boy Train would say, it all good. The conversation a four-star rating, the highest Carte Search.”TheExpressSearch live discussion. falters, though, when a scary-looking Harley guy with tattoos starts possible. “Magellan reviews are allows you to type in one or more The Market offers users a place dancing too close to the ladies. His pick-up line?“I’m a fucking German! based on the comprehensiveness, keywords at a time, enter the res- to get information, directly order Can you believe that?’ As they escape his clutches, they inadvertently ease of use, organization, inno- taurant name, or select from drop- food-related items and services, escape ours, too. But at least we avoid getting disemboweled by the self- vation, and overall appeal of a down menus of location, type of or be linked to other Internetpages. proclaimedfucking German. site,” according to the press re- cuisine, and price range. The A la It also allows visitors to browse The only action of the night happens when a 35-year-old woman lease. CuisineNet’s awards also carte Search allows you to search premiere food resources. Cyber- starts hitting on Train. He plays along, and grinds with her. Her reply: include Microsoft Network’s listings by cuisinetype, neighbor- personalities Lila, Ben, Chloe, and “You go, guy.” At long last, I have a friend who’s somebody’smid-life Travel& Leisure Pickofthe Week, hood, price categories,menu types Andrew serve as guides in each of crisis.Unfortunately, the audience chooses someoneelse, meaning that “Pick of the Day” from Hearst’s (including healthy, pre-theater, these sections. Chuck Woolery won’t pay for the date with the 35-year-old. So we exit Home Arts, HomePC’s 1996Best prix-fixe), dress code, food ratings, CuisineNet is the final source stage left, even. Web Sites, Net Guide’s Goldsite, ambiance, andmore. for any food-related question.The Day Two: At a dance club, Underwear and I meet a pair of Michigan aUSAToday HotPick,andLook The site also offers three other in-depth reviews and ease of ac- golfers. Later, one’s trapped in the evil clutches of a big muscular Smart’s Editor’s Choice. integrated sections: Diner’s Di- cess allow users to findthe perfect wannabe grinder. Invoking Gallahad, I offer to rescue her- after all, Approximately 50,000 individu- gest, The Cafe, and The Market. restaurant for any and all occa- she’s at a dance club without a golf club for protection. The damsel in als visit the site monthly. The most Diner’s Digest is a culinary data- sions. . distress obliges my offer, thanking me for my chivalry and even petting popular section ofthe site is “Res- base offering information on ev- For anyone interested, my horse (Camelot reference, not sexual innuendo).Fiveminutes later, taurant Central,” offering reviews erything from Tex-Mex to Thai. CuisineNet can befound at hQ:/ though, Maid Michigan has her tongue down Big Muscular Grinder’s of over 3,500 restaurants in the There &e sources for international /www.cuisinenei.com. throat. You go, guy. I go away, girl. Day Three: I talk to the most beautiful girl at the club, but only for a minute. In those precious 60 seconds, I get her laughing and cooing in a smashing Southern drawl. Of course, she has a big muscular boyfriend who’snotme whoshegoes back with, but it’savictory in my cruel world. On the flipside, X gets three condoms and two kisses from a sweetie ofa bartender. And he doesn’t grind with anyone over age 30. And no fucking Germans intercede. For X, it all good. For me, it all should. But it all ain’t. Day Four: I’ve startedto come to grips with the fact that I am not a big muscular guy. Somewhere along the way, I became deluded about my coolness rating and fancied myself notorious and b.i.g. Need I set the record straight about my biceps again? So tonight, X leaves the club with a honey and I leave the club with a free T-shirt. You go, guy. Go away. Day Five: Girls..,what arethesegirlsyou speakoCFuggheddaboudit. seeing the pair cheer for the Jumbus together was Day Six: Break isnearlyat itsend, andditto formypatience. I’venow needed to dispel the rumors that the couple was adopted the Why-the-hell-not? approach. “I have to use a cheesy having problems. pickuplinewhile I’mdownhere,andI’mgoingtouseitonyou,sowhen The events’ planners, Hillel’s Holiday and Con- you don’t like it, just say, ‘Goodbye.’ Ready?’ The suddenly uncom- servative Committees, originaIly asked the bride fortable beautiful woman smiles to her friends, unsure what to expect. and groom to participate because they knew the “Is your father the juice-man? Because you are veryJine.” two campusfigures would stir “I’veneverheard that one before.” Laughter and smiles abound, but she clearly has no desire to talk with me. Maybe the fact that she’s yet ding is a unique life-cycle event to make eye contact clues me in. Unfazed courtesy of that magical have experienced,” discussed alcohol ego-shield, I authorize her to use the line whenever she wants Chizzik. “Wehope dan Andi will draw people and walk away before I realize how far I’ve plummeted. and Day-o: Well, hosers,my collegeexperienceisnearly atitsend,andditto in.” for my patience. Now that Spring Break has come and gone, I’m in the absoluteanchor-legofmyTuftscareer.AndI’mstartingtofeelabitloopy. I’m starting tothink it’snot sobad an ideato findout ifrandomgirls’fathers lebration will be quite authentic,complete with are the juice-men. I’m starting to think that a good story is what I should beseeking. AndsoI leaveyou withmytriphighlight,asan emblemofhow to be the coolest dork on the proverbial block. -Marshall Einhorn Back to Dav Five: I acauire a fi~zzvDude ring courtesv of a whack- a-rnolekip-darkinghybrid’atthe localk-cade. Tharnight attie club, I look for a fine young lady to bestow the ring upon, hoping to parlay it into conversation. No luck, so I pocket the jewelry. Then: destiny in a black dress. The gorgeous blonde I’ve been eyeing all night is headed in my What this page needs is direction. I tap her on the shoulder and take her hand. She pulls away, visibly nervous. I slip the ring on her finger, tap her hand, and walkaway. A few seconds later I look over my shoulder. She’s laughing with a MORE pictures of dan: friend and showing offthe ring. She looks up. I summon all the coolness inmybigunmuscularfiame, smile,nod,andexitherlifeforever.Lateron, I see her grinding with a big muscular guy, but it’s irrelevant. Without givingherachancetorejectme, Ibecamepartofherlife.I’mthemysterious guy at the club she’ll tell everyone about when she fmds the fuzzy ring in her jeans pocket next week. We never talked, but I’m in her head. Pathetic? Maybe. But in my world? You go, guy. c sigh > page four THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997

IWEDNESDAY EVENING Q-TIME WARNER @.OVER AIR CHANNELS i:O:1-TUFTS CONNECT MARCH 26,1997 I

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liDS @$ 6dEerlv Hills. 90210 Stereo) Istar Trek The Next Generation IMovie ICops IJudgeJudy (Baywatch “Point Doom” (Star Trek I

A&E @ Quincy “Images” Law & Order ‘Wages of Love” Biography “Debbie Reynolds” American Justice (R) 20th Century (R) Law &Order “Silence” Biography “Debbie Reynolds” CNBC Bull Session Business Ton. Money Club StealsDeals Equal Time Hardball Rivera Live Late Night (In Stereo) Charles Grodin Rivera Live (R)

CNN @ Worldview @I Moneyline B Crossfire m Prime News E’ Burden-Proof Larry King Live World Today Sports Illus. Moneyline B NewsNight Showbiz COM @ TickB Dream On Daily Show (R) TV Nation Paula Poundstone Paula Poundstone Comic Relief Dream On Daily Show Comic Relief Tick Sat. Night Live CSPAN House of Representatives House of Representatives El Prime Time Public Affairs Prime Time Public Affairs (R) DISC a Beyond 2000 Newt Step (R) Wings “ME 109: The Legend” Wild Discovery “Death Valley” Discover Magazine (R) Who’s Afraid of. .. Cats Wild Discovery “Death Valley” Discover Magazine (R) . E! @ TalkSoup News Daily Melrose Place “Revenge” Sex on South Beach (R) Gossip (R) Model (R) Talk Soup (R) Night Stand Howard Stern Howard Stern Melrose Place “Revenge” ESPN a UpClose Spottscenter Vitale PTPers Final Four Men’s Final Four . March Madness: The Finals Baseball Sportscenter College Wrestling ESPN2 :55: (iD Spanish Fly Auto Racing RPM 2Night NHL Hockey Colorado Avalanche at Detroit Red Wings. (Live) NHL 2Night Tennis ATP Lipton Championships -- Women’s Quarterfinal. HlST Vase (R) Air Combat ‘The Fighters” Drive for the American Dream True Action Adventures (R) Weapons at War “Artil!ely” (R) Year by Year “1932 (R) Drive for the American Dream LIFE @ Supermarket Debt Designing Designing Unsolved Mysteries (In Stereo) Visions of Murder (1993, Suspense) Barbara Eden, James Broh Martha Stewart Mysteries Unsolved Mysteries (In Stereo) MTV Ren&Stimpy TEA Singled Out Idiot Savants Prime Time Get Up, Stand Prime Time (In Stereo) Real World El Jenny M. Singled Out Loveline (In Stereo) Altern. Nation

NECN :59: NE Tonight NewsNight New England Tonight Newscenter 5 NewsNight (R) Primellhe-New England SportsWorld PrimeTimeNew England (R)

NICK Clarissa Expl. Tiny Toon Adv. Doug El /Rugrats El. Hey Arnold! Happy Days I Love Lucy El leewitched ]Newhart El lOdd Couple [91 Taxi M.T. Moore Dick Van Dyke Bob Newhart

~~ @-ne ITales-Darkside /New Edge -1Masters IViwers’ Choice ISightings (R) (In Stereo) lNew Edge IMasters IViewers’ Choice I

Thank you to the members of the Class of 1997 who have donated to the Class Gift. We have raised nearly $4,000 in gifts and pledges from 120 Seniors. Keep the donations coming!

Harry Anagnostopoulos Leslie Des Marteau Laurence Kalinsky Jared Nussbaum Rachel Small Wendy Anderson Chris Doller Linda Kane Brian Ostrer Joseph Sniezek Alyson Antine Damon Eastman Laurie Katz Alisha Ozeri Jennifer Snook Peggy Antzoulis Zachery Eller Susan Kehnemui John O’Keefe Benjamin Soule Liza Avinami Charlene Ellsworth Erin Kelley Cori Palladino Jeremy Stawiecki Laura Ax Angela Estrada Hae-Young Kim Coley Parziale William Sullivan I11 Carrie Berenson Rebecca Forsheit Bryan Krause Michelle Pedersen Don Sullivan Ben Berman Jessica Fraidstern Ed Kwak David Raff Jeremy Suratt Laura Bemheim Yael Freeman Cailin Lally Daniel Ragsdale Clifford Swap Shalini Bhatia Rachel Freitas Elena Laskin Sonya Rao Rebecca Tenney Amy Birnbaum Meagan Gallagher Elizabeth Loflus Jacqueline Reid Scott Thompson Margarita Blandon Jessica Gath Janice Lux Alice Rentz Dan Tobin Stacy Blasberg Amy Gillette Gabriela Marein-Efron Anne Risbridger Maki Tomizawa Michelle Breen Karla Goo Cindi McPherson Jill Robbins Mary Townsend Jason Campoli Nicole Greenspan John Eric Mendoza Heather Robert Nina Varanelli Andres Carrero Jason Greif Robyn Miller Julie Robinson Virginia Wang Rebecca Carson Andrea Grossnian Bojan Mitrovic Shari Rosen Jason Weber Eric Chilton hieHansen Michele Molnar Brooke Rosing Beth Werlin Adam Cohen Linda Harrison Kevin Mulligan Josh Rubin Sam Woodruff Carolyn Coheii Emanuel Hemsi Melissa Murnane Jay Ruttenberg Michelle Yannetti Bill Copeland David Henig Gregory Murphy Nancy Santoro Fumi Yashiro Loren Cruess Arianna Herzer Aparna Narang Amanda Senior Gregory Youman Jennifer Curley Kamden Hoffniann De Nguyen Kyoko Shimada Lori Zartarian Jose Matt de Iturriaga Mark Jacobson Khanh Nguyen Samuel Sin gal Anna Zhivotovsky All gifts are due by May 13. We will present our Class Gift to President DiBiaggio during Senior Week. Wednesday, March 26,1997 THE TUFTSDAILY page five

Say it loud: I arn car and I am proud byDARARESNIK made a cameo appearance in an English boxing match held in Zaire. The producers in-law and her husband (Ethan and Joel Daily Editorial Board Patient clip as the pilot crashing his plane brought with them to the stage Ali, afflicted Coen, respectively),and her son. It was one Every year in March, I invite all my amidst a rant about Uma and Oprah. At the with Parkinson’sdisease but still the heroic of two awards for Fargo, the other being friends over to watch my favorite annual end, Crystalbrokethroughthemoviescreen figurehealways was. Hereceivedoneoftwo Best Original Screenplay. event. We sit around the television with and received a standing ovation, the first of deserved standing ovations of the evening. Unfortunately, the evening ended with- popcorn, chips, and pretzels. We place bets many that evening. He then broke into his The other emotional standing ovation was out a climax. Anthony Minghella accepted and scream obscenities at the television traditional Oscar song. This set such a won- earned by the subject ofthe nominated film the Best Director award for The English screen. The shouts of, “Are you kidding derfultonefortherestoftheevening. Crystal Shine, piano prodigy David Helfgott, who Patient, which tookBest Picture as well. By me?!” and“Badcall!” was back, and despite a few made a controversial appearance to play the time the Oscar was presented, the show can be heard from slow moments, he handled “Flight of the Bumblebee.” Standing ova- had run over four hours, and the winner was milesaway. Wearenot Oscar most of the show with class. tions were granted to far too many Monday not much of a surprise. A still graceful, still watching the Super Review Awards highlights were night. By the end of the evening, they had charming Crystal asked the valet to remove Bowl twomonths late, plentiful if unsurprising. lost their emotional significance. his car, and wished us a good night. nor are we watching Cuba Gooding Jr.’s accep- Best Foreign Film was granted to Kolya, Ifthere is anything Monday night taught any sports event at all. WeEEI are watching the tance speech for the Best SupportingActor whose directorlproducer brought up with us, it was that Hollywood’s growing re- Academy Awards show. award for his role in Jerry Maguire was him the adorablechildofthemovie’stitle.In spect for and attentionto independentfilms Despite all the backlash against the fantastic. The conductor tried to play him addition, his “Dear Oscar, we didn’t know certainly does not change the nature of the hype surrounding the Oscars, I, like so offthe stage.“ You can cut me off ifyou want who you’d belong to,” speech was one of 0scars.Theshowwasstillthesame-afew many other starstruck people around the to, I don’t care,” said a visibly shaken, the best of the evening. “Maybe, one day,” memorable moments, too many standing world, am inexorably drawn to watch them excited, and emotional Cuba. As he hemusedwithathickaccent, “We willmake ovations, and apredictable outcome for the year after year, from beginning to end. Let’s screamed and clicked his heels in the air, the a brother for you.” Best Picture Oscar. It would have been face it: Iam achumpfortheHollywoodglitz audience rose to applaud his audacity and Billy Bob Thorton received his much- exciting to see the award presented to an andglamour,forthecelebrity, forthe legend his humor. deserved award for Best Adapted Screen- intricate, dark, and seamlessly directed film and film history behind Oscar. The big upset ofthe eveningwas Juliette play for his film Sling Blade, based on his like Fargo, or to an uplifting story about the This year, many critics said the Oscars Binoche’s winning of the Best Supporting stage play of the same name. Obviously, triumph of the human spirit such as Shine. would be disappointing because so many Actress award for herportrayal ofthenurse since Oscar is finicky and tends not to go to Not to detract from the beautiful cinematic of the nominees were from independent in The English Patient. The awardhad been the same person twice in one evening, this value of The English Patient, it was simply films and starred lesser-known actors. This practically assured to 72-year-old screen eliminated the Renaissance Man from the the predictability of the decision that was proved untrue, however, and the evening veteran Lauren Bacall for The Mirror Has Best Actor category. Geoffrey Rush was anti-climactic. wasfilledwithasmanyhighlightsandmemo- Two Faces. Binoche accepted the award awarded the Best Actor Oscar for Shine, But as the stars drag themselves home rable moments as ever. with elegance, though, and conceded that and rightly so. Having now seen Helfgott, from their long night out, and the red carpet First, Billy Crystal returned to host the it should have been Becall’s award. It was one can see how much Rush embodied and is rolled up once again, we know the Acad- awards, and he did so with his usual grace, the first of Patient’s nine awards Monday captured the character and his essence. emy Awards will be back next year, and style, and charm. The show began with a evening. Frances McDormand’s struttingon stage hopefully, Crystal with them. The glitz and nicely-done montage ofthe nominated films, Another wonderfUl moment was the pre- to accept the Best Actress Oscar forher role theglamourandthe hype willallreturn. And into which Crystal was inserted -Billy as sentation of the award for best Feature as a pregnant cop in Fargo was adorable. maybe, when I make my yearly bet with my CubaGooding Jr. inJerryMaguire, Billy as Length Documentary to the producers of She was really charming, imploring writers friends as to who will win Best Picture I will acop in Fargo, Billy as Ralph Fiennes in 7he When We Were Kings, the documentary of to continue creating strong female roles, be wrong, and the Awards will end with a English Patient. Even David Letterman the Muhammad Ali-George Foreman 1974 thenthankingwith awarm smile herbrother- bang. Two sides to ‘Touch of Silver’ Mixes childhood memories, superhero reflections by PoRNSAKPICHETSHOTE ,steroid-infested suDerheroesmav Daily Editorial Board A of prove to be (it’s a sad truth how As is becoming increasingly Touch well these embarrassing comics obvious, nostalgia is “in” these Silver I sell), A Touch of Silver may be days. While the evidence can be more marketable than Valentino traced in everything the artistic JimValentino admitsto believing.The aforemen- aristocrats call “pop culture” - tioned nostalgic strings which the the gamut supposedly runs from superheroes seem to be pulling movies to TV to comics - in no due to the color of his Hispanic wii~allow Silver to attract more other medium has it been as distin- skin. members of the mainstream com- guishable as it has for the comic All ofthis comescrashingdown munity than would be expected in book superheroes. on him in October, 1962, onthe day previous years, while the series’ The mainstream’smost notable of his tenth birthday, as Silver subject matter will put it on the writers, includingthe likesofAlan wonders if any of the other kids same racks that alternative com- Moore, Grant Morrison, and Kurt will really show up to his birthday ics’ readers are used to frequent- Busiek, areal1voicingtheirdesires party. To such a boy, the idea of a ing. on returning to the magic and man who can fly or a hero whose It also helps, though, that A wonder of the superheroes. More power is to become super-smallis Touch of Silver is very easily and more, writers are taking the too captivating an escape. By fo- Valentino’smost personal work in challenge of bringing the heroes cusing on those two sentiments,A avery long time, marking amuch- back to their original status as Touch ofsilver proves to be about needed growth in Valentino’sma- positive icons. two things: Silver, a boy trying to turityasacomics writerandartist. Keeping that in mind, Jim endure the growing-up process, With boring superheromelodrama Valentino’s A Touch of Silver is and the refreshingbackdrop which like Shadowhawk and The 0th- notasurferofthis wave-it’snot the superheroes of the ’50s and ers, Valentino’s Image work, re- about retro superheroes at all - ’60s (betterknown tocomic histo- gardlessofthemoney it made him, but its sensibility is the next logi- rians as the silver age heroes) can was uninspired to say the least. cal seed to take root in it. The provide to such a child. In terms ofartwork,Valentino is seriesstarsTimmySilver(orTimo- To a reader hip to the comics responding to his new exploration thy B. Silver as he is called by his scene, what makesA TouchofSi1- by showing much more ambition usually enragedmother), and with ver particularly interesting is that in his renderingsthan in any ofhis the series’ first issue, begins by it’s created, written, and illustrated recent work. His decision to make chronicling the boy’s childhood by Jim Valentino, one of the the book ablack-and-whitecomic, in the early 1960s. founders of Image Comics. Con- aside from the obvious connec- Silverisachildplaguedwithall sidering that Image is known for tion it gives to the series’ title, is a parisons to Chester Brown’s mag- superhero-oriented Image work. the problems that make childhood just about everything that makes fitting, albeit obvious, choice to nificent “I Never Liked You” or a His sequences shift from drama to bittersweet. His father is callous comics embarrassing, (flashy su- emphasize the rnundanity Silver good majority of Lynda Barry’s melodrama too suddenly. Too of- and irresponsible. His mother, perheroes wearing way-too-tight feels in his life. Meanwhile, the work. Incomparisontosuch excel- ten, loaded images such as a tear when not hollering at her hus- clothes, doom’n’gloom angst, layouts and breakdowns show a lent works (or even works of lesser trickling down a cheek are redun- band, transfers her hostility to Sil- soap opera melodrama, women Valentino who’susing wit andcre- quality), A Touch of Silver pro- dantly iterated to imply to the ver in the form of militant com- from every possible wet dream), ativity to push his own familiarity vides an awkward read. unconvinced reader the intended mands. Unremarkable in school, it’s ironic that the exploits of a with thecomics medium. Stories about growing up are strength of a scene. Valentino’s lacklusterly dull when compared lackluster ten-year-old would be The pains ofgrowingup, how- delicatecreatures,involving a frag- overkillresults in a story that takes to his cuter younger sister, and coming out from them. ever - which is what Silver is ile balance of tenderness, poi- one step back for its every step cursed by the label of‘weird” from WhileValentinohasvoicedhis undeniably all about - is hardly gnancy, and agreat deal ofsubtlety. forward, IeavingA TouchofSilver the other children, Silver is even fears on the career suicide that an unexplored area in comics.Sil- Valentino, however, seemsto have further alienatedby his few friends Silver’s departure from his usual verwill undoubtedly bringup com- toomanyreflexesleftoverfiom his see SILVER, page.15 page six THETUFTS DAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997

c Tufts Entertainment Board Presents the 1997 Spring Comedy Show I Sturring Kevin Meanev

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.. ,. , . ,.>, . , , , In trades, Indians and WNBA: Will it survive? Women’s professional league starts soon Braves fill needs byMARSHALLEINH0R.N formed Major League Soccer had some improved both teams. “As a neutral ob- Daily Editorial Board highly questionable names going into its Los Angeles Times-Washington Can women’s professional sports suc- Post News Service server of their club, they’ve sol first season: the Kansas City Wiz and the WESTPALM BEACH, F1a.-Twoofthe their center-field position for y ceed in America? It’s a question that has Dallas Burn? The bladder references didn’t best and most aggressive teams in the come,” Schuerholzs slowly emerged in the past few years, be- hurt MLS’ success, and it shouldn’t hurt major leaguessent shock waves through- Justice, who’s been v ginning with the growing popularity of the WNBA. out baseball Tuesday. The Cleveland us. We got the premier women’s boxing, and it will, come.to the Thetrue test will be how much star power Indians traded center fielder Kenny center fielder in the gam forefront once again this summer, as the the league’s main attractions carry. And Lofton and reliefpitcher Alan Embreeto who really helps us in the bulIpen.” inaugural season of the Women’s NBA when you look down the team’s rosters as the Atlanta Braves for outfielders Mar- Indians General Manager John Hart (WNBA) kicks off in June. they stand now, three players and one coach quis Grissom and David Justice. had made it clear since last winter that Of course, there’s no questioning the will undoubtedly have to bear the brunt of Both clubsrid themselvesofproblems Lofton, who hit .3 1 7 and stole 75 bases popularity of amateur women’s athletics. the load. Sheryl Swoopes, Rebecca Lobo, and filled needs. Indians officials didn’t last season, was available for the right Just take a look at this past summer’s Olym- and Lisa Leslie are the players that the believe that they’d be abIe to re-sign price. He briefly discussed a Lofton- pic games in Atlanta. It was dubbed the league is hoping Joe Q. Public may have Lofton, a potential free agent following Roberto Alomar deal with the Baltimore “Year ofthe Woman,”as the women’s bas- heard of. Unfortunately for the league, this season. By acquiring Grissom, they Orioles. Schuerholzsaid he had been dis- ketball, softball,soccer, andespecially swim- Swoopes will miss the season, as she is added a capable replacement as a center cussing a trade involving Lofton with ming and gymnastics teams all grabbed the pregnant. Somehow, I doubt that excuse fielder and leadoff hitter. And Justice Hart since the winter. The deal essentially nation’s attention. Ifyou need hrther proof, would hold,water in the NBA. Lobo and bolsters the middle of their batting order wascompleted late Mondaynightandthe check the ratings for this past weekend’s Leslie, possibly the two best female centers withanother sluggerableto provide some loose ends were tied up with a telephone women’s ice skatingWorld Championships. in the world, will take on the league’s two protection in the lineup for Jim Thome, call at 8 a.m. Tuesday, SchuerhoIz said. Originally, the first real problem with biggest populations in New York and Los Matt Williams and Manny Ramirez, “It’s kind ofa shocker,” Orioles Man- women’s professional basketball was that Angeles, respectively. Along with Cheryl The Bravesget one ofthe sport’s most ager Davey Johnson said. “John Hart has when people finally realized it was a good Miller, whowilltake thehelm ofthe Phoenix dynamic players in Lofton and some pulled some shockers this year.” thing, not one but two leagues formed. Yes, squad as the coach of the Mercury, the needed bullpen help with Embree, a hard- Schuerholz said he’s confident the the American Basketball League (ABL), a three will have to carry this league in the throwing left-hander. Braves officials Braves will be able to sign Lofton, adding: second professional women’s league, com- beginning. wanted to trade Justice or first baseman “We’regoingtodoall we cantokeepthis pleted its season a few weeks ago. Where To be successful in the longrun, though, FredMcGriffbeforeOpeningDayto trim dub at a championship level. Is there a did this brilliant idea come from? After the the league needs more intriguing personali- what would have been a $55.7 million better guy in the game as a leadoff first few weeks, though, we didn’t hear ties to step up and help out the superstars. player payroll. Now the Braves can play and center fielder?” . much of anything coming from the ABL. Players like Ruthie Bolton-Holifield, promising youngster Andruw Jones in Going up against the actual NBA and NHL Michelle Edwards, and Australia’s Michele right field and may have the financial Manager Bobby Cox helda teammeet- on a nightly basis undoubtedly hurt this Timmsmustemerge in thesmallercitieswith wherewithalto make apemant-race trade ing Tuesdaymorningto breakthenews to league. The WNBA, on the other hand, star-power. Otherwise, this league could and attempt to re-sign pitchers Tom his players, and he and SchuerhoIz said surely is hoping its summer schedule, riding bum out rather quickly. Glavine andGreg Maddux, who couldbe Grissom and Justice madegracehldepar- on the heels of the NBA Playoffs, and only Immediate success or not, there’s no free agents next winter. tures. “Marquis stood up, shook my hand going up against Major League Baseball, doubt this idea is long overdue. Much like Braves General Manager John and thanked me for the opportunity to be will mean little competition. basketball has exploded in the past 20 years Schuerholz said he believes the trade aBrave,” Schuerholzsaid“That’sclass.” Eight teams will hit the hardwoods be- on the playgrounds of America .among ginning June 2 l, with all eight coming from young boys, so too has it gained in popu- ~~ cities with men’s teams already established. larity among girls in the past ten. With NBA In naming its franchises, the league was not aspirations floating around the heads of so Sheehan hopes game improves shy about hiding most of the team’s con- many boysgrowingup, it’sabout time girls Los Angeles Times-Washington be putting your swing together like ajigsaw nections to their men’s counterparts. In can have the same dreams with the knowl- Post News Service puzzlejust before you play amajor. Sheehan Charlotte, the women suit up as the Sting, edge that there’s a place where they can RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. -The defend- knows how she feels about it. while the men are the Hornets. Houston’s actually come true. ing champion of the first women’s major “Not very comfortable,” she said. isn’t much better as it will have the Comets golf tournament of the year got ready for Sheehan is No. 58 on the money list this and the Rockets. Things go a bit downhill this week’s Nabisco Dinah Shore by miss- year and hasn’t finished better than a tie for in Phoenix with the Mercury (can’t youjust ing the cut at Phoenix. 18th -in the season-opening Tournament picture it? “Mercury rise above the Sting”) Patty Sheehan is trying to find herself. ofchampions. Last week, she shot 72-76 at andthe Suns. Sacramentoisn’t all that bad, Has anybody seen her lately? the Standard Register PING and missed the with thenew Monarchstogoalongwith the Wednesdav. March 26 Well on Tuesday, Sheehan could be found cut by one shot. Kings. Utah, though, might be the worst, as Men’s Lacrosse: vs Amherst, 4:OO playing a practice round at Mission Hills “You know, it’s tough,” Sheehan said. they’ll send the Starzz out to do battle with p.m. Country Club, where she quickly noticed It probably isn’t going to get any easier, the league. I guess they were going for the Men’s Tennis: vs Clark, 3:OO p.m. there was something wrong with her swing. beginning Thursday at Mission Hills, where double z thing with the Jazz. So Sheehan spent some time working on the rough is higher than usual and the idea The threeotherteam namesare not much Thursdav. March 27 her shoulder turn, shifting her weight off of keeping the ball in the fairway would better: the Cleveland Rockers, the Los Baseball: vs. Brandeis, 3:OO pm. her right side, finishing her swing higher seem to be a good one. Angeles Sparks, and the New York Lib- Women’s Lacrosse: vs. Mt. Holyoke, and positioning the ball farther back. But first there’s one problem, namely erty. But poor name choices do not mean 4:OO pm. It remains to be seen if it’s a good sign to that swing thing. certain failure for a new league. The newly Georgetown’s Page made fine progress until now Los Angeles Times-Washington attending two prep schools to get room until he has time to put on a ics.Thompson dismissedhim from you feel like a chump. Look at Post News Service his high-school diploma. jacket and tie. Page, like Allen practice for a week in January so Kevin Garnett! Sometimes, the headlines make “I have a tutor. They’ve been Iverson a year ago, was making he could concentrate on school; The results hurt everybody. youwanttoscream. “PageToTurn helping me ... that makes me want progress in that Hoya tradition. in a statement Monday, Thomp- College basketball is badly weak- Professional”said the headline in to stay even more.” Hewason hisway.Notjust toward son said, “I understand Victor’s ened; marquee stars don’t stay Tuesday’s WashingtonPost. You For 25 years, I’ve interviewed theNBA. But toward being some- decision,particularly with the aca- long enough to be part of a cohe- could yell, “NO!” But what sur- every prominentGU player as early body you wantedto talk to whether demic demands of Georgetown.” sive senior-led team. The NBA is prises us anymore? in his career as possible. I wanted or not he played basketball. Now, Page claims that, academically,he weakened - the quality of the Two weeks ago, Victor Page sat a benchmark. Coach John Thomp- they’ve both chosen to go pro - could have returned next season. league goes down every year - in McDonough Gym and talked son, with that deflated basketball half-baked, so to speak. But did he want to return? because its next-generation “leg- warmly about how he wanted to in his office, claims his program is In a sense, Iverson was an ob- As a junior, Page would have ends” are one-dimensional out- play two more years at Georgetown about education. The proofshould ject lesson. One that Page has hadtodeclareamajor,work largely of-control ballhogs or immature University. “I have to work on my be in the pudding. Four years on ignored. Iverson left for tons of with the faculty of one department stringbeanswho develop bad hab- whole game,” he said when asked if the Hilltopoughttomakeadiffer- money. But was he grown up and face a tougher work load. The its to survive. he would try to parlay his Big-East- ence -a huge difference. And in enough to handle that money? first two years at GU are largely an The worst victim is the player leading22.7scoringaverageintoan most cases it has. The verdict is definitely out. academic experimentfor basketball like Page whose game probably NBA contract. “I need to stay two Overthe years, there have been Page’s case is more complex players. The third year is the litmus isn’tready fortheNBAandwhose more years. Then I’ll be ready.” stunning transformations. As a than just the lure of a huge con- test. Perhaps what’s impressive is academic progress is in constant Page also spoke with pride freshman, Patrick Ewing was so tract. The official version is: “I felt that, until Iverson and Page, so jeopardy. Everything conspires to about his school work. He was shy he made himself seem mono- I had the talent to play on the next many GUplayers stayedthecourse. prevent a college student from raising his expectations for him- syllabic. Now, he’s an assertive level.” That’s not what Page said Unfortunately, the NBA has studying. “Wanna shoot some self. “When I first came (to GU), I and vocal team leader for the two weeks ago. Then, he volun- made the choice for Page - and pool, Boz,” was plenty to pry me thought I ‘d be a gym teacher some hicks. teereda long list ofhis weaknesses everybodywho follows him-far away from Anthropology.How do day,” said Page, who attended but For two years Alonzo Mourn- -enumerated to him by Iverson. harderthan it used70 be. By draft- you hit the books when the NBA did not graduate from McKinley ing covered his insecurity with No doubt Page lusts after the ing high-school kids, theNBA has is, figuratively, standing outside Tech in Washington. The 6-foot-3 hostility; now, he refuses to be NBA, as he says. But he may also lowered the bar. If you stay in your dorm-room door with a blank guard entered Georgetown after interviewed in the Miami locker have left GU because of academ- college more than a year or two, check? 7 r U t t b If

- Are you considering your housing options for next year? Would YOU like to live in an environment where you get to meet faculty @ and administrators? Do you- want to get to know the rest of your housemates really well? Do you want to make friendships that will last a lifetime?. If so, Bridge-Metcalf may be the place for you!

Bridge-met calf is a residential program intended to create opportunities for students to bridge their academic and non-academic lives, to enhance intellectual life and personal development, to increase informal contact with faculty, and to build a sense of community in residential living. Residents eat together every Tuesday night and gather for a program they've planned. They meet faculty and administration mmbers from different departments, talk about current issues, and get to know each other.- @ T5- Wednesday, March 26,1997 THE TUFTSDAILY page nine Nationa orld News ikes interest rates, to deter inflation Women-ownd firms, in millions: Greenspan has warned that, with 6.97 percent, while the dollar rose 1992 1996 Los Angeles Times-Washington 1 1987 Post News Service the economy continuing to grow smartly after see-sawing for a few WASHINGTON - The Fed- rapidly far longer than anyone minutes in the wake of the action. Types of businesses eral Reserve Board launchedapre- expected,wage pressures are likely A few minutes after the central I emptive strike Tuesday designed to heat up again late this year or bank’s announcement, several of to ward offincreased inflation pres- early in 1998 and the Fed must the nation’s major banks, includ- sures later this year,nudgingshort- move now to have an impact by ing CitibankofNewYork, boosted term interest rates up by a quarter this autumn. their prime lending rates - the of a percentage point in the first Greenspan had been warning interest they charge their most such rate hike in more than two for weeks that Tuesday’srate-hike credit-worthy corporate custom- years. might be coming. Although some ers - to 8.5 percent from 8.25 In a modest step, the board’s members of the 10-person Open percent. More banks are expected policy-makingOpen Market Com- Market Committeehad been reluc- to follow suit. . mittee boosted its target for the tant to raise rates, enough ofthem Increasingthefederal fbnds rate federal funds rate -the interest went along in the secret ballot to amounted to the smallest step that that commercialbanks charge each enable Greenspan to prevail. the.Fed could have taken to carry 3/17/97 KRT Infcgraphics/DAVID ARBANA other on overnight loans -to 5.5 The Federal Reserve launched out its long-awaited preemptive percent from the 5.25 percent level asimilarpre-emptivestrikein 1994, strike. The panel left the discount that had prevailed since January with widely acclaimedsuccess.Not rate-the interest the Fed charges VP Gore assures 1996. only did inflation subside in the on its own short-term loans to The increase,which many ana- wake of the central bank’s action banks -unchanged at 5 percent. lysts expect will be followed by but the economy continued to Economists generally sup- Chinese premier similar increases at committee grow. ported the central bank‘s move, meetings in May and July, is ex- Analysts saidthe central bank’s arguing that there was little risk it Los Angeles Times-Washington pected to spread quickly, affect- announcement contained two ba- Post News Service would plunge the economy into a BEIJING-Vice President GorepromisedChinesePremier Li Peng ing everythingfrom the prime lend- sic messages: First, it believes the recession, while at the same time on Tuesday that allegationsthat Beijing may have tried to buy influence ing rate charged by banks to inter- economy is currently growing at ensuringthatinflation remains low. in Washington with illegal campaign contributions will not affect the est on credit cards, auto loans and an unsustainable pace and, sec- Allen Sinai,president ofPrimark Clintonadministration’spolicyofseekingwarmerrelationswith China. home mortgages. ond, the key to continuing the Decision Economics, said that - Li, China’s second-ranking official, brought up the controversy- The Federal Reserve said in a expansion is to make sure that if the Fed had not tightened now currently among the touchiest of subjects with senior officials in both statementthatthe action was taken inflation is held in check. -it would have had to administer capitals -in a meeting with Gore. “in light ofpersisting strength” in Reaction in the nation’s finan- harsher shock-treatmentlater that The vice president quickly interjected that “the matter is being theeconomy,which it said“ispr0- cial markets, which had expected might have pushed the economy investigated,” but pledged that “this in no way would deflect the gressively increasing the risk of the move, was mixed. The Dow into recession. “It’s better to do it administration from pursuing its policy of engagement,” according to inflationary imbalances develop- Jones Industrial Average of stock this way,” he said. a US official who attended the meeting. ing ... that would eventually un- prices soared 47 points immedi- However, most analysts, in- Li responded by repeating his government’s earlier statementsthat dermine the long expansion.” ately after the Fed’s announce- cluding Sinai, expect the Federal it did not try to surreptitiously funnel money into last year’s congres- Ironically,the action comes at a ment but later fell to close at Reserve to engineer further rate time when inflation is at a 30-year 6,876.17, or 29.08 points below sional and presidential elections - an allegation currently under hikes overthe next severalmonths, investigation by the FBI. low, with wage increasesfmly in Monday’s level. raising the federal funds rate an- The premier offered his own assurance, the US official said, that check andnomajor economic dis- Yields on 30-year Treasury other quarter ofa percentage point China will not let the uproar disrupt his plans for a closer partnership tortions seeming to threaten the bonds, regarded as a benchmark in May or July and continuing to with the United States. six-year economic expansion. by bondtraders, plunged by about tighten through most of the sum- When Gore reassured Li, ad- However, Fed Chairman Alan half a percentage-point,falling to mer. ministration officials said, he was referring only to the controversy over the investigation, not to any Chelsea Clinton offers views possible consequences for the re- lationship ifthe allegations prove Speaks on US society to local teenagers in Africa to be true. Los Angeles Times-Washington Gore himself is especially sen- Post News Service daughter and suggesting she might have something sitive on this point. After reading ARUSHA, Tanzania - The words had all the to say. early wire-service reports describ- familiar ring of a presidential sermon, the plaintive That Chelsea responded like a seasoned pro, ing the meeting, according to concern about “hopelessness and cynicism” in though, was less ofasurprise to those who know her. people familiar with his thinking, modern American society followed by a spirited After all, her father has been campaigning for or he was distressed that they left the testimonial to the individual’s capacity to rise above holding elective office from the day she was born. impressionthere would be no con- the forces of despair. And as she has come of age in her own right, the 17- sequences for China even if an But the preacher in this case wasn’t Bill Clinton. year-old high school senior has quietly impressed investigation proved that Beijing It was Chelsea. many in Washington with her maturity, poise and wastryingtomanipulateUS elec- College Pre&Exchan& After more than four years spent largely in the down-to-earth quality. t<,-.”” LIULAJ. shadows of the White House, the first daughter Despite Tuesday’s polished performance, Chelsea A briefing for reporters travel- Vice President Al Gore emerged on the public stage Tuesday in a way she apparently has no plans to follow her parents into ing with Gore was hurriedly called Wednesday morning by a senior never has before. politics. She’s focused on pre-med instead. She’s al- administrationofficial on the trip. This official, contradictingtheversion Accompanying mother Hillary Rodham Clinton ready been accepted by Harvard University and prob- that another, lower-level official speaking for Gore had earlier offered, on atwo-week tour ofAfrica, Chelsea was invited to ablyhavereplieshm someofthefiveotherschools she insisted that Gore made clear to Li that he would consider it a “very answer questions from a group of local teen-agers applied to when she returns from Afiica on Sunday. serious” matter if the investigation showed proof of influence buying. and weighed in with an eloquent discourse on the She has insisted to her mother and to her friends In its own statement on the meeting, the Beijing governmentdid not troubles in her home nation. on the first lady’s staffthat she has not decided what directly address the contributions controversy, but noted obliquely “We have big problems with violence in our college she will attend because she does not yet that its policy toward Washington “will not be disturbed by a single act country, in all spectrums,” she told her African peers know where she will be accepted, though it seems or by a short period of time.” during a brief meeting in an airport building in this unlikely she will be turned down anywhere she wants As Gore and Li sought to contain the damage from this new strain East African city. “We have a big problem with drugs togo. A final decision likely will wait until May after in the US-China relationship, they did the same on human rights, a and people not thinking they have a future. There’s another tour of campuses. controversy of much longer standing. a lot of hopelessness.” Georgetown, her father’s ahamater and the you- Gore raised the issue of China’s repression of political dissidents Asked by a young girl what was being done about can-live-at-home suggestionofher parents, didn’tmake with Li, known as the “Butcher of Beijing” for signing the martial law these issues in the United States, Chelsea talked first Chelsea’s final cut. Neither did her mother’s school, order preceding the bloody 1989 crackdown on studentsdemonstrating about efforts by parents and teachers. “But,” she said, Wellesley College, whose single-sex tradition didn’t for democracy in Tiananmen Square, but aides said he avoided an “I think with our problems with hopelessness and hold as much appeal for the younger generation. acrimonious tone. cynicism that (the solution) ultimately has to come Aides say the suspense is killing her parents, who “The vice president told them what was on our mind, and he (Li) told from the young people themselves. I think that’s are dreading her eventual departurethis fall no matter us what was on theirs,” said Leon Fuerth, Gore’s national security somethingwehavetoworkon. We’vegottorealizewe where she ends up. adviser. “But it was aconversation, and it left them at the end ofthat time arethefutureandwemakeofourfimrewhatwemake “There’sno doubt about it,” said Melanne Verveer, in aposition to take up thenext agenda item in acalm andequable frame of it, and ultimately we have to do it for ourselves.” the first lady’s deputy chief of staff. “Hillary has ofmind.” If this was something of a public coming-out always said she’s often asked about all these difficult party, it was strictly an accident. Hillary Clinton was experiencesand there’s no more difficult experience The different items on the administration’sagenda, however, do not meeting with a group ofteen-age girls who had scaled for her and the president than Chelsea leaving for always fall easily together. The Clinton administration is aggressively Mount Kilimanjaro, led by a Peace Corps volunteer. college. She said the most devastating thing recently promoting business deals with China at the same time that it seeks to The first lady shocked everyone in the room. - was going to college night and realizing it was real. show steadfastness on human rights. including, as it turns out, herself- by turning to her That was hard.” )age ten THETUFTSDAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997

EASTER MASS FOR THE TUFTS

CATHOLIC COMMUNITY

WILL BE HELD AT 1l:OO A.M.

SUNDAY, MARCH 30

IN GODDARD CHAPEL

BRUNCH TO FOLLOW

NO OTHER MASSES DURING HOLY WEEK ON CAMPUS. PLEASE CALL ST. CLEMENT'S CHURCH, SOMERVILLE (625-0122) OR SACRED HEART CHURCH, MEDFORD (396-2232) FOR OTHER HOLY WEEK MASSES. page i PAIDADVERTISEMENT Wednesday, March 26,1997 THEFUTUR EMOC Y

An International Sy

at Tufts University

April 2-6,1997

Join in the debate over the meaning, meiual aid consolidation osdemocracy with policynzakers, activists, journalists, scholars and military leaders imluding:

The Serbian general who fought to defend a democratic, multi-cthnic Sarajevo

Leading Icgal scholars,jurists and activists working to restore justice in Cambodia, Rwanda, South Africa, and the Former Yugoslavia

A senior member of the Mexican comniission on goveriimcnt corruption who criticized it as “illegal and immoral”

A renowned Palestinian intellectual and humanist known for his independent criticism of Israeli and Palestinian democracy

The student leader of the Timorese underground resistance

The high-ranking Israeli politician who opened the first dialogue with the PLO

0 The Chilean politician who fought Pinochet’s military regime and now heads the OAS’ Human Rights Commission

* Investigative journalists who endured threats to their livcs while exposing fundamentalist ~, ~ militias in Idaho and the “Red Mafia” in Moscow

The leader of the African National Congress’s Youth League

Presidential candidates from the United States and El Salvador

One of America’s leading public intellectuals’ famed for his critique of American democracy and U.S. foreign policy

A Nobel Peace Laureate considered one of the world’s visionaries on democratic :ace and demilitarization

e The director of the Assessing African Democracy project The USLt. Colonel who led the Quick Reaction Forces in Operation Uphold Democracy in Haiti I A leading advocate of sustainable developrncnt,indigenous rights and cnvironmcntal protection of thc global commons

The historian whose interpretation of the radicalism of the American Revolution won him thc Pulitzer Prize

A former FLN guerilla leader trying to establish links between the Algerian military and its Islamic resistance

A former South African political prisoner who is now an investigative reporter struggling to reform the South African truth and reconciliation process

High ranking American national security officials who have fought secrecy and endured wiretapping to reveal corrupt U.S. govcrnment practices from death squads to secret bombings

Leading constitutional scholars seeking the rule of law from Argentina to Iraq

An Israeli scholar known for her analysis of the impact of Israel’s civil military regime on Israeli and Palestinian women

The Comrnandcr in Chief of the Chincse Pro-Democracy Movcment who led the hunger strikers in Tiananmen Square,

Scholars tiying to understand the tensions between democracy and ethnic nationalism from Qucbec to Kashmir

EPIIC is a program of the Experimental College Wednesday, March 26,1997 PAID ADWRTISEMENT page ii The Future of Democracy: Program

Wednesday, April 2,4:00pm, Cabot Auditorium Fridaji, April 4, 12:30pm, Barnum 008

Martin C. M. Lee Lamis Andoni Chairman, Democratic Party, Hong Kong Inclepentlen t Journalist; Reporter, TheJordan Times,Amman Dragan Cicic Nieman Fellow, Harvard University; Reporter, NIN, Belgrade Anthony DePalma Toronto Bureau Chief and Former Mexico City Bureau Chief, The New Yor&Times Alfred Ross Thursday, April.?,3:00pm, Barnum 008 Executive Director, Center for Democracy Studies, The Nation Institute Sandy Tolan Steve Burg Director, Honielands Productions; Creator, “World Views,” Corporation for Public Broadcasting Professor of Politics, Brandeis University; Author,War or Peace?: Nationalism, Dcn?ocrac]: and American Foreign Policy in Post-Comnirrnis1 Europe Mathatha Tsedu Nicnian Fellow, llarvard University; Political Editor, The Sowelan,Johannesburg ViginieCoulloudon Adviser to the Director for Russian Domestic Affairs and Former Moscow Bureau Chief, Politique Internationale;Author,Le Russisme: A Political Analvsis Of The Elile And Patronage In Russia Friday, April 4,2:30pm,Barnum 008 jonathan Freeman Fellow, Kennedy School of Government and Harvartl Business School; Fornmer Director, Chai Ling Ofice of Democratization, The Russian Federation, National Denwcratic Institute Fiona Hill leader, Student Pro-Democracy Movement, Tiananmen Square, China Ronnie Dugger Director, Ethnic Conflict Project, StrengtheningDemocratic Institutions,Harvard University Founder, Alliance for Democracy; Former Co-Editor (with Molly Ivins), The Texas Observer Daniel Mulholland Llova Eliav Professor of History, Tufts University Former Chair, Sheli (Israeli Peace Party); Former Secretary -General, Israeli Labour Party David Powell Lulu Johnson Fellow, Davis Center for Russian Studies, Harvard University; Professor of Russian Studies, Member, Afrian National Congress Executive Board; Former Head, African National Congress Wheaton College; Author, Sovier Social I’ro6/ems Youth League Dov Ronen Constantine Pinto Author, The Questfor Se~Deteminationand The Challenge Ehic Corljlict, Democracy, Of Former Leader, Tiniorese underground movement, National Council of Maubere Resistance and Self Determination in Central Europe (CNRM); CNRM representative to the United Nations lohn E. Rosenthal Co-Founder, Stop Handgun Violence Inc.

Friday, April 4,6:.?Opm,Cabot Auditorium Steve Burg Professor of Politics, Brandeis University; Author,War or Peace?: Nationali.vn, Democracy, Welcome: Sol Gittleman, Provost and Senior Vice President, Tufts University and American Foreign Policy in Post-Communist Europe Video Presentation: EPIIC Colloquium Dragan Cicic Recognition of the Cavallo Foundation Nieman Fellow, Harvard University; Reporter, NIN, Belgrade Thomas Cushman Chair, Department of Sociology, Wellesley College; Editor, This Time We Knew: Western Responses to Genocide in Bosnia Bogdan Denitch ~- Friday, April 4, 7:00pm,Cabot Auditorium Professor of Sociology, City University of New York Graduate School; Author, Ethiiic Nationalism: The Tragic Death of Yugoslavia;Director, Transition To Democracy The mission of the Open Society Institute and the Soros Foundations is to support national lovan Divjak :ransitions from repressive to open societies and to protect and expand the values of existing open Former Deputy Chief in Command of the Territorial Defense of Bosnia-Hemegovina;Founder and President, Education Builds Bosnia and Hentgovina Foundation iocieties. Accepting the award on the organi7ation’sbehalf: KedKurspahic Former Editor, Oslobodjenje,Sarajevo; Author, As by& Neier President, Open Society Institute; Former Executive Director, Human Rights Watch; Former Long as Sarajevo Exists National President, American Civil Liberties Union Dusan Makavejev Filmmaker, Montenegm; Fellow, The Carpenter Visual Arts Center, Harvard University lasminka Udovidci Professor, Massachusetts College of Art; Author, Yugos!aviaS Ethnic Nightmare and Burn ?rid; April ;7:30pm, Cabot Audilorium This House. The Making And Unmaking Of Yugoslavia Ison Clay Senior Fellow, World Wildlife Fund; Executive Director, Rights and Resources, Inc.; Former EXHIBIT: Krujinu, Tuzlu, Surujeuo Director of Research, Cultural Survival, Inc. Photography by Maya Munk, Tufts University Museum School

?riday,April 4,8:00pm, Cabot Auditorium

Iogdan Denitch Professor of Sociology, City University of New York Graduate School; Author, Ethnic Voam Chomsky Nationalism: The Tragic Death of Yugoslavia;Director, Transition To Democracy Professor of Linguistics and Philosophy, MIT; Author, Deterring Democracy vlorton Halperin Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations; Former Director, Office of Democracy and Human Rights, National Security Council iteven Hirsch Chair, Department of Classics, Tufts University Viday, April 4,11:00am, Coolidge Room vlallika Mathur Member, EPIIC Colloquium on “The Future of Democracy;” Sophomore,Tufts University [he summation of over 50 hours of deliberation by 15 Massachisetts Lnn Elizabeth Mayer :itizens on the impact of emerging telecommunications technologies on Associate Professor of Legal Studies, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania;Author, he Future character of American society and politics. Islam and Human Rights gward Said University Professor, Columbia University; Author, Culture and Imperialism, The Politics of Dispossession, and Orientalism ru Wei-Ming* Professor of Chinese History and Philosophy, Harvard University; Author, Confucian Traditions in East Asian Modernity page iii PAIDADVERTISEMENT Wednesday, March 26,1997

Saturday, April 5,8:00pm,Cabot Auditorium Saturday, April 59:15am, &hot Auditorium Jovan Divjak John Brooke Former Deputy Chief in Command of the Territorial Defense of Bosnia-Herzegovina;Founder Chair, Department of History, Tufts University and President, Education Builds Bosnia and Herzegovina Foundation Margaret Bumham* Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela* Professor of Political Science, MIT; Civil Rights Psychologist; Member, Human Rights Violation Committee, Truth and Reconciliation Attorney Commission, South Africa Ronnie Dugger Richard J. Goldstone* Founder, Alliance for Democracy; Former Co-Editor Justice, South African Constitutional Court; Former Chief Prosecutor, United Nations (with Molly Ivins), The Texas Observer International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda Michael Dukakis Neil Kritz 1988 Democratic US.Presidential Candidate; Former Senior Scholar, U.S. Institute of Peace; Editor, Transitional Justice: How Emerging Governor of Massachusetts; Professor Democracies Reckon With Former Regimes of Politicdl Science, Northeastern University Ellen Lutz Susan Ostrander Professor of International Iaw and Human Rights, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Chair, Department of Sociology and Anthropology; Tufts University Author, Money for Change R. Bruce McColm Sidney Verba Director, Institute for Deniocratic Strategies; Former Director, International Republican University Professor, Harvard University; Author, Voice and Equali@ Civic Volunteerism in Institute; Former Director, Freedom House American Politics and Equality in Amm'ca: The Viewfrom the Top Paul Stopforth Gordon Wood South Afrian Artist; Lecturer, Department of Art, Tufts University Professor of History, Brown University; Pulitzer Prize-winning Author, The Radicalism of rhe Mathatha Tsedu American Revolution Nieman Fellow, I lawird University; Political Editor, The Sozuelnn, Johannesburg Ruben Zamora Secretary-General,Democratic Convergence Party; Deputy-Elect, National Assembly, El Salvador Saturday, April 5,11:30am, Cabot Auditorium I EPIIC will also be honoring the work of Physiciansfor Human Rights on its 10th anniuersa y and of Adolfo Aguilar Zinser the Project on Justice in Times of Transition of the Foundation for Ciuil Society. Legislator; Senior Member, Mexican Commission on Political Corruption,Mexico M. Shahid Alam Professor of Economics, Northeastern University; Author, Governments and Markets: Corruption As An Economic Deuelopment Strategy Sunday, April 6,l:OOpm, Cabot Auditorium Jack Blum Attorney, Lobel, Novins, Iamont & Flug; Former Chief Investigator, U.S. Senate Foreign Terrell Arnold Relations Committee Former Chair, International Studies, National War College; Former Deputy Director, , Virgiaie Coulloudon Counterterrorism, U.S. Department of State Post-Doctoral Fellow, Davis Center for Russian Studies, Harvard University; Author, The MaJia Thomas Blanton in The Soviet Union Executive Director, National Security Archive Richard Joseph Richard Nuccio Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Professor, Department of Political Science, MIT; Author, Special Assistant, Senator Torricelli (D-NJ); Former Senior Adviser on Latin America, US. Democratization in qhtca Department of State R. Bruce McColm Director, Institute for Democratic Strategies; Former Director, International Republican Institute; Former Director, Freedom House

sunhy, April 6 2:30pm, &bot Auditorium

Morton Halperin Saturday, April5,3:OOpm, Cabot Auditorium Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations; Former Director, Office of Democracy and Human Rights, National Security Council Sugata Bose Sean Lynn-Jones Director, Center of South Asian and Indian Studies, The Fletcher School of Law and Co-Editor, lnteniational Securily; Co-Author,Debating The Democratic Peace Diplomacy, and Professor of History, Tufts University Tommie Sue Moatgwtgr Padraig O'Mdey Visiting Professor of Political Science, Tufts University; Author, Reuolution In El Salufldor: Senior Fellow, Center for Democracy and Development, McCormack Institute of Public From Ciuil Stnye To Gild Peace; Director, Multilateral Approaches To Peacemaking And Affairs,University of Massachusetts, Boston; Author, Northern Ireland, The Changing Democratiiation In the Western Hemisphere, North-South Center Paradigm: Politics and the Constitution Tony Smith Robert Ricigliano Chair of Political Science, Tufts University; Author, America'shfission:The Unitedstates and Executive Director, Co'dict Management Group, Inc.; the Worldwide Striigle for Democracy in the Twentieth Centuy Lead Mediator, Canadian Constitutional Crisis Project Michael Trahan Dov Ronen 1995 Commander, U.S. Ground ManeuvedQuick Reaction Forces, Operation Uphold Democracy, IIaiti Author, The Quesrfor SelfDetemination and The Challenge of Ethnic Conflict, Democracy, Edmundo Vargas and SeljDetennination in Central Europe Ambassador to the Organiation of American States, Chile; General Secretary, Iiuman Rights Commission, Organization of American States Peter Wmn Professor of History, Tufts University; Author, Americus Ruben Zamora Secretary -Genecil,Ikniocriitic Convergence Party; Deputy-Elect, National Assembly, El Salvador I Saturday, April 5,5:00pm, Cabot Auditorium Hmou Amirouche Fellow, Algerian Institute of Strategic Studies; National Liberation Ammy Guerilla in Algerian Revolution Kirk Gregersen (EPIIC '89) I Program Oficer For kinAmerica and The Caribbean, National Democratic Institutc; Program Officer, Civil-Military Projects, National Democratic lnstitiite Hannah Henog Professor of Political Sociology, Tel Aviv University;Author, Political Ethnicitv: The Image and the Reality David Scott Palmer Professor of International Relations and Political Science, Boston IJniversity;Author, The Shining Path oJPeni Jennifer Schirmer Fellow, John F. Kennedy School of Government; Author, A Violence CulledUeniocrzrcy:The Guatemala Military Project - Wednesday, March 26,1997 PAIDADVERTISEMENT page iv

Workshops

,. llicsc workshops NC ;MIopportunity to ;ittcti(litilcitsivc, SIII~III-~I-~~I~I(lis(:[issiotis oti slrcific. I( q)ics. . P;ir~ici~x~~~ts,it) tii:itly ~;ISCS,arc ;11so paticlists iti tllc syniposiutti. 'l'hc worksliops arc: "Truth and Recot!ciliation in Bosnia: The Soutli Ali,i(.;itt Pr~rcetlctit"convciirtl Iiy 'fitii Phillips, co-foutttlcr of tlic Project on Justice in Tiiiies of Transition of the Fountlatioti for Civil Society "1ntcrn;itional Intervcntion antl Democracy" cc~rivciictlhy Mottoti I l;ilpcriti, Fcllow at tlic Council OII Forcigri Iklations "Corruption and Democracy: Mcxico" corivctictl by J;dc Ihi,;itrorricy ;itit1 fornicr senior invcstig;ltor for the U.S. Scnate Forcign Relations Committee "I'rospccts for Democracy in kilcstinc" coiivcnctl 1)y Litiiis Atitloni, ;in itidcpcntlcat Rtlcstitiiai journ;ilist "'l'hc Futurc of Dcriiocracy ;itid Civil Socicty it1 Isi-;icl" cotivctictl Ily 1,lov;i Aliav, Iortiicr- Secrcr;ir~-~;cricl;~~of the Isl;icli l.ho~rhrty "Coninioclitics, Glohal Agriculture, ;itid C;lob;il E(1uiry" coiivcncd by Jxoti Clay, Scnior I:cllow ;it tlic World Wiltllifc Fund

'l'lic workshops rim coticurrctitly; ;ittcii(l;tticc is liiiiitctl

The Sounds of Democratic Democracy's Precarious Present The Future of Democracy in Lath Discourse: Chick Corea and Enduring Promise: Jean America: Oscar Arias Siiiirlq I\pr.il G, 7:00pni,Alimiiae Loziiige Bethke Elshtain Saturday, April 12, 7:00prn, Cohen Auditoritmi Ibiiiwlni; i\pillO, 6.30pii1, Cdior Air(lilor-iiriii An evening of improvisational A presentation by Oscar Arias, jazz with worlcl-renownedpianist fornicr President of Costa Rica and and composer Chick Corea, one A lectitrc antl discussion with Jean Ikthkc Elshtain, the rccipient of the 1987 Nobel Peace of the most individualistic, dy- Laur;~Speltnan Rockefeller Professor of Ethics at tlic Uni- Prize for his efforts to bring peace namic, and recognizable musi- versity of Chicago antl the author most rccently ofDemoc- to Central America. He champions cians of this or any time. He is such issues as democracy, human rucy on 7M.She is one of the country's Icading political the winner of eight Grammy development, and demilitarization. Awards and 25 nominations for philosoplicrs aiid public intellectuals. lle founded the Arias Foundation his vibrant acoustic and electric for Peace and Human Progress. music. Drawing on Spanish, About licr rcccnt book, Robert Colcs said, "Yet again Jean Latin, and classical traditions, he 'Freedoinworks miracles. Forfiee naen everything ispos- Bcthke IYshtain dares chailenge a bast of iCieologica1pi- has pavctl the way for jazz fusion. His most recent record- siblc. The challenges confronting UT can be overcome by ctic's -- anilso doiiig, gives zrsnporucrjd iiioral sta(enierit ings are The Mozart Sessioia with Bobby McFerrin antl PI^ Anierica which is democratic and free. %%en I as- Chick Corea aiid Friends Remcnibering Bud Poioell. uDoirl the iimiiiiii'q oJ'c~einocr-cq." rttmed the Presidency of Costa Rica, I calledfor an alli- mceforficedotn and democracy in the Americas. I said ilc will be attending the EPIlC symposium -- ;I portion of 6en, and I repeat today] that we cannot ally ourselves the evening will bc his musical interpretation of the pro- ?iherpoliticallyor econonzicallywithgovernments which cccdings. qpress tbeirpeoples. Latin America bas never ktzown a ;ingle iuar between two democracies. That is reason Rich Jankowsky (EPllC'92), a '95 Tufts graduate and jazz wotigh for eve$ person of good faith, for every govern- tlrummcr, will introduce this session with a prcscntatioii incut tuitbgood intentions, to support the eforts to stamp

of his research on jazz and democracy. )ut lyranny. " From his 1987 Nobel Peace Prize address. Wednesday, March 26,1997 page eleven

Glenn Rothfeld, STA Travel is the world’s largest travel organization specializing Instructor, Tufts University School of in low-cost travel for students. Medicine PSST! Got the urge to travel? STA Travel has great student airfares to destinations around the world Go shopping on our website for current Cathy Sims, PA-C (617) 5 7 6 - 4 6 2 3 student airfares 65 Mt. Auburn Street ai Cambridge, MA 02138 STA TRAVEL Learn about a philosophy of health care WUT. st a-travel. corn We’ve been there. with a growing following and the many career o p po rt un it ies ava ilab le

Wednesday, March 26 at 5:OOpm East Hall Lounge

Sponsored by Carol Baffi-Dngan, Pre-Health Advisor He’s Alive ’97

,

Join Us Easter Wcekcnd!

TI-! U RSDAY Prof. Peter Kreeti talks on tlw Resurrection of Jesus Christ Barnum8, 7pm

FRIDAY Good Friday Service Goddard Chapel, 7pn1

SUNDAY Easter Celebration .- Carmichacl Quad, 2pm

Qucstiorrs? call Suinnnc x7778 ‘I’ufts Christian Fcllowship page twelve THETUFTS DAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997 4

FOREIGN TAXATION t

t

z

COME PAINT YOUR HANDS WITH MIDDLE EASTERIWOUTH How to Prepare Your Tax Return c On Saturday, March 29th at 1O:OO am in Eaton 201 EAST ASIAN CEREMONIAL DYE $30.00 Entrance Fee Required

For sign-up information, please refer to Pannell, Kerr & Forster c brochure (# 6 17/26111 5 15) which is available in the Fletcher Ginn Library. The deadline for faxing (#6 17/261/1520) in registration information is Thursday, March 27th at 200 pm. 6

You will be able to prepare/completeyour federal & state tax returns at L this session. *

c

MEET NEW PEOPLE AND LISTEX TO TRADITIOX4L hlUSIC ALL ARE WELGORIE!! - FREE . . . t

1 EXPERIENCE ASIA THIS SUMMER HALL LOUNGE Participate in the second JOURNEY FOR INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM <

The Rev. Dr. Youhanna and Ephronia Mugar Memorial Scholarship will be awarded to a Tufts student entering his or her senior year in the fall of 1997 Tufts Alum Becomes an t

The selected student will travel to Asia this summer to observe the Individual and Family handover of Hong Kong to China. Therapist!!! Additional travel in Asia, most likely to China, Singapore and Malaysia will c also be included.

An internship in Hong Kong in either the financial industry, .media and \ entertainment, or information technology will be part of the award. All expenses will be paid. - Comeandheartheevolutionof a I Students must be in good academic standing. Tuftsstudenttoapracticing Those applying must submit an application form (available at the familyand individual therapist. . Career Planning Center), a personal statement, resume. transcript and letter of reference.

c

Applications are due at the CPC by 5 pm Friday, March 28, 1997

,- Wedntsday March 26, 1117 7:OO p,m. in Barnurn 104 c

-.. Sponsored by the Tufts Psychology Society for more info call Liz 391-7667/50 666-8165 Email: scohen I @emerald.tufts.edu i . Wednesday, March 26,1997 THET”sDAILY page thirteen

Guess what?

16’s Time to Celebrate Eric Ue9sBirthday’! I Gme on down and feel like

ILI ’1 you’re in an episode of “Friends”! and.. I ..

The Monty Pfihon Society

Wednesday, Mar. 26: Michael H Thursday, Mar. 27: Jim and John Endee Saturday, Mar. 29: The BdSquares ?law+ 4 &wl is looking to hire Tufts’ talent. If you’re a performer or in a band you think should play at the coffeehouse, drop off a demo tape (doesn’t have to be a high quality comeJaDk ‘119s For I recording) at the Student Activities Office in the Campus Center. Free Cake!!

ASIAN AMERICAN CENTER

PRESENTS

FRElDA LEE MOCK

INDEPENDENT FILMMAKER, CO-PRODUC E WDI RECTO RMRITER ~ OF THE ACADEMY AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY, FLIGHT #1818 WILL BE “MAYA LIN: A STRONG CLEAR VISION“ DEPARTING TO ISRAEL FROM THE HlllEL CENTER AT 4PM ON SUNDAY MARCH 30,1997 @eo@@oee@ T H U RS DAY COME FLY THE FRIENDLY SKIES WITH APRIL 3,1997 SENIOR CITIZENS FROM THE NEWTON JCC BARNUM 008 FOR AN MERNOON OF ISRAELI FOOD, MUSIC AND DANCING @ @ @ e e 0 630 PA.- FILMSHOWING, “MAYA LIN: A STRONG CLEAR VISION” SHARE YOUR ISRAEL EXPERIENCE WITH 8:lS P.M.- TALK BY FRElDA LEE MOCK FRIENDS AND PANEL DISCUSSION @ Q x4( @ 0 0 WITH PROFESSOR LIZ MONS,ENC LISH DEPARTMENT PROFESSOR GERALD GILL, H I510 RY DEPARTMENT PROFESSOR PAUL JOSEPH, SOC 10 LOGY DE PA RTM E NT DON’T WORRY ABOUT JET LAG -- THE TRIP IS ONLY 2 HOURS! AND, OH YEAH, inFREE! @UPrgpU€4AND0OY@-X@ TH WILL BE AN OPPORTUNITYTOTALK WITH FRElDA LEE MOCK IN A SMALLER, MORE FOCUSED DISCUSSION ON FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL4. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL THE ASIAN AMERICAN CENTER AT 627-3056.

LO-SPONSORS: OFFICES OF THE PRESIDENT, SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND PROVOST, VICE PRESIDENT, DEAN OF STUDENTS, AND DEAN OF THE COLLEGES; ALSO. THE ASIAN COMMUNITY AT TUFTS, PROG RAMM INC BOARD. AFRICAN AM€RI CAN CE NTE R, AME RlCAN STU D IE S DE PARTM ENT. EXPERIMENTAL COLLEGE, ENGLISH DEPARTMENT, HISPANIC AMERICAN CENTER, PEACE AND JUSTICE QUESTIONS? CONTACT NIKHI a1688 OR LISA 623-8621 STUDIES, AND THE SOCIOLOGY/ANTHROPOLOGY DEPARTMENT page fourteen THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997

ATTENTION: INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS Army nominates first female 3-star general

Visa Options for Working in the Los Angeles Times-Washington Kennedy’s appointment must U.S. after Graduation or How to Get an H-1B Visa Post News Service be confirmed by the Senate. The WASHINGTON-The Army, buf- Army andNavy have already had feted by a sexualmisconductscan- three-star officers. dal and eager to make itself more Born in Germany, she began hospitableto women, is likely soon her military career in 1969 in the to have its first female three-star Women’s Army Corps at Fort general. McLellan, Ala., and has had a se- Maj. Gen. ClaudiaJ. Kennedy, ries of increasingly responsible an intelligence specialist and 28- administrative and intelligence Getting a Head Start on Your Job Search for ____- year veteran, was nominated Tues- positions since. International Juniors day to become a lieutenant gen- 017 .4pril Istfrom 4 - 5 piiri /he C’cireer PIii~i~~itig eral. Kennedy, who has served as Before her current posting, she Center --- the Army’s assistant deputy chief was deputy commander ofthe US __-__--__---- of staff for intelligence since July Army Intelligence Center at Fort Job lntcrvicwiog Skills __-_-- 1995, also is being nominated to Huachaca, Ariz., and, earlier, di- serve as the deputy chief of staff rector ofhtelligence, G-2, Forces for intelligence. Command,at Fort McPherson, Ga.

RESERVATIONS REQUIRED FOR ,\LL WOKKSHOI’S Please call the International Centcr at 627-3458 to malic your reservations

Co-sponsorcd by the C:irccr Planning Center Sr the 1ntcrii:ltion:d Center

. Seniors... COMMUNICATIONS ARTS CONNECTION Resume Referral Program

Resumes for 4 organizations in the fields of media, communications, and the arts are now being collected.

Participating organizations include:

Adams Media Leo Burnett Aperture Foundation Margeotes-Fertitta You If personal and cultural Apple Farm Arts Center New Jersey barn Company growth are the rewards Bard Associates New Jersey Symphony Orchestri you’re looking for, Brooklyn Museum of Art Ogilvy Adams & Rinehart check out a wide variety of Israel experiences. Philadelphia Print Shop won’t Burson-Marsteller Programs last from Captured Time Productions Physician’s Telephone Dir. three months to-a year Civilization Magazine Putnam Berkley Group and could be the most CNN Random House rewarding personal Conde Nast St. Martin‘s Press investment you’ll Cottage Grove Sentinel Scholastic ever make. C-Span School of American Ballet ESPN Securities Data Publishing paid.. .But ELEK International Signe Nielson, Architect Hartford Business Journal Soundprints come back HGTV Home and Garden TV ‘The Nation Institute richer. Huckleberry Press Wenniger Arts & Crafts Gallery Katz Media Ziff-Davis Publishing Combined Jewish Call the Israel Keogh & Riehlman Fine Art Philanthropies Programs Desk at 126 High Street . (617) 457-8754 Boston, MA or e-mail: An information Session will be held on 02110 [email protected] for Thursday, march 27 at 4:OO PM more information. Large Conference Room, Campus Center Resume Deadline: Thursday, April 10, 5:OO PM Career Planning Center

Sponsored by: Career Planning Center

,.,.. . Wednesday, March 26,1997 THETUFTS DAILY page fifteen 4 Culmination of months’ work EPIIC formerYugoslavia. continued from page I Rich Jankowsky, a 1995 Tufts during the symposium. “The stu- graduate,andmember ofthe EPIIC dents are absorbed in all the differ- program in 1992, will present his ent facets; the symposium is just research on jazz and democracy as one ofthe culminatingevents,” he an introduction to Corea’sperfor- said. mance. Tufts Democrats r “The students will be present- “There are so many different ing and moderating at the sympo- components to this. The students sium.” themselves are a microcosm,” he Several students have been said, describing the diversity of General Meeting! Everyone Welcome! working to create an interactive the students currently enrolled in Upcoming elections and plans to attend CD-ROMaddressinginternational the class. regional conferences will be discussed. conflicts and their outcomes. Explainingthat the class mem- “This is one of the first Arts bers are from countries including and Sciences and Engineering Bosnia, Israel, Chile, Bangladesh, collaborations,” Teichman said, Kuwait, Hong Kong, and India, Thursday, March 27th 7:OO p.m. explaining that a portion on the Teichman said, “The studentscre- CD-ROM will be displayed at the ated a community with a tremen- symposium. dous amount of cross cultural sen- “The class and the symposium sibility and very productive ten- Large Conference Room, Campus Center concentrate on merging theory sion.” with practice,” he said. In addition to the symposium, Another student in a five-year Teichman said that students in program in conjunction with the the EPIIC program have also Museum of Fine Arts will present worked on over 15 programs this photographs she shot while in the year. Feedback has been positive CONSERVATION efforts to improve campus-wide continued from page I conservation will most likely not contractors, despite the incon- end with water. venience their work may have She said that participantsin the posed. Green Lights Program will make a Currently, the University is a commitmentto survey theirfacili- participant in the voluntary Green ties and perform upgrades on at Lights Program, organized by the least 90 percent of those that do B r o testa nt Stu d ent Fe 1I ows h i p EnvironmentalProtection Agency. not meet specified standards of As a result, isenstein said that conservation. Wednesday, March 26 Second comic shows heart Meditations: The Passion Drama SILVER the girl who’s apossible romantic Chaplain Miriam Acevedo Naters, speaker continued from page 5 interest), Valentino does remem- doing the literary equivalent of ber to infuse all the characters Goddard Chapel, 12 noon

4. treading water. with at least the potential for hr- Still, marketing hooks aside, ther depth. there’s something appealing There’s enough room for im- about an ongoing series dedi- provement for future issues to cated to the childhood of a young provide the satisfaction that the pre-adolescent. Valentino has book’s premiere didn’t. What A colored Silver’s life with some TouchofSilver does show is heart, Maundy Thursday, March 27 interesting friends and although but in order forthe book to live up “Thinking about the commandment to Iov2.” as ofyet, they all can be described to the potential of the series’ in a sentence fragment (the kid charming premise, Valentino is Lunch time reflection, 12 noon - lpm with the racist mother, the boy going to have to show his readers Curtis Hall Loft who’s abigger loserthan Timmy, some subtlety too. Protestant Chaplain’s office, above “Brown and Brew” (bring your lunch) BOSTON UNIVERSITY 4-

-. Good Friday, March 25 Joint service with Christian Student Fellowship 7:OO pm Goddard Chapel

Fall semester or simply take a class for personal enrichment. EASTER c oston University Summer Term gives you a new Celebrate with us, 6:30 pm perspective of the world Goddard Chapel around you, *+ 1. x Summer Session I: May 20-June 28 Summer Session 11: July Y-August 9 Hegistration begins April 23 page sixteen THETUFTS DAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997 The Hispanic American Center What’s happening tomorrow Presents AROUND “1960’s Activism in the continued from page 19 University Chaplaincy NOON HOUR CONCERTS Puerto Rican Community” Tomorrow Mozart, Debussy, Ravel, and Ibert. PERFORMED BY: Tracy with University Chaplaincy McGinnis, Bassoon & Dani Gloria Rodriguez CHAPLAIN’S TABLE: WORLD Rimoni, Viola RELIGIONS - PERSONAL VIEWS Goddard Chapel, 12:30-1 p.m. Fornier member of the Young Lords Party “What it Means to be a Muslim in the, 1990’s” SPEAKER: Asif Islam, Tufts’ Campus Earth Summit LA’98 Campus Earth Summit MacPhie Conference Room, Burden Lounge, Anderson Hall, 1- Film & Discussion 5-7 p.m. 445 p.m. Palante Siempre Palante! LGB Resource Center Tufts Entertainment Board QUEST: Questioning, Understand- 1997 Spring Comedy Show The Young Lords ing & Educating about Sexuality at Cohen Auditorium, 9 p.m. Tufts. LGB Resource Center, Catmichael Career Planning HallMear Dining Hall, 9 p.m. Communications & Arts Connec- Wednesday, March 26, 1997 tions Information Session Tufts Department of Music Large Conference Room - Campus 4:30 p.m. Olin 12 Student and faculty performers Center, 4 pm. present works by students, faculty, Join us for delicious Puerto Rican food and staff. Protestant Student Fellowship Alumnae Hall, 8 p.m. Maundy Thursday Reflections at 6:30 p.m. in the OhLounge Curtis Hall loft; Protestant immediately following the presentation Chaplain’s office, 12-1 p.m. Tufts Democrats General Meeting! Everyone Tufts Christian Fellowship Co-Sponsored by: Experimental College, Hispanic American Society Welcome. Prof. Peter Kreeft talks on the Office of the Provost, Peace and Justice Program Large Conference Rm,Campus Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Center, 7 p.m. Bamum 8,7 p.m.

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Reach 20.000 with one ad. Start thinking about advertising in the Daily’s Commencement issue. . Center-spread and baskgage still available.

F Call Neil, Ab y, or John at 627-3090 more details. c page eighteen THE TUFTS DAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997 c

BE THE ENVY OF YOUR "Typing and Word Childcare needed. Spring Comedy Show Super Summer Sublet 5-10 hours per week depending on This Thursday at 9 in Cohen. Come from mid May thN August. Partially FRIENDS! Processing Service** Personals 396-1 124 Lour schedule - afternoons preferred. see stand-upwmdysensatmn Kevin furnished 3 bdrm apt only 10 min walk 1 Bedroom... 6/1/97 ....$650 Heated. ,losetoTufls. Start nowandcontinue Meanev for onlv a buck. Tickets on from campus. Close to gym. Laundry 301-303 Boston Ave. SpectacularApt. Student papers. theses, grad school facilities rent $290/room/month. Call Hard wood floors just refinished, aoolications. Dersonal statements. through summer, if possible. Must be SSK- saleatBoxOR~ck.Broughttoyou with reliable and fun. Call 393-9881 for an Michaii 306-0001. modem kitchenandbath, plusreading tape transiriptions, resumes, Rope - a - dope love by tha Entertainment Board. interview. Rope - a - dope room. CALL NOW. 617-859-3661. graduateMaculty projects, multiple letters. AMCAS forms. Thorough Puffin Wuffin 1997 Spring Comedy Show Summer Sublet 3 BDRM Apt, FREE ROOM AND BOARD Come see comic marvel Kevin partially furnished Great, CHEAP Summer knowledgedAPA. MIA and Chicago Manuals-of Style. AU documents are in exchange for childcare. Contact GALA TICKET WANTED11 Meaney this Thurs. March 27th, at 9 10minutewalktoTufts.Availablemid Sublets1 Terry at 646-1945 (Tufts '79) If you are a senior not going to gala p.m. inCohenAuditorium.Ticketsare May-Aug. $290/room/month. Call 2 spacious furnished rooms available laser Drinted and spelkhecked using WordPerfect. Reasonable rates. and will buy a ticket for me please call only $1 and are on sale at the Cohen Michael3C6-0001. LaundryAvailable. June - August. Great location: very Joshua Tree New BarlRest 629-0543. Box mce. close to campus, 5 min. walk to T. Quick turnaround. Serving Tufts LAST CHANCE TO BE A Free Laundry. Nonsmoking females, studentsandfacultyforover 1Oyrs.5 Looking for young min from Tufts. CALL FRAN at 396- high energy upbeat bartender, wail Christina Gould Intercultural Semi-Formal111 GROUP LEADER AT KIDS' call Brett or Karye at 625-0743. Hey tile sis! You've probably been 1124. (Member of NASS - National staff, doormen FTPT. Open house Sat,April5thattheCambridgeMarriot. DAY Association Secretarial Services) lookingforthis.Wellgoodthings come Summer Sublet of interviews Mon. Tues 3/24, 3/25, 31 7:30 p.m.-2 a.m. Hors-d'oeuvres Attend one of the following meetings: AAA WORD PROCESSING. 31,4/1 between 3-6 p.m. 256 Elm St. to those who wait. Hope you had a served at 8 p.m. $IO/person. $151 March 25, March 26, or April 1 at 9:30 2 rooms of 4 bedroom house. June to good break and get ready to have Davis Sq. Somerville. couple. Live DJ +DanceTroupe. Free p.m. in Braker 001. Bring money to August. 42 Bromfield. Call Anne 627- Plan Aheadll! some fun. Love, me. shuttle to + from Campus Center. buy a Kds' Day T-shirt. If you want to 8565 or Shannon Ethnic attire encouraged!! 627-8094. Spend your SPRING BREAKeaming Animated Instructors be a group leader, you must attend up to $1450 participating in an 11 or Pipestem, WV ONE of these meetings. Needed Do you like to do stuff? Do WHUUT? 16 day full-time drug-free Sleep to present fun science activities for Summer Sublet research shrdyat Brigham8Women's Dostuff. Here'sto 10awesomepeople Four rooms left in a GREAT five kids at schools and parties. Need car KIDS' DAY GROUP Hospital. We are seeking qualified and experience with kids. Training who did the one-cheek booty groove LEADERS bedroom apartment on College Ave. lhrouah 9 states and 2040 miles. You For Sale MEN ages 18 to 30 only. Study provided. Part time. Pay: $20/1 hour You must attend ONE ofthe following June 1 - Aug 31. Partly furnished! mck!-Your leaders o'love requires3 week preparation period. program. 617-643-2286. meetings: March 25, March 26 orApril Kitchen stuff! Give us a call: Jane or Call Gail now: 617-732-8093 or email Meg 625-5839. Wendy 0. - 1988 Honda Accord LX 1 in Braker 001 at 9:30 p.m. Bring gailQgcrc.bwh.hafvard.edu. DO YOU WANT TO BE A power everything, sun roof, standard, money for T-shirt. Last chance to sign GROUP LEADER FOR KIDS' I'm so excited to be your big sister! up to be a group leader at Kids' Day! Summer Sublet 24 Curtis Guitar Lessons This year is going to be great. Alpha AMlFM cassette. mise. 4 door. 98K. Ave. DAY? Love, ?? $3000. Call Jason Bates 3964221. Lookingtoleam howtoplaytheguitar. Attend one of the following meetings: April 1st 4 bedroom. WID. Will sublet rooms 1'11 have YOU rocking in no time. Very IstFloorApt,1argeyard.driveway. W/ separately. CallCaitlinorSarax1604. March 25, March 26, or April 1. All are affordabie. Interestid? Give Ian a cail at9:3O p.m. in BrakerW1. Call Jeannie 0, 2 bedroom plus eat-in-kitchen, atx1432. Birthday hardwoodflwrs. porch. $950.00/mo., Summer Sublet x7433. . Housing needs yard work. 171 College Ave. June 1 - Sept 1. 3.4.7 bedrooms furnished/ Arlington - Part-time 5 Bedroom Summer Sublet unfurnished. Questions? Call Shana Wanted childcare Even if it isn't your x8018 or Jenny x7146. needed for our two daughters (ages 5 birthday Available June 1. Located at 42 ... BIG SINGLES Bromfield. Very large rooms, 1 Teach English Abroad! and 8) during the summer. Car Come see stand-up comedian Kevin needed. Pay: $8 per hour. Call 646 Wantto livein agreat locationthat has bathroom, W/D, driveway for 5 cars. Lg. and small apts. available How would you like to teach basic Meaney in Cohen this Thursday at conversational English in Eastern 4261. 9:OO. Tickets only $1, on Sale now at big singles? Apply to the Bridge Call Brian or Ian Q 827-1432. close to campus, Program in Metcat We meet every wilhin walking distance. Close to T Europe? Our materials profile many the Box office. Bring a live chicken rewarding opportunities with great Playful and Responsible and get in free. Tuesday for dinner and a 2 BR APT also; These places are in great program...j oin us. Applications in Sunny 2 Bdrm in 3 fam house on condition and rents are always benefits! For information: (206) 971- Babysitter ResLfe. South Hall, ext. 3248. RaymondAve,offCurtisAve.2minto reasonable. Call day or night 625 3684 ext. K50357 (We are a research For one byearold boy, about 515 to campus, porch, WID. modem K 8 8. 7530 and ask for Camillo or Lina. Off 8 publishing company). 6:30 p.m.. pref. Mon-Fri. Walk him Events Room Available April 1st yard. $850 incl H 8 HW.Call owner campus living is the best. home from daycare (Tufts vicinity), One room available in a quiet building 491-771 7. Need a Summer Job? set the table, play with him until we ten minutes from Tufts, near 1997 Summer Sublet Staying in Medford? Earn $3-5000 arrive. Nocarnecessary. Nowthrough laundromat, T and grocery store. SUMMER SUBLET 4 furnished rooms. $350/month. 11 working outside for College Pro end of semester at least; summer Chaplaln's Table, Thursday, availability ideal. Spanish speaker 3-27-97,5-7 p.m., Furnished kitchen. bathroom and One room available in a 3 Mrm apt. Bumham St.. behind Latin Way. Call Painters. Now hiring painterslJob Site bedroom.RentisWW/month.Please July I-Aug 31. Boston Ave location - Brad 6294850. managers. Call Shawn at 627-1320. welcome! Laura or Rafael at 391- MacPhie Conference Room. World 4429 afler 8 p.m. or leave a message. Religions Personal Views is the call Pat at 625-6112. Non-Smokers close to Tufts, $3oo/mo. Please call - preferred. C.Z. Q 391-0634. 1997 Summer Sublet Did you go to your prom? subject with Asif Islam. LA'98. JCC Jacob and Rose speaking about 'What it Means to be 1 furnished room. $350/month. June Help an inner city teen attend her a Muslim in the 1990s.' Interested In subletting a Starry Night Bed & Breakfast and July only. Call Brad 6294850. special night. Please donate your Grossman Day Camp of the room for the summer? Brick wlonial home, spacious rooms, dress to a 5'lO"sbe 8 teen who can't Jewish Community Centers We live in a gorgeous 4 bedroom a/c. marble firedaced livinaroom. afford a dress. Call 3758146 or 522- of Greater Boston Noon Hwr Concerts, 0609. Thursday, 3-27-97, aDartment on 185 Colleae Ave and continental breakfast. home-baked Summer Positions Available: 12:30-1 p.m.. Goddard Chapel, need subletters from Jine through goods. 4.5 miles to Harvard Square, -Administrative Staff close to Tufts. MIT. and Boston. Drive Services LEADERS NEEDED: Summer presents the music of Mozart. August. Great location, friendly -Arts and Crafls Director Debussy. Ravel, and lbert performed landlord and standard rent for College to Lexington, Concord. (617)646- teenage bicycling -Special Needs Counselor Ave. Please contact Meg at 666-3433 8236. trips. US, Canada, Europe. Minimum -Senior Counselor byTracyMcGinnis,Basm.and Dani Put your Resume on the Rimoni. Viola. ASAP. 4-week time commitment. Salary plus Specialists-Waterfront in the Staff Following areas: Short walk to Tufts Internet expenses paid. Student Hosteling Women Unite Looking for a sublet this 4 bedroom duplex apartment, 1 112 $35 for 1 year. Reach millions of Program.Ashfield Rd., CONWAY, MA -Basketball. Fishing, potential employers! Auster Web 01341. (800) 343-6132. Gymnastics, Jewelry Making, Nature, Cometo ourweekly support group for summer? bathrooms, washerldryer on Single & multiple rooms available premises, large kitchen, separate Services.617-731-3165, resumes@ Outdoor Living and Wrestling. women. Talk to us about YOUR to-get.com. http:/hnrww.resumes4. Please Call: Stu Silverman or Leslie NEEDS and YOUR CONCERNS. It's closetocampus. Call Diane6299764. dining room, living room. quiet street. Cruise Lines Hiring com Zide (617)244-5124. all about YOU. Every Wed. Q the backyard, lease. No pets. Available Earn to $2,000 +/mo. plus fr& world Women's Center 7-8 p.m. Two females seeking same June 1. 1997. $1200/mo. (617)227- travel IEuroDe. Caribbean. etc.) No 8000 (days), (617)969-3075 Get Better Grades1 exp. necess.&. Fwdetails..call: (919) For 1997 summer, to share duplex (evenings). English instructorlwriter will edit KIDS' DAY 1997 GROUP off Boston Ave. Parking. Quiet 918-7767,ext.C186. (Member. Better counselors sought for papers or theses to improve your Business Bureau CARE Program): unique, prestigious, coed LEADERS location. $303.50 plus utilities. Call grammar, spelling and punctuation 527-8274. Short walk to Tufts children's camp. You must attend one of the following 4 bedroom apartment on quiet street, and helpwithtextcomposition. LEARN For 1997 summer, meetings: March 25, March 26, or Spectacular. pristine location. coasta W/D on premises, backyard, large HOW TO WRITE. Typing included, counselors sought for Maine on both fresh water lake and April Iat 9:30 p.m. in Braker001. Last Conwell Ave fax service. Paula 617-646-6731. kitchen. seoarate dining room. living unique, the ocean. Specialists needed for 3C chance to be a group leader on 1 bdrm of 4 bdrm apt for rent. Lease room. spadous foyer, lease. No pet5 Saturday April 19 - KIDS DAY. starts May 1 at $375/mo. Fun, prestigious co+d camp. activities: Trip leaders, Equestrians, Available Seot. 1. 1997. $1200/mo. Looking Shaggy? Spectacular, pristine location, coastal Photographers, WSI. Swim responsible MIF non-smokerwanted. (617)227-8odO(days).(61 7)969-3075 If you need a haircut. don't go off KIDS DAY GROUP LEADER Please call Jill at x8134. Maine on both fresh water lake and Instructors. Baseball.Basketball. RRe (evenings) campus. Get a professional haircut the ocean. Specialists needed for 30 and Sailing Instructors, Archers INFO MEETINGS from a licensed stylist for only $8. Call If you signed up to be a group leader, Beautiful Summer Sublet activities: Trio Leaders. Eauestrians. Fisherman, Kayakers. Canoeists One room in big apartment Jesine x1827. Naturalists, Marine Biologists. Rock you must attend ONE of the following 1st Floor apt. 4 rooms: huge kitchen. Photographers.WSI Swim I'nstructOrS, . , .to sublet for July and August with Baseball. Basketball. Rffle and sailing Climbers, Roller hockey, Visual meetings: March 25, March 26, or full bath, hardwood fl. WasherlDryer. option to renew for fall. $3W/mO. incl Lifeguarding April 1. All are in Braker 001 at 9:30 Parking. Fairmont Ave. Next to Instructors. Archers, Fishermen, Musical, dramatic and Martial Artists heat, hot water, dishwasher. Great Renewal Course, Sat. March 29 or Kayakers. Canoeists, Naturalists, waterskiers and Windsurfers ...tc p.m. Call Jeannie at x7433. Hillsides. $14OO/mo. June 1st-Sept location on Boston Ave. Call 393- 1st. Call Dan at x8563. Sun. March30.CallP.E.Officex3440 Mahe Biologists. Rock Climbers, mention a few. Interview in Medforc 0256. for information, KIDS DAY GROUP Roller Hockey, Visual, Musical, possible. Inquire early. Salary . fee $30. Dramatic and Martial Artists, structure commensurate with age LEADERS Summer Sublet 3 Bedroom Summer Sublet 2 bedrooms, close to campus. Waterskiers and Windsurfers ...to activity expertise, and experience Attend one of the following meetings: Available June 1 - August 31. Very Come to the Women's mention a few. Interview in Medford CALL (508) 2785600. March 25, March 26, OR April 1 at Available June-August. $375/month. close to Tufls. Spacious rooms w/ Call Lauren x8156. Support Group possible. Inquire early. Salary 9:30 p.m. in Braker OOI! Last chance eat-in-kitchen 8 WID. Storage 8 aconfidentidwomen'ssupport group structure commensurate with age, to be a group leader on Saturday, Parking (street and driveway) Summer Sublet thataddresses women'sissues. Some activity expertise and experienck. JCC Camp Kingswood Coed April 19! available. Call Dave, Josh, or Chip issues that are addressed are rape, CALL (508) 276-5600. Looking for 1 person to sublet 1 Overnight Camp 391-8754. assault, and relationships. Meets Available:in Bridgton. Maine. Summer Positions Please come hear Adam bedroomin an aDt on CaDen St. Close every Wednesday evening, 7-8 p.m. Ogunquit, Maine hotel hiring Glick speak to Espressos 8 Campus.~$350/month. APARTMENTS FOR RENTII Avail. 6/1/97-8/97. Call Jeff at at the Women's Center, 55 Talbot assistant -Administrative Staff about being an individual and family 666- 2 people, 2 bedrooms, $700 Ave. 8969. manager and housekeepers for -Assistant Director therapist on Wednesday, March 26,7 3 people, 3 bedrooms, $820 summer season. Dormhostel style -Waterfront Staff p.m. in Bamum 104. 4 people, 4 bedrooms, $900 Looking for a place to live "'RESUMES"' housing available. Call -Assistant Waterfront Director Heat and hot water included in the LASER TYPESET 603-430-7941 or write Geoff Blake Counselors for the followinr Juniors-Deadline this summer? rent! 10 minute walk to campus! Call specialties: I'm looking to sublet 1 bedroom in a 3 $28.00 - 396-1 124 P.O. Box 714 Portsmouth. NH 03801 Applications are due Fri March for the days: 396-8386. eve: 483-1045 or Impressive Laser Typeset Resumes, for details. Archery, Athletics, Camping Rev. Dr. Youhanna and Ephronia bedmom place. Available6/1/97. Call 391-6053. Ceramics, Photography, Tennis Jeff at 666-8969. featuring computer storage for future Mugar Memorial Scholarship-the updating. Your choice of typestyles, ALASKA SUMMER Boating, Waterskiing. "Journey for International including bold, italics, bullets, etc. on Please Call: Wayne Goldstein or Suf Great Location1 Wanted EMPLOYMENT Perspective.' Observe the handover Strathmore paper. Have your cover Earn up to $3000-$6000+/mo. in Green (617) 244-5124. Hong Kong to China. Travel in Asia College Ave-Across from Career ADartment for 2 students during the c of Planning Center. Female roommate letters done by us to match your fisheries, parks, resorts. Airfare! Food/ and do an internship in the financial rnonthsdMay, June.andJuly. Phase Resume! Oneday service avail. 5 Lodging! MaldFemale. LandlSea. Get wanted for 3 bedroom apt. Either call (352)336-4924 or 1-888-486- industry. media and entertainment. or min from Tufts. (Member of PARW all the options. Call (919)918-7767, Somenrille Synagogue info tech. More info and applications summer sublet or for the 97/98 year. 7971: -' Professional Assoc. of Resume Cali Tara Q 627-1045. exl A186. Seeks Sunday School at the CPC! Writers. Call for FREE 'ResumelCover Teachers For Fall '97 Letter Guidelines") Also, word NATIONAL PARKS HIRING Experience with children, strong 1997 Spring Comedy Show College Ave 8 Other Apts. Four Bedroom processingortyping ofstudent papers, Somerville. Sunny 3 bdrms. excellent Plus forests, beach resorts, ranches, Judaic and Hebrew languagf This Thursday night, March 27th at 9 Living room. dining room, kitchen. grad school applications, personal rafting companies. Up to $12/hour. background. K-7andteens. On public p.m. in Cohen. Come see superstar location.washer. dryer, refrig, storage, Winthrop St. near College. WID. 2 statements, theses, multiple letters, parking. Avail June 1.Other-4 bdrm, Nationwide openings. Room and transportation. Resume to Phyllis wmic Kevin Meaney tell funny jokes. door fridge, refinished, subletting. tapes, transcribed. laser printing. Fax board oflen provided. For info. call: 0sher.TempleBnai Brith. 201 Centra Porter Sq Area. Call Mrs Buckley. Tel. parking, June 1st. Call 395-2463 Tickets are only $1 and are on sale at Service. etc CALL FRANCESAT 396 (919)916-7767, ext R186. Street, Somerville 02145. the Cohen Box Office. 617-729-8151. 9-12 p.m. or 2-5 p.m. 1124 AhRESUME SERVICE.

All Tufts students must submit classifieds in person, prepaid with cash or check. I' lassifieds must be submitted by 3 D.m. the before publication.Classifieds may also b iught at the InformationBooth at the CMIF :enter. All classifieds submitted by mail must be accompanied by a check. Classifieds may not be submitted over the phone. Notices and Lost & Founds are frei and run on :days and Thursdays only. Notices are lit dktwo per week per organization and run space permitting. Notices must be Written on Dailyfonns and submitted in person. Notices motbe used to sell merchandise or advertise major events. The Tufts Daily is not li :for any damages due to typographicalerrors or misprintings except the cost ofthe insertion, which is fully refundable. We reserve the right to refuse to print any classifieds which contain obscenity, are of an overtly sexual nature, or are used expressly to denigrate a person or group.

Pelicans Marching c Wednesday, March 26,1997 THETUFTSDAILY page nineteen

4 Doonesbury by Garry Trudeai Around Campus

Today Student Coalition for Investor Responsibility at Tufts (SCIRT) Alcohol and Health Education Campaign Planning Meeting. Open 12-Step Meeting. Eaton 204,9:30 p.m. Sneider Room 2nd Floor Campus Center, 12:30-1:30p.m. Tufts University Unitarian Film Series Universalists Film: “West Side Story”. Open-Minded Discussion and MacPhie Pub, 9:30 p.m. Worship. FoxTrot by Bill Ament Goddard Chapel, 9 p.m. Women’s Center Women’s Support Group. YOU FoRCol’ Women’s Center, 7-8 p.m. LCS YWR LUNCH! Kids’ Day 1997 Group Leader LGB Resource Center Meeting. Social Night: Movies, Games, and Braker 001,9:30 p.m. Food. LGB Resource Center (Carmichael Film Series Near Dining Hall) 7-9 p.m. Film: “West Side Story” ONLY $2. MacPhie Pub, 9:30 p.m. University Chaplaincy MEDITATIONS: A TIME FOR La Casa Hispana THE SPIRIT “The Passion Drama” Muevelo. SPEAKER: Rev. Miriam Acevedo- Milne House/lO Whitfield Rd, Dilbert by Scott Adam Naters, Associate Chaplain. 9-11 p.m. Goddard Chapel, 12 noon- 1 p.m. Queens Head and Artichoke Submissions Deadline. ATTEMPT TO SUBTLY Tufts Department of Music Tufts Faculty present works by Info booth + English Dept Office, Today PERFUME IS KLLLING 5 Boston composer Elizabeth Vercoe PEOPLE. OILLTRY and European Tarn de Marcz I Q A DIRECT Oyens. Pieces include dramatic APPROACH. Protestant Student Fellowship staging and electronics. Holy Week Meditation on Passion Alumnae Hall, 8 p.m. Dram. Alternative Medicine Goddard Chapel, 12noon-l p.m. Glenn Rothfeld, MD instructor, Tufts School of Medicine Cathy Tufts Psychology Society Non Sequitur by Wile: Sims, PA-C learn about the Adam Click, Tufts Alumni, speaks philosophy of health care with a about being a family therapist. growing following and about the Barnum 104,7 p.m many career opportunities available. East Hall Lounge, 5 p.m. Women for Health Vision of : Cultural Osteoporosis Prevention Survival Hogdon Lounge, 7 p.m. General Meeting. Oxfam Cafe, 8:30 p.m. see AROUND, page 16 Weather Report Mother Goose & Grimm by Mike Peter! TODAY I TOMORROW Q . Well, it ain’t sun Well, it ain’t rain High: 53; Low: 38 I- High: 54; Low: 32 The Daily Commuter Crossword ACROSS 1 Interlock 5 Shipping container 10 Old Greek inne us weight 14 Pot MATSCRAMBLED WORD GAME 15 Unwind by Hem bold end MIL. Wrlon DEWICK- 16 Floating ice Inscramblethesebur Jumbles, MICHAEL mass ne letter to each square, 10 form 17 Chester- )ur ordinarv words. Arthur 18 Demean * French onion soup @rembroccoli 19 Devotees 20 Cheap and . Squash medley andmushroom gaudy 22 Boater Bok choy Ma.riaaa sausage 24 Part of Asia 26 Draw, in a way - Chilled Indian wit Sauce 27 Fatherly 31 Sew 35 Alien craft 0 Chinese chicken chicken 36 Moving about 38 Hackneyed Spinach and 39 Baseball team 41 Point in tennis mushroom lasagna * Beeflo mein 42 Kazan 43 Peak Q 1997 Tribune Medii Services. Inc. - AU 3l26197 rights reSeNed. * Swordfishwith 0 Spicy green beans 45 African river 48 Devilkin Yesterday’s Puzzle solved: Now arrange the circled letters lo form the surprise answer, as sug- orange herb paste WithtofU 49 “Scarlet Letter‘‘ 89 FlavorPuts forth effort gested by the atme carloon. name Pork char su 51 Cars for hire 10 Grayish color Harvest lentil pilaf 53 .-old 11 Boring cowhand...” 12 A Chaplin (Answers tomonow) - Vegetarian stew Aztec chicken 55 -bean 13 For fear that bsterdaygs 1 Jumbles: HOIST RIGOR POLLEN BANNER 56 Top fighter 21 --vis Answer: What the cowervatbe @litidan was lolown * Curled rice noodles Natural sliced 60 Specimen 23 Play parts for - “LIBERACTIPS 64 Costa- 25 Old Nick * Angel cake with potatoes 65 Shot of booze 27 Sock 67 Needy 28 In flames lemon Ice cream bar 68 Mine entrance 29 Musical sounds daze 69 Weird 30 Lawful 70 ‘Exodus” author 32 Shire the Quote of the Day 71 .Adam -m actress 72 Get up 33 Scale 73 Caused to go 34 Lots and lots 37 Kingly DOWN 40 Cost oroiection ‘!Ihope Z stand for anti-bigotry, anti-Semitism, anti-racism 1 Watery trench 44 office worker, for short ” 2 Fitrgerald This is what drives me. 3 Cabbage salad 46 Was 4 Treat 47 Ottava - 5 Items for 50 Hoists 56 Grouch 61 Tinyopening -President George Bush, during a 1988 campaign stop colorers 52 School grounds 57 Secrete 62 Cut of meat 6 Johnny - 54 Certain singing 58 Sour substance 63 Formerly, of old Late Night at the Daily 7 Oh, woe! group 59 lbsen character 66 -Tin Tin page twenty THETUFTSDAILY Wednesday, March 26,1997

Thru March 30 Thursday, March 27 Thursday, April 3 Ecological Contours, Conceit by Women Tufts Composers Spring Development Pathways: A Composers Affiliated with Concert. Works by students, Photographic Exploration of Tufts. Student and Faculty faculty and staff will be Global Consequences. performers will present works presented. Presenting selected by students, faculty and staff. ALUMNAELOUNGE 8PM photographs from the United Composers will include Nations Environment Program Blackman, Cormier, Klemm, (UNEP) collection, with Fitzgerald and Hsu. This curators Richard Weltzer and evening promises to be the Susan Masuoka. highlight of the Year of UNIVERSITY GALLERY Women in Music. ALUMNAELOUNGE 8PM

Kevin Meany, nationally- known stand-up comedian, will Friday, April 4 perform in the Entertainment Momentum. Sarabande Board’s spring comedy show. Repertory Dance Ensemble Reserved seat tickets are on presents their annual spring sale at the Box Office for $1. show - a one-night dance COHEN AUDITORIUM9PM extravaganza featuring piece: Wednesday. March 26 choreographed and staged b: Faculty Recital. Tufts Faculty Monday. March 31 Sarabande members and members Vivian Taylor, Pascal guest performances by other Feldman, Emmanuel Feldman, Career Panel of Women Working in the Field of Tufts Dance Groups. Tickets Arlene Cole and Lynn Torgrove are $5 at the Box Office after present a Year of Women in Music. Parti ci pants in cl u d e : Catherine Peterson, Boston Monday, March 31. Music concert dedicated to the COHEN AUDITORIUM 7PM memory of Dutch composer Globe Critic; Kay Roberts, professional conductor; Jane Tera de Marez Oyens. Friday & Saturday, April 4-5 Pippik, WGBH sound engineer; Dramatic settings and Dance Performance. Sylvia Glickman, publisher of electronics will be featured in Featuring works of faculty, women’s music; and composer the daring and original works students and alumnae. presented. Marti Epstein, with the JACKSONDANCE LAB 8PM ALUMNAELOUNGE 8PM premiere of com posit ion commissioned by Tufts New Mondav, April 7 Music Ensemble, NME. 1000 Days to the Millenium. ALUMNAELOUNGE 7PM A Donald Berman piano Tuesday, April 1 concert. Works for solo piano Chamber Singers Spring by Zoltan Kodaly, Charles Concert. Directed by Eves, Tamar Diesendruck, Eric Jonathan Hirsh. Moe and Arthur Levering. ALUMNAELOUNGE 8PM ALUMNAELOUNGE 8PM Wednesday! April 2 ynn Torgrove, soprano and Kayo Iwana, Thousan d Cranes Project. liano, Fall 1996 Photo by Ian Ross An international children dance March 27 - April 6 for peace. A cultural and ArtWorks. Annual juried artistic exchange between exhibition of art and design Japanese and American work by Tufts Undergraduates. students. Based on a true Opening Reception on story of Sadako, a young victim Thursday, March 27, 5-8pm. of the atomic bombing of UNIVERSITYGALLERY Hiroshima. Choreographer “A Thousand Cranes,” Hood School L-R: Stephanie Schoch, Cindy Ung and Nikki Hu and music by Guy Nikki Hu. Photo by Walter Hoej Van Duser. For more information, please call: Events are FREE COHEN AUDITORIUM6:30~~ Alumnae Lounge 627-3049

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