File #4242: "Suffolk Journal_1993Nov03_vol52no9.pdf"

Text

TheSuffolkJ uroaf'

■ TOYS

Cootia•

BSU.
°We WI
m,theoon
IO&ive ' bai
llity, wbai

Beacon HIii, Bealon, MaAachuaetta

Volume 52; Number 9

...

-Police Co~ioner William.Bratton speaks at Suffolk
the New York City Transit

By S~pbule Snow
JOURHAL S'To\f"f

William J. Bratt.on, Boston Police

a~'tf

Commissioner,
keynote speech
entitled "'Daring to Dream - Strate-

aics for Success" yesterday afterfocused not only

noon. Th.is addrcu

on his own career progression bul
also how law enforcement has progressed sini:e the 1970s.
Firs1 bccumlng a Boston Police
officer in 1970, Bnuton went on to be
police chid of lhc Massachusctt.s Bay
Trans.it Aulbority (MDTA) and also

Author-

ity, before coming bock lo Boston.
Before being chosen as Police Commiss ione r in June 1993, Braiton
served as Superin1codent- ln-Chief
under former commissioner Mickey
Ro&c:he. who resigned 10 run llll!UC·
cessfully for mayor.
Bratton was hired as Superimendcnt-Jn-Chief after the release of the
St. Clare Commission's report c ~cling mismanagement in the Boston
Police DcpartmcnL While recognizing Roache as being an honest man,
the report weru oo 10 crilici.u: him for

mismanagement of the department
and caJled for him to seep down.
To stem lhe idea of mismanagement. former Mayor Ray Aylln hired
Bratton• as superintendent-in-chief,
to take the heal off his long-time
friend Roache.
Branon , born and ra ised in
Dorch.ester, described the changes
that have been occurring in policing
since the 1970s and how excited he

that the next CQUple of yean will
probably see the Boston Police Department do the most hiring it will do
for awhile.
A product or the Boston Public
Schoob t ystcm and graduating from
Boston Technical High School,
Brauon joined the Army in 1966,
specifically the Military Police. He
e1plaincd his choice as "that or be
drafted." While in the Anny, Brattoo
spent a year in Vietnam, describing it
as a "pretty good tour of duty."
B~TTON

continued on page 2

Suffolk's rating
falls to second
quartile in us
News special ed.

~~

tioa bun

the&
Family Fa

IDd Scop l
oanbedroj
Room 765

Affain Ofl

~
Forum :Z,
c:!:

Hardiman speaks at Ford ~

•~~ :r=:cn;:•
. The Old South Meeting

b~:of:~~::
Room, 25th floor Ill I Beacon St. an hour before

~=: =
=/~~;

=~=

~~~A~

and bow it was, u be u.w it,
the IDOll

Clothes

do not~
1
toys must

~ ,ystcm of ~n~

=:.;,aso!:;:n:or°: H ~ ~ ; ~ h Dean
speech entitled '1'bc Future of the School of MWge-

~
many

:g°"::!1=.:
edmtcd

r = : i :~~::s·D~.wa:

•=-~pole of the
"Solar i
t.xe uocb, like Apple .~vc9 ~

;i~

pectfog

a

.!~~
:

~ t y " by Jo- tbcgucstspcakcrolhi1vicw1
acph Hardiman, the prcs.idcnl . and opinjoal t?D·-tbc,IOpic .of
and chief executive omcCf discussion. Following tbe

mmket Was sccbnd only to
thc. J1YSE. Hadiman's $lOCk

of rh~DF~~d Hall Forum

: = ' ~ ~ t o ! , - : drive luc l

C'o'eotwasthckick--offincd-

:~~~

howvolumcinthcN'ASDAQ .ficeisf1.lll;

~::c: ~; :

pose q ~ on the \liewt · years."

2Stc:;!t~ ,,;r;=:\.:vidtd

Diane

1

=~~

that
~ eino~::: :u~s=~ ,helped, bu
Ma.nagement'1 Masten of w,s designejl to ·pitch
running 1h
Bu.sinea Adminiltrcon pro- N.j'kDAQ to • .clieDce of
FORUM
Diane Cl1
Jrim; A ~ b;cfonr tbc ~ laylheD and • fioancc ex•, . coa&iDucd OD page 14
BSU mcml
ulty rejoiced at the news that Suffolk
University was rated in 1he top quartile
of America's Be,st ColleBCI, an anDual publication by "U.S. Newt and
World Report,~ which 1parud much
publicity ol the rating both on and off
the campus. ·
However, this yur lhc reaction to
tbc publicatioo was much more ~
ducd because Suffollr.' s rankinB did
to the so::ond quanile.
Tbe coijeges !fMl universities were
nmbd according to academic repu•
tat.ion, average Scholutic: A{'Uwdc
Teal (SAT) scores of accepted appli-

la8'Wedn8190Y.

.

.

BSUto sponsor toy, f®d, clotliing

drive for v~ous chari1ies cpUccting food ,
BSU bu been
toya. aDd clotbcs &incc Oct. 4 and
will coawme to do'° throu&b Nov.
"We're tryiQs to pull away from.
19th. Tbc food ii beina dooaled to
the NCioolype ....... ooly do l\uaP tbc:BCIIIOG¥Baakmctttietoy1
thM involve partica or rccrClltioaal and clothc8 ae..beia, aiven to the
thinga."taid O-CCak.onoocof Salyadon Army and poaib~ YmOUI
the rc:uooa the Placl: Sbadeol Union women sbcben.
(BSU) is boldiaa it1 ICICOnd mnual
"We need t0 do thinp like tbit.
· TOy, Pood, aod Ood:ICI Drive.
People need tbeae tiDdl of dona•
RashitaCl-,t ( DO relation.to Diane tioos.Tbc:rc'1alottobedooeout
Cade), BSU ....-,,, ogm,d. "A lot th=,"aidl);ooeOark,pr,a;denlol
ol clubs focut Oil patying. but not OD
the co■maaity. They doa't give
TOYS
coatitucd on page 3

-- ... -

.

• -

Suffolk_hosts 15th
annual Forensics
tournament
,B1S..,..-

andllor7~Al.SfAl'P

Sllffol.k Univenlty'• utioully
reonpized debete &cam held ill ISib
Anntw Foreniia Tounameat du.a
weekend. .]'be. toumamClll was bdd
at both the Donahue and ArcbcL
buildin11,
Suffolk earned 170 poinlt ia

l'OUNSICS
COMimcd OD JIIIC 3

=-~~'tra:1=,r:

· toral degrees, studq'lt/faculty ratio,
and frcabman rctentioo ntel..
':'" Suffolk ranked high in catqoria
sucb ai the ~ ol faculty memRATINGS

COlltilmed 00 pace 2

Sufi
quai

Happv ,Jhan~lvlng!_ •::
be'J

.

e

Fna11-The Shldent
Governillent Attoolatlon
Me¢tin~ on Tt-\esday
Sawye.-,421 at 1 p,m,

)lold

greeai,orl

in their f

an avCtq
of .55pc:rci

beJOW ave
tc.ntiOJI ra
One of s,

poinlSW&I
ulty· ratio

Accordi
ooly 47 p

hahmen
top 25 pc,
achool cl
·abo~
ofappl~
inidicatin1
not a1 It:
northern c
venit.iea.
Dircctc
Research
ataccd Uu

miOaa ws
itwuttil
force the

secoodq,
"Last}

1'heSuffolkJqumal •W-y,Novcmbcr3, 199.3"
'

.

.

Black Student Union
sponsors second
toy, t~ drive

annual

year's drive was very succe'.uful.
BSU is also holding a tur"Wc want to focus more

18th, Members are s_ lling
c
raffle tickets with a portion
of the proceed, going to a
turkey giveaway for various
Boston-area shelters. Diane
Clark is hoping to raise

from the Suffolk community,
Family Food.land, Bradlces,

enough money to purchase
IO tudeys.

and Stop & Shop. Donations

==IIIHJl)l=-:=·----~-------..C'' ------J

key fund-raiser through Nov:-

00 the conununi1y. We want
to give back to the commu•
nity, where y,-c came from.
and help," said RMbita Clark.
The 55-member organization has received donations

"People buy more when

~~~~u~!i~=

:~kn;w g:i~~reto~c c::

Affairs Office or at the BSU
office in the Student Activities Center in Room 328.
Clothe$ that are donated
perts. Hardiman spoke al do not need to be new. The
great length aboQt NASDAQ
toys must be new in boxes or
aod how it was, as he saw it, unwrapped. However. food
the mOII advanced system or must be non-perishable.
trading stocks.
"So far it' s successful. We
Hardiman spoke or the have six bags of clothes in
many hirge stocks, like Apple the BSU office and arc exComputers, Inc., that were peeling a lot more. The oftraded on ,NASDAQ, and ficeisfull.: it's prcttycrowded
bow vol~ in the NASDAQ in there," ,SW:d ~ Clarie, a
marlcet was second only to sc,nior Finance major.
Diane Clark began this
!!::rt~t\::ru::•~s~~
drive last year when she was
stock market for the nellt 100 the BSO Trc85Urcr. Last year,
years."
C.OUncil of ~idcnts (COP)
One of the questions helped, but this year BSU is
aslcd, in essence. was about running the drive on its own.

Hardiman speaks at Ford Hall Forum
speech was held at the
President' 1
Conference
JOURNAL C0ff!IJ.8tn'Olt
Room, 25th floor at I BeaThe Old South Meeting con St. an hour before
House was the setting on Hardiman's speech.
Thursday, October 28 for a
The Forum, which Dean
speech entitled "The Future or the School or Manageor Capital Markets: Continu- mcnt John Brennan modering Evolution, Unprec- atcd, w a prescnlatioo by
.as
cdcnud Opponunity" by Jo- the guest spcaku '!f bis views
seph Hardiman, .the pres.idem and opinions oo the topic of
and chief executive officer
:~::~:~~i:,n~~~~o:~~e!!~
of NASDAQ.
This Ford Hall Forum was given the opportunity to
event was the kick-off in cd- pose questions on the views·
cbfflling the 25th anniversary that were prcsc:ntcd.
or
the
School
or
The prcsc:ntatioo provided
Management's Masters or was designed tl pitch
BU1ineu Administration pro- N,¥DA.Q to an audieoce of
gram. A receptioo before the 1ayChco· and not fimmcc exBJ James R. Schembri

FORUM

continued oo P.B&e 14

Happy Than!sgiving!

, -----.
e
_ __

From-The Student
Govern11ent Aaocllfion
Meeti"'e, ol'\ Tuesday
Sawyet-< ,421 at 1_p,m.

:~~~~:

:a.:r:::;

mentcd Rashita Oark.
Tickets are $1 each or $4
for five. The prize is a-.S l5
gift certificate to Stop & Shop
and a turkey. Tickets can be
pure~ in the Sawyer Caf.
tjeria from 9a.m. to 11 Lm.
on Mondays and Wednesdays or at the BSU office
from 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
on Thursdays.
According to Rashita
Clark. B~U is ,loolcing into
• working with the BO)'I and
Girls Club, Youth Builders,
and other youth-related organitations . in the rufurc.
"We're gci°ing to show
them wbaf college life is like.
We'll give them sotncone to
look up lo aod something to
~ttaf~d (i~ ,"

said

&kf, ---..,..----'-----Compiled by Stephanie Snow
Gary :lerola

ranked

-.;
8argeu! appoints Vke

Program Council bolds
annual Halloween Rat

Director of International
Programs appointed

major?
·•

Interested In wilt
Write for TlieSu

Prisldeql of Development

.Journal.

:pall ~ or
! . at 57~23

~

,Marguerite J. Dennis, Dean of
David J.. Sargent.~tly
Enrollment and R~ntion Manage- HJi~!:o~mw~o:e\~i~t a;;:: 8MOJ1DCCd the appoinbDcnt of James
ment, announced that Margaret Loret in the Sawyer Cafeteria. The disc A. Campbeli as Vice President· or •
has been appointed Director of InterDcvelopm~ t at Suffolk UniversiJ)'.•. • • • • •
naLional Programs. She came to Su£- jockey played varioos st ylcs or mu- He Will . comniCrice bis duties on
folk from Harvard where she worked sic while the 100 plus crowd jammed Monday, Nov. 15.
.
in the International Office.
the dance floor. Some people got in
CamJt,ell, a very experienced de,.
She has a &Uyi in .Higher Educe-

~oest:::. ~t:ni:nt:::C:e~

uu• -,eA,sd,.m,y;nan;,d,rn,uoM .Afro m,·n H,eac=hi•,,dg Director or Admissions, William
· .•,
• _

Cougblin and Dean of Students, Elliot
Gabriel. The Suffolk Police Force,

English as a Second Language from

iu~:':too led

Paglilltu!o,

thcS~eni;::;Y: : ~ :

SU



~ • .• • • • • • • •.
1

velO[ineDt professional, has over 12
yeari stnic~ in prestigious educalion.al jnsli'!ltions. He is c~tly the
Direc:tor of t-'fajor Gifts at The Col-

order ~:::0°:s~tr~: ~de:~a~~o!:

by John
kept
CUILivation, SOlicifation and stewanlOffice of Undergraduate Admission. : · gi~g briicl~ti tb ~ old e~ollgb ·ship of:-prospccl5 ohfieir .$60 million
to ';8kc adv~C or the Sl.50 per capital campaign.

OcL 12 and will be located in ,the 'and ·deccirum while checking ID's

~!~;:'eJ::;~

Suffolk Law School hosts

forum

l~:~ :.g:u: · ' PriOC

~ ~_wytt Cateicna'.
a

3:7 ·p.m. in

1

This p~ ·t.·'fe~k~Ditbcre w~ . a · '
.' 1 · · ,

1
Law School For;ur,n a~ Jh.C COpJey Ang~ni appointed as
.
Plllll sponsoied by Law Services. ~~~~ prOf~or of
l.aw Servif c's p~ vided information accounting •
1
~ ~:t
::
at!~:~~:~·r~:~~~adp~;~

~e;hoo~.a;;;d E~~!:~r~~~:i~
:r don
Law , and Suffolk Univ~rsity Law

ri'omthe University of H9us-

ton.

0,

• •

"

J

j



• Bodyl•?~~•odll'l""nDCO pkk up wbcro
)'OW',resumc~offl. ,
, ~··
:,oar body ""8il-ll" i, ll)mB'• boo, ID me~-

. • Whlf
~

t~ . ·... ,

. •'

·~~

1

,II\•



l,<t.

.;.;•:;,,-:.

,U,

~~-==fl ":':,.
...
onproros,;amlimMF- _.,• ,."' • ,•_

eo-.......,..it,yPn>pomCouocil . .
Tue,day Nov. 9

...



iames Angelini is a new associate· prOfCssor · or ~ccounting and
taxatiori. He had been assistant proCessor of ac~ounting at Northeast_ Uniye:rs!ty.
em

Angelini will be involved in the
expansion of the _ aster of science
m
in· twtion ProgrJ!.!D~_He bas a &:'S.
with ,hon·ors ,in , accounting and a
M.B.A, from .Babson College.' He
has a Pll.D in BUStOess Adm.iniStra-

ing to law schoci,l. MOre" than · 1_00
representatives from American Bar
Associalion-aPpl"Oved liiw :scbOOls
answered q uestions iibout their
school, the location. and law schOOI
in general. Schools were there froqi
across the country including Americllll Univel"$ftY "Y~1:i!Dg1o'i1 Colicsr
or Law, Fordham Law School,
Georgetown University Law Cen-



to fotriirig The College of the

the
~::::-i.:;:
~~=~ ~

rah". field OD Friday, Nmember 19th, Jfoly Cr"9151 ~ ~ I -served•

8~ .C~pley. ~ . ..

School. ·

ranked (iri ~ place). This
year we were ranked 4;4th.
~asically< difference ,was
the.
ID bow prcsuie.nt.s of other
c~lleges and universi ties
Viewed Suffolk ," said
Dufa n.
g~an s~te:' that "':bile
the , un1vers1t! s ~ank1n~s
from other_ wuven1ty pres1•
d,e nts dcclm~•. as well as
1 0
se\ec t1v1ty , .. rate,
Suffolk' s 'rac~lty rcsou~
and g raduation rate in creased over last ye,r's
rate.
Other schools that were
also
in the second
quartile were Assumption
College, Whceloc~ College,
Rhode bland College, and
the Univenity of Muaacbusetts af the Bo1i'on,
Dartmouth, and Lowell locations.
Colleges a.nd:univenities
that ranted in the tOp
quartile this year_ are
Villanova
University,
Stooehill Colleg·e , St.
Bonl.vent1Jre Vniveui ty,
~d Emenon Coll'ege.

Are you a buslil

and

Suffolk's rating falls to 2nd
quartile in US News
.J"
■ RA~G
Continued from page I
be~ holding terminal degrccs,, of' the highest degree
in their field (9Spercent)
an average g~uation rat;
of 55pc.rcent and a slightly
below average freshman retenlion rate or 78 percent.
One or Suffolk's stiOngest
points wllJ its student to faculty ratio of 17 to one.
According to the "ratings,
·ot\ly 47 percent o[acceptcd
freshmen graduated in the
top 25 percent or their high
school class. The ratings
·also stated that 80 percent
or applicants were accepted,
inidicating" that Suffolk is
not as selective as other
no!111~m colleges and univenities.
Director of Enrollment
Reilcarch Mic~t~Duggan
stated that the decline in
~tings w_as slight, however,
11 was still large enough to
force the school into the
second quartile.
"Last year Suffolk _
was

- ...............
:
.

s.w,;. 429-Jl, , 2:30pi,
i:dopn
. ,

·::~:~~~ ~~~.~~8

Graduate :School of Business.
Campbell was chosen•for this position after a thoroug_ ; nationat
h

:,:C!·t~v1~~

i:s:~t:; c:'!'

Institution's alumni and develc;,pmcnt
ac;tivitics. Prior to fonnally usuminghis duties on Nov. 15, he will bc ·at
the SC:h°!OI for a few days on a consuiting basis,.
·


--·

_ __........,
_ »-,
• fns•dan~ach;"!

~~
otfl1!19Ciatricled.

-~ .

.-•to

:

The Suffolk Jqumal •Wednesday, November 3, 199.3"

Black Student Union
sponsors second
annual toy, food drive

um
poke at
ASDAQ
csawit,

,mmor
of the
teApplc
al were
.Q, and
ASDAQ
only to
1'1 stock
be "the
OCXI 100

1
cs1ions

"about

:e l4

year's drive was very successful.
BSU is also holding a nir"We want 10· focus more key fund.raiser through Nov.
on the communi1y. We want 18th. Members are selling
' CO gi'lc back to the commu- raffle tickets with a portion
nity, whuc we came from. oftheproccedlgoi.Dgtoa
and:bclp," said Rash.ita C!ark. tudcy giveaway for various
The 55-membcr organiza- Boston-area shelters. Diane
tion has received donations Clark is hopi ng 10 rai se
from t.bc: Suffolk community, enough money to purchase
family Foodlaad, . B"'4)c«, ID turkeys.
"People buy more when
and Stop &. Shop. Donations
c;an be droppe,sl off.at Sawyer they know where the pro-cccds are going to," com•
menle.d Rashita am.
T.C.kets are $1 ·each or $4
~
c!r~os~=t 3~vi- for five. The pize is a $15
gift certificate to Stop & Shop
and a turkey. Tickets can be
toys miu:t be ocw in boxes or purchased in the Sawyer Cafunwrapped. ljowcvcr. food eteria from 9a.m. to 11 a.m.
must be non-perishable.
on Mondays and Wedncs•
"So far it's succcuful. We days or at the BSU office
have six bags of clothes in from 2:30 p.m. 10 4:30 p.m.
lhe BSU office and arc ex- on Thursdays.
pecting a l0t more. The ofAccording to Rashila
fice is full ; it's pretty crowded Clark, BSU is looking imo
in thcre," .said ~anc Oark. a w~g with the Boys and
senior Finance major.
Girls Club. Youth Builders,
Diane Clarie bcgnn this and other youth-related ordrive last year when she was ganizations in the future.
the BSU Treasurer. Last year,
" 'We're going 10 show
Council of Prcsideo<s (C'OP) them what college life is like.
helped, but this year BSU is We'll give them someone 1
0
running the drive on its own. look up lo and something to
Diane Clark, . a thicc-ycar look forward in," said
BSU member, IUlt.Od lhat last Rashita Clark.

(Jllllf''" ~ , , - - - - - - - - - - - Compiled by Stephanie Snow and Gary Zerola

Marguerite J. Dennis. Dean or
Enrollment and Rcicotion Management. aMotmcc:d that Margnre1 Loret
has been appointed Director of Inter•
national Programs. She came 10 Suf•
folk from Harvard where she worked
in the International Office.
She has a Ed.M in Higher Educa·
Lion Adminis~tion from Harvo/d
University and a M.A. in teaching
English as a Second Language from
the University or Lodz in Poland.
She began working at Suffolk on
OcL t2 and will be located in •the
Office of Undergraduate Admission. :

=7~~orM~!:1:5
~

a::a:

do~~~U:':;

Suffolk's rating falls to 2nd
quartile in US News

Suffolk Law School hn<ls
forum at Copley

.Pll!za

This past y,'Cckc'nd there w~ a
Law SchOOi Foryii;-. at ~h.e Copley
Plaza spons~red by_ Law Services.
Law Services provided informotion
including literature, videos, and personnel about the process· or applying l0 law school. More than 100
reprcsco1atives from American Bar
Assoc iation•approved law schools
an , wered qucstfons about their
school. the local.ion, and law school
in general. Schools were th~~ from
across the country including Ameri•
can University Was hiiigton CollCBc
o( Law. Fordham Law School ,
Gcorgc1own UnivctJily ~aw Cen•
ter, Harva rd Un1vcrsuy Law
Sc hool, New Eng land School o(
Law . and Su££olk University Law
Sc hool.

Sargent appoints Vice
President of DevelopmeQI

H:i:::~ocr:~o:c~~i~t aF::;

President O.vMfJ. Sargent rcceoUy
annouo&ci ~ appointment of James

in the Sawyer Cafeteria. The disc
jockey played various slylcs of mu•
sic while the 100 plus crowd jammed
the dance noor. Some people got in

~v;::i::: :;
He will comfflciicc his duties on
Monday, Nov. 15.
CaroRbc,ll. a very experienced dc-

~:t:~:. ~~ui:"~fn~O::C:e~

velopment pro{cssiona1, ha., oYcr 12

·Director of Admissions, William

'=:!~::O~yuc~

~

~=~~'.n

led by John Pagliarulo, kept o~r
and decorum while checking ID's

f;~:e

b : t ~ : ~eol;I.~:

ship of]>rospects

o(

their S(i() million

1
~ ••~~.

Oireitot ·or · DeVelopment

~;"1!"::~:ov~~ri~~•

Cot

=====F==== · ::i~~lj~~B~=l·F~~UU:·
AngeUni appointed as
assO(:iate professor of
accounting
James Angelini is a new associate professor of accou nting and
taxation. He had been assistant professor o r accounting at Northeast•
cm University .
Angelini will be inYolYed in the
expansion of the master of science
in ta.x,aV.on program . He has a D.S .
with honors in accounting and a
M.B.A. from Babson College. He
has a Ph.Din Business Administration from the University of Houston .

•..

• Whaf )'OOI' body laDgoap iJ saying - bow 10 UIC it
,,.

~:!~ "i:

c~~~r' ~Jrm::;·Thc C.Ollcge of the
Holy <;IVSS! Campbc]l ·scrvc:d as the

*BodylaoPFaod-pi<kupwboro

J.,..Goft'Dcybu

Dirtttor of Major Gifts at The Col·
0
! s!~e
~:°7dc:~~a~i:!:
cU.ltivation, SOiicitation and steward•

cup· beer pnCf:. The. Dext Program
Council event is the •Karaoke "Hur•

l"'A'......;1m..om
as a.tool ,.

s:~:lkPr;~:~i;~

=t=~~
°;:';c~[t;~:•~!:



RA TING
ranked (in 40th place). This
C.Ontinued from page I year we were, ranked 44th.
BBSicallJthc difference was
her, holdins te rminal dein how presidents or other
grees, or the highest degree
colleges and universities
in their field , (95perccn1),
Yiewed Suffolk, " u id
an average graduation rate
Dugga n .
.of 5.5pc.rccnt and a 1ligbtly
Duggan stated that while
below average f~sbmao rcthe university 's ra nk ings
teot.ion rate of 78 perccnL
from other universi1 ·prcsiy
· One of Suffolk's strongest
dcnts de.d i ned, as well as
points was its student to facthe
selectivity
rate,
ulty ratio of 17 ll}anc.
Suffolk's 'faculty resources
.
According to the ratings,
and gradu11tion rate in•
only 47 percent o( accepted
creased -over last year' s
freshmen graduated in the
rate.
top 25 percent of their high
Other schools that were
school class. The raJinss
also stated that 80 percent also ranked in the second
of applioanb were accepted, quartile were Assumption
inidica1ing that Suffolk is College, Wheelock College,
not as selective as other Rhode hlaod Coµege, and
northern colleges and uni- the Univcnity of Massachusetts at the Botton,
versities.
Director o( Enrollment Danmoutb, and Lowell lo-Research Michael Duggan cations.
Colleges and un.iYenitics
lhlted that the decline in
~tings w_ sli&:ht, however, t hat . ranked in the top
u
it was 11111 large enough 1o quartile thi 1 year arc
University ,
force the school into the Villanova
Stonebill Co_llegc, St .
second quanile.
Bonaycnture University ,
.,Last year Suffolk was
and Eme™>n College.

"

P11>1!!am Council bolds
aD.Dual Halloween Rai

Di'rector of International
Programs appo1nled

,.

·

tniocdc,,., IOOa:mullaols

wllRu>WJl)l!aodaioduds~.......,.
pofemoml image.

00

~ by l'rojpcm, Council .
TueodayNov.9 Sawyo,429 1,oopm . 2;30pn.

vCrsi1y and his M.B.A. from Fordham
Graduate School of Business.
Campbell was chosen for thi s position after a thorough, national
5C81Ch. As Vice President for Devel•
opmcnt, he will supervise all of the ·
Institution's alumni and development
activities. Prior to Connally assuming
his dUtics on Nov. IS, he \Viii be at
lhe school roe ·a ·rew days on a consulting basis.
·

Are you a ·busliles.,
, major?
!flteresled In writing? •.
Write for The Suffolk


Jour"nal.

: Call Andrea or Stephanie:
:
at 573-8323
· :

___
_.,_

.,

___

-,,2·... - . -..,

A COlllitiN of ~

Ualvenity....W

-o,p,oiml~
ism (SOAR). lat Sat

-Kan.-

-Collcp.

...i,~~
Ibo orpa:i.zatioo. . .
by Doua Sclmudl;
rectorofttadaatM
RoscWright,tbcaul
m::IOf' of tbc Balloa:
ing Cent.er, David 81
learning speciali11

......................
.
j



it

CO\ly
une,

..
,....

11 of
n:ity.

'

:r 12

luc,-

y the
Colhe is
Llion.
•onlillion

>
fthe
• the
for

un,'.
Unilham

....

ional
leVel•
~the



Are you a business

major?.
lnleresled In writing?
Wrile for The Suffolk

Journal.

:

: Call Andrea or ·stepbanle:

:

at 573-8323

:

Tllo Suffi>llt: Joaraal • W~y. Jljov•""" 3, 1993
,

SutJolk students,.faculty · ·
participate in SOAR ~nference
• ., ....... _

&poa;l..caminaCenlu, and

----'===:.:. . - o.aNAL srAl'I'

~=

· A coalilioa of approxi-

:;1~
~

~=!~ :.e;c::
denls()rpnized ApulltRacism (SOAR), last Saturday at
-College.
Paul Korn, wbo was recmdy appointed pmidcol of
the orpoiutioo, WU joined
by Dmna Schmidt, the director of student activities,
Rose Wright, the assistant director of the Balloui Leaming Center, David Bochanan.
learning specialist al the

K:orn i tated that then: was
.about five Suffolk ·11udeo11 also a design team presem
from varying "backa,roundl. lo plan a program for the
. • Over S, 1tudea11 from nes.t SOAR conference
which wiH be held in April
~uoco-=n:=i~ at Conn'ccticut College.
Korn swed that the conthe hopes of ·sharing')heir
ferencc !"as a positive cs.pcrieocc for all involved.
:pe~c::oc-:-!f
" People came to sha re
campus.
Studcnll and faculty mem- stories of their pain and suc•
bcn anended a series of Work- ceues, and 10 meet wilh
shops at the c.oofcrcoce. en- other studenll who under·
titled "Stop Racism: E'.ducat· stand (their cs.pcriences),"
ing Tomot10w's Leaders," said Korn. " People were
rangi ng from strategics for pretty positive about the exsucce ss for s tudents of perience and things that they
color, to breaking down learned."
Donna Schmidt shared
cullural barriers.
Korn 's posi ti ve reelings
about the conference.
.. h ·was fabulous to have
uver 80 s1udcnu present.
There was Jou of good dialogue and sharing of feelings and tho ughts," said
Schmidt.
David Buchanan of the
Ballotti Learning Center
• stated that he found the confercnce to be a positive experience, but rel1 that some
· of thi: Workshops were too
generalized.
.. ~Y pcnonal feeling is
that it takes different kinds
of food- to nourish different
people. The infonnation (in

=~~

~:~=

:fzallf'at 1993
Sn,s,

•wa.

Sifts

aul«l'■ Btll

~'!
,.,,....
JV-.U,1)1&

-.WIidt a-.,.

·aUSl>IUI



' Have lower interest
rates helped the elderly?
investment income by over
B~ " ; :~ r l

56~. Coupled with this calamity is inflation, which a1

Thn:e or so years ago, the
e lderly were able to get
seven and one-half to eight
percent rates on vinually
risk-free investments. Their
portfolios were designed to
give them a return. coupled
with their pensions and Social Security bene fits , which
wcrctolastthcmthercstor
their lives.
With today's very low interest rates., the elderly investor is able to get a meager three to three and onehair percent return on income generating risk-less
assets .
In a simplified example ,
assuming no reduction in
investment, an elderly person was able to gene rate a
per ann um risk-free re1urn
or $8,000.
Today, at the current return of three ind one .half
percent, which is yery difficult to find , the investo r will
only be able to cam $3,500.
This drastically cuts their

present reituces the invcstors rcal rctum.to nearlyO'lt.
While President Clinton

is praising his policies as
being the catalyst behind
the low interest rates, the
elderly are suffering finan -

cial hardships.
· Many of the elderly, even

after reaching the age of 70,
have been forced from their

peaceful retirement and
thrown back into the work

place.
Because of this, a question is left: Have the lower

in1ercsr rates really in-

creased our prospc;rity? The
answer to this is at best dcbat.ablc. Is i~ foir that those
who have made our country
the greatest in the world,
most of whom are in their
mid- 70s, should have 1 go
0
back 10 work in order to survive? Only your own personal humanity can answer
this one, but remember that if
you arc lucky, you too will
some ;lay be old.

Suffolk hosts fo~~ics
tournament
Sweepstakes, enough to
place first . However. host
schools do not acc.e.pt sweepstakes trophies. Because or
this, New Jersey's Brookdale
Communi1y College, with the
next highest total of 123
points,was doclaredthewinner.
This exceptional performance, combined with last
week' s seco nd place in
,sweepstakes at State University of New York at
. ausburgh, shows the makings or yet another successful year foe Suffolk's forensic lCam . Last year, Suffolk's
fon:nsk team was linc:oln~tglas national champiTad Funado haj an imp~ ive tournament this pas1
weekend. He placed second
in Rhetorical Criticism,
foun~ in Extemporaneous,
fifth in Impromptu and sixth
in lnfonnative Debate.
Also placing in fatcmporaneous were Kate- Parker
nod Russ Pauen with a fifth
and silr.th, respcc tively.
Su.rro1.t had a strong
showing 10 lnfonnative with
0

Angelique Muller and Christine Will::cn~ landing in the
top fouTpllces. ~wilk ns
C
praccd second and Muller
came in fourth .
lo
Dcba 1e,
Mary
Cunni ngham placed third ,
losing in lhc scmi-fioab lo a
debater from Tufts University. Coming in fourth was
Vickey Whelan, who 1011 in
U\c! quarter-finals against 11
debater_ from Bridgewater
State University.~
Other pt()ple placing in .
the tournament for Suffolk
included Ikoise Cogliano
who came in lhird in Pcnuasioo and Ke4t~ Connolly
placing third in Poet,y. .
Dr. Edward Hanis, chairperson ..ofr the Communications and Joumafum Department, is director of Forensics. Sarah Carroll is Liocoln-Dougtas coach and Dr.
Richard' Kropp is ind_ pcne
dcnt evenu coach.
Tiul wcckeod, Suffoli's
forensic team will be !ompcting at Northeastern Univenity, Some other local
teams that will be competing
i~Judc: Bridgewa!Ct' State
University, Emerson Col·
leae, . Harvard Uni.versity,
and Tufts Uoivenity.

Reflections on the d!
By V. Gordon Gita, m
JOURNAL STAfF

" Gee Gordon, you're
look.ing mighty morbid today," she said, the first per·
son to talk to me on Dead
Day. She was addressing tho
fact that I WBS dressed a]I in
black . At whic h tirhe, I •
showed her my pin •that laid
I was dead and· she said,
"Whoops, can't talk to you,
you' re dead."
Bei ng dead for a day
seemed CQOI when i was first
Eff~n Hidalgo, I
asked to do it. I didn't get the
W8reamongthe 1
seriousness of it until just a
couple of days before I 'a drunken stupor 1
"died."
'
the same road as
What if I was tt
I as ked myself the
pcrverbial "what ifr' questions. How many times have
I \dt a club where many
people we re dri'nldng . s.
mlounts of alcohol, and afterwards g~ !n10 their ~ in

j
F: -

'111oSall'oll:Jomul ,WeGDCljlay,Novcmbcr3, 1993

-Suffolk students, fa~ty
participate in SO.t\R conference


., ....... ....,
IOUMAL.JlfAl'P

A coalition · of approJtimatdy 12 ltudc::au Md f.:Wty membc:n from Suffolk
University attended a coafcrcoce spomoral by the S~donu (l,pnw,d Apimt Racism (SOAR), last Saturday at
WhealooCotlcge.
Pau1 Korn, Who wu reccnUy appoinccd president of
the orpni.z.-ic,n. WU joined
by Donna Schmidt, the di·

rector of uudent activities,
Rose Wright, the assistant din:ctor of the Ballotti Leaming Center, David Buchanan,
learning spcciali ~t at the

Balloai Learning Center, and
•about five SUffolk itudents .
frQm varyina back.grounds.
· Over 8$' 11udcnt1 from
about a dowi area scboolt
attended lhe conference in
the hoP-CS of , hari na tbCir
experiences and knowledge
on the subject of racism oo
campus.
Studcnt.s ud faculty mernbcn attcnded ascrics of workshops at the confcreoce, entitled "Slop Racism: Educating Tomorrow' s· Leaders,"
ranging from slnllegies for
success for Sludenls o r
co lor, to breaking down
cultural barriers.

:fnllf'at 1993
s..,s.•aas.Wts
au k l ••·

•n

rit\!•
,.,.
.Nn.U.IIL&
Walutlialre

allSIHm

"Ille Suffolk Journal • Wcdne&day, N~vc1

Have lower interest
n\tes helped the_
elderly?

investment income by over
56$. Coupled with this calamity is inflation, which at
Three or so years ago, the prelent reduces the inveselderly were able 10 get 1orsrcalretum 1onearly0% .
While President Clinton
seven and one-half to eight
per~ t rates on vfrtually is pri.ising his policies as
risk-free investments . Their being the ca1a\yst behind
portfolios were designed to the low interest rates, the
"People came to share give them a return, cou pled elderly a.re s uffering finan stories of their pain and suc- with their pensions and So- cial hardships.
Many or the elde rl y. even
ceases, and to meet with cial Securi ty benefits. which
other students who under- were to la.st them the rest of after reaching the age of 70.
have been forced from thei r
stand !lheir eJ.periences)," thei r li ves.
With today 's very low in- peacefu l re1i re men1 and
said Korn. " People were
pretty positive about the CJ. - terest rares. the elderly in- thrown back into 1he work
pcrieoce and things that Ibey vestor is able 10 gel a mea- place.
learned."
Because of this, a quesger three 10 three and oneDonna Schmidt s hared half perce nt return on in- tio n is left: Have the lower
Korn's positive ree li ngs come generati ng ris k-less inte resl rates really in about the conrerence.
creased our prosperity? The
aSlets.
.. 11 was rabulous 10 have
over 80 stu~ents present .
In a si mplified eumplc. answe r to this is at best deThere was Jou or good dia- ass uming no reduction in batable. Is il rair tha1 those
logue and s haring or reel- investment, an elderly per- who have made our country
ings and thou ghts," sa id son was able to generate a the greatest in the world,
Schmidt.
per an num risk-free return most of whom are in their
mid•70s, should have to go
David Buchana n of the of S8,000.
Balloui Learni ng Center
Today, at the current re- back 10 work in order 10 surstated lhat he found the con- turn or ~rec and one hair vive? Only your own perrere nce to be a posilive ei1- percent, which is very diffi- sonal humanity can answer
perien~e'- but relt ·that some cult to find , the investor will thi s one, but remember that if "
or the workshops were too . · only be able 10 cam S3,500. you are lucky, you too will
generalized.
This drastically cuts their some day be old.
"My ~nonal r~eling is
lhat it takes different kinds
of food to nourish different
people. The informal.ion {in
some of the sessions) was
too generaliud. On lhe other
band, ii was a good sla~
(for some students)," said
Buchanan .
Angelique Muller and Chris-

Kom swcd that lbcre.. Y(U
also a des.ii.a tum present
to plan a· program for ·the
nc: . SOA:R conference
u
which will be held in April
at Connecticut CoUcgc.
·Korn stated that the confcreoce was a positive expericnce for al l involved.

By James IL Sd,anbri

~ COKnIBUT'Oll

Suffolk hosts forensics
tournament

eeps1akes, enough to
place first. HoWeve r, hos t
!1Chools do not accept sweepstakes trophies. Because or
this, New Jersey's Brookdale
Community College. with the
neJ.t high'est total or 123
points, was declared the win•
ner.
This e11ceptional perfor•
mance, combi ned with last
wee~•s second plaCe i n
swcep_takcsa1StateUnivers
si1y or New York at
Platts burgh, shows the mak-·
ings of yet another successf~l,,year for Suffolk's forensic learn. L.ast"year, &uffol.k's
forens ic team was LincolnDouglas nationa l champions.
Tad Funado had an impressive tournament this past
~eek.end. He placed second
in Rhetorical Crit icism
fourth in fatc mporaneous'
~fth in Improm ptu and si•th
m lnfonnative Debate.
Also placing in fatemporaneous we re Kate Parker
and Russ Pauen with a fifth
lllld sii1th. respectivcJy.
Su ffol k had a strong
showing in Jnfonnative with

tine Wilkens landing in the
top four "
places. Wilkens
placed second and Muller
came in fourth.
In
Deba1e,
Mary
Cunningham placed third .
losinginthe scmi-finalstoa
debater from Tufts UniYer•
sity. Coming in fourth · was
Vickey Whelan, who IO;St in
the quaner-finals against a
debater from Bridgewater
State University.
Other people placing in
the tournament for Suffolk
inc luded _qenise· Cogliano
who came in lhiril in Persuasion and Kevin Connolly
placing third in Poetry.
Dr. Edward Harris, chairperson or the Communica1ions and Journalism Department, ii~rector of Forcosics. Sarah Carroll is Lincoln-Douglas coach and Dr.
Richard· Kropp is indeperident events coach.
niis weekend, Suffolk's
forensic team will ·be com•
pctinJ Bl Northeastern University. Some other local
teams that will be competing
include; Bridgewater State
University, Emerson College, Harv~rd University,
and Tufts Unive~ity.

I
Reflections on the ~Y the dead walke
By V. Gordon Gknn,

m

JOURNAL STAFP

"Gee Gordon, you're
looking mighty morbid today,n she said, the first per·
son to talk to me on Dead
Day. She was addressing Ibo
fact that I was dressed a)I in
black . At which time, I
showed her my pin that said
I was dead and she said,
"Whoops, can' t talk to you,
you're dead."
Being dead for a day
seemed cool when I was first
asked 10 do it. I didn' t get the
seriousness of ii until just a
couple or day s before I
"died."'
I as ked myself the
pervert,ia) "what if?" questions. How many times have
I left a club where many.
people were d rinking •
!UIIOUDIS of akohol, .and afterwards got into their cars in

a drunken stupor and got on non-drinker and always have
the same road as me?
· been. It's just not my style,
Whal if l was the DCJ.t vM:- but ii is a way of Jife for a lot
tim of a c.mless drinker and of people.
my death was a reality? I
I thought oflhe"times I've
have oftc:n thought-of the cir- seen people getting sma.slted
cumstances of my death. I · 01 a club lllld I never sald,
figu_
red lhat ii would prob- .. f;ley, 'canlgiveyou11ride?''
ably happen ihat way. I'm a or # Do you have a ride
"



The Suffolk Joumal , Wcchlcld,ay, November 3, 1993

Suffolk students, faculty
participate in SOAR conference
• ■y A..,_ a..pr
JOtMN"1. fflll'P

4

=~
~=!~ ~~«::
A coalition of approaimlllely 12 ltUdcms Md fatWly memben froai Suffolk

~i:~;::: rQr:':::

KOffl ~wed llull there was
about five Suffolk 1tudents ~s;l:n
from varying backgrooncb. . nezt SOAR conference
Ovc.r 85 s tudent• from which will be held in April
8allotti Leaming ~ . and

~~co-:r-crc~!:'°:

thei
~:::i::r

at

Connecticut College.

: ;::r;:.;_i:,u~
· :.w;a! ~::u~:

rector of student activities,

. . , . Center, David Buchanan.
learn i na speciali u al the

V'-IIV'

By J1met R. Sdlembri
glllNAl. co,m uii..rroa
Three or so years ago. lhc
elderly were able lo ict

seven and one-half to eight

~~~ :i::/::: ~~~~~~ ~~~~ 1:"cn:~~~i~

the hopes or sharing

denu Orpniu,d ~piut Ra:ism (SOARJ, lat Saturday at
Wbcaloo CoUcac.
Paul Korn, who wat reccndy appoiA&ed prc.ddeot of

re!::

=pe~e=~f

pericnce for al l involved.

~~~~l~ :;l~
co:t~

~i:::~

ll mity is innation, which at
present reduces the inves1or1rcalretumtoncarly0%.
While President Climon

~i~t~:g

c~~:,;::i::~i:~

portfolios were designed to

the low intcrcsl mes, the

campus.
Students and faculty membenattendcd u criesolwort.•
shops at the ooofcmx:e. entitled ..Stop Racism: f.ducat-

.. People came 10 s hare give them a return, coupled
stories of their pain and 1uc• with their pensions and Soccues, and to meet witb cialSccuritybenefits,which
other students wbo under- were to last them the rest of
sla.Dd (their experiences)," their lives.

elderly arc s uffering finan .
cial hardships.
Manyofthccldcrly,even
artcr reaching the age of 70.
have been forced from their

:~~

:r~::u~a::':~~omt~:t w:::

:=::.i:::~

~!.~;mf:;w::.:;::~~~

;:tt.::tivc
..

success for studcn 1s o f

ica~::.~ ~ thinas lha.1 they

vestor is able to get a mea-

;: 1
t:~I ':!:~~ing down

bonna Schmidt s hared

ger three 10 th ree and one-

Because of this, a ques-

~~•~oc~:~:~::e~lings

:;~epe;:;:.;~~~~is~~I~;~

~~o1 5l~f;= : :v:e~; 1~
:::
a
o7~~

"II was fabulous to have
over 80 students prucnt .
There was lots of good di.alogue and sharing of feeli ngs and thoughu ," uid
Schm idt.
Davi d Buchanan or 1be
Balloui Learning Cen 1c r
11ated 1ha1 he found the conference 10 be a positive ca •
perience. bu1 felt th1u ,ome
of the workshops were 100

usc15 .
In a si mplified eumplc,
assuming no rcduccion in
investment, an elderly person was able to generate a
per annum ris k-free ret um
or $8,000.
Today, al the current re1urn of three and one half
percent, which is very difficull to find , the investor will
only be able to cam $3 ,500.

creasedourprosperity?The
answer to !his is II bcs1 debatablc. Is it fair tha1 thoS<
who have made our country
the greatest in the wo rld,
mosl of wh·om are i n their
mid- 70s, should have to go
back to work in order to 1urvive? Only yo ur own pcrsonal humanity can answer
this one, but remember that .if
you arc lucky. you too will

1

t 199~

J. Gill .e:i

~

ier::t~::::y~s/:~~~;

ge~:.:-;li;!·onal reeling is ,This drastically cuts their

place .

some day be old.

that ii takes different kinds

~~ ~~e"~~~s!n~:t!~r~~~
some of the sessions) was

~
::~n~ra;=~~~o:;:t~~

(for some students)," said
Buc hana n.

nc suffolkJoumal •Wcdnesday, Novcmbcr3, 1993

Have lower interest
rates helped the efderly?

Suffolk hosts forensics
tournament
□ .-ORENS I CS
ContinuF(t from page I

Sweepstakes, enough 10
place first . However. hos1
schools do noc accept sweepstakes trophies. Because or
this, New Jcrscy"s Brookdale
Community College, with the
out highest 10111I or 123
poinu,wasdcclaredthewinThis uceptional performance. combined with last
week 's second place in
swecps!Ukcs at State Universic y or New York at
· · Plausburgh, shows the makings of ye1 another successful year for Suffolk·s forensic tcnm. Last yea,, Suffolk's
forensic team was Lincoln•
Douglas na1ion11t chumpi on1.
Tad Furtado had an impressi ve 1oumament this past
weekend. He placed second
in Rhetorical Criticis m,
fourt~ in Extemporaneous,
fifth tn Impromptu and siath
in lnfonna tive Debate.
Also placing in Exiemporancous we re Kate Parker
Wld Russ Pauen with a fifth
and sh.th, respectively.
Suffolk had a s trong
showing in lnfonnalive with

Angeliq ue Muller and Chris•
line Wilkens landing in the
top four places. Wilkens
placed second 8.fld Muller
came in founh.
In
Debate ,
Mary
Cunninaham placed third.
losiQ& in the s.emi-finah 10 a
debater from Tufis Univcr•
si1y. Coming in founh was
Vickey Whelan, who lost in
the quarter-finals against a
debater from Bridgewater
Seate Univen.ity.
Other people placing in
the 1oumament for Suffolk
included Denise Cogliano
who came in third in Persuasion and Kevin Connolly
placing third in Poc;y>'.
Dr. Edward Harris, chairperson of the Communica•
lions and Jouma1ism Dcpastmcn1, is director of Forensics. Sarah .Carroll is Liocoln-Oougla.s coach and Dr.
Richard' Kropp is independent events coach.
This weekend, Suffolk's
forel\Sic team wil~ bc competing DJ. Northeast.em University. Sorue other local
ICafI!S that will be competing
include: Bridgewater Slate
University, Emerson Collcae, Harvard Univcrsi1y,
and Tufts Univcnity.

I

I

Rdlections on the day the dead walked the Earth "Fatal
just
By V. Gonion
m
Instinct: II
be
and
the
a hysterical
and
peror someone
son
parody
Someone
Day.
Glenn,

K>UllNAL STAfP

"Gee Gordon , you 're
looking- mighty morbid 10day, she said, the first
to talk to me on Dead
She wu addressing thefact thai I was dressed all in
black . At which time, I
showed her my pin that satd
I was dead and & said,
he
"Wboops, can't r.alk 10 you,
you·111 dead."
Being dead for a day
seemed cool when I was first
asked to do it. I didn' t get the
seriousness of it until just a
couple o f d1ys before I a drunken 11upor and got on non-drinker and always have
"'died."
1he wne road as me?
· been. It's jUst not my siyle,
I asked myself 1he
What if I was the next vie- but it iJ a way of life for a lot
perverbial "what if?" qucs• Lim of a careless drinker and of people.
tions. How many limes have my death was a reali ty?
I t.h9ught of the times I' ve
I ld t a club where many have often thought of the cir- 5CCll people getting smashed
people we re drinking x curnstances of my death. I 81 a club and I never said,
t01oums of 8kohol. ind af- figured that it would prob- "Hey, can I give you a ride?"
1erwards got into their cars in ably happen. that way. I'm a or .. Oo yOu havp a ride
M

home?" I
assumed that
they were going 1
0
taken
care of: But what if they were
not.
leaving
club they
got inro their can
killed
themselves
else?
like met
This in mind, I approoc.hed
· Dead Day with seriouancu. I
dressed UI black. I hung my
head. I spoke to no one.
I'm oot vain enough to say
that the world would end if 1
bad died that day, bu1 l1 was
weird to think about as I hovered throuah my day.
Everybody wu talking
around me, but not to me. I
felt like a fly on the wal l
looking into what used to be
my life. People makiog funny
jokes. Talking about me as if
I wasn' t there.
II was eerie. I started' to

81 Justin Grieco
KIIUaHAL STAPP

Thc.rearesomcrulesthat
should be attached to watching " Fa&al lnstincc," the new
"Naked Gun" scylc sppof of
block.bcistcr thrillcn. To fully
enjoy this com pletely
whacked-out, goofball romp,
the viewer must have already
seen at least hair of the
lar thrillers the moviC i1 •
s kewering.
The lisl of movies s poofed
includes: " Basic Instinct,"
.. Fatal Attraction" (herice the .
title: " fata l Jn i tinct"),
':Double Indemnity," "Body
Heat," Body of EYidencc,""
''Cape F~' and "Sleeping
With the Enemy."
""'The viewer also has 10 ht_
i.n the mood for some really .
..
silly jQka and ,.... "' juJt
plain, dumb fun. Fonu_
natdy,
this view.er v,,:as. The movie is
a high-speed ride of puri &tu ·
pidily miaed with the mos!
likable cut of lunatica since,
)'l'CII, ""The Naked Gun." Jbe
result is 1otally hilarious.
The plot itself is an a ~
lu1e riot. fl combines all of
the basic auspensdtllrillcr ~cmcnts from the doz.en mov~
its qui1e the same .,.; those
other thrillcn stitch together
tbdr preposLCroUs plot-lines.
Ned Ravine (Armarid
Assan&e) ii, a cop and la'1cr

P0Pl-

wbo defends the aiminall be
bust&.' His wife, Lana (Kale
.N¢Wpn), is tchcmin& widri
her lover to' kill Ned for the
imuraDce

mooey. Ned

1tart1

to fall few a Sharon St~
type "fcmmc-falale:- Lota
Cain (Scan Youn.a), who also
devdops an obseuive anracDOQ to Ned.
Ned 's secretary, Laura
(Sherilyn Fenn), adores him
and is haunted by fluhbacb
of her fanatical, abuaive blllband from whom she fled.
Meanwhile, one of Ned'•
old clients, Mu Shady
(James Raa), is released oa
parole and vows his vengeance on the . lawyer who

FATAL

eoaJinuc<lool"&"6

.

(

'Entertaimnent" world mourns
•~ of actor River P.hoenix

A commentary OD the life and death ofa rising.star



...,. ll Your,g - - vcn1tioa, the man stated,
'"He's bavio& aciurea-, 1
The cotenaimnatt indus- think be dtd·IOIIMI Valium or
ry ls mownia& lhe loa or 10mellllna."
Phoali.a WU proaouaccd
liver Pboenu., • promisiq
)'OWll actor whose pcrfor• dead an hour later at 1:51
Lm. hcif1e lime u Ccdar1
mancet were, critiully flt·
claimed and whose career Sinai Medical ea.er.
1be rea1lt• of the mtopSy,
..... riaio&.
f'lloa:u, lJ, died o! I IUI· which was performed on
pcctcd drug overdose early Monday, have not been ~
Sunday ~er collaP5ia1 io leased.
FoUowin, the death. fam
front of the Viper Room, a
, Hollywood hotspot owned by placed flowen, caodlea aod
Johnny Depp, the 1W of "Ed· other items on the 1pot what
ward Sbsorhands" and '"2 1 Phoenix coll,psed In Croat of
the Viper Roocn.
Jump Street."
Phoenix was born in Ma~ IClor was aucnding 11
Halloween pany al the club dras, Ore. and spent much of
with I C ~ fricods and fam • bis childhood in Vcoez:uda,
ily mcmbcn. Pboc;oi~, 'fU, where bis pucou were lllis1tbcdulcd to perform with sionarics for OuLdrcn of God.
bis baod at the club that nighL a rdiaious group.
Wben he was five-yean•
wben he was leavina the club old Phoenix got his fint WlC
shortly before I a.m. Pacific of show busineH 1inging
time wilh acmuca Samantha with his 1l1ter Rainbow, then
Math is
a nd
Christina three. on ,1rce1 comers in
Applcga1c. When Phoeni• Caracas, Venezuela.
collapsed, a womM believed · In 1985, Phoenix made his
to be hls sistcr Rainbow came movie debut io "'The Exp~out from 1hc club and 11- crs." His sturuiina debut per•
formance was roilow.ed by
lCmpled 10 rcvi'le lhc actor.
bis appearance in the criti•
cally acclaimed 19g6 rckase.
nix was acting "auanae" u "Stand By Mc."
In "Stnnd By Me," Phoc•
he was leaving the club.
Phoenia 's brother, nix played a tough, cigarcueJoaquin Rafad "l...af," made 5mok.ing iecn who goes into
lhcdespcratccall 10911 inan lli't: woods ,n search or 11
attempt to save the actor's ~ rpse with II gro up of
life. Durina the phone con• frien~s. The movie was a

_..,,,..,..- -

~~old~~~,i,!~

poigoaiu portrayal of 1hc
,roup'a pauaac into man•
hood. ,.
PhOCnht was nominated
for .. Academy Award for
bis pedonunce in the 1911
film, '"RUnnina Oo Empty."
Pcrbap1 the actor'• best
tole WIii a male pro&ti011C,in

"MyOwnPrinteldaho.'"Tbc
movie wu highly acclaimed
by critic, and fans, and maay
people eoosidered Pboc.nix
to be ooo of the bottcll u~
and<Ofni.oa 11e1on of the 90s.
Pbocaix wu oanicd best
-actor by the Venice F"Lltn fa.
,, tivtl lut year for hi• role in
"My Own Private Idaho."
Phoenix portn.yed a .;de
variety of charactcn in his
many film s. He appeared th1
~ Mosquito Cout." ··1ndiana Jones ind the Last Cni•
ude" and "Little NikilL..
Phoenix had a suong pres•
eooc on the scn:,en. His most
recena. performances helped
him gain the respect of Hol·
lywodd insider, and roles in
top films.
At the time of his de:llh,
Phocnl,. was in the middle o(
filmina "Dart Blood." He
wa, also IChedulcd to appear
wi1h Tom Cniise in "Inter•
view with a Vampi~" which
was supposed to begin film ingbdMetheendofthcycar.
PHOEN IX
contlnucd on paae 14

Suffolk U's NEW!

&nmikllli
PROUDLY PRESENTS
PAUL KENNfltUY
.
.

MIKE REY,NOLDS
BRENTMN.BULGER
FOR AN AFTERNOON OF
. IR/SliMtJSIC
THI/R3'tlA'f'II'( 4TH I

·-,:~-

.: ,S4m?Qc!'
AU-~

"Fatal Instinct:" a parody
of Hollywood's top-films
■ ~ rrom pqc ~~a:~~!::
5

dida'1 protcet him. It is

'

TheSaffollt.Jouraal • Wodoeldtly,No,anbetJ, 1993

The Suffolk Journal • Wcdnclda • November 3, 1993

A first -hand account of
.

the day I was dead

The Improbable Players build
awareness of substance abuse

amus· of the joke,: do not worlc and

ing to watch all of this
mumbo-jumbo come 10•
set.her with overwrought era•
zit1ess.
The plot itself is sueh a
meucd•up puuJc of contriv·
ancc, tha1 1 is very funny
1
whm the viewer finds them·
aclvu wrapped up io the
wholo thingl
The movie also includes
some painfully funny ~
diea of "Fatal Acnction" and
"Slcepina Wilh the Enemy"
u well u a winlliog joke or
wrbe Steam:, Ses Sceoc..-i,
bas a field day makina fun of
the acrobatic sa usually depiclCd in erotic tbrillen.
The cbaracten add lo the
mix wonderf11lly 1 Assante
('111C Mambo t.inas") rivals:
Leslie Nielson u another
numbingly dumb cop. Young
has her bcM role 1 da10 and
0
adds unusual life to her role.
She is no longer zombifled
and dull like her previous
roles. FcM is likably idiotic
as was Priscilla Presley io

lbeviewcrcan'tbdpbutlhink.
olwaysthcyoauldbavebecn
improved upon. A few jokes
So on a bit too Iona for their
own eoodTbe5c are (au.Its that rcaJl y
can oot be avoided though.
bccawc this lype of comedy
has bceo doae so man:, times.
This film , however, is better
than many n:cent dTons like
"Hoc Sbou.. and its sequel.
" Nitiooal
Lam poon 's
Loaded Weapon I ," and
" Robin Hood : Men in
Ti&hts."
Another naw, which is also
a compliment, is that the au•
dicoce laughed so loudly a,
times that ii was difficult 10
hear 10me of Ille punchlines.
But the movie .could have
beat •so much w OIK.
Most people will enjoy
"Fala! lnHiQCI" for daring to
just be ttupkl. Some people
wi.U hate it foe the same tea·
SOI],. ~ are more laughs
here than in an averase ''.serioui " comedy. Watching it.

~ =·~yU!'~ I~~ :
(" Dead Men Don't . We ar
Pl11id"
~nd . "S\ilUmcr
Sc hool" ), · ""fatal INlnlCt" .
mov~ alo\ti ar I b ~:
ing pace. This 90 minute film
flies by, at what ru.Js like, a
hair an hour. Reiner has a
sharp eye for movie parody,
He knows just the right sequ_ ces to pluck from the
~

;:;er.,;~:°Jj:~

..,oai.

~rC~m~~~~o:~~=~~
aanized I debiifc for city

s:t~,~

Continued from page 5
understand what the fictional
Ebeneezer Scrooge must have felt
lite on his jaunts lll;to his "present"
life in Cbatlea Dickens' ,AOu:illm.1.1.

Ciall.

Some of my friends jokingly laid
they were IO sad that I wu gone.
Ignoring my "ghost.. In their pres-cnce, they ta1kr.d about me ud tried
to get my "ghost" to wk. One even
said, "Gee, it's quiet around here
now that Gordon is gone!"
The people that I didn' t know and
who didn't know about Dead Day
Wt.f( genuinely impressed when I
showed them my Death CcrtificaJe,
which each of the "dead" were given.
I think that some were enlightened
on the immediate ramifications of
careless drinking.
It was difficult not 10talk, because
I , m so outspoken. One of the " livina'' even said 10 me.. .., couldn't do
it ...kccping quiet all day."

,..

-

OD a
.... ......... p a f - tut

Thursday to build an awareoeu of
how akobolism and drua lddiction
caa affect live,. The IJ'OUP k>oks at
these serious problems io a liaht·
hearted manner to keep people intereatcd while they are beina cducaled
about the subject.
The Improbable Playen, which
~ve been ~Ol'ffling at scboob _or
f
w. y~, consists of f~ recovcnng
ak:obol_ia ~ ~• ~ -who act
out vanous situaUons mvolv1ng drugs
and alcohol They show bow thele
su~candistortaperson' 1miod
and body. .
l!•lna a acnes of maskt_'. the SJOUP
showed the way ·a ficuonal man
named Owlic looked and flCICd when
be wu under ~ influcoce o f ~
bol. The1
masks 1Uustrated how Charlie
felt when be was both sober and
drunk.
,
In another sc~nano, the group
showed 1wo endings to 1he same
part:,. lo the firll scenario, three
frictldl dec:tded to go out foe some-thing to cat after the party, When ooe

AVAILABLE HERE!

nstaitpre•padknjmslnec.-d

Sllltlllilllliy
c.._,__ falil
r.1111-..1mr.i5lllll

lllallecal!s u.thoutcuns
•l'.asytouse

../0

• Ilse Ollill'Jtoodllone phone.
• l1o cndtcheckor aa:ooit to open

cncOUrage lhem lo vote.
Vining ii also a member
of lhe Me.dford Republ jcan
Ci1y Commiuee. He plans
on writina a letter, which
will be sponsored by the
comm ittee, 10 encourage
more people 10 become involve.d wilh the Republican
Party aod uoderstaod what
the patty ttaod.s\ior.
As a s1uderu al Suffolk
University, Vining has been
involved in numerous ac•
ti vitics. He wu class president , and executive uea surer, ,ll'retidcot and mem ·
her of Alp1 fti.()mcaa (or
~
rou.r Yi
· ,Vinio1-i1 currentJy wort·

:.::•on~i::s:;

:~
school oeJct fall .

~:!~e~=:
v~~~trois=m~:i~;ly~::
aod nqtjUU.¥Olcfor a nuae, Yi~~ ~b u food drives.
The pu~ r,f ttiC .dCbi.'te , . l-ai&loar'moaey for homeless
was 10 info rm volert lbcl ., sbdtcn aod clcanillg up die

. ----,_;

I, however, took the silence u a
a dedication lo thole who died
by their own fault or by the fauh of
somebody tlsc by way of cardeaa
drinking. I felt like it wu the lc:ut I
could do, 10 that aomconc tlsc might
think about it the DCJtl time they go
out and drink too much then try to
drive, be it• car, boat, or cen-spccd.
Being ..dead" for a day was not at
all what I cxpeacd. it wu deeper. I
got in louc:h with the deeper sense of
Alcohol Awarcneu Week. I had to
ask myself, "What if i1 was me that
died instead of somebody else? What
ir I could have prevented itT
TilCKarethequeationsweallmust
ask ourselves if we chose to drink.
ride with IOfDCOOC dNnk, or, wone,
let a rricnd drive dNnk.
A friend would not let anothtr
friend put their life, and the livea of
others they come in1ocon1.1C1 wilh, in
grave dallger.
YOW -

The Suffolk University Bookst0re

and tlwt's the reason people
go 1 the movies.
0
No, this is not a cuttil'f:•
edge pnrody, and il docsn ·1
need 10 be. " Fatal Instinct"
gains iu laughs by simpl y
putting a smile on the
viewer's face from 1hc very
beginnina and keeping i1
~ until the very end.

Suffolk grad student
meets the President
VIN ING
Condnucd from pugc 5
new id eas and energy ,"
Vining SlatCd. He said lhat
Anthony Gialio, Mcdford's
current Stale Represen t• ·
live, 11 not sc.rvina the citiu ns of Medford to lhe best
or his abilities.
Vinioa 1ta1ed 1hat bis
include keeping taxes
low . incceas ina runding
through an altemadve roucc
and gcttina the govtmmcot
orr the bacb of individu•
als, as well as businessc,.
He would like to foster ec~
nomic growth , not raise
tuc, and regulations.
Vining recently worked

The lmprobable Pllyen put
■ DEAD DAY

of the friends WU llkod if· bc could
drive, be \aid be WM too drunk to
walk 10 be hid to drive. The frieftds
coded up io ~ accidcoL _
la the KCOOd tcmario. the a,oup
was accompanied by two sober
friends. 0oe· or the friends ufe1:,
drove lhe aroup to aod from the
ruwua.nt. Thii scenario made the •
point that friends 1hould never let
friendl drive dnuik.
The m01t moviq ,egmme ol lhc
performance wu an Wmtntion of a
•family over the put 20 yc:an. The
mother of the family was an alcoholic, but everyone in the family
denied that she w.. ao alcoholic.
II took a penoaa1 injury ror the
family loadmitthM thcrcwua ~
lem.
The 10n wu addicted 10 dnlp.
The father wu aware of the problem
and tried to help·~• IOCl, bw the boy
,q,amcd birmclf from the family.
This sceoe showed one of the bigat
problems related lo dtua and alcohol
abu.se--deolal.
The enlightening pedormancc by
the Improbable Players wu , pop,orcd by the Suffolk University Al·
coho) Awarcneu Committee.

.,

• ~tousemw
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$97.50

.

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12

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... .... 11111 . . JI

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Monday &T~y .
Night Live

CaHee-Talkfl
Stop by b

CARSSR'ADVICS

" over a cup.ofhot coffee. tea. or
cocoetnthe

Sawyer I:,obbg
Monday & Tue9clay,
Novembers & 9
'&om 4 - 7:::30 pm.
andW.µ.
.....,~.,.,..._,

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(

Thos.trolltloonll .,,.,_y,NOYCmber3, 1993

'

AIDS awareness enlightens; ignorance ~estroys

Editorials

by PIIUI DI,._,,,. _ _ many names, but in the town diseue that ii takioJ lives arc ~ for the ahockParcou have • fear tlaac
AIDS 1wareaa1 wlll aomoor Braintree they arc called ud for which a cure must be ina reality ol iL

Awastt:_ potential
of



1bc Cow>cil . , _ (COP). ooe o{the-led -,,;,
three,. ~ oa cam.pus.· is probably one of the most
DU.llllldcntood antdent poups ll Suffolk Univmily. The
aven.ac Sllffolk atudeot hu no conception of what the
Comcil doel and- bow it operates.
COP actually consiats or an uecutivc board of four
ltUderlla and ~ v e s from all the groups on campus.
Tbc CUIC\ldvc board of COP delqllcl fuodl to all of the
smaUa campus clubs and organiDtiom who .are noc directly
t\mdcd by tho university. The mere existence of this boant is
lblolutdy unnoceuuy and uodcnnincs the confidence and
..umomy of 1maller- irou,ps on campus. The dclcptioo of
fwtdl for campus organiutions showd be handlod directly
thtou&b the univcnity, thus diminating the red Lipe and
,cooflicu ol lntarsl involved in funding ICtivities fot a WJc
group d clubs and orpniz.ations.
Prob&eml arise when groups such as the Black Student
Unica (BSU), one of the largcsl and moJt active sroups Oil
cmnpus., 1pomon an evcaL ID order- to receive fundiJI&, BSU
must submit a proposal to COP. who then approves or
disapprow:1 the amount of mcoey that will be alloc:aud for
the event. Becaue of the fact lhal COP provides the funds for
die cvcnc, the Council takes credit for co-&pOOIOrina the
event. reprdlcu of tbcir involvement in planni~ the event.
The Council of PrcsidcOlS is oot a nccasity. Fundina fo,
all orpru,.aliont abould either be provided directly lhrougb
the university or through the Student Government Assoc.ii•
'Thank you for your cdi1oriaJ or Oct. 27 highlighting the posilivc goals or Alcohol
tioo. Oive the IWdent groups the right to plan lhcir own Awlt'COCU Weck. While we in the Student Activities Office 11pprecia~ the llllCDtioo, we
events. and let them take credit for their bard wort.
would like 10 clarify that Alcohol Awarcncu Weck came about through tbc efforu or a
cam~•wide coalition which was coordinated only in pan by the mcmben of our omcc.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
Margllffl Fitzgerald, the Dirt:c1or of Health Services, and her staff cook a great deal or the
ioJtiativc in the coordination or this pn>jcct, and were instrumental in 1ee-in1 I.he week

Letters

Giving credit where credit is due

"I was parched! "

Jm,~r:«==in';ic:!o;;

~J

of

Mu SM drank in dine days while ill Lond0tt,
&1land.

I

throu&b lO ha 1ucccuful conclusion.
Included in the list o f ~ who contributed their ume, energy, and resourua 10 making
the week a reality arc thc President's Office , lhc Dean or Studcnt'1 Office, the Student
Govcmmen1 Association, I.be Program Council, the Couocil of Prclidcna. Tau Kappa
Epsilon, Alpha Phi Omega, Phi Sigma Sipa. the Counseling Center, the Univcrshy Police,
the University Safely Office. the Women's Ccn1cr, lhe Suffolk Journal. the Studen1

CREDIT

TV viewing a matter of choice
One need onl~ to 1witch the num~ ~hannels, be it on
situations tha1 television routinely broadcu ts. Grar.uitous
violence and gratuitou1 sex is sometbin& that television
counts on 1101 only 10 stir up controversy but also to boost
ratings.
The bouom line (Of a ~levision proarainmc, is the ratin&5
that• particular 1how receives, 1101 the social ramification, or
wbM they produce. While this idea miaht prove unsculing 10
many, the question remains: To wha1 dcarcc should 1elevi•
a.ion have lO ccmor itsctr in order to limit the violence and sex
that arc regularly fcalurcd?
While ii cannot be denied !bat the sex and vlolcoc:e on
television can IOmctimcs be u.ccssive, ultimately thc viewer
will decide what hdlhc Wanb to waich:
By lhe aame ioken, parents or legal au,iudians should be
cbcct.in& carefully their children' s viewing babies. Tclevi::c~not 111d should not be responsible ror 'what children
Tdevi1ion is ftlled wilh both quality and not so "1aiity
programming. Viewers, by sheer viewcrsbip, decide what
. .)'I OD the air. lf people don ' t want to view sornelbina, turn
Jbe IUUOD.. 11' 1 u simple u that.




--~

For the Record

Due10• ffl'OI' bl lhcOct. X7 iuoc, SICpbcaT. Kot.I:'• name

TbeOct.nAlcobolAwaraieiaWeckscorylacomcdyllaled
dial It wa lhe finl DE SDffolt partidpaad la the effllL Tbe
.aivenkybabeaUlfflwdiatbcew:a1sincet6clDid,,clpliea.
TbelmprobatNcl'llycn:wcpn:,fcsakmlactcn.DOtrecova-

continued on page 10

"Voices" segment angers student
The voice of Suffolk by Julie Miller or Oct. 20 1eems to illullnlle more abou1 the
Americans (sic) i&norancc of foreign affain. Aa a Somalian, I rcgrec any lost (sic) of life cilher
the Americans or the Somalis as well (sic), however, some or the answers from the 1tt1denu
appcars 10 have miss (sic) lhc point or why Americans arc Lhcrc in the first place..
There is nothina,.. ?'~ ng with saying, ..Pull ouc" ot "Leave" and I strongly feel !bat the
Am~aw should get out or SomaliL But, the answers like: .. Blow them up" and '"TUm it into ·
1 parking fot" seem lO say some 1hink (sic) about the American people. l can't understand
why an individual goes 10 school and spends • 1 of money to educate bil or her sci( and
01
l1l1k like that And if these are the leaders or tomorrow, 1ha1 this country have 1 offer (sic).
0
Now we know why America is going down the tube because, these arc kind of people that
the country ls producing (sic).

In todly's society, it ii almost impouiblc 10 believe
that disease, were once

looked upon u • penalty ro,
a person'• lack of morality Of
• symbol of some rdigiow
slaoifigancc.
Anyone who 1w studied
the history of carty civila.l•
tlons, iocludiog the fom,a .
tivc yc:an of our own United
Sllld, knows that numerous
idcalop:I viewed affliCUOOI
of the human body 001 as
being physical in nature. but
rttber as havi ng a greater
symbolic impect.
11 would be uu.crty ridial•
lousifwebclievedthat 10in& blind sipified cucuivc
muturbatioo, or brain tumon
as "" a result of watchin&
"Beverly Hilla 90210" over
an wended period of time.
Whatarclief'itiatbatwe
can oow tauah ar. such idiotic
reasoning! A member of any
20th century society would
never 1ttach character or ct.hi·
cal judgment to a phy1ical
malady.
Oh wait, 1 forgot aomc,.
lhing. AIDS.
Just when you find the di·
ru:tions 10 Mr. Roger's Nci&h•
borhood , a gust of reality
blows them away.
Two wceia ' ago the
Braintree Public School Sy1•
tcm held • meeting for parems co speak oo a propoacd
• AIDS Awarenas proaram
which would be offered to
grades K- 12. 1be school system had c:omtJw:tcd this
~
ID-cluld=and
ybong adults about the real·
ity of AIDS and what, they
can do 10 prevail ia 1prcad.
Before you cou.ld praise
1bit step in the ri&ht di.rec·
tion , lhc ..&.bough1 police"
made their dramatic appear·
ancc. These igoorut, unrc,.
aliatic, do-gooders JO by

r--------:--- ------------,
TheSuffolk JournaJ

8ythe~forthcsrudcnls. sincel936.
Aadru Ruap(,F..dilor-1n-Ouef
K.cvia a.-banli.~ Editor

Saep!IMk s.ow. tb-a Edu

V. <lc:lnlNOkM..lD.SpcciabE.di..

OritOlloa.5p;lluE&lr
Ridian1Mdlo.P!NJll>Edi10r
N.E.Elc:otw,OidCop,,Edili;w

Juaia Ciricco.,.,.._Ulcatyt,uf.dilor

Micbad~Todiao.AIILSplcilllEd:iloi'
PaolDiPau.,.,..,Spcn&lilal"

a.,....._.._ .......

Cliirillia t.,kr,Sab-0:.,, Ed:iloi'

R. Patrick Beoedem, Pnx1ac:1ioa Aa1s1ao1

. . alcoboUca. lbdrpa'polO b lOpalota a J)M1dellpld 10
,_,.awnncuofalcobolism. Tbe HeateScmoaI>epauneat
erpaizaliOn ot AJcobol Awarmca

......

...,_. a b:y role in the

AJcoilol Awaeocu Weck ii a c:oordlaadoa of dfom &om
...,. . . . . . . .y ~ ~ t b e l l l s l v e n i t y.

Chaf1ene Toner
Sophomo<e

The Cooccmed Parcn11
would have ua lock up all
fl>Cmoning of AIDS rcl.-ed
iuuea and bu.mu ac.uality
into• clOld and ptacl'ld they
do DOI exist. I have yet to see
• problem solved throuah
ignorucc.
Thcworldila lowyplacc
to live l.n sometimes. Thia
rn,,ycomeauurpri,etoaomc,
but if the oext aeoentioa of
adwailraiaedinanc:oviroo- ·
ment wbcrcadvc:ralcyl.scopcd
with throu&h abuttio& the
door OD rcali(¥, lhcn ldula
have failed in their role as

--

bOw conupt or alter t.bcir
child' avirtue. Kidsareaoin,
lO lam ll>out AIDS throuJb
the oataidc world wbetba' we
like it, or not. Wowd it not be
better they lean about AIDS
inaoin(grmativc,cdl.lclliooal
Idling imic.l Uthe IU'Cd? If not at school, at lcut
lhrougb ooc'a .-,cnta.
AIDS awareness should
not be ceola'ed oa where It la
tauplbutODthe(actlhltltla
taught. Coauary to the bcUd
of IOfflCo awarcacu PfOIJ'lfflS
cnliJhceo and uvc liYCI, not
destroy and corrupt them..

Playing the phone tag game

:rc:7

case that conupCs character
and lifestyle.
AIDS is• disease like any
oche r because it has no
predjwtice. 11 can extinguish
the liva of the young and old
rtprdlcu or sexual prefer•
cnce or lifestyle. AIDS mwt
be viewed in !he aamc li&ht
as • disease such u canca; a

Voices of Suffolk

Ahmed;.. Eaal
Suffolk. S1udc:n1

IC.aM.Y-i,I.JfcMyb F4ilor

fouod. People do not castiThe Concemcd Parenti.
AIDS is a disease whkh ii p~cancu'tic:timsfnntheir
often transferred throuah company. They arc not acsexual intercourse so it makca cused ol shameful livina and
sense to offer awarcncu pro- thrusl away from all bu.man
grams Ill tbe junior high and wannlh and companiomhip.
high school lcvds, a period AlOSiladiseaseofthebody,
when adolescents start 10 be- not the soul Until this acticome sexually active. Offct• tudcgainsgrcau:rlCICCl)WICC,
ing awareness programs at The Concerned Parents or
lhc grade school level 11 a Braintree will gain member•
controversial issue due 10 tbe ship and non•mcmben will
tges involved. but 1 believe continue to suffer from their
they dlould be offered at the ianorance.
Rccoanizing AIDS as a
higher levels (-4, 5, 6 gradcl.)
Parents u the meet.in& aca• dcadJy disease tak.ina anycrally thought awareness ooctodealb'1dooralloraisc:I
programs should be offered
Ill ooc level or theOlber. Not
those beacom of societal bar·
moay, the Cooccmed Parby H.E &col»r - ents of Braintree. They eoSometimes it's hard to doliaJllcncd school officials aad
acnaible
parents
thal cidc wbctbct or IJ0t tecbnol·
abstinance or sex is the only ogy is a &ood thine, Take:.
monilly corrcct way to~- fMCUD1plc,m.a.n' 1biagcst
vcot AIDS . Obc member, accomplisbmcn1 10 datonoting with puricanical COr• the anawcring ma::hifte. Do
rcctncss, stated chat fomic.a• WC really oeed th:il thinJ?
I've realJy tried to under•
tion is against the law. An•
other spouted out that AIDS , acand aod apprecitlc thia
awareness suppons and en• lhing. I rr;,ally have. 1 think
c ourages a homosexu al it' 1 , a great cooc:cpt. How
else can you lcaveyou.r(ricnd
lire.style.
l...d us leave the delusion, a mC11Pge aboul the lateal
or .this group fM a moment keggcr even though hc'a nol
and knock on reality's door. home?
Ain' t tecbnoloa.Y &rand?
Despite the dc:tcfflUnation or
In case you've misled the
the medical field and the
u.rcum. I suppose I have to
awareness prognms already
in uistance. there is a major presenc my lideolall this.
YoulCIC,arr;,ponerliveaaad
aica with the phone lo his
:=1:::t;,:1~ui:
AIDS: it is viewed u a dis• haod. Our vay livelihood

on

for informltion. Without
thM. you',c finished in tbil
bu1inc11.
Anyway , IHI week I
called • source to aet. some
clarificatioo on • st.ory"l'm
workingon. l~toleavea
me11a1c on 1his pcnon' ,
machi ne (VOi)' polilel , I

ml&ht add) to ca1J me• their
Otay, · ao maybe, 1 liave
e:mtiest convcmetlCIC. I never beca doing loo ~ ow:rgot a rcc:nm call
time down here io my cu-

""°""'

I call«l apin--loft
message (not so polite, but
rmn). No call
After one more 1uempt
and a not ao mce meuqc, l
aavc up. Extremely ticked
off, 1 had 1 scourlbc city for
0
additional sources. Oh well,
Jive and learn!

J°"""".

bklc • the
Maybe
the l'lldiatiOI} from my, computcr tmnioa1 ii killirc my
bnii, cdla. Or may6e m)'
cyca are bq.innina to n,n
1oactbcr from hlvina to rad
cveryont'1 copy. l juti hive
one quation: why· docm' I
a nyooc ever ret'urn their

& ~ : d ; . : : : ~ ~ I ' : ph~:.:=:~jUllld·
oot really great •l, I also bad tin& their humanity slip tway
a n,n-in with the Suffolk•· without even k nowina.
swering machine 1y11em , "We'rr;, not even aware al ii.
which goa on before and bu1 tcchnololY ia takina

aftc:rccrtainbowa.

-~~~t

over, wlittcvahappmed
to the

aood

old daya ' wbal

pcoplc_cm!'leaouat>iocall
U you are trying to reach the back?
admioistratioa offlOCI, pres, . Tome,it'scommonco.&rtwo.

Doea dm new advance in
technology annoy anyone poaa
else? I mean. why ii it C'ff//rJ· a:nooyed I pt
wbcn: you call chcse days? make ,cpeced
Every buinea fcela it'1 nee• rcmcmbu
~ to ha~ oac of meat commercials
thhtp, which are complctdy ,.. ycan *10 Old
wonhlcss bec:a&K CYCllllaal.ly reach out and
yo. ,a: CUI. olf.
' . oae."

_ By Kevin

ThcSuffolkJoumal .Wedncaday,NovcmberJ, 1993

0/- __

.9

AIDS awareness enlightens; ignorance destroys
by PMJI-

In today' a society, it j5 aJ.

most impossible to believe
that diseases were once
looked ul)OO u a pcna.lty for
apc~'1Jac.k.ofmoralityor
a symbol of some rcligioos
s ignifigance.
Anyone who has studied
the hlstOfy of early civiliza-

tions, including the fonnativc ycara of our own United
States, knows that numerous
idcalogies viewed affl.id.ioos
of the human body not as
being physicaJ in nature, but

rather as having a greater
tymbolic impact.
It would be utterly iidicuif we believed that go•ing b lind signified excessive
Jous

J
1e

[ Alcohol
ntion. we

forts or u
1t1r omcc
ea1 of lhc
the week
.omaking
C Srudcnl
Ill Kappa

ty Police,
: Student

1t
1bou1 the

Life either
~ &tuden1s

I that the
Jmit into

""'"'"""'

r sclf and
ffcr(sic).
:oplethat

masturbation, or brain tumors
u a result of watching
·ecvcrly Hills 90210· over
an atcndcd period of time.
Whal a rdief it is that we
can now laugh at such idiotic

rea.wniog! A member of any
20th century society would
never auach chanlctcr or ethi-

caJ judgment to a physical
malady .
Oh wait, I fo rgot some-

thing. AIDS.
Just when you find lhc di·
rc<:tionsto Mr. Roger's Neigh•
borhood , a gu.11 of reality
blo;!olhc:e:r:r ago the
Braintree Public School System held a meeting for parems to speak oo a proposed
AIDS Awareness program
wh ic h would be offered to
grades K- 12. The school sys•
1 had constructed this
cm
gram to educate chlldrul and
young adults about the reality of AIDS and what they
can do to prevent ill spread.
Before you could praise
this step in lhc right tlhec:tion , the ..,bought police"
made their dramatic appear·
ance. These ignornnt, unrc•
lllistic, do-gooders go by

"No.'lfs funny, everyone Ukes It It's more of
an adult show. !rs not
for llttle kids.•

8323 _

Charlene Tener
Sophomore

many names, bu1 in the 1own
of Braintree they arc called
The Concerned Parents.
AIDSisadiscasewhichis
often transferred 1brough
sexual intercQune so it make!'
sense to offer awareness programs at the junior high and
high school levels. a period
when adolcscems start 10 become suually active. Offering a wareness programs at
the grade school level is a
controversial issue due to the
ages involved, but I believe
they should be offered at the
higher levels (4, 5, 6 grades.)
Parents at the meeting generally thought awa reness

arc prepared for the shocking reality of iL
foun"d. People do not casti•
The concerned Parents
gat.ccancervictimsfromthcir woujd have u.s lock ~pall
company. They an: ooc a,c. mentioning of AIDS related
cuscd of shameful livi~g and issues and human sexuality
thrust aw!',y from all human into a closet and pretend they
warmth and companionship. do not c.usl I have yet to see
AIDS is a disease of the body, a problem solved through
not the soul. Until this atti- ignorance.
tudegainsgrcalC:l'acceptancc,
The world is a lousy place
The Concerned Parents of to live in sometimes. This .
Braintree will gain member• may come as swpriac to some,
ship and non-members will btll' if the next gcocntioo of
continue to suffer from their adulls is raised in an environ- ignorance.
menl where adversity iacopcd
Recognizing AIDS as a with 1hrou1iih &
hulling the
dcadlY. disease taking any- door on rcalitl', then adults
one todcath'sdooralsora.i.scs have failed in their role as

~tr:~:e~~~e~~~e,::

r'!'-;"'"""""'-'°'"-"""""""'"'-"lri!!!Jli!!!li!L.Oedu<=ot'°'oe,"',:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
.
·

tho,ebcaco~or,od,tallwmony, the Concerned Parents of Braintree. They cnlightc:ncd school officiab and
s ensi ble
parents
tha1
abstinancc of sex is the only
morally cocm:t way 10 prevent AIDS. One member,
noting with puritanical corrc<:tnc:u, slllled that fornication is agaimt the law. Another Spooled out that AIDS
awllJ"Cness suppons aod encourages a bo mose11.ual
lifeslyle.
Let us leave the delusions
of this grou p for a momcn1
and knock on reality's door.
Despite the determination of
lhe medical fiel d and the
awareness programs already
inexistancc,thcreisamajor
stumbling block in the preve ntion and fu1ure cure of
AIDS: it is viewed as a discase that conupU: character
and lifestyle.
AIDS is a di.scasc lite any
other because it has no
prcdjudicc.· It can extinguish
the lives of the young and old
rcganilcs.s of scx.u.al preference or lifestyle. AIDS must
be viewed in the same ligh1
as a disease sugl as cancer; a

d isease tha1 is taking lives

ud for which a cure must be

Part.DIS have a fear tbal

AIDS awareness wiU somc>bow corrupt or alter their
child'S vinuc. Kid,~going
to learn about AIDS ihrough
lhc outside World whether we
lilr:e it or not Would.it not be
bcucr they learn about AIDS
in an informative, cducatiooal
setting inswld of the ~ ?
If not at school, at leas t
through one's perenu.
AIDS awareness should
DOI be centered on when, it is
taught but on the fact that it is
taughL Contrary to lhe belief
of some, awareness programs
enlighten and save Jives, not
destroy and conup( them.

Playing the phone tag grune
by N.£ &cotMr - Sometimes it's hard to decide wbctbcr or DOI technol ogy is a good thing. Take,

might add) 10 call me at their
Oby, so maybe I have
earliest convcnicocc. I never been doina too much overgot a rccuru call.
time down here in my cuI called ag~left another bicle at the lourn.al. Maybe

for example, mun'1 biggest message (not so polit.c, but
accomplishment to date- firm). No call.
the answering machine. Do
After one more a ttempt
we really need this thing?
and a DOI so nice message, I
I've really tried to under- gave up. Exu-cmely ticked
stand and appreciate 1hi s off, I had to scour the dty for
thing. i really have. I think additional sources. Oh well,
it's a great concept. How live and learn!
else can you leave your friend
Aside from phone tag (a
a mCSllage about the la1cst ~game, I've discovered, I'm
I.egger even though he·s not not rcully great at), I also bad
home?
a run-in with the Suffolk anAin't ICChnology grand? s wering machine sys tem,
In case you 've missed the which goes o n before and
sarcasm, I suppose. I Kave to after c:enain hours.
present my side of al.I this.
'1f you arc calling ~ a
You see, a rc.po11u lives and touch-tone phone, press 1oc.
dies with the phone in his
hand. Our very livelihood

1he radiation from my computer terminal is killing my
bnlin cells. Or maybe my
eyes are begiMing to nan
together from having to read
everyone's copy. I just have
one question: why docsn'I
anyone ever re luro their
phone mes~cs? ·
I think people arc just letting their humanity slip away
withoul even knowing.
We're not even awan: of it,
bu1 technology is taking
over. What ever happeat.d
to the good old days when
people cared CJ10Ugh to call
back?
To me, it's common cour,.., 0

thal, you're finished in this
business.
Anywa y, last week I
called • source to
clarification on a sto,y' I'm
working on. I had to leave•
message on thi s person's
machine (very polilely , I

gcuomc

technology annoy anyone
else? I mean, why is it everywhere you call these days?
Every busi.Dcss (cell it's ncc-

=. :ru~;~ooeco:~~

try to call people • sooa as
possible because I DOW bow
annoyed I get wbco I have to

make rcpcat_ d calls. Just
e
~ b c r those okl AT&T
commerciaJs from a few
years . ago aod ..zeach out,
worthless because evcntually. reach out and touch IOIM-)'OU get cut• off.
one."

10

essenJ

Student
Tunure: 811
Activities:
TbcOcl.7'1--"TCDme
a ICIDgiving credit :::-..!-,/;~;_~~
where credit is mai.t11emu....ity•-........ juit
taowlcdac,
due
~1-:!";,,~• .... ure:

wilb cmdoa• .,._

dot

~
PIii

Suffolk, Bricfty, lbc cmiwnity ia pri-

•=::.



mmily respoa.sible for

::l_

1

cdilorial mistlkcnly IIIWDCI
.... .,..,....... primmy ,ajioalibil•
Tbe

from -

8

_ ..... K_....,...,_._

ityiaaavi.na:IIDdc:nla.•if lbcuai-

tbcOfficeofHWDID Resoarcea. ARA

Orialabao -

staff, and studaa cuaomcn:: Oo lbc
pimar)' f'CIIIODUbility
of both ixofeason and atudeala u
members of I.he acadc:mic coauau· ca
aity is to knowlcdce Ulll iDldloclual mi"'
inquiry. The UDn'Slity it . . . . .
dcputmelt: itorc .o« • social service DI!
a1cocy. S1udeii1~_and profcuon vi
whole primary inlete&t a smdeata Iii
aad ~ ia not the life ol lbc i~

· Campus - ·
Foodsimce.tbeSodolo&Yllq>llt- cootnry, I.he

Hat RcltaurlDt, and
the Cbadea River Pina Cinema.

lDCDl. die Red

As you can ICC. Alcobol A warcnc:a Week. wbicb bas bccD a u.ditioo al SuffolksiDcc the l980'a. could

DOI have been lll0CCSINl ,...itbout. ihc
entbusium and dcdicatioa of the
Suffolk oommwail)', We felt that it

__ _

. . imp:,n:atoJivecredilwlae
Cft'Jdil:Ml&lc.
_ _apiD for your opecial
n.at you _ , IDCl froot-

. . . .,,..,, "'Whal is drinkinc. proo1cmr. Tbe&e con&:ibutioos of ~
Joomal staft" wen: . . ~ put of

..,.........,

place "during Alcohol Awareness

Ww..
- ~ up the good ~ort!
DonDa ' Schmidt

Dirtictorof Studcot Activities

mioclbeloocdoewll=- .
Tbe aa,..ce of lmWC maba . . .

UI

fcuon (M it would make jadaa) cop_-. th
vulnerable to-the JlftlUUffill ,of tbole di

:::.'1~::.:t!.~: :
_.,.......,....,......_...,_c
son arc ao1 ~ allboillp tbae
is consideBble eff0!1~to mate. tbcm .n

SOTbe ~ O; lanlt'C is to help
make SU{'C thit.tqowkd,e ia pursued
without. irrelivant end polilical dit-,

C"
0

,

10

_ Tho Sulfolltloumal •'!"-y,N...-,3, 1993

'llloS.tfolk.Joaul;Wedlmday,Now:mbcr'J,1993

Student

Tunure: an ~ntial part of the academic world

Activi~:
giving-credit

ous

TbeOcL20.lm&mlledilCrial.'7alwe.: 111e widi ~ .. &howl a seri-

where credit is
due
eam,...

sia,r,
Miniary,
the Office of Hwnan Raourca. AR.A
Food Savlce. the Sociology Depon•
~ the Red HM ~ and
the a..nc. Riwr P!aza Cux:ma.
· M you cu see. Alcobol Awwo--

E .W;!;~: =,:

md the uniw:nity. By "Uoivcraicy," I
mca Ibo bnivmity at Jatse. not jult
Suffolk. Bridly, .the u.Rivmity ii pri•

marily ruponsible for knowlcdJc,
not peop&e; lftd ieow-c i1 the normal
condition of faculty.

■ CUDIT
c.ontiallCd from page 8
~

~ of both teDlft

The editorial• mittakenly usumct
that pro(cuon' primary reapomibilhy ll aavin& a&udeatl, • if the u.ni'ftt'li1y wae K-Mart. profeuon salet
and atudcnu cuatomc:n. 0n the
cootnry, the primary rcspoo.sibility
of both pro(cuon and icudeMa' u
manbcn of the actdemie com'.alunity ;i IO k.oowledp and in&dlecrual
inquiry. Tbe Wlivenily ii ac:ithcr a
deplrtmeDl 1tore nor a IOCW acrvic:e

swr.

=

DOlbavebcmsucccssfulwimoulthe
aulklsium and dcclicatioo of the
s.ffolk coa:um,.a.ity. We fdt that it
.,. importat to give c:n:dit where

acdil WIii dlac..
n.k you apiD for your frool_
_ , odilariol, aod ,pocial

__

aacncy. Studenu and profct1or1

...........

whole primuJ interest u 1bldcats
111d profll:IIOn ii DOt lhe life of the

n e ~ o 1 ...... -...,...
feuon (u i1 would mke jndaa) too
wlnerable to the SftUWU of thole
DIIWI l&Ofy, '°Wbm ii dlinking a probprimarily inlt:~ in
kfflr. Thc.ae contributiom of the grades, hiab enrollment,acl(~teem,
popularity,
Jownal ataff 'Mft IP integru pert of
pleasina others. aoina alon,. Profcadie communi~ ~ which took
aon are DOI u.lesmen, although there
place durin1 Alcohol Awareness
ii considerable dfort IO make lhtm
Wc:ek,
Keep up Ille good wortd
The JlWl)Ole of tenun: 11 to help
make sure thait.kDo!Nledge ii pursued
without imk.vaot Md political di1-

,o.

IOrtioo. ltbdP'pn,ct.ctacmc:micfre.

::·,;~~
uar::-di~
inquiry.
~

(11tli docl not

imply tblt tmurc is ablohlte. 11 docl
mean"' that teowe may not be a~
aated without due proceu cviclaidary bearings and facu lty participation and judplenL)
An imponant diatioction is lha1
1enurc ii rccoaniz.cd, not granted.
~rcuon witlM>ut tenure -are probe-

The ........ p,o(euiooal · -

b .... 6 y-, b a tufficiool ......
donary pcriqd. Tenure ii the normal
condition or flCWty and ii distinct
from promotion.

but the 11udcnt1 involved to know (or
au.re how 1ood a teacher ls-but I
can cadfy from pc:nouJ upcricnce
that tcadUna 11 always the fust issue
on Lhc commiucc members' minds.
There have also been severaJ cases
wbc:o, with typical Suffolk &ubili1y, the Comm.ittcc has waived lhc
MCI and 1r111tcd tcaure to loo&•cime
racully members who did oot bold a
PhD, IOlcly because ii believed that
be or ahc was an outlt&ndinJ ieachcr.
Al I laid, the Com.mince can make
mistakes; and in tome cues faculty
who were once excellent tcacben
may chanae later. To lhi1 utcnt. the
tenure system impedes flexibility. eu,
against lhls we mu51 weiah the lcuon
of lhc: pas1 700 years or academic
hi1tory; lhc security or tenu~ has
proved lo be the only reliable: protec·
tion for lhe freedom of tea,cbcnand 1wdcou--10 teach creatively, to

c.x.amioc basic values and c:ootrovc:r•
aial issues, and to question cttabli1hed autbori1y. Without this freedom, even the most tale11tcd teacher
will not be able 10 ach.ievc excel•
lcnce.
John Berg
Profcuor of Government

,The Suffolk Journal
General Sraff Meeting

CcurNe~ec,onl

(61~828

~azine Report Indicates Changes in Jo~ Careers

Blair f . Bi1elow
Professor or Engliah

Professor clarifies ~ue of tenure
The editorial '"Tenure: UIC with
caition" in your Oct. 20 WI.IC raisel
901llC impOfWll i.ssucs. As a facu.Jty
~ who bas SCJYed scvcra! timcl
on the Promocion. Tenure. and Review commiaee of a.AS, I would
like 1 comment on some of tbcsc
0
iuuct.
You recommend lhll, for pivmc
uaiversitiel, ""pcdormance should be
lho deurmiaing facuir in lhc retention of (acuity, oot the nu.mbCI' of
dcgrccs that onc bolds or the number
of years of teaching e,i pcricnce." I
can auw,: you that this ii the case.
A PhD or equivalent deg ree is
R:,quin:d for an initial appointment u
a full-time faculty member. No one i1
en, given tenure simply because he
or abc bolds tllil or any other advanced degree. similarly, 1evcn years
of employment an: a prtftqUisite for
oonsidcnllion for laturc. not a gUIU'•
antcc that it will be awltdcd..
Tbc prime coa.sidcratioo of the
Promolioo. Tcourc and Review Committee is, and always bas been, ucdkncc in teaching, followed by excellence in scholanrup and in scmcc 10
the university and community. Like
anyone, the Committee can make
mistakCJ-it is difficult for anyone

·C areers

tioaary: that ii' tbeirc:oUetpcs have
yet to recopiJ.C their mc:tobcnhip in
a patt.icular academic community.

Thursday, November 4
from 1:00 - 2:30.p.m./ln Scmyer 421
AH are wek;:omel

BJ Mldlael A. TocUno

lief when tha1phonecall tells
them that they got the job.
But what kiDd of job will

JOUI.NAL STAFF

For many graduating colthat be? What are the hot
Iese 11.udco11., the end ii near.
jobs or the future? The u.s.

Their four ye.an of college

Ntws & World Rtpon 1994
arc comln1 to a rapid cl06C Careu Guidt, Nov. I ediand they will IOOO be (acing tion, ind)Ctics some helpful
the mother of all ni&htmara
stntcgies in purwins paracttin1 a job.
While some lucky studcolJI
will be able to avoid realily

~,::ti~~::~

the majority of lbldcnlJI will
be enlerina the fri&hte ning
world of employmcat upon
lhci, araduadon.
They wm onJy be armed
wilh lheir raume and whatever will they have accumuh11cd during their, lifetime.
They will have to endure 1
multitude o( interviews in
~bk.h they fnust worry about
what lhcy say, how they look
and how they arc being re•
ccivcd.
Tbeir competition will be
,110', although. For every job
opponunity, there will be at
lcut JOO candidates. 1n the
,.tnd, however, they will
breathe a _ uaivc sigh or re•
m

I

oculat carecr u wcll u whifh • ,
professions will be in high
demand for the near futu~.
According 10 the magazine. people in1erestcd in
becoming doctors should be ,t
prepared for the many ,
changes that will be hitting
the medical professlOft. It
reports that although the
median income in 1992 for
ramily practitioners was
SI 12.585 and that cardiovas-cular s urgeons· a¥Craged
S499.901 , docton are beginning to fee l thepregsurcaor a
demanding career.
The mMI stanling chaage
~::8 ~ . : '~::i~ ~h: With m011 doctors joining
In light of this infonna0
practicc.. The U.S. Ntws & hcaltb plan• the!sc days 10· tiOO, many doctors arc sugmake themselves more. mar- . Jesting that 1tuden11 inter•
World lhpor1 study states lhat kctable. they are fmdina I.bat ested in aoin& WO medicine

:~~r

..s: ~

:~I~~

primary c!re physicians.

these "HMO'1" want primary
docton instQd of spe-

~ISU.

a

schools mentioned were the
Medical Coll* or VirJinia ,
ud lhe Univcn.ity of Tuu.

~
...aaoo:·::-:

:

ta'
~

anmd medical IChool
w jll provide ·eucmi:ve
ing in pr_j.mary care. Some

REl'OaT
coociqued_ ODplllC

12

~e_

freshmen

co-sponsor "Quest" for Career Week J993

work soup
kitchens

By v. Gordon Glmn,

m

The Career Services and

NORTH EASTON, Mass.
· Every fres hman cntcrin&
StonchiU Collcae this year is
required to donate a <1aY or
their time to SL Paul's soup
kj~hen. the Habitat frx Humanity , a homeless shelter,
or the Old Colooy Hospice.
'"ldoa'tlmowofaayothcr
colligc that dOCI aa,t.hin&
like lhi1 with ·ks cotire incomin& (freshiiian) clus,' '
sajcf the Rev. Dao lsaiag, the
fou nder of I.be " h110 the
SltCc:tt'' proamn.
The two-year-old program
is a ffllDdMory pan of freshmu orientation which fs:
scheduled for two days.
School officials aay tbiy
ctellcidthepn,aramtofamil·
iarize ltudenu with the commv.nity of Nonb Easton and
10 make them aware q_,r the

DTCHENS _ ,


I~~

":'e ll

1

::a~: ::::j::

reer QucaL..
forTi::

JOUJlHAL STAFF

lhc whole office, Tank.lefsky
said. "At IW~ half of the
scheduled cvcnu arc cosponsored bf some clubs and
organizations of lhe uni!cr1ity."
When asked wbal the procea wu for the co,spomorship of evcoll, be iodiclud

lice...

~

=•

world.

short tam goal,,

ac- ..

0a Wedoeaday, Nov. ,.3;

s~~ ·
prafdeal _;

~ ! C : : n ! ~ : :dilth~
cvenu "as ~ cai,lorc ca- uaittam to the
reer opporpuntJCI.". The Joo& director ol multicultural af.
~ lam ioah arc a ~ fain, ~ "~
or awaieneu of the Career ~ Oi,pot1Mt1ltlu for AHAJriA
Services ana ~ t i v c a..dala 1'111 lie pnlCllllld
Edocatiooofficc•araoa:e flam t2-1 p.m.. in the Mace
to 1tudciill lllrwpout the Coalereace Room Arcller
yean of ~
·
J JO.
, .~
'
"ScDdcats arc...__ 111M
Rcprasdauliwca
from
we cmt. ( ~ ,__ wcve T V , ~
a tes ihat ..w aro Nrc.• ~
a-, ...t ........ ....
T~ak~al;d-Jdcadq: o 6 t ~ ..... Ila
'l:bll tile-~ 8w mer 1.ei,o-; ~ will be aYlillble
lbldalis.'lalf Jm'IIDd~ fcr ·..-afta' a brief
sored ac..,lcall "7$ prosnm.t plMI ~ ncy will
and worbliopaJ....
._ _ talk~ tbeir pop-■ ..t
"lt's"outj
· ld.,. ..
ca hlcludiq laaucrt.ive_ _
n:i1111111 ,
need to wort
..., A
a die __.. J
mwibu: dm w e --...- a l ' ~ ooca N1f for

Cooperative Education departmcnt have been sponlOr'ing Career Weck for lhe past
ten years. Tius year they have
madctw0cbafi.1cstotbepro_
gram. The obvious .cban&c is
I.bat it's two ,wecy and oot
ooc. The other diffcrcacc is
thatit'sgotadiffemuaame. thalifaSutrolk.otraceba.1'
Car=r Qi.M:St 1993.
idea for a s-o,.,am, Cai;ecr
Accordin& to
Paul ~ approachca • orTanklcfsky, Dirt.etor of Ca- pllizaboo Uthcy bfve-.im.imer Scrv~ and Coopcn- a. DCCds.
tivcEducationforfivc)UII,
~e reason for the two
lms year's~ ii baed Oft wtck upus.ion, wu, "We
the '"Qucs_
t". definition wanted to tab ldvantap of
Webster's Dictlonat)' offcn: the utra activities period,"
the
uid Tanklcfaky , who went
the thin_& ~g.tiL
on to iDdicatc tblt they caThe 1
CjM\C= from
1 panded it dUI ,ear' t0 that
Staff," S1Jd Tankle~sky, at• students could have moro


brainstonning mc:dllll llbout opportunitic,.
~ 'ro..dMIP
'(l'Wr 1Jtlcifllaby bawe
seven wccb ago.
"Our' l"allllll bope ii dllt
The ~ lbM. ~ tpclO- ~ relllCd ~ for
,the_~
tele~ton •it would 1ca,,aae•. .itudeiu ftJrcd ..-ttff&■&lolli"' CG'eat- -- - - .. ---·
...
~-~~~ Jrwu lMo- inla'Clt and parddpadoa u ~at '93 IDeapt to covs
QllUr
decided thal the name be "Ca- weU • vilil;,ilby for ov of. lbc whole realm of the eara:r-•

~

f~

2
~~-~-~ die,...

a1,:~ ; '

df':

we:i/.

*,

It--

_,. . , ~

~ r t•,.

-'~'



cm P'IID 12

l

C

11

V,:odaadaY, November 3, 1993

.

(

ThcSuffolkJoamal •WCldnrsdly, Novembcr3, 1993

ee:rs

auiting Coordinator worbd on with
Mike Mernic.k. M.P.A. Auoci■tioa
Presiden1 , and Professor David
AKANA ltladalll.• uid TuklefU:y.~ pfeifcr, will dilC\W s,exoal, racial,
- W e ~ sai.-(Attiwact- aaddisabiliryblnammlinthewort":"')· She worbd wi.~ · Pat (Y~. place and in lhe classroom.
director• of Coopcnlivo cdocalioo)
The disc ussion, moderated by
lpCllken and get the word Pfeifer of the School of
out to_ltUdco&s."
Management's Public Manaaeme(!I
On Thunday, Nov. 4.' from 1-2:30 Ocputment, will abo iddras implip.m. In ,the Sawyer budding oo the cations of inappropriate behavior and
lllb)loor, C..-ScmcaaodCoun• atn.tegies for persons feeling ha- ·
cilolPiaidcnta,praentCanuCon· rused
wr,.,,o,u.
On
Nov.
from 12-1:30
"Eumcially, (at) is an opportunity p.m., in Sawyer 521, lhe Human

. QUEST

.

o.tuued from page 11

Changes jn Jobs, Careers

to~,

~=)
~~:;:a~==

Frida,.

5.

W:,!:a':! r;;;;~urn:;:.:..~~ :!~1 ;.';:&;':;

said Tankldsty wbo indicaacd that

1

is dcsipecl for admlmlultors, mff,

::.!.■:I~ =~~w~

~-u,d-- .. - ..... ,. . .

lhele ldnds o( ......
profi()o ooo-profit ICICIOr.
for Univenity Staff.
The prescatcn
alumni who
AccordiAa to their titenturc. '1'his
made it oat ie die real world. he uid. proc:ram is deapeii for thole ~
They lie back IO alme tbcir e:xpcri- eated in focuai.Qa tbcir cnersic■ on
...., Jo lhe wonp1ace. "(11'1) clcaa- ea- rmewa1 tbrooaJ> defllWII '°'
nated to be u. ploratory ht cvalll■Wla pcraou1 cuccr- ,-■. .. .
Ulllf'C•• -IOGlethiDI that's appropriIt Ii • lulscboon iDvmlion to f,c.- for undcrclulmcn u well • up- ulty to ■a.end • worbbop tb■t loob
pcC'Ct.aumen...
a1 their caRC11 and die poaibilitica
luws of Horassmau in tJu Wort- for renewal. The posram praaa&cr
pl,ace, ~ spoosored by Masters in will be Susan JOICpb, ·MS7,9. the di-

are

::~=5~~;~)p~~ :CO::U?: it::!t"f~Cll~o;.:;
i• Sawyer 521, Tburlday, Nov. 4.
Tbe pmcl dilc\auioo, which Karco

ost docton joining

In light of thi1 infonpi•

10

tioo, many docton are sug•

emselves m~ mar•
lheyareflndinatha1
M0'1" want primary
:ton inslt:ad of 1pc-

gcsting tht,t students inter•
wed in ,oina into 111cclicioc
■Ut.od a medical !Cbool ~I
wiU provide extcosive ~
in& in ~ care. Some

~ani t.bese day,

schools mentioned woe the
Medical College of Vitginia
and the University ol Tc.us.
The 1itv.ation doesn't act
much diffi:renl with the meo-

C$L"

rice."
The 1hon term go&ll, ac:co,dina to Tantldsky, is to

llEl'ORT
conlimlcd on pqe 12

-=~~ ~
~are,.._ ._ :_

U.S. News & World Report
saysjobs, they are-a-changing

::



and bilingual insbuc~ really n in

from pqe 11

wi:~~

lion .of lawyen. Ac.cording to the shcwt
that many 1111Wtimal ·'
repo,1. lheNatfonol UIW Joumol found jobs are simply ruMina out, lhere we,
tbM. "For lbe second straight year, however, • number of careers that
nearly half m the nation's 250 biggest appear to be both available and .prom•
law fUttll cut their legal staffs."
WIJI;. Public relatiom s ~ who
The repc.t. i.ndicaud, ..,~ 71.5 per- aver1ae • Startin& salary betwCCn
ccnt,. l law acllOOi paduMes last '1$ $25,(XK)-$30,<XX> are DICUkd in 1■rJc
r
had found full-time jobs six months citiea like New York, Boston Ind Q.i.
■f\cr lffOllbOD, down oeady 10 per- ago.
ccnt from the boom year m 1989."
"Numerous accountin1, engincerAccordina to .the m■garine, sw- ing and mihagancot-consu.Wng fums , dcntswhoareiruresu:dingmffginto andmcethan75perctntoflawfu-ms.
the kpJ "
pro(e5UOll should seriously ate .now usioa public rdadoos or !J'S·
consider lookin& into lepl areas such kcting pro(c:ssionals IO dream up hi&,b• medical, mvironme:ntal and c:om• profile projects for tho fum to get inJUCI' law. II ii also ru:ommended thal volvcd wilh and otherwise pmcr rlM>
law tmdc:rw,s take coursa that will m- dia CO'Vpagc." the- repc.t. ~
iilile l!iii:mlo'lmiii t-=s qaic:t)y and
Anothcs- bot can,er, accordin& IO the
Cheaply.
mapr.inc.dthalrlabusinealaavioes

=

:m:~arou.oo in sci:ncc." the

eve.nu '"al tboy uplorc carccr opportwlitics." Thc tooa
term aQUI are• IWD~
of awareness of the Career:

: : p = • or- a1c1 that we ■rc · bcre," ·· e.t,andloro.daaloiitwith
00 if they have aimt- T~cru.;. old. i~na ~ Ol6s- .O~tcr'. l)oacoa area
h.
'that tbc'otr10e i'.aW O¥Cr 140() ~ will be avallabie
re~
!or the two 1tlldeml-· ~ Jar ancl sSJOO- for.,q ~. af\er • bri~f
, ' ~ wu, "WC \oral at least 15 programs ~ ~ J O G . They will
'toom od-•of udwO<blii>ioor
.• -. lalk~~.""'""'.'"'...s
l'I. ldivitiel period."
" It's OW,~ td"->',;,~ C I iocllNiiq i.AUlklefsky who went ■ssertive_!II~
,Y"e ,, ~ ~ c:arecr- rdatcd
odicae th■l they CJ. • need to wort
• com:--!'~
-and tbe baw:6ta
it this ~ IO that :nic■te wt ~e
~polidonina ~ ldf for
1
11 cou.ld have more
v
..4_,.a,.
L.11
uUties.

~le CO:.dllllJp (.......). •
~ •~1"""~y -ve
· sreaa-bopelsth■I
Theevem tb■lare,poo- Cfflll'!re!a&cdes.penc:ncet for
Id acDeraie ... itudent . lbred'" tlltOlltli)\lrC■l't et --- -~ ..-·
...
uwL ea,ticipltioo u Quest '93 auempc to cover
QUUT
viaibiJity for OW' of. tbc whole realm ol the career
cootmuod. on PIIC 12
_·,: I
. - · -.
-

'!'eek

~;:o~~~

Oo WednClday, Nov. 3,

get 1tudcn11 to attend the

i\t least half of the
led events arc cocd by somcclubl and
llions of the univcr•

recr wlswace for over 100 yean,..
lhc.ir litcrarure ll8k.d.
Wamt11 '1 /s,u,u in die Wortploc,,
from 2-3:30 p.m., in Sawyer 427,
Mooday, Noy. I, which is c:o,.spoosored by the Women's Ceotcrt will
■ KITCHENS
prcacnt, an opportwuty to hear ac•
Continued r~ J)l&C 11
compli1hed women from different
ptofeuions share thei r pcreeptions soci al problems that exist in the
on the challenges of establishing a world outside of colleae.
succcu!ul career and to get advice
"It's proving 10 be• very posiand insider tips on how to make ii u tive experience for e veryone ina women in I.be work world.
vo'tved," Issing aaid.
Career Service■ and Cooperative
Many of the students find workEducatioa turned ■gai n to Alumni ing with lhedisadva.nt■ aed sou.ti1for thls peftCI diJaw.ioo, which ll f'yina that they become permanent
DOl ncceu.ari)y I oew program dur- part•tirne \<olunteen with the v■ri •
in& CarKr"
of pu1 years. --We ous community oraaniu1ions ,
QUEST
luin& added.
.continued on page 14

:i:r:::::.: =~'~:

have an edge if' they have volu.nk:ffld
• a neighborhood health clinic of have

world.

alona with eo-1pouonliip
from Sbaroo 'Artil-Jacbon,
uaittant to I.he ptt1L4ent and
director of multicultural affairs. Amadlt& ~
Oppor11111lli~• for A.HANA
Services and Cooperative Soldata ,nu be praco&ed
aaskedwhallhc~ Educationofficcasaresousce from 12-1 p.m.inthcMwice
11 for the co-apomor· to 1tudeoit lbroul,bout lbe Coofcrenu Room, Archer
CVUl.ts. be mdicllltl yean..Qf..~
·
110.
-~
Suffolk olf10e bu an
"Studeocs an, aware thM
Rcpre1catativc1 ) rom
Career we Wst. (tbo cvtfl!) ~ - WCVB TV, Fcdenl_
~
ilc office, Ttnk.lcCsky

Uniob.
"Career servka at I.be WEJtJ' bu

l..o()u..idice.lhocsa:a'SemcefR.e,. , bccn

vices and other departmen
Quest" for Career Week 1993
planning committee
scheduled cvenll Wu

Stonehill College
freshmen
engage in new
service program

Career Services and C~~tive Education office
~ r myriad of events for Career Quest '93

report

~;;-9~~th~

:-:~=th= = ::::.:. •
.m::.,g
U.S. New, & World Report also
lkcd that enginoerl and teachers mUSI

=

viduals are mostly sought "'wherever
t.bcrc are big businesses that have ~

for representing independent contrac·
IOfl who arc biding -with their oppo,
~y

thit ..,_ -uooally ,.....,., tb!in

I

~

-

a<; wbc<hc,- you

-

m ~ Jawya- or a p,oceia
W• now ovtr.
chc:mist, Aldcam who~ be ~
In order to get an eogmccnngjob in the work force must be prepared lo
~futme.•~tblltenat- dealwilhanaaonmentcliuueath■t
aca, begin IO turn their ~ to will surface wh!;n they begfo their
financial servica, managcmcnl con- · scatCb.
ailtina. irformalion l)'lllmS and soft.
One way to prq,ere for this ineviwa,e ~ - "I'helc firms need cable outcome ii to visit Suffolk's c:adcctrical IIOd softw~ eogiocas 10 n:a- ICM0CI depstme«. which offen
cbip and run ~ ocmpucer hinll on preparing a rc1Umc or the
ayaans... the repc.t. todic■tcd.
proper presentation during' an interf.oJcalon ae also f-=mg adifficult view.
wodd in terms cl 6ndiog • job. The
The fflOII • important aspoc:I In ...
problem, KCCWding IO the tq,on. is that tin& ready IO CIRI' the wnr1d rl wort b
many education po1itbis are beina to plan ahead md keep an open mind
filled by mid-clm:-:r" ptifcaima!s chit to whllevcr situatioo paentqi with.
'111ve tnded the boardroom for I.be By doing this, the cwt future that
.. ~ ... • well as former ocb:a- awaitl anyone who ii not pn.pm-ed to
IOfl rauming to the work fon::c.
deal with ''THE REAL WORLIY' can
I The map:dne ,.bta that "IC:ience
be ■voided.
... matb.llXbc:rs ire still 00'VCtcd in· '

wicb jobl

drying up with lhe c.old

--aodapcci,ledlJcotxlll

1bc SulfolltJou!""1 •Wedneaday,Novcmbcr3, 1993

12

ano

Career Services
Coope~tiv~ Education office
spomor myriad of events for Career Quest '93
■ OUEST

.

Coadnucd rrom page ·11

AKANA ltlNlma.." aid Tanklefsky.
-We approached Sblrm (Artis-Jadsoa). She: worked with Pat (Yates,
dircclOr• or Cooperative education)
to identify speakers and get the word

cruitin, Coordinator wOfbd on with
Mike Mcrnic.k. M.P.A. Auociatioo

recr wistancc for over I00 y:can,"
their litcrtiW'C ll8led. . Women 's lssuu.,ul tM Workplau,
from 2-1:30 p.m., in Sawyer 427,
Monday, Nov. 8, which is co.1poosorod by the Women's Center, wiU
present, u opportunity to hear accomplished women fro m different
professions share their perceptions
on the chal.lengcs or establishing a
successful career and to get advice
and insider tips on how to make it as
a womca in the work world.
Career Services and Cooperative
Education turned again to Alumni
for this paocl discussion. which is
not occasarily a new program during Career Wcclc of post years. "We

President, ·u d Professor David
Pfeifer, will discuss sexual, racial,
and ~ility lwuslneDt m the wenplace and in the classroom.
The discussion, modctatcd by
Pfeife r

or

the

Sc hool

or

out to acudcnts."
Management' s Public Management
0a Thursday, Nov. 4, from 1-2:30 Dc~cnt, will a1so address im plip.m. ill. the Sawyer building OD the cations o r inappropriate behavior and
I lth}Jo«, Can,er Sc:nrica and Coun- suau:gics for persons reeling hacil ol Preaideatl ~ Caner Con- ruud.
verMtio,u.
On Friday, Nov. 5, from 12-1:30
"'tiumtially, (ii) ii an opp011Wlity p.m., i n Sawyer 521, the Human
for IIIJdenu lO visit with (and learn Resources orfice will el>1ponsor
obout) IS (dilf...,.) pro(.,,s;onah." Career Drmmill&, "Essalti-1)y lhl•
said Tanklefsky who indicated that is designed for adzni.nistrlt~ staff,
there will be two JO minu te session and raculty," said Tankldsky who
• prcacnwion, on their jobs and-lidded .indica&cd that Hwnan Re&OUrces orquestions including everythlng from ten sponsors these kinds of events
profit to non-profit IC:ClOI'.
for University Staff.
The preaaucn .-e alumni who
Acocwding 10 their litenturc, 1ltis
made it out io die real world. be said. program ii clt.ci.pca ror UIOle inter•
They are back t o ~ their o.peri- cated in focusing their cacrJies oa
CIK:a in the workplace. "'(It's) deli&·
Career reocwal through dcfi.o.i.ftg renatcd to be exploratory in evaJualing penooa1 career goals."
11.11.ure .•.somc:tb.ing that's appropriIt is a lu.achcoa invilllion to racMC for undctclusmen as well as u~ ulty to attend a worbhop that looks
perclusmco ... ·
at thei r careen and the pb,ssibilitics
ISS111ti of Haraumau in 1M Wor.t- for renewal. The: program prclCnl.cr
plau, co-sponsored by Masters io will be Susan JOKph, MS79, tb= diPublic AdminiJmlioo ( M.P.A.) As• recto r or Career Services for the
IOCillion ~ill be from .5:30-7:30 p.m., Womcn:S Educational and Industrial
in Sawyer 521. Thursday, NOY. 4.
The panel dilcussion, which Karen
l..o()uidioc,
career Services Re-

QUEST
continued on page 14

Continued fro m page 11

lion ,of lawyers. According 10 the
rq,ort.tbeNaticnaJUJwloumaifound
that, "For the second straight year.
nearly half of the nation's 250 biggest
law firms cut their-legal staffs."
Thcrcponindicalai. "Just7Upcr•
c:cntrllawtclKIOlgradualcslMlyear
had found f~ time jobs six mon!hs
al\crgno&llk,n.downnearly !Opetcent from the boom year of 1989."
According to the magazi ne. stu•
denlswhoareintm:stcdingoinginto
the 1cgaJ prof'ession should seriously
conndcr looking into legal areai such
as medic81, environmental and computer law. II is also rccommendcd that
law students take courses that wiU en•
- al>lethem to handic cases qwckly Wld
cheaply.
1
. 1 .u~;;oo;~C:
J

~:'?~~

U.S. N~ws & World R~porr also
stBICd that enginoen and teachers milil
adjust thern5elves to deal with a c ~-

ing

that

marut.'

For engineers, iDWstrics
have traditionally provided them

with jobs arc. drying up with the Cold

.

W-ar now over.
In ordeuo ar:t an engint.icrio& job in
the fu111rc, it is m:ommcodod that Cflgtnccn begin to tum their aaeotion to
financial scrviccs;- management consulting, infonnation systcmS and ·software industries. "These fi rm i need
elcctrica1 and software cngineen to
design and ND sophisticalcd COO\p.lltt

--tho,epO<t-

F..duc:aton; are also racing a difficult

Compiled by V . Gordon G lenn, Ill

service program

U.S. Vets recognized
at Student Activities
Ceremony

social proble ms that exist in lhe
world outside of college.
"It's proving to be a very posilive experience for everyone involved," Jssing said.
Many of the s tuden ts find work·
ing with the disadvantaged so satisfying that they become permanent
pan-time '-'olunteers with the vari ♦
ous community o rganization s,
lssing added.

The Student Activities orficc,
oo Nov. 9 from 11 a.m. • 2 p.m.. u
sponsoring a recognition ceremony for those studenis. administra10B, facu lty and staff who arc
U.S. Veterans or lltt: in ac1i ve duty.
'The program, A. Salute to Our
Vdt'nvu, will be in 1hc Fe mon
Lounge and will include a Bene•
dictioo by Campus Minisler Rev.
Cbarlcs Rice. Those interested in
being recognized should stop by
Student Activities today and fill
out a card with infonnation on
their tour of duty.

US. News & World Report
says jobs, they are-a-changing
■REPORT

13

The Suffolk l oumal · ...Vodocoday, N.,.,.,... 3, 1993

Stonehill College
freshineil
engage in new

and bilingual in.stNclOn rcally arc in
sbonsupply."
While it seems that many lraditional
jobs arc simply running out, there arc.
however, a number of careers that
appear 10 be both available and promising. Public rdatiom specialists who
average a sta n.ing salary .between
are needed in JarJe
cities like New York. Boston and (]ii.
ago.
"NumttOU! accounting, engineer•
ing and managc:mca1<0nSUlting fums.
and more than 75 pcn;:cnt of law fums.
are now using p.iblic relations or markcting pn:,fes.sionals to druun up highprofile projects ror the finn to get invc,lvcd with and otherw;se gamer media oovcragc," the report indicalcd
Anothrr hot auttr, according 1 the
0
mngazinc, is that of a business 5Cl'Vices
sales rcprc.u:nt.ativc. Wilh an enuy
level income or S39.000. lhesc individuals arc mostly sought "wherever
thcn:arcbigbusines&csthalhavere-ccntly downsized. particularly in the
~Atlantic area" and arc responsible
for representing indepc:ndent contnlC·
toB who arc biding wilh thei r opp>
ncnts in tryi ng to provide a company
with a variety of acrvioes.
Regardless of whether you btpolne
an cnvi:ronmental lawyer o, a proccio
cbt:mist,ltllde«swhowillbecntcring
the wodt force must be prepared to
,deal with an assortmc:nt rl issues thal
will sUrflice wh_en they begin their
search.
'~
One way to prepare for this inevitable oulCOmC is to visit Suffolk'• career services department, which offers
hinu on preparing a resume or the
proper presentation during an in1c:rview.
The moa· importa,i: aspect in get·
ting ready to cnttz" the world of work is
to plan ahead and keep' an open mind

ru.cro-no.cro

woridintcrmsoffindingajob. The
pt)bk:m. aocadin& to the rq,ort, is that
many education positions arc bcina
lillod by mi<l-<an,, po(cssfonals lhat
thi
"have traded the boordroom for the ;Y w::;cr : ~
c ~ , " as well u former educa- awaits anyone, who is not pn.putd to
deal with 'THE REAL WORlD" can
lorl recuming to the wodi: force.
The magazine states that "lclC!lee be avoided.md m:Mb lm:hcn are still covtUd in
IDOll disuicts and q,eciaJ c,dpcadoo

~~

JFK Library hosts forum
on National Health Care

·Students, Faculty perform
at Berklee Recital Halls
The Berklce Coll ege o r Music,
1140 Boylston St.. Bos1on will present
their Fall 1993 series o r recital halls
and other perfonnll!lces at their per•
formance center.
S1u<tcnt bassist Marc Ensign pre•
KfllS his Sa ior R~citJJ I, fea1uring
rock/pop and rhythm and blues. with
song! by Level 42, David Bowie,
Fishbooc, and James Taylor. Pcrl'ormance is a.t 7 p.m. tonight.
BerkJec guitaris1 Edward Barrett
performs original j111.Z in Dualilies,
featuring additional songs by Sting.
Rogers & Hart, and Stravinsky a.t 7
p.m. Thursday. Nov. 4. Both of these
concerts are free.
Faculty guitarist Bob S1nnton and
Yo Team present lhe Berldcc College of Music Country Ensemble in
Bob's----CoulllTJ Bunhr, an evening
~ of traditio nal a nd contemporary
coun try mu sic, bluegrass, caju n,
western swing. and rock at 8: I 5 p.m.
Tickets, available at lhe 136 Massa•
c husctts Ave. Box Off,ce. are $4 and
41 for senior citizens.
• compil~d from press rdcas~

Co-sponsored by the UMASS at
Boston John W. McC.ormack Institute of Public Affairs, The Kennedy
Library Fall PublK: Prog!'1ffl prc$Cf1U
NAtional llcaltlr Care: ]"q MollN"t
of Political Truth, Monday, Nov. 8
rrom 5:30-7:30 p.m.
Spc.iker3 111 th is forum will discuss
and analyze the many proposals being conlildercd by the CongTCSS in•
eluding the options or managed com•
petition and the Canadian si nglepayer sys1em.
Theywillalsorcviewthecoagius1onal
res ponse
to
the
adrninis1nat1on's proposals and the
reactions of 'physicia ns, hos pitals,
drug and insurance companies, sc•
nior citi tcns and other public interest
groups to the momentous debate tak·
ing place in Washington and through·
out the counuy.
-t:ompil~d from pras ,~l~asc

The Cambridge Muhic ulwral
Arts Center Fa ll 1993 World"s at
Risk series continues this month.
On Friday and Saturday, Nov. 12
and 13, the CM'AC presents the

Impulse Dance Company.
Adrie nne Hawkins. artistic d irector of lhe 18 year o ld Boston
based dance company, in hopes to
develop and preserve a contemporary tradition _ Concen. Jau dance.
• dance form bom in America thu
has been acclaime~ aro und the
world presents Reality CJr~ck.
·Located a t 4 1 Seco~d. St., th e
performance will be a s p1n1ed Concen Jan piece abou l wome n's
sues exploring the humor, preJUdiced and violence found in mod·
cm life. Tickets are $12 and SIO.

!s-

:The Suffolk Journal

GoldbcrJ,

General Staff
Mef!tinK
Thursday, Nov. 4
1-2:30 p.m. in
Sawyer431
All are welcome!

·famished by 1Jre Boston Public
Library

November sacred harp
singi ng dales at OCBC
On Monday, Nov. 8, Ncru mbcga
Harmony and Old Camb,ridge Baptis1 Church (OCBC) will host an
evening of tr11di1ional four- part
shape-DOie singing £mm the Of16inol Sau~d Harp, beginning at 7:45
p.m. at the OCBC. located al I 15 I
Massac husens Ave.
Singings arc regu larly held on the
second Monday of each month or
each month. Boo~d arr introduc•
tion to the shape<Y no?es will be provided Donations will be collected 10
help defray the cost to the church.
Cull 648- 1009 for more information,

ff you have an event
that you want featured in Pulse, the
bl-weekly calendar
listing of events in
and around the
Suffolk community,
p l - submit It to .
the Suffolk Journal
in care of V. Gordon Glenn, m, Specials Department
Editor, or caJJ
5'13-8323

-

l'l lit liRlmlcml

•171

..........

sll,,,.MD.o .

&aelll-TRAVElCHD

rromtlS

0

BPL presents panel
discussions, "WoIQen and
Power" and " Writers'
Rights Day- 1993"
Freedom of Expression,

C~C, Impulse Dance Co.
present a " Reality Check"

discussio n rcaturing a numbe r o r
s uccessful female execudyes and
entrcprencun on Nov. 10.
The Pf'0&1&rD celebrates the
publicM.ioa of Mon«n of the Club:
tire Comin& of A1e of £sec11ti.,e
Wo,nm. co-authored by Dawn-Marie
DriscoU and Carol R.
who
will serve as modcm011 of the panel,
and will address issues facing career
women when they become "members of the d ub."
For more infonnation please
contacl the Associates of the Boston•
Public Library at 536-5400, EJ.L 220.

PASSION•~-• ~ •

Feelings• TRUST•_ e x • ~
S

7'--~

ecb-

~!:;;::r;~~'.~
·
:

~e:m~::~s:1
Ri,lrts DaJ-l 99J as a National WritUnion series aimed al pmmOWlg
rcapcct, fair play and fair trcatmcnl
or all writers continues at 6 p.m.,
Tuesday, Nov. 9, in the Rabb Lee:
turc Hall o r the Boston Public LIbrary, Copley Square. ,,.
Panelists will include authors
, K. Anthony Appiah, Harvard Pro-ressor or Afro-Am~. Studies and
P!1ilosophy; Henry Loun Gates, J~.
director ~f Harvard 's Af~Am~can Studies program; Lin H':'re-

byHarold Pmler "
.
Diric1td l,y Patrick &Mdettl
and


ers

=
~~r~=.mth =

sai:sem,

~

tcacher•

~

Series~

and Leslca Newinan, author of 15
books.
For more information on lhi•
event, call 536-540J EAL 336.
Also in
Rabb Lectui-e
Hall, the Associates of the BPI.. will
spomor Wctaa-' ,,._,., a pmel

the

Ulff

Marriage • Lovers • Friendship

,.

Savage/Love
by SamSbq,ad•J-11Clloim
Di-,.,J byM,/ua c,,-/;by

Twa~ I

; ••
p,u,n,,,J by - - -

Suffolk Studenl Thealre
C. Wug Tltatro
Nov. 68 I p. m
Nov. 19 & 20 Bp.m

For Tk:kell C■ll 573-8680

(

lbcSuffotkJoumtl •WedDcsday,November3, 1993

14

The SulfolkJoonial

community policing, rcprqentativc
of the 90s. The lhn:e PJ.s of com-

munity policina arc paruicrship.
problem solvih& and prevention.
Bratton alao dcsc.ribcd bis mete•

&plainini that be always wanted
1 bo a police
0
but not know- oric ria,e, happening' at the 1ame
in& W'by, Brauoo reasoned that per- time u these changes. Placing fint
hap1 bccalue he WU fuc:inated wilh in the Civil Senicc Exam for &er•
. celcvidoa &hows of police work, ii geant and accond when he took the
mlaht have led to hit cai'eer choice. le.St 10 be lieutenant, Bratton was
ln describing Jhc Boston Police obviously a 11ar within the departDepartment w hen be lint came on mcn1 .
u an officer, Branon slated lhat ii
Bob DigrllZia, a police commis•
wu 1 "troubled orsaniution," He sioncr du ring I.h e 701, presented
uoc.od · the corruption and how the him with a huge opportunity When
lucnrc.hy in the Police Dcpartmcn1 be offered him a position in the
nilcd with an iron fist .
commissioner'• oHlce. Bratton
'BfMIOII told of the thn:e R 's that commented 1ha1 the change
.m1de up the ""new wave" or polic• DiGruia brouah1 ahou1 made
i.na dwiq the 70.. They were ru- Brauon believe 1hat one pcnon can
• m patrol, rapid respo111c, and make a difference in thi lives of
ruccive iDYcadptiQDI. la contrast, many.
.
BrMOG later acatod tbe faadamcn•
Partly becaase of a ..Bostoo Olobe..
tab of tbe "aew ·piloaopby" of SpocJ;pc_ ... . . _

OITw:er

0

-°"""""'Spdmcll.ak!
Lootiq..fc.- tbc party-minded for
a road trip lO Florida or air trip to
C.:Un. Wam.e'!_ people 10 go! Call
Guy 11 The Suffolk Journal.
57.3-8323
WANTED: Someone to bold me.
Am boneal.. 10 the poinL Don't like
word games. Pn:::fer live-in situalioo
with intellectually curious type.
Meet me in lhe college boob1ore.

Go ....
S priaa Brak Camll'al.Cndae
with fellow Suffolk Students. G~
price! Few more info. leave a note
for Nancy Sodano Ill the Cheering
Office in the Student Activities
Building.

SPRING BREAK '94
SELL TRIPS. EARN CASH &
GO FREE!!! Studem Travel Ser·

in the Boston Police De.panment, a
reorganization of the department
took place. Al 32, Brauon ·wuiec.
ood in command, wiul the title of
Supcrin_tendcnt- ln-Cbief.
Without explaining what happen'cd1 Brauon stated how his powerful, second in command job became one of his fint setbacks. He
was relegated to an omce with no
s taH and blatant public humilialion.
. Afier this; Brauo~ tooltthe MOTA

police chief job and sooo wu of•
fered the New York Transit chief
job in rapid succession.
In explaining hii rise to ~ top,
Bratton credited opportunity, lou
of-luck, hard work and crcar.ivity.
Bratton had some advice for the
people In the audience. He llated to
"never be afraid to be noticed."
Bnu10~ went on 10 explain that he
was never shy about being noticed
and that it helped liim gel ahead.

Career Quest is worth the look

•g,,,~from page

CRUISE SHIP JOBS!
Suadents needed! Earn S2000+
monthly. Summ~ystfulltime.
Wo rld 1ravCI. Canbbcan, Hawaii ,
Europe Mc:aico. Tour Guides. Gift
Sltop Sales, Deck Hands, Casino
Worun. cic. No apcricnce ncccs-

BEACH Sprin&break

Promoter
Small or laracr groups.
Your's FREE, diJcoonlcd cw
CASH.
ea11 cMl 1-800-423-5264

Jean Gajf,uy: TM WinninJ lm-

CRUISB ,Sllll'S NOW
HIRING
Earn up to 52,000+/mo. OD
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FuU-Tiaw: employmcat available.
No exp. ,-cssary. For info. call
' ;., l •~
ell, C5023.

For mtn information send a self
addressed stamped envelope to:
Travel Inc.
P.O. Box 2370
Hialc.ah, A. 33017-2370

,-,~~=~__,,,...,-,-,----,-,

main reuon for lbe lack of r~
support at same,.
•0ne of our biggest negatives la
not having a home field ... and nol
knowing w.hcrc we will practice
from day to day," said F!Ufz.ak.
It is hard £or Suffolk students 10
aucnd soccer games because lhc
1cam often !ravels to colleges no1
easily acccuiblc, exccpl by car.
The coaching staff hopes to fonn
a boos1cr club to provide transpor•
talion for fans, as well as getting
more people involved.
All lhcteamunityandspiritinevi•

an

lably DlUlt be mcabod with
cquaJ
infusion of talent Pranc:ut under.
stands this and hopes to have a IUc.cessful reauitiaa period. •
"'Every coac:b comel buo a aim.

tion bopina to tu.m .. 0.9 ffJCOnl to 9--

o. Oden I c:auld WOffJ about ~
ries·, I bad to achieve my short tam
golll ..• Sllrtina next ICalOll, a winnin& record will be a priority."
If the team continues to make
progre51 u ii did at the cod of the
season, •lhal winning record will
come the Rams' way.

with audience participation during
the Activities Period, 1-2:30 p.m.. on
Nov. 9, in Sawyer 429.
Gaffney, who was well rueived
last year, is a spclkcr: llid an image
consultant to corpc:ntions and individuals. This event is co-sponsored
by Program Council. She will present,
according to Tanlc..lefsky, "the winning image."
The culmilllllion of Career Quest
1993 will be a presentation by Channel 7 Sporu Anchor John Dennis,
titled, Making /1 in Broadccul Journalism from· 12- 1 p.m. in the Munce
Conference Room.
Arter Dennis speaks. he wiU cnt.crtain quos\ions from 1hc audience.
'"Anyone interested in the media
would find him cntcrt.aining and in•
fonuativc," said Tankldsky.

ISSUCI.

ParucipanlS can bring resumes and
olhcr career relat.t.d issues. There will
also be opponunities to sit and utlk
with catt.er counsdon ia the omce
oo topics such as job search, resume

Hardiman speaks at Ford Hall Forum
drcu what might happen 10 people
who an: in the field now. Would the
vas1 majority or traders and floor
people loae their jobs?
Hardiman 1ucssed that NASDAQ
is a. ruaure market and 100n might be
the only ra.artct.
While NASDAQ may seem like a
good idea on the surface, all or the
issues involved must be weighed and
it must be decided if, the benefits or
NASDAQ outweigh its deep valley

data bank and bow susceptible ii

m:-:=

~;itorus~

system is immune to all 10Ch attacks.
but he did not guarantee a fool -proof
system.
Hardiman, unfortunately, failed to
address the loss of jobs tbal wnuld
follow lhe i&doplion of the newer
trading toc:boology. He £ailed to ad-

of"""'·

Rivet Phoenix,-young film
~
i dies , t age 23 .
a

~::~-~=
~

::~~~.:;: g!!!~~~o~1:! ,
moumed~the losi oflames
Dcan, who was killed in car accident.
·
·· ·;
These YOung ac tors · and muii-'
ciaos were all rising 'lo
10~ ·

the'

~

lhat could

)P''

November 3 - 9

COO·

RivcrPboenixshould be remcmbered for what he did while he was
alivo-not how he die4. He wu a
lhinini' •tar whose liiht dimmed
befof"C its time.

Suff'olk University's Calendar of Events

Wcdnrr!n 11/3
8'30-1(►.(}()

9:00 - 10:00
10:00
J0:00 • 12:00
12:00 • 1:00
2:00 • 4:00

Hl0 : 6,oo
-

II/◄
9:00 - 10:00
12:00
1:00 • 2:30
1:00 - 2:30
1:00 - 2:30
1:00 • 2:00
1:00 • 2:15
1:00 - 2:30
1:00 • 2:30
l:00 ,; 2:30
1:00- 2:30
I. • 2:30
1:00 - 2:30
, .J,qjo - 2:30
1:00 • 2:30
1:00 • 2:30
1:00 • 2:30
1:00 • 2:30
1:00 • 2:,30
2,00 - 4,00
3:00
4:00 - 5:00
4:00 • 6:00
4 :00
5:00 - 7:00
.5:jo . 7:00
5:30 • 7:30

Jb11nda1

fddu...l1ll

when their livei abruptly ended.
They were not viclims of drugs,
alcohol -and fut living. They were
The life or River Phoenix ended victims of their fame. They earued
prematurely like 1he lives or so too much money and fame too
many other you ng'tiienli. ,A gen- · •quickly. They had too:much moocy
cration ago, the 'World ' nibuffied and too muc h Limd' on their hands.
the toss of Jimi Hendrix , Janis They all had.tragic endings to bril•

that

University Dateline

cw. will make a slide presentation

■ PHOENIX
C.OOtinucd from page 6

nry.
• EXTRA INCOME '93•
CALL 602-680-4647, ExL Cl47
Earn 5200 -$500 weekly
,__ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ mailing 1993 Travel brochures.

game or lhe year in term, of team
play."
Dcspilc a losing seuon, Francz.ak
Rams' most outstanding games of
thinks lhat people need to look be·
the -,cu at Eastern Nazarene Col- yond the scores.
lege. Francuk £ell 1h11 game stood
H
Wedidn't get beat by that many
· amon,: all the othc~ because his
goals and we had the benefit of an
tcamJltd been pl ayi ng well at the excell ent goal kee per, Erickson
Lime, but kept coming up s hort.
Jus tus ."
•we were extremely competitive
If the team can conlinue to add to
in games against UMus- Boston and !heir defense and bring more deplh
Nichols College, but lost them both . to the midfield and front lines, winS
Our goals agfinst had been down, will come along with £an s upport .
but we came out on the s hort end.' '
Beyond reading into lhc record
• 1t(eutem Nazarene) was our best too much, Francz.ak explained a

C.OOtinued from page 16

aae: o;US aNl Body U111aua1e Sue·

the security of NASDAQ's massive
Breakaway Toura Inc. now hir•
ing campus reps to promote sprona
break vacations. Earn free trips pju.s
highest commissions. Destinations
include CANCUN.BA HAMAS, JAMA ICA.
SOUTH
PADRE,
PANA~A C ITY. KEY wes:r.
AND DAYTONA. Call. 1-800-2 148647. Let's go Suffolk! !

■ soc<;ER

tip1, and cover letter drBfting.

12
lried to be responsive to the S. U.
Community and these issues," said
Taokldsky. "It was a natural for us.
(We) i01 immediate response from
the. Women's Center 10 do a program
ol this nature."
ln the Sawyer Lobby, Nov. 8 and
9, It's MOMIJy and T ~-, NiJht
Livt: Coflu Talk with EDSA and
Career Services, will be presented
from 4-7:30 p.m.
The Evening Division Student's
Association, who usually sponson
coffee in the Sawyer Lobby on CCf•
tain !lights during the year has joined
up with Catttr Scrvicci with a booth
~t up to ask , i uutions on career

Call Gt 800-648-4849.
M•fREE TRIPS AND CASH·•·
Call us and find out bow hundreds or IWdc:ots are already earning .FR~ TR,J;PS ,and LOTS OF
CASH with Amaicl'• II S prina
Break Company! Choose Cancun,
Bahamas, Jam aica, Panama.
Daytona or ~rel CALL NOW!
TAKE A BREAK STUDENT
TR.A VEL (800) 328-SAVE
or (617) 424-8222

15

Soccer team focuses on bright f~tu~ ahead

~ton Police Chief'William Bratton speaks at Suffolk
■ HATION
~ fmm pe,gc ~

Ni-.y, No..mber3, 1993

12:00 - 1:30
}:00 - 2:00 ·
2:00
2:30 - .5:00 ·
5:00- 6:00

SabaNl,11 11/f
12:30 - 1:15

~

llc00 - 12.~
12:00 - 12;.50

Dmu..1.11!
1:00 1,00 4:00 •
4:30 •
S:30 6,007: 1.5

2;30
2:30
7:.30
7:30
8,00
8,00

C.rttr Quat: El.cc. Breakfast Series w/ K.C. Branscomb, Sen V.P. Locus Devel Corp.
Law Financial Aid: Entrance Loan Counseling
Attcarvcd Ring Sale
S111dcnt Services Staff Meeting
Cal'ff:r Quest: Ami.ling Adv&n1zment Opponunities £cw A.HANA Studenis
ADA Task Force Meeting
Law Financial Aid: Entrance Loan Exam Counseling

Law Placement Office Orientation for Firs! Year StudcnlS
'
Alpha Phi Omega Meeting
Suffolk Jou.ma] Staff Meeting
CLAS Seminar Series - Jacqueline Jones on America's Undcrclaucs
BalJoui Leaming Center - Mitt0-Ecooomie1 Study Group
Self-Dcfensc/Pcnonal Safety Trainin& with David Shim
Caner Quest: Career Conversations Co-Sponsored with COP
Humanilics Department Meeting
English Dcpanm~l Meeting
WSUB Genera! Meeting
Forensics Team Meeting
CLAS Faculty Asscm y
Emerald Oub Meeting
Telephone Training Meeting
Sociology Department Meeting
Council of Presidents Meeting
Beta Alpha Psi Meeting
BLC - Accounting Sllldy Group
Investment Commiltec Meeting
Charitable Giving •Scoop Day•
Finance Commiuec Meeting
Trustees Student Affairs Committee Meeting
fortyFirst Donohue Lecture: The Madisooian MovemcnL..
New Eng.land Environmental Law Society
Identifying Oppottunitics in the Public Sector I Law
Career Quest: I ~ of·Harassment in the. Workplace

Career Quest: Ex~tivc Programs: Idcmifyina Growth lndu.strics
BLC- Accounting 312 Study Group
Step Aerob.CS Seas.ion D Begins
Accounting Association M ~
AccouDtini ~2 1 Review Saaoa
.
C . - Quac c.lf,. Talk EOSA & c.r.er Senkea
Free Coffee for Evcnina Stmlma:
Proving or DiJpu.tina Damlpa ~ Pmal loJury Caies
Maruti•8 Global s...,.;a <.a Lovy <lilloao Corp.
MBA Association Meccina

Sawye, Lowe, Lebby
Ridgeway '1l:n
Munce Confermce Rm.
Sawycrm
McDennott Cool. @.ocim
Donah~

SOM Trustee Committee Meeting

Carffr Quest: Career Dteaming Co-Spc:morcd with... Humaa ~rces
BalJotti Leaming Center - Micro-&onomics Study Group
Psych. Dept. Colloq. Sc:rics: Covert Communication w/ Bob Rolendw
Open Dress Rchcanal for Handel's Ads & Galatea
.. r
Law Placement ~ Oric:nlatioo £or First Year Scu4cots

V .P. Confc:rcnoc Rm., One .ac.x.
McDermou Conf. Ropm

631'

V.P Conference Rm., One Beacop-

Fcriton 337
Sawycr421
Munce Conference Rm.
..
Sawye,430

Fcntoo 331
Sawyer I Ith A9()1'
Fcatoa4~
Feoloo331
Feotoo603
Ridgeway 416
awyer
Sawyer 708,
S.wyalOI ·

Saw)'cr8ll
Sawyer 921 .
Sawye,,m.
1
V.P.
~
Sawye, 308
v:P Conference R.m., ,One 11e:acoa.
.
Munce <:onrercocc Rig...
Pa1lot Law Libn,y

eo.raa::.:•!
:

Dooobue'1l11
C. Wabb 'lbcac
, Sawycr521

---.;:.,

Sawyer 521
Sawycr"30

-631

CMD,0.:8-

C.WabllSawyu308
Sawyer 521

RidpwoyOymaaolom
Sawyer UZI
Sawyer 1021/IOZ3

S..,.Lalll,y
--S..,.LGM,;oa
-218
CMD,01119-'SL
Oradaaro i , _ S.W,,.,4111 fi.

aday, November 3, 1993

15

tl bright future
~ain · ;euon for the lick of fan
1tipport 1t' games.
.
. MOne of our biaaest negatives is
101 hiving a ·home fie ld ... and not
tnowlng where we wiU p111ctice
:rom d1y to d1y," said Pranct.ak.
It is h1rd for Suffolk: studen ts 10
111end ·1occer games because •lhe
cam of1en travels to colleges not
:asily 1ccessible, cxcepl by cir,
. The coaching Staff hopes to fonn
I , ooster club to provide transporb
ation for fans, as well as geiting
n0re .people involved .
All the tcan:i uniiy and spirit inevi-

16

ahead

tably mu~ be meshed with an equal
infusion· Or talent Frariczak understands Jhis and hopes to have a successful recruiting period.
"Every coach comes into a situation hoping to tum Ill 0-9 record to 90. Before I cOOld wony about victories, I had to achieve my short term
goals ... Starting DCXt scuon, a winning rec:Ofd will be a priori1y."
If the team cootioues to make
progress as ii did at the end of the
season, that winning record will
come the Rams' way.

I
'-

Soccer team finishes 2,.8-1,
buflooks forward to future
Byr..lJ>lPmlll
JOURNAL STAPP

Vollma'

~

Feeling llw be has SUC•
cessfully addressed his abort

Yes, Virginia.. there is a term agenda, Franc:z.ak is

---■
,v

a(.

u:am 81: Suffolk Uni- ready focusing on loog•term
YUSitY. Unfortunately, • 2. goals durina the oCf season.
'"I bnpc 10 increase our
s-1·rt:Cord and the lack of a
home playing field have kepi wlll total and add some more
the Suffolk Rams ia relative games to the ICUOn," said
ob,curity anoos I!") ,cbool'a Fnw:z.ak. "increasing it to a
16 game schedule."
The current season cooooe additional
·winandaticsepandingthis sisu of 11 games, followed
by a bid toeitherthcECAC
year'1wintotalfromtbe 110 record of IUl year's « NCAA playoffs, depend•
aq!J,ld, it would be uoder- ing on the regular season
modable for frusuation to record.
Franczakplanstoactively
Finl-year bead coecb 0$n- n,cru.it players for next year's
nis Franczai will be the first Lea.m, both in-state and out.
to tdl -Y!'JU 1hat ,he is far.from nJs is one of his key l011gfrustralcd or Sl!Pl' with the lCmt goals for impn:iYemcnL
raw.ts. Describing the sea- "I'll be talking to kids in
New Bedford (ooc of M&S.UllOG, which coded with a tough
1-0 1011, to Salve Regina. chu.scas top high school socFraacuk was upbeat and cer .teaf!1S) as well ·as kids in
pleased with .accomplishing California, Virginia and New also hopes to set up • •pri11&
match•up between the Rams
the four short-term goals he Jersey.''
Current members or the and soccer power, Bentley
set comint into the faU. scateam. most of who will be College.
lOC. "I caa1e), Suffolk with
~ off-season q>ntelts
lbe following goals for this returning ne11:1 season, will
seuon: stability, disciPline, be busy during the winter arc the bes~ to gauge
B
• . lowergoah~t•v~- break. _ eginning in J ~, your program, " Francuk

soccer

~ersity's Calenclu- of Events .


=J
part

Student U
Univeni~

ott;iJ~;

comb, Sen V.P. Lotus Devel. Corp.

s few AHANA Students

dents

V.P. Conference Rm .• One .Beacoo
McDermott Conf. Room
Sawyer Lower Lobby
Ridgeway '1l:r1
Munce Conference Rm.
Sawyer 521
McDcrmou Conf. Room
Donahue 638
V .P Conference Rm .• One Beacon

a·s Undctclasses
Jroup
itlm
with COP

Fenton 337
Sawyer 411
Munce Confereoce Rm.
Sawye:r430
Fenton 338
Sawyer 11th Aoor
Fenton 4308
Fenton 338
F<nion 603
Ridgeway 416
awyer
S.wyc:r708
Sawyer 808
Sawyer 821
Sawyer92I
Sawyer927
Sawyer 1011 / 1023
V.P. Conference Rm., One Beacoo
Sawyer 308
V.P. Conference Rm., One Beacon
Munce Conference Rm.
Pal.lot Law Llbrvy

Donab.. 1JJ7

C. Walsh Theatre

Sawyer ,21 .
Human ~rccs
R>Up
w/ Bob Rosenthal

SaWY,er'521
Sawyer.C30
CMD, ODC8eacx:JG
C.WabhTbc:ltro

Oooo1we 638

r -!Bdastrics

S.wyc,308

Sawyer 511

JWa,,w,,y a,,m..lum
S.W,.,1128
Sawyo, 1021nll:Z3
MCa

.. .
iel

S...,..LGl,by
FenlooudS...,..Ldibiel

-218

CMD,QaeB.-;St.
Gndualc1-Sawy,r41h0.


in~~

... ...

an indoor league. Franczak

Reflecting on the past sea--.

in~

Cwllnf u

ldad ud
1
BSUPrcu

IOll,

he empbalized the lead-

crihip of,jwuor Phil Falzooe

......

as a uJ!ifyiog demcnt foi the
"Phil brought the guys
1
ogetber: ..(1• valiant effort
consi~na the diverse inmajority o f ~ rnem&en) ...

lhey hung out ~ether and
wentout~."
Although thi1 uni ty vtas
banf to l:lilc:em dwjng much
of the aeuoo, it wu obvio usly a factor in one'or the
continue4

Oil i-,e

15.

Red Sox miles away from World Series destination
By Nat Newell

NESN and keep the attendance upr
Well, Lou does the onl y
I realize this it going to thing he can do: trade Aaron
upset a lot or you Rt.cl Sox ~le' for- Andy Van Slyke.
fans out there, but I doo't Sure. he's got a bad back.
think we can pin all the Red Sure, he ' s34-yean•old. But
Sox ' problems on Lou theNESNsubscriptionsanct
Gorman.
ticket~~ just went up a,nd,
When you iet right down who know s, -Van Slyke
to it, I UCCCSJ hat followed might even be able to play
Gorman irbu.nd. 'Die Balti- ,center field after his back
more
Kanau City . surgify.
Royalf. New Yort Meu-ud - Of couru, who gets to
even tbe·Red Sox (dme di- answer the screams or the
vision titles and a-pennut) media ud fans 11then "Van
have all been very strong Slyke land, OD the disabled
teaml during and immcdi- list? Management 1impiy
ately after Gorman'• tea- 1rou Lou out there, tits back
me. Tbae should be no and watches him get
doa.bc. that Gorman knows & I ~, coaveaieatly forbow to bu.Iid a succeasfol gettiaa the impduible 1i1u•
IOUD.

atioo. they pat him in.
But what bappeu when
•••••
IIIJIIIIIPCDClll •aayt. "'NE.SN
Now, let's aet down to
JOWNAL STAPP

Orioles,

Catdler.You'rekidding,
SborUtop: Sure, John and bu the' mobility of a
right? · 'J'ony Pena i~ gooe Valentin d0Cln•1· make you ~e).' Billy-H~hc:r'a sur'(thank (lod, a good night forget Ouie Smith, but he' s pn11ng seuon will be exwu 0-3), ~ut that leaves ~ the ~ t offensiYe shorutop plained' ooe .secood after. bis
Bob Melvin ( .222 , no in the ~ a n League be- bat breaks open and the cork
power) and John Fl.'4eny hind T9DY Fernandez ud flies out (like it.did in 1986).
(. 120, DO oothing).
Travis Fryman (who plays "'This may be the WOflt dcfeo-Flnt bale: Mo Vaughn third now). NO, 1 didn't live outfield or aU-timo--<be
11 far and away the best forget Cal Ripken, hot bat steel worteri ·"Union m~e
player on, this learn. You Valentin ~0 'ti.mes m the lbem honorary memben.
could easily win a World - third spot and he' ll drivtj__
~
P l ~ ~ Sox ~ve
Series with Mo b atting 90 runt, too. Iosteld, rU eiioogh ~•tching to win a
fourth
a nd ,. playing bat him eiahth and see you WorldSc:riea. BetwemR.oser
first: ..OK, DH.
in tiSeriea.
~ (rda. folb, it _
..,.

Scco■•bue:

IfTim
o.tfttld:Miben,;_well
Naehring is go\01 to bit and Andre 0.WIOO ~ into
.337, theSoxmatlseL Of the same ~ory .u ~
coune his range at ICCODd per. H they re bMliq IWb

::!~

~:u:e~~t hae -~;~

hitter. Scott Aeicher is a
soUdutili~man.but ifhc's
leadia.1-off, the Sox aren' t
goiaa anyw~
Tldnl..: lfScottCooper ia battiia aeventb or,

::.•:;;=. y~•:::.
;

==•V=
=

NMc MiDcbey ad ~hllnu
30+--Jar--olcl he ageat Leu
ii focced to brine in, they

have tbe nution.

Paul

lhcybatsecoadmd,dlird. To ~
• Kea Ryu, Orq
topirallolf, Onmwellbaa
~ oa a ~ --1- of
WeU, loot at the brisht
his body ever, off-aoaoa. side, tbe Saa me oaly three
~ racricCI Ida sarpry- p(ayen away .•Joe Morpn,
~ . , . dowa•
.-cl busineu . A pcisitioa-bytobilbocs(deracb:mor Jolumy Bench aod W' U' ·
I IC
;,.,;,oi .....i t1c11erpricol. pooitioolool<a1-- eisbtb, you're all ript. Of 10 DQ ~ l:ieo. ••• dne Mays
......,_.pacn1 .....,_: the Sm an: to the World coane oe tbe Sos, be bats iachei lborter tbaa lie waa

fifth..

wbea he ....,... doe
. . . IO do to aell Seri/a:

:!'.:!~make

""°"

Su«o1t I

,.:.1:-i
it'acompct
all in lbe

16

eguai

TheSufftil

mdtt-

1itua-

l109-

I

.;.,10: tam
I Win•

p,akc

,(the
will

Soccer team finishes.2-8-1,
butJooks forward to future
ByPoulOO'fflla
D.aNAL STAPP

Yes, Virginia, there is a
socci::r team at Suffolk Univei"sity. Unfortunately, a 28-1 record aod tbc lack of a
home playing fidd have kepc
the Suffolk Rams in rdativC
ot,sc:urity alDong the school's

Olhc,- sporu.

...
>Om

bby

With only one additional
winandatic~this

ycar'swintotalfromtbc 110 record of last year' s

squad. it would be under-

'-'11

lta.Ddable for frii stration 10

tm.

"'"'-

521
,om

138
<:OD

337
421

tm.
130
138

First-year bead coac.b Dcnnis Franczak will be the first
totdlyouthathcisfarfrom
fnastralc:d or angry with the
th

~=tuc=:th :u:~

1-0 loss to Sahe Regina ,
Franczak was upbeat and
pleased with accomplishing
the four short-term goaJs he
set coming into the fall season. •1 came to Suffolk with
the following goals for this

season: stability, discipline,
a lower goals against aver-

e-:onHII,-,

VollJITii! 52, Number 10

BS~, SUHA and AAA plane~

Feeling that he has successfully addressed his lhort
termagcn,la.Francr.akisal- -rcady focusing on long-term
goaJs during the off !C8SOl'I,
••1 hope to increase our
win tOUll and add some•mOfe
games to the season," said
Franczak, N
incrcasing it to a
16. game schedule."

ByV. GenloaGlenn,m
JOUUIAL ~APP .

The cumnt season consists of 11 games, followed
by a bid to either the ECAC
or NCAA playoffs, depending on the- regular season ·
record.
Franczak plans to actively
recruit playenJor next year's .
team, both in-statt: and. out.
This is one of his key lon'gtenn goals. for improvement.
~ru be talking to 'kids in
New Bedford (one of Ma.us·
)'he ~ r team's-unity this year gave Coach OeMls
chusetts top high school socforward to.
cer teams) as well as kids in
.zed the leadCalifornia, Virginia and New also hopes to set up a spring son, be cmpbas~
Jeney :·
match-up between the Rams ership· of junior Phil Falzooe
Cum:nt members of lhe and soccer power, BentJey .as a unifying clement for the
ieam, most of who will be
c
returning nexl season, will Co ~ off-seaJ/ oniests
~Phil brought the guys
be busy during the winter are the best way to gauge "togcthcr... (a valiant effort
break. Beginning in January, your p~ogram," Franczak considering th.e diverse in.
.

.......

tacte<!lheolhe,oosamzaaomabout
·

In an effort to take an active •
part in the plannin& of lhls ye&l''s
Culturaf Unity Weck ·m Man:.b, the
membcn ~ advilOl'S of the Black
Student Onion ~SU). the Suffplk
University Hispanic Association
(SUHA), and the . Asian AmenCan
Association•(A.A.A.), met last week
in an open-forum discuuion:
The meeting, which. took place
Tuesday, Nov. 2: wu the firat of its
kind aod w9:5 Qlltjally the idea of
BSUPraidclllDianeClark.wbocon-.

a mODth prkw. "I thought of it durin1
the summer wheo I was tryin& to
decide what would be a &ood event
for Oaltural'Uaity Week... sul a.t..
In tcrm1 .of ~ t i to lbc BSU,
Clart said, "lt;ll give tho BSU ID
qpportmait¥ to work with the other

S
ii
h
"

.
'11

orpnizaliool oo campai • well •
.serve u an cducltiooal tool in the

~

ol. Ddmt

inlaest."

"It Wu a Chance for the three · U
oq.aaiz.atioas•to pt lOSolhcr·to .we·· k
could cb::usa. DMR ~ ~
kMrlnk dlli
~

weti•_
-.a

a

Frencmk plenty to look

they hung out together and
went out t.ogctbcr.''
Although this unity "".,85
hard to discern di¢ng much
of the season, it was obvi•
01isly a factor in o/iebf the

Red Sox miles away from World Series destination
123
X)Q

I08
,..

:m.
.,.,

...
'-'11

'21
i21
00

...
:00

i3I

~

;,,
'18

St. .

n.

NESN and keep the attendance up?"
Well, Lou docs the only
thing he can do: trade Aaron
1 ,.,..u....
80
upset a lot of yoo ·Red Sox Sele for Andy Van Slyk"e.
rans out ~ . t,ut I don't Sure, he's got a bad back.
think we can pin all the Red Sure, he's3+years-old: But
So,rm' !~oblems on Lou theNESNsubscriptionsand
G0
ticket salcsjustwentupand,
Whenyougetrig'htdown wh o kno ws , Van ·s1yke
to it, success bu foilbwcd ·might even be able to play
~~:.dic!:.B~uty center field aften bis back
·•
surgery.
Royals, NewYtd:"Mcts•and
Of course, who gets 10
even the Red Sox (three di- answer the screams of the
vi&i.011 titJea and •· pennant) · media and fans when Van
have all been very 111'0118 Slyke lands on the disabled
~ during" and immedi-• list? · Management simply
ately afta' Oorman' s ten- U'Ots Lou out lhcre, sits back
ure. There should be no and Watches him get
doubt that Gorman Dows slammed,C:oa'lcnientJyforbow to build a successful getting the i = b l e situBy Nat Newdl
JOURNAL STAl'I'

- - "·•

this u· . ·ng ,o
,

-~~~-: •-~: ~~
= :
·~~t .whal happe4I ,ybcn

miilipment 1
11ya. "'NESN

ation

they~r.~. ·

in.

N ow, let's. get down to

Catdler:You'rekidding,
right? Tony ·Pena i~ gone
(thank God, a good night
was 0-3), but that leaves
Bob Melvin ( .222, no
power) and John Flaherty
(.120, no nothing).
Flnt base: Mo Vaughn
is far ,and. away the· best
player on this 1eam. You
could easily win a World
Series with Mo .battiil"
g
fourth
and
playing
first. ..OK, D.H.
Seco ■d bue: If Tim
Naebrins is going to hit
.337; tbe Sok are all scl Of
course hi1 range at- second
would do.uble if he lay
down, and be isn't a .337
hiller. Scott' Aetcher is a
solid utility man, but if he's

Sborutop: Sure, John
Val.elltin dOC$n't make you
rorgetOzzieSmith,buthe' s
the best offensive shortstop
in the Amencan League behind Tony Fernandez and
Travis Fryman (~ho plays
' third no.w). No, I didn't
forget Cal Ripken, but bat
Valentin 650 timea ' .in lhe
third spot and·hc'll drive in
90 rw'ls, IO«?; lo.stead, I'll
bat him ei&hth and see you
in thc· Series.
O.dldd: Mike Oruawcll
and Andre DawlOll fit lllto
the same category u Cooper. If they're bMtiDg six1b

aren'. t

~~:~:'.:~::t ~ ::

illPI

IO do

u, oell __ , Setica:

fifth.

-

30,-,...,_,,.._1.ou

==~~-= ......

W.. 1 1
crarteaeralllllMI« tbe Sox arc to the World· course oa the Sox, be bats inches •barter tbaD be,..

wba, h o ~ _oe ..... .
d

.,.

-.,, Duwm.

is foa::ed -to bring in, they
and seventh you've · ·got have the rotation. Paul
strong om;ase. On the Sox, Quautrill, Keo Ryan, Grq:
theybMICCOadllllddlinL To Haris and 1df Rusaell make
top if .it off, CiremM:11 bas upaaolidbiullpc:n:
Well, look at the briJht
lido, d,e Sox . . aaly-lhroc
DawlOD rabic:tl bia -,cry playen -~way..Joe_J.(orpo,
Johnay Bench and Willie

~::•=~~Sox :a:;_
;:~==
TlalnlNN:: lfScouCoo-

and bas the mobility of a
acawe): Billy Hateher's surprising season , will be explained one second after his
bat breaks open and the colt
flies out (like it did in 1986).
This may be the wont defensive outfield of all-time---tbe
•~~l w0rken · union made
them: honorary membcn.
Pltdalaa: The Sox have
enough pitching to win a
WoddSeries. 8dwcmR<,ge,
aemena (rdu. folka, it was
jult ID off.:., ._), Frank Viola,
Aanx, Sde.
Nace ·Mincbey and wbaitvcr

folk.ad _ _ ..

;owbldlllll--tmddpoled.
Tho

Suffolk Uni~ersity WU oace again
complemcd;ed by it's natiooal champion Forensics Team when it n:qed
it's competitioo and placed fint overall in the Northcastcm Greco Line
Tou.mamcnt, in, Which }.2· schools
, competed.
.
• Tbcramisallofirstinlhccumullli,. al !be Plalubwgh, Suf-

em-.,._, led by ·-

Cmoll. eaa..ilbtiao ~
profcuor, bad two momben dw
placed in ,the IOlammcmt. V'ICUJ' w
Whelan _nd MIi}' Canila...... ,
a

plaoedlintmddmd,-1,dwly

"' Uiioola-~ ~

~-Jailillli,la.-.0r.
nmamat•
cdlllillled•'PIIID3