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NSUWorks Citation Nova Southeastern University, "The oN va Knight" (1991). The Current. Paper 97. http://nsuworks.nova.edu/nsudigital_newspaper/97

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the NSU Digital Collections at NSUWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Current by an authorized administrator of NSUWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ,urtesy Photo, 'J·:urt"esy· Photo/File Fonner NBA Star, Earvin "Magic" Johnson Joins New Current 93 and HOH Jointly Create Island, A Hypnotic Team. See page 10. Journey Through The Tribulation Of Life. See page 8. The Nova Knight

Volume II Issue VIII Serving The Nova University Community December 10, 1991 Louisiana Students Help Defeat Duke Kozol SpeaksAt Last Election Arouses Questions Of Racism And Corruption Forum OfThe Year By Bridget Bruen By Deborah P. Work treated me the best of any group I've ever Compiled By Aka Ali known. Whenever I am around poor people, Students throughout Louisiana and the they are nice to me and I feel at home." country turned their attention last week to the Why would a person from a well-to-do "You cross certainbridges in your life,and fmal gubernatorialelectionbetween David Duke family from Boston, who has been educated at it'snot easy togobackagain, not withoutakeen and Edwin Edwards. The election aroused Harvard, want to dedicate his/her life exposing sense ofirony," Kozol continued. questions ofracism and the corruption ofpoliti­ the corruption surrounding the unequal distri­ Kozol spoke to Sun Sentinel Education cal candidates while spurring students in Loui­ bution offunds to inner city schools? writer Deborah P. Work after the lecture. siana to action. Free-thinker,educatorand award-winning He revealed that schools in wealthy neigh­ Students on campuses across the state, authorJonathan Kozol told us why as thefourth borhoods raise and receive more money than including Tulane University, Grambling State Nova University Forums speaker at the Ana· schools in poorer neighborhoods because the University and Louisiana State University reg­ Capri Inn on North Federal Highway on No­ property value in those areas are higher. istered to vote in record numbers, held rallies, vember 20,1991. . "Innercity schools need far more funding teach-ins and educational forums, suppliedrides "The poorest people in America have because it is far moreexpensive to educatepoor stop~ to voters on election day and traffic at ourlesy Photo children of color," Kozol stated in the inter­ main interse.ctions to urge voters to oppose F6rnter Klu Klux Klan Leader David Duke. His view. David Duke. campaign has emphasized reforming U.S. 'The burdens they bring into school­ "I really believe ~at students affected the government, employment, and welfare. lead poisoning, illiteracy, drugs-leave the outcomeofthe election," says Meredith Miller, desks stacked against them." a junior at the University ofNew Orleans. "The people ofFlorida should re-read the "Students said real loud, 'We don't want [Duke] to come into our state. '" words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: Equal Miller believes that Duke has brought many students together. resources for unequal needs is not equality," he "Dukemade us all get together-women, men,African-Americans, whites, gays and straight continued. people. Our issues are all one issue," she says. Kozol also stated that affluent schools Risa Kaufman, president of the Coalition Against Racism at Tulane (CARl), also believes frequently obtain more money that isn't bud­ that students influenced the election by educating the public about Duke. geted. "Students got involved in the cause and showed concern," says Kaufman. "They are in a position to raise funds. "students weren't going to sit by and let this happen in their state." o Parents who are executives with corporations Kaufman and 400 classmates participated in a rally at Tulane on November 6, 1991. Free-thinker, educator and award-winning author According to Kaufman, hundreds of students from New Orleans worked both with the Jonathan Korol, above, appeared at the fourth Nova Please see page 6 University Forums Please see page 6 Darmouth Students Win Graphs& Statistics ROTC Ban in 1993 (NSNS) Student plans for rallies and sit­ Roland Adams and DAGLO faculty advisor ROTC Programs Under Fire ins this fall atDartmouth Collegeconvincedthe Prof. Peter Sachio both agree that DAGLO's Schools octing against ~ military's ban on gays and lesbians Board ofTrustees to announce on September actions had a significant influenceonthe Board 12,1993 thatthey woulddiscontinue theROTC of Trustees' decision "[The students] wanted AIhd~ 1lInmauIlc.ae ~... ,..",.,..s.UlNlrlity program inApril of1993 ifthePentagon has not the college to consider the contradiction ofits AmIric:M IkIiwrIi¥ llIPIuw ~ ofTIdlnl*Illr lhvIrIiIr 0I~ AmIlnt CaIIege DnM lbwrIiIJ ~ 0I1IicIigM Pilzaoc.ae allowed gays and lesbians to participate. equal opportunity policy with an organization ~ 01 AtizIIna lluU U1NIrIity lIcIigMs.lhwIrIiIJ ~lhvIrIiIr IkIiwrIi¥ 01 Mna Gooogt w.lIil;Illn ~ CennI \IdigIllU1NIniIr 1'o.I1U~ During the summer, students form that officially discriminates," says Sachio. IIcoIllnUlNlrlity IWvInI U1MIIitr IkIiwrIi¥ 01 ..... IlInIIe-.PoIrlICIlnic ...... c.ifamia SlIM U1NIrIity ~01... ~oINolnIIca lhvIrIiIr 01 Rhode ...... DAGLO, the Dartmouth Gay, Lesbian and The official Defence Department policy IkIiwrIi¥ 01 CoIiIarniI ~ ... S.lkIiwrIi¥oI"-Yark "'-UniIIIIity Bisexual Organization, met with Dartmouth on homosexuals states thattheirpresence in the c.noaillllllan UlNlrlity ~01'" ...... Cammo.IiIy Sl. JolIn. U1MrIiIr ~oICinl:irlNIi .-..-ComnxI'" c.ae c.ae &r-UlNlrlity PresidentJamesFreedman todiscuss theROTC military "seriously impairs. . .the ability to CcIlJc.ae JolIn Jar c.ae ~oINanhClnlh lhvIrIiIr 01 r.... CaIcndo CellI. 01 CIIninII Ja'" ~lhwniIr ~oIT_ issue and formed a coalition with the Interna­ maintain discipline, good order and morale,. . UnivIIIitI 01 CaIcndo JolrIIHapIn ~ Nar1hn ...U1NIrIity TubUniIIIIity Uriwnityol~ U1NIrIity 01 ~ '*""-1kIiwrIi¥ lhvIrIiIr 01 ViIgiiI tional Students and the Goncerned Black Stu­ .to maintain public acceptability of military L,nchIug c.ae QioSWi U1NIrIity lhvIrIiIr 01 WIIIqlon dents to schedule protest for the fall. services and to prevent breaches ofsecurity." ~01~ WII/WlgIlln lhvIrIiIr lhvIrIiIr 01""'" w.1Im"'~ The organization also obtained the support The policy has been in effect since 1982. WiIIiMI ...... c.ae ~ oIW!IaonIiI ofDartmouthStudentAssemblyPresidentTarah Although many students do not agree with the v. U1IwIIIlIr McBennet and a DAGLO member made a military's policy banning homosexuals, some documentary about the ban ofhomosexuals by arguethatDartmouthshouldnothave terminated the military for a film studies class. the ROTC program. "The pressure we brought against the ad­ "It is a shame students no longer can ministration has definitely been a factor in finance their education with ROTC scholar­ Dartmouth's decision," says DAGLO co-chair ships," says Hugo Restall, editor of the Taylor Martin, a linguistics and education ma- Dartmouth Review, a conservative weekly not jor. sanctioned by the college. "Having ROTC on campus gives a mes­ President of Republicans at Dartmouth sage from the administration that discrimina­ Ted Braber agrees, adding that, "our statement tion on the basis ofsexual orientation is accept­ on this subject is distinct from whether nor not Source: American Civil able." Uberties Union Dartmouth Associate News Director Please see page 6 Natianal SIud_N_ C-...:_ Page 2 The Nova Knight December 10, 1991 I Making the Grade:- Staff Box The Nova J(rij'pt Staff TtS: Your Knowledge on Hunger and Home~ Cleveland Ferguson m. Editor-in-Chief Adrienne M. Buccm. AsmciatelCopyl Society Editor Errol L. Bodie., Layout Editor Jason Domasky. Entertainment Editor Dr. Steven E. Alford, Advisor

Man:o Dattini, Local News Editor Dan Finn. Reporter Jcrmifcr Baldwin. Reporter

Business Staff

LouisG. Badami Jr.• Business Mgr. Ever Get APal Orina Barber. Associate BusiJ1l!SS Mgr Eli7.abeth Frazier. Advisor smashed! Contributina: Staff IAIE !IIE lEYS (4// A(48· Aka Ali Tangia Alvarez ...... \ .. :.•...:\.....\.IAIE AS14,8. . Jessica Cabin DonzieFord Leah Gioc' Di.'lie Goodknight Jason Hanson Bridget Insinna Chris Kehl FRlfNDS DON'T lH FRlfNDS Rcbccca A. Kurek J.T. Landrum DRIVf DRUNK. .Jennifer Merrill Lisa Muenncr Umcsh Odhrani J3IIIie Peabody Carrie Russian Greg SioJlard Dccpak Tolani

DIe Nova Knipt is a bimonthly publication. An University mem~are~uraged to submit'artiCles. ~it(,rials, pcisonals:, 8ndIor SIOJy idea...

'DJc Nova Knight office is kx:atcd on the ~"\lnd nomofthe Edwin and Esther R~-nthal Studenl Center. Room 206. The No\'a Knight hotlinc is 452-1425.

Th~ opinions reflected in this publication do not speak for the University adminstration. WANTED! starr. students or faculty. Every individual speaks for him/hersclf. The Nova Knighl is nol responsible for the opinions of persons Journalists: nOl associaled with this publication. If you are a foreign student studying, traveling, The Nova Knighl editorial staff reserves the right 10 edit or disclude stories. advertise­ or working in the United States... ments.of bulletins due to space constraints write an article. If published, .~,.te' t61J,..l¥ A ~ \ eaJE\4E ~ If (f ~ receive the TCCI Literary Award for ,.,. ~ 1\E ~Ul­ \tW\»l W(ft.E .~ Excellence and $300.00 ~ee NO "1'\WltO'il"'tJEi• New publication for foreign students studying/traveling here in the United States. Write on any of the following topics, send as many articles that you are willing to submit:

• Exciting adventures while en route from one u.s. city to the next. • Cultural acceptance. • How to.bridge language barriers. • Communication with families at home. • Settling in. • Things to take /things not to take. • Dealing with culture shock and homesickness. • Safety tips. • General words of wisdom or advice. • Any relevant material that international students might find to be interesting and of value.

Articles / stories should be one to two type-written pages (double-spaced) and mailed to the address below before December 20, 1991. Students should include their name, country of origin, school, campus address and phone number. Articles cannot be returned and become the property of The College Connection upon payment. Students will be contacted after April 20, 1992 if their article is selected. Please call with questions: (203) 847-2200. Send articles to: News Editor The College Connection, Inc. 19 Newtown Turnpike Westport, CT 06880 December 10, 1991 The Nova Knight Page 3 BlockBuster Video, Inc OPINION Strikes Again Limericks Used to By Greg Stallard I'"rating replaces "X"andis thereforeequiva­ Editorialize lenttopornography, whichtheyconsidersinful. Once again. Blockbuster Video, Inc. in­ "NC-I'"was theMotion Picture Associa­ Prostitution sists on choosing what the public should view. tion ofAmerica's way of distinguishing fllrns The newest policy is to remove "NC-I'" or from pornography that had slightly stronger unrated movies from the shelf and to not carry content than "R," because of themes, violence, Dear Editor, new films with these ratings. or sex. Blockbuster's fust attempt to control These groups proclaim they will boycott I found an outlet for releasing my frustra­ viewers' tastes occurred when fundamentalists Blockbusterifthefllmsarenotremoved. There­ tions after reading thenewspaper. I editorialize succeeded in preventing them from stocking fore. anyone cultured aqd open minded who my opinionin the form oflimericks. They will Martin Scorsese's '''The Last Temptation of wishesto viewthesefllms willsoonbeun8bleto makesomepeopleangryandsomepeoplelaugh. Christ" two years ago. rent them from Blockbuster. Above all, they do it in any entertaining way. The news that Blockbuster will no longer This seems to be a regression back to Thenames oftheclients on Kathy Willets' carry thesemmswasrecently verffiedbyalocal Puritanism. There are worse problems in the list were released along with the information outlet manager. Although he agreed the policy country for these groups to· worry about than that they are being granted immunity to testify infringed onviewers' choices, he saidhehasno censoring movies. against their former courtesan. power to prevent the change. Fundamentalist pressure groups seem to Because ofpressure from Fundamentalist think viewing a film will drastically change "A Man's World" groups, artistic fllrns such as "Henry andJune," one's life or damn one to Hell. '7ieMe Up, Tie Me Down," and foreign fllrns The only course ofaction to combat these Go ahead men and have your joy, will soon be unrentable at Blockbuster. groups is to boycott Blockbuster outlets or any Ifyou're fOlmd using the harlot as a toy, Outspoken right-wingers insist the "NC- other video store thatcaves into their demands. You'll get immunity from going to jail, Just testify agmnst the tramp who sold her tail, 7 We go after the whore and not the boy, Unless the hooker's a police decoy. JE S

Doug Danzinger, ex-vice mayor of Fort TAE-KWON-~O Lauderdale, who campaigned against topless bars due to their immorality, was found to beon KathyWillets'lisl Meanwhile,JimmySwaggart was caught with another hooker. Children, Improve Your Children In These Areas 'TheDanzingerlBaker/Swaggart/Shuffle" *Lack of Self-Discipline & Self Confidence

Even if your beliefs fall into a different *Negetive Attitudes & Habits zone, *Concentration Problems I will dictate your moral code from my *Abuse At School Due TO Shyness Or righteous·throne, Overweight r Withpressurefrompoliticalpackswenave SPECIAL I 1 formed a mighty rod, FREE Legislation will compel you now to obey MEN & WOMEN I INTRODUCTORY' the will ofGod, TRIAL LESSON Ifrm c~ughtbehaving differently when I *Lose Weight I CALL NOW think I'm alone, *Learn Practical Self-Defense I Uta Lnso8ta I'llblamethedevil whorelentlessly forced SEMI-PRIVATE LESSON *Physical Fitness I 119 ",pont..... ODI9 I me to roam. *Build Self-Confidence L __Ex, 12-31-91-_-.I Ed Church *NEW & UNIQUE LEARN PROPER ·STUDENT DiSCOUNTS BREATHING ·STUDENT SCHOLA RSHI PS hESSE • f£miirorhft 81­ g~m~

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MEDICAL WARNING: THE MOST INCREDIBLE WAY TO S.EE A MOVIE Failure to attend the Ronkin Current movie releases on ttle giant silver screen. 2 SHOWS NIGHTLY MCAT course may be Also FRIDA Y & SATURDA 1'.: ~~ MIDNIGHTSHOWS ~~~o~"a hazardous to your score. SATURDAY & SUNDAY .....·~~:t~t DISCOUNTED EARLY SHOW~l ~~ /"/s

WE'LL MAKE SURE You MAKE IT. Southport: 523-8840 1455 SE 17th Sf. Cswy. f 0 STUDENTS PER CLASS C4lllb. w. 01 PIIr. on 1MCIwy) f 00 HOURS OF LIVE INSTRUCTION Reg. Admission: $2.50 50 HOURS OF LIVE TUTORiAL Reef Twin: 735-8820 3280 N. State Road 7 NATIONAL 800 TELEPHONE HELPLINE /_._010alIIIIId Pk. SMLI 3 COMPUTER-SCORED DIAGNOSTIC TESTS Reg. Admission: $2.2S SCIENCE FLASH CARDS ~ MATERIALS WRITTEN BY PH.D.s Be M.D.s Frldav at satudav NI(I)fs at 12:30 Say to sDtf necks. jammed elboWS & sore seat Itmaybe':~ItII fU1I Al and escape titm the adinaIy movie experience. THE FOUNTAINS ~­~~ 801 S. UNIVERSITY DRIVE -_..- PLANTATION ~. 370-9300 EDUCATIONAl GROUP December 10, 1991 The N'ova Knight PageS Sally Jessey Raphael New Law Delays Speaks At Nova Forum Student Loans

By Aka Ali ByJ. FeatherstOM o/The Metropolitan

Sally Jessy Raphael was the second featured Nova University forums (NSNS) First-year and transfer students speaker at the Ana Capri Inn on North Federal Highway. nationwide are feeling the crunchofthe federal Shespoketo areabusinesspersons aswell as Universitysupporters about government'snewlegislationregulatingstudent theups anddowns ofherlifebeforebecoming thefamous SallyJessy Raphael. loans this year. Underthenewlaw, students will Thirty years ofexperience helped her win the daytime Emmy award for have to waituntil halfway through the semester Outstanding Talk Show Host in 1989. In 1990, she won the Emmy for . topickuptheirStaffordandSupplementalStudent Outstanding Talk Show. Loan checks. "Success has not cOme easy for me,~' she stated. "Ihave spent 25 years The focus of the regulation, lawmakers notpayingmybillsontime, movingfromtownto town, takingoddjobs,trying say, is to stop students from defaulting on stu­ to sell perfume and stuff like that." . dent loans and dropping out ofschool. Raphael disclosed that she has been frred 18 times over the last thirty "The government feels ifstudents are not years. allowed to pick up the funds until halfway Throughitall, shehas maintainedan"Onto the nextadventure attitude." through the semester, more students will stay in She feels that one must look at life with optimism. school and the government will save intereston She then began to discuss how she obtains topics for her shows. . loans," says the Director of Financial Aid at "People write inorcall. Thestaffdoes extensivebackroundchecking to Metropolitan State College of Denver. Judson see ifthe stories are true. Then I decide whether or not to air it." says the new law has affected approximately She feels that she has never beenlied to. one-thirdofMetropolitanStates, loanrecipients She has only had to stop one show from airing. Manystudents inconveniencedby thenew Courtesy Photo 'Thewoman was scheduled to discuss how her husband beat her etc. but system don't know who to blame. Sally Jessy Raphael began disclosing her fetish for sexual intercourse with corpses." During the Reagan administration the She disclosed that she cannotjustdecide not to air a show in the middle Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Deficit Reduction of it. Actwas establishedtoeliminate thedeficit. The Each one costs about $100,000. act laid out specifications on where to cut the One member of the audience asked her why she has not switched to contacts. budget across the board for all government She related a story. agencies, including financial aid "I went to my boss oneday and asked how he felt ifI switched to contacts. He said, 'Sally, we have $1,300,000 in bus billboards, commercials, Ken McInerney, Assistant Director of advertisements in magazines...What did you come in here to ask me?' Governmental Affairs for the NationalAssocia­ So, she has decided to keep the trademark red rims. tion of Financial Aid Administration in Wash­ Raphael closed the entertaining lecture with "Ifyou can dream it, you can achieve it. Most ofus dream too :;mall." ington D.C., anon-profitgroupworkingonpro­ student legislation, says the new legislation is a burden on those schools with a low loandefault rate. ROTC Under Fire C.A.E.Factiod Ban on Gay and Lesbian Cadets PromptsAction Nova News Faculty, students, and graduates of the Abraham S. F~h1er Center for the Advance­ (NSNS) WhenJim Holobaughappliedfor ment of EducatiOn (CAE) have had an unprec­ and received a highly competitive four year edented impact on education throughout the Army ReserveOfficer Training Corps (Rare) United States and across the globe. scholarshipduringhighschool,hesayshedidn't TheCenterproducedtwofrrst-of-their-kind realize he was gay. trainingvideosforuseinthechildandyouthcare Duringhis senioryearatWashington field. University, Holobaugh was threatened with ex­ Center staff members also developed and pulsion from the ROTC program and notified launched a national education publication, The that the Armywouldseea refundofhis $25,000 Childand YouthCareAdministrator, sponsored scholarship. The National Forum for Educational Adminis­ Last year, only nine homosexual stu­ trators, and edited The Horida ASCD Journal. dents faced treatment similar to Holobaugh's. The Center offered in-service training on However, this fall hundreds ofstudents atmore 33 topics andpresented more than 600 hours of than 70 campuses are demanding that their workshops for educators in Broward County. schools terminate their ROTC programs be­ During the past year, CAE students com­ cause ofa military policy banning homosexuals pleted 1,350projects to improve schools as part from service. oftheirdegreerequirements. TheCenter, which "College campuses everywhere are has the largest enrollment ofany graduate edu­ acting up and challenging the presence of the cationschoolinthecountry,requiresits students military onuniversity campuses,"says William to identify and implement plans to solve real Students And Faculty RubenSteiit, Directorofthe AmericanCivilLib­ problems. erties Union's National LesbianandGayRights The exemplary projects are published in a Protest State Budget Cuts Project. bookseries, Outstanding Educational Improve­ 'The ROTC issue is broadening the mentProjects, anddistributedto4,OOOeducators. By Jim Haug movement against the military's policy. It is TheCenter'sgraduatescontinuetoleadthefield galvanizingnotjustlesbian andgaystudentsbut ofeducation. A rally at the University ofMaryland armory November 25, 1991, was tI;le latest action taken all students and faculty," Atthe endofthereporting year, there were by students and faculty who inrecent weeks have blocked a highway, demonstrated outside of the At many of the schools, administra­ 37 college presidents and chancellors, a state state Capitol, and held teach-ins to protest state budget cuts to their university. tors and Boards of Trustees are reacting with commissioner ofeducation, 2 deputy commis­ The rally, which began with hundreds of students, faculty members, alumni and parents caution, fearing that their schools will loserniI­ sioners, and 65 school superintendents in 16 marching from six different areas ofthe campus to the university armory, was partof"Maryland at lionsofdollars inROTC scholarshipmoney and states who have earned graduate education de­ Risk Day," hundreds of applicants. grees from Nova University. Therally included speakers decrying thetuition increases andbudgetcuts to the University of Butatothers, including AmherstCol-. Of the 40 largest urban school districts, 7 Maryland that have resulted in a loss of$40 million over the last two years. legeinMassachusettsandDartmouthCollegein are led by Nova alumni (New York; Atlanta; '"Teachers are being laid off, classes are being closed, and they are raising tuition," says new Hampshire, students have successfully Denver; Long Beach; Washington, D.C.; Day­ economics major Marc Solomon, one of the coordinators ofMaryland at Risk Day. pressured school officials to phase out campus ton; and Phoenix). "We're paying more for less," RarC programs unless the Pentagon changes To furthercontributeto theadvancementof MarylandGov. WilliamDonaldSchaeferdoes notblameany ofthestudents orthe faculty for itspolicies. PitzerCollegeinCalifomia,students education internationally, the Center co-spon­ theirfrustration, according tohisAssistantPress SecretaryRayFeldman. Butaccording to Feldman, helped convince their administration to ban sored the "12th World Conference of Workers the state has had to tighten its beltdue to the recession. RarC from campus immediately. for Troubled Children and Youth" and "lead­ 'Theyhave to take their share ofthe cutbacks as well," he says. ership for Innovation and Change." A petition was passed and signed at the rally supporting proposed legislation by state International students also serve to spread Representative James Rosapepe to restore funding to the university. educationalreform. In1989, theCenterenrolled In the latestrOlmd ofcuts, due to take effect this spring, 15 English instructors will lose their threeSouthAfricanstudents, doubleditsenroll­ jobs and 38 sections ofEnglish will be cancelled mentinCanadaintheMasterofchild andyouth "We realize that the enemy is not the governor or the Legislature, since everybody is hurting care administration, and expanded the doctoral rightnow," says English Professor Hank Dobin. program to include students from Nova Scotia "Wejustwantthestateto realize theconsequencesofthesecuts,becauseifthey arenotstopped, and Japan. permanent damage will be done to the university," Page 6 The Nova Knight December 10, 1991 Marines Celebrate KozolExposes 216thAniversary Corrupti~n

Duke Election .The USMarineCorpsBalI.onSaturdayNovember9,1991,heldattheElksClubinPompano can make iii-kind Contributions. They.are the Beacli,Florida, was .toCOJJlJilemorate the 216th anniversary ofthefOlmding ofthe United States parents who know how to get Xerox Marine Corps.· :. machines; computers and librmy books: . Spmisoredby the Tamarac, PI, Det8chtnel1tofthe Marine CoipsLeague; the Ballwas a huge l:quipment is donated lind does notshow up success.· Dress blues was the·unifOlin of· theday fc:itallaetive Marines..and neatly dressedfmmer inper.-pupil spenmng." Marines, Spouses and guets.. . . . Kozol also spoke aboutthe US losing There was dancing,Jrizes and ailelectionof~ its hold On world economic power. ' The anniversmy was. tOastedwithglasliesof~. The colors of the American and Marine Corps Flags w~. presented to the large audience in ali impressive display ofpride in alid honor ofour coUlltJY; ...... Themess8gewasreadbythetOas_terfromGeneralCarl~ay,thepresentCommalidant S.tudents­ ofthe Marine Co~ ...... The highlights ofthe galaaffair were theremarks ofMayorNOnnan Abramowitz0fTamatl1c, .afonnerN,"aVy andMarineVeteran, who statedthattheMarinesteaehus values thatare Jife-keepirig and arev.itaI toleaderShip iIi. all disciplines... . Win Ban and Fonnez Marine, Hy Rosen, recipient ofthe. NaVy Cross siX PUrple Hearts,· spoke ofthe COntl.Dued from page 1 crucialiegislation before the Congress and the PIesident for.<:ontinued assistance tQ Veterans.of .Vietnam, KOrea, WorldWllrI,WorIdWarlI, and, mosU'eCently, Desert Shield andPesertSronn; , the defense department policy is actually HyRosen hasheldmanyposts withtheMarine corPs League andServiceOffices withthe V~teran correCt." Administration. Dartmouth is the second college in the AllMarines, active and fmmer, and all Ameri~ salute Mayor Abramo~tz and Hy Rosen nation, afterAmherstCollegeinMassachusetts, for their gallantry and dedicationto the.United States ofAmerica. We are proUd ofyou, to demand that ROTC open admiSsion to ho­ On Monday, November 11, 1991, the Tamarac Detachment, the American Legion and the mosexuilIs·or leave.campus: Jewish Wai Veterans honored all Veterans who made the supleme sacrificefor our Nation. Part of the ceremony, held at Tamarae's Municipal Park at Southgate Blvd. and North University Drive, was a 21 gun salute to all who served in the Armed Forces.and CoaSt Guard. The Tamarac Detachment, charteied inMay 1991, has a membership over 200. We invite all Nova University members who have served in the Marines to joinour ranks. TheDetachmentmeetseverythirdWednesdayofthemonthatTamarac'sMunicipalComplex; The Commandant is John Joharin. For more infonnation, ~ contact lis at 973-USMC. (James Paomlo hi a fonner US Marine of ~e 1st Marine Dlvhiion. He hi also a Career Development student at No..a University.)

,\ I CAMPUS'ROORAMMINOIO.ID... . AND THI·YOLUNT••S.CI.UI , .. '~:.f. . Y>Ji: -ii: • .....i::, ("'" .,;.;.' ''i I,. *-'" On December ·171:11, ... Campus Programming· Board arid the Volunteers Club gave·agroup of underprivileged children When the children received from the Boys ClUb a Christmas party. The Volunteers Club their gifts,· their eyes picked up the children and dropped them off after a fun tripled in size. Afterwards, filled evening. CPB organjzed several activities for the the children played children, ·in·cludingpainting windows, meeting Santa, .and throughout the Rosenthal opening Christmas gifts. Student Center with their new First they painted windows, drawing some incredible toys. Children who were shy cartoon figures. Next the children decorated the Christmas earlier in the evening, tree with ornaments. There were plenty of cookies, snacks-, seemed to come to life. All of the children played with } and other sugar filled t;reats to charge up our little group , of youngsters•. Finally, they met Santa Claus who had lots each other's toys, and with , of gifts for each child. plenty of energy due to all ) the sug~r-filled snacks. The ~ ~ satisfaction the members of ~ Campus Programming Board and f The Volunteers Club received f f from watching 18 excited f underprivileged chil.drenwas ~ incredible. The Volunteers f f Club and CPB have already f begun planning a similar ~ event for spring time with f more underprivileged ~ children. Campus Programming ~ Board and The Volunteers Club wish all a Happy and Safe (: Holiday. ,~ f I f f December 10, 1991 The Nova Knight Page 7

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EXHAUS T-BRAKES-ALIGNMENT-HITCHES *JUST S6UTH OF GRIFFIN EAST SIDE OF UNIVERSITY DRIVE ACROSS FROM PUBLIX Page 8. The Nova Knight December 10, 1991 Crowley, Iceland, Tibet...Island? British Artists Current 93 Weave a Unique Musical Tapestry intact despite its original connotations. By Greg Stallard Current93 have20releases, includingfull­ length albums, mini-albums, 12-inch singles, British mystics Current 93 and long-time and a number of compilation tracks. Most of collaborator HOH jointly created "Island," a these are available on CD. hypnoticjourneythroughthetribulations oflife. Theband'soriginal soundwasexperimen­ It proves to be as excellent as past releases. tal and, at times, frightening. The lyrics have Current 93 consists primarily of David always explored religious, psychological, and Tibet, with various guest artists coming from philosophical themes. otherbands. suchas Death inJune, SolInvictus, Current93'smusicslowly evolvedintothe Coil, and largely acoustic sound that dominates the most The new release continues his intelligent recent material. Featured instruments include andcultured lyrics. One track. ''The Dreamofa the acoustic guitar, the harp, and the violin. Shadow of Smoke;· features guest female vo­ The music on "Island" is more electroni~ cals by Icelandic singer Asa Hlin Svavardottir. cally-orientedthanpastreleases,well-produced, The music and lyrics work together to andverycomplex. ThecollaborationwithHOH produce amelancholyeffect,playing withone's is probably the reason for the more electronic senses. Alternately dreamyanddance-oriented, sound. the compact disc features "Crowleymass Un­ veiled;'a remix ofthe original "Crowleymass," ~~~? from 1987. Current 93's first release was entitled "LAShTAL," released in 1983. The band's narne means "follower ofAleister Crowley," a Courtesy Photo philosopher who interested Tibet. Aftera while, Tibet'sinterestsevolvedinto CurreQ$,93's lyrics have always explored religious, psychological, and Buddhist andChristianphilosophies. Since the philosophical themes. Above is the cover of C 9311108 album band was already established, he left the narne

Self-Identity, Anti-semitism Tom Petty's Theatrical Realistic Issuffi in Mamet'sHomicide Schtick By Greg Stallard :,-j Fallin'" with menacing rockers like "Outin the "Homicide" is a well-written and well­ He is shunned by the group for not being By Jennifer Baldwin Cold," "Runnin' Down a Dream;' "Love Is a directed detective drama by David Marnet. fully devoted; his self-doubt explodes. LongRoad,"andaheatedrarnpagethroughtheir Actor Joe Mantegna plays Billy Gold, a Thefilm deals withprejudices thatexist in Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers kicked classic rock anthem "Refugee." Jewish homicide detective who inherits a mur­ our country. Marnet graphically depicts the offtheir Florida tour at the Miami Arena in late Thestagesetting-aforestwith a staircase der investigation. The victim, a Jewish grand­ clashes between cultures and ideologies. October. that led up a tree, chandeliers, and a totem mother, ranaconveniencestoreinablackneigh­ At times very violent, the movie never Pettydedicatedtheone-nightperformance pole-rivaled the elegant mansion backdrop borhood. loses sightofits purpose. Theplotoffers a good to songs from the albums "Full Moon Fever" used on the Southern Accents tour of 1985. This distracts him from making a major look into the world ofthe police. and the engaging "Into the Great WideOpen." Being the showman that he is, Petty in­ drug bust that he and his partner had been The main concept of "Homicide" is be­ Smartly dressed in black suede boots, blue dulged in theatrical schtick, including having a worlcing onbeforehestunlbledontothewoman's longing, and the wayGoldis seenas iiJewbyhis jeans, a black vest, and sporting a bandanna, psychedelic dragon bring him his harmonicaon death. peers but as a cop by everyone else. Petty led the Heartbreakers through a feisty set a silver platter. As the case involves Goldmoredeeply, he ThecontroversialideathatJewsrunorown that began with"Kings Highway." Healsoran around withanoversizedpeace finds himself amidst a neo-Nazi conspiracy. the ghetto is dealt with. The band played hits such as "I Won't sign and took his hat out of a lighted treasure Driven by his guilt of having denied his Through the eyes of the director, we are Back Down," "Learning to Fly;' and "Free chest. heritage, he joins the underground resistance to shown thatprejudices are ignorant, and that we the anti-Semites. can do without them.

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RUSH Week Berins January 7.1992 - '....I .. 1·58$ Contact any Phi Alpha Delta member or N ~~~ WAS 224.95 come to the Chapter meetings, held :=~- -I~ NOW 189.95 T Explore every Wednesday at 5:00 PM in the y New conference room on the second floor of Boundades.~ SCHWINN BICYCLES & EXERCISERS the Rosenthal Student Center. ROSS BICYCLES • BMX & JUVENILE BICYCLES TUI'.SnIWINN FRONTIf.R

GT ALL TERRA MOUNTAIN BICYCLES COMHMllANU: ANU nlN. un: Brian Ouellette, President Majar Credit Cards. Financing' Holiday Layaways __...io-._ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ...--.~~- fRONTIUl- Nt:W .'RUM Sc;"IIWtNN 878-6527 tUM I ttl I~ "1'1It: I'''A(-I'll' \1..\11 HOURS: Mon..frl. 9:30 am • 8:00 pm/Sal. 9:30. 6/Sun. 10·5 Eric Paul-Hus, Vice-President Cathy Byron, Secretary .....tlI'fJSt: HI".:TII"'l"S ... I,SO ...N IIIt:AI.STAlnf.MIII)(t:t·UMNt:W 755-4535 473-2772 COME IN AND HECEIVE ]l:, "H',:h;,-e r,"c:e:_';J",' - ".'P.1. ':,:,'.:,,:'r, ll"c:J;~' """'~'I \I~ IMkt:tfllJt.tfS Harry McCumber, Marshall Iolie Reed, Treasurer FREE WATER BOTTLE -'.'l"b'.l•• ',:"/Ir.:",/) ID .. at.SCHIIVINN' 987-9536 486-4872 WCYCLNG AND PITNESS Page 10 The Nova Knight December 10, 1991 Johmon Joins New Team And Becomes Two Day GolfTournament Spokesman For AIDS Goes Down To The Wire By Linda Tardif

There was no magic in the 8JUlO1mcement that Earvin "Magic"Jolmson, theL.A. Lakers' star By DtJIt Finn basketball player, gave onThursday, November 8, 1991. Johnson 8JUlOlDlced to the world. "Because of the mv virus I have attained, I will have to NovahelditsThirdAnnual IntramuralCWlfTournamentat ArrowheadColDltryQubonFriday 8JUlOlDlCe my retirement from the Lakers. I just want to make it clear that I don't have the AIDS andSaturday, November 22nd and 23rd. Aftertwo rounds ofregulation play, the two person teams disease, but theHIV virus." ofBrad Williams and BobDeutschman, andDavidMcNaron and Dan Finn were locked in a tie for Johnson saidhewilljoinanewteam and becomespokesmanfor AIDS awareness. The impact first place. he has had on the nation makes him a perfect candidate for ambassador in an attempt to enhance Friday's qualifying rolDld consisted ofeleven teams in a team best-ball event. At day's end, education and awareness of the disease. six teams qualified for Saturday's scheduled final round. . Unlike the two previous years, the two day tournament wentdown to the wire. BothWilliams! His influence was immediately apparent on the New Yoi'k Stock Exchange as the shares of Deutschman and McNaronlFinn shot a 155 after two rounds. The two teams will play another Carter-Wallace Inc., makers ofTrojan condoms, rose $3 upon Johnson's 8JUlOuncement that he eighteen holes for the championship. wouldbecome aspokespersonforsafesex, according to theNovember18, 1991 issueofNewsweek. The other four teams that qualified for Saturday's rOlDld are Stephan Strand and Tom NotonlycanJohnson reach the young, and the sports minded, butmore importantthe African­ IaJmarODe, who shot a team score of 158. Jeff Tarnowski and Rob Brzezinski shot a total of 174. American community. SOIDlY Hansely and Scott Vrabel entered a team score of180, and EdManson and Marty Hamilton Until now the myth surrolDlding mv/AIDS has been that only gay. white males cart contract turned in a team total of 195 after two days ofcompetition. this disease. Johnson's 8JUlouncement has eliminated this myth. Along with the competition for tile 'Cruise ofChampions', there was time for fun. Ontwo of mv/AIDS hotlines are ringing offthe hook with people asking questions aboutthevirus. For the three par three's there was a closest to the pmcontest and on two ofthe longer holes, there was instance, the Center for Disease Controlin Atlanta, GA. received 200 AIDS-related calls an hour alongestdrivecompetition. The winners ofthe ClosestToThePin contestwere MarkCalviand Jeff before the Jolmson 8JUlOlDlcemenl; now they have jumped to 10,000 an hour. • Tarnowski. The winners ofthe longest drives were Bob Deutschman and Scott Vrabel. Rock Hudson brought AIDS into the spotlight, but young people did not associate with him. My deadline did not lillow me to tell who the outright winners are, being that it is my article Johnson will continue to be a national hero through his new line ofwork. I will say McNaron and Finn have a slight edge over Williams and Deutschman. Ladies Volleyball Earn Their 7th Straight District Play-Off Berth

By Dan Finn

The Lady Knights earned their seventh straight District 25 F play-offberth, and went into the tournament at Warner Southern College seeded third. ' On Saturday, November 16th, the Lady Knights traveled to Warner Southern, where they played the #2 seed, Palm Beach Atlantic Sailfish. The Knights lost both their regular seasonmatches against Palm Beach Atlantic, but the Lady Knights were optimistic about the district tournament. "Ifwe play error free and get afew breaks we couldsurprise agreatmany people." CoachGary Groth stated. Inthe first game the Lady Knights stumbled andlost5-15. Inthe secondgame the LadyKnights battled hard, but still came up empty, losing 9-15. The third game had the same result, with a score ofNova 12 and Palm Beach Atlantic 15. Unfortunately for Nova, thetournament was singleelimination. The Lady Knights seasonmay Courtesy Photo be over, but it was not a season without its share ofhighlights. Now that Earvin "Majic" Joimson has tested positive for the mv virus, he has becqrne a spokesman for AIDS awareness· 1991 Basketball Statistics*

Nwnber Player Asst Steals . Blks TO Fouls DQ Pts PtS/Gtn High

Juno 11 7 9 2 12 6 0 80 26.7 36 Annstrong , Reggie I 50 4 5 1 6 10 0 46 15.3 18 Jackson I

30 James Hill 19 6 0 11 10 1 33 11.0 14

Chris 42 ~ 1 1 2 4 8 0 25 8.3 9 Walsh .\' ,,"'. Dave 40 ,. 4 1 2 5 5 0 23 7.7 10 S\Ii; McMillion \,'"f~","" Chris 0 0 3 3 2 0 22 7.3 10 "", Saunier '.

Mike 20 9 2 0 3 6 0 12 4.0 5 Aiello

Brian 32 21 6 0 4 4 0 10 3.3 8 Morris

22 Nick 3 2 0 6 2 . 0 7 2.3 7 Raich

Melvin 41 2 2 0 1 2 0 6 3.0 5 Mayo

Marvin 10 3 0 0 2 4 0 4 4.0 4 McFadden

Anton 51 1 I 0 1 0 0 4 2.0 4 Arad

52 Jason 1 0 0 0 1 0 3 1.5 2 Looky

Nova 75 35 10 58 60 1 275 91.7 University

Opponents 24 17 4 53 60 3 211 70.3 The Nova Knight Page 11 Men's Basketball Schedule

Date Opponent Place Time

01-07-92 Univ. of Lovvell (MA) Nova 7:30

01-10-92 "Wesley College (DE) Nova 7:30

01-11-92 Eastern College (PA) Nova 7:30

01-14-92 Palm BeachAtlantic Nova 7:30

01-17-92 St. "Thomas University Nova 7:30

01-17-92 Florida Memorial College Miami 7:30

01-24-92 "Webber College Babson Park 7:30

01"-25-92 "Warner Southern College Lake "Wales 7:30

01-31-92 Flagler College St. Augustine 7:30

,i. ~ 02-01-92 Embry Riddle Daytona Beach 7:30

02-07-92 St. "Thomas University Miami 7:30

02-08-92 Florida Memorial College Nova 7:30

02-14-92 "Webber College Nova 7:30

02-15-92 "Warner Southern College Nova 7:30·,t 02-21-92 Flagler College Nova 7:30

02-22-92 E:rnbry Riddle College Nova 7:30

02-25-92 Palm Beach Atlantic Lake "Worth 7:30 celebrating our 12th AnniVerSary Hollywood Spa &Health [Iub

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