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Aidekman Dedicated, Special Degrees Given

Aidekman Dedicated, Special Degrees Given

CTHE ~ TUFTS ~ ~~ ~~~~~~ ~ Medford, MA 02155 Monday, October 21, 1991 Vol XXm, Nuh3 Depiction Aidekman dedicated, hearing to special degrees given by CHRISTOPHER BODEEN said. Tufts was chosen also be- continue Daily Editorial Board cause the Aidekman’s two sons by PATRICK HISALY Tufts officials dedicated the had been u Iidergraduiitcs here . Daily Etlihrinl Board Shirly and Alex Aidekman Arts Through close coordination The Dean of Students Office Center Saturday in a ceremony with the architects, the Univer- hearing began last Thursday to rich with music. tradition arid sity and Mayer. the Aidekinais investigate last month‘s alleged University colors. were able to cotninuriicate their depiction of a rape spray-painted Among those present at the vision for the Center and to have on the hood of a car at the resi- dedication service in Cohcn Au- some of their ideas incorporated dence of 165 College Ave. will ditorium were renowned cellist into the final plans. When the continue tomorrow due to “the Yo-yo Ma and sculptor Richard drawings were transformed into lengthy mount of infortnation Hunl. University President Je‘m bricks,glass,and stee1,Aidehnan that must be reviewed,” accord- Maycr awarded both artists hon- said she was “overwhelmed by its ing to Associate Dean of Students banks of the Charles River to watch the Jumbo crew teams orary Tufts doctorate degrees. strength. beauty and w,annth.” Bruce Reitman. participate in four races in the annual Head-of-the-Charles. In his invocation at the ccr- “The rays of good fortune are Reitman said last night the cniony. Chaplain Scotty being reflected back into the com- hc,uing. scheduled to last for sev- McClcllan spoke ofthe hopes and munity,” she told the audience. eral hours last Thursdqy,will hope- Trousil resigns Senate dreams invested in the new Cen- In his address, Mayer defined fully be concludedtomorrow once Icr by the University and the do- the roles he perceives the Center all defendants and coinplaintants nors. He told the audience of will play. He said thecentral func- have presented their respective seat citing time needs guests.trustecsruidalu~ruii“tcach- tion of the Aidehnrui center will cases. Uig and theawakening of thespirit be to expose undergraduates to by JANINE BILLY tion requires. She had invested ‘‘My hope is that the hearing Daily Editorial Board the least mount of time in the ;re thc AidehnanCenter’s~uisorr art. He asserted that no one is will be completed on Tuesday. Tufts Coininunity Union se- Senate coinpared to her other ac- d’c’lru.“ lruly educated until they have However. there are five parties nior Senator Michelle Trousil re- tivities, she said, and thus felt Shirly Aidekinan. who with gained a knowledge of the litera- that have filed complaints ... and signed from the Senate yesterday. forced to resign her scat. her late husband supermarket ture. drama. art

an issue the faculty tabled last tuteaquorum needed toofficially spring after a majority of those vote on the proposal. TCU Senate recognizes two new organizations present uiiofficially voted for A straw poll was conducted at Inillor or Ina-ior changes in the that lneetingaskillg f:lculty Inem- The TuftsCommuiiity Union seniors to recount their expcri- the Dean of Students. She said hers present for their opinions on Judiciary 1&9t week recognized ences returning from overseas. the group hareceived “about 1hepropt)Scdrevisionofthepolicy. two new StUdellt OrgWiZatiOnS. Reiter voiced concern last half the submissions we need to Of the 28 individuals present. i 6 ahi-,uiiiuJjounudcalled”Frc)in week about the constitution be- produce the first issue,“ adding Inside adlninistr:1tors and f;culty ~ncln- Abroiid“and agroup focusedon cause “From Abroad” did not she expects the issue to be out in Features ...... p. bcrs voted for the proposal with establishing a Incmorid schol- separate the journal from the December. MichelePennell uncovers a Tufts stu- Ininor ch;~ngcs,eight ilidividuds arship fund for coinmuter S~U- University‘s Study Abroad Office The Joel Reed Memorial dent wanna-be, while Jennifer Kopple- voted for the policy with major dents. clearlyenough.However,accord- Scholarship, organized in man gives inside view of Vanilla Ice. an changes. one person voted against “From Abroad“ will feature ing to Rciter. the newly approved memory of the former student, Tufts students’ experiences org~iinltio~~‘sconstittltio1ilnakesisagroupdedicatedtotheestab- Arts the policy. and three ab- ...... P. stained. while living and studying in for- the distinction between the Tufts lishment of a $25,000 fund to Don’t squeeze The Daily, but do read cign countries. according to Office and the journal “clear.” awardaidtouiidergraduatecom- our review of the group’s performance However, swapsaid recently at the sold-out Orpheum Fnday. hc would prcscnt thc TCUJ Recognitions chair Kim Austin, editor-in-chief of muters. The organization has L revision of the cight-sclnester Lowell Reitcr. The journal will “From Abroad,” said last night already raised $24,000, accord- Sports ...... pp. 6-7 po]jcy with no changes froin the ~OIit~linstories.pocins ‘and pho- the organization has received ing to Reiter. ‘Ouch’istheoperativetermforJumbo pol icy presented last spring. tographs and isexpcetcd to serve “start-up funding” from the Of- Founder of the scholarship football and men’s soccer, but women’s Under the policy, the as il resOurcc for sophomores fices of the President, the Pro- fund William Kelly couldnot be -volleyball painlessly adds three wins. Ollly way to COIlSidCring studying abroad and vost, Undergraduate Studies, and reached for cotnment. , page two - Monday, October 21,1991 Mersto the Editor THE TUFTSDAJW -4-s As Foreign Study Adviser, responsible argument is invalid. Ge PPr Abroad aid coming for providing information on non-Tufts Klein goes on to state that “If America ef To the Editor: programs to hundreds of students every was a capitalist society oppression would / I would like to respond to the view- year, I welcome feedback from students not exist -- the mind would be free to think Managing Editor: David Saltvnan on the quality of programs they attended rationally.” Why is capitalism requisite Associate Editor: Michele Pennell points article “Problems at home can lead Editorial Page Editor: Eric finch to problems abroad” by Amanda Jacobs in and administrative procedures they fol- for rational thought? Great thinkers have the Oct. 17 Daily. Jacobs is correct in her lowed. I am sorry that Jacobs felt she did arisen under every form of economy: so- Production Managers: Michelle Frayman, statement that “Tufts students have asuong not get the treatment she deserved, and cialism, feudalism, capitalism, and even Julie Comell legacy” at the Institute for American Uni- will make an even greater effort in the communism. Again, another invalid argu- NEWS versities hAixen-Provence, France. Tufts future to assure that students receive com- ment. Editors: Patrick Healy, Janine Billy has sent up to 15 students a year over the plete and accurate information from this ThenK1einpurportsthat“Capitalismis ‘Assistant Editors: Christopher Bodeen, past 10 years, mainly because both begin- office. based on the ideals of freedom and of Maureen Lenihan objective, rational judgement.” Yes, capi- Wire Editor: Stephen Arbuthnot ning and more advanced students studying Nancy P. Kelly talism is based on rational judgement and VI~VPOINTS French can be accommodated. The city of Editor: Brian O’Rourke Aix-en-Provence is also a favorite loca- Foreign Study Advisor freedom -- but for the owner. Contrary to Assistant Editor: Christopher Provenzano tion for students who want to study outside Klein’s beliefs, a capitalist (if left FEATURES of Paris. unchecked) will not “pay his employees Editor: John McGuire It first came to my attention that stu- Capital conundrum fairly for their labor.” The 70-hour work‘ Assistant Editor: Jeff Geller dents can apply directly to the Institute in To the Editor: weeks,child labor, and squalid living con- ARTS the fall of 1989, when the president. Dr. I am personally appalled by Shawn ditions of the working class in the US Editors: Allison Smith, Caitiin O’Neil Amos Booth. visited our office. Since that Klein’s letter to the editor in the Daily on Industrial Revolution testifies to this fact. SPORTS time. I have advised students to do so, and Oct. 18. “Capitalism does not exploit The men who owned slaves were capital- Editors: Neil Fater, Jeremy Rosenberg our 1990-91 Guidelinesfor Study Abroad people.” Klein asserts that ”Capitalism is ists -- of the most perverted type. And if Assistant Editors: Paul Horan, Rob Mirman lists the Institute for American Universi- the only system of government that is “Capitalism does not exploit people,“ how PHOTOGRAPHY ties under recommended programs in moral.” However. capitalism is a form of would you explain the thousands of good 3ditors: Julio Mota, Nathalie Desbiez, Karl Schatz employees that are put out of work every Assistant Editors: Sofia Pescarmona France. There isno mention of US schools economy not government. Hence, the ar- AMi Recordati which offerprograms there. but if students gument is already confused in the opening year by greed corporate raiders who buy PRODUCTION choose to apply to one. rather than di- sentence. out companies through leverage and them -ayout Editors: Jennifer Wolf, William Eneswedt. rectly, it is out of my hands. Students Next. Klein contends that ”Oppression strip the business and sell it for parts? Michael Berg studying abroad on non-Tufts pro,Orams isnot caused by capitalism in America. but I too am a capitalist at heart. However. Graphics Editors: John Pohoqlo. Chris Capotosto must submit a leave of absence petition because it is not wholly capitalist.” This I believe that stringent regulations are Classifizds Editor: Lisa Moorehead necessary to ensure fair competition. fair Assistant Classifieds Editors: Cristina Garces. indicating where they will be studying. sentence does not make sense. Why can’t Ariel Ben-Zeev. Stephanie Romney Jacobs indicated that she would be going the capitalist component of America be hiring, fair prices. fair wages, and proper Copy Editors: Dan Levi. Elana Vatsky to the Institute for American Universities the part that is oppressing our citizens? care for the environment. and made no mention of going on another Clearly the conclusion does not necessar- Larry Azer US school’s program there. ily follow from the premise. Therefore the Craig Hawkins A’92 Executive Business Director

Business Manager: Sandra Giordano Office Manager: Michael El-Deily Receivables Manager: Gizem Olkulahci Commonwealth commits to human rights Subscriptions Manager: Stacey Feldrnan HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP)-- Leaders and institutions which reflect national cir- divided, with British Prime Minister John of the 50-nation Commonwealth prom- cumstances, the rule of law and the inde- Major arguing that an agreement reached The Tufts Daily is a non-profit newspaper, publishc ised Sunday to promote democracy and pendence of the judiciary, just and honest last week to scrap a limited range of em- Monday through Friday during the academic year and di just government in adeclarationre-launch- government.’’ bargoes did not go far enough. tributed free to the Tufts community. The Daily is enrire student-mn: there are no paid editorial positions. The Dai ing the largely Third World organization. The declaration said Commonwealth In the declaration, the Commonwealth is printed at Charles River Publishing, Charlestown. MA. But the 10-point declaration did not nations promised to respect “fundamental leaden p1edged“continuing action to bring TheDailyislocatedatthe backentranceofCurtisisll threaten sanctions against the one-party human rights including equal rights and about the end of apartheid and the estab- Tufts University. Our phone number is (617) 381-309 Business hours are 9:OO a.m. - 6:OO p.m., Monday throug states and authoritarian governments that opportunities for all citizens,regardless of lishment of a free, democratic, non-racial Friday, and 1:00 p.m. - 6:OO p.m. on Sunday. dot the Commonwealth. race. color, creed or political belief.” and prosperous South Africa.” Subscriptionsare $25 fora full year. Ourmailing addre The leaders of Britain and its former ‘. is: TheTufis Daily,Posi OfficeBox 18, Medfod MA0215 Among those signingwas KenyanPresi- The leaders, with the endorsement of Subscriptions are mailed in weekly packages. colonies agreed to the declaration at a dent Daniel arap Moi, who has banned and African National Congress President The policies of The Tufts Daily are established by weekend retreat in the Mctoria Falls re- harassed political opponents and says he Nelson Mandela, have agreed immedi- majority of the editorial board. Editorials are established \. a rotating editorial boald designated to represent a majori sort, midway through a week-long bien- intends to stay in office for another 20 ately to end travel restrictionsagainst South of editors. Editorials appear on this page. unsigned. Indivi6 nial summit. years. Nigeria‘s military ruler. Major Gen- Africans and bans on cultural and scien- ual editors are not necessarilyresponsiblefor.orinagreeme’ The declaration also signaled only a eral Ibrahim Babangida, and Malawi’s tific contacts and on air links. with, the policies and editorials of The Tufts Daily. The content of letters, advertisements.signed column guarded acceptance of repeated recent president for life, Hastings Banda, who But Major also wants a bans on trade Zartoonsand graphicsdoes not necessarily reflecttheopinic announcements by Britain and Canada has governed his one-party state since and on investment lifted immediately in- Df The Tufts Daily editorial board. that they intend to link aid to the human 1963, also signed. stead of being pegged to the start of con- Letters to the Editor Policy rights records of underdeveloped coun- The declaration was the culmination of stitutional talks among black and white The Tufts Daily welcomes letters from the readers. TI tries. a new policy by the Commonwealth to South Africans and agreement on a new !etterspageisanopenforumforcampusissuesandcommen hutthe Daily’s coverage. Canada’s foreign minister. Barbara switch from focusing on South Africa to constitution. Letters must include the writer’s name and a phor McDougall. said her nation did not expect scrutinizing the democratic shortcomings The summit was expected to deal with lumber where the writer can be reached. All letters must t to change things overnight. but rather to of its member-states. the sanctions issue in a separate declara- Jerified with the writer before they can be published. The deadline for letters to be considered forpublicatic start a process. “All countries now know The turnaround reflected the interna- tion. n the following day’s issue is 3:OO p.m. that their actions will be under scrutiny.” tional pressure for democracy that has Due to space limitations.letters should be no longer tha 350 words. Letters should be accompanied by no more tha she said. followed the end of communist govern- The Commonwealth decided to send :ight signatures. The Commonwealth nations agreed on ments in Eastern Europe. their Nigerian secretary-general to South The editors reserve the right to edit letters for clarit “extending the benefits of development The declaration made no specific men- Africa withanoffer to help mediate. Chief ‘ublicationoflettersis subjectto thediscretionof theeditor Letters should be typed orprinted from an IBM or IBh within a framework of respect for human tion of sanctions against South Africa, the Emeka Anyaoku of Nigeria said the mis- :ompatible computer in letter-quality or near-letter-qualii rights.” other main theme of the summit which sion was supported by the South African node. Letters written on Macintosh commters should t The leaders promised. however. to pro- ends Tuesday. government and the African National Con- )rough[ in on disk - files should be saved in “text-onlj .ormat, and disks should be brought in with a copy oft’ tect and promote ”democratic processes Western sources said the leaders were gress. - 1etter.DiskscaobepickedupinTheDailybusinessofficethe , following day. Letters should address the editor and not a particular individual. While letters can be critical of an individual’s At least 341 killed in mighty earthquake actions, they should not attack someone’spersonality traits. The Daily will not accept anonymous letters or pen names except in extreme circumstances if the Executive DEHRA DUN. India (AP)-- Amighty Uttarkashi was likely to rise. row roads. Board determines that there is a clear and present danger to earthquake convulsed the Himalayan foot- At least 59 people were killed in the Uttarkashi and Chamoli form a lush the author. The Daily will not accept letters regarding the coverage of other publications, unless their coverage itself hills on Sunday.killing at least 34 1 people, Tehri district just south of Uttarkashi, the undulating terrain at the base of the Hima- has become a newsworthy issue that has appeared in The flattening tens of thousands of homes and news agency said. quoting a local official. layan mountains and stretch 125 miles Daily.TheDaily will accept letters ofthanks,ifspacepermits, triggering major landslides, police said. Another 20 people were killed in the but will not mn letters whose sole purpose is to advertise an along theborder with Chinese-ruledTibet. event. The earthquake rippled through north- Chamoli district east of Uttarkarshi, po- No casualties were immediately reported When writers have group affiliations or hold titles or em Uttar Pradesh state. causing massive lice said. The victims included 15pilgrims in Tibet. positionsrelatedto thetopic 0ftheirletter.TheDaily will note destruction in at least two districts along that initalics followingthe letter.Thisis to provide additional at a Hindu temple in Kedarnath, they said. Communications between the Hima- information to the readers and is not intended to detract from the Indian-Tibetan border. At least 2,000 Asenior civiloffcial inDehraDun, the layan region and other parts of India. the letter. people were injured, the United News of nearest big town to Uttarkarshi said tens of shaky even in normal times, snapped.Tele- Classifieds Informatian India news agency reported. thousands of homes were reported de- phone contact halted seven hours after the All Tufts students must submit classifieds in person. At least 500people were feared trapped stroyed. The official spoke on condition of prepaid with cash or check. All classifiedsmust be submitted quake early Sunday, and officials had to by 3 p.m. the day before publication. Classifieds may also be in the rubble of buildings that collapsed anonymity. United News of India said400 rely on infrequent radio connections. one bought at the information booth at the Campus Center. All whenthe quake struck. DehraDun District villages were affected. Dehra Dun official said on condition of classifieds submitted by mail must be accompanied by a Magistrate Shishir Priya Darshi said. Army and paramilitary troops weredis- check. Classifieds may not be submitted over the phone. anonymity. Notices and Lost & Founds are free and run onTuesdays India’s Seismology Department mea- patched to Uttarkashi and Chamoli. Four At least three bridges and one dam were and Thursdays only. Notices are limited to two per week per sured the 45-second quake at 6.1 on the helicopters were ready to lift off at day- damaged, said police in Dehra Dun. a city organization ‘and run space permitting. Notices must be written on Daily forms and submitted in person. Notices Richter scale. The US Geological Survey break Monday with emergency supplies of of 250,000people 120milesnorth of New cannot be used to sell merchandise or advertise major events. put the magnitude at 7.1. rice. wheat and sugar and to start evacuat- Delhi, the nation’s capital. I The Tufts Daily is not liable for any damages due to The state’s top police official. Director ing the injured. Darshi said. typographical errors or misprintings except the cost of the insertion, which is fully refundable. We reserve the right to General Prakash Singh said 262 bodies The officials in Dehra Dun said police Police said there were fears of flooding refuse to pMt any classifieds which contain obscenity. are of had been recovered in the Uttarkashi dis- and rescuers were hamstrung by big land- farther south, because landslides had an overtly sexual nature, or are used expressly to denigrate a trict.United NewsofIndiareported.Darshi, the person or group. slides in mountainous region. which dammedthe Bhagirathi River. which flows the district magistrate, said the count in can only be reached by tortuous and nar- down the Himalayas. Monday, October 21, 1991 THE TUFTS DAILY page three II li 11 News Briefs 11 Israeli cabinet votes to attend From the Associated Press Middle East peace= conference II I1 r~solved." said Abdurahlln ~ JERUSALEM (AP) -- Most Israel's positions regarding the Mallouh. a member of the PLO's members of Prime Minister Palestinian negotiators he met. executive committee. Nine killed in fires, possible fueding Yitrhak Shamir's Cabinet set Isrite1 has said it will not IIC~O- Although Israel ha5 not been JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -- Nine blacks. including four iaidc misgivings on Sunday and tiatc with represelltativcs of the shown a list of Palestinian del- children, burned tu death in fires that may be linked to anongoing war voted for Israel to attend next Piilestinc Liberation Organiza- egates. both Shiunir i~dForeign between rival taxi drivers in Cape Town, police said Sunday. week's Middle East peacc confer- tion. known PLO incmbcrs. Pal- Minister David Levy said Friday . Two taxi-vlul groups coinpetirig for routes and passengers have elice. estinian exiles. or residents of they believed assurances by US been locked in an increasingly violent battle despite peacemaking But one of Shiunir's allies in Arilbeast Jerusalem. It says it will efforts by CapcTownofficids. incluclLig~iglica~iArchbishop Desmond leave the peace conference if the SecretxyofStateJames A. Baker the government. the ultra-right 111 that the list would meet Israel's Tutu. Tehiyah party. balked and said it Palestiniiui i1egotiatorsprc)fessties demands. In one incident. ;I taxi-van was set alight. and the fire spread to a would Iciive the coalition when to the PLO. which Israel calls a Meanwhile, signs grew Sun- nearby shack. killing four people in the Old Crossroads squatter camp the peace talks begin on October terror organimtion. day of opposition among Arabs outside Cape Town. police said. 30 in Madrid. Spain. Shiunir's The Palestinians will atlendas Muslims to the peace confer- Also, four children were burned to death when their shack caught Likud party was not in danger of incinhcrs of a joint dclcgatioii and elice. fire Sunday morning at another squatter camp outside the city. losing power. however. with Jordan. I s r ae I t e 1e v isi on quoted Another shanty fire claimed the life of a man Sunday, police said. An Arab group that opposes PLO chairman Yasser Arafat Hczbolkah. which claimed respon- Authorities said the fires may be linked to the taxi war, but they were the talks bombed IUI Israeli con- arrived in Amman. Jordan. Sun- sibility for Sunday's attack on the still investigating. voy in southeni Lebanon. killing day to meet with King Hussein. Elsewhere, at least two blacks were killed and one seriously thee soldiers and wounding two. PLO officials said Arafat. who Israeli soldiers, LLF saying the peace conferencewas an"American plot wounded when gunmen on a train fired on byst'mders as the train and raising fears of terrorism by is widely considered to be voice, pulled into a station in the Soweto township outside Johannesburg. extremists Arab nego- would discuss with Hussein the to take control of the region." opposing A Shamir adviser. Yossi Ben- Police spokesman Colonel Jac de Vries said the gunfire came from tiation with Israel. makeup and workings of the joint Aharon. also linked the attack to a train carrying supporters of the Inkatha Freedom Party. who were The pro-Iranim Hezbollah, or delegation atid to push forameet- Syrian domination in Lebanon. headed home from a rally. Party of God. claimed responsi- ing of the PLO "front4ne" and Syria has 40.000 troops in Leba- Witnesses said three people were killed. but de Vries said he could bility ,and reportedly linked it to Arab states to discuss the confer- non, ,and controls the Bekaa Val- confirm only two deaths. the conference. e11ce. ley. froin which Hezbollah The Cabinet vote was the last and "The PLO is trying to secure Palestinian guerrillas have step needed for Israel to send Turkey suggests Iraq arming Kurdish rebels ;in Arab commitment that no Arab launched attacks on Israel ~UKI ANKARA. Turkey -- Turkey's foreign minister said Sunday that repre sen tat ives to the US- Sovict - state will normalize relations with Turkish Kurdish rebelshad obtainedanti-aircrdt guns andotherheavy weapons, and Iraq might be responsible. But the foreign minister, Safa Giray, said the govemnent lacked enough evidence to file a formal complaint with Baghdad. "We have been suspecting that Iraq was providing heavy weapons Sununu states White House seeks to the PKK," he said in a telephone interview, using the abbreviation for the outlilwed Kurdish Workers' Party. "But we do not have hard evidence." to distance itself from David Duke It was unclear how much support Iraq might be providing to the WASHINGTON (AP) -- The months before the election. ran Thad Beyle. professor of po- PKK. Whitc House says it wants tioth- third. litical science at University of During the Persian Gulf crisis. PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan said ing to do with former Ku Klux "DavidDuke isnot theRcpuh- North Carolina, said he believes in published interviews that Saddam Husseiii had allowed him to Kl;lnsln;u1 David Duke, a Rcpub- Iicil~it~olnince."si~dSununu."He the rise to such heights of some- establish bases inside Iraq to strike at Turkey. The move was appar- licnI1 who is ;i runoff jiexl month is iw individual that has chosen to one as extreme = Duke must be cntly in retaliation for Turkey's support to the US-led coalition for Louisiana governor. call hiinselfaRepuhlicaiii.He W~Sviewed inaillly in the context of fighting Iraq. But some political scientists not supported by the party there. Louisi'ana politics. But he said But Saddam's forces fled from northcnunost Iraq last April when :re saying that &hougIi Duke's He is not supported by the IIiI- Bush's us(: of racial fear to win an allied coalition force established a "security zone." The region is views are more extreme and tionnl party." political victories has created a now controlled by Iraqi Kurdishrebcls, who are at odds with the PKK. sil1glc-minded than the GOP in Bush's only public rcaclion to climate in which ~oineonelike The PKK, which has been fighting since 1984 for a separate State general. the racial strategies used the Louisiaia primary was ."Sur- Duke can prosper. in southeastern Turkey, has recently stepped up its attacks on Turkish by President Bush have helped prise." which he shouted to re- "I think it is very hard not to military targets as the guerrillas' popular support has grown. pave his way. porters on his way to 11 golf game say they inay not be reaping what The rebcls also have abducted Western travelers in southeastern Sunday. they have sown in terms of the Turkey. including three Americans searching for the remains of Whitc Housechief1)fst~~fJohn campaign ads and the steps No'ah's Ark. The kidnappings were apparently to prcssPKK's claim of Sununu made clear Sunday on But speaking for Bush. Sununu they've taken in tcnns ofno-quota sovereignty in the area. The foreigners were later released. ABC's "This Week With DQV;~said: "The presidelit is absolutely bills." said Beyle. "Once they Brinkley" that the national party opposed tothc kindofracist state- unleash that feeling in theRepub- Pilot dies in mid-flight, woman lands plane wants to keep its distance from I~1cI1lSthathi~vecorneoutofDavid 1icanParty.gucss whathappens?" SHANIKO. Ore. -- A woman in the back seat of a single-engine Duke in his November 16 face- Duke now and in the past." Beyle was referring to 1988 airplane reachcd over the body of her father, who died of an apparent off with Democrat Edwin Duke faces fonncr Governor campaign ads in which Bush- heart attack at the controls, and landed the plane at a sinall airstrip, Edwards, a former governor who Edwin Edwards in (hegubernato- Quayle supports used the early authorities said. n'arrow led Duke in Saturday's rial race after an open primary prison releaseof black rapist Wil- Patty Sharp, 23. had never flown a plane before. primary. White House-backed Saturday in which White House- lie Horton ui Massachusetts as a "For someone to have absolutely no flying experience and the incumbent Governor Buddy backed incumbent Governor reason to vote against Massachu- Roemer, who switched from Buddy Roemer, a Rcpublicai, setts Governor Michael Dukakis circumstances she was under, she was very. very lucky," Wasco for presidcnt. County sheriff's Sergeait Charles Butler said. Dcmocrat to Republican a few came in third. Sharp and her father. Patrick Sharp, 62, had taken off in the Piper Cub for a day of sightseeing and photography Saturday in eastern Federal trial inVeStigateS death Oregon. I .a She was talking to her father when he slumped over. She reached and scam on gay male prisoners over his body to grab the controls, she said. HATT'1ESBURG.Miss. (AP)- som. ;in aging Georgia prison in- mainly through telephone records, "I can't imagine how she had any rudder control," Butler said. Vincent Sherry and his wife mate. Rudders, which steer a plane, are foot-controlled. and has been mentioned through- were shot in cold blood after pris- The four arc charged with con- Don Morgan, who was watering plants near the Shaniko Hotel, out the trial. But he isn't nmed'in oners heard the state judge spiring to cheat homosexual men watched the plane circle a small airstrip for about 20 mhiutcs. the indictments. He has been skimmed money from a scheme to He said the plane was so low he could see a woman reaching over of up to $1 million iwd plotting called lor questioning by the pros- a man, trying to fly it. in which ininales bilked their ho- kill Hw+isciii County Circui t Judge ecution aid defense. mosexual pen pals. federal pros- Vincent Sherry over missing Shnrp overshot the airstrip

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TUFTS HEALTH EDUCATION PROGRAM HEALTI-1 & WELLNESS 26 WINTI-IROP STREET 3Gl-0720 Monday, October 21, 1991 THE TUFTS DAILY page five FEATURES Who do vou think vou are? The scoop y’all, it’s Ice J J It was a breezy Tuesday afternoon. Or was it “Well. ye ah... Emerson hasa goodprogram too by GEOFF EDGERS father in the entire world.” really “Monday“ in Tuftonia time? Anyway. I was But I liked this one better.” he said. He went on Senior Staff Writer So we‘ve established that casually walking down the steps into the Campus with his spiel. When you look at the adver- Charles is a good father, Jennifer Center. coining downhill. I wits meeting my friend “Just so you don’t think I’m some sort 01 tisement for V,anilla Ice‘s new is intelligent and well adjusted, so Min whom I saw looking at a jewelry table that a Iuiialic, let me show you my papers so you‘ll see movic. its hard to miss the big what about Ice’?Let’s deal with vendor had set up in front of the ping pong tables. I‘m on the up-aid-up.” Doody said, flashing some bold faced letters. a his movie first. Foraplot summa- A red-headed plastic-encasedred-lettered cards with his “nane,’ K ( 1PPI, EM A N/ B A N B I E R/ tion we’ll let Jennifer take a shot. Michele Penneil boy was co1ni1lg description, and “authorization” that held a strik- C A RNFH ;IE produc lion. That’s “The inovie is about Ice and down the ramp to ing resemblence to a hand-drawn smiley face. 1 Tufts senior Jennifer Koppbnan‘s he’s a wise guy. obviously, he‘s Out of the Blue thecmpuscen- mean, I wasn’t sure what they read, but at leasi dad they’re talking d bOUI. like Manilla Ice and he’s driving ter in exact syn- those were all that he flashed. “You can help me Charles Kopplcman is the across wine town with the other copation wifh my steps. He looked over at me. earn points.”he continued. “If I get 20,000points. Icadcr, owner and guru of SBK bikers wid ashe‘s going across the ”Excuse me.” he said. I cnn go to England, France or Spain.” He flashed records. This is the SBK records country he sees a girl and he flips “Yes?” I replied politely. the other side of the card at ine with a red-outlined that owns Ice and Wilson Phillips for her. She disses him really hard “I just transfcrred to Tufts and I’m trying to win picture of Europe on it. “May I ask you what would aindthc saincSBK thatownsJcsus in the beginning.” a trip abroad to Europe. Maybe you could help me? you do with hemoney if you won.. .besides spend Jones. Like anyone related in sane And for a review: “I liked it. I “he said. withasweet politeness reinhiiscent of the it all 011 me?” he said with ,mother honey-dipped way lo the inan they call Vanilla thought it was suiprisingly fun. manners of true Southeni gentlemen. I admittedly smile. Ice. Jennifer soinctiincs finds her- The music‘s terrific, great have a soft spot for So-~e-you-a-fres~nan?trans- “Well, uh, I’m not going to win. You are, right?” self expliiiriirig ald defending the soundtrack. Naoini Campbell has fer students, being a fonner one myself. I replied. inan himself. Not Chirlcs. YOU a cameo. She‘s a supennodel. It “OK ...” I said as I sauntered closer to Min. “Well, yes. But anyway, you’re probably won- idiots. Ice. inoves quickly. Its not a deep “Great. What‘s your name?” he asked. dering how you can help me earn points. Would Jennifer said that she usually inovie -- who are we kidding? -- “Michele.” I replied. you like me to tell you?” were his next frosted flake has little trouble dealing withcriti- but it‘s definitely cute. It’s enter- “Well, I’d actually like to talk to you about it if words. cisin atid questions froin peers. faining.” you can spare 60 seconds and sit down with me,” I was truly curious, still. “Yes, I would!” I said hut there are times when she gets Jciuiifer pointed out a key rea- he oozed. By this tune, I was wondering what he as whatever sales inanual he read said I would, annoyed. .son the inovie can be entertaining was trying to push. I decided to play along for fun although he was really holding both sides of this “I’m usually okay with it.”she even for Ice-haters. “It‘s good in and to find out what he was up to. I told Min I was conversation for us. said. “but soinetiines if I’m in a a way because people who love to around and sat down with the mysterious red- “Well, all you need to do is get this little bell, bad mood. I miiy t‘ake it out 011 the hate hiin will see hiin dissed a headed freckled boy 1-11call Doody. Howdy Doody. and engrave my name on it. Then you ring this bell person who said something. For lot.“ “What was your natnc again?” Doody asked. any time you need something and 1’11 come run- fhc inosf part [criticisin of the Jennifer adrnits that Ice is not “Michele,“ I replied faithfully. ning out of my donn to give it to YOU,” he said. artists on SBK] doesn’t really of- her favorite artist, but she does “You know Michclc.” he said as we began to sit “Oh, what donn are you in?“ I asked. I wanted fend me.“ like him personally. They first down. “you have really pretty eyes.” to give him one last chance toprove his legitimacy If you are related to a high met at the Gramny Awards in “Uh-huh.” 1 said. thinking veuh, yuh, yeah, I (she wrote, trying to rnake herself look innocent as ranking ineinber in the entertain- February last year. totally bclie\-e vu14 too. Like rotally. she covered the deep hole in the woods with ment industry. you can obviously “I think he’s a good guy, he’s We sat down oiiaproininentcoiner ofbrick, and braichcs and leaves in hopes of catching the stray get the best tickets in the free or gotten a bad rap. But even nega- he continued to chat at me. Doody. capfured world. This is another tive publicify is publicity,” she

“I transferred here for your communications “Uh....” he st,unmered,durillgastingingpause. common thread that connects said. “The people who try the program. I‘m plaruiing to major in communica- “You know. since I just got here I’miiot really sure those friendly people who come hardest to put hiin down are in,&- tions.“ he added. of its name yet.” up and say hello. ing inore albums sell.” Too bud MY don’t hase one! 1 thought. Whose I looked at him as I thought Everyfieshman at “People have come up to me Now for what you‘ve all been catalog MWC YOU lookiiig ar? any college has memorized the name of their dorm aiid~skedincquestioiisand asked waiting for, an inside story about Min finished looking and sauntered over, un- moriths before they ewr even get on camps arid me for concert tickets,” Jennifer Ice that only Jennifer could tell, aware that Doody really wasn’t a friend of mine. you’re nor sure? But I waited politely for an said. “Pcoplc ask me ithut Wil- the kind of thing that would incake “I transferred over froin BU,” he volunteered. answer. son Phillips ;I lot.“ even Jackie Collins jealous: “Why?” Min asked. confused. “Uh.it’s actually the one right up on the comer By the way. if you are wonder- “When Madonna‘s inovie “I transferred here for the coininunications pro- over there. I think it begins with an N?” he said. ing if Wilson Phillips arc decent cane out. Madonna had a crush grain; it‘s better than BU’s.” he said. I pursed my lips. I’m sorry, that is incorrect. You people, Jennifer has the scoop. on Vanilla Ice. so she invited hiin That’s exactly what she was thinkhig - you lose the double jeopardy. “They are.” to the premiere of Truth or Dare. moron. we don’t even have a communications “It’s not an N. It’s an M -Metcalf,,“ Min said Is it hard being the offspring of He went and was sitting next to major. never mind a one that compares to BU. as she looked at hiin like he was too stupid to even it famous lcadcr of the recording her.andhc was wearingahat.She “Isn’t their program one of the best in the country?” industry‘! Are her nights filled said to him. ‘You have to take off she asked. ius1 checking the facts. see BLUE, page 11 with pain. trying to deal with the your hat so people know who you pressureof fame, fortuneiuid fast- are.’ He wouldn‘t do it and she living? said, ‘You’re with me, the hat is No. Jennifer clearly has no coming off.’He said no again. He problem with her father’s posi- refused to take the hat off ‘and he tion. “I love my father because took his shirt off instead.” he’s a good dad: He’s the greatest Pure Ice.

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for -nosebleeds. Daignault’s strong: a squeaky nerd who does goosepimply tenor is highlighted well with his numbers. Squeeze spends the night in Boston in “Cry” and “Moments to Re- . The piano and bass are solid. the right warhorses onto stage for sponsible. There were a couple member.” He has all the “money They even get into the action a by GEOFF EDGERS notes“ and is not afraid to use little with an occasional silly hat Senior Staff Writer this show, moving from the open- musiccansapparently trying to re- The Guide Book for British ing “The Prisoner” to “If I didn’t place Holland on the keyboards, them. or bit. Pop Bunds: Love You“ and “Is That Love.” but they did nothing outstanding, Sparky is wacky and almost The choreography is appropri- Rule No. 1: Be clever. Give These two oldies were attacked just sort of plugged the gap. A slimy. David Benoit does a nice ately kicky and often awkward. well and had the honor of being woman, presumably the second job with Sparky’s’ Perry Como them quirky. highly quotable wit. see PLAID, page 10 Squeeze played a sold-out untouched from their late ’70s keyboardist, did provide some of tribute. Orpheuin theater Friday night. but early ’80s versions. the stranger moments of the night. longtime keyboardist Jools Hol- Ride No. 3: From stereotypi- On some songs she would lurk land was not appearing. Fortu- cal Squeeze manager: “No im- around the stage with an DeVito satirizes the ’80s nately, most of the pop hooks provising, yeah, that means you accordian, either not plugged in by MONA IWTOUH mance stands out the most. He Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford Tilbrook, you lousy bloke. Keep Cimtrihuting Writer plays the greedy Wall Street cari- have written were in attendence. the tunes at three minutes andfor Ah. the 1980s. The decade of cature with relish, delivering ev- For this band, the words do bloody sake, don’t change the yuppies, junk bonds and Michael ery line for maximum impact. Milken. The time when Reagan count. When Tilbrook sings dine rhythm of a hit.” Similaritiescan be drawn between like, “I guess it’s my assumption/ Squeezecouldeasilyhave gone Lawrence Garfield and DeVito’s I’m really up the junction,” one through the drill, slept through character in The War of theRoses. wants to think.1 wish Icould have the Greatest Hits and made it Both are successful, self-impor- come up with something like that. home unscathed, even approved tant men who enjoy addressing I I Rule No. 2: In live shows, tell by a Boston crowd that quite the camera with their witty obser- frankly would have cheered if and Trump’were considered true vations on life. It is these lines in jokes to introduce songs, jokes heroes. It isatthiserathat director fhutnobody uiiderstairds bemuse any member of the band had Other People’sMoneythatarethe belched on the stage. Even the Norman Jewison takes a satirical best - w r i t t e n , part ic u 1arl y you are American and we are look in his new film. Other British. But YOU will laugh any- drummer. Garfield’s hysterical comments People’s Money. way because of the idolatry inher- Instead, “Take Me I’m Yours” Glenn on money and lawyers. Based on the popular play by , ent to the situation. was bluesified, with a groove or mixed too low to hear over the Miller, who has given solid updating the song whichmight be band. That didn’t matter, though; Jerry Sterner. the film stars Danny performances in movies such as There were a couple of poor DeVito corporate-takeoverking inclusions to the set,notably“The great on record but is trapped in she was very odd and entertain- as The Freshrtiun ‘and Awakenings, Lawrence Garfield. Carfield is a Prisoner,” and “Hourglass.” Those its own time. “Goodbye Girl” was ing. handles her more demanding role money-worshippiiig. doughnut- songs aren’t particularly enjoy- brilliant, done as the second song Rule No. 4: Plug the album. here well. Kate Sullivan’ s rela- cating. uncthical businessman able on disc and clearly went flat of an acoustic encore by Tilbrook There were a bunch of new tionship to Garfield is interesting knt)wn Limy the Liquidator. live, but these were only minor and Difford. The band joined in songs played from the band’s ex- and complex -- she shares his One morning. his bclovedcom- flaws. acceptable because after the first few verses tocomple- cellent recent release, Play. “Sat- qualities of ruthless ambition and puter. “Carmen,” brings to his Syuecze is no longer a scratching ment thecountryish version. Even isfied,” “The Truth,” done before intelligence. yet she is repulsed attention a promising small com- new pop band. but a world-weary “Tempted” was changed, the “Goodbye Girl” on acoustic gui- by his moral Stimdards. bunch of middle-aged musicians tempo more upbeat, perhaps to tars.and “Wickedand Cruer’were pany. New England Wire and Because the two share a simi- Cable, ripe for takeover. How- with a wealth of material to pick mask the fact that two singers on strongest, while “The Day I Get lar mentality, they enjoy playing ever. Garfield runs into a slight and choose froin. Difford is 37. the album-released version, Paul Home” was awful. In the latter games with each other’s emo- C‘arrack and Elvis Costello, have song. ‘anannoyingkeyboardover- problem when he encounters the tions and challenging each other Therefore, it‘s important to company’s owners. Andrew and note that the band trotted most of been on vacation from Squeeze shadowed everything else. It was mentally. It is this relationship for more than a decade now. a small noise, but like a faucet Bea Jogenson. that. despite adding a small de- On paper, a band like Squeeze dripping in thenext room couldn’t The Jorgensons, played well gree of confusion to the fihn, adds isn‘t expected to be much more be ignored. Overall, it’s obvious by Gregory Peck and Piper Laurie. the most substance. than manic and poppy and Brit- that the band enjoys playing fresh pride theinselves on their honest. Other characters worth noting ish, but Friday they displayed a material, and the music offplayis small-town American values. To are Bill Coles. the Jorgenson’s finesenseofinusichahipas well. the freshest. fight a takeover, they call in their supposedly loyal associate who Tilbrook is a top-notch lead gui- Then there was, of course, the lawyer daughter, Kate Sullivan, personifies the greed of the ’80s mist who doesn‘t get the chance obligatory playing of “Annie Get to negotiate with Garfield. The almost better than Garfield, and lo play much on disc. Through a Your Gun” and “Black Coffee In rest of the film primarily focuses Garfield’s judgmental secretary, song like “Slaughtered. Gutted Bed“beforetheband1eftthestage. on the relationship between Margaret. andHeartbroken,”hecooked,rip- Rule No. 5: British pop barids Sullivan. played by Penelope Ann The film has its drawbacks, Miller, and Garfield, and on the ping off some quickjazz riffs. The don’t die us they get older, they however. It can, at times, seem fate of the company. band itself was very tight, with ,just get lessyoyularuiidplayverv drawn out, and the script occa- All four primary actors are drummer Gilson Lavis and bass- well.It’s a weakrule, but the truth admirable, but DeVito’s perfor- see MONEY, page 11 Chris Difford ist Keith Wilkinson largely re- is often weak page eight THE TUFTS DAILY Monday, October 21, 1991 SPORTS Patriots upend Vikings in OT; Colts drop to 0-7 in 1991 Frrm the A~~ialcdI’rcss Wdsh had two ol‘his first six games in the AFC Central. The yards in the air to Jackson. who Hector took a hnndoff and flipped . Patriots 26, Vikings 23 (OT) passes intercepted but shook offa Dolphins fell to 3-5; last season was wide open at midfield. Jack- the ball back to O‘Brien, who FOXBORO, Mass. -- Jason slow start to convert key third- they finished 13-5. sonran to the 16,andTreadwell‘s passed 47 yards to an unguarded Staurovsky redeemed himself down plays on three scoring Smith’sfumblewas hissecond 27-yard field goal four plays later Moore for the first Jets touch- marches, passing for a fourth- at the goal line in as many weeks. won it. down. quarter that clinched The earlier bobble sparked a 42- The Chiefs moved the ball just Seahawks 27, Steelers 7 ;I 23-7 victory for the New Or- 7 Kansas City rout as Chris Mar- across inidfield in the closing sec- PITTSBURGH -- leans Saints over the Tampa Bay tin returned it 100 yards for a onds, but rookie Mike Croel found the magic again after a six- ~~~ ~~~ Bucc,aneers. touchdown. sacked DeBerg on third down. week injury layoff. Neil with the biggest kick of the day Walsh started Sunday in place . This time, Smith took the and DeBerg’s long pass on fourth O‘Donnell lost his in just six days. after watching the Minnesota Vi- to the injured Bobby Hebert after -handoff and appc~cdabout to down was out of bounds. Krieg, sidelined since the sea- kings get their kicks all game having relieved him in 13-6 vic- score when linebacker Lamar Jets 17, Colts 6 son-opener, directed two Seattle long. tory over Philadelphia last week. Lathon grazed his arm and the INDIANAPOLIS -- The New second-period scoring drives as Staurovsky, who missed ‘an Hebert has a bruised right shoul- ball came out. The turnover squan- York Jets found a vulnerable spot the Seahawks turned a blocked extra point in the fourth quarter der. dered a nine-play. 75-yard drive. and usedone of the oldest tricks in punt and a fumble into a 17-point and a 36-yard field goal in over- The Saints remained The Oilers took over at the 20 and the book to keep the winless In- halftime lead and a 27-7 victory time. hit a42-yarder with no time undehted at 7-0, aid the Bucca- ran’out the clock. dianapolis Colts with the worst over the punchless Pittsburgh left that gave the New England neers fell to 1-6 for the season. Broncos 19, Chiefs 16 record in the NFL. Steelers on Sunday. Patriots a 26-23 victory Sunday. The Bucs, ranked ninth in the DENVER -- John Elway “The defense was being real “It was fun to be back in there,” The Patriots (3-4) got the hall NFL defensive standings,had kept heaved a 71-yard pas to Mark aggressive, doing agreat job stop- said Krieg, who was 25 of 3 1 for at their 20-yard line 011 David every game close except a 31-3 Jackson on third-aid-17, digging ping the run,” Jets receiver Rob 266 yards and two . Pool‘s fumble recovery with 23 loss at Detroit, until Sunday. Denver out of a deep hole and Moore said of his 47-yard touch- “Standing on the sidelines isn’t IO go at the cndofan 18-yard pass Walsh’s came setting up David Treadwell‘s down reception on a flea-flicker much fun. I got back in there and play froin lo Steve when communications broke fourth field goal to lift the Bron- pass from Ken O’Brien htcom- we wererighton thesamepageas Jordan. down with his receivers. Both cos past the pletely surprised the Colts de- when I left.” Hugh Millen’s 27-yard were thrown well behind Saints 19-16 Sunday. fense. The play sparked Sunday’s O’Donnell, making his first coinplction toGreg McMurtry got receivers directly to Tanpa Bay The Broncos (5-2)snapped the 17-6 victory over the Colts. NFL start, couldn’t duplicate the the hall to the Minnesota 33 with defenders -- one to Darrell Chiefs‘four-game winning streak, Brad Baxter also ran for one 20-point second-half comeback 39 seconds to go. A 5-yard Fullington and one to Carl Carter. beat them for the ninth straight touchdown. and the Jets, (4-4) he led in last Monday’s 23-201oss time at Mile High Stadium and coinplctioiito MarvCookput it at Walsh finished with 205 yards stretched the Colts’ streak to 16 to the Ncw York Giants. He was climbed ahead of Kansas City (S- the 24 with 5 seconds remaining and the touchdown, coinpleting quarters without a touchdown. intercepted once and didn‘t get to set up Staurovsky’s kick. 19 of 31. 3) into first place in the AFC O’Brien hit nine of 10 passes Pittsburgh(3-4)onthescoreboard Minnesota‘s kicking had kept Oilers 17, Dtilphins 13 West. in the first half, including the 47- until connecting with Dwight Elway’s 22-yard touchdown the game going to that point. Af- MIAMI -- In a giunc of give- yard scoring pass to Moore. and Stone on a 57-yard pass play in ter Cannon‘s 4-yard touchdowrl aways. the Miami Dolphins and pass to rookie Derek Russell late finished with 14 of 19 for 205 the third quarter. in the first half and Treadwell’s pass to Anthony Carter cut New Saminic Smith fumbled their yards. Seattle (4-4). which leads the three field goals had staked Den- England‘s lead to23-20 with 137 chance to upset the Houston Oil- TheColts(0-8),theNFL‘slow- AFC in takeaways, forced three left. the Vikings (3-5)recove[ed ers. ver to a 16-9 third-quarter lead. est-scoring team with 55 points. turnovers and held the Steelers an onside kick. . Smith coughed up the ball 011a But the Chiefs seized the mo- haven’t scored a touchdown since scoreless for the third consecu- Brent Novoselsky got it. but first-and-goal dive play at the 1- mentum in the fourth quarter, the fourth quarter of the fourth tive first half while taking a 17-0 the replay official ruled he touched yard line Sunday. and Houston’s marching SX yards for the tying game. Their points came on a pair lead. it after it traveled just 9 yards. The Cris Dishman recovered in the touchdown thanks to the running of second-period field goals by Krieg didn’t look like a quar- nextonsidekickwent therequired end zone with 3: 10 left to clinch and receiving of rookie Harvey DeanBiasucci, who has accounted terback who missed six games Williams. He dashed 14 yards off IO yards. and Solomon Wilcots a 17-13 victory. for all 18 points the past four with a fractured thumb. complet- recovered for the Vikings at the Miami’s five turnovers also the left side for the score with games. ing his fist nine passes. And Se- New England 43. included an that 5:40 remaining. Indianapolis got inside the Jets’ attlc didn‘t look like the team that The drive ended with Fuad rookie Dxryll Lewis returned 33 On the next series, Elway was 20 only once, then reached the blew a 17-point halftime lead in Rcvcid’s third field god, a 23- yards untouched for the game’s sacked for a 7-yard loss by Der- New York 21 in the third quarter Im week’s 23-20overtllne loss to rick Thomas and Bill Maas, and yirdcr with 20 seconds left in the fist touchdown. Surprisingly stout before Jeff George was sacked for the Lus Angcles Raiders. fourth quarter that forced OT. defense by the Dolphins limited the Broncos appeared in a desper- a 10-yardIossandBiasuccimissed Krieg also avoided the turn- Saints 23, Buccaneers 7 Houston’s run-and-shoot to one ate situation with a third-and-17 a 49-yard field goal attempt. overs that led to the release oftill- NEW ORLEANS -- His start touchdown,partly by forcing four from their 13. O‘Brien, whosprained hisright in Jeff Kctnp. who was undcrstandahlc and correct- turnovers. But Elway then rolled out to ankle on a first-quarter sack, left led the NFL with 12 interceptions i\hlc.Stid StcvcWalsh.Thcrcsult The Oilers improved lo 6-1 his right and threw an across-the- the game for one play on the Jets’ is what counts. and increased their lead to three field pass that traveled at least 60 next possession.Three plays later. see NFL, page 13 Homecoming Parade Saturday, October 26

All student organizations are invited to enter floats. This year’s theme is “The world According to Jumbo.” Registration forms are available at the IDC office on the 2nd floor of the Campus Center, or call Jesse at 629-9029 for more info. Monday, October 21, 1991 THE TUFTS DAILY page nine - SPORTS Tufts’ total disaster Polar Bears edge out Jumbos Williams lays 6-0 hurt on Jumbos 21-13 loss is the fruit of Tufts’ long Maine road trip by MARC SHEINKIN tic lean effort on their hc by ROB MIRMAN fifteen-yard passes Over the the Jumbos were only down a 1)aily Staff Wntcr said. “Wc just weren’t ready for Daily Editorial Board middle on third downs. The Polar touchdown, 14-7. “Everything That wasn’t n typo. You read it it. They caughl us off our guard.‘ over theseasonTufts’defense Bears employed their was pretty much‘clicking [offen- right. Inaroad game that theTufts It was the second consecutive has as a quarterback’s mobility well, of- sively],’’ said senior quarterback inen’s soccer team desperately defeat for the Brown and Blue. ab big-play On many Occa- ten passing on roll-outs. And the Chris Wild, “We were Dassina Ithey fell back dowli to .SO0 it 5- pass opened up, so did their run- early, and it seemed they were Men’s 5- 1. Only three giuncs remain 011 ning game. Senior defensive end weak against it.” the 1991 schedule, and even il Ross Hampton explained, “We’d And with five minutes left in Soccer they were to win all three. hope! all be in our pass rush, and they’d the oDening half. the Jumbos had I of ii playoff berth are remote ai ’ use a lot of haws.’’ a chance Lo tie’the score after needed to win -- or at least play best. sions the Jumbos have up During the Polar Bears’ initial sophomore Anthony Puopolo compctitively in -- they came out Most likely, what really re. with an impomnt stop Or stuffed charge, with the down marker blocked a Polar Bear punt. Wild IlN iind WC~Ccoinpletcly de- inailis forthc Jumbos in these kai Opposing teams On first-and-goal reading fourth and inches, the led the Jumbos upfield and threw stroyed at Williams. 6-0. gams is achance to redeem theii situations. On Saturday, Jumbos were able to stop the on- an apparent 25-yard touchdown Yes. 6-0. dignity. “We‘ll just have to plaj Bowdoin’s Offense showed the slaught from Maine. ButBowdoin pass to freshman Chris Mikulski It was thc worst defeat for the real hard and show we’re not 2 Jumbos the wrong side Of the big made the plays when they had to deep in the Bowdoin end zone. Jumbos in recent ineinory.hid by scrub team,” Torres said. “No- Play- for their two first-half scoring But the officials didn’t see it that their own admission. they de- bddy looks at us like we are. ,and The Bears didn’t have a drives. “They definitely came up way, calling the catch out of served it. Nothing went right.Thcy I know we aren’t.” air-it-outtfle Offense, but with the big plays when hey bounds. had no attack. their defense was “We have to go into these nexi theyseemed to big when needed it,” Svagdis said, “and we A frustrated Wild said, . “It like a sieve. and even Pat Duffy’s threeg,uncsandjustclobber them, they needed to. “We were doing didn’t when we had usually superb goaltending could because I know we can,’’ Torres reatwellWiththeirrun,’’exPlained Even SO, late in the first half see FOOTBALL, page 10 not rescue them. continued. “[Saturday] was re- junior defensiveendPaul Svagdis, It was 2-0 before Tufts knew ally frightening -- but what can “They just didn’t keep running, what hit them. The halfthne score you do?“ they hit something big.” was 4-0.and at that point Duffy “Frightening“ is a good word For the most part, Tufts kept was lifted in favor of sophomore to dcscrihc the Williams giune. the Bowdoin rush to small three- backup David Covey. He was Tufts cane in knowing that they or four-yard gains, creating many greeted by two inore quick goals had to win. especially after last third down and fourth down situ- at the start of the second half, and Tuesday’s 1-0 loss at Wheaton. ations. Whencaughtin these situ- it was 6-0 until the game ended. Had they won Saturday, their ations, the Polar Bears seemed Finally. chances of inaking the playoffs able to pick up the yardage they Most of the team was not in a would have increased greatly. needed. talking mood after the game, but thanks in some part to earlier “We were playing well, but sophomore fullback Phil Torres well-played gmnes against such just couldn’t make things hap- was surprisingly candid. He schools as Wesleym and Trinity. pen,” explained sophomore line- surnincd up the game bcst when However. Williams definitely backer Eric Sholds. Svagdis he said bluntly, “It was pretty smashed those chances. “We were agreed saying, “It gets frustrating ugly.” terrible,” said freshman forward when you stop them, stop them, Torres was quick to acknowl- Erik Anderson. “We weren’t ready and they hit the big play.” edge that the Ephmcn wcrc at the Bowdoin’s quarterback was Photo by Kad Schatz topoftheirgiunc. “It was afiuitas- see SOCCER, page 11 consistentlyabletopickupten- to The Jumbos couldn’t quite catch a break when they had to. -. .

all record to impressive 16-5 found strength in their serving a!

Phoro by Karl Schafz The victory over Am hers t Photo by Karl Schatz stretched the Jumbos winning Tufts captain Catherhe Offen said that she and the rest of the hikes like these sDell V-I-C-T-0-R-Y for Tufts’ 16-5 squad. streak to ten st raight. __dumb10s are “looking forward to the NESCACs.” page ten , THE TUFTS DAILY Monday, October 21, 1991 * Finney says proposal still ‘a financial risk’ COMMENTARY tioned aspects of the revision. at the faculty meeting. I’m not Finney explained at the April likely” that administrators could continued from page 1 Arguments against the policy sure if he [Swap] has done any- meeting the policy was inconsis- manage such exact planning. benefit students who distinguish Trustee representative Angela thing with the policy,” Finney tent because students at Tufts In light of Swap’s statements themselves academically before Finney, a student member of Pe- said. could get advanced standing that he has not revised the pro- coining lo Tufts. ter-Paul last year. spoke last spring Finncy argued last spring the through outside work but could posed policy in accordance with Concernovertherevisedpolicy at the faculty meeting against the proposal was inequitablebecause not take “five courses every se- the straw vote results, faculty was voiced at last spring’s meet- policy, saying she was“disgusted there arc not enough alternatives mester for seven semesters, have members at the meeting today ing. particularly the inspecific at the loopholes in the proposcd for students who are not finan- 35 credits, and graduate early.” may question whether Swap has rationale and questions about the policy that could benefit the Ad- cially well-off to gain advanced Questions concerning the accurately changed the policy to financial aspects of the policy. ministration.” Finney said last standing. She cited the expensive policy as a.financia1 risk for the allay concerns about the fairness Although the Educational Policy nigh1 thediscussion~oday“shou1d costs of AP tests and the fact that University revolve around the of the policy. Committee approved the policy be interesting because I don‘t Tufts Summer School does not Administration’ssupposition that The standing policy was cre- and the Budget and University knowif[Swap] changedthepolicy offer financial aid as reasons why they will be able to admit addi- ated four years ago by Swap‘s PrioritiesCommittee (Peter-Paul) at all .” the proposed policy would be fi- tional students toTufts in propor- predecessor. David Maxwell. said there were no major financial “I have not been involved with nancially prohibitive for under- tion with students allowed to (Daily Staff Writer Chris problems with the proposed anything regarding the policy privileged students to gain ad- graduate early under the revised Srriyitiis coiitributed to this ar- policy. faculty membersstillques- since last semester, when I spoke vanced smiding. policy. Finney had called it “un- ticle .) Jumbos play one of those ‘weird games’ Funny show FOOTBALL later in the half when they had a ing to pin the Polar Bears down PLAID continued from page 9 little too far to the sappy side. but first-and-goalsituation. Tufts was and force a punt. Tufts.made a continued from page 7 seemed like he was clearly in.” A hit with a penalty, then stuffed at it does help milk the final number. successful stand on first and sec- There is only so much one can few moments later Wild would the line of scrimmage before After all. this is show biz. run- ond down, but the Polar Bears choreograph for dweeby dead get even more frustrated as the made yet another third down con- “Forever Plaid” is funny, ning the ball to the two. On fourth men. Director/choreographer officialscalled back another Tufts and goal, the Jumbos went to the version, allowing them to run out charming, and a good time. It’s Stuart Ross, who also wrote this touchdown pass with a penalty air, but a Polar Bear defender the clock and hold onto the win. theater junk food: not substance piece, milks about as much as one for illegal motion. swatted the ball to the ground. Hampton recalled before the buta1otoffun.Thisshowisworth can from this premise. Wild didn’t get many more But the Jumbos converted on game thinking of a quite different seeing. chances to put Tufts on the board outcome: “We figured that we their second big break when, with Sometimes the play is a little Dinner packages with Legal as the Polar Bears run-oriented two minutes left in the game, could dominate the game defen- offense chewed up the clock on heavy-handed. The humor and Seafood are also available, mak- senior linebackerDave Callahan’s sively. characterizations are broad and ing this a good date or a great long drives. Bowdoin converted a “They seemed to get us out of interception gave Tufts the ball. just on the brink of being place to take the folks. The Ter- fourth-and-12on what turned out In aslightly hurried offensive set, ourgarneplan,”Hamptoncontin- to be their sole second-half scor- overplayed at times, but that’s race Room is a cabaret setting so Wild brought the Jumbos to ued, “We play aggressive, with forgivable for this setting. theater-goerscan drink overpriced ing drive. “I thought it was spot- Bowdoin’s nine-yard line before big-hits, that didn’t seem to hap- ted wrong [after the fourth down drinks during the show. 1960s- connecting with junior Omar Darr pen on Saturday. It was one of This show has a nice build. play],” Svagdis said, although he style snacks are even served. for the scoring strike. Tufts’ at- those weird games.” The Ed Sullivan tribute is fr‘mtic admitted, “We should have tempt at a two-point conversion Next week the Jumbos play “ForeverPlaid“p1aysevenings stopped them anyway.”The score and funny and keeps the audience failed,and the Jumbos weredown Amherst at home. Hopefully the laughing so hard that they can aid some matinees at The Terrace put Bowdoin up 21-7. by eight at 21-13. Jumbos won’t have one of those Room in the Boston Park Plaza The Jumbos didn’t have barely keep up. With all three time outs left, ‘weird games’ on their home turf. Hotel. 64 Arlington St in down- Bowdoin’s luck on a key drive the Jumbos kicked off deep, hop- Thepace slowsdownonly with town Boston. Performances are the slight 1y - sad/sli g h t 1y - Tuesday through Sunday. This is inspirational inoment at the end. Aidekman wants groups- - to share theater- an open-ended run, so while it AIDEKMAN In a scene almost reminiscent of may not play forever. this one will how much he had enjoyed Tufts “Our Town,” the boys discuss continued from page 1 drama groups such as the Black be around for a long while. theater programs, particularly the Theater Compnny. the Women‘s what lies beyond. This pushes it a 1976 graduate of Harvard, where drama department Cup and Sau- Theater Collective and Torn this June he was also awarded an cer productions. He added the Ticket I1 are not allowed to stage honorary doctorate in music. Aidekman family will certainly their productions there. Maya then prcsented ;ui hon- be interested in the future of the Following the dedication, the orary Doclorale of Fine Arts de- center, but will not t‘ake a hand in audience attended areception and gree to sculptor Richard Hunt. a its operatioiwnot even to suggest tooktheopportunity to stroll about Chicago imtive known forhis large a particular production. the new arts complex. The worksdisplayed in public spaces. Although the younger Aidekm‘m center is made up of 11Ith.icks. 111it t iI ig vou r One of Hunt‘s smaller works. a Aidekman voiced his hope that the Marston Balch ArenaTheater, piece entitled Planar Morrrrtuin. access to the Marston Balch Arena the Tisch Family Gallery on the was donated to Tufts by Miriam theater would be shared between upper level. the Koppelman Gal- like 45 iiiiiiiitcc to nttziid ;I fret. Spertus Victor and has graced the sludents and the drama depart- lery on the lower level, and the ceiiiiiix, \dirre yo^! cnn grt n lawn in front of Cannichael Hall ment. there has been concern at Harry Remis Sculpturecourt.The brondcr outlook oii the since May 1990. Tufts regarding the degree of ac- Tisch family gallery is currently Macsncliucettc eroiioiiiy, job Gary Aidektnan, who attended cess student groups should have displaying an exhibition of strik- Tufts in thc early 1970s, said he to the theater. While the student iiinrkrts niid thr iiiipnct of our ing landscapes and city scenes by shriiikiiig world. Lenrn Iiow to views the Center as a “facility drama group Pen, Paint ‘and Pret- Alice Ned, the American artist opeii doore iii closed iiinrkrts, niid liow n clucer uiiclcrstniidiiig of your relntioiichip to God cnii provide cpiriwd solutions.

C.111 tod;iy for n rcserv;itioii to tliis iiiiport.iiit eveiit, or drop iii (seating is litiiited): 450-3339

LARRYGOODRICH Senior ctnff corrccpoiidziit for 77rc-Clrric1i~irrSrirric-c ,I /oiri/iv

DIANNEHARTSHORN Eiiiployiiiriit coiisiiltniit

REED HARRIS starrrp nrrd yorrr rerrrrnrrerrt Chistinil Science Ircturrr horrre nddress if yorr worrld like therrr rctrtrrred to pi. Also, lease prirrt yorrr horrre nddre or1 the rear of each photo. tiirvnrd Lniv Scliool

Tinkc the “r”I

I’rcwitcd by The Fir,t Church Monday, October 21, 1991 THE TUFTS DAILY page eleven ‘Look, I know you’re not a Tufts student’ BLUE continued from page 5 little bell,” he continued. “All you ...” ccrity. iW if I was trying to get a kid student. you have to do is buy one of these “What?” he said. “I told you off the streets, “If you want to sell And we thought it was easy to find Tufts. magazines. Look - each one that I just transferred here.” InilgiIzirles. YOU ci~llgo in that fake that we study at Tufts. We “Well. actuiIlly it’s not that gives me a certain number of ‘‘Doyou have an ID?:’Min and door there ‘and talk to the student should give ourselvesmore credit one. It’s the one right next to it.” points. ‘and gives you great S~V- I chimed at the same time. activitiesoffice.They can arrange next time. he said. assuredly with a wide- ings. For example. if you were to “Well. no, I just got here. I to get you a table like that one Min and I had a good laugh eyed-I-didn’t-reall y-break-the- buy S~ortslllitstr~~ted,that would have to have my picture taken therc.” I said. pointing to the afterwards. I almost felt bad be- cookie-jar looks. cost you $1Y.Y5 for...“ today.” Doody exclaimed. “I have jewelery table Min was just at. cause those ads on the back of At this point, I couldn ‘1 take it Grune over. man. one from BU. though,” he said as “What was.thar?” he asked. I those comic books don‘t always anyinore. “Look.“ I said.“I know you’re he feigned to reach in his pocket. repeated my instructions. “Oh. deliver the grand prizes that they “I was only kidding about the “Look,” I said again with sin- OK. thank you very much for the promise. and Dmdy inay just have not a Tufts student. Why don’t -.. inforination.” he said as he been another victim to the darker Jumbos can still salvage season promptly departed for the door side of Archie and Veronica coin- SOCCER ing about the fafi of 199~.DUI rnis ’Torres noted that it would be with the large round window. ics. But hopefully, he has enough continued from page 9 young team can only get better as anawfully long winter if the Jum- seemingly cxcited by the fact that points to send away for aneat hot it will only be graduating three bos did not come out and play just by going inside he might be- pink high’ tail skateboard. I al- to play. We weren’t mentally pre- seniors. well in the last week and a half of gin to lookeven more like aTufts ways wiuitcd one of those. pared. Sources close to the team say the season. Even if the games do “We gave up those first couple that coach Ralph Ferrigno is re- not matter in the overall scheme Jumbos tear up competition of goals very quick,” Anderson cruiting very well. with many of things, they still can offer op- Olympic Development Players VOLLEYBALL continued. “And after that, we portunities for some much needed continued from page 9 gams Tufts’ squad hopes to go lost our focus. Nobody was run- available aid considering Tufts. dignity, pride. and satisfaction. out with a bang. “We’re peaking ning, and they ran right through The better the Jumbos finish in The remaining matches can game. Tufts shut down the Lyons at the perfect time,” said the defense. We had no team 1991. the easier it will be to re- also allow the Jumbos to try to put attack and went on to win IS-12. Ballentine. and Offen agrees: shape. There was nothing [Duffy] cruit -- another reason that the the Willi,ams disaster out of their Tufts reasserted their authority in “We’re really coining together, could do.” final three games are important. minds. They should not forget it the second giune of the match, and we‘re looking forward to the No excuses come to mind, no The first chance for redeinp- completely. however. because pounding Wheaton to win 15-6. NESCACS.” If the Jumbos can reasons for such a flat perfor- tion will come on Wednesday at they donot want torepeat it. Inthe With il 16-S record, the Jum- inahitain their high level of play, in‘ance. There were some injuries, home against Clark University. end, though. they cannot let it bos are heading towards the end the NESCACS should provide but none so bad that the Jumbos That is followed by the last home weigh on their shoulders as the of yet mother successful season. them with the perfect opportunity

could not play competitive soc- game of the season on Saturday season winds down. Victorious in their last eleven toprove how good- they really are. cer. The team had said from the against Amherst. and then the sea- Soccer is a tough game, and very start that they could play son finale at MIT next Wednes- Saturday was just one of those Film offers humor with and beat iU1y team. and they day. days. Every now and then, teams have proven that on a few occa- just don’t show up to play, and MONEY movie’s shameless plug of a cer- Three straight wins would give continued from page 7 sions. Tufts a very respectable 8-5-1 they pay the price by getting tain doughnut company. However. in every setback record, and although a playoff smashed. All that the Jumbos can sionally becomes predictable. Other People’s Money is gen- there is a silver lining. nnd this shot would be a longshot, that do is give the Ephmen some credit Two speeches made towards the erally effective in getting its mes- one is no different:next year. Yes, kind of record is still worth re- and get ready for Clark. The sea- endof the moviereflect this. One, sage across and offers some ex- it might be premature to be think- membering. son isn’t over yet. by Devito, shrunelesslyextols the tremely funny lines. It is not as good that the world of Wall Street sleek or well-crafted as it could can do. Another features Peek have been, and sometimes the ...* ...* TUFTS BALCH ARENA THEATER 8c h.10 19 doing his best Jimmy Stewart situations in the movie become 7-mAIDCI(M4N ART5 CENTER while asking for a return to old- tedious. But its caustic wit and PRESENT IN fashionedvalues -- a“little1ookin’ quality performances carry it out for the next fella.”so to speak. through and help the audience GROSS NiEA = 30,225 SQ Also slightly irritating is the overlook any .weaknesses. I Please recycle I Iln rinfi this newspaper.

WINNER OF THE TUFTS MEMORIAL PLAYWRITING CONTEST Wo Places ’Ib Call For Help WithTheNew LSAT: - INd3 SIX CHARACTERS 1. Stanley H. Kaplan inlllll 2. Dial-A-Prayer

The new ISAT course. For the new LSKI:

I- 5 OeTOBER”2’2-26,1991 8:OO p.m.u...l Classes starting now! Special discount for

Wednesday & Thursday $5.00 . on-campus classes. .I Friday & Saturday $6.00 ... . Mastercard & Visa accepted- for iiiforiiiat ion 81 reservations call 627-319: Call 1-800-KAP-TEST page twelve THE TUFTS DAILY Monday, October 21, 1991 Senators accumulating absences RESIGNATION force a senator to resign and thus threat” thal she would be asked to continued from page 1 cannot hold elections for a seat resign. but because she did not asked to resign if she had missed until the senator officially resigns believe she was giving the Senate anorher meeting. Kleiiunan has from his or her free will. enough tine. also noted Trousil has been ab- Thisrule. thoughit has been in According toFoster.manynew suit from Education committee the Constitution since its ratifica- senators have accuinulated ab- 1991-92 Evening Seminar Series meetings. tion, is one many senators do not seiicesrrlready.Fosternoted, how- in Medical Ethics Sponsor: Foster also said. according to take it seriously. Foster said. In ever. that most freshm‘m senators the current TCU Constitution. a the past, she said, the absence rule do not have this problem since Pre Med - Pre Dent - Pre Vet Society fourth absence from a meeting has not been “strictly enforced.” only two incetings have been held and BA/MD Early Acceptance Program ”implies” the resignation of the Trousil said that she realized since the Freshmen Elections in absent senator. She noted, how- her absences were nuinerous, but September. ever. the Senate has no power to that she quit. not because of “the Elections Board chair Brian Barnum 008,7:30 pm DiGiovluuii could not be reached forcomlnent last night on whether No progress two years ago- October 23 ~ a special elections would be hcld SCAM- for Trousil‘s replacement. The Dr. Shenvood Gorbach, Professor of Medicine, criminal arrcstcd 20 times by age continued from page 3 election will likely take place in Tufts University School of Medicine 40. the youiwcr Nix is a rcDuted Januarv. Nix, 48. whose father and Ieadero~the~~uthemundcraorld “Cases in Medical Ethics” namesake wasachiefjudgeof the kiiown as the Dixie Mafia. Oklahoma Court of Criminal Ransom. .64,also a reputed November 20 Appeals. is serving life without Dixie Mafia member, is serving a Dr. Thomas Sabin, Professor of Neurology, parok for the 197 1 murder of a 12-year scntcnce for ~nanslaugh- & New Orleans grocer. A career tcrataHudwick.Gcorgia.prison. Boston University Boston City Hospital “Origin of Stigmatized Attitudes Toward Disease” Looking for Q local dentist? December 11 Services include both emergency and routine dental To be announced care and checkups, cosmetic dentiStry (including - computerized video-imaging),and specialty referrals. January 15,1992 BE.A BARTENDER! To be announced Richard M. Reiter, D.M.D. ._ LOCAL I NAllOWAL P UCCYLNT 474 Broadway, Somerville 623-2223 ABSISTANCL February 12,1992 (3/4mile from Powderhouse Circle fowards Boston) DAY’IMNIWG ONE WEEK 536-7272 To be announced Tufts D‘75 graduate 7 10 BOILSTON STREET. BOSTON March 18,1992 Dr. Arthur Safran, Professor of Neurology, ~ Boston University & Boston City Hospital ”Malpractice, Quality Care and

Expert Witness Testimony ”

For further information contact Dr. Stanley Jacobson at 956-6701. Are you a cancer survivor or been touched by cancer? Interested in a

. support group?

Come to our meeting: Monday, Oct. 21 Or in any of over 70 developing development, engineering, the sciences, countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and more. With a degree or experience in or Central Europe. Your first job after these fields, you may find that Peace 7:OO pm graduation should offer more than just a Corps will be able to use your skills like paycheck. In the Peace Corps, you’ll no other employer you’re considering. broaden your world view and your And equip you with the Eaton 208 horizons for the future. You’ll learn a new type of experience language.. . live in a different culture.. . valued by interna- develop professional skills.. .and meet tional firms, challenges far greater than those you might government be offered in a starting position in the U.S. agencies, and Any questions, ca Peace Corps is looking for people private industry from many disciplines- education, health, and graduate 629-7680. All students, the environment, agriculture, community school programs.

Peace Corps recruiters will soon be visiting Tufts University. M:i,jors in science, ni:itli, civil engineering. health, faculty and-staff invited. elementary or special education, English, and business are encouraged to attend. Find out how you can qualify: INFO TARLE FILM SHOWING INTERVIEWS MONDAY, OCT 2 I MONDAY. OCT 2 I TUESDAY, OCT 22 10:OO - 4:OO pin . 8:OO pm 9:OO - 430 pin Co-sponsored by LCS Cancer Outreach Meyer Center Lobby Zamparelli Rooin . Career Planning Center and the Health Education Program Or call the Peace Corps: 617-565-5555 EXT. 502 Monday, October 21, 1991 THE TUFTS DAILY page thirteen Raiders come from behind again NFL as time expired. end zone. McKyer protested that to Atlanta last week. up a 37-yard field goal by Jaeger continued from page 8 Friesz completed 33 of 54 Hill pushed him in the back. The win improved San Fran- that gave the Raiders a 23-20 when he was waived last Monday. passes for 321 yards, all career The result left the Cardinals at cisco to 3-4. putting at least a overtime WinoverSeattleonOct. Krieg didn‘t throw an intcrcep- bests. with one touchdown and 4-4 halfway through the season. temporary end to the squabbling 13, inade his second interception tion and the Seahawks. who led two interceptions. Kosar rallied ending a two-game skid, and ~idf11iger-pointiligatthe troubled of at the Rams’ 39- thc AFC with23 turnovers. didn‘t Cleveland froin a 17-3 deficit, dropped the Falcons to 3-4. four-time chanpi- yard line with 3:07 remaining. funble. coinpleting 26 of 42 passes for Phoenix cornerbacks Lorenzo ons, who lost Montana to an el- The pass was deflected by defen- Krieg hit Chadwick on a 14- 297 yards and two touchdowns, Lynch and Jay Taylor intercepted bow injury before the season sive end Howie Long and Lott yard touchdown pass 18 seconds both to Leroy Hoard. a pass ,and recovered a fumble, started. Montana underwent sur- was at the right place to catch it. Kosatr, who extended his string before halftime. then found respectively. in the third quarter gery 10daysagoaridislostforthe NickBell thencarriedsixtimes Tommy Kane on a 60-yard of passcs without an interception toset up the last two fieldgoals by season. for 25 yards, putting the Raiders completion to set up his own I- toacluh-record 233. eludedpres- Davis. and strong s‘afety Tim ButYoung lookedevery bit the in position for Jaeger to kick his yard scoring pass to Tice in the sure and threw a 15-yard touch- McDonald sealed the win with part of the four-time Super Bowl 19th field goal in 22 attempts this down pass to Hoard with4:09 left fourth period. That pushed two interceptions111 the last 3:37. MVP on Sunday. season. Seattle’s lead to 20 points. for a 24-24 tic. Kosar completed Atlanta had taken a 10-3 lead Hecompletedh~sfirst 16passes The Raiders had tied the game O‘Donnell was less success- four of seven passes for 72 yards, in the second quarter after Chris and finished 18 of 20 for 237 17-17onal-yardrunbyBellwith aid gaincd the other 5 yards on ful. going 14 of 22 for 184 yards Miller hit Mike Pritchard with a yards and two touchdowns -- a 2- 408 remaining, capping an 80- the drive with a run. as Pittsburgh‘s offense constantly 2 1-yard TD pas and Norm John- yarder to 49 seconds Yard, five-PlaY drive after Lett's short-circuitedwith blown assign- One drive earlier, Friesz re- son kicked a 29-yard field goal. before halftime that gave sm interceptionintheendzone. Bell‘s ments. penalties or dropped covered from a damaging inter- Davis, who came to Phoenix Francjsco a 21-3 halftime lead, touchdowll was the first rushing passes. In oneeight-playsequence ception by throwing a 2-yard under Plan B, kicked his first field and a 22-y~derto M&e Sherrard TD for the Raiders dl Seaon. in the second period. the Steelers touchdown pass to Steve goal from 29 yards. capping an in the third quarter. He also hxett had thrown a 19-Ywd fumbled twice. dropped two Hendricksonfora24-17 leadwith J 11-play drive with the opening scrambled seven tunes for40 yards touchdown Pasto Vernon Turner passes. committed two procedure 6:38 left. kickoff. He tied it with a 51-yard before being lifted after the third in the third quarter to break a 10- penalties and allowed a sack. The Browns trailed 17-3 late boot and kicked the last one from 10 tie. It wasTurner’s first recep- in the third quarter. But Kosar quarter for Steve Bono. Browns 30, Chargers 24 (OT) 49 yards with 931 left. TomRathman,meanwhile. had tion of the season. threw a6-yard touchdown pass to SAN DIEGO -- Former The game was played in tem- scoring runs of one and two yards There was no Scoring after that Hoard. and Joe Morris scored on Charger David Brandon scored peratures which neared 100 de- and went 1I yards until Bell’s run, which came a a 1-yard run. all in a 2:26 span. to on a 30-yard interception retuni grees before the sinallest crowd - around right end for a TD on a little more than two minutes after with 7:20 remaining in overtime. tie it. - 24,124 -- in the four years since Friesz then led thechargers on fourth-and-one play in the 21- it appeared the R‘ms (3-4) were lifting thc Clcvclaiiid Browns to a the Cardinals moved from St. point second quarter. in coirunand and about to score wild 30-24 victory ovcc Sari Di- an 86-yard drive. He was 7-for-9 Louis. for 68 yards, including 3-for-3 on Raiders 20, Rams 17 the clinching points. ego and spoiling John Fricsz‘s 49ers 35, Lions 3 LOSANGELES--RonnieLott But Lott gave the Raiders a finest day as ;I pro. third down. --The San The Chargers had gone ‘ahead made two fourth-quarterintercep- chance by making his first inter- Braidon.aCharger from 1987- Francisco 49ers turned back the tions to set up the tying and win- ception. and they took advantage 90. beat receiver Natc Lewis to 17-3 by scoring on consecutive clock on the Detroit Lions on third-quarter drives. Harmon ning points Sunday as the Los of it. Friesl’s pass and scored Sunday, returning to their cham- Angeles Raiders rallied for a 20- The Raiders had tied the game uncontested as the Browns (3-4) scored on an 11-yard draw play pionship fonn and tumirig the and Marion Butts got in on a 2- 17 victory over the Los Angeles 10-10 on a 35-yard field goal by broke a three-game losing stre,&. Lions back into cubs. With Rams. Jaeger. Brandon, a linebacker who spent yard run. Both drives started in- looking like Joe side Cleveland territory. JeffJaeger’s34-yard fieldgoal Evcrctt co1npletcd 22 35 last year on injured reserve, was Montana in a perfect 13-for-13 with 2 seconds remaining gave passes for HI yards two Cardinals 16, Falcons 10 first half and the defense shutting left uiiprotcctcd by the Chargers the Raiders (5-3) their second touchdowns.Raiders quarterback and signed with Cleveland as a TEMPE. Ariz. -- Tom Tupa down Barry Sanders. the 49ers threw a 3 1 -yud touchdown pass straight come-from-behind vic- Jay Schrocdercolnpleted I 5 ($26 Plan B free agent. beat the Lions 35-3. tory. to rookie Randal Hill to tie the passes for 271 yards with one Friesz. who outdueled Bcniie That ended the five-gane win- Lott, whose interception set interception. Kosar in a second-half shootout, garne. and Greg Davis kicked lhree ning streak of the upstart Lions, completed seven of nine passes field goals against his old team as wh; fell into a tie with Chicago for 55 yards to move the Chargers thc Phoenix Cardinals defeated aton the NFC Central at 5-2 arid Land does not equal peace- (1-7) froin their 20 to the Cleve- the 16-10 Sun- ldkedgvery bitlike the Lean that PEACE land 24 in the final minutc of day. hasn‘t had a winning season since . continued from page 3 Syria at the peace conference. regulation. Aholding call against Tup’s pass dropped over 1983. Sanders, who had had four In Tehran, Iran, Arab and Ira- Arthur Cox inovcd the ball back cornerback Tim McKyer, who straight 100-yardgames,was lim- Israeli soldiers. ruanofCicialsdenouiic~the peace to the 34, ‘and John C‘mey was jumped too soon and was falling ited to26 yards insevencarriesby Ben- Aharon indicated that Is- conference. wide left on a 49-yard field goal when Hill rose for the catch in the a defense that allowed 39 points rael would take up the issue with “Israel will not give any con- cessions and the Arab states will not gain anything .” Lebanese Druxe leader Walid Jumblatt told the Islamic Republic News Agency. Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati also con- demned the confercncc. Hardline Iranian officials told a conference of Arab and Muslim groups that and Islamic army should be formed to “liberate” Jerusalem. Baker, who made eight trips to the Middle East to press Israel and the Arabs to attend. was in Madrid Saturday to make final arrangements. then returned to Washington. The Cabinet vote toattend was 16-3. said Transport Minister Moshe Katzav. Those who voled no were Housmg Minister Ariel Sharon, the most outspoken opponent in the Likud bloc; Science Minister Yuval Neeman of Tehiyah; and Rehavam Zeevi, a minister with- out portfolio with the Moledet, or Homeland. p.any. Tehiyah advocates Jewish settleinem in the Israeli-occu- pied lands and strongly opposes the peace forum, saying it would force Israel to make territorial concessions. Modelet advocates expelling Palestinians from the occupied lUnited States. gate dealers. the newspaper re- inaide unnecessary repairs. a news- per last week. "There is nothing lions of dollars because transmis- GM and the state agreed to ported. paper reported Sunday. wrong with it morally. ethically sion repair shops were taking ad- keep the compnny 's participation The practice may be legal, but The automaker provided cm. or legally." vantage of a 1983 agreement be- quiet. . the state should have announced transmissions, engineers. mechan- On Sunday. Kellcy released a tween GM 'and the Federal Trade In a 1986 television interview that the autoinaker was involved. ics and garage and office space to stiltclnent through spokesman Commission. The company had when the sting results were an- said Yale Kamisar, a University the 19x6 Operation Shifty sting. Chris Dewitt. saying the newspa- agreed to pay repair bills for cars nounced, Kelley advised coiisu~n- of Michigiln law professor. aid the state attorney general per failed to report that the invcs- with faulty parts. includlng the iigrced to keep GM's involve- tigation saved Michigan residents Turbo Hydra-Matic 200automatic IGCJ waits for outcome ment quiet. The Dclrnil N~MTs;Ud. millions of dollars in fraud. transmission. The FTC said that to date. GM HEARING GM has did the same during "Court after court. including continued from page inspection report has not been similar investigations across the the federal courts, have agreed has handed out more than $68 released to the public. country. including in Maryland with my position that the case was inillioiiirirepairbillsforcars with 16s college include hree Inter-Greek Council Vice. and Florida. the newspaper said. handled properly," Kelley said. faulty parts. neighbors of 165 College Ave. President Jen Samuelson. also All 13 shops investigated in "Fortuiiately for Michig'an. resi- GM wouldn't who claim they witnessed the al- chair of the IGC Judiciary, said Michigari were shut down. Some dents, judges have understood ment on details of the investiga- I,,Lbtd, spray-painting incident and last night she expects to receive a paid fiies and reopened aid oth- who the true bad guys were in this tiOn hecrlusc Of pending litiga- were verbally &used by the jjldi- report of the palel's final deter- ers remain closed. ' case, the involved transmission viduals. Sornerville Alderinan Inillations of the hearing. GM's involvement with the shop operators. not General Mo-. said Sunday. Jack Connolly. a witness to the Samuelson, whohassidtheIGCJ sting wasn't disclosed at a news tors." we tota*ly alleged incident.as well as aTufts will convene its own hearing in conference in 1986, when state Kellcy said he will continue with A' tonicy Kelley. University Police officer have the coming weeks. explained she Attorney General Frank Kelley his policy of welcoming corpo- whosaid there witsnothhg wrong each filed with the wants to know the outcome of the with GM's cooperation either announced that the'operation was rate and private citisciis with any - _._of Students. Dean of Students hearing before a success. coinplaints ofchcaling or defraud- morally. Coruiolly ha.. said he is unsure convening the IGCJ hearing. The newspaper rcviewed about ing the public. ethically or legally,~'Cr&n said. ifthe townof Soinervillewill take The IGCJ hearing. according 10,000 pages of court testimony, Some critics don't agree with adding that GM will continue to any action in the case, adding to Samuelson, will determine administrative hearing records, such leainwork. cooperate in any probes of illegal- action will depend on the out- whether there is :my organiza- government files andGM memos. "I'm troubled by the notion of activities that defraud customers. coine of the Dean of Students tional culpability regarding the many obtained through the Free- private groups funding law en- GM had hired an investigator hearing as well as ruiy initiative incident. She said the IGCJ has dom of Inforination Act. forcement efforts and the cozy to determine if shops were using t'aken by Soinervilleresidents.The jurisdiction in these matters if Kclley saidthe busincsscs werc relationship that engenders," said the FTC agreement to rip off the Somerville Board of Aldennan fraternities,and not specific indi- invcstigiltcd hcc;iusc of com- Joseph Gnuio, a former deputy company. then turned to the state. voted two weeksago tohave town viduals, are involved in the inci- plaints from consumers and the assistant US attorney general who "The size of fraud was amaz- health officials inspect the resi- dents. state already had a probe under teaches law at Wayne State Uni- ing." said private detective dence at 165 College Ave. The 1Classif iedsclassif iedsclassif iedsclassif iedsclassif iedsclassif ieds

lmagewriter II The 3rd Floor is Yours! Yoga! Yoga! Yoga! Bought last Christmas but hardly Spring sublet. 2 rms 8 your own Relax, renew, rejuvenate. Classes Also, word processing or typing of Events used since then 8 needs to be sou. private bath. Off-street parking. Free offered inSomerville. Reducestress. student papers, grad school appli- Only $300 for its new 8 excellent WID. Why live in one room when you intensify creative energy, increase cations. personal statements, the- condition. Call Lek at 629-7703 & can sublet a floor? Call Rob, 776- mental clarity. First class free! ses. multiple letters. tapes tran- please leave a message if no one's 7502 Teacher certified by Kundalini Insti- scribed, laser printing. etc. CALL musicians! home. tute. 628-7364 FRANCES ANYTIME AT 3955921. Personals AppleJam is planning Fall Concert Apt for rent events for student bands. To per- Buy classifieds in - Newly renovated, 3 bdrm. Ivg rm, form, your band must attend MAN- The Tufts Daily! NEED TO TALK? modern bath. e-i kitchen wlrefrig. Call Ears tor Peers withquestions or DATORY MEETING on Tues 10/22 Onsalenowat theDailyofficeinthe parking, very closetocampus.Avail. back basement of Curtis Hall or problems, big or small. Tufts'anony- at 8pm Lewis Hall Lounge. Alex: at now, $750/mO. Call 776-5467 after mous student-run hoiline is there for Angela . 6299881 the Campus Ctr Info Booth. Hands off Mark! He's mine! Sally 5pm. you. Every night 7pm-7am. 627- 3888. Confidential. GOOD NEWS!! Male roommate wanted Wanted ERICA For those who were interested in Oi Oi Oi Oi Oi Oi Oi Oi or is it Oy Oy Beautiful. spacious 3 bdrm apt. YEAH BOYEEEEEEE ... E Ballroom Dancing. Instruction is be- Kitchen, Ivg rm,3rnin from Tufts. For Oy Oy Oy Oy Oy Oy? D.V. ing given every Monday from 7-9pm Planning a house party? For the Housing more info, please call Clara 628- best in house, Rap. Reggaeand Top in Bush Hall Lounge. All are wel- 4324 Dear Jills- mme! Wear comfortable shoes, but 40 to keep the bodies movin', walls Thank you for making my birthday skatin', derrieres wigglin', and the no sneak&. No charge. CHEAP! CHEAP!! Minority Juniors 8 Seniors: unforgettable and making a link Block from campus newly renovated neighbors askin' you to turn it up... dream mme true. See you at your SUBLET Call DJ RAFF-E at 489-0346. Meet and interview with dozens of Attention Women Engineers!! Stan now or Jan 1 Large bdrm in 2 3-5 bdrm e-i kitchen. parking, near :orporations (Merrill Lynch, next show. Craig Attend the SWE Regional Confer- Wrm apt, furnished, near Davis Sq redline. Lv message at ph# 484- CMT Word Processing Services McKinsey. P8G and more!) at the ence Nov. 1517 at WPI. Sign up by 8234 UlNORlTY CAREER FORUM. 1216 Alfred 23 on SWE bulletin board in 8 campus, on College Ave, large will inputthesis, letters, manuscripts, Oct. driveway, $400lmo Call 395-3204 Sheraton-Boston. 10-4. To regisier. Hi! I will probably have talked to you Anderson Hall. term papersintoIBMGompu1er;print five times by the time you read this, out letter quality. $2.25 dsipg. Fie- and resume PRIOR TO 10131 :Crim- son8 Brown Associates, 143OMass so there is not much to say. Just Elderly Outreach Apts for rent sumes$l2. Tapetranscriptionavail. take it easy and smile. Love, G. 4bdrms8 2bdrms 29ChetwyndRd Free on campusdeiivery.Quickturn- 4Ve. Suite 1003, Cambridge, MA Do you enjoy carving pumpkins and 4 bdrms, refrig. driveway, newly ren. 321 38. Questions? (617) 868-01 81. working with the elderly? Come hear around. Call Cherat 321-3746. . Enrique $1100, avail now 2 bdrms, refrig, how you can do both tonight at 9pm driveway. newlyren Avail 1ai. $750, ATENTION STUDENTS!! Relax and kick some in Eaton 202. For info call: Jess at $99 DJ Special Steps to school 648 4247 Wanted lance to the best music from CD at Farn up to $500 cash for 5 hrs work. ass tonite! Love, Thingy 629-9885 or Melissa at 629-9056. Ride to New York City on 1 111. Iam four next party, spun by an upbw ni'l Business Tours is seeking an happytosplitthecostofgas! Please TAMARA APARTMENT FOR RENT! XI (with no attitude!). Pricefor stan- irticuiate student to organize a 30 Memorial Sewice Planning E Somerville Off Broadway (1) Bdrm, call Nanette at 629-8554 nin info meeting on campus. No WhatmuldIpossiblysayinthislinle Further planning for anyone inter- lard 4hr. on-campus events ($25 IIV rm, dining rm, lg kitchen wlrefrig 3xperiencei54-4158 needed, call now!! (800) personal that hasn't been said al- ested in a memorial service for Kyri 3xtrafor lg rms). KARAOKE "sing-a- Glassed in porch, enclosed yard w/ ready. Enjoy your name in print. Kincade will be held Mon. 10/21 at ong' also avail (add $40). Contact Love, your roomie. 5pm in the University Chaplain's of- Off4 parking $525lmo Heated no lim of Laser Sound at 489-21 42 for CAMPUS REPS WANTED!! fice in Goddard Chapel. uttls No fee Call Lark Assocs nore info. Men's Hoop Team Wkdays-(617)784-0964.eves (508) iarn valuable experience. travel. 8 Thanks for a great game, hope you Attention Seniors: 238-3554 Services "'TYPING AND WORD"' neet new people1 Sell winter/spring raised lots of money, and sorry for Please note following additions to PROCESSING SERVICE mak packages toJamaica.Cancun. throwing the bat against the fence. Cycle 2 Recruitment at Career Plan- a room apt 395-5921 3ahamas. Margarita island. From From Barn-Bam at the Daily ning. ed. 3299: 11/20, Lockheed 1 112 bath 4 bdrms. Next to Tufts. ;tuden! papers.theses. grad school 369 Best commissions paid! Sun Wers. resumes due 10124: 121 Call 395-4407 or 396-0369 Key-bored? ipplications. personal statemerits. splash Tours 1-800-426-7710 03, NYC Dept. of Transpartation. Berkiee professor offering state-of- lape transcription. resumes. grad/ resumes due 10/24. Info sessions Apt for rent the-art private keyboard instruction. faculty projects, multiple letters, added: 10124, Andersen Consulting. 5 rms (kitchen. living rm & dining rm, All contemporary styles, levels. De- AMCAS forms. All documents are 4pm, Large Conference Rm, Cam- Zbdrms), off-streetparking, 1st floor. velop your musical talent! Discover Laser Printed and spell-checked pus Ctr: 1 1I1 9, Lockheed Sanders, $650/mo. Close to T 8 Tufts. 729- the joy of improvisation!! Free con- using WordPerfect 5.1 or Mukimate. Birthdays 2323 7pm. Anderson 21 1. sultation. Somerville location. lmprov Reasonable Rates. Quick turn- all instruments. 628-7364 sround. Serving Tufts students and Beautiful 2 bdrm apt. on College Minority Juniors, Seniors: faculty for 10 yrs. 5 min from Tufts. Jiffer Ave CALL FRAN ANYTIME, .395-5921. Happy 20th birthday! Have a great Meet 8 interview with dozens of English as a Second Language torent forJan-May1992 Lg kitchen, tutor [Member of NASS-National Asso- day. Love, Susan corporations (Merrill Lynch, Ivgrm. bdrms. right next tocampus. McKinsey, P8G 8 more!) at the MI- Masters Degree- ESVBilingual stud- dation of Secretarial Services.) W501mo. For info & to see, call 629- ies. Experience 8 references- Ex- MIGUEL C. NORITY CAREER FORUM. 12/6 5332 Sheraton-Boston, 104. To register, ceptional. Flexschedule, near Tuns. GRAD SCHOOL APPLICATIONS Happy belated birthday co-advisor! 666-4621 EXPERTLY TYPED Hope you are enjoying all your pre- sendresumePRlORTO10/31 :Crim- Medford son 8 Brown Associates 1430 Mass. (Law, Medical, Business) sents(!) Bytheway, that wasareally Colonial 7 rms. Quiet area, fenced Avon "'395-5921 *** great party. Love, Giz Ave. Suite 1003, Cambridge, MA yard, deck. Lg kitchen. 1st f!., laun- 021 38. Questions? (617) 868-0181 To buy or sell for Christmas. Nancy, &re your grad school applicatigns dry, office. New bdrms. custom 391 -7181 Diled high on your desk? Are you Cam!! bkshelves, wodstove. Veryquaint. Nondering how you're going to lit all Happy 2Mh! Whal hangs off a Ti- Easy access to Rt. 93, 10 min to HOUSECLEANER lour info in those tiny spaces? Are betan Yak? Can you tell us? Ler's Tufts. $165,000. 391-1261 Thorough, experienced 8 reason- fou gncerned where you'll find the keep the good times mining. WE able rates. Interested?Call Karenat .imetodoitall beforethedeadlines? Childcare needed LOVEYOU! Your family at 19WaIker For Sale 215 College Ave! 623-1653 Is your Personal Statement profes- Loving, responsible 8 dependable looking for Spring Sublet. Beautiful sionally typed and laser printed on student to help w/3 mo. infant-Jer- Jodi Lou apt- closest house lo campus. We Word Processing Sewices iigh quality paper in a typestyle emy. Part-time, afternoons, 666 Happy birthday one day late! You're 4621 For sale have cable, TV, VCR, microwave ... 15 years professional experience. hat's attractive? No need to fret - real cool and you chill to the max. Entertainment center (holds-TV,ste- all the amenities. If you are sick of' Reasonable rates. Fast 8 accurate. :ALL FRAN at 395-5921 a special- Welove you! Lovelove love-shedog, reo, books, etc-it's huge); Micro- the dorms or just want a new place Free pick up 8 delivery. All jobs st in making your applications and Part-time work nursemooney.francis. bernard. and wave (brand new, still have box); CALL ME. Susan- 666-9403 proofread & spell-checked. Rush 3ersonal statement as appealing as We're looking for friendly, energetic kathitee Panasonic dual cassette box. Must iobs welcome. Call Carol at 623- 3ossibie. people with customer service expe- rience for counter work. Must be at sell. Cheap. Call Susan at 666- SPRING SUBLET (from Dec/Jan) 3590 MTS. Jodi 9403. Cheap, behind Wren Hall, inexpen- "'RESUMES"' least 18 8 have agooddrivingrecord. Happy birthday to our favorite s-b-h. sive. 1 bdrm avail in beautiful 3 bdrm P.S. Off-Campus Listings LASERTYPESET We need to fill am 8 pm hours 8 We promise not to gang up on you Spend Thanksgiving in Philly apt. Ttl 7 rms: Ivg. rm, fireplace, Needan apt for next semester? Need $25. Call 395-5921 . weekends. Located by Logan Air- becauseit'syour birthday. Hope you Cheap round trip airline ticket. 111 huge kitchen, study. Wall to wall 'a place a listing for a housemate or mpressivelaser Typeset Resumes, port. Ask for Roger or Sue, 561- had a wicked day. Pluck pluck- the 26- 1011. Great price. Call Jami at carpet with 2 baths. Call 628-5000, Nhole apt7 Call 776-7292 for info! eaturing computerstorage untilJune 4488 crazy ladies in Lewis 776-9431. ex. 5189 (Amar). leave message :Freetorecieve listings,smallfeeto or future updating. Your choice of (any time) or eves 391 -7781 )lace one. Run by Tufts grads.) ypestyles, including bold, italics, Still undecided Sue Frost Bloodsugarsexmagik! iullets. etc. on Strathmore paper. about what todo over winter break? Ahem ... hope you had a,.. ahem ... The Tufts Concert Board still has Everett modern 1 bdrm apt 3ne day service avail. 5 rnin from There are still several late arrival happy 2151 birthday! Your first drink possible 2. 4 rms wlpantry. Big Interior Painting ruffs. (Member of PARW: Profes- internships avail. Apply at the Ca- tickets forthe Red Hot Chili Peppers :xPerienced quality interior painting ai the pub is on Annela! Love. vour Show1 l/l attheWalterBrownArena kitchen w/ cabinets. Tile bath. 1st sional Association of Resume Writ- reer PlanningCenter. Call x3299 for 11low. competitive prices. Call Henry fellow cross-count6 runners, -An-' at BU. Tix are a cheap $20! Call floorwMhookup. Parking.Quiet area, 3rs. Call for FREE "Resume/Cover details. Deadline for applications: gela and Lisa Near T. $550/mo. (508) 887-8675 .nytime for a free estimate at 629- -etfer Guidelines") 10/25. Rachel at 381 -3869 or 629-9241 '312 page fifteen Mondav. October 21, 1991 THE TUFTS DAILY )oonesbury - BY GARRY TRUDEAl Around Campus

Memorial Service Planning for Kyri Kincade. Goddard Chapel, p.m. Today 5:OO Tomorrow ECO General Meeting. Eaton 201,9:30 p.m. Hebrew Table Programs Abroad Speak Hebrew over dinner. MacPhie Study AbroadGencral InfoMeeting. Conf. Rm. (off Pub), 5:45 p.m. Eaton 201. 1 1 :30 a.m. Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Wattersor Peace and Justice Studies Women’s Track & Field Team “Revolutionary Transformations: A Mandatory meeting for Indoor Journey Through Central America”- Track. Cousens Gym, 5:OO p.m. Lecture by photographer Lorene ? Wapotich. Baronian Field House, The Experimental College 7:30 p.m. Ballroom Dancing. Bush Hall Loungc, 7-9:00 p.m. R.E.A.L. Program 1st in a series of weekly meetings. English Majors Lane Km. 218, Campus Center, Meeting for those interested in 3:30 p.m. establishing an English Society. East Hall Lounge, 5:OO p.m. AppleJam Mandatory meeting to plan fall GROOVE THIS: concerts. Lewis Hall Lounge, 8:OO Live and uncut- prepare to groove. p.m. Hotung Cafe, 8:30ish. Amnesty Intl. by Bill Amend Cancer Outreach/Health Ed. General meeting. Eaton 201, FOX TROT Program 9:30 p.m. Cancer Support- General Interest BOZOS Now, WHILE JNLIMITED”? YOURE NOT Meeting. Eaton 208,7:00 p.m. Community Health Program ED To SEE iNb A LITTLE REQUIRED “Famine in Iraq?” Colloquium. \ To BET LCS Elderly Outreach C.H.P. 112 Packard Ave. 2nd floor, Elderly Outreach Organizational 4:30 to 6:OO p.m. Meeting. Eaton 202,9:00 p.m. Hispanic American Society Tufts Catholic Center General Meeting. Campus Center Speaker Series“Drugs: A View from Conference Rm, 9:OO p.m. the Streets”, Brother Joe LaGressa. Goddard Chapel, 7:30 p.m.

Subscriptions 31LBERTB by Scott Adams NAME - ~~ r UH ... WALLY, YOU’RE THE COnPANY LAYOFF THL5 HAS GIVEN ME ADDRESS WEARING ONLY PLAN 15 VERY GENEROUS. A DEGREE OF FREEDOM CITY __ STATE ZIP UNDERWEAR AT I’LL GET A DIG PILE OF IN DEALING WITH MONEY IF THEY A3K RE . . I’M TRYING LOCAL MANAGEMENT. Enclosc chcck p;iyablc ‘I‘he ’I’ufts I)aily TO LEAVE. I I ) TO GET FIRED Ir 1 to Thc Tufts Daily. Subscription 1)ept.’ I S IS through 1/92 or P.O. Ilox 18 $25 Ihroiigh 6/92. ,Medford, MA 02153 The Daily Commuter Puzzle

ACROSS 1 Cast a ballot 5 Hackneyed 10 Seeger or THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAM Fountain by Henri Arnold and Bob Lt 14 Muslim priest HE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON ~WW3U 15 Holiday song Unscramble these four Jumbles. re will be surpris 16 Type of type one IeIter to each square, to form abbr four ordinary words. 17 Indian dress 18 Flavoring 19 - and void EO Pencil end 22 Things handed down 24 Strike 26 Store sign 27 Trustworthy 31 Usual 35 Constellation 36 Swiftly THE JLJVGE ALWAYS 38 Fuss PRONOUNCES WORWS 39 Algerian port THE SAME WAY, BUT 40 Nighttime sound PRONOUNCES THESE 41 Goad PIFFERENTLY. 42 Offspring 43 Napped leather 44 ’- Jacques ~1991Tribune Media Services inc 1012 1/91 Now arrange the circled letters A5. - Mniirnfiil. .. - -. . .. - . Ail Rights Reserved form the surprise answer, as su 47 Puts inside gested by the amove cartoon. 49 Circle sections 9 Richness in 51 Desert dweller decor Print answer here: mm-x 52 Church section 10 Claw 56 Plays out 11 Fancy case (Answers tomorri 60 Retain 12 Story 61 Wed in secret 13 Building Yesterday’s Jumbles: NOVEL PIVOT YELLOW DARING 1 Answer: That lazy guy never stumbles onto a go 63 Tiresome additions thing. because he IS always doing this- person 21 Verve Dog previews LYING DOWN 64 Princely It. 23 Medicinal plant family 25 Flying machine 65 Took a meal 27 Perch 66 Cafe au - 28 Mistake 67 Close 29 Climbing plant Quote ofthe Dwy 68 Vegetable and 30 Poem meat dishes 32 Stable 69 Shade trees occupants 33 Love to excess DOWN 34 Ore veins “Cats are smarter than dogs. You can’t get 1 Clamp 37 Sports stadium a 2 Poet Khayyam 40 Attains a goal eight cats to pull a sled through the snow.’9 3 Scarlett’s 41 Likely to 48 Religious 55 Manner of home happen teachings expression 4 Discharge 43 Form of 50 Cleave 57 Anthracite e.g. 5 Beetle address 52 At that time 58 In good -- Jeff Valdez 6 Light brown 44 Custard 53 American condition 7 Seed case dessert Beauty 59 Collections One Female Engineer and No English Majo 8 Misplaces 46 Male goose 54 Can. prov. 62 Church seat THE GREEK GAZETTE News and Information of the Tufts Greek System

Volume 6, Number 1 October 21,1991

by JANET SIEGEL dent Elmer Hewitt Capen and a elected member of the !h&s Uni- charity and college loyalty. In an A small piece of history has former Grand President of AOII. versity Board of Trustees. effort to revive some of Delta been returned to Delta Chapter of The Ruth Capen Farmer Lounge Founded at Barnard College of Chapter’s past traditions, sisters Alpha Omicron Pi at Tufts. Newly of Alumnae Hall is named after Columbia University on Jan. 2, and their dates will bring toys restored and framed, our original this Delta alumna. MacPhie din- 1897, Alpha Omicron Pi is an or- insteadofcorsages or boutonnieres chapter and local alumnae char- ing hall was named in honor of ganization rich in history and tra- to our fall semi-formal this year. ters are now hanging on the walls A011EttaPhillips MacPhie (Class dition. And here at Tufts, A011 is The toys will be donated to a local of the chapter house. Founded on of 19101, who was also the first especially proud of ow chapter’s children’s charity, as they have April 13,1908, the Tufts chapter female Trustee of Tufts Univer- long history of dedication to the been in years past atA011 on this ofAOII was the tenth chapter to sity. Georgia Hodgdon (Class of ideals of friendship, scholarship, campus. be chartered. The Boston Alum- 1897) was a member of Delta nae Chapter received its charter Sigma, the precursor of Delta on Oct. 31, 1908 and is now the Chapter of AOII, and Hodgdon Greek Life 101 successful oldest active alumnae chapter in Hall was named in her honor. by JENNIFER SAlVIUELSON Of five meetings. A panel of mi- AOII. Among more recent AOII al- The Inter-Greek Council has nority students involved in the Some of the notable members ums, Linda Dixon (Class of 1960) coordinated a series of sessions Greek system were selected to of A011 at Msinclude Ruth is current President of the Tuffs that comprise Greek Life 101. discuss their personal history Capen Farmer (Class of 1908), Alumni Association and Jane Though the title might imply prior to Tufts in addition to their daughter of former Tufts Presi- Redfern (Class of 1966)isanewly- that the covered issues will only experiences both in and out of pertain to fraternities and so- the fraternal system. Even Greeks sponsor Bertice rorities, the topics discussed are though the actions of individu- relevant to the remainder of the als are often classified as activi- Tufts’ community, as well as ties ofa member ofa Greekchap- Berry lecture on racism American society. This program ter, the panel explained that each b CHRISTINE from all over the auditorium. As heads is designed to educate pledges person affiliates themselves with FE&AIVDEZ-ZAYNS nodded in recognition offamiliar ste- and members ofthe Greekchap- other roles; whether it be race, lbesday, Sept. 24 saw CabotAudi- reotypes, Dr. Berry asked, “How is it ters on various social issues. ethnicity, gender. torium come alive with the comedy that people from such different back- For or and insight of Dr. Bertice Berry. Dr. grounds and from all over the coun- a period of five weeks, all partici- Berry, a professor of sociology at Kent try can all know the same stereo- pants will meet weekly for an In addition to the above men- State, was named the 1991 Come- types?” hour to discuss and be informed tioned subject matters, next se- dian of the Year. In addition to her The message in her lecture was about the subjects of date rape, mester the h~r-Ch~?k~ouncil tour of the country lecturing on the poignant and well-taken: Education alcohol awareness, racism, sex- is anticipating a session on the effects of prejudice and racism odin is the key to understanding the dif- issues of homophobia and AIDS. society, Dr. Berry has also been tap- ferences between people. Stressing As the Greek system grows it is ing shows for “Friday Night Videos.” the need to confront racism and preju- Two weeks ago, the pledges important to address the issues Beginning her lecture with the dice in everyday actions, she encour- from each house aswell as broth- that are prevalent it and its story of her own college years when aged the audience to question and to she was one of 75 African Americans discover, rather than passively ac- ers and sisters attended the first society. at her university, she described the cept or ignore the information handed various stereotypes she encountered out in society and in the classroom. as a co-ed. The incidents ranged from Yet, she encouraged the crowd to Pizza Eating Contest to her high school’s college counselor, always maintain a sense of humor who informed her that she was not because, “if I couldn’t find the humor “college material” to the dorm mate in some of this, I’d be full of hate and kick off Homecoming who stared at her in the shower be- resentment ... You have to use your by LESLIE MESSER Victoria Strouse, are certain that cause she wanted to know if being pain and hate in a positive manner in Chi Omega will kick off Home- this event will once again be a black meant your whole body was order to achieve change.” coming Weekend will their Sev- great success. Strouse remarked black or just the parts that weren’t The almost capacity-filled audito- enth Annual Pizza Eating Con- that the contest “attracts many covered by a bathing suit.And as she rium rose to give Dr. Berry a stand- test. At 4:30 p.m. on Oct. 25, a people because it occurs during recounted these familiar stories to ingovation at the end of the hour and representative from every Greek a half long lecture. the audience Block Party when students don’t the audience, her face would smile As organization on campus will have feel it is a burden to help but and her dreadlocks would twist as began to leave, many stayed behind 15 minutes to devour much she shook her head in disbelief. “We to continue the conversation, because as rather they think it is fim.” are all prejudiced,” she said, “the that was the tone the lecture took -- pizza as their stomachs can hold. Last year,AlphaSigma Phi con- point is to confront it in yourself and an exchange between friends united Students are encouraged to sumed the most slices of pizza. refuse to perpetuate it.” in a common cause. watch the event on Fletcher Field Thanks to their appetite and the As her lecture continued she asked CDr. Berry$ lecture was sponsored and to pledge money for the fra- hunger of others, the Sixth An- the audience members to volunteer by the Inter-Greek Council in asso- ternity or sorority they think can nual Pizza Eating Contest was different stereotypes that they were ciation with the Sociology depart- eat the most. Chi Omega sisters not only entertaining but well- familiar with. After the initial si- ment and the Chaplaincy of Goddard will be asking for donations prior appreciated by families who were lence, stereotypes were called out Chapel.1 to the event in order to benefit the fortunate to stay with their loved philanthropic organization, the ones in a time of need. Ronald McDonald House. Fletcher Field will surely by a Welcome the Beta Chi Omega has been raising bustling area of campus on Fri- funds for the Ronald McDonald day. The prospects that this pizza of House for the past several years. eatidg contest will be as well at- Chapter Phi Sigma The purpose of the charity is to tended and supported as years allow parents and their family to past depend on students’ help. Sigma back to Tufts remain near their hospitalized Chi Omega hopes that no one will children by giving them a place to mess the excitement and that ev- On Nov. 2, the Betachapter Pledge They all deserve many congratula- stay in one of their Ronald eryone will aid this wonderful Colony of Phi Sigma Sigma is going tions for the hard work they’ve done McDonald Houses. to be installed as the Beta Chapter, over the past year. cause by making a pledge and the oldest existing chapter of Phi After initiation, be sure to look for Philanthropy Chairwomen for then cheering on their favorite Sigma Sigma. That whole weekend Phi Sigs all over campus taking part Chi Omega, Jennifer Sliney and eater. will be filled with various activities, in many varied activities. One im- ending with a brunch on Sunday in portant event on the Phi Sigma Sigma Homecoming Block set to honor ofthe foundingsisters. Present schedule is the “Rockathon” that will Party at the brunch on Sunday will be the take place on Nov. 22. Look for the fill Fletcher Field on this Friday e Phi Sigs in their rocking chairs rais- National President, along with vari- The Inter-Greek Council’s annual Homecoming Block Party will be held ous other members ing lots of money for the National of the National on Friday, Oct. 25, from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. This year the party will be held Kidney Foundation. usual, we’ll Board and ?wts administrators, fac- As on Fletcher Field. There will be two bands, a Pizza Eating contest, the Pep ulty and other special guests. The be really busy with chapter activates, but we’re all excited to be the newest Rally (including the crowning of the King and Queen) and a bake sale. founders are looking forward to the Bring your spirit and come join the festivities! weekend with great anticipation. member of the Tufts Greek system.