File #4245: "Suffolk Journal_1993Oct20_vol52no7.pdf"

Text

,_
Ballon

~

Apaola:u and _,. Cruuder
The crowd. made
up of hi&IJ school soccer
pla~ tau:nted Suffolk from
behind the· Ram' bench and
left no Suffolk em>r1 l1M4>

QUINCY-The Eastern
Colleg< Cnuade'1
had • 8-2-2 record coming
into Monday's pme qairist
Suffolk. Bui thal didn' t mat•
-



'"·

1be Cru.sadera had• 1J1=w
ollUbstiwces. Bui tblf didn't
The Ousadc:rs allo
had the stands c,,u of
bul that also dida' t matter,
becaaac at the eod ol regulatioo time. Suffolk had won 10. pwl.ing off a huge upscL
Withthevictory,lhcRams
improved their record to 2-51. Joao Pereira'• goal at lhc
49 mimatc mark proved 10 be
the difference.
JDM&er.

rus.

Playintbcfinlbalrwu a
liaJe aloppy and comical, but
by the ond oC ... half thi...
bepn to (all iato place ror

~~~;;::
case to prevent in appucnt

E.utemNaza:n:neaoal.
Rams goalie Erickson
Justus played a remarkable
pme, making 14 saves.
1bing.sgocten1eocarthe
end or the fint half, as a

-

Croea Country In Babeon

So,~ want to know
about law echool, eh?

lnvlall01181

TheSuffo.

.

w...-y, Octo1>er 20, 19113

Beacon Hll, Boaloo, -

Volume 52, Number 7

cniptcd.

,...u

/Pap S

Dangerl Dinosaurs Invade .

Suffolk community travels to the Congo

ticcd.

Liberal Ans and Scienca and otbec
general sponsoring deputmenu such
as I.he Bal.loui Leaming Cau.er and
Athletics, was able ro pwt:hue 130
Facts and fun make the perfect tickets for two lcctu.cc1; lhc fint wa
lc:ctW't: and ttaara wbai you a« if you bdd oo September 29.
The tickets, whicb were offered
.., joined the Suffolk community Iii. the
Mmewn of fiDt Ana lut WedDet,. university-wide., wae also offered to
day for a dazzling lcc:ture oo African the Roxbury Boyl' and Oirll' Oub

Bylllaae Cark

Fout minutes i.n10 the second half Pereira scored, with
l.aki Attaut assistina. Azzaut..
cniettained the crowd with a
JCOrull dance after the &oal
wassc:ortd. Bytheendoftbc
game, An.alt bdcl the crowd
under- his spell and had lhcm
wanting another goal dance.
Lat.er in ~ second half.
Justus made another grea1
save with 30 minutes left to
play to JIRS,Cn'C the shutout,
his first of the season.
Jose Villlbaiso still scood
a1thceodofthegamc,dc>
spite hiving been kicked in
the face dwing play. Pa-ci.ra . came out and pl1yed with
was taken ou1 after IUIWQ. determination 10d pride.
ing • leg injury,and- wu re• Suffolk may Pot bavclbc:
plac.ed by Erin Kalakowsky. bat record this 1euo6, but
Al10 on the injury front. Ibey
improving every
Desmond Patrice was injun:d game. One 1hi ng Suffolk
and didn't see act ion in does have is pride in I.hem•
selves and a slroog unity
amangit the team.
The Rams lrlvel to M
us
Maritime Academy foe a I
pro ·game on Saturday.

and

v. Gordon Glean, m
JOl,&NA,1. STAFP

an.

:::~~unily based Youthbuild
Tbc lecturer,~ Farris Tbom~

aoo, pro(euor of Africm Studies at eatcd in ~ mon: Jcctuns. "1t
Yale Univcnity, dedkllcd his Ice- takes a diffc:rc:nr. tilld of mind to want
lute ro th,cr C:00,o trldiUOO·and 1piri- to get a d e e p e r ~ ol tbc
wality aod bepP it with one of scv- wodd and ootjul& Uvo ia it."
eral jokea. that kept tbc audience
Con10, wbicb meua "bere,
· amused and iDla'clled..
prcscnt" . . deacribed • • dallicll
"J didn't know what to upect civilizalioo because hi UDlpll are
..,._ I dDcidod ao llbmd. bul I ..,.
~willl--haw;"aid.........e
1h11 ~ cm see C.,0"1!_

~~ ~!~ ~ 8 ; ! !
~

time • the musc:um akl WU inler-

Suffolk's 1993

DORCHESTER:- The
Rams took anotba- siep. forward ·on Satulday, 11 tbcy
ou!_P,~ y¢ a tough UMauBostoo.team. Howe,vd~ the
team absofbed • tough-luck
loss, 2-0, at the bands of the

c':tvJo:fe~e=

tie.ice! in a cn:u at the 81
minute mark, scalina the
pmc: and droppin1 Suffolk's
ra::ord 10 1-S.. 1.
Suffolk: coac h Dennis

Out-of-state; inti.
students changing

a,~._.,
JOUI.NAL' ITAPP

: ~

~Uoiversky°rdcaaedill 'cn•

t111laMn1: ftpra 1uC

week. unouoc-

•a oee percc:al inaeue in cnroU~ for , tbc 1993:1994 academic
'le-, brinsiog d}e totaJ. number of
INdenu to <t,376. nu, figure in-

-

"!'d"- -

Fcanczak thinks his t.eam hu
made a lot of progress since
the swt or the season and
played its best 1amc IO dale
aaainst ,UMass.
..I think we would have
won the game," uid

Fra.r:t2ak. ~~IOllourcom•
posucc for about,,JO mioutcs.
We teamed i. valuable ·leiBeacons.
.
- M>n. We probably learned
After Suffolk had con• ~ from I01ing this game
trolled the play for moct of than we Would hive if we
the first 60 minutes, Carl01 won."
femaDdez scored on a penThe loll of composure that
. alty lhol with 28 m.inutea left, Fcancnk alluded to came
s:tving UMass the onl)' goal it when a ·dispute between two
would oeed.
Suffolk pl.lyen' at midfield
The Ram, managed a few allowed the 8eaco1'1s to cklle
more scorina opponunities in on the Suffolk goal.
~<Me

CONGO

continued on pqe 4

m·u

Rams~emorep~
but fall to ~Boston, 2-0
JOURNAL STAR"

... mennc

identity ·of Suffolk



BJ O.ril Olsoo

- · --

Dila:lcfoC-Willlam

o.,plio-M lbere
... ...,.._ • Suffolk.. lea
in
dlao

but 10 ti.kc dowa UMau' wide. JuammadecigbtuYCS
Fl'lllk: Caci.a in the boI, CIUI--. in the game..
in& the officials ro award •

peoalty shot 10 the Bcacool,
tJMASS
,
which J:crnaDckEz buried foe
ooatinucd"'Olt· JIICC 15

Y

-~llemlit,-

~ i l f Admi a i o m -

Collplia.. die uinnilJ llu.

----■ . ;.=
---- .-.-, -ID,__ - • •-coapo1p
"°°'I_..,...,..._
"W• ... - - - , ( J - o C - p o ...

----applb-dlil-."

laioim-7_., _ . , _
_ _ _ .... _

-.-..w~"111cn:- - - - - -

w•

=:
~:ve~~~=

:_«!:e,'-':

ucll

of providing affocdab1c private'
education to Boston area students.
Sllffolk bu kept up with dt\l lradition for many years, but u the
pool of applicaob dccr&scs, the
OVet luC year.
uaivuaity ~ iak£g) step& \o CD• Although earollmcm bu mcreucct ' wrc .lhe ~ div~ity ~ fi.
alipdy, i t ~ in com.-,iloo to·lu&
~ stability that IS eueotial 10
yar'a increuc of 3.1 pcrcen1 ad
dlo,achool
.
..
acarly,eycopm:c,,t-illdte
,_..thodf-efthoOpm,iaut - · .
.
. , _ ... _
_
_

ihe

aame-winnu.
'"They have to realltc that
they' re very good u ~ team,''
said Fcaoczak, "but they're
not good as individuals. We
need Ip play ro(etbcr, and
they'did it for 80 minutes.
We lost th~_pme and I'm
upset · about )Mina, but we
played well, ., a long ~ we
played wcll, 4_:m happy."
Ao early frco.kick by Suf·
folk gluci:d off the croabar,
and while the Rams' ofl'c:mc
bcgitaomg ro click, Suf.
folk 1oalie Erick.Ion Justus
wu onc;e aaain strong be·
tween tbe pipes. b1m1kiaa the
8eacon1 until the pemlty abot.
JUltul made one spectaca1ar

and gradu-

tioo ol lbe biw school
Dean of Enrollment and Retention
Marperite Dennh unveiled the fig1l(U ro a committee of key admi.nisaatofl last week., stating that 1bc umvenity bu·erwoUcd 42 more ltlldcDII

'

effort to boDa r,lgwJy do~reai•1 eniollmcot fipra
,futtlacc divenlfy SutrolkT CIID-pus, the adraioistratioa bu moved
to actively rccruil tarF" nwnbcn
of out-of-stale ud : Ullt:mldoraal
lludenli, tbus chao&inl: lbe face
of Suffolk Univenity.
.
Suffolk University was fOU!Xkd

.,,.._
JOmNALRAl'P

. ..-111eni.-.-..o..
~

m . - - . . m . . , . _ tbc

-ro ,-pllplef .......t
I.- ,,_.,,, Suffolk: Ulliwnity woama..
boilm lbe . . . of t w o ~ foACICiDll6al 10 ltllbll. ta.e paapa'
cuaio& cm•wamea and domcldc Yio- - - - -- ■
1111
· lencc. Tbe ICIIIUlll1 arc i-t •of die beip1ea ~ - - - - .
.,......,,, ...,.....,. oC Ntlioaol . . . . - . . - . . Domestic Violence Awarcae11 ~~adiniliac:omJDODtb. ~

.. ..._.

5 - ICabol. Eucud,e oC BaoaedW..... .Flpdq Bock,

VIOUNCII
- - • -3

Coupllo ........ olipl 111CRIIIIC la emollmeat ia cb, to die fact
.._mcrcapplic:::.-laredloollatlD
-

Suffolt.
"'We wen able to .p:t more ttuclcm (to . . . a ) . , . . . il bo bo-

-r-·-··


_.,1111.i...,...«ju,<beacr
TM &ct

re:auial,

~cvci, Lb.It

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......

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lllel.N

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11
11

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now-...

3

• W-y,()clober20. 1993

Suffolk enrollment up
Out-of-state, international student one percent for 19931$7Uitment expanding roots
1994 academic year
Oca.D.i• awed that 1be i, ioa th.It Suffolk i1 growina
activdy.Javolv«I ia recruit• away from its rooll 11 • ■ ENROLLMENT
11■ duu o•uidc of commWUty collcae IDCf hat
Continued from pqe I

i••
Men1w:heec:a1

Denoia bu
beca rccrv.hiaJ 1tudca·11
tialDde~llUdalb.
ID&a'mi.ioul 1mdcat co- from Lona hind, New
rollme.at is at u all-time York ; New Jersey, New
laip f•SllffolklWl'Jf»r Hamp.a.ire. Vermool. Coawil'll4CJ-lnlmoll DOCticat, Maine, Rhode lsover the world au.diq tbe lud, Florida and Puerto
univcnity. DeaniJ 1tated, Rico. However, eorollina
however, tut intcmatioaal these 11udeohl i1 difficult
atudeau coutitute 6 per- due to tbc lack or dormitory
ceat of lhe acboo1'1 total space.
Adcqvate bousin1 11 • bot
corollmcnt, wbich is the
k,wat perccDtqe of intu- iuue for studenu lately.
aatioul lhtdeotl in the ma. Maay studcalll have ca-·
J)Ce,sed concerns over the
The avenac, accordiaa to
Dauul, ii 10 to 20 percent. lack of adequate dorm
space ror· cunmt students,
-We have • loa& w.y to
let aJooc any out-or-state
10." Mid Oenail.
DellUlia also stated that 1tudeat11. Mcmben or the
the m.i.oooty populatioa hu Offiocl fOI' ~llmcnt and
a rowo to inc lu de 602 R.ctcftlioo MW&cmcnt and
AHANA atudcat.1, aa ia- Admi11ioo1 have been
creuc or • nearly 200 per- work.Ina clOICly with other
cent since Derutis' hiriaa in key admia..istrators on ■c·
quiriq dorm space that will
1988.
This year'1 enrollment accomodatc lhc hopcruJ infiprc1 abo indicate th.at Oua. of out-or-swc stude.nll.
Althou&II the enrollment
tbeR! ;, , · e.firu1C ueod or
d
adult and evening 1wden1J or intermtioa.al and out-or11atc 1rudcnu may be a nccattend.in& jJ&ffolk this year,
with a~ly 35 percent of enary action for the unithe student population ea• versity durina 1ucb tough
rolled in the cvenina divi- ccooomic lime&, many 1tu•
sion. la ,~ trend that indi- dents have criticized the
c.w tlial Suffolk it retum- current admloi1tratioo for
la, to iu roou u a acbool ill agrcuivcneu in rectuit•
for adults, 39 percent of the ioa 1tu den11 ou11lde the
populatiOo is over the age melrOpotitao Boaton area.
Their priDlary cooocm be-

roraouCft about the r.:t that
the averaac 11uden1 doe1
commute rrom a ocarl>y city
o r town. Concerns have
bcetl raised amooa 11udenu
that the univenity ID.I)' nealcct to addrc11 the ncedJ
or the com.mu.tin& 1tudeou
in the proccu or rocuain&
on thOIC who are rrom out•
tide Mauacbuaetu.
· Ocania, however, reru1e1
this cridci1m , statina 1h11
lhc int.cmatiCNW compoocnt
it • vl..luable one for all 1tu•
dcau enrolled at Suffolk.
.. It is • lcamin& ea:pcricoce," uid Dennis. "'We U'C
not replacina the Medford
studcnL We U'C not willing awty rrom our miuion;
our mi11ion bu u.paoded."
Tbe miuiOA of the unive,shy hu ch,nged. The
administnlioo is now fac•
ing 1ltu1tions that it h11
ocv·cr had to deal with before .
Suffolk University is at 1
tumin& point 11 which ii 'will
define what the school will
become in the foture . The
achool h chaoging in to
something broader with •
different mcanin'g. But tbc
question or what euctly that
meaning is has yet lO be
determ ined.

a slia,htly arcatcr number of
11udcn11 is still opt.in& for
thls Beacon HIii campus.
Thi• year, )70 freshmen
and· 38) traosfen enroUed
11 Suffolk. Dennis 11atcd
that this is the tirst time tlw
more transfer 1tuden11 than
freshmen bave enrolled la
the univenity.
The number of intema•
Uonl..l students is l..lso oa
the rise. There. arc 340 internat iona l students en •
rolled, up from 121 intern••
tional students In 1988.
In kcepina with its the.me
ofcalturtldiversity,theuni•
versity enrolled
602
AHANA ( African, His panic, Asian. Nttivc American) 11udea11, an incruse
or 194 percent since 1988.
According to Dennis, mi•
nority studcnll now consti•
lute 21 percent of the total
enrollment.
Dc:nnis l..lso reported that
)S pcn::cnt of students are

adult or cvenina learners,
and that 39 percent of 1hc
student body ii over the age
of 25.
With tµition lncrcases beIna or primary cooccm, mos1
11udctUJ will wonder whai
tbcae fiaurcs represent rn
1crm1 of money . Denni s
stated that tbCle figures r-epreseal the overall enrollmcat., and arc not separate
in regards to full and pantime students beet.use some
put-time students arc s11II
enrollioa. Until these fig ures arc rclcucd , 1here 1
s
no way 10 de.tcrminc the fi.
nancial rcpcrcwsions of 1hc
enrollmeat situation.
Vice President and Treasurer Francis X. Flannery
awed that students can u, .
pcct a tuition Increase every year, but there. is little
correlation between enroll meal and tuition increases.
"We arcjwtlboµt" level
enrollmenl,.. said Aanncry.
"There Is no shortfall . so
1uilion will not be affected -

Suffolk to open intemational
student center on campus
mcot and R.c:tcntion Manage•

w~ shares philosophical
i~eas about knowledge
BySlepllaaleSoow
JOlaNALff.AJ'P

In a diacuuioo that
sparked different kind.I or
philoloplKal lhauaJ,tl, William Wiao1. I pR)fc.uor II
BOMOn University, aavc a
leccurc entitled Arl.slode &
The Problem of HuMafl
KnawledJe.
we· 1ccturc focu.scd on
Aristotle and bit CODlem~
rariel' viewed leamina, Uaina variou, books that
Ariatotlc bad writtc:ll durioa
his lifetime., Wiant backed
up hi.I idcu or what ArillOl1c
thO\l&ht about the Idea of
lcamina.
Aristotle cautioned that
liumans were. far from the
bell thlna in the uoivcnc.
Wiana pmcnkd ID idea tbM

be<all<d ... ..-poblan. The p,oblan ll u fol•
lows: Cao human knowcn
aapire 10 mere probable
cau1e1?
lo the lucnn:hy ol livin&
things,. Ari1todo pi.ccd hu•
mao.s one 11c.p above a ni•

mm. aqd a step

Iowa than
the gods. Wiani ca.plained
th4I Aristotle placed humans
a step higher than animals on
the hierarchy of living thlnga

and the goda ooc step hia,bcr.
Wiant allo pracDIOd another
Ari11otclian
problem :
wbc:cbcr 01' DOI the punu.il of
truth it ut)' -or difficulL
Arillotle believed that pur1&1it of truth it CU)' bccau.ac
everyone bu some.thing to
cootrlbllte.
Another Ariatotdian qucstioo Wianl broupt up WU
this: Why abou1d hwnana be
lucky cnouah to obtain
knowledge dcspi1c tbc:ir infc.riori1y?
Wiam went OD to u.plain
that Aristotle believed the
world wu ordered, which
may account for the fact that
human.a could aaln k.nowl•
edae.
Ariatotle, accordina to
Wians, believed that the
knowledge human beings
ICd: is clivinc. but lNII bu.ma
have lim.hed aoceu to this
tnowledp. It WIii Ari.stotlc'•
belief &.bat llumaos punuo
k.nowlcd&c QGly when they

WOlllffl's Center observes National
Dome&1ic V10lencce Month
■ VIOLENCE
Continocd ·from PICC I

quiet and' not mehdoned
ouwdetbcbome.''

Polt-filmdisculiionwu
muolty response and inbcsi&antatfintu_audiencc
YOlvemcnL
.. Defending Our Liv ea" mcmbcnpupedlheuqlc
IOldtbeaoryoffou<womcn doscofrealJty in thcf"tlm.
impriloned fo,; ldllin& their Kabaldidnotfoeu1tbcdisbau.erc:n.hwuafrlplw,- cul&ioo oa blame but on the
ing. rcali.stJe look at the in• cauacsof domestic abulC.
juatlcea some women su.f• Anpr,c:mbllrnlllmcntand
fc:r.Tbaelncludcdnotmly a.mu.ement were a few or
lhcphyalc:al inumabut the thc~rcactions.
One audience member
lack of fair treatment from
brouaht up what many
ourlegalsyttcm.
people think ia the root of
Kabat DOtCd that "bat·
tcrcd women
m1ltrealed domestic abuse: tradition
mrouat,oultbemtlrccdml- andllllilUde. Dolin&bocklO

are

nal::.t=-~iy
ln1anatiooaJ (~orpniu-tlon fipdna for human

riaht.i worldwide) and the

clauah..,andponddauah-

----

sona11uc1 wayp1an and•
CCdlr<JllinabdlavlonwamingU'.il.
Suffollc will coadnuelu
observance of battered
womcnanddomatk:vic)..
lenceonOaobe<261aSawyer 1021 a t 1:00 p.m.

Euacni&Mocn. thcfintof
the Framinaham EJpt to
bav:.e her SCDlCDCe com,.
muted byOovcrnorWW•
iamWddblledoaBIIIICftld
Women Syndrome. will
~ OD the illUC of (lo.

.-lovio~Sllowlllbe

accompamed by her Jaw•
yer,SuN,D HOWU'da. 1••
rercd aninberentlydangerlbcPnn>ln&bamliialitia
a ,roup of imprisoned
ousbelief.
Kabatex.claimed, "For women who Battered
too lonatbercbu been this W..-flal!dnlllacltbelicftbatwomenarcprop-.
erty ...... therefore you can
dowbatyouwanttowhat's tent is to have all of the
yours.' '

m.aleproperty~nen fos-

~-""'!..";..,~
topomoccArillotle•~

ter of b a ~ women,
Kabat cmpbulr.cd why it
h• taken ao Iona (or do-

0 ~ than most coot.cm~
rary phiaophy allows. W'lanl
conuncaU:d."AriltOdcteeml
to ~prd lr.nowing u pracu.
¢1yagi~"

mc5ticabuletobcrdcnowl•
At lhe eonclusion..oflhe
~
- ''TbercislOO.much
YictlmbllmJ.ia .c,.y<mwoa<> discuuion,pamplileuand
(dbmc¢e abuse) was kept

These COnalsted o·f a per·

~-:===

::~~

fact sheets were passed out.

, ; DON'T BE LEFf ON:-.~,;
THE PLATFORM!

By Rk:b Bono

In her own words. Dennis

student Government Association

We Want Vow.I

Herc at Suffolk Univmil)'
there is • great divcnity or
llUdcau.. Many fed that boIna different from each other
ii what makes college auch a
great lcamiag ca:pericncc.
What makes up • con1id•
crablc portion of this diver•
the irnemational 1tu•

~~t::-C

mittec and a fOl'Um to ad•
dtal every iuue concerning
iD&emational atudcou." Such
iuucs are lflDIS, l9&M, ac•
tiYitics, or mty problems the
international students might
have.
Dea.ni.s is a1ao concerned

== ::7mr~-i!~f::

Cunently sia: percent or

~~~~

describes tbc Cen1cr as M•
program that provides a com•

:1'f:::!°Jm.:C::';

I ~ i!,at wdcomcl bl!cr•
were 128 io1cnwional ltudcnu_11 S~ffolk.
arc • identity r« ~ years and
3
:
that ii ii time te·ICkoowlcd~e
cd b
u'!'bcr hat tbcsc atudcait and then
1
ncreas . Y 90 since lut needs. By doing so, it is
year. W11h such a rapid hoped lbM Suffolk will be·
growth . Suffolk thouaht come • place rccog:aizt.d for
some changCJ would be in ita commitment to intema•

:nim:

::IS •::~:l•onal IIU•

Of~~ past

summer, Ptcsi.

dent David J. Sargent made
an IDOCIU.DO::mcat totbcUni--

lnterestedinSGA?
We're interested in you!
SGAMeetings,Tuesdays
at"! p.m.inSawyer421 .

versity Commiuee that be
would Cltablish a Center for
International Education that
would discuss the spe,c:ific
needs or intematiolW ,iudcnu. He also annouoccd that
lhe center would be under
lbe m&naacmcnt of Mqueritt Dennis. Dean or Enroll-

tional ~

-

lhcOvc:!. ~
~i;:
SWdeotl will baYC a positive
.tffect cm lbc )!.bole Suffolk
community./Sbe loob forwud 10 ICCUll aU of thc lhl·
dcolacome tagdhcrand learn
•about each other. She tho
bopc:s IO ICC all students at
the activitia ror intc:mational
--lheywmbe
welcome.

SENIOR PORTRAIT SlmNG

oc:r. 25TH - OCT. 29TH,
9AMTOSP~ ,tTH FLOOR; SAC
($5 fee)

. Call the

afbOOk

26

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:,Tho=S;,;;ulrolt=;.;loomll==._•,.;;W.;;;od;;;-='1=
; 0cu,be,==.;;;20;;:.•,.;;199;,;;;.3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......,;.3-

Suffolk enrollment up '
.e nt one percent for 19931994 academic year
11rowin1

:!:ctuu:

■ ENROLLMENT

Continued from page I

cfaccthat

lent doc,
earby city
rns have
11tudcnts
• may ne,.
the needs
t atudcnts
focusing
from ~ I·

a sligh1lygrea1cr number of
students is still opdng for
lhis Beacon Hill campus.
This year; 370 fres hmen
and 383 transfers cnroUed

at Suffolk. Dennis stated
thalthis is the firsttimc that
more transfer students than
fres hmen have ~nrollcd in

:r,reCutcs
1 na 1ba1
ii

the university.
The num_ber o f in1cma-

~~;::~ ~:"~,:i~ccW :e ~~ i:~

Suffolk.
8 cs.peri. "We arc
Medford
moc walkr mission;
tpandcd."
. the unigcd . The
now facIt it has
with be·
ity isata
1 it will
ich
:hool will
turc. The
,ing into
:r with a
, But the
1actlythat
~C l 10 be

tc rna1ion a l studen ts en rolled, up from 128 intcmatiooal students in 1988.
In keeping with its theme
of cultural diversity, the univenity_ enrolled 602
AHANA (African , Hi spanic, Asian, Native American) Sludcnts, an increase
of 194 percent since 1988.
Accord ing 10 Dennis, minority students now constitute 21 percem of the tot.!1,.1
enrollment.
Dennis also reported that
35 percent of studcnl.S uc

Sutfolk to open international
student center on campus
By Rkh Bono

=
-

,n
I!

adult or evening learners,
lDd tl;l•t 39 percent or the
student body is over the agcof 25.
With tuition increases be .
in&of primary concern, most
studenla will wonder whac
these fi1u.re1 represent in
terms <!:! mo ney . Dcnnh
1t1tcd that these figures represent the overall enroll ment, and are not separate
in regards to full and pantime studenu because some
part-time students arc sull
enrolling. Until these fi g
ures arc released, 1here 1
s
no way to detenninc the r..
nancial repcrcwsions of the
enrollment situation .
Vice President and Treasurer Frucir X . Flannery
swcd that students can e~
peel a tuition increase every year, but there is liule
correlation between enrollment and tuition increases
"Wearejustaboµt at leve l
enrollment," Hid A an ncry
'7bcre is no shortfa ll . so
tuition will not be affected "

ment and Retention Mnnagc-

Io her own wonh, Dennis
des.cribe, the Center as "a
Her-cat Suffolk University program lhat provides u comtberc is a great <fivcnity of miuee and a forum to ad•
students. Many fed that be- dress every issue concerning
ing different from each other international studeolS." Such
i.s what makca college such a issues arc lfllOIS, 1
98115, acgreat learning cxpcrieocc.
tivitics, or any problems the
cra:a~:~es 0

?O:it::~~

~~~tional 11udcnts might

1i1y arc the international students.
Currcntly six percen1 of
the United Stntes population
is international In 1988 there

Dennis is also concerned
wil;h eatabliabing a rcputalion for Suff'olk ,Universi1y-,11s
a plaoc iliac welcomes ttncrnational lb.ldents. She fee.ls

re::

..

~;\~~:~~';?hn! • :

now ·340 internatioOal s1udenl.S a.ad that num ber has
increased by 90 since last
year. Wi1h sue ~ a rapid
grow1h . Su rrolk thought
changes would be in

::c~

This past summer, Presi-

!:n°:~!8;~,C~~
vcrsi1y Commiuee that he

~:!:

=~t~:i::~c:~;~

that Suffolk has lacked this

thei e &Ju.dents a nd thei r
needs. ·By doing so. it is
hoped that Suffolk will be·
come a place recogniu.d for
its commitment to internat i o ~ : : ~ ~1 feel s th.at

w: i::,:~~::

tbe Center for International

~~

:::m-:c::::~::

:
0 :is~:c;:~er:: community. She· looks for•
would discuss the specific .

: -!~ ::

~:e::~:;

about each other.

~:=

She also

the center would be under
f ! \ =:n::
~ management of Marguer- _
studeals because they will be
lie Dennis. Dean of Enroll- welcome.

Wians shares philosophical
ideas about knowledge
..-By Stephanlt Snow
JOUaNAL -STAPP

_______
In a discuuio n that
sparked differen t kinds of
philo;sophica11 thoogbtl, William Wians, a profeasor at
Boston Univenity , aave a
lccrure entitled Aristotle &:
The Problem of Human
Kno wledge.
Wians' lecture focused on
AristOl.lc arid his contcmporaries' viewed lcamina. U•ing varioua books that
ArislOl.lc had written during
his lifetime, Wians backed
up his ideas of what ArislOl.le
thouht about the idea of
learning.
Aristo1le cau1ioncd that
humans were far from the
best thing in the universe.

and the go4a one step hia,bcr.
Wi~~prcsentcd another
. ~ n atotehan
, problem :
whdhcr or DOI the pursuit of
truth i1 easy or diff
icult.
Ariatotle believed that pur•
1uit of truth is easy bccau.se
everyone has somethi ng 10
contribute.
Another Aristotelian queslion Wians brought up. was
this: Why should humans be
lucky enough 10 obtain
knowledge, despite their in•
feriority7
Wians wen1 on to explain
that Aristotle believed the
world was ordered, which
may account for the fact that
humans cou ld gain k.nowl•
edge.
Aristotle, according to
Wians, believed that the

Domestic VIOlencce Month

__ ...
......,_
■ a.,--i
CONGO

ndilicainlO

■ VIOLENCE

Continoccffrom page I

q uiet and' not mentioned
outsidcthchome."
Post~ i l m ~ w a s
f
munity response and inbe&.itantatfint uaudicncc
volvemcnL
.
" DefendingOucLivcs': mcuibers grasped the tragic
tokllhe5t0ryoffourwomca doscofreality in the film.
imprisonedforkillinalheir Kabat did not focus the disbatterers. It was a frighten- cussion on blame but on the
ing, realistic look at the in• c auses of doDlCitic abuse.
justices some women suf- Anger,embarrusmcntand
fcr. Tbc:scincluded not only amazement were a few o f
theph~slcaltraumabuttbc thcexprcsscd~tions.
0.ne audience member
lackoffairtreatment from
brought up wllat many
ourlegalsys(CID.
people think is the root of
Kabat noted that " battered women aremistreatcd domestic abuse: tradition
througboutlhoendrecrlmi- andatti1Udc.Da!inil,..:k10
nalJus!jcc,i,MCm."
A ~mber'oft;hneSty
have limited access to thi1 lntcmatlonal(anotpnwt- iercd an inherently dangerknowledge. It was Arislotle'1 tion fiJbting for human ous belief.
Kabat exclaimed, ' 'For
belief that humans punue ripU y,rorldwide) a nd the
tnowledae (!nly when they daugll_teraqdgraoddaugb- too long thcrchu been this
rcaliz.c they an: ignonmL
tcr of ba ~ women, bclicftbatwomcnarcpropW'iam dcaipcd this lcctwe Kabat emphasized why It erty ...•.. therefore: you can
to promote Aristolle as more h as taken &0 lo ng {or do- do what you wanttowhal' s
Greek than most contcmpo- mesdcabusctobcacknq_wJ- yOW"S.:·
mry philo6ophy allows. Wians edg6d: ' ' Tberei5too.much
At the conclµsion of th·e
commeotcd, ..Aristotle seems victimblaming.-.•. ycarsago discussion, pamphlets and
to regard knowing as practi(domestic abuse) was kept fact sh.e cts were-passed ouL
cally a given"

:i:l~~~kka~ =w~a1~~:i=
1cm. The problem is as follows: Can human knowen
as pire 10 mere probable
causes?
In the hierarchy of living
things, ArislOtle placed bumaps one step above animah and a s~ lower than
the gods. Wians explained
that Ari~totle placed hu~ ans
a step higher than animals on
thc hieratehy of living things

·women's Cente~ ol&rves N;itional

:=;.:~w::

.

!

·'

These conlisted of a pcr&0nalized safctyplan !&Jld a
controlfingbcbavionwamingtist..
Suff'ollc:willcontinuciu
observance of battered
women and domcsdc vlolcnceonOctobcr26inSawycr 1021 at 1:00. p.m.
EugeniaMoorc, thcfintof
the Framingham Ei&ht to
have her sen tence conimuted b:Y OovernorWllliamWddbucdonBanenxl
wOIDCn Syndrome, will
speak on the i11ue of domc:aticviolence. Sbc'wWbc
aCComparued by her lawyer,Susanffowards; ·,·

ThoFrarninglmnEJahtla
a group of imprisoned
women who Battered
WomenRsbtingBacklidod

by submittinaconunuto&il

petitions to Weld. 'Jbeirb'I!
tent is to have all of the
wo~•sscntences~
oreliininatod.
· '

DON'rB:E LEFT ON;.,,:
THE PL:,\TFORM!
SENIOR P~TRAIT SlmNG
O<:;T. 25TH '- OOT.,29TH
9AMT05PM
.
· 4TH FLOOR,SAC
· ($5 fee)

Qupstions? cilu tt,,e
con Yearbool.t
ats1J-S~26

==
--~
Didymcw

...

mddcriadisn!

-·......
hips or "S

wassaidollhci

-

Tbompooo I
,,.... ""1

50 ycan alOII

-·ICWptmcaina
dicnce lauah

.i;-·- bij1
hand on the
forward 1ymbl

(I"

ltrmgth" ((

The~
lheNlmeolLi

"dwae·' """
Did)'(

---·

cbcaladma '
pla~c? Acco1

ca:iculturcaft:c
South from H
i

---3
ooal

Thos.«olt-...i • W -y, Oclober6. 1993

Suffolk community ~vels to Congo
- ~~=~

tcd ofa pcr-

~plananda
nvionwam-

lconlinueita

of bauei-ed
omcaticvio->er26inSaw1:00 i,.m.
re, thefintof
l~•f-i&htto
illC:DCC comvporWill,clons-ed
1drom:e, will

Juueof do:c.Sbcwillbe
lbyberlaw-,
wanls. •·
ghlm~il
imprisoned
o Battered
naBockoldcd

comnuailao

'clef. Tbeirb,!

vc all Of the

=~

·........ ~ ~ ~~~, ~&JCIO
IO
...

1rom-- •

His message can be interpreted as
.
,_..
· - UI l'Ur&:all .... ........
saying_that the gestures, music
~ in today's IOcidy. Thom~
1be "hi&b;5'', cocuidcrcd a .black and SO-Called slang· that AfricanIOII ta.lkcd about the small bodily · Jbetto thin.a,· is actually a Congo Americans and other races utilize,
plblra, phrlJCI and ml&Sical imcru:. duna. A ~ • ~ out and up in arc more deeply rooted in African
meat1 t.Ml ,--o ~venally Uled that ....~iiiis~aaignolrejoicing culturetbanwccanbegintoima~ne.
were origimlly in the
111 _Congo culture• . Remember the
"The p~sCntation clearly high-

c.oaao.

~~:er~~"'!Y~

an elder is disrespectful? 1n the Congo
tradition putting both hands on the
hips or ..Standing in Kimbo/
Pacalaba.. was a sip of defiance. It
was said of the pcnoo thaf. they feared
no one.
lbompson presented slides of recent poses and gestures over the past
SO yean along the side slides of
sculptures in a similar pose. The audience lau~hed When Thompson
equated a pose carved into a Sunmu
mging stick or a warrior with one
hand on lhc hip and one band pushed
forward symbolizing "ready 1 fighl
o
or _
strength" 10 me· choreography of
The Supremes for their hit "Stop 1n
the Name of Love" and lhc universal

one

~atte
end

D _ . _ _.. ., ... , .......... ..
n.1:1.1 ~ TTa:I\.'

1---------By Stepluuaif: Snow

JOUJ.NAL STAff

=~R;:;

Despite alniosC getting lost cnroute.

::t~Ol~: ~~-CrooJ!~ ~~:::::;:~:; !:U~::i:~: : ~~~
:

Zeb .~iw, whiC~ means make~
body twist, was a traditional dance or
~ Congo, whlch really gives inean•
1D8 to the phrase, " It's in the blood."
"The guy was dynamo," said
David Buchanan, a Leaming Spccia1ist at the B.L.C., who said he went
10 further his research into history
because he is intcrest.cd in working
urban schools. "I never met a history
that could do the Charles•
Ion.
Much of the art from the Congo
has th~ !wisting pattcm. which ·~ a
aymbohsm for completing the circle
of life. Much-of lhe art of the Coogo
bas been found bwicd right in tbe
southern .U.S. It was buried there

of Americans in the U.S.," said
Buchanan.
Professor Thompson also stressed
the importance of putting things into
a l111Ber context . to know the bdOC'C
and after to undersUlnd the topic at
hand. "When you hear II cord change
ii means nothing, what happens after
is imponan1;· he said.
Following the lecture. guests were
taken on a toor of 1he museum to
view lhe artifacts included in the
lecture.
" I was really surprised that he was
white," Buchanan said. "'The foct
that he was white added emphasis
that all of us should know more about
African-American History."'

Sargent localed in Peterborough, New
Hampshire. The people who auended
the retreat participlled in team building
exercises with all of the orpni.uu.ions
and a1so participated in focus groups
wilhin their own OfgMization.
Donna Schmidt, Director of Student
Activities. said this~ had "~i,ccial
navor." She said that the cooperation
between the organizations was great.
paniculady between the Beacon Year.
book, Council of Presidents, Program
Council, and the SIUdcnt Govemmenl
~iation (SGA).
Michelle McGinn, SGA President.
remarked that there was "more time 10
woct on 1ools IO~ implement goals.•·
McGinn, a veieran of three other re-

''charge~f';: f:::h:!:e:berc . ~,.'~:~g:;r;;th:u~~°:;:':;

of : ; e i1
;:~~1~::~!n:::

~ • a l s o ~ the

chccrleading came from in lhc first
place? According 10 Thompson,
chc:erkading bccamc a part of Amcri•
can culture after ii was broughl 10 the
South from Haiti. Drum major bands

Pro~:"°'"

fmewcd coopera-

ex=:::

lndcpendcnce. stole the treasures of
enslaved Africans and kept them for

ourselves and others and atrcnd more lionM~= ~:~cr~
eveots such as these, after all, what appointmcnt'that the media ocganiz.athemselves.
you learn ootsidc the classroom is tionsdidnotattcnd.~oflhemcdiu
"African archC!)logy ,1lumbercd, jµs1 as vi1a1 as what you learn in the organwuioris Was invilOd, but all denow we-know wbere· to mg,'' qyotcd classroom,"' Smith said
- Thom~ of an unidentified IOWCe..
.....;._"""
c1__the_in_,....... ___~
,__....:.

r ________

"1t1'6J'k.TAm 'NT&,rJ £.5
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,..$,o t..t,1 11 1-nt

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.......... .
(617) 558-282_
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::?d

Omo-mite! ''The :pinosauri
By N.E. Elcobl.r
JOURNAL STAPP

White' Michael Crichton
was writing his number one
best-selling novel, 1.u.al.u.iJ;_
M, he was quoted as saying that this would be '"the
most expensive movie ever
made." Although Steven
Spielberg was able to cut
movie cosu dramatically,
Crichton's predictions may
not have been far off the
mark, considering all the
money the movie bas made
off of mett:bandisc and special attroctions.
The Museum of Science,
in cooperation willi WBZ
television and radio, is ishow•
ing a new exhibit, which runs
through Jan. 9, 1994, and is
enti1led ""[he Dinosaurs" of

Jurassic Park." The exhibit,
which brought the largc:11
numbers in SO yean to the
Museum of Narural History
in New York, is split into
threeparu: props used in the
movie , reconstructions or
eight dinosaurs depicied in
lhe film, ·and· fossils, including insect specimens !nipped
in ancienl amber.
The &iaantM: replica or a
fossilized Tyrannosaurus rex.
which grccta visitors as they
en1.c r the exhibit, is one whlcb
"Jurassic Park" fans may rec•
ogniz.c as having,bung above
the c o ~ to the vi1i1or'1
cenlcr in the movie.
upon· e'ntenng ibc Nithob
Gallery, where the collection
is hous~, you- may not be
· DINO~AURS

lboSuffolt.Joamal • Wcdncsday, October 6, 1993

'

Suffolk community travels to Congo
■ CONGO
CoatiDIICd from

~

I

b"lditions in today's sociccy. Thompaoa tali.ed about lhc small bodily

.-uca, phnlsa and music:u insuu--

__, thM -

uoivcnally med lbll
werc.origiJlally ill the Congo.
Did you ever woadcr w~y puttin&
your bands
your. hip1 in front of
00

anclderisdistespectful?lDtheCoogo

tradition putting both haods

arc to prevalent in the South due to
kl deep ropes lo Africa.a culture.
'lbc " hi&h•.5" , coaaidc:rcd ■ black
ghetto thing, i1 actuaJly • Congo
dun,. A band spread out and up in
tllc.air is UNl!dala. a sip cl rejoicing
in CooaO culture. Remember the
twist? Chubby Chocker brought it
with him in his soul from thc Coogo.
Zeb. Nitu, which means make thc
body twi~ was a traditional dance of
the 'Congo, wh.ich really gives meaning to the phrase, "ll's in the blood."

the
00
hi ps or " Standing in Kimbo/
Pacalaba" wu a tiaq of defiance. It
was said of the pel'IOO that they feared
"The guy was dynamo," said
no one.
·
David Buchanan, a Leaming SpcThompson praenlcd slides or re- cialist at the B.L.C .. who said he went
cent poses and gestures ov~ the past to funher his research into history
50 years along the side slides or because he is interested in working
a:ulp(W"CI in a similar pose. The au- urban 1ehoob. "I never met It history
diencc laughed when Tho mpson ProfCS50r Lhat could <to lhe Owlcsequated a pose cuvcd.io10 a SWUDU Ion."
digging stick of a wani« with ooc
ML1C h of the an from the Congo
hand on the hip and ooc hand pushed has this twisting pattern. which is a
forward symbolizing: "'ready 10 fight symbolism foe coroplcting the circle
or Slfen8th" to lhc choreography of ol life. Much of the 811 of the Coogo
TheSupremesfortbeirhit "'Stop In has been found buried right in the

~~

~";: ~=-ersal

:;::veu:~~w:C~~ed~:

His mcuagc can be interpreted as
one sayiq that the ges1we1. music
and so-called slang thif African- - - - : - : - : - - : - ~ , , - - Americans and .other races utilize,
B/,Stcpbanic Snow
are. more deeply rooccd in African
JOUI.HAL STAFF ·
culture than we caa begin to imagine.. _ _ _ __;...:.;__;_ _
..,.he prescntaLion clearly highOcspile almolt gcaina Joa cntoutc.
lighted how much of a gap there is in the annual Scudcnr. l.adc:rsh.ip Rctnat
our educational system about 1he role wa.s hdd this .-st-~ at Camp
or America ns in the U.S .," said Sqcnt localed in Pctctborough, New
Buchanan .
Hampshire. The people who 11tcndcd
Proressor Thompson also stressed lhc.retrcat panicipated in team building
the imponance or putti ng things into exercises with all of the organlza1ion~
a larger contexl . 10 know the before and also participated in focus grouJ>!>
and after to understand the 1opic at within their own organiz.atioo.
hand. "When you hear a cord change
Donna Schmidt. Director or S1udcnc
it means nothing, what happens aner Activities, said this retreat hod "spoc1al
is important.'' he ~d.
navor:· She said lhlll the coopemtion
Following the lcc1urc. guests were between the organizations wa~ gn:m.
lak:en on a lour of the museum to panicularly between the Beacon Yc.ir•
view Lhe anifac1s included in the book, Cowx:il of Presidents, Progr.un
l~turc.
Council, and lhc Student Government
"I wu really surprised thiu he was Association (SGA).
"".bite," Buchanan said . ..The fact
Michelle Mcvinn, SOA Prtsidcnt.
0
th1.t he was white added emphasis renuut.od that there was "more time 1
tbatallorusshouldknowmoreabou1 work oft tools 1o, implemc nl goals."

Af~a;;:;;c;

~!s=

"t.ime out

Did ,you evu wonder where Carol,• signer of the Occlanllioo of of our daily lives to learn more about

=~o=:gn;:";: :!r:: ~
~:00~':'=
0

cbccrleadiog became a pan of Amcrican culluJ"c after'il wa.s broughl 10 the
South from Haiti. Drum major bands

r:!

thems.clves.
'' African archeology slumbered,
now we know where to dig," quOlc.d

rr=========;;,lbom;.;;;;;; ;;,;•;;,r,;;;,;""';;;;;;
"""' .. ·deft;;;;;;tifi,;;;•"';;;;-=;;;;;;

Students attend
Leadership
Retreat Wi'..-,,.1 , nd
~e

Mdiinn, a veteran or throe other re •

=~n:=Eal:~~=~
~ " ' : : : : . : ; : , ::

:u=~v:C-:'as~~t=~ :: Mc<iinn, however, ex~ di~-

you learn outside lhe class room is
just as vital as what you learn in lhe
classroom," Smith said

1

organiuu.ioos was invited, but all de-

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:.' 'incd-_- the

1n_ w_ ____~
,;_ .·oo.

By N.E. Escobar
JOURNAL !TAFI'

While Michael Crichton
was writing his number one
best-selling novel, J..ll.mllic
M, he wu quoted as my.
ing that Ibis would be ''the
mos1 expensive movie ever
made." Although Steven
Spielbcra was able to cut
r~;~;o:~•t;r:!r:::~~c~I:;
no1 have been far off the
marlr., considering all the
money the movie bas made
off of merchandise and special aunw:tion, .
The Miacum of Science,
in coopcnuion with WBZ
television and radio, is showing a new uhibi1, which runs
1hrough Jo.n. 9, 1994, o.nd is
entitled "The, Dinosaurs of

movie, recons tructio ns of
eight dinosaurs depicted in
the film, and fossils, including insect specimens µupped
in ancient amber.
The gigantic replica of a
fossilized Tyrannosaurus rex,
which grccts vi1iton as they
enter I.he exhibit. is one which
..Jurassic Park" fans may recognize 11.1 having hung above
the entrance to the visitor's
center in tbemovie.
Upon entering the Nichols
Gallc,y, where the collection
is housed. you may n&' be
DINOSAURS

"Judgment Night:." a

mtl'l9'FtTAnt 11GTXJ &.$
il'Jriel9'11
S&UZJF,1rr A<J<Jl9Unt.S
6',Rn<J&

jud(pnent~.
BJ-Gri-

JOURHAi. c:ommvroa

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nse thriller at·

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t1

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maocb,oothey••-

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for , an .alterudvo ....._ cbe
~our oodce tbM dl8y . . bl
ci1y.
Tbe· four

araue ~

>' ,

wdl•eitheroftbolefilms. andtbetabitapuaiaapcdc:&Tbe movie ii aenuincly tense trian. They find CJUl tblt the
and c:xqdag. but its abo all man they hit wu nuu1i111

:::a,=~~".:

aoo familiar to be aa)'thing from • dnla dealer-. named

• bot averqe.
Aa a late~ntabt cal>le
movie, tbil mm would be they Kddeatly bit. they 100D
awpriaiq to ltWDblo m'OI&. = e hi• next ~ n~•l

,,,.,. ..tr""A.

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kan•'I ••-•• belore-a
. . . . -,,,...
.-.- ... _ _ _ Tlle_ol
AayGDD wbo UI evs l,oai tbc mCMCI dlea uf'oldl 111 ,
loll la• "'umafe" pllt of die bide-and•10-1eek fulllo11

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I

.;!~tw=t~~

nic:bt witb the pya. Pant

wilbdlo"pdpqs"ayifti
world al die

n.

ftlm ii well dinlc(ed
by S...,.,. ..,.._ (......
2" ud tbe apcomlna
':Bl~ Away"). Hoptiu'

tor

:=- . .,,,..,.. -·J,..._

· llldlu-llayadMib ' ....,.._f_,tyle/'(Oaba Ooodiq Jr.), 111d bis
~ ~~ »

:,as.:·~.:: 11:

, Y ~ - · Joba, ...


V'e

=--~IICb while d~nti•a

no

-



lfOUp 1eta

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ad - . , dllt 111ey ·

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wdlwllca ittapliato . .

morals 11d die' macbo .
men mve to fit inlo, ' : ' :
vay rarely bbl tbae iallel

NIGHT
ccatilmed. o a -.7

Students attend

: to Congo

Leadership

JftCSsa&C flUl be intcrpre1cd as
uyi.DJ lhat the gestures, music
so-called siang that African•
ricans and other races ud lii.c.
no,e deeply rooccd in African
re lhan we can begin 10 imaainc.

Retreat Weekend
By Sttpbaalc Snow
JOURHAL STAFJ'

Despite ahnoit gdting lost CM)Ulc .
the annual Student Leadcnhip Rctrc;u
was held this past weekend at Camp
S1111CtV. located in l?ccerborough, New
Hampshire. The people who ancndcd
the retreat participated in team buildmE'
c,iercises with all or the organi1..11.11om
and also participated in focus group,
within their own organiution.
Donna Schmidt. Din:ctor of S1
udcn1
Activities. said this rctrcat had ..sper1JJ
flavor:· She said that the c:ooperJtJon
between the organizations was greaa .
pruticularty between the Beacon Yca,book. Council of Presidcms, Prognun

'he presentation clearly hig h!d how much of a gap there i~ in
ducational system about the role
,mc ricans in the U.S.," sai d

1
anan.
o(essor Tholnpson also stressed
nponance or pulling lhings into
,er contut • to know the before
lfter to undcrsumd the topic al
. "When you hew I cord change
ans nothing, what happt:ns after
porw u," he said.
llowing the lecture, gucsls _we~
1

on a tour of the museum to
the anifac1 included i. . hc
s

"'· reall y surp,scd that he wa~
was
:," Buchanan said. ''The fac t
he wu white added emphasis
:II of us should know mon: about
an-American Hi~tory."
fc should all take some time out
r daily lives to learn more about
Ives and others and attend more
s such as these, after a11 what
,
team.. outside the classroo m is
'5 vi1al as what you learn in the

-oom," Smith said

Council, and the S1udent Government
Association (SGA).
Mk heUc Mc:CiiM, SGA Pres1dcnt.
rcmarlc.ed that lhcre was ~
time lo
wodr. on 1ools 1 implement goal~:·
0,
McGinn, I veteran
three other O:·
treats, also noted thc renewed cooperation between the various organii.atiom
McGiM, however, expressed disappoiniment that the media organiz.a.
lions did no( attend. Each of the mtdia
orgnniz.alions was invitod, but all declined the invitation.

or

Dino-mite! ''The Dinosaurs ofJ ~ Park~ the.Hub ·
By N.E. Escobar
)()IJDIAL STAJ'I'

While Michael Crichton
was writi ng his number one
bcs1
-sclling novel, lwJw.ii;.
fad, he wu quoted as Uy•
ing !hat this would be "the
most c,i pcruive movie ever
• made." Allhough Steve n
Spielberg was able to cut
movie costs drama1ically.
Crich1
on·1 predic tions may
not have been far off the
mark, considering all the
money the movie has made
off of men:handise and spo-ciitl 1111mctions.
The Museum of Science,
in cooperation with W BZ
television and radio, is show•
,ng u newexhibit. which ru ns
throU Jan. 9. 1994, and is
gh
entitled '"The Dinosaurs of

Jurassic Park... The exhibit.
which broug ht the largeH
numbers in .50 yean to the
Museum of Na1urul Hiscory
in New York, is split into
three parts: props used in lhe
movie , reco nstructions of
eight dinosaurs depicted in
the film, and fossils, includ•
ing in.sec! specimens Lrnpped
in ancient wnbcr.
The gigantic replica of a
fos.sili:r.ed Tyrannosaurus rex,
which erects visilOTS as they
enter the exhibil, is one which
"Jurassic Park" fans may roe• ·
ognizc as having hung above
the ent.ra.oce to the visitor's
center in the movie.
Upon entering the Nichol,
Gallery, where the collection
is housed, you may not be
DINOSAURS

''J~~ent Night:" a
. judgment nighuna,j1

mt1'6Jt.:·um rlirt,o £.5
i"1.:6J'11

-SrUZJerrt ACJCJ6JUn-t.5.

__________ ______ _
6Jrr,CJ£
_
::_

city.
~ rout arpc fRqucntly
and then hit a . . . . . pedc:I·

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>I£ ?A.U ,qqJ S £111£S T £R.

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'110V£11<:8£R , _ ,-,q, ?A.U :Z:,£? £RR£:Z:, TU ·
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t

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1
• TH £ SP 1<1ri9 TU n 10 ri :Z:,U£ ;z:,,;n:£ w,.u

~£ 711A RO >-I

rr. ,-,-,.,_

The movie is genuinely 1en1e
aod aciting, but its alto all
too familiar to be anything
• but average.
At a ~•te-nl&hl cable
movie, th11 mm would be
surprising to ltwDble acrou,
but u • theatrical releue,
there :•n't much lhl~, )'OU
haven ., I CCD bofore:--•
couple dmea over.

trian. The,' ft.nd out that the
~ : : ~e~h~t ~run::
Fallon (Dellls t...ry). After
• ICCina Fallon mmdcr the man
lhey accidcntly bit, they soon
become bit ne.t potential
victim.I

t ~ y tbt four end up
without ~porttdoa ud
bavCI IO ru.a from Palloa and .
bit PAI oo fool. Tbe 11111 of
~wlto W ovwbcm tho movie tllca ufoldl 1h. '
Iott bt•'"'amafe" p.-toldle hlcle-aad-10-1eck rukloa
dlywill.....,,_ _ IOdlo wkblllo "p,od..,...ayma
fiD'uD--pl6cU.. to
1be wodd ol lbe
Fruk Wy~! (Em.llto .,,_-:;...,.
Elteva).~Yel bis mbort,aa
• Tbe ftllD .. wd1 ditocted
~c, bu wife, ond pnciow by
ltoi,tlm ( . _
1~f10t dauabtcr tor • rew tor 2 .. aod tho apcomina
tiou.n: while be &oea out for• "Blowo Awai"). Hopkins' •
Di&bt. wi!h the pys. Pamk • lb"aipl-forward lt)'lo JI eaay
and hi4 friend&. Ray IIPd Mite 10 follow . t tbe accioa aoj o.&ba Ooodina Jr.), and bis qoeaoN .-e acidq.
' Y~nacr ~ • JohG, uo
"'JINlpnent Nisht" worb
SCUI to a boiina maach. The well wben it up iDlo male
foar mil 111 ,RV lftd dri¥e IO moral, - tbe macho tmap
tho ma&ch while drlntina mca have to r11 buo, bat it
boen.
very rarely bit& tbele iuuea

S..,._

-.

NIGBT

- .,

, 1993

Monster~

Museum of!
j
.-mite! "The Dinosaurs of Ju:nmk Park" hit"theHub

.....,
STAFF

icl Crichton
number one

•cl, ~
1oted
581t>Uld be ''\he

as

movie ever
•ush Steven

able to cut
rtmatically.

Ju rassic Parle " The exhi bit, , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ - ,
whic h bro ug ht th e largest
numbers in 50 yean 10 the
Museum of Natural History
in Ne w Yo rk. is splil into
three pans: props used in the

movie, reconstructio ns o f
eight' di ~osaun depicted in
the fil m, and fo5sils, incl ud-

ing insect Specimens unppod
in aociC:'lt.,bcr.
The gigantic replica of a
fossilized Tyrannosaurus rex,

lic1ions may "!:hich greets visi1ors as they
far off the e nter the ex hi bit. is one which
ri ng all the "Jurassic Park" fans may rec• 1e 1w made: ognize u having huns above
lise and spc-

1

of Science.
with WB Z

the entrance 10 the visi1oc's

- sure whether to take in •
behind-thc-sccft'e& film or to
gne In ' llDlucmc;Dl at K -

tbi

ia
Nj

:::-== ~

: :c~k:: :
or the vili,tor's center ud
later pJ{y a critical part in
lhe movie' s ending.
Once you aie finally able
to move past the flicbrin&
video screens, which constantly show which acenea
in the movie the artifact
you're looking at i1 featured
in, you will definitely want
to check out the dinosaur
nursery. Actual movie c111,
the model o( the baby
v e1oci rapto r born in t.Jie
movie, and the incubator
which stores the d.ino1aur
~m6ryos 1tolCo by ·Dennis
Ncdty are all OD diaplay.

center in the movie.

ac

w
111

pi

in
81

ti,

at

y1

.,
c:i
01

t.11

...
~

11
c:

,;


.

Upon entering the Nichols
Gallery, where the collection
is housed. you may noc be

. n

DINOSAURS

tl

city.
,
The four ariue frequentl y
and then hit a pudq pedestrian. They find OUl that lhc
The movie is genui nely tense ivan they hit wu running
and CJtciLing, but its also a.II rrCJTt-'a drug dealer named

=~;;~,:~.:.~:~: ;~:~~;?.~=

:~:i~
~:b'7:~

but u a theatrical relcuc,

there isn't mlicb tbal you

become his next potCntial

victfffll.

.

wj~n::,~t!.=:i.::

have to ND from FIIJoa and
AnyoaewbobucYOl°liecn ' bit pot ~foot. ~ J,at ol .

: : ; . : · ~~;ver~cfore-a

'l:..=:.~s-'!-::u:: ~::=~~;!:e:~=1~:
oet
ofihe
in• "Unaafc" pat

witlJ

1

Fraok

Wyau

(Emilio

, !~;~~d;::;e~o~,:

the

"aood

guys" lr)'ina

!;.. a :s.~'hciTwortd. of the
c
ne film

Eacvcz) lea.vet his-subwbao

ii wdJ

dircctcd

by Stephen Hopaol ('?ftda.

hours wbil.c be IOCI ow for a ;

:
10 '0

8.:~a~!).ur:;:i~~
Ja

. niaht. wi~ the guys. ~ • atraipl;forwird style cuy
andbia~R&ytod~ 10 follow IOd the acdoa ~ (Cube. Goodina Jr,), and 1w queace1 are CJtcida,g.
youoJer brother, Jo~, are
"Judpient Night" worb
aoina to • boring malcb. The well when it 1ap1 into male
four rmt an RV_Md d:rive to morah ud the macho imap
tho match while dnnking men have u, fit into, but it

bee~ group &eta atuck in

very rarely bill these lllUCI

IOd ra1iie t1ta1 they
·• PJU11: 10 be LMe for the

NIGHT
cootiaued oa PICC.7

a7aff!.! !~~r ~}~~si
•'NNi~ar-,
CllllloriaL
----Cltl.wnlit-1111ffmauss
LlneTStap

For llclllla call 11711-8748.

, 1993

.

'

n.,s.1ralu -u1 ,

Monster madness at
Museum of Science .
Aa you move ·pas1 other

..Juriuic Park " u1 ifa c1s
aucb u a niu1ivc model of
l ure whether to lake io • the vWtor'1 center. 1hc shavbehind-thc-sccneJ ftlm or to . ina cream can, used by
gaze in amazement at- actual skeletal n:constructions

N.cdry, and actual 10
badacs, you come in1o the

which stand in the main hall

acctJon of the exhibit which

of ihc visitor'• center and
later play a critical par1 in

scpualea fact from fiction.
Whclbci' you're obscning

the movie' s ending.
Once you are finally 8blc
• to move past the fl ic.kerina

an actual "nptor" skull or
playina with one of many
interactive computer tcnm-

nau, there

vidco screens, which constantly show which sccoe1
In the movie the artifact
you' re looking at is featured
in, you will definitely want
10 check out the dinosaur
nursery. Actual movie eggs,
the mo del of 1he baby
. Ve locira ptor bor n in the
movie. and the incubator
which llores the dinosaur
embryos stolen by Dennis .
Ncdry are all 00 disp~y.

are auidcs sta-

tioned around the uhibit h >
answer any questions or hclp
you .
.. lc'1 a wonderful fond
uhibit," RayAnn Havasy.
ucc:utive dircctof of 1he o,.
nosaur Society, another of
lhc uhibi1' 1 spont ont, said
''The models of the di no•
saurs themselves arc breat htaking. These are the closes1 ,c.crcations to dntc."
Once out of the cduca•
tional portion , which in •
eludes more rccon1uuctior15
ICt up by Peter May, who
made the skeletons used 1n
the movie, you will _ egin a
b
great journey into the past
u you slep thl;ough a ffliniaturc version of the great
gates which made Jeff
Ooldblum wonder, "What
are they keepin& in there?
King Kong?"
Once sun-oundcd by the
painted backdrops of a .lush
jungle world, genuine tropi•
cal plants of that en, the
electrified fences with their

Wodnelday.~6. 1993

~ fever niffi rampant ''Judgment Night:'' a
in.Boston area
judgment nigh~
■, DINOSAURS
Continued from pege 6

junglc sounds all · lead you out or
the fanllsy and 4rop you right into
iUnmic Puk ltJclf.
The ciaht dln()ll.Un on display
are all incredibly detailed and seem
to have 1c1ually come to life. There
is the sick Tricer1tops, with her
baby Ocfi 00 the cuttina room floor
during ftlm editina) Uld a model of
the computerized Oallimimus herd.
The poison-spitting Dilophosaurus
and the Brachio11urus, which prottudcs from the '"tree tops" also
make their presence known.
Ahhough the entire exhibit is
.ylcrcdible, perhaps the two most
, wesome sights in the entire exhibit are not the monstrous W I of
the man-eating T-rcx with the jeep
it smashed in the movie, but the two
models of the dangerously intcUigent Velocirapton, whose yellow
eyes IC.Cm 10 follow every movemcnt you make. The fee.Jing you
get is fO eerie, you might feel safer
bringioa along a friend to see these
preh.is1oric monsters with you.
Asioulea.Ve)urwicPad:,makc
1urc to atop in the gift shop, where
you can ahop for all of your dinosaurnceds. Browsethrpu_ghthe,Piles
of T •shirts, try on thC hats, play

with the puulcs, and make some
models of your favorite dlononura.
You 1cc, whether it'1 lacky dliloovcnmits, amber jewelry, or a copy
of Crichton' • novel, in your choice
of hardcover or paperback editions,
there is somthina for everyone,
adults u well u kid.I,
If you loved or even remotely
liked the movie, you will definitely
find somelhina to capture yoUr interest. -i'he Dinosaurs or Juruaic
Parlt" will thrill you, entertain you,
and even educate you. It is a dcfinite leap in lime to a more vicious
age where the strong survived and
the weak went extincL
Advance tickets to "The Oinosaurs of Jurassic Park" is strongly
recommended, but not requi red.
Admi11iot1 to the exhibit is: adults,
SI I ; children (3- 14) and scniordtizcns (65 and up), $1. Admiui.on
prices will also include entc.rance
to either an Omni Thcatie,, Planetarilim, Luer Show, or any of the
other exhibit halls.
The exhbit will be open lo the
public Monday throuafi Thursday,
9 a.m. to S p.m anti ,Friday throuah
Sunday, 9 a.rn. to 9 p.m. To pur. ch.ue advance tickets or for more
information on this or any other
Museum of Science c:1hibit,. call
(6f7) 723-2506.

know about him Is tbJl he has •
wife ud dauabtcr and be used to be
a real '"bard-au" before be wettt to
Oil a deep eaooab level.
the Brandon Walab "90210" tcbool
The movie alto benefits from of "rCUODlna."
defyina racial stereotypes. It'• reThe ooly ·character wbo ll not. ...
trcshina to sec whl1e pq lord.a in bwt by tho weak writi.q la Fllloa.
a poor world lnatead of the typk:al Leary bu a mc1merizln1 acreen
black or Puerto Rican crimhW1. presence. He Ls auppoeed to be nathThil film u.ndentandl tha& ay l'ICC leu and mcaa. 1'bal ii all the audl·
caa and does live in abct101, cDCC knows about b1m and tha& la
projects ud the suecu and any 111 tbe aud ience needs to know
race can be Involved Jo criminal about him \o tear him.
activity.
Tbe wrilin& i1 c:1tremely ridicu•
The film's performances vary Jou, in some 1pot1, eapecially tbc
from aood lo pauablc to border- di.aloaue between cbanctcn durline di"uster. Eatevez is a bit too in& t.lmca or trqedy or pu.lc.
"aoody-aoody" for audi_
cnce mcm..Judifnent Nlaht," ho wever, Is
ben to fully rcl11e to him.
·
very e:1citin1 in many accnea. The
Cuba Ooodlna Jr. ("Boyz 'N The film alao moves a.Iona very qukk.ly
Hood'J aives one oftheyear'1 moat so the flaws pu1 by ud it's euy to
irrit.ltin&ly poor pcrforma.ocea. As not nodcc. The moYic could have
Mike, be bu aoofy expre11lon1 been much better, thoua,h.
thu. almo11 force the audience to
The film needs some su.rprlsci
lau&h oot loud.
some 1wi1u, anythlna 10 idd to ill
However, it iln't completely the close to non: edatent ttoryline.
fault of tbc actors for thi1 naw. It 11 ..Judamc·oL Ni&ht" suffcn a,eatly
also in the film's wrilina. The char- from Its poor script. It's juat an
act.en are barely fleshed-out , It'• averqe run-of-the-mill cbue film.
difficult to feel ror a a,oup of people 8:1citina it i1, ori!Jinal It'• dofla~tely
tbc., audieace·tnow1 DQlhina about. ·. not.

■NJGBT

Con;dnucd

C
rom paac S

•.....,..

Eslevcz.'1 cbaracter, Prut, 1, Ufe

moat lnlrielllly wriUeG 1M Ill ••
~

.
.
•.

ro~~-~"'f=
OPPORTUNITIES

Dowaliby

to direct
student one
act·play
■ DOWALIB\'
Cootinucd~ from page 5

=::.:=~~=~~

nee

.:a~~

!~~r

--NAIi

!-'Jr~~ght

Plaoe ••
- ~~
l,JneT Stop
c.b.1-opllonal. Fortlcbla call 571-8748.
TO

CoAunao, -

-

Jbauss

Suffolk'• artistic director,
from whom ahc had taken a
directins clMs, is ooc of her
rolc111odcla.
"Sav11e\Lovc ," along
with -rbc Lover," which is
• dJrcc:ted by tcnior Patrick
8encdc:tti, will be performed

-· ~~·:11:.~~

~ nUDDITSAIID,ACULTt IN'tMOtD)Df
,AICTICll'A.ffNO DI A GltOfl1' C::W S1'0#IOIUIIO A a..AS.J/1/JOM
ntDDITATICN JH0UUJ CONTACT &4Y llAU.X:S AT IZI'. ID6
Olt. IN .alDGO'AY Jd1
.

• Men and Women In ReldoMhlpt
• L.MnglnTwoCuftut'N
• Balancing P~

and Yow C8tNr

___

• U - ond ~

T-

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.

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..

...,_"""""and ......... • _

._

.

..._ _ .,......, ... Phplcol_

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•UrbanSUrvfv.i:Sdlty-.nd~

• Hu m o t o n d _ b _ o n d ~

'

admiuioa ii S3.

ltdo.a'tbavetobeSpring
· forlovetobelntheair. Tbit



Fall, love will be IDdoa..;pattbcC. Walsh

~at,_ Z'i,,,,a

...........,...............................
0,. Vlld

Trampnt Snit locdon.

.TheSuffolltlourul• Wodoeaday,October6, 1993

r
Edlterials.

rampant ''Judgment Night:'' a.
judgment nightmar:e .
~

· One step at a time ·

puzzles, and make some

e, whether it' • acty dioo- ■NJGIIT from page 1
Continued
ts, amber jewelry, or a copy
hton's novel, in your choice on a deep enouib level.
c9vcr or paperback edjtions,
The movie al10 benefill from
s somthins for cveryozie, defyina raclal 1tereotype1. It's refreshlna 10 ac;e white pna lords in
u well as kids.
)u loved or- even re~ly a poor world Instead of the typical
1c movie, you will definitely black or Puerto Rican criminals.
mcthing to cap1ure you~ in- This film undcntan(!I that any race
''The Dino111ur1 of Jurusic ci:n and docs live in ah.ettos ,
viii thrill you, cnt.enain you, projecu and the streets and any
race can be involved in criminal
1
0
activity.
Thc film·a performances vary
1ere the strong survived ~d
from aood to passable to border•
ak went extinct.
line dilaster. Estevez is a· bit too.
ancc tickets to '"The
1f Jurassic Park" is strongly "aoody-goody" for audience memmended, but oot required. ben to fully relate to him.
Cuba Goodina Jr. ("Boyz "N The
lion to the ed.ibit i1: adullJ,
tildren (3-14) and scniorciti• Hood") aive1 one or the year's most
;5 and up); $8. Admission irritalinaly poor pcrfonnances. As

or your. favorite dioriosaun.

~: if~:!e,ta ~~r~-ic~:~;
v

Di.

0
will aJso include cnterancc
~!~e~!:,~~r:: ~ ::~~:!~~o~;
er an Omni Theatre, Plan~. Laser Show, or any of the lau&h out loud.
However. It isn't completely the
1
xhibit halls.
fault or the actors for this flaw. It is
exhbit will be open to the
a1Jo in the film's writina. The charMonday through Thursday,
aclffl ire bare\y fleshed-out. It' s
10 5 p.m and friday through "difficult to feel foraaroup of people
f, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. To purthe audience know, nothing about.
ldvance tickets or for more
Estevez', character, Frank, ii the
iation on this or any o~r
mo11 intricately written ud aJ,l wo
1 of Science exhibit, call
m
723-2506.

,W..i-dlq,,Odobor20, 1993

koow about him ii that he has a
wife aod dauahter..and be wed to be
a real "hard•a11" before he went to
the Brandon Walsh "9021 0" ichool
or "reuonina."
The onl)' cbarac1er who ii not
hurt by the weak writins 11 Fallon.
Leary hal a mesmcrlzin& 1ercen
presence. He 11 supposed to be ruth·
lcn and mcaa. That is all the audi• •
cncc knows about him and that is
all the audience nccd1 to know
about him to rear him,
The writina i1 extremely ridiculou1 in some spou, espe(ially the
dialoauc between cbaracten dur•
in& times of traacdy or panic.
"Judament Niaht," however, Is
very excitin& in many scene,. The
film also movea aloQa very quickly
so the flaws pass by and It's euy 10
not notice. The movie could have
bec;heh(~ ~::~ ~hoo;:\urpri1c1
some twists, anythina to Add to it1
close to non-existent storyline.
"Judamcnt Ni&ht" suffers arcatly
from its poor script. It's Ju1t an
average run-of-the-mill c ~ film.
Exciting it is. original it'1 definilely
not.

1J!l--•.llllllmldq•pooli5!i;~,;.;:i.~ ~
.,......,... -1-.lllbili1y, Saffolt..uo1.... ·

-

. !ilY.-,.._.recra11m& ...-o1- ·
_......._ Dmail. Dela of Barollmmt
~

. .

·,

1D1tRetmtiqn
IWed lblt min ii a deftaiteneed hebe

tclloollOoq,amlapm_
ill.,_u•umll,-1tycolleF,

..........

IO~apmicrnumberofin~ooal andoat-of-ttale

Howevtt, many students feel that oot--of-stale m:ruitment
is an ~
-p l · or Suffolk a1 this plint in ~
r
With a ¥vete ~ of dorm apace. compounded by a
rq,u~ u a comamlelr ~ it scems foolish for the
adlµinistratioo.lO ~ M) much time and "mooey on Ollt--of•

lhc

state ,fOC[Uitn:imL
The primary goal or
Office or HmolllllOIII and a-.
tiOO Manapment and Admissioos -abould be to actively
smlllble dormitory apece ror stDdcots. 0ncc adequate
student housing ii 'obiaiocd, the university lhould then move
io recruit ·out-of-stale. Until the housing lituatioa ii raolved, .
, Suffolk will oot look vuy attrtctivc to an out-of-state swdco.t
who does oot have tbc opti90 of commuting.
If Suffolk wiahea to change itl reputation as • comm.1ter
school, it must 6rst ~ i ~ for that change. Otbeiwiae.
Admiss.ioos and F.mollmeot representatives will have an
extrffllely difficult tilDIC enticing prospective students to
apply !O an' OOt of state acbool with limitd1 dorm~ The
argument for attending Suffolk over a school with ample
hoosing 'is not vr:ri Compellin&
· ·
1ft1tee!1 ottakfug·tbe steps to 'enswe adequate dormitories
fc.- ,saidc:alS, the un.ivcnity bas thrown themselYes i.oto a
l lituatiOII that may
to be disaibous.
. ;,,

pursue

prove
l, ~ / QUOTE-OF-TH.E WEEK

Grade: C

····•• '\9! •

·This is your space! Lei us knqw what yc;,u think.
Write a letter to the editor. Letters must tie signed and
submitted no later than 1 p.m. on Thursday ·to~
puqliqatiol). The Journal reserves the rigl')t<to· reject
ariy letter (or profanity or space consid&rations.

In.:...

•Actually, it Wl!ID't biid..' We played
aiiil...-:
'-11 ,1,rl ·
-Rtdlard Joyce, Sophomore Cltu•
Pns_idenl, on tM lioder.f/up retreaJ weuttd.

j

'

' you.'"fl:t~~ don't ba~e to say aoym~ 1·4uote
ta

[TIES
~~~~

1Tl1i1UU1ZDIN
WJffJNIOl(fNOA ~
~ £4Y 1£4C11UCIJ AT ED'. .t22d

........

DEMAND!

-.. ',:- . ·

TCOUIC, • ·primary goal for many faculty memben, can be
· a n ~ daaprous cooccpt from a llUdcat'a ~

~ (IIIR 7lJ DRll

'While

ority_h,dont
...... and Phpical AbuN
.Ii ·.,



d-

ep,Mli0n (vs. "Blun1
_

_,"-""tty

..

.

----·lhc-alllkills
co cloal -

:

$1UIIIH ID

ORBlEXl'IIIES

fJl,10& 27,1993

olview.

molt~ '

--io-intlte..-r..ino"""')'public

"

...........................................
.
Off..- ~ only al , _ Tremont Street loc;atlon.

~ sirive to piq dlii

icbool .l)'ltanl in "lhe Ira. Due to

Bill O#E ilEf IJIIE , . -·~
.
. WITH SIIIRJIJ(, - :·
.

many

~~~~~cbi,~W>m:mad

.

.

lookin

lhri.aki.oa

lhc oomp1c, . . - fxing

budp:ta fOI'

...,..,.youth ...

recriving pint dips. wbile tbolc-wbo bne tiem m:bing for
·
aqd bave oeidlCt bl dcsR the
· 10 be 8 .

...

~ modd for chiJdrm -bald~ YD-~

Thii ii. not to - , Ila all tmqrm -=bcrs or pdcaan,are-

.·=::e~:-~•=:are~~~ .
- IDilikr:~dec:iliomaccdtopayallcalioDIOmomdlall

~ ~ ~:.
~ wbm ~ ~ JnCioa.

_..,.....,...._iy.,.,._........., __
P'IJial
~t:.t~:-...:r-1~:!.!·, :;~1
.
d',.
of
Suf.

folk. When lb.mD,ac

~ el dollauo ~ve

. _, __ .,_.,.__of...,.
«

numbo,

janll,t.imcWiij · .....,..._
.

~as.mtll:apcfromtbclOIDOlimclllDICnll,indifra'•
• - o o or lhc ptblM: ,,__ .,.. • lffl!IO

---

......,Suffollt_
mmt_ra_.tltel"!'-oldlo

...,..._,_....,.1111_'

..-mffPRlscotlte~olfaatlty.
- a.1a_, __

"""'"'"-i,;th

lhc·- - - - - - .....

.

----'DleSulfolkJoumal
Bylhclillilcnll,fonbelllUdtm,liDa: 1936
AuaRlmlpf,P.dilor~



ICcvial..ombri. ....... Ediuw

S-....&iow,'-'Bdilor

a..a-.s,..Bdiaor

RkMldMcllo,IINIIOlidilm-

N.&e-t.r;CliifCap,Bdlb-

Dr. Oenldllkla,aa. Advbor

NorincBcip,lapo.bn:l&IC.-...

n. s111ro1t-..i

I

Edltorlals

.One sfep at a: time
_...-, biaoo........,. _ _ .
1a_ .......... lllbili.1)',
__.far_,...._. a...:w
_.,

The SuffolkJoumal . • Wcdacaday, October20, 1993

.,,..-,,Oefobor20. 1993

We have only ourselves~-b....e

I.

By..,,,,,,,,leSnow - - Darla& dais Ii.me of ye.r, many
studma arejult beafnning to truly
ace UIIO 1M acbool year. No matter
how we haft ~ to avoid the end•
leu readiap and rcporu ror our

pool(ll.~""'1tbe .
Saffoit UDiffl'-

==

~it~mclpainfullyclcar
that igr,orin& thclc things will not
make them go 1Way. Instead, we pay
the price by staying up the whole
night; 1ludyio1 for mid-tcnns and
reading thiop Chat we should hive
been reading throughout the course

~

~ltilleiildlat~lladefiaiteaeodfordlo
--. _ " - · md ICltool IOcq,and tipm it1bucuaamall, commuaieycoHop
ap"CaB aamber oliD&enwimul

ud oat«-aMa

. However, maa.y IIUdcoa hid that out-of.awe recndtmmt
11•~aOllf«Soffi:a:1tdnspoiatiDlime.
Whb a ICVUC sbort1,e of dcrm space. compounded by a
repatadcm • • commuam- a::bool. It aeema foolish for the
~~ IO spmd so macb time and money oa out.of'-

--

• The primary goal of~ Oflicc of EmoUIDCDl ud Raco-.
boa Mamraemeat aa4 Admissiou abould be to actively
punue suitable dormi10ry ~ for 1rudau1. Once ldcqu.ale
lbadait boaua is obwDcd., lbc u.aivenity abouJd dicn move

1
"'""""''."' -of•stale. Uatillhcbousinaaowlooiaraolvecl,
Suffolk will 00( loot vrsy attractive to an cait-of-.state student
who does not have lhe opeioa of c:ommutiq.
lf Suffolk wilhc:I to change its reputation .:S a commuter
xbool. must 6rsl J.'ftPU': it.self for that dwlge. Otbcrwi.sc.

~

Admlssi001 IDd EoroUmm, ....,._tati,ca ,..;u

,,...pecti••

or the semester.

C..... ' ...,. .,..,_

I

I

Lett·ers

·

submitted no later than 1 p.m. on Thursday for

,e,y compellina.
,...,....,wioa '!'°~'°....,. -domtl"'"" . P(Jbl'icaI'ion. Th e Jo~rnal reserves the right to·reject

any letter for profanity or space considerat1·ons




OTE OF THE WEEK
•Actually, itWIIID'tt.d. We.playedtcx~and.- •

,

busy we are. and evuything aolna used to write bot DOW doa't bodlcr; been aadonlaodinl, 1bould Ibey ...
1n our hvcs. cic:. Hoftver, these knowing that tbcy will never get a .UyboJl!"l'"d"'°""'

on

Why is it dw. people put off dungs

- · .. DOI

'?' ......... ""' ........., has _lluvwn lhcm,elve, inlo,
■IUMM>G that may prove to be diauuou.


coaceanre

,...._

to the last minuie when they could

ha•• .. · Th'IS , your space! Let us know what you think.•
. IS
'° Wnte a letterto the editor. Letters must be s·gned and
1

.......i, ditr"'u1' time eew:1n1
lludeou
1pply to an out of IWC .:bool with limited dorm lplCC. The
""''."""' ro, Otleeding Suffolk ove,, school whh '""P'•

uawnpciom we woold lib ID di.nk rdmD Idler. Or a femiJy member
people ue mak:ina an, ld6lb cm our with a bis evaitCOIIIUII up and n •
We have noKICOOd tbougbllabout part. no doDbt tbout lL EWIJ'(Jllt it ..,... - . . . ,.., your
nealectina to c:all the house aod 1.c:U busy, nea if we woa1d lib ID dak family DOC. . . . . IO be a bladen.
Sdlool, wod<mdbri!acdmor...
our worried parcnll that we woa't be lba1 out live, are the au:lea m:td
yoanilf ae 1111 I - dup to
home till late. We just assume they busiCIL In that way wbea we blow
OIL TbrowD lato that
will undcmand. Or if a frieod c.al1I people off, we have ready-made a.mi.I, howt\'CI', there haa to be time
and we say we wiU call them bac.k,
wcblowlhcmoffinstead. Aaain,we
There are wami.n:1 sipa in our for your frieadl and family. ~
reladOlllhipa too. if we -ca lpll'C are lbe pel)l'le wllo lme been there
w ume they will also u.ndentud.
In our busy state, we lib to chiak eaoqblimetoocbowlodtc"""'- for ,.., ......,. tbe p,od md Ibo
that everyone wiU Wldcracand, how Frieodl wbo live far away md who bad. While it ii aw dill they have

even ifwearenocuutina thcmthe
way we shouJd.

u,,,,t,
-Rldlanl Joyce, Sophomore Cla11
Pruldotl. on the ko&enliip' rttnaJ tWeund.

have easily been done so long ago?
Is it that people wort bcuer under
pressure or just the cheap adrenaline
. boost induced by both fear and the
'numerous cues of caffeine consumed
in the hopes of staying up the whole
night'?
Does this late night cramming,
with only David Lwennan u company, aclually help ou r grades'?
Chances are that our grades are not
skyrocketing due to these study SCS·
sions. Don' t we aJways swear, u we
walk ·around in an eternal fog for the
nu t day, that lhis is the la.st time we
are going to fall behind? That ne1t1
time wiU be different?
Trying to stay cum:nt with our
cluses is oevcr easy, but eventually
most of us do it because we ~ish to
avoid failing I class. The warning
signs, for eumP,lt, the low grades on

Morality vs. the media: who is really responsible?

By Paul 0 /Perna - - - slandered and bubed. The news ii 50~
7 W e weot ripl uead
blamed for bc:i.n& filled with vio-- ud did ii. ~ ins rel&iaed from
We arc constanlly bombarded lcoceandderogaaOC')'siwatiombut somedliaaaiVC1hatempdqfta•
by organiz.ations, groups and in- is ac,iually a reflection of society. vor.
'
dividuals to censor material from Themediareflecu:tbc: divencideu
I am tD no way advocatui1 the
television, radio and movies. of this country and does not, de- freedom to do wbalever you like.
Shows such u " NYPO ·e lue" spiteatoweringoutcrybyiudetcr• Tberc DNll bc Uystemofliwsto
are lambastc.d forlheirconuover- rcnu, create human nature.
prevent chaoi. Certain maaerials
sial content. Radio programs like
When MadoMa came out with dopromoeo lwe and violeoce. Just
"Imus in the Momi.na" arc criti- hcrlatcltalbum, Eroticaandabook wbatllllleriala arc damqinsmust
cized forcrossiqgthe lineofw te· callc.d Sex, tbc: media was blamed be decided by all people not 1im•
fulness .. The ~vie indu_stry in for _
promoting the material. Hey. ply radical l;l"'RIW poupl, ~ Iigeneral 1 qucsuoned for its lack,. critics I have a revelation fO£ you! - gious 6av,ru ud po1iliciam. To
s
or morals and decency.
Youu uppc,Kdconcem £O£theC0r- blame the ~ for prqmoting
There arc no concrete IIUW~n ruptlve influeace for MidoM a' s iDcOrTCCt behavior ~expect.las
tothescqucstions dcspitepusion• maa.erialmadcwbatprobably wouJd itto preted~corrcctiKlebaviol
ate debate. Many aflUO lbat the,- have 1fGe
ipo,ed a mun. ii Judicn>u&. Thia ii • duty o
media bu a duty and purpote to see pKDomellOCI.
one', puaab and aulboritrfil
instruct the public how lO live
.Think about it. HOW many times wa.
f
teSts, or the nagging feeling of losing
their lives in a pr0pCr manner. bu an iuue rcprdleu of ill COd·
1bc media reflecb human nacontrol of the 1ituatioo, usually are
enough to get people on track and _ Religious figqtc.l, politicians and tent boomtru.sed from oblcuriry ture ud doa DOt craie h. Critica
parcnu groups attempt to pre• to become a freakish focal point? of tbemectiaibouldlook.101.bcm~k into concentrating on their stud.
ro r conduct for '"'lbeLutTemptllion Of Christ"', selves forauwenimtead ofbur·
·
"
·
blame. Stn:cchiq
r While we valiantly try to cau:h up American citiuns.
This complex dilemma aiises Howard"Stem Show". Tab your lite t.utcflll bouadlrfe, U1
· - with our claslcl, work. and ml.I have
lime to occasionally jll.\t hang out, it from a two--faccd, contradictory pick 'r.11 c.ach of thae calerWD- e ~ &old am la • qucaidcolo1Y, U.ve your panmu ever ment devices pined a lqe fol- tiouble acc:madoa lbat can DOI
is the rdatioosh.ips we assume tlw
1old you IAll we respect the indi- lowingbccausecertaini.odividuals t,cthrult Upoll a ,lq:i,eiDldwtion.
will always be there that suffer.
1be reladon&hipa we have with
vidual, the person wbo expresses told us lhat they were damqi.q to ~ ut this 11111.y DCYCt occur u placfamily, ud friends are ones that we
tend not to wo,rry abouL We leftd to
tl~~:v:
~
d
u:-11J
lhinJt that no maUttwbat wedo. our
whc:ncountleuctlwcitcsal'Cstill when our part:nl.l told 111 DOl ~~
family and frieodl will sti.lJ like us.

t.u:,stY

~: =~t

,Volca of Suffolk

::!s

:~~~

:.f =~:;,"flm~ ~
By Jula,.,,.,

Should t~e u~ ..stay Involved In the contllcl-ln ~ ?
s

-~N.Ya.a,Ubcylll6dilur

V. OlllnlaaO-. Dl, Spcdaklidili:w"

. Goy ...... _ _
WlidlldA.Todiao,,Aat.Spu:WaBdio'

R. ~ . . . . . . . , ~ AllilaaDt

Chris Fenner
Junior

.,,

The Suffolk.Journal • Wcdne&day, Octobcr20, 1993

We have orily ourselves ~ bh!me
Bys,,piYnleSnow - - - even 1r we arc

001 treating lhcm·the
way WC should.
Wc havc nosccood lhougbtsaboul
studmll are juat•bqinning to trul y neglecting to call the house llnd LCII
gel into ibe tc~ year. No matte, <1ur worried parents that we·won't be
·how we l'IAYC Med to •~oid lhc endh~mc till late. We just usume lhey
leu readings. and rcpons for our will understand. Or if a friend c&lls
. classes, it becomes painfully clear and we say we will call them back,
thai. ignoring these things will not wcblowlhcmoffinstead. Again.we
mak.ethcm goaway. lnstead,we pay as.sumc they will also underuand.
the price by ltlying up the whole
In our busy swe, we like to think
ni&ht; ltudyina foe mid-1em1s and 1h111 everyone will undenttnd how
reading thiop that we should have busy we are, and everything going
been reading throughout the COUT2 on 1n our lives, eic. However. these
oflhe semester.
Why is it that people put off thmgs
to the •lut minute when lhcy could
hav.c easily been dooe so long ago?

Durlna this ·time of year, many

z1~:a~=~:~~~;

~s~~

boost induced by both rear ana the
numerous cups or caffeine consumed
in the hopes of staying up the whole
night?
Does lhis late nigh1 cramming.
with only David Lcacrman as company, actuall y help ou r grades?
Cbances are that our grades arc not
skyrocketing due to these study sessions. Don' t we always swear. as we
walk around in an eternal fog for the
next day, that this is the last lime we
arc going to r.JI behind? Thal next
time will be different?
Trying to stay current with our
~ori:an::c;t :Y:u':';;e;~~~
avoid failing a class. The warning
signs, for eumP.IC. the low grades on
teSts, or the nagging feeling of losing
control of the situation, usually arc
enough to get people oo track and
back into concentrating on their stud-

-assumptions we would lite to tblnk
people arc makin, lrC selflsh oa·our
pan.oodoubtabootiL Ell8f)'OQeiJ
bwiy, cvca if ;we Would like 10 think
that our lives arc the cruieal and
busieat. In that way when we blow
people off, we have ready-made Cll·
c use.a.
There are warning 1i&Jl5 in our
relationships too. if we c.an spare
eoougb time to .:knowledge them.
Friends who live far away and who
used lO write but oow doa•t bother,
knowing that they will never get a

Morality vs. _ media: who is really responsible?
the

By Paul DIPerne - --

slandered and bashed. The newt is
blamed for beinl filled with vioWe arc constantly bombarded lcncc and derogllory situations bul
by orga.nitations, groups and in- is actually a reflection of society.
di vidual s to censor material from The media reflects the diverse ideas
telev isi on, radio a nd movies. of this country and docs not, deShows such as " NYPD Blue" spiteatoweriogoutcrybyitsdcterare lambasted fortheirco ntrover• rents, create human nature.
sial content . Radio programs like
When Madonna came out with
M
lmus in the Morning" arc criti - bcrlalCStalbum, Eroticaandabook.
cited for crossingtheli ncoftaste- . called Sex, the media was b lamed
fulncss. The mo~ie industry in for promoting the material. Hey,
general is qllestioned for its lack critics I have I revelation for you!
o f morals and decency.
Yoursupposedco~m forthecorTherc
no concrete answers ruptive influence for Madonna's
to these questions despite passion- material made_:wlw probably would
ate debate . Many argue that the · have gone W"Fly iJD()ffil a must
media has a duly and purpose to sec pbcnotQPDOD.
instruct the public how to live
Think about it. How maay times
their lives in a proper manner. bu-an issue regardless of its conReligious figures, politicians and tent boomeranged from obscurity
parents groups attempt to pre- 10 become • freakish. focal point?

,re

Amcric!ciu':eos~ Conduct for
While we valiantly try to catch up
with our classes, work, and still bavc
time to occasionally just hang out it
is the relationships we assume that
will always be there th.al suffer.
The relatiooshipa we have with
family and friends arc ones that we
tend not to worry abouL We tend 10
think that no maner what we do, our
family ud fricodl will still like us.

Or a family member with. bic event c:omina up and cveey.on, kDowiq deep« yoo. your
family oot wantiq: 10 be a bmden. ·
School,~ and haviD& time for
youndf' are all_imporWlt thinas to
concc.nuue OD. 'Ib.towD into that
11\U., however, lhe:re hu to be time
fO{ your friends and ·(amily. Thae
arc the peoplo who have been there
for you, dlroogb' tbc aood and the
bad. While il ii lrUC tha1 they have
been Uftdenl.mdina, ahou1d they really be ~heel too far?

return leUer.

"Thel..astT~~ion <>!' Christ",

This complex dilemma arises
from a two-face.d, contradictory
ideol~gy. l!,ve your parents ever
told you tha1 we respect the indi vidual, the person who expresses
their heritage? I find this just a
little bit difficult hard to believe
when ~dess cthnicites arc still

Howan:fStem Show" . Take your
pick
each or these entertainment devices gained a luge following ~ usecenain individuals
told us that Cfi'ey were damaaina: to
children and the morality of tbe
country . What did we do u kida
whe n our parents told UI not to do

'r.'l

50methin17 We went right ahead

and did it. Bei.na retained from
something gives it a tempting fl• •
vor.
I am in no way advocating the
freedom tO do whatever you like.
There muat be• syatemof li:ws to
prevent chaos. Certain materials
do promote hate and violence. Just
wtw~ala are damagio1must
be decided b y all people not simply rdical parents groups, religious figures and politicians. To
blame the media for prQmotin1
incom:ct behavior and expecting
ittopreacribeconccti ftehavior
is ludicrous. This ii tbo duty of
ooc:'s pm:ou and authority fi1J

urcs.
l
The media reflecu human nature and doea not create It. Critic•
oftbe media 1bould look 10 themselves for atuiwers instead of hurblame. Strctchina
the tuteful boundaries ID
elllCl1ai.nmetlt field are iJ a questionable ac:cuaatioa that can not
be tb ruat upon11inglein11ilUtion.
B ut 1bi1 may never occur u placin1 blameiJ alway, more fun than
propolin1 ·solutiobs

By Julie MIiier
~ould the U.S. stay involv~ ln the .conflict 1'1 Somalia-?

Volcu of Suffolk

.

I


- • ias ...111. . . . . .· • • 1-nw. .

.......

..

•. SISIIJGIIR.81t•tst•..._.·••rrillaJ

KristenLynch
Freshman

.

Or a fatdily member
Dl comina up and CV•
Ill ucept yOll, your
lliq to.be a burden.
k and havina time b
~ lffllMl'Wlt lldna, 10
,. Thrown into lhat
there bu to be time

Ila and

ome that you'll f ind in the departm~
prices ... check' your pulse !
0

Girts' FIMIII MIIIII' ~
Th.es• po~llrfiuhicN fortDday'1 glrt1, It th11e

family. Thelo

who haw.been thcto
,p'dlo ,iood and the
ii true that they have
,diq, ohciiild dloy ,._

pncn. willbepopuiarwilhtodly'tmothlrs.

I IOO fat"I

ionsible?

.

Ve wenl riJbl ahead
1cia1 retained from
vcs il a templina-naway advocati.na the

lsuedam4&io1must
r all'f,eople nof. sim·
ll!'CRlJ Jf'OUPI, reli1 ud

politicians. To
ICdi.1 fOC' -prQmotina
ll.Vior- ud es.pectin&
econecti Aehavior
,-'fhil i, IAO duly of
~ and authority r,1 J

i
, renectt hwnan na1 not c ~ ll. Critici

blame. SU'CICblQ&
bowldaria lb l
1tfteldare ilaqu,cs•
:uudon that can not
1a.a1inalc~tion.
, never occur u placalways more fun than
>
lutions

.,...,...up

.

"' ·

frompl1C1

3499

11117-$191

>whatever you like.
ea 1y1tem oflAws tO
1. Cert.a.in materials
ue ud'viQlepce. Ju.it

abould look to tbcmswen instead ofhur-

-

abrilliantt1bli,

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.

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$Q99_$1999
Compare 11114-$40

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Toes• po~llrfuhlonl for
pnc::n . wiHbepopullfwilh

~~499

$Q99_$1

tompa,e II $14440

...

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fnlm pl1c,

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finl&iropNnll'lll'I'•

carry1hlflmous

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nemewilnlhe
Manhlhpric,.

-

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warm

$16999'

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$1499
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Nil;

.

_ars

~

s ... check your pulse!

_-

Gids' _ _ _
'Thf51po~r fllhlonl fortodr(111irll, 1tthu1
pnm. wil bl popullr widl todl'(1 mothtrs.

..

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t,o,pnll S14-S40

llrilidtabte,

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flmousMnhalspric1.

'159

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99 "

. II

•Wedocaday, Octobcr20, 1993

(

Thes.ffolt-..i • W - ,,Oemborf: 1993

TO M O R l=i'O V V
rtment stores l:)ut for 20% to 60% less.
II
,

1 \



I
~(l ri,

I

I
~law pljuis fall events after
Ohio State drops plan for gay housing •
l'!!Storin& voting and funding rights COL.UMBUS , Ohio he was wilhdnt.wina the pro- university will addrcu lhC

11

ByNldMlaWWllbor'oe
JOUaNAL

1'

°""""""'"

................

udV. -Glala,m

'-

I',

On October 5, 1993, the
Pre-law Association e:r.er~
cised lhcir newly ~attained
vo1inJ riJhtl and elected
their new ucculive board in
their second inccling of the
adcmic year.
The elections followed
thusly: President Windy
Rosebush·, Vice President
Mike Lavin. Secretary and
Council of Presidcnu (COP)
Rcpre1enta1ive
Ann•
Mqamte MonUouls, Trtasurer Dan MIWC, and COP
Rcpresentalive 12 Nichole
Whitchome.
Alon& wilh their voting
• righu; the Pre-'t'.aw Auocia. Lion a1Jo got back their funding from COP which they
· tos1 last . year, according IO
Bruce lmbucuan, treasurer
of COP, because' ..they ex•
cccd the number of allowed
absences lhat are allowed in
the COP Comtiwtioo."

-·---·
TheM fwll EiRpltn IM!l'I
blenncanylhlltfflOUI
. . . . namewithlhl
llmoLIIMlnhdl price.

SoyoulMsz«II

~--

s159~9

n;lc! ';:;rysc::: ~~"':~
Marriou Copley P!-=c for the
opportunity to talk with tt:pracntatiw:s rrorn mOl'e than

=!~./~~~t,:k•:;

cataloJ• and fin ancial aid
materials.
At thl1 free forum, held

lars ...,,..
. .,never

on

Saturday. Oct. 30 rrom

IO

a.m.

10 3

p.m., partici•

panlS will have the chance
purchase LSAT preparation

ma1crials and law service
publications and soe videoabout the law school
admissions legal education,
and c~rs.
On November 9. the association is plannina a dis•
cus.sion for a DNA testing
mod trial co-sponsored by
Suffolk ' s Hcallh Careers
Club, scheduled to take
place either at the end of lhc
1emcsler or the beginning
of the spring 5;Cmcstcr.
A fall visit from a Stanley
Kaplan representative who
will offer free diagnosdc
1csting for the LSAT is also
being planned by the ~
ciar.lon. Along the same pur•
pose of that evcn1 will be a
November 30 speaker from
the Admissions Deparuncnt
who will speak on what ii
required of those intciuted
in applying to law school.
Such planned topics that
will be disc:uucd wiU in+
elude applicant's arade
point averages. whal c
pre-law Sll>dcou should be
a IDI , a n
ow
scores rdalc to the college
one applies 10.
President Rosebush is
CUJR;Otly working wilh the
Sociology Department to
put together a student fer
rum on sexism, raci•"! and
tapes

PRE-LAW
continued on page 13

(CPS)-- A plan to open Ohio
Stale University' s family•
housinJ COfflpleii. to gay and
lesbian couples wu quietly
shelved after President E.
Gordon Gee ran in10 heavy
resistance from Board of
Trustees membcn and state
leaislaton.
.
The 396- un it Buckeye
Village cuff'Cfltly ~ open only
10 manied lludetlU and IIU·
dents who are ainJlc parents.
Gee had poposed tlw PY
and lesbian cou plelj who
1iJncd an affidavit of " di>
meilic putn,c,lhip" also be
allowcd ' to live in the com•

~~

posal, indicating t.hat the
Board of Trustees didn 't like
lheidea.
"'That was really the political reasoo it did not JO
through at "this time," laid
Phil Martin, din:doro(Gay,
Lesbian and Bisexual SIU·
denl Sc.ncices.
Martin also noted that Gee
removed a provision from
the original proposal wh.ich
would have allowed unmarried couples to live in the
family-housinJ com plex .
Objections arose that unmarried, hetueosexual couples
would be di sc riminated
against if the new policy were
adopted .
w.tio ,ajd he believes the

Campw -~
officer Kevin
commar)d center In the Donohue bulldlng.

iuue qain B1 a later point.
Twenty other institutions of
higher educttion a lready
have approved plans 10 aJ .
low a•Y and lesbian couples
to live in univcnity housing,
he said.
" IMdcnUy, ii was not the
riJht
time
for
the
univenity...and it (the plan)
got a lot of resis~
from
lawmakers," Martin said. " It
will probably lit for a while,
but it will come back."
Ohio lawmakers also
raised objections about the
plan , wilh one Republican '
leJislalor, Rep. Michael Fox,
introducina a bill lJJ,at wquld
have nullified Gee's plan.

Cdardr:1: buay:7~the

Taking the LSAT is just half the j9b of getting into law school
By Brvct lmbucan

pa1ce:

sreaAL

ro ne KlUUtAL

)fyou wcn!1010,ap 10 any
random student al Suffolk
UniYCtSiry and ask thal pcrlOD wbal be or she plam to
do after they araduaae, the
answer would probably be
auc.odin& law tcbool. What
arc the rcuoos why they
. - the 1ep1
Maybe it's the Jlamorous life
thM LI portrayed on TV and
io llbOYies. Maybe it is the
c:,ppo,tunity 1hat pnw:ticina
law Jivea IO people, auc:b u
makia1 •• huge amount of

prorewoa,

_
_,.,.......,,IOCialido....... "' ........ the leu

fortww.e mpro bono cases.
Whatever the rason m.igJu
be. swdcnlS are not aware
whar.stcpSmustbclaUDjust
to apply and be considered
for admission into a law
JChool.•.Any studenl coasid·
ering attending law school ii
classifiedasapre-lawmajor,
for there is DO Id standard
major a IIUdc:at IIWlt follow
in order to he. c:ocsidered for
adllliuioo.
Nonetheless , students
choose majors they believe
they mu.st ~ntralc on in
order to be considered for
law ICbool. Most academic
fields they cbooK are Politi•
cal Science, and HillOr)'. But

thl1 is unncccuuy; a student applicants to cakecouna that
may conccmme in any6:a- challenge their critical trunkdcmic: rdd ~ or abe ii inter• ing, ~ IIUdenu to
lf"'d .. lllody;.., nu,, ..,,_ read and analne material
de.au majorina io ioloa,, effcctivdy. lf SIDdenu have
Marketina, A:ccountina, doae well ia their majors,
Spanish, Art History, or their cbaooes in being admitClicmhlry cu all apply to ted - better.
Then: are several other
law ,cbool.
One of lbe factors law facton that are required or
tc.bools look for in coasidcr• recommended in bdo,J COG·
inc admiuioos is a &tudem's sidercd for admission, such
srade poiat avenge and the q the Law School AdmisAcademic M... be c:oncen-· sions Test, the LSAT, which
1r1ted on u an underaradu· is conducted four times durate. A law 1<:hool reviews ing lhe academic: year: June,
how many different co1u1es October, Dcc~ber, and,feb..
one took throuJbou1 one} nuuy.
The test is scored on a
ICldemlc yean.
Law schools encouraae ICa1c frQm 120 to 180 and is

divided in10 five sections,

one of which bc.in&

aia

ex-

perimental ulllCORd section.
A writina sample ii also ,e.
quired. Studc:ots are allowed
lhllty-five minute, on each
section, ud thirty minutes
on the writing sample. The
arcutcsudintheexamare
readina comprehension,
lo&ical reuon.ing, and 8118·
lytical rcuooina. To rc,istcr
for this eura, one must obWo the LSAT/LSDAS reJis-tration booklet 'and fill-out
the re1i1tration form . Registration bookleu are located
LAW SCHOOL

continued oo page 13

(

ThoSuffi>lk·Jowml •Wednetday,Oculber 0. 1993

12

The Suffolk Journal .Wednesday October 20 1993 .• .

_ ore pointers about
M

1111
Pre-law plam fall events after
restoring voting and funding rights
ByMdMla~
JOURNAL a:»rnmlTT'Ca
and V. Gwdoa Gknn, m
JOUUIAL STAh

On October 5, 1993, the
Pre-law Association cJ:crcised their newly re-attained

on Satun:la)', Oct. 30 rrom
10 a.m. 10 3 p.m., participams will have the chance
purchase I.SAT prcpa,al.ion

materials and law service
publicauons and see videotapes about the law school

ad missions legal education,
votiog riah1s and elected and careers.
thei r new executive board in
On November 9, the Mtheir second meeting of the sociation is planning a disacademic year.
·
cussion for a DNA testi ng
The elections followed mock trial co-sj)OC\SOfCd by
thu sly : Pres ide nt Windy Suffolk's Health Carccr:i
Rosebus h, Vice President C lub, sc heduled lo ta ke
Milr:e Lavin, Secretary and placceither a1 lhccndoflhc
Council of Presidents {COP) semester or the beginnin g
Representative
Ann • or the spring semester.
Margamtc: MonUouiJ, TreaA Fall visit fromaStu.nlcy
surer Dan Masse. and COP Kaplan representative who
Representative #2 Nichols wi ll offer free diagnos ti c
Whi1ebome.
testing for the I.SAT is also
AIOQJ with their voting being planned by lhe assorig.bu, the Pre-i.aw Assocl&• ciation. Along the same purtioc, also &Ol back their fund• pose of that' event will be a
in& from COP which they November 30 speaker from
IOII last ,.UI. according to the AdmiutonS Department
Bruce lmbucuan , treasurer who will speak on what is
of COP, because "they ex- required of those intcrulcd
ceed the oumber of allowed in applying 10 law school.
absences that are allowed in
Such planned topics that
lhe COP Comtirution."
will be discussed will inThe association, which
has many evenu this semester in lhe works, are plana 10g, an
ow
nual Law School Forum , scores relate 10 the college
he ld every year at the oc,e applies 10.
Marriou CopleyPlaceforthc
President Rosebus h is
oppoctunity 1 l8llr: whh re~
0
rescntatives from more than
put together a s1udcn1 fo.
= ! ~ wA
;=,;:!i;:~a!; nim on 1exism, racism and
catalogs and financial aid
ma~rials.
PRE-LAW
At this free forum. held
continued on page 13

Ohio State drops plan for gay housing
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(CPS)- A plan 10 open Ohio
State Universily 's familyhousing cocnplex lo aay and
lesbian couples was quieUy
s helved af1cr President E.
Gordon Goe nm into heavy
resi.Slance from Board of
Ttus1
ces members and sta1e
legislators.
The 396- un ii Buckeye
ViUage cuncnUy is open only
to married students and Stu•
dcnu who are sinale parents.
Gee had proposed thal gay
and lesbia n coupl es who
signed an affidavit of "domestic partnership" also be
allowed 10 live in the com•
plu .
Just befoce the Fall term
suuted, Gee annouoced that

he was withdrawing !he pn>-

posal. Indicating that the
Board of Trus1ccs didn"t like
the. idea.

'"lllnt was really the political reason it did not go
through at this lime.'' said
Phi l Martin, diroctor or Gay,
Lesbian and Bisei:ual S1uden1 ScNiccs.
Manin also noted thw Gee
removed a provision from
the original proposal wbich
would have allowed unmar•
ried cou ples 10 live in the
ramily•housina compl ex .
Objections arose lhat unmarried, hetereosuual couples
would be di sc rim ina ted
against if the new policy were
adopte~. _
.

univers ity will address the
issue again at a later poinL
Twcn1y other instirutions or
higher educa tion already
have approved plans to allow gay and lesbian couples
10 live in university housing,
he uid.
"EvidenUy, it was not the
right
time
fo r
the
univeni1y ... and it (lhe plan)
got a lot of resistance from
lawmalcen." ' Martin said. ·•1t
will probably sit for a while,
but ii wiU come back."
Ohio lawma ke rs also
raised objections abou1 lhe
plan, with one Republican
legislator, Rep. Michael Fox,
introducing a bill tha1 would
have nullified Gee's p!an.

--

;u;:;!;gt6~;:n:~~I~

~ eomm..d:
Campw pol+ce officer Kevin Colanlno Is busy at work at the
command center In the Donohue bullding.

Toking the LSAT is just half the job of getting into law school
BJ Bruce lmbucan
Sf'llOAL TO THE IOUllNAL

fonunar.e in pro bono cases.
Wbafever the Rlll50fl might

be, s tudents are nol aware
If you wef'C ·10 go up to any what steps must,be taken just
~odom studcnl at Suffolk to apply and be considered
Uni veni1y and ask that per• fo r admission i nto a law
son what he or she plans to school. Any student coosid•
do after they graduate, the ering aucnding law achoo! is
answer would probably be classified as a pre-law major,
attending law school. What for there is no set standard
are th e reasons why 1hey major a ltudeot muat follow
0
choose the legal ixofeuion? in order 1 be considered for
Maybe it's the glamoroul life admission.
No netheless, 1tuden ts
lhal is portrayed on TV and
ia. movies. Maybe it is lhe choose majors lhc:y believe
opportunity that practicing they must c;oncentratc on in
Jaw ,;ves lO people. &ucb as order to be considered for
mating a huge amount of Jaw school. Mos1 ~
..-cy, cbM&ing social idc- fitlds they choose are ~iti•
cilopc:I, « helping the leu cal Science. and History. But
0

this is uoneccuuy; a ltUdent
may conccnlnllC in any academic field he or !he is inter•
ested in ltudying. Thus, sw=dents majoring in Biology,
Marketing,
Acco unti ng,
S panish. Art His1o ry, o r
Chemistry can all apply to
Jaw school.
One of the fac1ors law
scboob look for in consider•
ing admissiocs is a lludenfs
grade point average and the
Academic Major he coocentraied on u an underJradu·
ate. A law school reviews
how many different COUJ1d
one took 1hroughou1 one's
academic ye.an.
Law schools encourage

applicants to lake courses that
challenge their critical thinking, and require si.udenu· •loread and analyze ma teria l
effectivdy. lf studems have
done well in their majon.
their chances in being admit•
ted are better.
There are several other
facton that arc required or
rocommcnded in being coosidered for admission, such
a.s the Law School Adm.is-

div ided into five sections.
one o( which being an ex•
perimental u~red section.
A writing safflfle is also re•
quired. Studen ts are allowed
thiny-five minutes on each
sec1ion, and thirty minute,
on the writing sample. The
areas te&ted in the exam are
readina comprehension,
logical rusoning, and analytical reasoning. To register
• (o,c this cum, one must ob-

:u:n:C:~th;~:!•:~:r~ . : : : : ~::~:~~-~;
ing the academic year: June, the re&isttation fonn. Regis•
October, December, and Feb- U'lllion booldets are located
nuuy.
The lest is scored on a
LAW SCHOOL
scale ffOO) 120 10 UIO and is
cootinued on page. I 3

CJ~':n~~~\age 12
m !he lobby o( the Suffolk
Law School, and a1 the
BaHotti Leamipg Cenier.
The wises! time to take
jjjjs exam is in June or Oc1 0ber prior to thc fall of lhe next
year. For example, 11 student
applying for the fall or I~ .
should take the tcs1 in either
Ju ne or October. Law schools
accept lhe December 1cs1 . but
only a few law schools accept the February exam .
The earlier a student take.~
the exam, lhc beuer for the
student. If the applicant docs
not perfonn to his expecta•
oons, he or she has the ~
uon of re-taking the exam.
S1udies have s hown that
.'iludents perfonn better when
they are familiar with the tCSl
problems. than those that arc
not. There are tons of stud y•
mg aids wilh strotegics und
practice exams, that arc pub-1ishe_ by Law Services,
d
Barron's, 1111d other publishmg and ecb:ational institutes
or coinpanics.
lfa student takes a prepa•
ratioo cowsc, stnu.egics and
1echnique1 will be taught to
the studenL The ltUdcnl will
also have the opportuni1 to
y
ialce ·several exams for prac:•
lice.
Such preparation courses.
con.ducted
by
S111n ley
Kaplan, Princeton Re view,
an pnvale uru vers11.1es, cost
from S400 10 $800.
r · Another s1~ Uuu mus t be
taken is completing every•
thing an application re.quires
the student to fill out and
send to the law school. The
majori1 of law schools rey
quire that the student submit
a personal cs.say. This essay
could be used as the student's
opportunity to demonstrate
his or her writing ability, and
to inform the admissions
commiue.c about any infor•
mation, be it economic,• m•
cial, or social problems. lha1
the applicant has overcome.
or any vol.,unteer work done
. by the IIUdenL '
Recorrimendatio n lcuers
are another essential factor
than can hdp a s1udent gel
accepccd. These are either required or encour9gcd. Most
schools want two or three
recommendations se nt 10
!hem. Tbe Jaw schools use
1
hese evaluations 10 dc1er•
mine if the s tudem has the
caliber and ability to succeed
in law school.
An optional form a stu·
de nt may send is their re•
sume. This win su'mmarize
their education, wort expe·

..

,

The l.SDAS sends chis mforma11on repon when 1hey
receive a post card from the
law sc hool mdicatmg that
they w11m a student 's n::pon
sent to their law school. The

13

· New pre-law assoc.

law school admissions
ucncc. spcc1a l skills, And
honors 1ha1 the student might
have achieved. If a student
has a strong workmg back•
ground. this will only bcnclit
the Sludent.
Ano1hcr 1mponunt ~•ep
that the Mudcnt mw,t take is
reg1s1
cnng 1 the Luw School
0
Oat.a Scnicc (LSDASJ. operated hy Liw SCTVK:CS. An
LSDAS repon , which con•
"sL, of your I.SAT "'·riling
~ample . trJn-.c-npc from undc rgraduu 1c )Cbool, and
I.SAT !,Core will be ~ nt 1
0
each law i.c hool you apply

,#

plans new-fall events

postcards, fo und i n the
LSAT/LSOAS reaistration
boolcleu. !hat lhc LSOAS receive from the law school,
must be supplied by the student in the application.
Once 1he studenc has com•
plc1cd and sent the applica•
lion, lalcen the LSAT, regis•
tered to the L.SOAS, done all
required paperwor1r:, and the
law schools have received
the l.SDAS repon, a student
should receive a leuer from
lhc law school by the spring.
There is a lot of tedious
wo rk in applying 10 law
school, but ir a s1uderl1 reads
the Registration Book.lc1 ,
completes the ·a pplications
early, and takes the LSAT
early, the process of apply•
ing should be made simpler.

LAW SCHOOL
Continued from page 12

participi,lion. which helps,
acco rding to Rosebush, to
other issues of concern and make the club more succeualso with lhc: History Depart- ful. .FulU~ mcctinp will be
posted.
...
ment to a;ct an attorney from
the En"
vironme nutl Protection
Agency frol!) the Attorney
Genera1"i office in Boston.
Planned for Tuesday, Oct.
26, their nexl meeting wiU be
a s horter one because
Eugenia Moore. one of the
Framingham Eight, wiU lecture on her life and experiences that s urrounded the
trial.
The Pre-Law Association .
invi1es Pre-Law majon and
other irncrested students 10 ·

:···················th·; s~«iik u;.i;;;;ity-~ks~;;····················~
We Wou ld Like to Hear From You!
Present to ~ier Before Making Your Purchases
:

Please Circle Mos, AppropriaJe Answers:

: lam:

:

Fr/PT
DAY/EVE
LAW /U NIV
GRAD/ UNOGRAD STlJOeNr I FACULTY I STAFF

Are the bookslore hours sufficient?

: How would you ra1e boolclltore service?

ABOVE AVERA GE

YES

NO

AVERA GE BELOW

AVERAGE

: How have you found the g~eral operation of the bookstore?
:
ABO~ VERAGE
AVERAGE
: How would you rate our store policies?
ABOVE AVERAOE

BELOW AVERAGE

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --,:~__.;
AVERAGE
BELOW AVERAGE

What suggestions would you make for improvement in any of the 4 preceding questions?
USED

Which type$ of books do you buy most? NEW

Do you sell back your books?

NO

YES

If no. why n01? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- ~- - Have you purchased 1exts at other bookstores?

NO

YES

we realiz.c the price or 1exts is high; who do _
you (eel is mos~ rcsponsibile for this?
PUBLISHERS
BOOK WHOLESALERS
BOOKSTORES
OTHER:
Compared 10 other bookstores, how would you nue our prices?
ABOVE AVERAGE _
A vtkAGE

BELOW AVERAGE

ir you pun::hase a T-Pasr. 10 you purchase it at the Bookstore?

YES

Should the Book.store stop selling cigmdles?

YES

NO

NO

Would you like the Bookstore to sell IBM or clone computers as well u Apple'?
'
YES
NO
..,
ALREADY ·OWN ONE
Do you purctwe swdcnt priced software and related computer producU at the Bookstore?
YES
NO

If no, why DOI? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- ; - _
Optional: Name
: Any other suggestions?

Tl,+, survey goodJor 20'1o qjf iui:Jl}ting
Exeept tulboolu./ law ailb I ~ iullU

·
:
ntF,rNli4:<Jcto«r20tJi.Ot!ta/,,f29d,
. .
·:
: ••••••• .• ••••••••••-.ft;·••••••• •.•.• •••••••••••••• . •••••••••••••• •.•••••••••


TheSuffollc JounuJ • W-,,, Oc:10ber 20, 1993

~rted thoughts, SUggestiom and remedies ·on 1he sports world
CASA PRESElf'S 0f PORTU· 1upportio1 the cdtaeation and care
NITYTOLEAR.NLATINDANCES of women livin1 wilh HIV, lesbian
CAMBR1006--Larn the u.ba. • ·puentin1, b~1U11 ud employ•
meriApe. ca.mbia. chH:Mda IDd men1,.
.mare ia the five wed: Lailf Dae.
1'11 Al.rd.. Acuu Projttt, a
~ apcmored by CASA, the oetwOf't of orpoiwiona and lnd°i•
Ceotral America Solidari1y ·Auoc::ia-- vidual1 dedicated to insuring ac•
tioo, Fridly nights rrom 6 - 7:30 p.m. ceu to We, le&al, and affordable
Localed at lhe Cenu-al America reproductive health care, will meet
F.ducalioa fwld/CASA olf10e, 1151 nut Wodoetd.ay, OcL 27. Call 738·
Maudrusetu Ave.., the rec ro, the 9'79 for time and place.
lessons is $12 per aeuion or $50 for
Tbe Oreater Boston NOW office
I========== the whole c:oune. which bqina Otl is located at 971 Commonwealth
AIDS ACTION COMM.ITT'EE 22. For more information calJ 547- Ave. Each meeting date will begin
HOSTS Q&A SPMINAR
3363.
al 7 p.m.
SAY OIEBSB!
k 'aaiorportnit-.eapblJ'I'llc
Beaq,a Y&abool: ii aow fiWN in
timc:I Md dlya cbiac s...,- ,,.,,_
.,.. 9t'..t. Oct. 25 - 19, M the
Stlldeal Actmdca Ceaca-.
1:>uriq tbe week, pbo&os will be
latm diuioa the momi:aa and afterIIOOM from 9 L 'm. 10 5 p.m, For
men iaf"Clffllllioa call ICudeot -=tivities at 57~1320 or the yearbook
office It S73-1326.

-complkd from pre11 rdease

'Jbc AIDS Acticm Committee or
Bos&oaiJapomorinaa(rceCO!lfi•

dcntiaJ aeminar to answer the fman•
cial, leaal, inawuce, and job-re•
1alf.d qucatkw: of Q)CG ud WOfticD
who have lated HIV•po&icive.
Aa,wn n.., +,JrCICD&ed bylhe
commiuee', Fi.a.anc:ial ud Leaal
Senica Slaff, will be bdd toniaJu
from 6 :30.8:30 p.m . 11 the
Commiucc'• otrm. 131 Clarendon
St. Coofidcatiality is aswed.
For fwthc:r information, contact
Mary dark. 437--6200, utauioa
216. Pre repatration u encounam.

BOSTON N.O.W. CHAPTI!R
LATE OCT. MEEJ'JNG DATES
The Greater Bostoa N1liooal
Organization for Women office
ia 1pon.soring many opponunitie1 for involvement at their many
meeting, for the l111er part or
moa!,h or October.
TOIUahl, the Lubiu Erlla
Tu k Porn will meel and ad·
dress fighting discrimination on
the bui1 or sexual orieotatioo,

VARlETY CLUB TO PASS GO

u:ctiveServic:c:s, lnc:.dproc:eeda
from lhb offacial tou.marnc:ot will go
to support lhc variow prosrama or
the variety Club, whic:b aervk:a ill,
di11dvantaaed, a.ad handicapped
childru.
"Any~intereaudinpuuin&their

reaJcs1111e~nglkiU.qainsc.otber
top player, while bdping oul • c:aase
abould contact the Variety Club 11
617- 437-9500,"
uid
Elaine
Bamtc:le, executive direclor or the
club. ..We BIW8lltce a lot or fun and
cxchemeoL ..
• compiled from press release

WORKSHOPS, FESTIVITIES
FOR LATINOS ANO FRIENDS

ANO COLI..ECT $635,880
The Cambridae MulticWhnl Arts
Hundrm of Monopoly pme play- Center'• World's at Risk ·Serics will
ers, Saturday, Oct. 2J, wilJ COOVerJe pacnt B'VOft'• •• to, 90'1, Spa.a.
Upon the Sbcnaoo Botton, the larz· ish for "F«us on the 90'1" from
est Hoed in New England. to buy and ooon 10 p.m. on Sa11:1rday, Oct. 23.
This livdy alloday pthcrina and
sell bcwes, hocda. and more in the
Variety Cub or New Englapd'• 6ru bilinpal forum will_ fQC¥1 oa liauea
AIQ,al IIONOl'OLY C... Tow-- vital to the LMino commWU1y ~
11 cultural visibility, political empowerment, cilucation, immiaration,
heal.lb and hew.in&, For more irlfor-

matioo call 661-6391.

■ 1'lfOUGBTS
,. Continued from pe,ge 16

PICk 1n lhis wcd:'i football pool
80' 1 are goa,e. The Cdtica mlllt proWhat ia the big deal with cduca-- puc to become a roroe cl the 90'1-

,pecialdf--!><doY-

SJQ Joec is oot much bcaer. Tbe
will bear, '1be name's Kruk and llon anyway? lnhait the ript geaca.
E,aybody b -Jaac the same of boctey doea DOt ncod a
whal the bell is it to you tnyway'r' learn 10 dribble and &hoot I buku· Bruins' pair or tics lut wc:c.kcnd aha.tout of WMa to promote iCI rme

)'CIU

How about lhoae New England
l'alrioll?
Folb, lhio&a will be tough ror 1
_ while but do DOI bail OUL Tea.nu like
the Cowboys, Bnvcs, and Philhcs
have 1poiled us with their last 10 first
finilbea in ooe year. This wu as
much luck u it wu sman managcrDCQl.. Give BiU PartcUs time. He will
brio& a Super Bowl to New England.
Until that time, hold oa to I.he pos1•
tive.. At lc:ut everyone 1w one su~

ball and a degree i1 the Jut thin& you api.mt Aaabc:im aad San Jc:&.
will Deed. JUJt ask Larry (SM millioo
over 12 years) John10n ud Chris got by the ddcme. Only one IOal aot
($74 m11hon over 15 years) Wctiba. by both Joa Cue:y Md Joha Blue.
The Cehic:1 should looaen their
It is only October. The offense will
las1 chokchold on the put and call in
come around. Remember April and
a complete overhall . Yea, Pariah May arc what really Dlllta°, not midneeds to stay in the picture to wtor October.
lhc young and inexperienced Acie
Speakina cl Anaheim and San Jose,

U-•p-1
0o1y,_....,

Ev!.
Bui Parish could just u easily do
this
coaching c:apacicy. It i• lime
the C's 10 admic the obviOUL The

ro,

in•

University Dateline

points.
Lou Haitz. The ame conjures up

thouahuol......,_,., lackolld(.

eoalrol, ud
baJJyiaa
,_,,,.thea__ at&iCDde

demwbaollecnocbda~
over a Nocze 0.. plaJa'a ....._ Al

Iona II Holtz winl, the ICbool wtu
I thoug.bc tbey were auppoled to be overlook his malticllde of UL
lites af boc:tey CXJJbliOO tnd QOl a one way to &ive dlil llllD wbal lie
1ub1idy or Diseyla.nd. Then: wen: dc:aetvca will be to beat his cam ialo
more aimicb, llllffcd animals and t h e -

nc

October 20 - 26, 1993

Suffolk University's Calendar of Events
Wedw«!tr I QflA
11:00 • l:OOCount,y Line Dancing
11 :30
Policy & Stnllegic Planning Committee
12:00 • l :30 Bostoo 8111incss And Government Seminar
2:00 • 12:00
Supervising Scudcnt Slall Worbbop
3:30
Men's Soccer vs. Notre Dame Colleae

Sawyer-Cate
Sawyc:, .623
(see daily calendar f o r ~ )

VPCcmamce-......
NouellameCo!qe

D uc8'11 IQl'll
1:00
Alpha Phi Omega Meet.in.a
·1:00 - 2:30 Accounting Assoc:iatioa Meeting
I :00 • 2:30 Leaming Center .\ccounlina Swdy Group
1:00 - 2:30 Humanities Department Meeting
1:00 • 2:30 Be■coo Yearbook Mcctin1
_ l.i99~ :.JO_WS~ General Meeting
I :00 - 2:30 Phi Sigma Sigma
1:00 · 2:30 Ftm:nsics Team Mcctlng
400
1:00 · 2:30 Beta Alpha Psi Aocountina Mcetina
I :00 · 2:30 Council or Presi~u Meccina

......-337
Sawyer 1121
Sawyer 1122

-·-•JOB

•-603

"-.JJIA
~

Sawycrm
Sawycr9'21

t'ndar...1l£U
Last Day To Wi

9:00 • 11 :00
dredl of llUdeoll are already earn•
iag FREE TRIPS ud LOTS OF
CASH widl Amak:a'•· t i Sprillc
Bra.t Compeayl Choose Caocun,
Bahamu, Jamaica, Panam a,
Daytona or Pad.rel CALL 'NOW!
TAKE A BREAK STUDENT
TRAVEL (BOO) )28-SA VE

or (6 17) 424-8222
CRUISE SHIP JOBS!
Siudinu needed! Earn $20@+
monthly.
Summer/holida1s/
fulltime. ~odd tnlvel Caribbean,
Hawaii , Europe,- Mexico. Tou r
Ouidea , OiJt Shop Sales, Deck

Breakaway TOt.lrt Inc. now hir•
Ing campus reps to promote Spring
B_
reak v ~ ~ free ~Pl ~tus
highest com.m1u1oos. Ocstanat1ons
include <;ANCUN, BAHAMAS, JA.
MAICA ,
SOUTH
PADRE,
PANAMA CITY, KEY WEST, AND
DAYTONA. Cati 1-800-214-1647.
Let's 10 Suffolk!!

t --::PRIN=G::-::B-::REAK,::,=-:- m
_ -,·g-h_o_£rom
---i
5=
7
$299 Incl~ Air, H01el. Transfers,
Parties, and More l NASSAU ,
CANCUN, PARADISE ISLAND.
J~,\ICA, SAN JUAN. Organiz.c a
small aroup • Earn ~ lrip pl111
eommiuions !

1·800-GET•SUN•I

Hands, Cuioo Workers, etc. N o t - - --

- - - - -----l

raw Wi out Penalty or ·'F" Grade
Slide Prcsenu,tioo On China

SaW)'el' 52 f

S..lucdly IW
5:30
Law School Reunion 1993
8:30 • 5:30 Phi Delta Phi McDcnnou Conference Room
1:00 •
Women's TeMis vs. Albcttus Magnus

--CopleyPla:e

7-

MQQday IW
Alcohol Awareness Week
Portrait Wed
3:30
Women· • Tennis vs. Lesley CoUcge
5:30 - 7:00 SOM Oraduate School lnformatioo Session
Senior Yearbook

Tuaclly IW
I :00 - 2:30 Accountina Assodauon Meeting
I :00 • 2:30 Swdc.m Government Association Meeting
I :00 - 2:30 Hersc.hd Silverman Poct,y Rcadi.nj
1:00 ~ 2:30, Succc11ful Telephone Techniques Work.shop
1:00 . 2:30 Undc.rgradua1e lnfonnalion Session
"
I :O(). 2:30 Women. Violcocc. And The Legal SyJCem • Eugenia Moore
1:00 • 2:30 Math Department .Meeti ng
I :00 • 2:30 Program Council
1:00 • 2:30 Humanities Ocpanmvn Meetina
I :00 - 2 :30 Geomet,y Meeting
Fenton 438
1:00 - 2:30 Student Government Association Mcc:tina
I :00 - 2:30 University Police Wort Study Mcctiaa
I :00 • 2:30 Pre • Law Associatioa Moctina
1:00 . 2:30 s.u. Hispanic Association Mcetina
1:00 - 2:30 Univcnity Medi• Savic:a Wort Study Oricaiation
5:30. 8:00 Proving or Dispuling Damages in ~ lajwy ':-'

7: 15

MBA Associadoo Mcctiag



10

~

1Jrnilbrt1 Pomo tells of w iJld..

..

S.W,.,1121
Saw,e.-421

MWICC Coofcrmce ltoaa
CMO,

One°'"""'

-,...

St 25111 Flow
Sawyer 11121

-·-

...... 331A
...... 337

S..,..421
-,...427

-,...121
S..,.921

s..,..m

-

211

ar._~-,...--

Univeraity .llladJDl is Suffolk Univmity's ~ calc:ndar. Pot infonnadoo oa •-/ ICllcdwed eveac. aqy .day ol tho . . . _ . ~ o, to lill • ewal
tJw YoU are plaanina call S7]-I082. A comprebc:nsive ra:onl of •lat b ·~
.,._-, ~ _ ror ,...._, ,-blidry « ,-..I ........

ThcSuffoUcJounw •W-y,October20, 1993

60rted thoughts, suggestiom
l(!Gll7S

and remedies on the sports world

p,d: 1 thi s week's rootball pool
n
What is lhc big deal with cctuca-

iriucd .rroffl ea,ge 16
bear, "The name's Kruk and

bell is it to you anywayr
about those New ~ngland

thing• will be 100gb

15

for a

:·oo not bail out. Teams like

boy1, Braves, and Phflhc~
~eel us with their las t to lint
in one year, This was as
:k 85 it was sman managc,c Bill Parcells time. He will
11per Bowl 1 New England.
0
l-time, hold on to the posicast everyone has one sure

80'1 are ,one. The Celtics IDU&l prepare to become .• roroe ol d!e 90'1.
uon anyway1 Inherit the tight geacs,
Everybody &I ,quaw.lriog about the
learn 10 dribble and shoot a basket- Bruin,' pair of lies tut weekend
ball and a degree is lhc last thing you aglinlt Anaheim and San Jose.
will nttd Just ask Larry (S84 million
Lighten up people\ Only two goals
over 12 years) Jo hnson and Chris got by the dcfCme. Only one aoai aot
(S74 m1lhon over 1 years) Webber. by both Jon Cacy and Jolin Blue.
5
The Cclucs should loosen thei r
It is only October. The offense will
la~\ chokc hold cm the pas1 and call in come around. Remember April and
u complete ovcrhall . Yes, Parish May are whal really maucr, not midnt!cds to stay in the piclurc to tulor Octobcr."
1hc young and intlpericnccd Ac ie
Speaking of Anaheim and Sao Jose,
Earl.
I thought they were supposed lO be
But Parish could just as easily do s.ites of hockey cxpansioo and
a
this 1n a coac hing capacity. II is time subsidy or Discyland. There were
for the C' s to adm it the obvious. The more gimicU, stuffed animals and

not

special cffecu than hockey.
Sao Jose ii nol much ~
The
aaaac- of hockey does
o~ •
,hark out of water to-promote its fine
points.
·
Lou Hoitt. The name conjures up
tboi.ights of dilhoncsty, lack of self.
control, and a bullyioa attitude 10
fierce. that the new
Inmhbcd Qomc tc11s •of ooc iocidcot where be cracked· • cli~bollrd
over a Notre Dame player's bead. Al
long as Holtz wioa, the- achool will
oVcrlook his multirude of aiD!. The
one way to give tbil man whal be
clescNc, will be to beat his team into
the ground.

not

Men~s ~ Country team competes ·
in Babson Invitational

book.'~

breakaway speed or billclimbing ltreQglh ovt:I' • 5mile nm," wd Walah.
Suffolk finiabcd 14th out
of 17 ~
- toppling both
Rivicr ColJese ud Eutem
Nazarene. wbicb had bocb

BJCllrilOlooo
JOlmfAI. ST'Al'P

The ~ ·s Croa Country
team competed io. the Bablcm

1iversity Dateline

CoUqe

~lk University's Calendar of Events

lnviatim.l on Oct.

~-r:=-~711·= ~~~:"~~::

October 20 - 26, 1993

Ouard Academy won the
Babson Invhadonal, followal
by MIT, Tufts, Babso·o.,
UMasa Lowell, Connecticut
CoUegc, Emory University
(Atlanta),
Stonebil.l ,

~~aod8ryarrtC4·
ou.s meet at Oodoa College 1
eams lb.at bad peviously
MJT numen Jcue Dadey,
week caticr.
beatal m , and that's • good (26:08) and David Moyle
Aocordioa to Coach Joe im~emeoy' said Walsh. (26:26) fiDiabcd finl and sec:,
Walsh, the: 5-mile Bab100
Lyoch actiallly led the race ood, followed by C~ilo
coune was "hilly, cballealg- after the one and WCl>milc Percin. (26:36) of Tufts.
ioa: 8l)d very wet." The top • marks, but faltered in the
Once again. Suffolk dido't
Suffolk fini1her wu Tom fourth mile, before falling to fidd a wcmcn's am. Walsh •
Lynch, wbo bad milled the 12tbaadfinisbingwith a timc . continues to comb the camGordon meet ·dfl'c to an iU- of 27:18
pis in ,emcb of women ru~
ncss. Walsh uid that L;nci,.
Suffolk'~ Tom O ' Hare DCCI. ~ if there's anyooo
·II.ill Wasn't in top ibape, but (36:28) finnbed 105th and iolerc$1Cd in nuuling crou ·
manag~ .,,.. finish io. 12th TunMurny(36:31)!Uriabt country, ·.contact Coach ·
to
place out or t 14 llll1DCl"L · behind him, finishina 106th. ·wals.b io. the Ajh)mc. Office.
· Walsh 'emphasized t!!•t Mikef>uru (39:.53)udScou
1:be ·cross cou'ntly lea\ll
Lynch's ltrel)&th is. ruonlng ~ (39•~~ also ran 10- CC!,mpetc1 at Stonebi~ this
on a flat~ cou.rK. How- gethcr, fimsbing· I lOtb aod Sunday,
ever, "He doesn ' t have the 111th.
(lOC

~
- I :00 Country Linc Dancing
Policy & Slra!cgic Planning Commiu«
• 1:30 Boston Business And Government Seminar
· 12:00
Supervising Student SIJlff Workshop
Men's Soccer vs.. Notre Dame College

SawyaCefc
Sawyer 623
(see daily calendar for location)
VP Conference Room .
Notre Dame College

du....lllal
AJpha Phi Omega Mttting
2:30 Accounting Associntion Meeti ng
2:30 Leaming Center Accounting Study Group
2:30 Humanities Dcparunc..'lt Meeting
2:30 Beacon Yearbook Meeting
~:JO. WSU! G ~ Mt.eting
2:30 Phi Sigma Sigma
2:30 Fotensics Team Mt.eting

Fenton 337
Sawyer 1128
Sawyer 1122
Fenton4308
Fentoo430A

Fcntoo 603
Fenton 338A
Ridgeway

2:30 Beta Alpha Psi Accounting Mt.eting
2:30 Council Of Presidents Meeting

No favorites in ·the NFL this

Sawyc:r927
Sawycr921

j'\

JW
Day To Withdraw Without Penalty of "P' Grade
11:00
Slide Presentation On China

ast

Sawycr52 1

iu..=

, __

Law School Reunion 1993
S:JO Phi Delta Phi McDcnnou Confere nce Room
Women' s Tennis vs.. Albcnus Magnus.

Boston Marriott, Copley Place
Albc:rtus Ma.gnus

tL..lllal

kohol Awareness Weck
~or Yearbook Portrait Weck
Women's Tennis vs. Lesley College
7:00 SOM Gntdua1c School lnfonnation Session

CMD, One ~

ix...lllll6

2:30 Ac.count.in& Associauon Meeung
2:30 Student Govcmmen't Associ~tion Mccting
2:30· Herschel Silvennan Pocuy Reading
2:30 Successful Telephone Techniques Workshop
2·30 Undergraduaie lnfonnation Session
2;30 Wo,;.cn. Violence, And The Legal System · Eugenia Moore
2:30 M81.h Department Meeting
~ Program Con.ncil
2:30 Humanities Dcpanment Meeting
2:30 Geometry Meeting
Fenton 438
2:30 Student Government As.sociali~n Meeting
2:30 Univcr.iily Police Work Study Meeting
2:30 Pre - Law Association Mcctina
2:30 S.u. Hispanic Auociation M«ling
.
.
2 :30 University Media Services Wo~ Study ~
8:;00 Provina or Disputing °?'"1agcs m PclSOD&I lnJWY Cases
MBA Ass01;io.tion Mceung

Jty Dl&dJm: is Suffolli: University·, nw1ci: calendar.

Fof' inf'~

Lesley College
DStrm 25th Aoor

Sawy'U 1121·
Sawya421
Muocc Conference Room

~
Sawya80I
CMD, Ooc Beacon St 25th floor

Sawyer 1021
Fcntoa 338A
Fenton 337
faw>o430B
Sawyer42J
Sawyer-427
Sawyer82I
S.W,.,921
S.W,.,929

Clradualo ~ae

Domhuo218
Floor

s...,.......,

on ID)' I C ~ event, any day of the academic yc1r; or to list an e'ICIII
re planning call 573-8082. A comprchcns1vc record of ~bat u liippcnina, wbca aod where - for plannina:, publicity « pn,cra1 iaformaio&

In the J970s, it was the
Piusburgh Steelers. In the
1980s, the Sao FrancllCo
49ers dominated the NFt:..
Each team won four Super
Bowls in• <lc,;adc, a ranarlcable feat. ·
Since San Fnmciaco's last
champioo.sb.ip seasoo., there
have bcea three different
Supel' Bowl winoert. Look·
f~ !hat tn::nd to cootiooc this
year.
· ' This year, unlike pall
years, thtn: is ' oo clear-cut
favorite to .10 aJi tbe way.
Tbc pre-scuoo eoit1eo.1us
was the defcmiDc ebll6pion
o.Jlu Cowboys. Dallas
• IWlcd off tbe ICIIOII witla
-two coueciative louc1,
s:ipedEia..ia.-Smiili,aadi.
lODC umlcf-.:d mcc. 1h11.
ic ii • DIOMI fai::t•dlll nipca:ing a danpical ii a aa::f&
toagber lat t.baa wi.uing
that firlc title.
.
s.a Fnacilco alto ._ a
IUOIII 1e1111. aace ...... al .
aarelybadaella111110,c,•
t.. u the NPC <llllDpiaa,-

year ·Assorted profOll

The so--called "expert" prog- for I.he season with a ru~
oosticators •will be picking turcd Achilles tendon.
either Dallas or San Fran•
Buffalo docso'1 seem to
cisco.
be fazed tiy three coosecuI, on the other band, like.to live Super Bowl losses ud
take a look at the ~odetdogs. may seiu the mOmcat and
The New York Giants baye '.Nin the whole t.lµog while
swtcd off on fire and ·may the same t.cam intill intact..
su.rpri.se some pc.opJe .io the Pittsburgh ' • defsnse applpiyoffs. New Orleans fi. pearsto besolid, andifBany
naVy has an cxperici;i,ced Foster can ruo like he did
quarterback in Wade Wilson last year, · the Sieelcn may
that cao.·lead tbcp) to the first return to the Super Bowl for
playoff victory in their exist- the fint time since 1980.
cncc. Green Bay is capable ·
~ 1entimental favorite
of doioa some damap.
has to be Kansas. City, led
Speakina of Iona ~bot,, by Joe Montana. So·rar, the
theAFCbalbqiffullor~ Chief• uc undefeated with
fotibc s-t 10 years. It b a l l ~ • a t the reigns.
been' • decade since an >EC. Shoutd.Joe stay heal.thy, be
&cmn 1 - ~ the SuperBowl baa the ability to take any
(tbc Raiddri did it io 1984>: team deep into the playoffs,
And every~ for the-pat except perhaps, the Patri•
10 )'Qf'I, this writer, • fool ot,.
for tbe hopclcu imdc:rdop,
Myfinal prcdiction: MooIm lllrDCd off the ldm5'(lD taoa will t:oJincer ooe or
lftstbe Sape:r Bowl ad aooc. bi1 cltuic drives late in the
IO bed bolb a little bit diqp- fourth qlWta lo defeat bi1
pointed and• little bit lipter former team , the 49ers.
ia the wallet.
Remember, tbi, is ,,., preBat lhll ~ ii diffeffllt diction from my own fan :"
for ,oac ftlll00 (mad you, tasy world.
he bem ll1illl tbi• for a
A ie.alislic , predictioo :
dei:ade). Miami ~looked Both. mysdf ud the APC
,.-..iNOdyr<lp,eO,. will-.0011--,tthe

---~--~

·sports reOe:wm1
ByPaulDIPa9a

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

cbt

~ ·:e:~!:n; ::;ota;
:

I clean out I.he spotU attic or
the mind:
c:q.be o,;>-~ ~ t
regudio.g Michael ·Jordan's
,_;1"'tiool 10 the
of
butdbail.HewasanadraaaliDC abot to the NBA and
ira,,ably the
lddctt we have ever sceo.
But I can DOl help feelina •
ICOIC o/ ,def. Aftcnll., iftbe
Cbicaao 811.ll1 had WOD I
fourth con.secv.dvc NBA
champioosbip, there would
hive beeo eodleu CfDJWi-

:n-crc

pme

moot_.,....

=:or~=·~.!;
man -oatinalib crcmDpuff; •
a. Gecqe complete mesa. I will• miss

triple_my 11
the comp,

°!~le they,
._other ~ •
Ray '3."I
foroeio.ttac
ycan..-11 ,J
· Old< ,ridi I
get a moll

limntoOar i
Bourque.

One •:
Kruk, Le:
Dant:o .O•

=

preM: ■ ta

~

.....
rict, it is t
between tJ

Y " " ~ ... - cnlSem:i
"
t1wia,,.....:l6c:llompl· - ..
·oaaip&. The world's ..-~ win? It iJ

... ........,,......,.,llill._

wort left 10 do. Sec )'OIi IQDII.
,Mpc.-,.-111oyca
Mikel
- - - - - - - _ l u.llnlSap,r-1 mdofSupe,BowlXXVW.
lwowd.JICVel'cal.1$2.2'

,

~OD

have to ioc
di.idBloc
Due to eveoll beyond this terms of ~
n:ponc,'s eoatrol, L hope ~ meitt. U I
bring you • .-onby rcplacc-- nm hlU' m
JOuaHAL STAR' '

iulad or

rncSuffolkJoumal •Wcdnctday,October20.1993

IS

11ggestiom and.remedies on the sports world
I week's fQOtball pool.

the big deal. with educa.
~? Inherit the right genes,
1bble and ahoot a buket-

~:::;s~~~~=

~} Johnson and Chris
n over 15 yC111) Wd>bcr.
llics should loosen their
old on the past and call in
e overhall. Yea, Parish
ayin thepicturctotutor
and inu~rienccd Acie
~ could just as easily do
h

ttehing capecity. II is time
to admit (he obvious. The

80'1 ~ JODC. The Celdct must pre- spocial dfocu than bowy.
San Joee is ooc. much better. The
~ t o ~ a force ol the 90'a..
Everybody is aquawkiag abiou1 the game of hockey does not ftccd a
Bruins' pair ,of tica last weekend sharlr: out of Wala to promote its f111C
points.
against Anaheim and San Jose.
Lou H.oltz. 1bc nanie conjurea up
Lightcu up people! Only two pis
thoughts of dishobclly, lack of tdf&ot by the ~feoac. ~Y ooc goal got
cootrol, and a bullying attitude ao
by both Joo Casey and John Blue.
It is ooly October. The offense will fien:e, tbal: the new book..~
come around. Remember ' April and Inmi&bo1 QQmc tells of ooc inciMay are what really matter, not mid- dent where bc~cracbd clip-board
over a Notre Deme playa'a held. As
Octobcr.
Speaking of A11abcim and San Jose., long as Hol11 wffll, tbc school will
I thought lhey were supposed to be overlook. his multitude or sins. The
sitet of hockey expansion and not a one way to give thia man what be
subsidy of Diseyland. There were deserves will be to beat his team into
more gimiclcs, stuffed animals and the ground.

a



October 20 - 26, 1993

Events
Sawyer Cafe
Sawyer 623
(sec daily calendar for locatioo)
VP ConfCl'CDOC Room
Notre Dame Colle&"C

mittec
lt Seminar
Woruhop
1llcge

Fentoo 337
Sawyei: 1128
Sawyer 1122

ly Group

Fcnton4JOB
Penton430A

fcr\ton 600
Fenton 338A
Rutgeway
Sawycr927
Sawyer 921

Meii•s

· ~ country~ competes
c
·

in Babson Invitational ·

:~:~•!...?~:d:~ !i'l:
The Men's Crou Country
team competed in the Babtoo
College lnvitalioml CG Oct
9. The1t:1111tumedina1tron1
~provemcnt over its pri:vi.ous meet • Oodoa College

.... _...
mile run," said Walab.
Suffolk: finished 14th out
of 17 teams, toppling both

~IIC,::X:~ : : College, Emory Ullivenlty
:

dcfeau:d Suffolk earlier in the

year. "We stepped over two
teams that bad previously
beatea us. and that:1 a good
cne week earlier.
Accordins to Coach Joe improvement," said Walsh.
Lynch actually led the race
Walsh, the 5-mile Babson
ooi.ine WU .. billy, challcea- afta the one and tbfte..mile
UII and Vt:s)' wc:c.... Tbc IOp marks, ~ut f~ltcred i~ the
Suffolk finisher wu Tom fowth mile. before falling to
Lynch, wbo bad miued "-l 12th and finishi:o3 with a time ·
, ...
G<wdoo meet due to. aa . ill- of 27:18 ,
Suffolk s Tom O Hare
nou. Wlkh uid .... Lynch
still waia!t 'in top shape, but (36:28) fmiah'ed I05th ·ua .
36
M~y < :31 ~was right
... manaiecf,...o finiab in 11th
t
place Old of 114 runners.
~ ~ · fioishi.Dg l06tb.
Milr:e Duran (39-..5 3) and Scott
Walab empb11iz.ed .lhlt
Lyodl'1 streq&th is running Dunn (39:~•~ also i:ao toonaflllt~COllrJC. How- ~ :.' firusb1ng I 10th and
ever, "He doesn't ~ve the

~

Sawycr52 1

Boston .Marrion. Copley Place
reoce Room

igous

The: so-called "expert" prognosticators will be picking
either Dallas or Sao FranIn the 1970s; it was the cisco.
Piusburgh SlcClcn. ln the
I, on the Ol.hcr hand, like to
19801, the Sa,i Franc isco take a look at the underdogs.
49crs doniinatcd the NFL. The New York Giants have
Each team won fOW' Super ,started., off oo fire and may

=~!~
decade,•~- = s.~cw~f~ ~
Since San Franci1eo'1 last
championship acuon, there

.,

Lesley College
CMD, .Ooe 8cacoo Stmct 25th.Floor

n Session

Meeting

Sawyer 1128' ·
Sawyer421
Munce Confereiice-ROOOI
I
Sawyer 8()8CMD, One Beacon St 25th Aoor
Sawyer 1021
Fenton 331A
Fenton 337
Fenton4308
,

,g
Workshop

..

"System - Eugenia Moon:
I

S.W,0,421
S.W,0,427

Meeting
,ting

I
)tud)' Oriegt.tioo

PmooallnjwyCasos

Sawye.-821
S.W,0,921
S.W,0,929

l>oouuoll8
GnldualeloongeS.wyor...,_

~ CllC:Ddar. For infonnadoo CG lily tc.bcoolcd event, any day or the academic~ or to list• C\'eOt
ra:ord of
is hlppenina, ytbcn and ,where - f« plamiliig, puhlil;ity oi general inf'011111da,

UIYC

':hat

~:=.

and B:::~:·
lcge .
MIT rumen Jcue Darley
(26:08) and David Moyle
(26:26) fllliabcd fint -'i°-.:ond , followed ,,, Camilo
PcrciJ11 ('26:36) of Tufta.
Once again, Suffolk ma•1
field a women's team. Walsh
COPWluea to c6mb the cam~ in search of women n:lnnen. So if there'• io
intcruted in ruooiog
country, contact Co= •
Walsb'io the ~
•Off'1ee.
1:he cross country team
compete• at Stooehill tbia
Sunday.
- ·

:one ·

~o favorites in the NFL. his year ~rted profountl.
t
.
j'\
sports reflections
ByCbrilOlloa

,f "F" Grade

The United States Cout
Ouard Academy woo the
Babson Invitational, foUowed
by MIT, Tufts, Babson,
UMw Lowell, Coonecticut

nally bas an cxpcri'enced
quanabac.k in Wade Wilson

=: !:~!•::i~:~
;.!":e::::.:

cncc.. Gr~:i Bay i• capable
::vs:ri·te
year.
ofdoina some.damage.
bas lo .be Kansas Ci\y, led
·•· _
This year, unlike palt
Speakiag o( lo~g shots, by Joe Montana. So far, the
ycan, .lherc is no clear-Qli. • lhcAFChaabeenfullofihem Chiefs are undefeated • ith.
favorite to go all the way. f« the put 10 ycan. It bu Montana a the reigns.
Tbi pre--aeuoo Cf~-:e·n,us t:u:a a decade since' aa MC . Should JOC ally healthy he
was the dcleadfaa ebampoo &camhllwonthcSuperBowl Ku the ability to tab ~y
DallaJ Cowboys. Dallas (the Raiden did it'io 1984). team deep into lbe"'Pia,off
aurtcd off the teUOII widl
And,e-ery .ycarforthc-pui except perbapa, the PaU::
~~•~~ 10 )'121'1, thia wriicr, a fool ots.
·
•-&.alllUU-.......- . - - for tbc bqpclca Ulldctdop,·
Myfl.oalprcdietion:Moogone WldeCClltd aiDcc. Bat Im: tamed df the tdevilioa taDa will engiucer ooe of
ii is a lcnowDfact• n,pcll- aftertboSaperBowtlDdscmc hi• clauic: drives late in tbe
q: • dtlmpiom _il. a mucb
bed bolb iliale bit·diup, fowtb quan.cr 10 dtfcat his
tau.sher tuk tlaaa wiuiq ~ and a littlie.bit lipter former team, the 49 era.
dall. fint tide.
m the wallet.
.
Remember, lhis is my
San Fralciaco a1,o Ml a
But dlis yeat is diffen:at diction &om In)' own
aroa, tam. om:c . . . .f« GDC «.OD (aiad you, • tasy world.
aardybaldie...._lDI"• I've been UJUi1 du.a f• a
A realistic prediction:
fll' u rltD NFC
Miami toote·d Both myadf and the AFC
dlip Game. .._. dlay ma ..... ad rmdy to JiYCO.. will come out losen at the

~~-/!~~\I~!..



r.:

pin

a-......
tome-•- .~).
.,

lu llnl Saps S-1 md of Supo, Bowl

fo,lalltyw•~- - - - - - - - -

::i:

-

millioa chump chan&e, bul I
have to.look at arbitntor Ri• ~
chard Bloch' s decision in the
terms or my area of employment. If aomconc with oot
~WIii half my ability °"CJY»

Pimburgb's defense ap- .: : , : . : . ; ; ~ •
:::otcazdin~or~ .
0
I clean oui lhe sports attic of triple my salary,J would drop
lasl year, the Sieclen may the mind.
· ·
tbe compact disc on them

'!:;;,_!;fl= ;:;;-:"o,y"";':U""'0::. ""'mu, tho Supe, BowUw
th

::~ ';;;
1
for
trend to continue this

~

for the season with a ruptun:d Achilles 1end6n.
Buffalo,. docsn ' t acem 10
BJ PIIIII Dlhra
be fucd by three conseeuJOWHAl. STAfP
tive Super Bowl IOS5CS and
may seize the moment and
Due to events beyond this
win 1.he whole ~g while n:porta's c.ootrol, I hope to
the wne team is atill intact. bring you a ~ y ff:place-

icxvm.

=.=.:.,: ~=?: :: :;. w=
game
Bourque

...

l~ g

the.

. contribldions"io the
or
,RA~
has been a
~Hewuaoadrcna-. , forcem-theNHLgoingool4
line shot to the ~A anil •. ~ ~ . Marty, McSodey, a
~ } y lhc moll complete rockWllh~andfcet,ean
~ we. ~5.evcr accn'. ~ a mulu-ycar, mulri-mil'3ul~bclpfecliog1 bornlollarcontnlcl, soabould
~ofrctief. Afterall.ifthe Bourque. .
.
Chicago Bu.Ila had won a
One 11de bout, John
fourth _ co~ecutive NBA Kruk, Len Dykstra , and
championship, then would
have been endleu ~ ~ to tbc IJ'CIC 0Ci:bic dy~oldlelNO a:llwoukl
~-~ He Gcorp Fareman eebJI& a. cradnpuff; a
ccbpletc mcu. I trill• aria
~ ~ but raDCIUCt.
Ibis ~ pmull: 16 claDpi·
Olllmpa. 1bc wodd'1 pail•
ca bubtball playa' Slilf Ills
~ left todo. ~ )'OU DIil.

Darren Daultoo. The otber
prc1eut1 John Olerud,
Roberto Alomar, and Dave
Slewart. Whacvc:r way you
~ ~ ·.the~- Wodd ~
ncs, rt IS dc:fiai~ly a bMtlc
betwaea the United Statca
Mlrinm ~ the, Bri':W' ~
~~Which side will
~? It 11 ..Ce to uy th.at
imtead
1'- familiar cli!
c.be, "'Bond. lames Bood,"

Miu!
- .
lw(>\lld.-..call$2.2S

THOUGHTS

"!

/:ootiauodoa· - 1 s

1993

15

es on the sports world
~

IDUlt•pre,-

:e ol lhe 91J't.

tkiac about the
lu t weekend

San,....

Onlytwopl1
~Y one p l got
id John Blue.
'he offense will
1ber April and
wtcr,notmi~-

n and San Jose,
:upposed to be
$ion and DOI a
I. Tbcrc were
J animals and

special dTcctt than hockey,
San Joee ii DOC much beaer. The
s ame of hockey dotl ooc. need a
sJwt O!Jl of Wl1cr lO promote its fine

·'fheS

point,.
Lou Holl%. The oamc conjures up
thou1h11 of diabonc:aty, lack of Klfcoottol , and a bullying attitude IO
fierce; that lhc new
ij,m...lllG
T1rni1ba1 Pama- tdll of ooc iiicidcnt when:: he cracked a clip-board
over a Notre o.me player's bead. Aa
long u Hoitt winl, the achool will
overlook hit muJtitudc of sins. 'f'he,
one way to Jive thiJ man what he
deserve, will be to beat his team into
lhe ........

boot;

Octob& 20 - 26, 1993

Sawyer Cafe
Sawyer 623
(ICC

daily calcudar for Locltion)
VP Conference Room
Notre Dame College

Feoton 337
Sawyer 1128
Sawyer 1122
Fcoton<4308

Fen~•....... ..,

Fcntoo33&A

Men's - ~ Counufteam ~mpetes
~
in Damon Invitational
........_.,._

a,O..«-

Volumo 52,

Tbc Mca's Crou Counuy
teaa1 ClOlllpcud io the Blbscxa
CoUqc llllvitatioall OD Oct.
9. Tbett:m1IXllllcdioastiong
improvaneDt over its JRViOUl meet al Oodon C.ollege
one wed. earlier.
Accordin& to Coach Joe ·
Walsh, the 5- mile Babson
course was "hilly, challaJgina and vt:sy wet... The cop
Surfolk fini1ber wu Tom
Lynch. wbo bad missed the
Gordon ~ due 10 an illneu. Walsh said~ Lynch
lliU wuo) in top lhape. but
managed 10 fini1b in "I.2th

Nazarcoe. which bid both
dcfeatcdSu.troD::earticriatbc
year. "We ~ ewer two
teama that had · previously
beaten us. and that's a good
improvement... sajd Wallb.
Lynch actually led the nee
after the one ancl-three-mile
marks, but faltered in the
fourth mile:, before falling to
12th and finishing \10th a time
of 27:18
Suffolk. 11 Tom O'Hare
(36;28) ft.ni sbed IO.Sib .and
Tim Murray (36;.)l) wit righl

~ . : ~ ~ml~:.=.·bat
Lynch' s llrCllgth is running
oa a n.t rc.d cwne. However-, "He doesn't have the

Du~n ('.19:54) also ran 10g ~. finishing I 10th IOd
11 lib.

~~•r:5~~·=
;

( Atlanta),

Nurrmer B

"Dead Day" t

breakaway speed or hillThe United Stales Coast
climbing lhal&th over a 5- Ouard Academy won the
mile nm.,'" said Wabb.
Babloo lnvitatiooal, foUowcd
Suffolk finiaticd I-4th out by MIT, Tufts, Babson.
of 17 teams, toppJing both UMw Lowell, Connccticut
Rivicr Collcsc and Eastern Colleae, Emory UDivenity

pen;

. , Robert IUc:d

""'
iaaj

........ cx»naa1n<a

Creating an lwattnCII of llcobol
hll alwa)'I been a problem ~
coUeae ltUdeotl. HoweYCr, Suffolk
hopes to leucn thal problem with ill
fll'lt evcr-,Alcohol Awarmcu week.

Stonebill,

Merrimack. and Bryana Collqe .
Mrr NDDC:n Jesse Dadey
(26:08) a.nd David Moyle
(26:26) fuusbed lint m,d ICC·
ond, followed by Camilo
Pereira (26:36) of Tufts.
Once again, Suffolk didn' t
field a women's team. Wllah
continoea to comb the campus in aearc:h of women ruo-ncn. So if there'• anyone
interested in runnin8 crou ·
cou'nlry, contact' · Coach
Walsh ia the Atbletic Off,cc.
The cro11 country team
compete• at Stoncbill this
Sunday,
·

Tbe---

,---=

~
bai
}.

pm

day and will ra untildm ·pat - Friday.
or Spec~ Prognms, first cmne
up with the ~ot; ; ~ D a y • ~

l'!'

RJdacw,y

No favorites in the ~ this year ~rted,profound

Sawyerffl
Sawyer 9'21

ByCbrilOlloa

,:tie so-cal.led ..expert" prog- for the season with a rupn~ticaton will be picking
e~
ther Dallas oc....§.d Fran-

Sawyer 521

In the 1970s, it was the CI SCO.
In the
I, on the other hand, like 1o
1980s, tbe San Francisco take a look at the underdog•.
49en dominaled the NfL. The New Yorlc Giants have
Each team won four Super started off on fire and may
Bowls in a decade. a remark'- surprise some people in thb
able CeaL
playoffs. New Orleans IiSince San Fmici100's last nally has an experienced
championship season, there quarterback in Wade Wilson
have been three different that can lead them to the fl.f1l
Super Bowl ~
- Look ' playoff victory in tbcu;_ exist•
for ~ trtnd to continue this cnce. Green Bay it -apable
yea r.
ofdoioasomedamage.
Th ia year, .uo.Jike past
. Speaking oj"1oog 1hot1,
yean, there is DO clear-cut theAFChllbcenfullo(them
ravoritc to ao all the way. foe the past 10 years. It his
The pre-Kdon CODJCDIUS bcea. decade ttnce-" lfEC
an
WIS the dd"eadizt& cbampioa teanhalwootheSuperBowl
Dall11 Cowboys. Dallu (the Raiden did it ia 1934).
~ off the _
ICUOII willl
Alldevayyear(ortbepast
two co~ecuove lo11e1 , 10 years, thil writa, a fool
sipedEmmia.~andbal ' for the bopdeu Ullderdop,
~ aadd~ smce. Bet baa lmnal off the tdevi.sitwl
~ll•lmon.~~rcpcll- lftcrJbe&.perBowllDd~
. . . ~ ... IIIDCb • to _ ed bod,. • liale bit ~
b
.4 toape1' ~ t.hao wining
~ and a little bit lighter
tb1t lira b~
m the ~
San Fraix:i-=o alto.
a
But du.I year is differeat
stroa,: lea. once ....., Md .foe IOIDC n:IIIOG (mind you,
• aardyhlldle ..... lD,c,•
been •fiDI· this
a
u tho NPC Qampiaa- decade).
Miami looted
llup Game. .._. dley CID _
poiled ad ready to aive
pia tome
...o.a. .... w. 6na ·s.p. Bowl

Pitt.s burgh Steelers.

Boston Marriott. Copley Place
Albcnus Magnia

Lealey College

CMD, One Bcacoo Street 25th

~

Floor

Sawyer 1128
Sawyer421

Munce Conten:occ !Joom,

s.,.,..808

CMD. Ooe Beteon St 25th Aoor
Sawyer 1021
Fauoo331A

Fcmoo 337
Feotoo 4308

Sawya-421
Sawya-427
Sawy,crl21
Sawy,,921
S.W,,,929

Dooabuo 218

Qiwd.,... Low,ge Sawyer 41h Floor
~ any day of the acadomic )'tlll'; or to list 1111 eYCDt '
re - for plaaaaiq, pubUcky or 1cnera1 infonudo&

a.

rvo

r..

re...-



ror

Dan

1a11 _ . , p11yo1f .._ - --- - -

lured Acb.iUca teodon.
Buffalo doesn' t seem lo
be fazed by three conseaalive super Bowl losses Md
may seize the mom~nt and
win the whole thing while,
thewoelClmis .llillintact.
Pi1t1burah ' s defense appears to be solid, and if Bany
f oster can run like he did
last year, the Steelcn may
return to lhe Super Bowl.for
the lint .time iioce 1980.
The sentimental favorite
bu to beKansuCity, led
by Joe MonlW. So far, Chi
Chiefs arc unddeated with
Montana 11 the reigns
Sboul~ Joe stay healthy ht
. bu th~ ability to take~
· team deep into the layoff y
except perhaps, t:e ~
:
011,
Myfuialpndictioo: Mon~
tana will engineer OGC or
hi1clusic drives late in the
fourth
to defeat bi
former team , the 49 era~
l\emcmber, this is my prediction from my o•-o fantasy world.
A realiilic prediction :
Both myself and the AFC
will come out lolen at. the
cod of Super Bowl

quarter

xxvm.

~porB'reflections
By Paal Dlhna
JOUIHAl. STAA'

million ~
chump change, but I
have to look It arbitrator Richard Bloch's decision in the
Due to events beyond thl1 terms of my area of eioployr e ~s coouol, I hope to ment. U someone with noc
bring you • _worthy replace- - e_ Cnbalfmyabilityor~
Y
mi;nt fQr thll week's tennis nencc came into Sam Goody
summaiy~ Please join me u ~d got paid double or even
I clean out the t poru attic of triple my l&lary, J would drop
the mi~.
' the, compact disc on lhem
The~ can ,be no UJUment wbUe they "!ett looking the
reg~~ Micti.e:J 1ordao'• other way.
·contrlbuboos to the pmc of
Ray Bourque ha.s been a
~Hewasaoldrena- forccin[hc,NHLgoingool4
Ii~ shot to the NBA and years. ~ Many McSodcy, a
arpably CK mOll campkce rock'tridtl1md11ndfcct.,can
adllc:te we UYe ever seen. -~ a mulif.year, multi-mil~
Bw.lCIDDOthelpfeelinaa lion~coacnct. soshoul?-'"'
1CD1eolrdie/. Aftcr.lll,ilthe Bourque.
.
Ch.icap Bulb had woa a
Oqo· aide boas ts John
fou.rth coo.aecutive NBA K,Ut, Leo Dybtra, and
championship, ~ wowd ~ Daulton. The other
hive been mdleu: COIIIJSi- pre1ent1 John Olerud ,
IOIIS to the pat Celtic dy- Ro6ato Alomar, and Dave
autia:oldtolPfiO'LbwOllld Slewlrt. Whllirver w\y you
havc·bem lib Oeocp Faro- loot II the 90m World Seman . etioa a. crc:mnpuff; 1 riea. it ii ddinitely t baale
c
complete meas. I will miu between tbe Unill!d Swes
you Micbaei. l:iul l'aDaDIJcw: ...,_. and the British Se'th.it in PNADI: 16 cbampi· C1'1t Service. Which aide will
om:hipt. The world'• pat- win? It 11 Ille to uy that
est bub:tba1I player ttiU bu l.utad of that familiar cli:
wort left to do. Sec you IOOII • che, "Bond. Jimca Bond "
Mike!
'THOUGHTS


----="---

I would,,,,,., call $2.2.!

~ '?° -

15

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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8111 . . . . . . . . . .

IO bdp llhllnle cbc l!f'(lblem - ,

cou
~

Dr. Edwlld H a r l i , ~ al ,111e
tho €ommnn'earime IDd ~ M

dllr""1!IO..-icoune,..i..
~ --- · · - ..i
dao.

iWOrld
hon hocl<q,.
much beuer. The
y doel not n·eed •
:rto~otcillfine
OI

,c aamc conjures up' ·
OOClty, lack of IClf-

bullying _attitude IO

,wbook,lllldi:<..Jl,:
=. tdh of one ioc:1-

=:,;.c~~
iDl,tbclCbocii.wlll
~titudc or :sin,. The
:_this man .what be
to beat his team into

.

. .

' Conference Room
... Dome Coilqe

FcDlon 337
Sawyer 1121
Sawyer 1121
f.catoa4308

FcDlon 430A

-603

........,

Fentoo.._338A

Sawycr927

SaW}'a"92I

Sawyer 521

riott, C.opley P1-:e
Albertus Magou,

Lesley Collqc
i Street 25th Aoor

Sawyer ll28
Sawye.-421

Con!ertDCC Room

· Sawyer 808 .

ICOO

St 25th Aoor

Sawyc,1021
Fentoo33&A.
_A '• Featon 337

feotoa.,008

team.COll1Jle;Udiotbe8abscm.
lnvitatioml 00 0:L

College

9_ The lt:MD tumed in a auong
improvaneqt over its pn:vious meet • Oodoa College
one week earlier.
Accordia& to Coach Joe
Walsh, the 5-mile Babson
course wu ..billy, challengin& and nry wet... The top
Suffolk finisher wu Tom
Lynch, wbo had missed the
Gordon meet due to ao illness. Walsh wd that Lynch
•still wam't in top shape. but
managed /to .finish in' 12th
place out or 114 rwmrn.
Walsh .emphasized that
Lynch's strength is NMing
00 a nai road course. However, "He doesn't have the

NII, ..

s...,..9:11
· S...,..921

s_n,a-$

Domllle 218

fSawyer 4th Floor

said Walsh.

.
finished 14th out

or t7 teams, toppling both
Rivier College and Eastern
Nazarene. which- had both
defeated Suffolk earlier in the
year. "'We stepped over two

teams that had- previously
beMen us, and lhat'.1 a good
. improvement." said Walsh.

Lynch actually led the race
after the one and three-mile

By Robert llkd
JOUa.NAl. o:wnmuroa
Crearing ao awarcncu or alcohol
has always been a prob~ amona
college students. ,However, Sutfolk
hopes to lessen: thu problem wi~ ill
finl ever Alcohol Awarcncu week.

pcnina today. HW)CI, who worbd •
Nortbeuccm University before coming to Suffolk. had seen ill SDCCa1
while abc was at Nortbcascera and

fd1 that it COllld be jult u succeuful
bctc al Suffolk.

At Nortbeastcm, students spraygrey to •
meat toinbitODCI !f dead people.
The ~ aa,,ed this past ~DIiThey pl~ed these boxe, in tile.
day and will nm until Friday.
school's quad, an area frequcolly
Jcaaacuc HiAon, AlailtlOI Directnvelod by Northeutem u.dcota,
tor of Special Progranu, finl ~
Studcdu pr"CUlldod ~ be ''-1 for
up with tJ:ic idea of •Dead Day• hap-

-')

MIT numcn Jcsic Darley
(26:08) and David Moyle
0,S,26) finished fint and IOC·
ond, followed by Camilo
Pereira (26:36) of

\!Ool<

"Dead.Day" the highlightj

Babson Invitational, followed
by MIT, Tufts, Babson,
UMas.s 'Lowell, Connecticut
College, Emory Univcralty
(Atlanta),
Stonchill,
Merrimack. and Bryant College .

~ HII,

Voli.me 52, N\Jl11b!lr8

'l'W.

marks, · but faltered in the
Oocc again, Suffolk didn't
fourth mile, before falling to field a women's team. Wllsb
12thandfinishing.withatime continues to comb· the camof 27:18
pus in sean;h of women
s urro1· r:•s Tom, o : uare ners. So if 'there's anyooe
1
(36:28) finished- 105th and interested in Npning cross • ·
TimtJjurray(36:3l)wasrighl
. behind him, ftnlshing 106(h.
Milr:e0uran(39-.53)andScou
Dunn (39:S4) also ran to-aether, finishing 110th and
111th.

painted cardboard boxes

ru'!'" ·

~:;.rt ~o;~

=

No favorites in the NFL this j ear_ ~rted profound
sports reO~ons1'
B~~ ~
!!:,:::°!i~~~;ic":8~ ~:;:~;~; ,';1!:.rup- - - - - - - - million chump change,

but I

0

In the 1970s, it was the

Piusburgh Steelers. In the
1980s, the San Francisco
49ers dominalcd the NFL.
E.ach team won four Super
Bowls in a decade. a remarkable fcaL
Since San Frimcisco'a wt
champion, h_ ~ . there
s ip
have beeo lhree different
Super Bowl winnera. Look
for that ttt:od tocootinue lhia
year.
This year, . unlike past
years. there is DO J:lcar-cut
favorite to go all the wa)'.
, The pre-season conacnsua
was uie dcfendioa cbampioo
Dallas cOWboya. Dallu
IUrttd off the aeuon witll
two consecutive loaacl,
signed Eiuua. Smith. ..S bas
gone undd'CIICd since.

Sawyu421
Sawyu427

.(_

breakaway speed o_ hillr

sidfott

Sawyer Cafe
)Bwycr 623
lcndar for locatioo)

. .

climbing wength over a S- Ouard Academy won the

mile

Tbc ·Mea's Crou Country

I- 26, 1993

.

Men's C~ Country team competes
in Babson Invitational

But

i l i s a ~-,-i::ctbatrepea-

in& • c:bmnpioas is a much
tougbet tut than wiani.ng
thll first title.
Sao

.. IUOD8

be~:: b:~:t~:c.: ~

I, on the other hand, like to tivc Super Bowl losses and
la.kc a loolr: at the underdogs. m~y seize the mo.ment '!1d
TilC New York Giants hav~ wm the .whole. th1~g _
while
started off on fire and may the same team 1 wll·intact.
s
surprise some pe.ople in the Pittsburgh's . dcfeo_ apse
playofrs. New Orleans fi. pears to be solid, and if Barry
oally has an experienced Foster can nm lilr:e he did
quancrbaclr: in Wade Wilson last year, the Stcclen may
that can lead them to the first return to l~e Su~r Bowl for
playoff victory in ~ire~- the fint ume
19~.
cnce.. Gmen Bay is capable
The sentimental favbtjte
of doin) ~me damage.
has to be Kansas ~ity, led
Speaking Or long shots, by!oeMoatana.lSo(ar,~e
the AFC bas been iuu of them Chiefs are undefeated . With
· for the past 10 )'can. It has Montana at the re}gns.
been a docldc WICC an M:c Should Joe. ~tay-hcaltfiy, ht"
ccarn has woo the Super BOWi has the ability to take any
(tbc Raiden did it in 1984). team deep into the playoff~,
And every year for the-put except perhaps, the Patn10 years, this writer, a fool <>!•·

. .
for the bopdcu underdogs,
My final predietJon: Monbas tDmCd off the tclcvisioo ~ wil_ en~nccr ~ of
l
afterthcSopcrBowllPdgooe hiscl..usicdtjvcsJ.aic.an~
IO Nd both a liale bit.~ ~ourth quarter to defeat h.ia
R()Ultcd'ar11h little bit lightcT former team_, ~he 49cra.
In ~ ~ .
L
.a,..._
~ember, ~- II my preo"' 1111 faz - ..... ,,..._ diction from · "91 own •fu l"
for IOIDC RmOD (mind you, tasy world.
I've been ,aayiaa this for a
A realistic prediction:
~•de). Miami looked B~ myself and the AFC
, . _ . _ . ready IO aitt: Du · w,ill come out loscn 11. the

•inc~

. . r - .,
_
;

Fraociaco alao i . a
once......, Md

tema,

'airely bu tbo IM:ael IO ao •
,_ as the NIC Qampicathlp Game. wtllftl diey ~

:::

;::::: Dul.las or San Fran-

': ::-tmdJ~.::09:: ::.

~

cad of Super B~wl XXVW,

.B~Al.INJ::8

= ~ l =sat~:~ : ~

Due to events beyond this tcnns of my area of employreporter's control, I hope 10 mcnL If someone with not
bring you 8 worthy rcphw»-~~evcn half my ability or t1..,pcmont for this week' s tennis nencc came LRto Sam Goody
'_ summaJy. Please join me as and got paid. double or even
I clean 001 the sports attic of triple my aalary, I would drop
. the mind.
the compact disc on them
Tberi can be 00 argument while the)' wcrc looking the
rca~lna Michael 'Jordan's other way.
.
contributions tO lhc game of·
•Ray Bourque has been a
bulr:etba1l. Hewuanadrena- •force in tbeNHLgoi.ngoo 14
line lhot to the NBA and. JC111 If .Marty McSorley, a
arauat,ly ~ mOll-complete rock'wilb~andf~~
llhlct.c we. have
seen.
get a multJ-year, mulu-rrulBue. 1can oothclp feeling a liornloD•cootnlCI, so lhould
aenacoftdkf.Aftaall,ifthe Bourque,
~
Chicago B\llls had won a
One . aide boast, John
fouttb consecutive NBA Krulr:, Leo Dylr:atra, and
championship, there woufd" Darren Daul too. T\e other
have bcc:n codlcu
prcsCn11 John · Olerud,
sons to the p'CM Cdtic dy- •Roberto Alom.ar, and Dave
llllbCloftbe.l9tiO'a: ltwould Stewart. ~ e r way you

ever

Aamlolar._;,;;.,:The~d~-•-

"

V~clepartmmt~ ·~ d j
TbcorJ

"CoerueictliC'ND
ud a
limll al :tO ( - ) . We lad a ..,._
j,<daeal1'smianlllill-

comi-i-

have ·becaHbGcorp·F,oro-

player.=:,

I would JICVcr call ·$2.25

Rcspoodioa10\beiuucolclat,

Joat a1 tbc· 9Ckb. World Sc-

man citiq. a. crainpuff; a ties, it _ definitely a baale
is
complete meas. hwil1 miaa between the United States
you . MJcbid, b.ac ~ Marines and tbc 'British Sc'this in .,.aiq:: 16 c:bampl- cn,t Sc:rvicc. Whkb aide wlll
oomi nc world'•
_ win.? h is ..Ce to· say that ..
est~
i.n.stca;t of that {am.lliar cli'
wod: left do. Sec you IOOII. che, • sood. James Bond,"
10
Mike!
THOUGHTS
·

coqtioDec1

~

NC 15

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___ ..,... . - -_ _ _ _ _ ... ...,._.,..
_ _ Tllln be_., dao, _ _ ,....,.. .........

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ias•W.._ .....~IOODCr,

ICIIDC . . . . . . affercmpaDlldoal toll--lip• ... weftpff;oal
10hdpillullnlolbe~many --,"llidllaim.

0..F.dward-~., ... ,.,....,.,~ .....

the Com°Jmnic,#iom and Ioanalism ' dli&it . . . . . . . . . . . .....
[)qmmeat.says,thMitil....cimcl _ . . . . . . . a-Ill . . . .
diff'"ICWI to pffllicl COW'1C regima- ....... He tdc:I 10 be .....,_ .IO

d..._

--dlaap.