THE TUFTS DAILY RHA plans Tufts dance by MAUREEN LENIHAN Daily Editorial Board The first Tufts campus-wide semi-formaldance, sponsored by the Residence Hall Association (RHA),willbeheldonFeb.21 at the Copley Westin Hotel in Bos- ton. According toKarlaBielawski, the idea for the dance stemmed from the fact that many individual residence hall govenunents were pl‘anning their own semi-fonnals. Due to the interest, the Residencc Hall Association platuicd a large scale dance. “First year that we have tried terhiy guilty of violi1titYg the dry their [Theta Delta Chi’s] alumni, ‘anything like this and we hope to EPC amroves minors rush policy. Because the frater- andclearerrestrictionsontheway make it an annual event.” said 11 nity had $ the past violated sev- recruitinent of new pcople was Jesse Lunin-Pack, president of eral other University aid IGC conducted. That was agreed.” the Residence Hall Association. draft, fad,ty to vote policies. the IGCJ dealt the stiff JohnGriffen,anattomcy at the Although there will only be suspensiontothe fraternity. which Boston law firm Nutter. 450 tickets on sale for the dance, by STEPHANIE SOLAKIAN oclologies and ways of thinking was also derecognized by Tufts at McClemen and Fish, who repre- the RHA hopes to expand the Daily Staff Writer about the subjcct.” the sane time. The fraternity was sented Tufts in the matter, said event next year if it proves suc- The Education Policy Com- Should the A&S Faculty vote dislodged from its house, now yesterday there was no exchange cessful. mittee voted 8-1-4 yesterday to in favor of the minors program, occupied by sorority Alpha Omi- of money or other agreements Junior Matt Pilarz, president bring the corninittee’s proposal major points of the Proposal state cwm Pi aiirl was disallowed to made in the settlement. He de- of West Hall’s donn government, for an optional academic minors that each department would have recruit new pledges. said that the event is “something program to a vote of the Arts and the option of installing a minor or University President Jean see LAWSUIT, page 2 that the entire campus could be Sciences Faculty, scheduled for minors and would require stu- involved with.” Feb. 24. dents to enroll in 4-6 courses to “Ev- hter-Greek TheEPC wasscheduled tovote fulfill the minor. According to the Council holds aformal, the rest of on the proposal at their meeting EPC proposal, students “enrolled campus really does not have one last Thursdiy, but the committee in a disciplinary minor**may or and this is a good tradition to unanimously decided to continue may not have an advisor, depend- start,” said Pilarz. discussion at yesterday‘s meet- ing upon the minor within the The IGC holds a fonnal dance ing. dcpartmcnt. In addition. a final etch year which is open to the Biology Professor Nancy project for the minor would most - entire Tufts Community, but Milburn. co-chair of the EPC, like1y be required by each depart- Bielawski said he feels that “it is presented the committee with the ment. not traditional for non-members latest draft of the proposal which Students wouldnot be required of the Greek Community to attend she and Tufts Community Union to enroll in a minor, and accord- the fonnal.” Senator Ellie Kleinman authored. ing to the draft, a maximum of Danny Sherer, the IGC presi- As stated in a draft of the pro- two courses “used in completion dent. said th?t the RHA setni- posal, which is subject to revi- of a concentration, foundation or formal is being supported by the sion, “the object of a minors pro- distribution requirementmay also IGC. gram is to present students with be used in fulfillment of the re- “We announced the event at the basic concepts in a single quirelnents for a minorsi7 Photo by Tab Teng scholarly discipline including an Theta Delta Chi will reclaim the house at 125 Packard Ave. this see DANCE, page 17 intrcduction toappropriatemeth- =e MINORS, page 10 September, currently occupied by Alpha Omicron Pi. 4 Financial Aid Task Force drafting First event for symposium report on last semester’s budget EPZZC The Tufts Financial Aid Task Force, which has completed its research from last semesteron the University’s financialaidbudget, on the environment set for today is currently in the process of re-drafting a report of the committee’s by JESSICA FOSTER spread of radioactivc material.” ers having anned themselveswith findings to be redistributed to the committeemembers for revision Contributing Writer Other speakers include Tho- nuclear weapons and ignoring and discussion. Six prominent speakers in- InasL. Neff, a senior fellow at the their consequences have created Former Dean of Administration Larry Ladd formed the Task volved in the international politi- Massachusetts Institute of Tech- an even madder part of madness - I Force last suimer to examine options for dealing with a funding cal ‘and economic r‘mifications nology and

The Tufts Daily is a non-profit newspaper, published US airlift uses ‘Desert Storm’ rations to ionday through Friday during the academic year and dis- ibuted free to the Tufts community. The Daily is entirely udent-run; there are no paid editorial positions. The Daily printed at Charles River Publishing, Charlestown, MA. ‘Provide Hope’ for former Soviet states A The Daily is located at the back entrance of Curiis Hall al ---- ~ ufts University. Our phone number is (617) 627-3090. MOSCOW (AP)-- American soldiers on the icy tarmac. Officials said each C-5 carried enough usiness hours are 9:OO a.m. - 6:OO pm., Monday through handed over surplus food and medicine to Three of the huge C-5s, each carrying food for 100,000meals for poor or elderly iday, and 1:00 p.m. - 6:OO p.m. on Sunday. Subscriptionsare $25 fora full year. Ourmailing address baby-faced Russian troops in wool coats about 40 tons of food, flew Monday from Russians. :TheTuftsDaily,PostOfficeBox 18, Medfod MA02153. on Monday as a first wave of US planes the US air base in Rhein-Main, Germany, The airlift is part of an international lbscriptions are mailed in weekly packages. The policies of The Tufts Daily are established by a began an airlift to the struggling people of to Moscow and St. Petersburg in Russia relief effort agreed to at a 47-nation con- ajority of the editorial board. Editorials are established by the former Soviet Union. and to Kiev, the capital of Ukraine. ference in Washington last month. Planes rotating editorial board designated to represent a majority The $78 million airlift, called “Opera- Nine smaller C-141s flew from Rhein- from Germany, France, Italy and Japan editors. Editorials appear on this page, unsigned. Individ- 1 editors arenotnecessarily responsiblefor, or in agreement tion Provide Hope,” will deliver tons of Main and two bases in Turkey to the also flew in aid. th, the policies and editorials of The Tufts Daily. canned lasagna, dehydrated pork chops, capitals of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Other aid came over land. Five trucks The content of letters, advertisements. signed columns, apple pie filling and other B-rations -- rtwm and graphicsdoes not necessarily reflect the opinion Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, from Germany were delayed for three The Tufts Daily editorial board. much of it left over from the Persian Gulf Turkmenistan,Tajikistan and Moldova. days by customs officers who refused to Letters to the Editor Policy War. Contingents of military brass, govem- allow them to enter Chelyabinsk, in Rus- The Tufts Daily welcomes letters from the readers. The terspageis anopen forum for campus issues andcomments TheColdWarseemedadistantmemory ment officials and everyday people wel: sia, the Information Telegraph Agency of out the Daily’s coverage. as shyly smiling, teen-age Soviet recruits comed the flight to Kishinev, Moldova’s Russia-Tasssaid. Local authoritiesrelented Letters must include the writer’s name and a phone helpedunloadthe first of the supplies from capital. Women airport workers wheeled when the frustrateddriverssaidthey would mber where the writer can be reached. All letters must be rified with the writer before they can be published. the gaping belly of a green C-5 transport forklifts across the tarmac to unload the return to Germany. The deadline for letters ro be considered for publication plane at Moscow’s SheremetyevoAirport. supplies. Men got the pallets onto rickety “The Cold War is over, and now it is the following day’s issue is 400 p.m. “It’s a little shameful that my country Due to space limitations, letters should be no longerthan trucks. time for all to join in building a new 0 words. Anysubmissions over this length may be edited has come to this. But what can you do? “We are so grateful to America for peace,” Secretary of State James A. Baker the Daily to be consistent with the limit. Letters should be That’s life,” said Pvt. Andrei Chemyi, a this,” said one of the women workers, :ompanied by no more than eight signatures. see RUSSIA, page 10 The editors reserve the right to edit letters for clarity. 19-ye-ar-oldBelarussian recruit shivering Minorda Byrnaz. blication of letters is nor guaranteed, but subject to the icretion of the editors. -.-- Letters should be typed or printed from an IBM or IBM- Reitman will make statement soon ‘. -72 mpatible computer in letter-quality or near-letter+ality )de. Letters written on Macintosh computers should be LAWSUIT come true. If they didn’t start their rush make a statement regarding the sorority’s mght in on low density disks - files should be saved in continued from page 1 :xt-only” format, and disks should be brought in with a this spring, they would be wiped off the housing future. py of the letter. Disks cap be picked up in The Daily clined to comment on details of the litiga- books,” Flores said, referring to the fact Reitman was away from campus yes- siness office the following day. Letters should address the editor and not a particular tion of the suit, instead pointing to the last that most members of the suspended fra- terday and could not comment on the iividual. While letters can be critical of an individual’s two sentences of the joint statement as a ternity are seniors. “I don’t think the old settlement. tions, they should not attack someone’spersonality traits. reflection of the University’s attitude. IGCJ then understood that fact.” After being suspended,Theta Delta Chi The Daily will not accept anonymous letters or pen mes except in extreme circumstances if the Executive “Tufts fully supports the action taken Floresalso SaidThetaDeltaChi,whose lost its fraternity lodging license from the bard determines that there is a clear and present danger to by the IGC Judiciary,and believes that the alumnicorporationownstheirformerhouse city of Somerville because the chapter was :author. The Daily will not accept letters regarding the suspension has fulfilled the intended pur- verage of other publications, unless their coverage itself at 123 Packard Ave., would move back nolongerrecognizedby Tuftsasamember is become a newsworthy issue that has appeared in Thc pose of removing from Theta Delta Chi into the residence this September.Although of the Greek Council. Somerville zoning aily.TheDaily will accept letters ofthanks.ifspacepennits those responsible for the disciplinaryprob- A0Pi is currently housed at the residence, laws will only allow three people to live in it will not run letters whose sole purpose is to advertise ar rent. lems. Tufts further believes in the merits of Flores said members of the sorority have a house without a lodging license. When writers have group affiliations or hold titles o its position in the litigation with Theta been notified of Theta Delta Chi’s situa- sitionsrelatedto the topicoftheir letter,TheDaily willnoh Delta Chi,” the statement ended. tion. She said the sorority will receive new Senior Ed Rego, president of Theta atinitalics followingtheletter.Thisis toprovideadditiona formation to the readers and is not intended to detract fron James Cox, a lawyer with the Boston University housing, and that Associate Delta Chi, did not return phone messages e letter. firm of Mahoney, Hawkes and Goldings Deanof StudentsBruce Reitman will soon yesterday. Classifieds Information All Tufts students must submit classifieds in person who represented the fraternity, did not qaid with cash or check. All classifiedsmust be submittec return phone calls yesterday. Symposium attracts speakers I 3 p.m. the day before publication. Classifieds may also bc ThetaDeltaChi,in initiating its lawsuit qhtat the information booth at the Campus Center. A1 NUCLEAR 2 last May, also brought suit against six don’t lookat the fact that Haiti isno longer assifieds submitted by mail must be accompanied by continued from page 1 ieck. Classifieds may not be submitted over the phone. Tufts students who were either IGC offic- an agriculture-based economy. Haiti is Notices and Lost & Founds are free and mn onTuesday! Id Thursdays only. Notices are limited to two per week pe ers or IGCJ members at the time of the media gatekeepers thinking and writing now a big brown rock.” ganizatiori and mn space permitting. Notices must bc decision. But Michelle Flores, current IGC about national resources as a component EPIIC is a part of the Experimental riaen on Gaily forms and submitted in person. Notice vice president and chair of the IGCJ. said of national security.” College that combines a year-long aca- lMOt be usedto sell merchandise or advertise major events The Tufts Daily is not liable for any damages due t( the students had been represented by the In the context of current affairs, Ewald demic program with an international sym- pographical errors or misprintings except the cost of thc University lawyers and the lawsuit has added, “there’s growing interest in the posium during the spring semester. Former sertion. which is fully refundable. We reservethe right t( concept of environmental refugees. We EPIIC symposia focused on human rights fuse to print any classifieds which contain obscenity, are o been completely settled. 1 overtly sexual nature, or are used expressly to denigrate i Fraterntiy to return to house argue whether or not the Haitians are and US foreign policy, international ter- mon or group.. . “The objective of the sanctions has political or economic refugees, and we rorism and third-world militarization. Tuesday, February 11,1992 THE TUFI’S DAILY page three VIEWPOINTS The real cost Business and morality:

of education the wisdom of Salomon ’ by HAROLD S. BYUN facilities for African Americans by SCOTTY McLENNAN only characters who were repeat- known and shared in our grape- “You are educated.” There are were acceptable as long as they The following is the text of a edly described in the orally-trans- vine here. times when I think about educa- were equal --“separatebut equal.” Meditation delivered in Goddard mitted legends were the chief ex- Today, I’d like to try to apply tion and what it means to be edu- In 1954,the case, Brown v. Board Chapel. ecutive officers (CEOs).And the the same kind of analysis to a cated, to have a diploma or a of Education, Topeka, Kansas, Last fall I spoke at a “Medita- most useful way to analyze the “bad” company - that is, to a degree. I think about the fact that declared that separate facilities tions” service on my ethics re- legends seemed to be through tra- companywhose ethical shortcom- education is often referred to as an were inherently unequal and hence search during my sabbatical last ditional literary categoriesofplot, ings have been widely reported in equalizing force in America: it is abolished de jure segregation in year at Harvard Business School. character and theme. The plot de- the news for the last five or six an institution that opens doors to America. In the 1990s, almost a I explainedhow I conducted some veloped through periods of ten- months -the Wall Street invest- opportunities. What does this re- century after Plessy v. Ferguson, 40 interviews from top to bottom sion in the history of the company. ment banking fm of Salomon ally mean when the educational the public education system is in a Fortune 500 company with a In the process of resolution of the Brothers. As most of you prob- system is so inequitable itself? stillseparateandunequal. Inmost good reputation?which I can now tension -in each denouemenfin ably know, last August the fm After all, we are educated in a states in the US, local property name as the Polaroid Corporation the plot -the moral character of admitted to repeatedly violating system of apartheid, from kinder- taxes fund public schools. And as - to find out how Polaroid cre- the CEO was revealed and certain US Treasury auctionrules barring garten to graduate school. “Pull Malcolm X said, if you live in a ated and main- any dealer yourself up by your bootstraps, poor neighborhood. you go to a tained a positive in govern- boy! America is the land of free- poor school with poor teachers, ethical climate ment secu- dom and equality! Go get a good get a poor job, and then your kids within its organi- rities from education!?’But schools are seg- are poor too: it is a vicious cycle zation. My con- cornering regated in the land of equal oppor- of poverty. Considering this, it’s clusion: it wasn’t the market tunity. Yes, if the Tufts’ Trustees interesting to note that one of two explicit materi- by buying wanttoinvestinasystemofapart- children of color in the US is als like the code more than heid without disturbingmany con- currently growing up in poverty. of ethics or train- 35 percent sciences, invest in America, sec- The inherent inequalitiesof the ing materials for of a single ond to none -- and it’s not subject system are currently being dis- new employees issue of US to international sanctions either. cussed in the US legal system. that really treasury Education in the United States Approximately 12 states have counted. Instead, bonds. Its is hardly an “equal opportunity.” cases pending in their court sys- it was theoral tra- CEO of 13 It serves tomaintainthestatusquo tems that challenge the present dition - stories years, John and preserve the current social form of localized taxation which generally known Gu tfreund, hierarchy. Even with all those his- funds public schools. Acourt case and shared in the resigned tory-making Supreme Court de- in New Jersey decided in 1990 grapevine along witha cisions, segregated schools have that state-wide funding, instead through gossip... number of yet to be eradicated. In 1898, the of localized funding, should be stories that coa- other top Supreme Court case, Plessy v. used for public education (Toch, lesced into acon- managers. Ferguson, decided that separate Thomas, US News and World Re- sistent legend or Graphic by Chris CepotoslD Its largest port, 25 June 1990, pp. 58-9). myth gohg back a number of value-laden themes were gener- stockholder, billionaire Warren Harold S. Byun, a senior, is a Only two states have alternative years - that shaped the internal ated within the corporate culture. Buffett, took over as temporary member of People Organized for and more equitable forms of fund ethical climate. In that meditation last fall, I then CE0,vowing to“c1eanupthesins Knowledge and TuftsAsianiAsian distribution where local taxes are I was surprised to find that the went on to draw some tentative of the past.” (Wall St. Journal, 8/ American Society. He isalso work- pooled throughout the state, and conclusions about the ethical cli- 19/91, p. A4) irtg for a certificate in Peace and Scotty McLennan is the Univer- mate of Tufts, by analyzing sto- - see EDUCATION, page 12 Justice Studies. sity Chaplain. ‘ ries I believe to be commonly see page l5 New Hampshire undeserving of primary primacy New Hampshire- what’s up with that? NEW Hamp- usually well after the nomination has been sealed. Even if the end result is savings and improvement, if the shire, New HAMPshire,New HampSHIRE. Still doesn’t Key issues that are important nationwide are largely means is a tax, New Hampshire will pay no heed. matter. This state, known in college circles for cheap beer ignored in New Hampshire. The state’s violent crime rate The ascension of primaries -just 17 in 1968to about and non-deposit bottles, has been the site of one of the is one-sixth the national average, and the state is com- 40 in 1992 - has been accompanied by a new-found most competitive -- and longest -- democratic primaries prised of 0.6 percent blacks with a 98 percent white importance of the media in the nomination process. ever. Since the Democratic Midterm Conference in No- majority. Candidates who focus on urban issues are Televisionand print alike have turned primariesinto Soap vember, New Hamp- pushed aside; Jesse Jackson, the eventual runner-up in operas and the entire process into little more than a horse Eric Hirsch shire has race. Unfortunately, New been the Hampshire’s primacy allows it to Heart of the Matter solearena dominatethe pre-race hype. Some- of presi- thing must change. Surely the me- dential politics. This is akin to holding a dia will not initiate reform: they swim meet in the desert. But, under stipula- will support the system they have tion of state law, New Hampshire must have built. New Hampshire provides the first primary. In fact, when South Da- drama, news stories and, more im- kotascheduled its 1992primaryon the same portantly,thousands and thousands day, New Hampshire, with the Democratic of dollars in ad revenue -- Repub- / lican fringe candidate Jim Lenane /-- National Committee initially refusing to sanction the new date, moved its vote up to must pay a fortune to have his ads Feb. 18. First is essential? providing mo- air on Channel Four every week- mentum to early favorites and establishing day a 555 p.m. before the evening previously ignored candidates (Gary Hart news. Replacing New Hampshire in 1984 and Jimmy Carter in 1976 each as the first primary state would be startled frontrunners). So with its position a start. Granted, much of the atten- comes power and disproportionalnational tion from this year is extraordinary attention. as the equally annoying Iowa cau- With a Democratic voter rank of 48th in cuseshave been foregone as agive- the nation, New Hampshire last voted for a away to home state candidate Tom . Democrat for president in the 1964 general Harkin. Other states should not be election. The state‘s registration reveals a bullied by New Hampshire law. 39 to 29 percent Republican political affili- Larger. more influential and piv- ation versus a 23 to 33 percent disparity otal states must be prioritized. nationwide. A 20 percent swing. Yet. each Democratic candidate has spent so much A smaller time span should money flooding the airwaves and produc- Grmk by capomsm be established by the Democratic ing forests-worth of leaflets. that only Bill Clinton 1988 among the democratic presidential field, came in NationalCommittee. working inconcert withtheRepub- has the resources to continue campaigning without a fourth with a meager eight percent of the vote. licans. Rather than allowing the process to go from Feb. major influx of funds. A conservative state should not - 18 to June 2, a two or three month period must be have so much influence in the selection of a Democratic In New Hampshire, taxes are the issue. The state has mandated. This downscaling will require the candidates candidate. neither an income tax nor a sales tax. and candidates for to spend less time in the opening states as other contests Furthermore. New Hampshire is a completely atypi- stateofficehavetraditionally hadlittlechanceunless they will follow sooner. Daily polls and months of campaign- cal state in comparison with the rest of the country. A take “the pledge.” And the pledge is given to presidential ing in this irregular. small state must cease. Shots of minuscule0.45 percent of thenationalpopulationresides candidates as well. Vying forthe Republicanncd in 1988, candidates bowling or lecturing in abandoned mills are in the state. This is a state which causes candidates to Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole was impaled while regional; and the region is not representative - not disappear and sets the players and agenda for the rest of straddling the tax fence. This year, Bob Kerrey will likely representative in its selection or prioritization of issues. the campaign. California. with 11.97 percent of the be devoured by the no-tax candidates, as his national nor its sociological composition. Such large decisions population. is slated to go last with three other states, health care plan hinges on a new five percent payroll tax. should not be made by such a small, out-of-touchgroup.

, ~ - 1.1 * , 1 81 I , 1 1 .>$ I, .. page four THE TUFTS DAILY Tuesday, February 11,1992 I

ESSEX HEMPHILL BGack ~uycuGturuC activist undpoet

7:OO pm- 8:OO pm

Wednesday, ~e6mu7-y12 4:OO pm Wor&fiop on BCutzllriters in Cupen House TO'NGUES UNTIED Tuesday, February 11,1992 THE TUFTS DAILY page five I, ri Successful lobotomies would have 11 News Briefs 11 stopped Dahmer, says psychiatrist II From the Associated Press II MILWAUKEE (AP)--Jeffrey have stopped himself from kill- ,sexualdisorders, but stopped short Dahmer would not have killed ing. of saying Dahmer suffered from a Arafat says the peace process could again and again if his attempts to Dahmer was not having delu- mentalUnder disease. cross-examination Mon- lobotomize a victin and turn him sions when he drilled holes into collapse if US grants loans to Israel into azombie-like sex parmer had four of his victhns’ heads and day, he acknowledged that TUNIS, Tunisia (AP)-- PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat predicted succeeded,a prosecutionpsychia- poured boiling water or an acid Daluner’s disorder was so severe Monday that the Middle East peace process would collapse if the trist said Monday. solution into their brains in an that he suffered from a mental United States grants Israel loan guarantees to resettle Soviet Jewish “As far as his first choice, his attempt to turn them into sex disease. immigrants. real sexual interest was not in a slaves, Fosdal said. However, he said the disorder Arafat said the peace talks that opened last year in Madrid are corpse,”Dr. Frederick Fosdal tes- Fosdal said he believed that did not “cause the degree of im- “menaced with completecollapse” by US-Israelinegotiationsoverthe tified during cross-examination had one of the experiments pairment” needed to make loan guarantees. at Dahmer’s insanity trial. “He worked, Dahmer -- who has con- D‘ahmer unable to obey the law, Arafat made his comments to the Palestinian news agency WAFA was more interested in homo- fessed to 17 dismemberment Fosdal said. while marking the 50th month of the Palestinian uprising, or intefadeh, sexual intercourse with a live slayings -- never would have Boyle has maintained that against Israeli rule in the occupied territories. body.”. killed again. Dahmer ’scompulsion to have sex The Palestine Liberation Organization leader warned against “the A zombie sex slave “was a Fosdal told defense attorney with the dead was so strong that it pursuit of the colonization and the construction of new Jewish solution to his dilemma,” said Gerald Boyle he did not discuss drove him to kill. District Attor- settlements” in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. Fosdal, who maintained that the practical details of how ney E. Michael McCann has ar- Israel seeks $10 billion in loan guarantees to help settle hundreds Dahmer began the experiments Dahmer had planned to feed or gued that Dahmer killed to fulfill of thousands of Soviet Jewish immigrants. The PLO fears that the because he had grown tired of the care for a zombie.. his sexual desires, and could have money will be used to settle them in the occupied territories, making work involved in dismembering Fosdal said Dahmer suffered stopped if he had chosen to do so. it virtually impossible to establish a Palestinian state there. and disposing of his victims. from necrophilia, a sexual attrac- The trialentered its third week Israel sought the guarantees last fall, but President Bush suspended Fosdal said Dduner suffered a tion to corpses, but that the at- Monday. If a jury finds Dahmer consideration for four months to pressure the Jewish state into mental disease at the lime he killed tempts tocreate sex slaves showed sane,he wouldreceivealifeprison participating in the talks. The suspension expires this month. and dismembered 15young inales that Dahmer was not only at- sentence for each Milwaukee The PLO is not formally part of the peace talks, but is widely in Milwaukee County, but is not tracted to the dead. County slaying. If deemed in- recognized as controlling a Palestinian team negotiating in a joint legally insane because he knew Fosdal had testified Saturday sane, he would be sent toamental delegation with Jordan. his crimes were wrong and could that Dahmer suffered various institution. Rescuers believe that more survivors of the Eightpolice officers said to be fatal Club Med crash could have been saved KAFOUNTINE, Senegal (AP)-- Rescuers who helped victims from a chartered Club Med plane crash that killed 31 people said killed by Islamic fundamentalists Monday the survivalrate would have been higher if they had been able to telephone for help faster. ALGIERS, Algeria ( AP) -- Is- slum of Bab el-Oued at nightfall. cient quarter of the city with tiny, The American pilot and co-pilot and 26 French vacationers were lamic fundamentalistskilled eight The Salvation Front was on winding streetsandtightlypacked among those who died when the twin-engine plane qrashed in a police officers Monday -- six of the verge of winning control of houses that was a stronghold of mangrove swamp early Sunday at this West African seaside resort, them in an ambush in the Casbah, parliament last month in the sec- revolutionaries who battled the Senegalese officials said. Twenty-four survived. the ancient quarter of the capital ond round of Algeria’s first free French from 1954-62. Club Mediterranee,the Parisian resort company, had chartered the that was a haven for Algerian elections since independence Algerians who fought in Af- Convair 640 to carry tourists to Cap Skirring, 31 miles south of the revolutionaries in decades past. from France in 1962. ghanistan have been blamed for crash site. The assaults 6n police were But the military forced Presi- previous attacks on security One surviving Dassenger, Olivier Perret, told France’s RTL radio the most deadly since the military dent Chadli Bendjedid to resign forces.Fundamentalists said some - stat& the crasi bccurrh almost immediately after the pilot an- took power amonth ago and indi- after it became apparent he was Afghan war veterans have de- -c /- .nounced the plane was about to land. cated a hardening of the funda- planning to share power with the clared ajihad, or holy war, on the “It wascomplete hum‘an error.”Perret said.“He said we were going mentalists’ response to an esca- fundamentalists, and the new government. to land at Cap Skirring, and then we landed in the brush.” lating government crackdown. military-backed government The Salvation Front urged Al- Regional Gov. Mbagnick Ndiaye told Senegal state radio the pilot On Sunday, the government called off the elections. gerians to reject the government’s mistook lights in a hotel garden for the lights of his intended landing banned the Islamic Salvation In the latest violence, police emergency measures. It said a strip. Front, the nation’s largest politi- said six officers died Monday national protest march would be Two of the injured passengerswere flown back to Paris on Monday: cal party, and declared a state of when their cars were riddled with held Friday as planned. the others are to return Monday night. emergency giving authorities gunfire near a mosque. The at- “Don’t give up,” the front told The plane’s “black box” data recorders have been retrieved and are broadpowers tomake arrests, ban tackers. who police said had followers in a communique, urg- to be examined by crash experts. demonstrations and dissolve lo- fought alongside Muslim guerril- ing them to claim their political Club Med said it was the first crash of one of its chartered planes cal councils. las in the Afghan war, reportedly rights. “Rest assured. the Islamic since the company was fonncd in 1950. The actions followed a week took refuge in the Casbah after cause will emerge victorious ClubMedoperatesa350-bedvacationvillage incape Skirring,one of unrest that left more than 40 the predawn shootings. whatever the sacrifices,” it said. of I10 of its resorts worldwide. people dead and 300 injurcd. Two other officers were slain The capital was calm Monday, Monday by companiolls of a fun-’ The communique was signed Venezuela police prevent paper from publishing state radio reported, and schools, damentalist they were trying to by inTormation director businesses and government of- arrest in Bordj Menaiel, 40 miles Abderrazak Radjam, whose ar- CARACAS,Venezuela (AP) -- Federal police prevented a leading fices operated nonnally. Security east of the capital, police said. rest had been reported by state newspaper from publishing Monday after it persisted in printing forces withdrew froin many stra- One attacker was shot and killed radio. It was not known whether accounts that accuse the government of corruption, the newspaper’s tegic sites during the day. bur by police: the others escaped. he was in custody. Most of the publisher said. witnesses reported soldiers were A policeman also was killed Salvation Front’s other leaders Later Monday, President Carlos Andres Perez promised to lift the moving into the fundamentalist Saturday in the Casbah, an an- are in jail. rigid press restrictions imposed on Thursday, and police withdrew 00. - -1 from the El Nacional newspaper, which had been surrounded for about 12 hours. Buchanan addresses ministers; All Venezuelan papers were censored on Monday. No &tion has been taken against foreign correspondents. The government of Perez has been sensitive to what it perceives as Kerrey bashes other Democrats anti-government remarks in the aftermath of attempted military an said. coup on Feb. 4. It has increasingly censored news accounts of the BEDFORD. N.H. (AP)-- Re- his campaign is, on track despite He concentrated on the uprising, which left about 80 people dead and 1,130 soldiers arrested. publican Patrick Buchanan be- poor polling. moaned America’s “social and Kerrey’s campaign manager, economy in his visits to a diner The government has particularly beenupset by newsmediaquoting and East Coast Lumber. a com- citizens who supported the coup leaders. moral crisis” Monday to a gather- Paul Johnson, said fellow Demo- The coup leaders had blamed the governmentof this oil-rich nation ing of ministers, and said his battle cratic Sen. Tom Harkhi of Iowais pany that had 300 employeesdur- of 20 million people for economic problems and corruptionallegations against ethical decay would in- “not coming clean” with New ing the region’s constructionboom that had gone all the way to the top. clude nominating anti-abortion Hampshire voters on his voting of the mid 1980s and now em- federal judges. record on fast-track legislation. ploys 32. Buchanan also told the group Johnson said Harkin radio ads say “You can really feel the devas- Walesa: US shouldn’t help new nations so much he favors cutting back “people to Harkin opposes such legislation, tation. The squeezeends up being WARSAW, Poland (AP)-- President Lech Walesa said Monday governments” foreign aid to Is- but that Harkin voted five times very personal,” Kerrey said. “I that the West should do more for the new nations emerging from the rael and other nations, but not between 1979 and 1988 for fast- feel very strongly that the presi- former Soviet Union than it has done for Poland. “people to people” humanitarian track trade legislation. dent should have moved much “We counted too much on the West,” he said in an interview with aid that is “an American tradi- Kerrey, Harkin and former faster to get capital into the bank- The Associated Press. tion.“ CaliforniaGov.Jerry Brown have ing system of New England.” Walesa has mainly CriticizedEurope for alack of action. Last week, Buchanan and several Demo- been well behind in recent polls Clinton, meeting with about in a speech to the Council of Europe, he accused the West of “making cratic presidential contenders of New Hampshire voters, with half a dozen supporters in the good business” out of Poland’s revolution, while giving little back in roamed the state, seeking votes at Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton and living room of Phil and Ann terms of investment. the beginning of the final week fonner Massachusetts Sen. Paul Ackerman of Nashua, called for r On Monday he said those comments were meant only as ‘P before New Hampshire’s first-in- Tsongas well ahead. the government to take steps ’to warning” so that Western countries do not repeat the pattern in their the-nation primaries. Kerrey, campaigning in East protect families from foreclosing treatment of the former Soviet republics. That, he said, could bring a Democratic Sen. Bob Kerrey Hampstead. said he’s unworried on their homes. The Ackermans retreat. from democracy or even violence. of Nebraska Senator bashed other by his third- or fourth-place show- He also stressed that he had been addressing Europe. “We don’t see ROUNDUP, page 12 contenders in his primary and said ings. “We’re doing just fine,” he - have much to complain about” concerning the United States, he said. l?. . . . , . , .‘’-P. .

I page six THE TUFTS DAILY Tuesday, February 11,

The U.S. General Accounting Office estimates a cost of $200 billion to clean up the hazardous waste from the U.S. nuclear weapons complex over the next 150 years; that is equal to $3 million per each warhead that has ever been produced.

More than 346 billion gallons of contaminated liquid waste has been discharged directly into the soil at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation since the 1940s -- enough waste to cover the island of Manhattan 40 feet deep.

On its 871 domestic bases, the U.S. military has identified at least 14,401 toxic "hot spots"

The U.S. exploded 670 nuclear weapons and devices since 1963 on land claimed by the Western Shoshone Nation in Nevada.

9 The Chelyabinsk-40 site in Russia, part of the USSR's nuclear weapons industry, is considered to be 100 times more dangerous than Chernobyl. What have countries sacrificed for their security?

Program: Slide Presentation: Peter Goin, AuthorPhotographer, Nuclear Landscapes, an exploration of the disturbing aesthetic created by more than 700 nuclear explosions on American soil; Artist-in-Residence, Center for Documentary Studies, Duke University

Introduction by Alexandra Zsaievych, EPIIC Colloquium

A former orchard near the Hanford Nuclear Reservation The nuclear reactors at Hanrord

Panelists: Moderated by Christy Barnes, EPIIC Colloquium

Peter Johnson, Senior Associate, Office of Technology Assessment, U.S. Congress; he is the project director for the - OTA study "Complex Cleanup: The Environmental Legacy of Nuclear Weapons Pioduction"

Sonja Anderson, Senior Scientist, Hanford Nuclear Reservation, she has exposed a number of the environmental . and health problems associated with the plant since 1987

Seth Shulman, Author, The Threat at Home: The Toxic Legacy of the U.S.Military; Investigative Repoier

Keith Schneider, Energy and Environment Correspondent, The New York Times

Thomas L. Neff, Senior Fellow, Center for International Studies, MIX Author, The International Uranium Marker, in expert on weapons production, dismantling and disposal and on nuclear proliferation, he has just returned from a tour of Russia and the Ukraine

Katherine Yih, Coordinator, Commission to Investigate the Environmentaland Health Consequences of Nuclear Weapons Production, International Physicians to Prevent Nuclear War

Showing of the Nightline Chelyabinsk program -- the first time American producers were allowed in to this site

February 11,1992 8:00pm, Cabot Auditorium TUFTS

Sponsored by EPIIC Education for Public Inquiry and International Citizenship -- A Program of the Expefimental College, Tufts University - Tuesday, February 11,1992 THE TUmS DAILY page seven . FEATURES Outreach plans April Open House by JEFFREY GELLER and parents visited the campus est number in the program’s his- Daily Editorial Board over the three day period. A full tory. spent an evening as a guest The Student Outreach Pro- day of events consisting of pan- of a Tufts undergraduate. gram, a student-run organization els, class visits, campus tours, and According to the release. April under the Office of Undergradu- lunch in dining halls with under- Open House, now in its fifth year, ate Admissions. is currently prc- graduates have been planned by isjust one of the many programs paring for a busy semester. The the Student Outreach Program. that Student Outreach sponsors in Officc is presently gearing up for Accepted students also have the order to maintain increased com- the arrival of its largest spring opportunity to meet and speak municat ions bet ween undergradu- program, April Open House with students, faculty and admin- ates and applicants. Other pro- (AOH). istrators throughout the day. grams include letter writing to According to a press release, A highlight of April Open both high school juniors and se- the AOH is a series of three one- House is the Overnight Program, niors, home visits, in which Out- day extravaganzas occurring on occurringonApril 13,14,and 15, reach inembers sponsor informal April 14, 15. 16. On these days, in which accepted studcnts are receptions in their homes or visit Photo by Amynah Janmohamed the entire campus opens its doors hosted by students living in the their high schools, and the publi- Students who participated in TuftsAn-IWashington reflect upon to accepted prospective students residence halls the evening be- cation of Tufts Preview, a news- ‘theirexperiences. and their parents. fore their AOH day program. In paper with photographs and ar- In 1991, over 1300 students 1991,over 350 students, the larg- ticles by Tufts studentspublished specifi&lly for all Tifts appli- Tbfts-in-Washington: cants.

This year, Tufts Preview was a taste of the political sent to over 7,800 applicants, as was very impressed with thequal- well over 2,000 high schools in by MICHELE KRONER as Contributing Writer ity of the lectures. “We had a the United Statesandabroad.The If spending a semester study- really good cross sectionof speak- \ paper is written by students to ing and working as an intern in ers. The speakers made it a more give applicants an idea of what Washington D.C. sounds intrigu- colorful experience,” he said. issues and events Tufts students ing then Tufts-in-Washington There are a few specific re- find important. might be just the right program quirements for Tufts students, for you. Last Thursday night a however, who are taking part in The Student OutreachProgram group of interested students gath- this program. Every Tufts student is holding a general meeting to ered together to listen to Laura must do aresearchproject of about welcome new members on Fish, Eric Hirsch, Stephen Simon fifty to seventy typed pages. The Wednesday, February 12,at 5 p.m. and Aitnee Clark talk enthusiasti- proposal for this project is due 1 I in the Bendetson Hall Confer- cally about their experiences in along with the application on Dai/y fils photo ence Room. Each Tufts student Washington D.C. March 2, 1992. The reviewers of Tufts students mingle with high school seniors at last year’s April has the ability to help shape future The program is geared to the applications are looking for Open House. generations of Jumbos. people who have a solid back- projects that wouldbetter be done ground in political science, eco- in Washington than in Medford. nomics or international relations. All applications should be given Commitment is key infinding Having a good grade point aver- to Jim Glaser. It is strongly rec- age increases students chances of ommended that this research pro-

1- being accepted; however, it is not posal should not be taken lightly, -

-non -prof it work opportunities~ the deciding factor. The program since it makes a big difference to by ELAINE GERETY organizations?Whether we know ever new start-ups are opening is worth fair class units, which ’ have the topic fully developed Daily Staff Wnter it or not, they are located all over too.” transfer to Tufts along with the before the program actually be- Dennis Baylor, a representa- the nation. Hospitals, museums, In fact, there has been a 40 glr~des.Therearecurr~ntlytweiitygins. All four of the students who tive from the non-profit counsel- scientific researchers and of percent increase of non-profit slots opcn for either the fall or had already participated empha- ing organizationAccess, presented course fund-raisinggroups repre- start-upsthis yeardespitethe state spring term. Last year twenty- sized the fact that there is no time the opportunities of working in a sent many of the million non- of the economy. Baylor believes four studentsapplied ‘and thirteen at all to procrastinate,soknowing nonprofit organizationto aroom- profit enterprises in the country. prospectsof getting ajobarecom- pcople were accepted. the topic in advance takes off a ful of Tufts students on Wednes- Baylor asked students and other pletely realistic today. “In my While in Washington, Tufts great deal of the pressure. day. Baylor spoke about the dy- members of the audience why view, the single most important students stay in American Uni- The last part of the program is namics of employment in both ,they were interested in working part of getting a job is having a versity dormitories and are also the internship.Unlike theresearch non- ‘and for-profit sectors. His inanon-profitorganization. Many sense of who you are and what free to use all of the school’s paper topic, students are advised aim for the lecture was to involve people claimed that jobs offered you are, which is essentially per- facilities. They must pay Ameri- to wait until they arrive in Wash- the students in a question and in the non-profit sector were those sonal vision, mission and pur- can University housing and board ington before they decide which answer forum to test their own in which they the most interested. pose,” he said. and Tufts University tuition. Al- internship to select. It is best to knowledgeof what the non-profit People also said that they wanted Baylor also advised the group though the housing is separate wait for the huge internship ba- sector really is. a sense of community htcomes about several interview proce- from the main area of American zaar that takes place in Washing- “I like to be a facilitator rather with working for acause and shar- dures and resume tactics which University. there is a shuttle bus ton. than a lecturer,” he said, adding ing common values. would help them to get their foot that runs between the two cam- Students do, however, need a his belief that through such inter- Many for-profit organizations in the door. He also added that puses and all the way to resumeandcopiesoftheirtran- action true understanding of each do not share one common value skills in finance and marketing Washington‘s subway system,the scripts ready in advance. It is also sector can be attained. departmentsareespeciallyneeded metro. The dorms are generally advisable for students to send out - or goal and according to Baylor He addressed the crowd with working in the non-profit sector is and wanted in the non-profit sec- nice and the area is relatively three or four cover letters ahead the simp1equestionof‘‘Howmany very similar to that of the for- tor. Most importantly, however, safe. of time in order to get an idea non-profit organizations are out profit. Working conditionsinboth he said; was trust. According to There are four aspects of the whether or not they want to work there?” Answers ranging from sectors produce a high bum-out Baylor, “for people to hire you program including aseminar,lec- on Capitol Hill. The internships 200,000 to 500,000 were peeped rate for similar reasons concern- anywhere, they have to like you tures and speakers, an internship do not actually start for at least from the crowd, only to be cor- ing frusuation, low pay, and de- and trust you.” In others words, and a research paper. The pro- two to three weeks into the se- rected with the surprisingly large creased benefits. Starting‘salaries prosp’dtive interviewees should gram itself is not regimented. The mester, sothere is nothing to worry number of 1.7 million. in the non-profit sector begin be- show dshared vision and purpose professors are given a great deal about in adv‘ance.

In fact, non-profit organiza- tween 16-24 thousand dollars per with the company. of freedom to do what they please, The program has about four I tions produce 15 percent of the year compared to the 18-3Othou- Baylor closed his presentation which ,makes each class unique hundred students who come from grossdomestic profit inthc United sand found commonly among for- by answering the group’s ques- and interesting. Classes meet only diverse backgrounds,bothsocially States. Baylor continued, saying profit companies. Although for- tions about any component of the three days a week and there is no and economically. It has a very that there has been considerable profit employees make more non-profit sector andjob hunting. set schedule. In order to social aspect because people re- growth in the number of non- money, pay raises in both sectors He reinforced the idea that “it’s accotnd?te the various spc‘akers, ally want to make new friends. profit groups over the last few have decreased considerably. not necessarily the hours, and the the times of theclassesconstantly According to Laura Fish, “It’s years and that they are actually Students then questioned how pay, but thecommitmentyou have change. great to be in D.C. when you are growing more quickly than for- to get jobs in the non-profitsector going in there.” With the help of While participatingin this pro- a college student. The nightlife is profit businesses. Religious orga- withsuchaweakeconomy. Baylor Access publications and Tufts gram, Stephen Simon was a stu- incredible.”Thenew friendships nizations, however, are still the confirmed the problematic Career Planning Office, Baylor dent in the National Government along with the research and work most prominent non-profit orga- economy of the countrybut stated, restored hope and provided adoor- Seminar. His class consisted of experiences all go into creating nizations in the country today. “It’s rough out there, companies way to employment in the non- twenty to twenty-five students an unusual and exciting program What exactly are non-profit are going out of business; how- profit sector of today’s economy. fromallover the country. Stephen in the nation’s capital. Write FEATURES! Call Jeff or Stefanie at 627-3090. They’re really cute. Trust us. age eight THE TUFTS DAILY Tuesday, February lI,l9 Mrhat's cheaper than

I :...... ,.. . ' A. . _...... ,. ..

diamonds, lasts longer I...... than flowers and isn't as fattening as chocolate.?

Personals in the Daily, of course. Valentine's Day is fast approaching, and the Daily is printing a special color .- centerfold of personals on Valentine's Day You can buy them for $2.00 each, 2 for $3.00 or 3 for $5.00. Onsale in the Daily office in Curtis Hall and the Campus Center Info-Booth until 3:OO pm on Thursday, February 13, so buy some. k >- TaesdG,%FebruaryIt, I992 . THE TUFTS DAILY ’, -- page nhie ARTS

Theater tonight and will run The play involves a number of of the play to the fact that it “is a through Saturday. The show, di- charactertransforrnations,as“one huge production.” The cast was ‘ rected by Bruce Shapiro, is t e main characters goes from set early last- semester ‘and re- ing civilization to not liking - hearsals have been intense, so the .’: The-play includes the devas- production certainly merits the ng effects of World War I1 in big billing it has received. the moral dilemma of isolation its themes, with the war “increas- The Golden Age will open to- from civilization and contrasts it ing disgust with civilization,” night at 8:OO and closes Satur&?y withanaboriginal clan’s incorpo- Leach said. the 15th. Tickets are $3 tonight, ration into civilization. its haunt- $5 on Wednesday ‘and Thursday, ing.rommic.atid tragic storyline Damy Strauss, who plays an and $6 on the weekend. Aspecial rtvolvcs around the discovery of autistic child in the clan, com- V~en~ine’sDay party will follow a strange group of peop1e:‘ghosts mented on the outstanding design the performaice on Friday night. from the netherworld of an Aus- %. tralian childhood.” In the play. I Ayre, the maternal figure of a lost Ladysmith Black Mambazo brought their internationally known colonist expedition,confronts two a capella singing to a packed house at the Somerville Theater members of modem Australian Thursday night.The South Africangroup’ssetfeaturedselections sociely. demanding to return to from several of their albums, including 1986’s Skaka Zulu and civilization and preserve the dy- Paul Simon’s Graceland album. The group’s performance was ing remnants of her tribe. The especially powerful, considering that one of its members was strength and endurance of this mysteriously killed by a security guard in South Africa several mother’s love for her lamily is weeks ago. Their combination of song, dance and humor made for also highlighted. an unforgettable performance. “Too often great works of drama are overlooked because they are hidden like gems in the ‘JFK’ puts assassination cultural lode of a foreign coun- try,” Shapiro said. The play was buffs back in spotlight first performed in Melbourne in 1985 and is considered part of WASHINGTON -- Don’t good to Weisberg. It’s meant more (AP) what critics have called a “New call them conspiracy theorists. mail more book orders. and Wave” of theatrical artistry in Assassination buffs? That’s even But Weisberg ha5 few kind Australia. Shapiro called the play worse. They’re the legion of crit- words for the film maker, saying “an Australian myth of epic gran- ics who seek an answer to one his - work“misled”and“deceived” dcuranduniversalenchantment.” question: Who killed John F. people. Kennedy? The reaction to Stone’s movie Elizabeth Mutton, who plays Some think they know; others caught some by surprise. aren’t so sure. But they all agree “Irony is what it’s all about,” both Elizabeth and an Angel, de- it wasn‘t Lee Harvey Oswald saysGaetonFonziofMiami,who scribes the central theme of the alone. investigated the assassination for play by explaining the differences Most have labored in obscu- two congressional panels in the between her conflicting charac- rily. Now they’re back, thanks to 1970s. “A work of fiction is fi- ters. the movie JFK. nally getting Americans to focus “Elizabeth is asymbol of soci- They don‘t like to be grouped on what the facts are.” ety and culture.” Mutton said. together this way. In fact, back- Fonzi theorizes that elements ”and the Angel is the opposite of biting is rampcant among the crit- of the CIA, working with orga- that, the true Australian culture.” ics of the Warren Commission. nized crime ‘and anti-Caslro Cu- A major theme of the play con- “Honestly, I like most of these bans. arranged the assassination, cerns the “conflict between these guys. but a lot of them just con- inpartbecauseofaCIAantipathy two cultures... ‘and is intended to template their navels; they don’t of Kennedy. make the audience question our do the real research,” says author Notre Dame law professor G. society and what really is the Harold Weisberg. Robert Blakey was chief counsel ‘high culture.’ The question is “I disagree with conspiracy in the Housc Assassination Com- whether ‘The Golden Age’ was of Romcan and Greek society and theorizing a1 t og ether, ” sav s mi ttee Drobe into Kennedv’s death Weisberg,whohas taken the g&- andknbws the killing can-become errunent to court repeatedly to an obsession.

/ gain access to assassinationdocu- He believes circumstantial ‘Medicine Man’ debuts in first Lents. “There aren‘t any leads to evidence points to reputed Mafia follow because the govemnent figure Carlos Marcello, who had Place as ‘Cradle’ falls to Seton d never investigated the crime.” ties to several people who were in His 1965book Whitewashwas colitactwithOswaldinthernonths Los ANGELES CAP) -- Tht, psychia&t with more problems. seyenth with $2.5 million. the first to chdleage the Warren beforethe killing. Those people search for a cancer cure in the. ;+ad hispatients,debutedtamqd- *Ttieamazing and entrancing Coinmission’sconclusion that Lee inkl@ded:a man whb worlied’for- Am‘&mnfouddbox-officegoldag- era@ business, pulling in ’$6.4 &&ked classic Beauty and the Harvey Oswald acted alone. Marcello, David Ferrie. Medicine Man debuted in first million for third place. Beast took in $2.309 million for Weisberg published& himself. ied Green Tomatoes, the eighth place. (A!&a!though the ’ Tlre public siiaprpf yp‘ 3C),oOO . b swaftwogeneratic&sof ’ms.ic is absolutely tenific, earn- i copies. He‘s writ%$ five %nip, em: &&en, sontiaueii -40 hg the Gdldein GlobeAwards this since then. rest, play strongly, claiming fourth year for best score and best song The movie’s thesis is that ele- nized crime. Medicine Man earned $8,5 mil-- place on e 6.2mjllion. (“Beauty and the Beast”), it still m$nts of the Pentagon m‘d the $- ‘Tojbelievetlp-e2w$s acp-. 4k3p i @tial XpkeFd $f re Its&p>o da@j& jsn’tm gpod asthe music in The

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provides a prime’ example 3 of education’s inequality. During the down” economic 1989-90 school year, Princeton dlocated$8,346per student while ready so high and continues to closure. est and ugliest scar across the face- othels, leaving defense and hu- taxing 67 cents for every $100 of skyrocket? D~Sit make educa- “The Embrys “are only ode of a of America the beautiful,” and mnitarian aid, he said. assessed property (a property tax tionmore accessible?Ithi& about great, many families in New said he ‘would -nbminate Strk The ministen reacted gener- of 0.67 percent). On the other students that are participating in Hampshirewho have beenforced constructionist federal judges ally with approval.. hand, Camden allocated $4,186 hunger suikes to protest tuition out of their homes by arrogant whose rulings would reflect the “In the Christian community, per student while taking $1.62 for increasesatUC schools;andabout and excessive federal banking belief that access to legal abor- there‘s been a tendency to almost every $100 of assessed property 1,000 Yale students and workers regulations,” Buchanan said. tions is not guaranteed by the give support toIsraelunchecked,” (a tax of 1.62 percent). These that went on strike toprotest bud- “Theyateonlyoneofmanywhose Constitution. said Tom Clark. pastor of the Tri- facts reveal that localized prop- get cuts in November. Then I loss and suffering has-made Askedbyasupportertoclarify City Covenant Church in George Bush’s FDIC (Federal his position on relations with Is- Somersworth. “That’s a poor erty taxes work regressively. realize that these strupglesareforuu People with iess money are pay- eaualitv in uneaual America. Deposit Insurance Corp.) the big- raec Buchanan said he has sup- policy.” ing a higher tax and in turn are They challenge thiuniversity as receiving less funding for their an institution. So when I think THE MEN WHO THE TUSKEGEE public schools. The above differ- about the cost of education, I can CHANGED A NATION ence translates into a budgetary say, “I am educated, I attended a AIRMEN gap of $104,OOO for each class- well financed suburban public room with 25 students. In addi- school to get here, and now I pay tion, the 28 poorest districts in $24.000 a year for my educa- New Jersey educate one-fourth of tion,”but Istill wonder: is thereal the students and 71 percent of the cost of education something state’s students of color -- sepa- much, much more? rate and unequal. Inequity in the public schools leads to unequal accessibility to higher education, too. Inferior schooling and an extremely high tuition work to deny studenls of color and lower income students access to universities. This begs the question of what being “edu- cated“ is really about. According WEDNESDAY to the Higher Education Research 7:OO Institute at UCLA, 73.7 percent FEBRUARY 12,1992 AT P.M. of this year’s fiist-year college IRELOCATED TO BENDETSON HALL 1 students consider “being very well-off financially an essential A reception and autograph session to follow. or very important objective”; 67 The books: The Tuskegee Airmen and Lonely Eagles will be on sale during percent felt that “becoming an the reception/ autograph session. authority in their own field“ was CO-SPONSORED BY: very important. Having these ob- NATIONAL SOCIETY OF BLACK ENGINEERS jectives is not necessarily wrong. I AFRICAN AMERICAN CENTER

i- , . Sponsored by the Residence Hall Association. Attention Women Students, Faculty and Staff... Alex Haley,- author, dies at age 70 KNOXVILLE,Tenn. (AP)-- ing his ancestors back toa village searching for a house in TennesJ Alex Haley drew his gift of .in West Africainthe 18thcentury. see. John Rice Irwin, aneighbor- Safer Sex storytellingfromthevoicesofhis The book, which won him a ing farmer and friend who ac- youth. and the echoes from the Pulitzer Prize in 1977 and made * compaHiedhim,saidHaleylodred family porch in western Tennes- him rich, wascredited with sensi- at a mansion with “each room see stayed with him all his life. tizing many Americans to the more lavish than the last” and a Workshop honors endured by their black dining room “covered in gold.” -His talent._ made. .- him we&y. famous and much-loved. compatriots under slavery: It also Whether a boyhood friend, a createdawaveof interest ingene- Bythatpoint,Haley waslaugh- for Women! neighboring fanner. the literary alogy among people of all races. mg. elite or powerful politicians. all “One of my friends said wbt remcmbered Haley as an author Alex Haley did is the black man’s ”I was just thinking what my Wednesday, February 12 whose works gave a wider under- equivalentof puttingamanon the grandmother would say,” Irwin 5:OO & 8:OO pm standing of what it meant to be . moon.“ said Charles Johnson, walled him saying. “She’d say, black in America. He died Mon- whose novel “Middle Passage” ‘son, has you done lost all your Terrace Room, Paige Hall dav in Seattle, at age 70. detailed the gruesome voyage of mind?.”’ His childhood tnemories in- a slave ship. fluenced Haley to write “Roots: The voices came back to Haley “He said he knew then he Lisa Blake - H IV/AIDS Education Coordinator couldn‘t buy that place,” Irwin for the New England Hemophilia Association The Saga of an American Fm- in small ways, too. ilv.“ the seminal chronicle trac- In the mid-l980s, he went said. Vikki Segovia - HIV Educator 81 Outreach Coordinator for the Multi-Cultural AIDS Coalition

Featuring answers to your questions: *What is HIV? How can I stay healthy? *How can I get my partner to use safer sex? *I’ve heard that oral sex is safe. Is that true? *I don’t know anyone with AIDS like me, am I still at risk? *Women and AIDS - what are the signs?

Plus free safer sex packets for women, including condoms, lubricant and instructions!

This workshop has been designed to address the needs of diverse communities of women. Whether you are staff or student; white woman or woman of color; gay, straight or bisexual woman, this workshop is for you.

Co-sponsored by: TLGBC, African American Center, Pan African Alliance, LCS, Dean of Students Office, Health Education Program, Tufts Sex Talk, Women’s Collective, Office of Women’s Programs, Experimental College.

/.----- Questions? Call Sharon at 623-2151. RAL-LY

MEET - Gov. Bill Clinton Democratic Presidential Candidate

Tuesday, February 11,1992 5:15 p.m. m Parker House Ballroom Corner of Tremont Wednesday, February 12 & School St.- Boston

Clinton For President Campaign 5:OO pm 8 Beacon St., Boston MA, 02108, (617) 742-9292 Bendetson Hall Paid for by the Clinton for President Committee Contributions to the Clinton for President Committee are not tax deductible. Organizational Meeting: All Welcome! -” ~ 7,.-- 2 a- * r‘; I - ”=- - page fourteen . THE TUFTS DAILY Tuesday, February 11,1992 Record books possible for freshman DEBUTANTE Still akkd ten more Points while average, and 14 rebounds per Beach will finish her career as a be a mn at Paula Moss’ ten-year continued rtom page 11 ~mingamuchlargerPreSence game. While it is Beach’s first grand dame of the Tufts basket- old record for career rebounds. the Wheaton game. on*fe~andofftheglass.Beach such honor, it will definitely not ball world. After LaCroix and However, both of those marks During those five starts before started the 18-4 run that put the be her last. Milardo graduate, Beach will areavery long way downtheroad the Gordon gameyBeach has cer- game away withanexcellent Pass If the first 14 games of acareer likely become the team’s go-to for the freshmanwhohas just had MYresponded to the opprtu- toLaCroix as Beach was heading can Sene as a guide for its final player and could finish with over an extremely nity she has been given. Since out of bounds on arebound- she numbers, then the debutante mints. Alsomssiblecould out party. moving into the starting lineup, also added four mints, six re- she h-averaged 17.2 points id bounds, three assists, and two 11.3 rebounds and has shot 64.1 steals over the ten-minute run. Worried about getting percent from the floor. Overall Moreover,although Beach played for the season, she’s has moved all 20 minutes of the second half, up to second on the team with a she never picked up her fourth a job afZer graduation? 13.6 scoring average, first with foul, despite having three at half- Interested in finding out information about a guaranteed and 9.4 rebounds, first among starters time. with 58.5 percent shooting and rewarding job that provides a high level of responsibility? fourth in minutes played behind “Today I was just in the right hi-captains Milardo, LaCroix,and spot at the right time.” Beach Freshmen and Sophomores: Kim Kelley. said. “The guards were excellent *Come check out the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps. at getting the ball inside to me in .FREE answers to your questions on benefits and commitments, However, compared to the post, and after that it was Saturday’s game, the season’s 13 pretty easy.” . and REFRESHMENTS. previous games were just warm- Come join the fun during the Military Knowledge Challenge, a ups. Onrepeatedoccasions,Beach Especially impressive about combination of athletics and military trivia, at 4:OO pm on made plays and threw passes that Beach’s performance was how Wednesday, February 12 on Briggs Field at MIT. one would have only expected she kept her poise in a very physi- from a senior. Right from tip off, cal but loosely called basketball Beach was involved in the Jumbo game. On many occasions she Contacts: Cadet Sarah Houle 629-8758 offense. The freshman scored was hit, elbowed, or even pushed seven of the team’s first nine to the floor, but she remained cool For info: Capt. Charles Danley 253-4475 points, and added four more dur- and was not thrown off of her - -- -- .~ - ing a 12-2 run. game. “She did a real good job of Despite early foul trouble in keeping her emotions in check Gay-andLesbian the very physical game, Beach where there was a lot of stuff returned from the bench when the underneath that was not called,” score was 38-37 in favor of Tufts, Dawley said. “She had twice the Faculty G Staff scoring the team’s last six points amount of poise she had last week before halftime. When the teams in Thursday’s game.” went into the locker room at the Beach added, “There was a lot Please join us for any or all of our spring meetings: half, Gordon’s coach must have ’ of physical stuff underneath, but I been shaking her head, trying to like it that way.” figure out how to stop number 42. For her play in last week’s Tuesday, February 25 - 1:00 pm Beach already had 19 points and three games -- against Gordon, Room 218, Campus Center seven rebounds. PineManor,andEasternNazarene -- Beach was named to the East- Monday, March 9 - 12:OO noon Although her scoring tailed off em College Athletic Conference during the second half, Beach Honor Roll with a 17.7 scoring Room 207, Campus Center Tuesday, March 31 - 1:00 pm

/- ~ Community Room 218, Campus Center //-- Tuesday, April 21 --EO0pm- Health Program Room 218, Campus Center Monday, May 11 - 12:OO pm Open House Room 207, Campus Center Monday, February 10 We look forward to seeing you there! 11:45 am - 12:45 pm - Tuesday, February 11 4:OO - 5:OO pm - -.i- Freshmen and Sophomores: Are you interested THE SWEDISH PROGRRM Il in a career in the health field? Then add the STOCKHOLM UNIVERSITY Community Health Program to your major. Y --

Study abroad,$ Stockholm, ‘ Scan‘ainavian liter ? Think about: .Exciting internships - work in a community on Svt.eden with The Swedish public policy, history of the a health-related problem of your choice. Program at Stockholm .Viings, politics, health .Flexible and innovative curriculum - as technical . UniversiQ. cake I Live with a or historical or humanistic as you like. I Instruction is iq Swedish family in a .Supportive environment and small classes. or .Increased job opportunities upon graduation. English. I Coursq university: dQrmitory. offerings ,are diverse, I Whessthe .. Meet program students, faculty and staff, for example: women dramatic changes and refieshments, too! and equality, environmental reshaping Europe on our II

‘2 studies, international excursions to Berlin and For additional information or for an relations, Budapest. application, please call or come by our office. Application deadline is February 19,1992.

Community Health Program I February 12,1992 3r30 P.M. Eaton Hall 201 112 Packard Ave. If you are unable to attend this meeting, please contact your Study Abroad Advisor or call The Swedish office at College: 859-4404 627-3233 Program Hamilton (315) Tuesday, February 11,1992 THE TUFE DAILY page fifteen Business ethics and corporate lore ETHICS fully self-deluded.” (Michael industry, in careful mentoring Of Salomon Brothers, by creating enrich themselves and the firm continued from page 15 Lewis,“ALiar’s Obituary,”8/21/ trainees with the expectation of new mortgage-backedsecurities, unfairly, they acted within a script This is a company that histori- 92) My claim is that his self- loyalty in return for long term provided a great service to its that had already largely been writ- cally had a reputation of great delusion turned largely on his employment and advancement bank customers. It helped to prop ten for them by the legend. Then, integrity. (Michael Lewis, Liar’s being caught up in the official based on merit in the firm, and up the failing savings and loan to make things worse, when John Poker, p. 151) How could legal party-line story about his firm, dedication to the firm.” (viii, x, industry in the early 1980’s(Chap. Gutfreundandhisnexttwosenior and moral violationsof this scope rather than putting his ear to the 170,195,197-199). IX). Thrift institutions could sell managers were informed of ille- occur? I believe it’s got alot to do ground to understand the opera- Ex-employee Michael Lewis, off their low-interest mortgages gal bidding activity by the man- with the contrast between what tive oral tradition. in his best-selling 1989 book on ina time of high interest rates, and aging directorof governmentbond was taught explicitly within the When the company celebrated Salomon Brothers, entitledliar’s instead purchase highly liquid trading in-Aprilof 1991, they did company, for example inits train- its 75th anniversary in 1985, it Poker, states that the firm without mortgage-based securities for nothing and didn’t reveal their ing materials, and the oral legend published a book called Salomon a doubt had the best training pro- their portfolios. (182) However. knowledge until 4 months later, that circulated in its grapevine. Brothers: Advance to Leadership. gram and written training materi- the oral tradition shows savings after SEC and Justice Department To some extent, this could have This was its official history and it als on Wall Street. Then he goes and lo‘an presidents as Salomon’s investigations were well under- been simply a matter of hypoc- began to be used as a basis for on: “But the materials were the naive fools tolerating huge profit way. (WSJ, 8/19/91, p. A4) risy, of consciousdisinformation, training programs for new em- least significantaspect ofourtrain- margins t‘aken by Salomon broth- How should Warren Buffett as public relations smoke screening, ployees. (Lewis, Liar’s Poker, p. ing. The relevant bits, the ones I ers on sales of mortgage bonds. the new CEO clean all of this up? and spin control, with actions ul- 159) It quotes John Gutfreund’s would recall two years later, were They were new to this high-pow- How can he rewrite the legend? timately speaking louder than remarks to the 1985 managing the war stories, the passing on of ered world, under pressure, and My research suggests only in two words. But there was also some- directors meeting in part as fol- the oral tradition of Salomon didn‘tknow any better. (105,114) ways: Either by getting his ear thing muchdeeper going on, which lows: “Tonight we can all look Brothers.” The book largely de- So much for dedication to the close to the ground and seeing if had to do with top management back on our 75 years of achieve- scribes that oral tradition, which customer ahead of dedication to there are any positive readings of telling itself the wrong story -of ment and the contributionsof the he learned through the grapevine the firm. legend incidents now existing in . its being out of touch with the people of Salomon Brothers to as a trainee and a young bonds By 1985 Gutfreund was using the grapevine accounts that he legend its employees told each the social and financial well-be- salesman with the firm for three the national press openly to criti- can stress and build on: or, by other in the grapevine. This is the ing of the communities, institu- years. cize the younger generation of exercising dramatic new leader- story that really drove the culture tions and governments who are I’m going toassume the accu- employees at Salomon in their ship during this period of crisis, and shaped its ethical climate, our clients. The principles that racy of his recounting of the oral 20s as disloyal and greedy, de- so that a fresh and quite different and top management wasn’t hear- were set forth by Arthur Salomon tradition here for my analysis, in manding higher pay or leaving chapter in the legend can be writ- ing it. 75 years ago are worth repeat- the absence of my being able to do Salomon for the highest bidder ten about him in the grapevine. There are some who claim that ing ... ‘I am certain that no person the kind of extensive interview- elsewhere once they had been What won’t work ismore official John Gutfreund was a bad man -- can succeed in Wall Street who is ing I did at Polaroid. It then be- trained. Yet the oral tradition pre- history writing, Also, he‘ll need directly knowledgeable and en- not a worker and who does not comes very instructiveto see how sented Gutfreund as hypocritical to respect the power of the leg- couraging of. and responsible for, value his integrity above all the official story from the 1985 becausehe paid himself more than end. A new chapter can be writ- criminal acts of the firm. If so, the things.’” (201) The book claims anniversary book compares with any CEO on Wall Street and had ten, and positive readings of pre- moral amlysis is rather easy. But that what makes Salomon Broth- Lewis’ reporting of the legend in already made a $40 million per- vious chapters can be stressed, I’m not at all convinced. I think ers unique is “a thread of continu- the grapevine. sonal fortune by selling Salomon but the negative readings of the it’s much more accurate and use- ity... a singular character in the For example, the official story to the commodities trading firm, earlier chapters cannot be easily ful to assume that he genuinely way that it goes about its business tells of Salomon’s pioneering in Phillips, earlier in the 1980’s. excised. At best they will fade thought he was acting with integ- and in the way it deals with its the creation of mortgage-backed ( 127) He also had married a slowly. There is no instant salva- rity throughout his tenure asCEO. own people and with its custom- securities in the late 1970s, an woman twenty years his junior tion or quick fix in the face of oral I’m going to assume he would ers.” (vii-viii) effort headed up by one Robert with burning social ambition who tradition. have appreciated advice on how The Salomon way, as described Dall. (Chap. IX) It then explains threw lavish parties and invited to maintain a positive ethical cli- in the book, includes the commit- thatRobertDal1steppeddown for gossip columnists. As Michael Actually, it seems that Mr. mate at Salomon Brothers. As one ment that “the firm’s pledge al- reasons of health in 1983, and Lewis explained, “it was impos- Buffett is doing a pretty good job commentator put it in an op-ed ways be honored at all costs.” It John Gutfreund selected a Lewis siblc in our company for some of of creating a new chapter of the article in the Wall Street Journal: includes “greater teamwork than Ranieri to succeedhim. (182) The this indulgcnccand posturing not legend. He’s taken action in re- ---“He was less cynical than Care- is encountered elsewhere in the oral tradition, as reported by to trickle down.” (48) moving a number of other top MichaeI Lewis, however, has The official story‘s stress on officials who knew or had reason Gutfreund helping Dall to select tcamworkandon loyalty in return to know of the illegal activity. utility bond trader Ranieri to join for long tenn employment was He’s made it clear that any action him in the mortgage department. also undercut in the oral tradition by employees even approaching American (90) Dall was then squeezed out by the story of suintnary dismissal impropriety will not be tolerated. by the loose, loudmouthed and of 500 employees, consisting of He’s said, “Anything not only on Red Cross brashRanierijust months after he the entire municipal bond and the line but near the line will be had hired him. (92, 94) Dall is moncy market departments, in called out. He is “coming clean in + 1987. (232)There was no attempt reported to have said, “Gutfreund an aggressive way” to the regula- STANDARD FIRST AID never told me that I’d be replaced to move even the most meritori- tors. (WSJ8/19/91 pp.Al,A4)He by LewieRanieri. I was left hang- ous employees into, other posi- understands how important his ing there, and it must have taken tions in the firm. Any remaining own example is, and he has “a me six months to figure out it covenant between employee and homey, guileless persona (which) Standard First Aid wasn’t my deal anymore.” (94) firm was finally broken. (233) It fills a.public yearning for integ- Then Dall left Salomon to work is my opinion that by the time of rity.” (WSJ 11/8/92 p. Al) The Course first for Morgan Stanley and then the illegal market cornering ac- Wall Street Journal in November later for Drexel Burnham. tivities with Treasury bonds last reported that “he has so changed This course includes cardiopulmonary The official history explains year, the ethical climate of public perceptions of Salomon resuscitation’ for adults, as well as techniques that Ranieri was appointed to the Salomon had been shaped by a that it has gone from being Wall required to provide immediate first aid Executive Committee in 1984, legend of lies, greed and disloy- Street’s bad boy to being almost . with Salomon being one of the alty to customers and employees. its choir boy.” (Ibid., p. A6) &care for- injury or sudden illness. few Wall Street firms that pro- This was the legend within Successful completion of the course will moted people on merit alone and which Salomon employees were Legends canbe re-written, but provide American Red Cross Certification not on their heritage. (183, 196) really living. Mr. Gutfreund and only with a knowledge of their in Adult CPR and Standard First Aid. Yet, the oral tradition relates that other topmanagersmaystill have power, their specific content, and three years later he was fired by been living in the official story of the role of plot, character, and Gutfreund, who gave him three integrity, service, and loyalty. theme. Very little of that can be Dates: Wednesday, February 19 reasons that Ranieri and others They may have had a very differ- had from the inside of a corporate from 4:OO - 9:OO pm found absurd: no one liked him, entandquitc favorablereadingof board room. It happens around hehadbecomeadisruptive force, every historical fact reported in watercoolers,cafeterias,andcom- Friday, February 21 andhe had become too big for the legend. Yet, when Saloinon pany hall ways where leaders need from 12:OO - 5:OO pm Sdoinon. 048) traders had the opportunityto cir- tohave theireyes andearsopenas The official story tells of how cumvent Treasury regulations to they make new history. Location: 26 Winthrop St., Room I Class Size: Minimum 8, maximum 14 Could Tyson have been greater than Ali? Registration: In person only; DISAPPOINTMENT not the smartest thing to do, it tized. $20 materials fee continued from page 11 does not qualify as sexual con- So now Tyson stands where he Pageant were reprehensible. sent, as Tyson’s high-paid, high- once did. For allegedly raping the Deadline: Friday, February 14 Throughouthistime there hemade power, high-profileattorneys have girl in Indiana, he faces 60 years unwanted sexual advances by argued. Simply put, Tyson took in jail. No more will people argue making lewd comments and advantage of a naive, innocent whether or not he was the greatest Note: This is a two-part course. pinching contestants. However, girl who was awestruck by his heavyweightboxereveThey will these disgusting actions, while being a celebrity. all agree that he was almost a Both sessions are required. they shouldhave served as a warn- Meanwhile,therearemany who great boxer and that he had the ing to Tyson’s accuser of what he have tried to portray Tyson as the talent to do so much more. might do, do not justify what he victim in this trial. Much of the TUm HEAUH EDUCATlON PROGRAM (allegedly) did to her that night. African Americancommunity has Because Mike’Qson could not HEAUH BWELINESS 2bWllWHROPSTREET 391-0720 While going out at 1:30 in the closed ranks behind Tyson, ignor- keep control of himself, he will morning to meet a man who had ing the fact that his accuser is one always be considered the biggest earlier been a walking hormone is of their own and deeply trauma- disappointmentin boxing history. page sixteen THE TUFTS DAILY Tuesday, February 11,1992 Once-secret police files flesh out Nazi history in Argentina BUENOS AIRES, Argentina Seventeen, years later, covered five Nazis -- Mengele, has not found it. when the Central Bank, the For- (AP)-- Legend has it that the’ Roschmann slippedover thebor-. Roschmann, Kutschmann, The police files raise as‘wellas eign and Interior ministries, the Nazis who fled here after World dertoParaguay toevadeanarrest Schwammberger and Martin answer questions. There was an Immigration Department and War I1 arrived with plenty of cash wmant. Hediedtherethree weeks Bormann, Hitler’s No. 2. order to arrest Mengele in July other agencies turn over their files and moved about freely because later of a heart attack, though There were even two files on 1961. It’s unclear whether it was to the National Archives, as re- the government sheltered them there was speculation hehadbeen Bormann, even though he prob- carried out: and if not, why not. quired by decree last week. and Argentines didn’t know or poisoned. Roschmann was an SS ably died in Berlin in 1945 and Kutschmann applied for a po- Samuels wants to track fman- didn‘t care. captain accused of killing tens of never set foot inkgentha. News licecerfificateofgoodconductso cial flows in the hope of finding A different picture emerged thousands of Jews at labor camps accounts had him hiding out as a he could travel to the United Nazi wealth in numbered bank Monday when decades-old Fed- in Latvia. priest in Bolivia, living in a re- States. It’s unclear whether he accounts in Switzerland. He also eral Police files were opened to Kutschmann, wanted in con- motesectionofColombianjungle, went. presented a list of 21 Nazis who the public for the first time at the nection with the deaths of 1,500 and laking his ease in Argentina Significant infonnation might apparentlyenteredkgentina, dis- National Archives. Jews at a concentration camp in after paying $200millionforasy- be disclosed in corning weeks appeared and may still be alive. They showed how Josef Poland, spent his last months in lum. Mengele, Eduard Roschmann, an Argentine jail and hospital, “I did not see anything new.” Kutschmannandothersof fighting extradition to Germany. Nazi hunter Shimon Samuels, di- Theorists in demand similar notoriety sneaked past Hedied in August 1986. Thenext rector of the Paris office of the JFK. “My wife has, many times,” immigration officials using false year, Schwammberger. 78. was Simon Wiesenthal Center, said continued from page 9 laughs Lesar, a bespectacled, names or passports. Some held arrested. Theconcentration camp last week after he was given spe- hind he assassination, trying to rumpled man with a professorial ordinary jobs: Kutschmann ap- commander was extradited in cial access to the files. protecthimself from CIA attempts air. His low-rent office behind parently drove a cab at one poinl. 1990 and now is on trial in The files present ody murky on his own life. FBI headquarters is stacked with Josef Schwammberger toiled at a Stuttgart.Germany,forthedeaths portraits of the men who ran the In22years,lawyerJarnesLesar hundreds of books on what hap- petrochemical plant. . of more than 3.400 people in Po- Third Reich or carried out its has gained access to more than penedinDallasonNov. 22,1963. - While not pursued for years, land during World War 11. orders. There is little before 196 1 300,000 pages of documents on Weisberg, 78, says he’s not in the accused and convicted war Some sought security by mov- on Mengele, for example, though the Kennedy assassination by su- it for the money. criminals -- some of whom. like ing frequently.Mengele, the “An- he began using his real name in ing the govenunent. “I think the Kennedy assassi- Mengele and Schwanmberger, gel of Death” at the Auschwitz 1956 after arriving six years ear- The financial rewards are few. nation jeopardizes our freedom,” lived openly under their own concentration camp, was a natu- lier on an International RedCross Has he ever considered an- hesays.“Our government institu- names -- were never sure they had ralized citizen of Argentina and passport under the name Gregor other line of work? tions didn’t do their job.” eluded justice. Paraguay. He is thought to have Helmut. I -I Adolf Eichmann, the architect drowned in Brazil in 1979. There is no file at all on of Adolf Hitler ‘s “final solution” There were no apparent bomb- Eichmann, who was here. Nor on to exterminate the Jews of Eu- shells in thenewspaperclippings, Heinrich Muller, the former Ge- -Write sports! rope. was kidn,apped by Israeli old photographs, fingerprints, stapo chief who reportedly was. agents in 1960, tried there, con- surveillance reports, Interpol re- The Foreign Ministry said it may Call Paul, Rob or Phil at 627-3090 victed and hanged. quests and other data. The files have Eichmann’s,though so far it 1 I .. ----

.I. \=---

The Senior Class Council has planned a 24-

hour cruise on the Scotia Prince--- &w+SeriIor Week in May. The cruise includes a DJ, live music, comedian and gambling in the casino.

Important information regarding this event and other Senior Week festivities will be available tornorro-w Wednesday) from 10 am - 5 pm in the Campus Center3obby.

-- _I Tuesday, February 11,1992 THE TUmS DAILY page seventeen

~ Dance is semi-formal J DANCE buses will be running all night Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings continued from page 1 ktween Boston and the Campus our Council meeting and we en- Center. couraged [Greek] houses not to The Dessert Bar will include- have any events that night [Feb. chocolate fondue, pastries, 2 11. We encouraged the members truffles, cream puffs, and napo- of the Greek community to at- leOnS. tend,“ said S herer. The dance is semi-formal due are now being held on campus. The dance will be held on the to the fact that the RHA did not first floor of the Copley Westin, want to require men to wear tux- Meetings are for Recovering which Pilan described as “really edos. Alcoholics and people who nice.” “A nice suit or sport jacket for The price of tickets will be $10 men and cocktail dresses for want help getting and staying sober! and will include transportation, a women will be acceptable,” said disc jockey, and a dessert bar. A Bielawski, adding, “We just do .cash bar will also be offered, and not want any jeans or sneakers.”

Mondays from 12 - lpm and Fridays from 1 - 2pm. Clark to come to Jumbodome For location and additional information, please call:

WfTS HlEAUH EDUCATION PROGRAM W HEWH 6 WEWESS 26 WNTHROP STREET 391 -0720 CORRECTION:

Minister Conrad Muhammed - e:r .

will NOT be appearing ‘

I --atWts-during . THE TUFTS Black History Month WORLD’S

Preparing for Informational Medical School Meeting for all Dr. Gerald Foster TCU Dean of Admissions, Harvard Medical School Organizations Tuesday, February 11 Tuesday, 7:OO pm February 11 Barnum. 104 6:30 p.m. Cabot Auditorium page eighteen THE TUFI'S DAILY Tuesday, February 11,lS c Classif iedsclassif iedsclassif iedsclassifiedsclassif iedsclassif ieds ~ Ride to Cornell GRAD ScHoOL APPLICATIONS YO DAYY EDMI Ifdriving to Cornell thls weekend or EXPERTLY TYeD Especially Phil Ayoub. I have re- ifinterestedin rentingacar(must be (law.Msdlcal, Elusiness) "'395592V" 1 solved to stop belchin , but not be- 21) call Dan or Elie at 629-8998. Will cause it's unledylike. #he Infamous share expenses. Are your grad school applications r-belcher piled high on your desk? Are you Notices wondering how you're going iom all 1 personals BURRRRPPP! Housing your info in those tiny spaces? Are Not1 you concerned where you'll find the time todo it all beforethedeadlines? Yo Jenc'. Ir. 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Moti- scribed, laser printing, etc. CALL completelylost 19inchesaroundmy 2 agla for rent wed beginners who can read mu. FRANCES ANYTIME AT 395-5921, Everyone b invited thighs! 3 Wrms, livrm, mod. bath, e-i kit, w sic,alsowelcome. Tminingakogiven to 'MEDITATIONS: A Time for the refrig. w/d, pkg. Steps to campus in score analysis. I have performed SDirit.' Wed. 2/12. 12-1~min GOLDEN AGE PEOPLE "WPING AND WORD'" Rent $810- $75O/I"tO. Avail June 1 in Japan, Russia extensively G'oddsd Chapel. Interfaithworship Break a leg tonight. It's going to be and PROCESSING SERVICE Events Call owner 776-5467 after 5pm. around Boston - 628-5063 395-5921 service whusic, silent meditation quiteaweek,andthenNOWTMOREl speaker from a different reli- I you guys- have a blast. Leila Studentpapers,theses,gradschool and love Avail June 1 TUTORING applications. personal statements. gious tradition. Light lunch and dis- 3, 4. 5. 6 bdrm apts around Tufts HelpwithComputerProgrammingC cussion follow. SPEAKER: Ginny KCD tape transcription, resumes. gradu- Updated 8 well-kept w/ free wM or Pascal, 8 Algebra or Calc. Grad rafacuttyprojects, multiple letters, Hamiiton, $92. HEY KC.wherecan you be?/Onthls student w/9 yrs programming expe day of February 11I Give me a call. 'SENIORS' pkg.sublettingOK.$290-310/bdrm AMCAS forms. All documents are FRANK PLAYS THE PUB' Thank mo. Call Tom at 721-981 4. rience. Call Andrew at 9644781. Laser Printed and spell-checked AT0 RUSH or come by my hall/ Your roommate usingWodPerfecl5.1 or Mulmate. FREE PIZZA! Come eat and meet Of 207.6259770 God for Frank Dlavs its own blend 01 psychobluesb&&a-woogie funk-& 5 rm apt for rent You've only got one week to Reasonable Rates. Quick turn- the house! 134 Professors Row. around. Service Tufts students and VICKI matoonage at the Pub Tu-. night. on Hillside. 391-5073. live! 9:30-1130 p.m. Ouestions? Call %+e or Die!' Do it right! Spring Break in Jamaica, faculty for 10 yn. 5 min from Tufts. Rachel 629-2952 Thanks for your good judgement. Bahamas, Cancun, Margariia from Call FRAN ANMIME. 395-5921. We owe you one. J8C Avail June 1 Bkkgy Students 3952463.2- 4bdrm apts. 1- 3bdn $369!! Hotel. air, transfers, parties1 (Member of NAS-National Asso- ECO FA,CT! apts. Wllvng 8 kt. Wd. $750-$900 Organize group travel free! Sun dation of .%mtarial Sewicss) "The average American throws out Hey Leila! If you plan todo research in summer '92, 8 want to receive academic Winthrop St, next to campus. Pkng S~~U~-ao0-42~ about61bs.oftincanseverymonth." Congmtulations on your ASM'ing -* "THE DJ SPECIAL " Let's not be average Recycle! flebut. sweetie1I am extremely proud credit. you must have prior dept. .appraml.SeeDr.Slegel.Dana22OA Avail June 1 of you and looking forward to more Beautiful 3 Wrm apt on Upland Rc International General fun tlmes with YOU and OUR CAR1 Club near campus. Hdwd flr, ceramic tlk mka leg, or a prop. Love you1 at--2142. pine bath, ind pkng. Call 8 leave mes. sage for Nick, 623-2500. To the sisters Phi Sigma of Next to Tufts campus on Wed. Feb 12, in P&%-a Sigma 630 pm Thank you so much for the decora- Whitfield Rd, Somerville. Apt for rem aarting June 1.5 rms + 2 fini hec iions! We're all looking forward to FREE SNDY BREAK the next few weeks! Love, the porches,modembath,refrig.$l~, mo. No util. 861-8349. Come to Trios Coffee House! Mon, i pledges of Phi Sig Sig Tues, Wed nights, 9-12pm. Uve Roommate Needed music and free admission always. To the Women who are too wxy Gourmet coffees. teas, cookies. for this schook Grad student 8 young prof seekin( 3rd for 6rm house. Yard. pkng. w/d cakes, cappucino. and frozen yo- Thanks so much for being there for gurt. Points accepted. me.YouguysarethebestandIlove new heater. $333hnO, utll ind. 1C I Wanted min to Tufts. Short walk to bus sta. ~ you much1 Smile! -Peppermint P. so tion. 863-1259. Model U.N. Mandatorymeeting tornorrowatspm I Danny in the Zamparelli Rm, Campus Cen- Congratulations WelmetoPhl QUICK QUICK! and We need one roomie for gref ter for all those going to Hawaid SiglHopeyou'rereadytohavesome Somerville place. WD,new bath, 1 fun1 Love, Your Rose Sister ;4-/=+- FUN roommates and a playful cat Aeryoneinvolved with Call Lori 629-2281. you hnre Plg.meker;-===' Phi Sig Sisters- Daily/Obsewer Charlty Do- -.-:[email protected] Chemistry Ijust finished reading WE ARE PHI Basketball Game welcome to the General Interest Come see today's best young jour- Large and small apts. Ve have 2 positions available for meeting of the-Amer,iF Chemical SIG and I was amazed how manv Avail lor rent w/in walking diStMC6 mistant production manager. Call nalists play 40 minutes of rough- .I society. Wed 1130am (Mon sched to Tufts and to the T in Davis and-tumble hoops, the pmceeds of Sq IAN at 396-6519 open block). Pearson 106. Call Amy which will go to the Joel Reed 8 Goodmnd.CallFrankorLinadayo~ 396-2660 or Chris 629-8555. Ronald Blackbumschdarshipfunds. nite at 625-7530. Off campus livinc DAYTONA! -SPRING BREAK '92 FAST FUNDRAISING PROGRAM The game is on Feb 15 at noon is the best. Wl3-22. Oceanfront hotelonstrip. .raternities, sororities, student Sat Best beaches, party. and clubs! lncl Are you interested InCousensGym. Ifyouwouldliketo WE.. Earn upto$low)inoneweek. in joining a new and interesting makeadonation, pleasecallhryat Apartments for rent 7 nights hotel, + deluxe roundtriD 'Ius receive a $low) bonus your- notormach. Only $259! (quad group? Come to the Zamparelii Rm. 6273090. Marshall St. 3 and 4 Wrm apts 8 occ:) elf. And a FREE WATCH just for in the Campus Ctr on Thurs, Feb larger (1st flrand 2ndflr). Call Linaoi :all YANKEE TOURS at 1800- ailing 1-800-932-0528ext. 65. 3DAYTONA. Mon-Fri. ; 13th at 7 pm. A group especially for 'HELP FRANK FIGHT AIDS Frank at 625-7530, after 5: 289 86. all you cancer survivors who have Thank God for Frank, 'The Plague 7370. EXPLORATIONS, FALL 1992 had it or someone close to you has. that Makes Your Booty Move"wil1be WORD PROCESSING SERVICE jophomores and Junio rs... Have a 1% yrs professional experience. playing9pmFrinight attheMacPhie Female roommate wanted !reat ideafor an ExplorationTopic? POLlTlCA 1 Free pickup 8 delivery on campus. :ver thought about teaching? Lead Pub Aids Benefit. If you care be 3 bdrm apt near Tufts. block ot IS now accepting submissions. Ar- Powderhouse Sq. 5 min to campus Reasonable rates. All work piomptly VI Exploration!! Applications avail- there! 5 accurately completed. Rush jobs tides may be on issues Foreign or 10 min walk to Davis T. $31O/mo 4 &le at the Ex College. Miner Hall Domestic. Please submit artides to mils. Share w12 recent MIT grads 8 welcome. Proofreading. editing. 8 aser printing avail. Call Carol: 623- the Political Science Dept, Eaton 2 cats. Call Marie or'Debby 625 PERSPECTIVES 1992 Oliver:MI, by 623-1 Feb. 64824. For more info call 5486 3590. Sophomores and Juniors... Inter- Med in Media?and/orPolitlcs? Ever CALIFORNIA $149 hought about teaching? Lad a 4nd Portland/Seattle. Anytime. ei- 'erspectives Group! Applications .herway, coasttocoast.Catibb- ivailable at the Ex College, Miner For Sale mly $189 roundtrip air to some iall rheresunnyandwm. Hitcharide IO Europe only $160 each way! S40,WOlyrI READ BOOKS Rachel 629-2952. Airhitch (212) 864-2000 or 800-326- 8 TV scripts. Fill out simple "like/ 2009. don't like'form. EASY! Fun, relaxing Ride to Cornell Brother Word Processor Rides at home, beach, vacations. Guaran- If driving to Comell this weekend or wknonitor. Excellent cond.Priceneg. Term .Paperrnesis Problems? teedpaycheck.FREE24-hrRecord- & ifinterestedinrentingacar(mustbe Call Allana 629-8519. Know what to say but not how to say ing 801-379-2925. Copyright Lost 21)caII Dan or €lie at6298998. Will , it? Sewices in Print can provide #MA1 6KEB. share expenses. CHEAP! FBVUS. SEIZED writing 8 editing support. We can Found 89 Mercedes $200.86 W $50.87 also 'punch up' resume. (617) 662- ALASKA SUMMER Hey Alliaonl MERCEDES,'$~OO~a MU~TANG. 5635. EMPLOYMEHT You are the ultimate news source fisheries. Earn $5000+/mo. Free goddess1Yourexcellent phoneskills $50. Choose from looo's starting $25. FREE 24-hrRecodingReveals HAVING TROUBLE IN RUSSIAN? transportation! Room 8 board! Over are also an asset to the business Fletcher student, has lived in Mcs- dept. Do you wani a job here? Details 801-379-2929. Copyright &Mx) openings. No exp necessary. - #MA16KJC. mw, can tutor all levels, beginners Male or Female. For employment Stacey toadvanced. ingrammar. conversa- program call Student Employment tion, usage, etc. Can also tutor So- Services at 1-206-545-4155 x335. Hebrew Speekers!! 1 WT Tx Boston to LA 2/13 or 2/14 to 2/17- own name. vietnussian Foreign 8 Domestic Come to the Hebrew Table in the Policy. Call MKE: 625-5908. Zamparelli Rm in the Campus Cen- $300 or BO. 629881 1. Need extra income for 199l? Earn $500.$1ooO weekly stuffing 3, FOUND IN WHEN ter. 535 -Be there!! NEW INVENTION! LEARN HOW TO EARN MONEY envelopes. For details. rush $1 w/ \Neil, it's either a REALLY LARGE DEPTHVISIONGLASSES makeTV My assistancemakessteady inmme SASE to: OIH Group Inc. 1019 Lk. tingoraREALLY TlNYnapkin holder. PAINT THE TOWN BLUE AND more vivid, more intense. Avail on possible. Easy method starts you Shewood, Orlando, FL 32818. Call to I.D. 629-9375 BROWN hbhly limited basis onlv Tufts 8 2 earningquickly. For informativeappt. TUns First Annual Winter Semi-for- at othei schools. Be ambng the 1stl phone 739-5414. TheAm House wants artiste FOUND: mal at the Copley Westin from 9- Call Bonnie 629-8751. for galleries. Call x2908 8 talk to Basketball with name on it found in lam on Fri. Feb 21. Only $10 per 'TYPING AND WORD" anyone. Have a dale in mind. All IM Gym on 2/5. If it could be yours, person- Fun, food, music, and trans- 'PLAY DRUMS, THEN GOLF' SERVICE mediums encouraged. call Paul at 391-4079 after 8pm portation provlded. Tickets on sale PROCESSlNG Zlldlan cymbals 8 a set of Wilson 395-5921 outsidedlninghalls and at the Cam- golf clubs for sale. All prices negr Student papers, theses, grad school Smoker looking for 1 bdrml h?y hands are freezing pus Center Info Booth. Call Ted at 629-8558. applications. personal statements. etudio apt because I lost a pair of fur-lined tape transcription. resumes, grad/ in Medford/Somewilleareatosublet leather gloves in or around book- 84 Chev Caprice Wagon, $1995 faculty projects, multiple letters, forJunethnrAug.CallBeckyat863- store, and a black and blue wind ~ Grabyourpaint%%ndstmpaint- WChevCelebrity. $2995;87 Dodge AMCAS forms. All documents are 2495 or 861-1754. shell with a cyclist on the front. Ing the town blue and brown. Actu- Shadow, $3995$9DodgeDaytona, Michael. 629-8596. ally,donYstartpaintinguntiIFeb. 21. Laser Printed and spell-checked -5; 90 Dodge Omni, $6995; 91 wing Wordperfect 5.1 or Multimate. Literary Jewish Students 1 MeetusattheCopleyWestinaround Plymouth Acclaim, $7995. Knox Reasonable Rates. Quick turn- interested in workiig on a Jewish Lost- 9pm Love, RHA Dodge, 645 Broadway, Somerville, around. Serving Tufts students and literary magazine, call Bonnie 629- Keys on a Tufts Club key chain. ! 617-6652200. Since 1932 Open faculiy for lOyrs. 5 rnin from Tub. 0751. Please contact Wendy, 629-8597. 8, Hey Marcbe Sun 124. Come help me patnt the town blue CALL FRAN ANYTIME, 395-5921. (Member of NASSNalional Assoc. Actors! FOUND and brown on Fri. Feb 21 at the an I.D. case was found containing a Copley Westin Hotel. It's semi-for- Futon for Sale of Secretarial SeMces.) Needed for student film. If inter- +Frame, $85. Call Ron, 623-5367. ested, pleasecallGregal623-3318. Tufts ID and some other cards. Call mal. so 1'11 be wearing a tie with my ' Ismdriving to U. Michigan- Ann 629-9200. silk boxers! Love. ? SNDY ABROAD IN AUSTRALIA Buy classifieds In Arbor Info on semester, year, graduate, VOICES The Tufts Daily1 )o you want to come with me? I'm summerand internship programs In Make your submissions to Tufts Lost in Barnum JP I On sale nowat the Daily office inthe BvingthisThurs.pm,retumingMon. Perth. Townsville. Sydney, and Study Abroad publicationatthestart My English book- Adventures of I hope waything goaS We\\ wAhai back basement ot Curtis Hall or at Im. Call Andrew 629-7804, leave Melbourne. ProgramsstarlatS3250. House or Wessell Resewe Desk. Augie March. Please call 629-9355 I cad Igave YOU. GOO^ luck. s Call 1-800-878-3696; The deadline is March 2. anytime. Thanks! the Campus Ctr Info Booth. Wssage...... _...... b- .> THE TUFFS DAILY page ninetec Tuesday, February 11,1992 , Doonesburv BY GARRY TRUDEAL Around Campus Israel Network Hebrew Table. Zamparelli Rm, C. Ctr, 515 p.m. Today

[R Program Tomorrow Ihe Borghesani Prize Colloquium. Zabot, 7th flr, 7-8:30 p.m. Tufts Programs Abroad Career Planning Center General Info Session - Rep. Presentation: Preparing Medical from for Swedish Program present. School. Bmum 104,7:00 p.m. Eaton 201,3:30 p.m.

Thank God For Frank* International Club Plays Pub Night. GeneralMtg.Pearson 104,6:30p.m. Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson MacPhie Pub. 9-1:Wa.m. AIESEC AT0 Rush MarketingMtg. 213C.Ctr,8:00pm Free Pizza! 134PrOf~sorS ROW, 9:30-11:30pm AIESEC Community Health Program General Meeting. Large Conf Rm, C. Ctr, 9:OO p.m. Open House. 112 Packard Ave, flr #2,4-5:00 pm TCIAModel UN Amnesty International Mandatory Model U.N.Meeting. Zamparelli Rm, C. 8:OO p-m. General Meeting. Ctr, Eaton 201,9:30 p.m. Big Sister/ Big Brother Volunteer Vacations General Meeting. Eaton 201,8:00 p.m. Play Switch! ' Eaton 208,8:00 p.m. Programs Abroad Study .Abroad in Sweden. H. Dudley Wright Center Eaton 201,3:30 p.m. A Strategic Analysis of Science & Technology Education. BALCH ARENA THEATER Large AV Rm, Olin Bsmt, 9:30 a.m. The Golden Age, Admission $5. Tickets in Box Office, 8:OO p.m. Balch Arena Theater , The Golden Age (Admission $3). Israel Network See Box Office for Tix, 8:OO p.m. Slant a tree in Israel. C. Ctr, All day Tufts Asian/ MEDITATIONS Asian American Society Ginny Hamilton Speaker. General Mtg. Eaton 206,9:30 p.m. Goddard Chapel, 12-1:00 p.m. Hispanic American Society Blues Jam Valentine Serenades $3. Hosted bv Thank God For Frank. Campus Ctr, 9:30-4:30 p.m. ' HaTongue Cafe, 8-1 1:W p.m. DILBERTB by Scott Adams Weather Report TODAY I TOMORROW REMEP\DER, THE "ROBOT'S HA! I DIDN'T 51GNANY COD€" REQUI RE5 YOU TO "ROWS CODE." IN USE YOUR VAT STRENGTH FACT) WITH MY VAST TO SERVE, PROTECT) AND STRENGTH I CAN MAKE Partly cloudy Sunny NEVER HARR HUMANS. Yo0 SERVE -ME ! High: 45, Low: 21 I High: 23, Low: 19 The Daily Commuter Puzzle

ACROSS 1 Lanky 5 steep slope 10 Burrowing mammal THE FAR SIDE 14 Potpourri By GARY LARSON 15 Disappear slowly 2" - 16 Baking need 17 Kick 18 Wed on the run 19 Comic Jay 20 Columnist Landers 21 Serene 22 Commences 24 Bed canopies 26 Toothed wheels 27 Printer's measures 28 Certain entertainer 31 Bloodhound's clue 34 Lumps 35 In the past 36 Transport 37 Traverse 01992 Tnbune Media Sern'ices. Inc. 02f 11/92. BLOFIE 38 Pack All Rights Reserved Now arrange the circled letters ti 39 Pretty picture Yesterdav's Puzzle Solved: form the surprise answer, as su~ - gested by the above cattoon. 40 Form 6 Jail rooms 1IK:II 41 Suppose 7 Unit of matter 42 Treat in a way 8 Capitol worker: Answer: MAKE 'I 44 Sheltered side abbr. 45 On the warpath 9 Shows (Answers tomom 46 Refined 10 Teeth Yesterday's I Jumbles: TRUTH FATAL CLOVEN SUGARY 50 Accompany 11 Use hyperbole Primitive resumes Answer: He gets carried away b the sound of his ow 52 Mild oath 12 Fasting period voice, but never this-FAR ENOUGH 53 Chicken - king 13 Biblical name 54 Bank deal 21 Coin 55 Eastern bigwig 23 Labels 57 Journey 25 Collapsible 58 Funny Johnson shelter Quote the Day 59 Brutus e.g. 26 Silly one of 60 Worker and 28 Skiing milieu soldier 29 Freudian 61 Lack terms 62 Locales 30 Uses oars 63 Got it! 31 Swindle 02/11/92 "Women who seek to be equal with men lack ambition." 32 Lawsuit DOWN 33 Kill 1 Go - for 34 Box (support) 37 Prates 44 Hears 50 Panache -- Timothy Leary 2 By oneself 38 Beef fat 46 Legendary 51 Tender 3 Jungle beasts 40 Wound cover 47 Makes money 52 Salesman's car 4 Fate 41 Man 48 Select group 56 Swab 5 Old weapons 43 Pressed 49 Fall from grace 57 Mai - (drink) page twenty I -- a - THE TUFTS DAILY Tuesday,- February 11,1992

TUFTS HEALTH '' ED UCATI ON PROGRAM I-IEALTI-I.& WELLNESS - 26 WINTI-II7OP STREET 3h-0720 i'