File #4257: "Suffolk Journal_1993Apr07_vol51no22.pdf"

Text

I',,

(flt,...,~
MAGNA

.. ,a,_,. car
CUM

.~ ... -~
-~
·- _ _
...

Get $400 1b Uae Aa cash Back Or A Down Payment.
Plus, Pre-Approved Credit For Qualified College Graduates.
You took end.Jess 1esu and endured more alllli#ltets lhan )00. can remembet II~ time ID recent
the aedit ioore due - savings on the R>ni car or
tn.d«i )OOC chokz.
.
And )OOC Rlld dealer can help. Right'""'( )00 can
recehta$400cashrebateoomostnew 1992or 1993
R>t<lcanrxtrucks instoclt, In ...Utlon ID other in""''""' being dlered. ~allfled gradual,s coold make
oo down paimenl on "1tlc\es \a, lhan $18,000 MSRP

\bu can""" defer )OOC ftlll payment up ID ra> ~

This dler Is :Milahle ID a>llege grad!, grad school
graduates and grad school students graduating
bet\leenjanui,y ~ 1993 and Deamber 31, l9'Jl
So hurry down ID )OOr Fonf'dealer and pick up
some extra aedit - big savin~ on a ford car or
truck. lbu may even be eUglble br pre-appro"'11
financing. The Ford College Graduate Pun:hase
Program Rlrmore tnbmatlon calJ; 1.-321.1536.

Ne~
l ■ BDI

FORD DEALERS

"'II'

1111

~~• ••• 'C

. ~.u->~

,_._/~~~

THE SUFFOLK JOU. NAL
R
Suffolk University's Student Newspaper
Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts

Volume 51, Numbcr22

McGinn wins top seat
Tuo year SGA veteran to.succeed to presidency

Wednesday. April 7, 1993

Cheating cuts
~ student body
Students complain about ease
some have with cheating

By Stcphonic Snow

Joumo l Stoff

In 1he major surprise or
yci.tcrday' s Student Govern•
mcnt A s.~oc111tion Executive

By Thomas Belmonte
Joumal'Staff

Board elections. Juruor Class
VM:c-Prcs1dcnt Efttn Hidalgo
withdrew his name from coo-

for both secretary and vice-

prcsidcnL
However. before the voting
began, Dunn and Falzone had



Suffolk

cl~':~nfirmed rumors of
cheating in several claues in
the paduate and undcrgradu•
'a&elcvc.!1 ofbotb the School of
Manigernent and the CoUcgc
of Libcn.l Arts and~Scienccs .
were 1ub1tanti.atcd by tbc_aUogations of swdcnts lut week.
Four students, all full lime
day undcrgraduatcScamcfor-

president, thcrcforepavingtbe.

way for an unopposed -..cin for
Michelle McGinn,cUITCfllU"Ca·
surer.
When asked why he decided
11gainstsec.kingthcprcs.idency,
Hidalgo replied, "Michelle has
the experience we need plUJ
she knows I'll be ~ r devil's
ltdvocate."
Hidalgo said be had "no re•
grcts" about not seck.ina 1he
~~r::::::v~~U:~.
lions arc im rtant. Hidal o
who was on the ba.lloc for both
president and vice-president.
went on 1 win the vice-prcsi0
dcnc:y.
The Executive Board secretary position remains empcy
bccauscboth candidatcsforthc
position withdrew from the
race. Judy Dunn. Junior class
represe ntat ive, and Phi l
Falz.onc, Sophomore class repre.sentative, were on I.he ballot

By Lawrence M. Walsh
Journal Staff
While moat of us spend
many hours In the li~rary or
hunched over a kilchen
table into the we.e hoo.n-or
the momina studying for
cums, one Suffolk. al1.1rnnus tells of how easy it was
1
0:chcat his WIIY through

;-----ft:':=•:=~=:7"::e
.
.:i

this arowinapro\)Jcmofdlcat·

lw1ifer Ktlwxllou""'1 SwJ/

~

~
:~~:n~sci::~~iin:~
chcatingand fcllthatthcyhld
Despite witbdmwing from
u
fore the meeting that she was the race for secretary, Dunn :t:'~:::~~;/s" ~t~t~o~
not interested in the position of stillm::eivedthcmostvotc1for muni\y. ,/
secretary but the ballots had the post. She de.clincd the poSince last week, five stubeen already made with her sition. Falzone received the dent.a in the schoolofManagcsecond hi&he$t total but also mcnt have been failed in II
nllJTlCOn them.
Falzone, howevCr, an- declined the post.
COUl'K for plagiarism, two of
nounced his int.ention 10 re- , HidalgoandRichardJoycc, whom were Sttliors, who wiU
scind the nomination during Freshmanclassrcpresentativc: not gn,duatc this May as •
the time when be was sched- alsoreceivcdwritc-invott.;i for
• Contilu1tdon page 12 •
uled 10 give his speech for secUJIIIUu1tt/ 011pQ1e22
withdnwn from the race for
secretary. Dunn had awed be-

;

adminstrative documents, pho- ·
tos and memorablia. The archives an: located in the be»
mert of the Sawyer libnuy. ,
Until recdltly these lk>c:u·
mcnts were dry and safe but on
March31,Ll1>rary Oiru:torTed .

Due melting snow and rain
suping into the Sawyer building. the university archives have
lostanumbcr ofhistoricalartifacts, inc:ludina office material Hamaoododd<dthaewu'°""
from Suffolk's last prcsidcnL stuffpilling upandhad tobeput
The university an:h.ivcs col• down in the archives.
., went down~ and tbcr
b:t materials thal document the
hi5'0f)'andactiviticsofSuffolk was ymcr all over the~"
u.;,a,;1ymc1uo1mgyeat,oo1a, .,;.,Ham,nn."Aum\lP.)Olof
catalogs,
ncwpapers ,
C
,01t1ituud °" P46e 21

through

tc"~;\:~':\;~c::.;':'::;".:';:-e;w",;\:~·c..jJ:O,OU;\IIY,!i~~h!!.i/!!.'~s;!'co"~•~l!,,c.m~,;,

=~~:'e~=!~~~::!ao;,~~'.;_clle

O<W)'.

Wmter meltdown damages m-chive's material
.
By Kara Doldma.scolo
Contributing Reporter

Alum says he
cheated way

Thercaregro~inaConcerns
among s1udcnu rcaarding the
seemingly increasing trend of
cheating and plagia,:ism in

siderauon fot Executi cBoard

+---J.

:::sc:! :ri~ ,
anonymo\ls, this Suffolk.

died three· times, his

~oc;~

!~;~s:w~
wu in seve111.I fictional car r
accidents, all of which
added in his chcatina or
getting an unearned gndc.
"Iioldoocprofeuorthat
my mother died because I
wu toc.ally unprcpatcd for
.Conlil111tdonpa6e 11

2,

The Suffolk Jowml

Wcdocsday, Apdl 7, 1993

Wednesday, April 7, 199)

UMASSIBoston paper shuts down under financial PretWre
ey Patricia Cobb •
Jou.mal S1.11.ff
The mff of lhc s1uden1 paput Mus Media, al UMassBos1on was locked outoflhcir
ofrice lutThursday by the administration and S1udcm Sen•
11c. The l.llcgations of mism1nagcmcn1 and fai lure to secure eJ1.pc ns ivc compu1er
cquipmcn1 prompted UMass
officials 10shu1out lhe paper's
staff thus suspending publica1ion.
The iuue tha1 was 10 be
published charged 1hc adminislnnion with misleadi ng stu:
dcnu about a S256.l 76 deficit
in the student ac t1 vi1ics1rus1
fond . However, Ass 1s1an1
ChanccllorforS1uden1 Ac1iv111cs, Mjdge Silvio, claimed lha1
lhc neu edition was10 be about
1
hes1udent elections.

.

Rumo rs arc permeating
throuahou\ the campus al>ou1
the Mass Media and it's dcfi•
cit. A widely distributed f'ifcr
is circulating on campus allcgin,thcMas.s Mediaof overpayina staff and JMying them
for houn no1 worked. It goes
on 10 name Student Senators
that knew what was going on
a l 1hc paper and did n(){hing lo
resolve 1he alleged abuses.
Currently they areS)l,000
1n the red and withou1abusincss manager who resigned
scvenil months ago.
Al issueisthefactthat 1he
cduorial board is paid a snlary
that is supposed 10 come from
advertising sales. Midge Silvio
staled, " I feeltha1 lhes1udcn1
s1affof che Mass Media an:
well m1cn11oncd joumalis1s.
howcv.:r. they arc not busi ness mnnngers and th is is the

.anglewood, Ltd.
• Custom Floral Arrangement..
Fresh & Dried
• Function Designs
• Wedding Designs
Michael A. Cla udio
617/266-2291

Elizabeth A. Wittkower
617/723-7161

<t9 Wausia- Stretl. South Eiid, BlliilOD,

Mau.achuse1ts 02 11 8

rca.,;onwhytheyure madefi-

mg cobc p111
d.

The S1uden1Senate Exccu•
TheMassMcdia focullyad- uve Committee met Thursday
viror, Donna Kneel. was at- 10 discuss the problems sur•
tempting to work with naff rounding the Mau Med ia.
volun1ccrs 1n ordcr.10 publish Some allegauons were ral5cd
lhal equ1pment had been van•
dahted, computers were dcu1 feel that the sludenl \'elop,ng nruscs. and soflwarc
staff of the Mass Media packu8es werebcmgerascd.
The E1ccuu ve Commiuee
are well intentioned
!'(commended that the Jocks
journa lisls, howeve r, ht-changed until the s11uat1on
they are not business could be dealt w11h.
OnMarchJJ .1hcs1affmemmanagers a nd this is
bcn. of the Muss Media went
the reason whytheyar-e ro Su ffolk Supcnor Coun 10
in a deficil."
\ ( Ck U prel1m1nary mJuncuon
agam~
11hcunu·ers11ymotder
1he paper, which had been 10 rc.~ume pubhshmg. Jusuce
agreed 1 last Tue~ay On Hiller Zobel advised the par0
Wedncsday. 1he ed11onalst.iff ucs 1 rcsoh·e the d1spu1c and
0
mfonned 1he S1udent Senate contmued the CII.\ C unul Apnl
1hat they would n01 pubhsh 12.
1hepaper1f1hcy weren01gociL..11

On Friday aftemOon, Apnl
2. the full Studcnt Seniu C1
001.
up1hcissue ofthedefic111n thc
studentac1ivitics fund . Are,o-lu1ion was passed 1 unfrcc,.c
0
the remaining student a~
counts. which mcludcd 1hc
Mass Media rcga1nmg :iccc"
1 their offices.
0
The editorial staff of 1hc
UMasssrudent papcr, lhe M,is,
Media, was unav1
ulabl1: ,md
unwilling to comment nn 1hc
allegations of mismanugcmcnt
and the circumst11ncei. , 111
rounding the lock-out.
"Many students don't ~nu1<.
what happened 1 the paprr
0
We cou nt on it asou r SO\lrc1:1•f
communication for a lari:r
campos,'" said an umdcnufleJ
UMass s1udem. Anothe, ,1u
denl slated, "A fo1 of pcupk
n:a~ 11 and 11 1 1mpor1am 11 ,
s

Russian, American students tell of
political turmoil in Russia Republic
By MK"hcleMosca
Journal Staff
Ove11hcpas1sc-vcralycars.
lhc siandanl ofhv1ng m Russ,a
has Steaddy dechned due
largely, m pan , 1 Russian
0
president Bons Yehsm's fo1lmga:omomic pohcywh1ch ha~
causcddramaucnsesinmna.
llon and unemployment. and a
sceminglyendlcsssuugglcfor

STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION

Student Forum
FOR ALL STUDENTS
TO EXPRESS THEIR CONCERNS ABOUT
LIFE AT SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY

COME TO OUR MEETINGS
AND TELL US WHAT'S GOING ON
WE HAVE MEETINGS EVERY
TUESDAY AT 1:00 P.M.
IN SAYWER 423

IF YOU CAN'T MAKE THE MEETING
CALL THE S.G.A. HOTLINE AT 573-8322

power and democracy within
th.:- Russi:m govem.mcnL
h 1
sth1s mstab1li1y within
thC'Rui.s1angovemment.agovcmmcnt relauvcly new IO the
pracoce of democracy, wh.ich
IS behe\·cd 1 be the primary
0
cause of the country 's economic worry
Because Russia is not yet
considered 11 "true democr.icy''.
there CklSI 1 controlling or
wo
"dual po..,.·ers. • On one side
tht!re ,~ the hardhne Ru.u1an
congrcss, kd by speaker Ruslan
Khad>ul:uov, and on the other
end of the spcc1rum there ore
thc hbcr.il,democracy-sccke rs
lr-d by prc)1dem YelL, m.
UndcrYeh.sin's pre.~1dency,
pnce conlrob ha\'e been itbol1shed. a frcc ma rket was es1ab-hshed. and pre\'rously state•
o u.nr d r nte rpri se~ have
changed 1 pr:va1 hi.nds.
0
e
While v.e here m Amenca
take wc-h rcfonn, for granted,
they ha\e ')nlbolllcd a pos, Un• Slep mwatd~ democracy
for thr Rui,\1an people. a s1ep
the- Ru~\mn congress greatly
fear~ . for 1f Ru~)1a were lo (k.
,·elop 11110 ,1, 1ruly dcmocr.iiic
~oc,ciy, the JIOwr-r or 1he congre.~s would b( mefftct1ve.and
f)O).~lbly abandoned all 1 .
0
gether.
lnu1ally, thcleg1slaturewas
able lo cont rol Yelt~m by rcJCCtmg any rc"forms proposed
by th e Prc.<i1dent A recent attempt to impeac h Yeltsin failed
hy a mcrr ll YOtes. Now
Yeh~m hMcalledforarefen:ndum 10 let the people ikcidc if
ihry ~11 11 !rust ham to run thrcouniry
"Yeh\1ncallmgforareferr"ndum 1 uur r pohucal bril~
kanre:· uy, John Bowman. a

government majo r who rrcently joincdothcrgovemmeua
students on a uip 1 the Ru,0
sian Republic. "The Russrnn
people have &passion for democracy and are willing to i.oc•
rifice anything for iL"
Suffolk Russian exchange
student Anna Petrovskayabelicvcs that ncither Ych.sm nor
congress "isgoina to help. the)
JU!it suuggltJor power." She
secs the biggest prob~m 1
n
Russia as -a problem of good
government, which is hard co
find. In Russiath1s1sthcb1 .
gest problem, lsu1 in Russ1
.i
there arc too many problem.~ I
don't know how Russrn •~ gt•·
mg to find a good leader."
The political upheaval m
Russia has caused a lrlluma11,:
dttline in the srandards of \1\
mg. Peuovsknya simply sum,
up the living conditions in Ru,s,a as "OOI good. no( good .11
all."'
On his tnp to Russia. Beno, .
man go1aglimpscofhow tough
things really arc.in the country
statingthat"i1cnnrnkcup 104'.'i
min utes jus1 to gel 11 piece uf
meat 10 feed you r fomi ly."
In spite of depressed hvm1,1
conditions, Bowman fed s th,11
the Russian people "posess :i
s1rong sen se of hope ..
Petrovskaya disagrees.
''The Russian people are always in a bad mood because of
thcconditions they are made to
live in." Whcnukcdiftherc1~
any hopcfOC'thcRu.ssianpcopk
she replied, "No, I don' t think
so."
When asked if she would
like to go home, Petrovslcay11
said, ·0ncc you go home, yoo
may nor be able to ge1 back
w

The Suffolk Jow:nal

Students trade time for practical experience
By Lom1ine M.K. Palmer
Journal Staff
On a nation-wide scale.
people t.akc five years or more
1 graduate from a four-year
0
college. said Patricia Yates, the
associate directo r of Career
Services and Cooperative Educauon. At Suffolk University.
however, only a few studcnt.s
even considereJ1.tending their
graduation date by a scmcs1er
or two if they do not have to.
'"Suffolkisn' 1se1upfor full ume allemating semester coops m some of the depanmenr;.," suid Yates, "but over
ume I' Y noticed that studenu;
e
an: more: open to ii than they
have been 1n the past."
Some depan menu lend
themsel ves 10 tha1 option ,
whcrc"asothcBdonot. shcsaid.
Largcr depa rtmcnts. likc1he
Communications and Joumal1
sm Department . have u large
COU M selcction. "lfas1Udent
lakes a scmes1er off and p3rtic1pa1cs in a co-oe_, chances
art' when 1 si:udem comes
he
bad the fo llowing semester
!here will still be 8 rich SCI of
choices to fulfill (his or her]
requ1n:mems:· saidYates.
Commumcauons and journah~m maJors. a«ording 1
0
Yntcs. 1
11ke tht: opt ion of the
11l1
ema1i\'c semes1crco-opmorc
than any other majors.
One reason for this. said
Yates. 1~ that major newspa•
~rs. c.spcc::,ally thf- !oston

Globe, only like to offer alter•
nativcscmcstcrco-ops. "lf thc
student wllnlS 10 do it (co-op)
at all , thcy havc1odoi1."
Another factor is 1hc fear of
the job mark:CI 1ha1 is instilled
into lhc students by the com•
munications and JOum.alism
professors, she said. !hey
hear i1 from a lot of differe nt
sources. When they come 10
lheco-opoffic:ewesay. • ' Yup.
this really isn' t optional."'
Smallerdepartments like the
physK:5 and engineering de-partment do not have such leeway. " lf(cnginc:t:ringmajors]
lllke a scmcs1er off, 1hey've
missed a whole sequence of
courses and they have a lot of
requiremcnlSforgraduation. II
might be a year unlil that SC·
quencc of courses is offered
agui n,"said Yates.
Some enginc:t:ring students
an: opting 1 uikc a whole year
0
off 10 avoid lcamina anyihing
out or the sequence of courses.
Professor Walte:r Johnson of
the physics and engineering
department has worked hard to
help studcntsobtain pennanent
co-<ip positions, said Yates.
On the whole, Suffolk studenlS feel that they have 10
graduate wi1h their class, even
if that means graduating with·
out the competitiveedge that is
needed in today'! working sode1y.
"S1ude:ntscomc (into the coop office) and say, ' I have to
gd out of here on time.' It's

not that they don't like Suffolk . ll 's tha1somehowthey 1vc
got this graduation da te filled
in their mind that is somehow
magic or golden and lhc cmploycn arc aoin& 10 le.now or
care tha1 i1 took you another
s.emcstcr Of year to graduate.
Employers would much rather
seeuperiencc, shcsaid.
" 11'1 son of a high school
mentality. Oh. I've got lo
graduate with my class," she
said.
'
Another real factor lhat may
stop s1
udcnts from going an
cxlrllsemcster0Tycari1pre1sure from home. "Sometimes
I think it's the whole family
dynamM:. Parents wait fortha1
magic graduation date u well
when they' ll no longer have to
pay tuition ind their son or
daughter will be financially
independent," she said.
"If their graduation dale has
tobc c111cndcd by a semester or
a year, even if they arccaming
money during that time, they
still sec it u a depe ndency
thing," said Yates.
A qucstionain: wu handed
0Ul to fi fly random Suffolk51U·
dcJ11$ on whc1hcr they would
take a semcs1croff 1 _
o gaincx•
pcricncc in their field of study
inordcrtoincrcuclhcir,valuc
fresh out of college.
Ann Walker.junior.humanities, said "Yes, I plan to go the
five year plan just to be more

marketable in my field after
araduation." She said that her
humaniticsadvisortoldherthat
the be.st way 10 insure a great,
sali~fyingjob is to have a port-folio filled with varied internships.
Gordon Beebe, senior, poti1ical scicnce, said, "Ycs.cspcciallytoday. The,tobforceis
so competitive. This wou ld
give me an added advantage."
Ascniorcommunicationand
public n:lations major said,
"Now that I look back, if I had
to do it again, I would take a
semester to work in my field
before graduation and then go
back lO school,''
Kristen Lochiauo. senior,
sociology, said, " Yes, dcflni1cly. S1udenu need the o~
ponuni1y 10 get upericncc.
Experience Is more than a plus
for achieving your co ree'r

goals."
A senior print journalism
major said. " I am seriously
thinki ng about ii, irtha1 is what
i1 will take to &et thai edge tha
is needed for a succeuful st.an
in my career."
S1udcnts who said that they
would not pa.nicipete: in a cooperative seme&ter said, "No,
because I am Interested in
graduating nut May, not any
later,'' "No, arter graduation,''
and "No, I wouldlikc 1
ograduatc as soon as possible."
The steep decrease in uncmploymcm from February to
MarchinMwachuJCU.S, Yates
said, is a hopeful sign. The
unemployment ra1e dropped
1.3 pen:entaaepoints,from 7.7
inFcbruory106.4 in M11rch. "I
find that students are finding
jobs a little more easily (sic)
than last year," she said.

HAVING AGRADUATION BASH?
No Party Too Illa or

smin

All rypu of music
SiucialilU•& in
Dane,

15%

"'"'"'
Don,,

For'Suffolk Gra~ ·
,;·


. Leo J.

-

....-.ia



!!.'

..

t.:all D.J.

. . .,,

''

•·

~ (617) 241-9344

METRO DELI
13y Andrea Rumpf
Journal Staff

here (lo leach)," said Sar1cn1,
s1111in; 1h11 Suffolk's sis1erunivcrsl1y,CIS, inMadridisabos110
manyU\len1edproressors.
Sarcen1 also stated that he
wo111d like 10 sec more Suffolk
students involved in1he CISexehan"proyam,dcscribing il as
a~grc1
uoppor1uni1
y"forfflldcn1s
1 uperie:nce another culrurc.
0
"Then: arc fi\-e SludcnlS from
Suffolk ancndin& classes in
Madrid1hi1scmes1er.
Sari:eni anribvtcs 1hc small
n11mbcrofambauador sruden1s
fromSuffolktothclackofknowledi:e !bout the progt\m. He stated
tha1 allhough 1hcproi:ramisp11b-llciud, m!llly a udents arc no1
aware: of how 1 prova,n opcr·
hc

S11ffolk Universil)' President
OavidS11.ri:entreccnllyre1vmed
froma1rip 1 1hc Cen1erfor ln1cr0
n11.11oo:ilS1udcn1s,CIS,in Madrid.
Sp;iin, d11rin;wh1chhcmc1wi1h
several adminislnlt~ to discuss
lSSUCiJWCh :as thccuniculumand
1he fomi;n uchangc prop1m.
Sargcnl met wi1h communicanons professor Deborah Geisler,
who b; 1eachin; in Madrid thil
semcs1er, Residen10ircctorl..eslic
Crodord und Suffolk exchange
111udenti 1 discuss 1hc ru1ure or
0
1
•he
:::~1.su'fro11i;
Universi1 has a "good rcpul.l•
y
uon" in the in1em111.ionlll arena,
According to Sar1ent, the unithussupportin&1hel~cnumbcr vcniry in Mfdrid ii acrually pan
ofjntemadonal s«udcoisthatll• ofSufTolk, thuslllowin&Sludcrus
1endSuffolk.
1
01rudyoverteU11noadditional
sar,enl iflled 1 graduates COIi. Sar&C'-nl also cxptalned that
ba1
fromSJMinarcfomlin:analumni lhctranscrlptSforambassadorSIU·
usodarion in Madrid. The sru- dcnt1an:S11fTolknnsc:rip1S, d11.1S
denu arc veryenthusi1S1ic (abour eliminali~lhcconfusionofnnsSuffolk)," said SaigenL "They (cnin& crcdirs bcrwecn uniw:rsiareourbcSl :unbassadors."
1
ies.
The program in Madrid is
S11racn1alsoexplained.tha1he
would like 1
0sec more profcsson Suffolk'1Jarges1ambauadorproinvolvedinthcOSprognm. .. We i:,am,bowcvcrtbcwrlveail)'also
WO!Jkllike.scndmoreofourpcoplc sponlOl't summer propu15 in
over 1hcrc (Madrid), and bavc Czccho$1ovlkia and RAwiL
more of their pcopk 5COI ova-

::!;i~~

160 Cambrtd,e Slrttt, BDlton., MA 02114

NEXT TO THE NEW SUFFOLK BOOKSTORE BU!WING

SUFFOLK 1.JNIVERSITY
!!! SPECIAL!!!
25% Ol'F
A c ·HOICE OF 15 VARIETIES INCLUDING OUR
FAMOUS COOKED FRESH DAILY

TURKEY
DINNER, SANDWICHES, SOUPS, AND FRESH SALAD BAR

JOIN US AND ENJOY OUR SPECIAL OFFERED
ESPECIALLY TO SUFFOLK COMMUNITY:
'PROFF.SSORS, STUDENTS, AND EMPLOYEES'
OWNER A SUFFOLK GRADUATE

J,,

1

,111111, Ill,/ /111 /,

~

Get good grades, Get cheap rent
The owner of an apartm ent complc~ near the Univcrsi1y o f An zona ha~
agreed to give full -time students a break on their rent if they make good

gr.we,.
Roger Oster devised a sliding sculc based on the previous semester's grade
point avcrogc. The reduction ranges from 2 percent to 10 percent. He wa~

rductanl 1 give specifics, ciung ..competition" from other apanmcm com0
plc11. owncrs.
The rent rcduclions arc great for the students. but what's in it for Osier"

Students and professors are on hand in the Motl, Support Cente r. in ~
Fenton Building, for those who need help in math and 51.Btistics.
Carolyn Bcaty/Jo11mal SIIJj/

PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED!

" It reduces noise and damage. and I gc1 a bcuerclientclc," he said. "I ha\·c
serious students who want to go 10 school. and when they gel some tune off.
lhc:y want torelax,not pany."
The 76-unil Country Gartkns complc,. 1 within walking disiancc of the.:
s
un iversity, and Oster cstima1c:s that 65 pcrcc:nl of the: people who rent th e:
apartmc:nl5 are c:ilhc:r graduate: o r undergraduate students. He: said lhc:rc: 1 a
s
waiting for studenl5 to move: rn.
Before he: offered the deal. things were: different at Country Garde ns.
..There were wild parties going on, and people whose aparune n1.s were near
the pool complained about noise:." he said ... I didn' t like the job of playing
poliC"eman.··{CPS)

Community ser vice is good for grades
The
Suffolk Journal
needs
photographers who are able to take
news, feature, and sports photos, as
well as do darkroom work.
For more inform;ttion,
call Larry Walsh at S73-8323

Talcing the LSAT?

A University of Michigan stud y found tha t college s1udents who take part
m community service proJects make better gmdes than s1udenl5 who spend
allthc:ir 1imc:studying.
The: study, by political science Jl(Ofcs.sor Gregory Markus, a researcher :11
Michigan's Institu te: for Social Research. wa.s done: in collaboration with the:
universi1y°s OfftceofCommunity Leaming and lhe Jo hn F. Kennedy School
of Government at Harvard University.
_ ·f or 1hc stUdy, 89 Michigan undc:rgrJdua1cs enrolled in Marcus· cour..e
..Contemporary Poliucal Issues" and were: rundomly a.~~1gnc:d to two sc:cuons: the: tradmonal grouii. which prepared a tenn paper requ1nng 20 houn
of hbrnry research. :md ;1 sernce grpup. which provided 20 houn. of
cornmunit yse rv1cc.
There were 52 .\tudents ,,,..signed w do rc:.\carch and 37 us... igncd 10
community \erv 1 A1 the end o f the .,emc.~ter. stoden lS who did libmry
cc:.
~eseaI"Ch eamc:d an averJgc grJde of a B to a U-plus. while the: students who
_.orked in 1he commum1 y averaged a 8-plu~ toan A-minus. Addilional ly. 78
0
1
1
1
:::i: _: ~1~: :t;t;c:~~ ~~~~~o0~~;;:~:;~:~1;~dd::.~~~~kly~j~ussioi
n~

"Indecent
Proposal" a
half decent
proposition
By James McDono ugh
Journal Staff
"Indecent Proposal," which opens today 111 the '
Loews Cheri in Bosto n and the suburbs. is a fairly
entcnainingtakc:ontheageoldqucstion. "Can money ·
buy love?"
Powered by three standout perfonnanccsby Woody
Harrelson, Demi Moore, and screen veteran Robcn
Redford. Adrian Lyne·s lilm s1arts out steamy (as lhc
ads suggest), and 1hcn scn lcs in to a .surprisingly
effcctive humandrama.
Harrelson and Moore ponrny David and Diana
Murphy, a young couple struck by lhe iron fi st oflhe
recession. After losing his job. architect David and ·
Diana tmvc:l to Las Vegas in o ne last c hance 10 raise
enoug h money 10 save their new home.
While 1herc. the 1wo win big. and eventually lose
11 all. Enter John Cage (Rc-dfo rd > a suave billionaire
.
who offers David one million dollar.. for one evening
wilhDiana.
"'
If the plot of this film sounds famil iar. us probably
because you ha ve seen last summer's hi lario o.s "Honeymoon in Vegas.·· in which millionai re JamcsCaan
offered 1he same proposition to Nicholas Cage: and
fianccS:irahJcssica Parker.
Although .. Indecent Proposal" docs not contain

..

.

Before a grnduatc picks up a d1plonm from Alma College, a small liberal
ans college 1n Michigan. he or she ge1s a pcr..orml 1nv11ution to the prc.~ide m ·s
home fordmncr .
All 225 of th is yea r\ graduates will ha\'C a c hance to talk with President
Alan Stone 111 .. St"nes of dmncn;, known as " Pres-dins," which arc considered
among lhc most m1ponan1 social evcnL~ on c ampus.
"Seniors rea ll y cons,tler it a highlight ," said Charlou c Schmidtke. a

::::::.~7::
Disc e rn 1he poi n l and logic of arguments. E,cp lai n
what you read . Undersland ho ....· ru les ord e r a nd limit
lhe unive rse. Con struc t a 1<i-rit1e n posi 1i o11 .

:-!,K:: :
:
..............
U&T-............__._.
__,..........._ .. .

---

---·
--- ......
~
l'
. .::=!

These are th·e thinking 5kills
required of a legal mind . Sk ills
tes1ed by th e ISAT. Ski ll s
taugh1 by Kap la n . And o nl y
Kaplan .
Call"-' IGJISII up/or i1U.tll11ttlll l.s.AT P,~p

1-880-KAP-TEST

KAPLAN

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

:~n:.~. college. "Studen1s are a llowed to choose the evening
1
Most of the di nners arc buffet-siyle for abou t 30 studcms 111 a time. but
some arc more intimate with a doze n or so stu dents, the president and his wife
g~thered in the pri,·ate dinmg roo.m of the 1920s housc.{CPSJ

_ Wedoesday, April 7, 1993

The Suffolk Journal

.

.

that 1s character orienlllted.
Unlike: last year's overexposed "Basic lnstinc1".
and even Lyne's own "Fatal Attrdction, " Indecent
Proposal" does nol rc.~on to exploitive: sex and violence: toc:ntenain. Instead. it utili zes its three stars to
th
c::~
Diana's rendezvous with

f~l~n~~~!~

1otd

Cage:, her and David argoc about the inc:vitt1ble
question of whether she had feelings for Cage. Even
though the scene sounds like soap opera. i1works
because of the viable acting tale nts of Ha rrelson and
Moore.
Co111i11uetl 011 pagt 7

Love the articles, Hate the photos
_ survey o(Sµmford University women studcnl\ found that they liked the
A
e~ nonal content of such lllagazinc:s as "Vogue" and "Glamour" but said the
p1c1ores or ultrn•slim models undermined thdr self-esteem.
The su~·cy, done by Debbie Then. a social psychologist who received her
dOC:~oratc: rn psychology and education rrom S1anford. was conducted las!
spn g. Of the 75 studcnt.s who respo nded. several said th ey found the: aniclc:s
on sex and health tobc info nnative.
un::;;;;·bnet:? 50 ~rcent said their self-esteem and confidence: were
Of
Y photogra ph.~. and 68 percent felt worse about their bodies.
said t!I ~:men whoans_ eredqucst.i~nsabout lheircat.ing habits, 82 percent
w
Y db(e n ona d1eta1 some point rn the past.and JO pcrc:c:nt said they
wc:rcorhud bccn bulimic or anorex ic.
nd
: : :.: ~:e a : : en1 : "I usua ll y feel terrible after going through a

1110

advc:nisemc:n~s th · O~ every page you are faced wilh pictures, articles or
reading one.''(~ ; pornt out your inadequacies. I fc:el truly ' lesser' after

'

\

WCLB: Boston's new country musi
by Tony Dellorco
Journal Staff
Seven weeks ago. Boston broke out
theH'cowboy hats and saddle boots for
t),e fi,st time in four years when adult
COnt(Jl'lporary station WVBF became
" Hot New Country." WCLB.
WCLB is Boswn·s first FM country
suuionsince
swicbc:d to no adult
album. rock fonnat in 1989.
The'switch was.sudden. WVBfwas
· promoting their stat.ion as the .. New

wBos

WVBF" up unt.il the switch in February. Theybadhircdlongt.imef(is.s 108
legend Sunny Joe White and added
morclife,tothcirformat.
The station began playing adull "lop
40" records such as "All I Want," by
Toad the.We\ Sprocket and Madonna's
"OeeperandDeepc.r."Theycvco stnrted
a Saturday night dance .show.
·wcLB' s Operations Dircc1or, Robert O uisty said that those programming dec isions were made before they
knew tbey were heading in a counuy

direction.
Christy said that the programmins
staff was playing with lhc idea of a
country fonnat fo r over II year and a
half. Whatfi nallycons1itutedtheswitch
was a study reccn.tly conducted which
found out that many Bos.tonians bad a
"grassroots"intcrCStineounuy. dirisry
stated, ..Boston was lhe only 1op· ID
radio market wi thout a coun1ry
Stat.ion ... (while) adult contemporary is
an over popula1ed format here."
Ouisty feels that country music bas

irr
ye:
a:

Ko
lh

a
tic

cc
th

II

1bc owner of an apa~nl complex nca1 t!'ie Univers.i1y of Anzona hli
agreed 10 gh·e full-umt studen1s a break on their rent if they make good

Students and professors are on hand in the Math Support Center, m the
Fenton Building, for those w~ need help in math and sta1is1ie1.
Corolytt BtQ/')1/Jmmwl Sv:,//

PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED!

II shding 1otale based on the prcv10U1 scmcster"s grade
point average. The reduction runges from 2 ptrcen1 to 10 percent. H~ !!'•~
reluctant 10 give SpC'CLfics, cmng "compeuuon" from other apunment complex owners.
The rent rcduc!ions arc grc111 for the students, but what's III it for Oster"
"llreduccsno1
seanddamagc,and l gc1u~tterclicntelc,"hcs11id." l ha\r
serious students who wunt 1 go 10 school, and when they get some ume off.
0
they want to relax, not pany."
The 76-unit Coun1ry Gardens complex 1 w11h1n walking dm11nce of thr
s
university, and Oster csumatcs that 6.5 percent of the people who rent the
apartments arc either graduate or undcrgnidu:11e studenu:. He said there 1s a
waiung for students to move 1n.
Befof'e he offered the deal, things were different at Country Garden).
''There were wild parties going on. and people whose apanments were near
the pool complained about noise," he s111d. "I didn't like the job of playing
policeman."(CPS)

Community service is good for grades

The
Suffolk Journal
needs
photographers who are able to take
news, feature, and sports photos, as
well as do darkroom work.
For more information,
call Larry Walsh at 573 -8323

Taking the LSKf?

A University of Michigan s1udy found that college studc.nu who take pan
m commum1y sc.rvJCe pro,octs make bcuer grades than sn,dcnu. who spend
all their time scudymg.
The study. by poli1ic1I !IClence profe ssor Gregory Markus, II researcher 111
Michigan's lnsutute for Social Re.~arch, was done m collaborauon wuh tht'
umversity's Office ofCornmunuy Lc;ur111ng11nd the John F Kennedy School
of Go,iemment a1 Harvard U111vers11y
For the stud y. 89 M1ch1gan undcrgr.iduatcs enrolled 111 Murcws' cou rse
"Contempor.uy Pohucal lbue~" and ~·er(' f"Jndomly as~1gned io cwo ~ecuons: the \f"Jdumnal group, ~•h1ch prepared a tenn paper rcqu mng 20 hour:i;
of library research, and a sen 1 group. ~•hw:h pro\·1ded 20 houf'> of
cc
commumty scn1cc.
There wrre 52 ~1udcn1~ a~Mgned h• do rcM'arch and .' 7 11~~1gncd to
commumty scn1ce Al thr end of chr -cmc~tcr. ~tudcn t~ who did hbr.iry
rrM:an:h eamt'd an :wef"J_ge grade of II U 1 a 13-plus. while the )ludents who
0
1,, orlr.:cd m thccommumty a\·erngcd a ll -plu~ to un A•mmus. A'.d~11on11lly. 78
percentof1h_ studcnbass1gncd 1
c
odo ror11n:h al tended a biweekly d1scuu 1
on
session. while 85 percent of the other ~cudentJ. did so.(CPS)

• '-·

:.~

I

,,

/: I

Llfe.S-tyfes

Get good grades, Get cheap rent

,-..
RogerOs1erdev1scd

I

Wtd.at$day, April 7, 1993

1be S llffoUt Journal

"Indecent
Proposal" a
half decent
proposition
By James McDonough
Journal St.11ff
""Indecent Pruposul," wluch opens 1oday at the
Loews Chen in 13oston and the suhurbs. 1 a fa.irly
s
enteruunmg l!lkeon thcugeold qucsuon, "Can money
huy lo,ie'.""
Powered by 1htce Slandout pcrfonnanccs by Woody
Harrelson, Demi Moore. and screen ve1eran Rohen
Redford, Adrian Lync's lilm stans out SlCamy (as the
ads suggesi). and then scu lcs m to a surprisingly
effccuve humandruma.
Harrelson and Moore ponr.iy O11v1d and Diana
f..forphy . 11 young couple Slf1K:k by the nu n list of the
recession. After losing his Job. arch itect David and
D111na ll"J\'C.! 10 Lus Vegas in one last ch11nce to raise
enough money 10 Y\'e their new home.
While 1here. the 1wo win big , and eventually lose
11 all. Enter John Cage {Redford), a suave billionaire
who offen D-Jv1d one m1ll1on dollars for one evening
wuhDiaru.
If the plot of this film sounds fom1 l111r. us probably
because you have seen last summer' s hilarious "'Honeymoon in Vegas," in which millionaire James Ulan
~~::ds~h~h~::i::oro:Jc~ to Nicholas Cage and

1

Seniors dine with pr~id..ent of.college _,.--+ ---• -----.1c.i -e'wi~~...1 'hfili>;:~;~,.~~ _ t;.;Pro..,.n,..,':.,:.,i1,,...,':",.,1ci.h:,,.:~e~,,;i:~~''";",·+---1.--- - - ---:J
~~"'
~~"'
.. ~ 3
d.e*
.. .
lleforc a graduatr p1clr.:s up a diploma from Alma College, 11 small hbcrJI
ans coUej!e m /-..lich1gan. he or ,hr get\ a personal Ill\ mmon to the prc.,1dent "\
home for dinner.
All 225 of this year") gradu.1te, ~•1II h..H· 11 chance to talk wnh Presiden1
Alun S10nc at~ scnt"S of d1nnt'r,. l no11,,n lb "P•r,-d1ns." which arc considered
among the most 1mponant )()Cll\l e\enli. on campu~.
"Semon really conMder 11 a highlight." i.a1d Charloue Schmidtke. a
a: ~;:;_ collrge "S1ude"nls arc allowed 1 choose the e,iening
~0
0 1
Most of the dinll('n; are buffe1-,1yle fo, abou1 JO s1udcnts at a ume but
wme arc more intimate ~•nh II doLen or ~o s1udcnts, the president and h1~ ~1fc
ga1hrrcd m 1hc- pnva1e d1mng l'OoJm of the 1920s housc.(CPS)

::::::~7
Discern the point and logic of a r,;umrul s. Explain
"'· hat you read. Unde rs land how rules urdc r a nd Ii m il
the uni verse . Cons lruc 111 wril len posil iun .

.............
........
---......
.................
---,

ua, ..... .....-.u

_

~

.

. _._

LIA-:.:::.:

...

These 11re

thetliinkirig skills

req uired of a lcgo l mind . Sk ill s
1es 1ccl b y

th l' LSAT. Ski ll s

taugh t by Kap lan . And o nl y
Kapla n.
Coll w10 ..11111pf«1iurll°'r,uL'iATl'rtp

1·I11 - KAP-TEST

KAPLAN

n . . _ .. ._. .... .,..u-

l- -

th:11 1s charac1er onc.nt.atcd.

Unhke las1 year's overexposed "Basic Inst.incl''.
and even Lync's own "FatAI AtllllCtion. "lndccenl
Proposal~ does not rcson 1 exploitive sex and vio0
lence to entennin.. Instead. ic utilizes its three stars to
their full potential.
In II scene after Diana's rendezvous with John
Cage. her and David 11rgue about the inevit.ablc
question of whe1her she had fttlmgs for Cige. Even
though the scene sound~ hkc SOllp opera, i1work.s
because of the \•iable acting talenlJ of Harrelson and

Moore.
Cm111n .. td1111putt7

Love the articles, Hate the photos
A survey of St:inford Un1l'e~~uy women ~1udc n1s fou nd thut they 11ked th~
eduonal content of .,uch mugazmc~ as "Vogue" and "Glamour" but sutd 1he
pictures of uhra-shm models undcm1111ed their self-esteem.
The sun•ey, done by Debbie Then. a social psychologist who received her
doctorate 111 ps)·chology and education from Stanford, was conduc1 last
cd
spnng. Ofthc 75 studen ts who responded. several said they found the articles
on sc1 and health 10 be mfonnauve.
':owcver · ocarly 50 percent u 1d their self-esteem and confidence were
un ermined by th e photogr:iphs, and 68 percem felt worse about their bodies.
~:cl ~7~:hoanswc~ed qucsuons about thei r eating habiu, 82 ~rcenl
531

were oryhad been

:i:

=~::

1

: a=::m m the pas!, and 10 percent said they
0

wo::.:
;:spondeDt: " I usu.ally feel terrible after going 1hrough a
advc.n~m g ~nc. On every page you arc faced wilh pic1urcs, articles o,
reading on=~~~; poml ou, your in.adequacies. I feel truly 'lesser' after

WCLB: BMton's new country music station
by Tony Dellorco
Journal Staff
Seven weeks ago, Boston broke out
their cowboy hats and saddle bools for
the first time in four years when adult
cont~ponuy station WVBF became
M New Country." WCLB.
Hot
WCLB is Boston's first FM country
station since WBOSswichcd to an adult
album rock fonnat in 1989.
The switch was sudden. WVBFwas
- promoting thei r station as the "New

WVBF'' up until the switch in Febru·
ary. They had hired long time Kiss 108
legend Sunny Joe Whit,c and added
more life to their fonnaL
The st.at.ion began playjng adult ''top
40" records such as "{JJ l Want," by
Toad the.Wet Sprocket and Madonna's
''Deeper and Deeper.''They even st.ancd
a Saturday night dance show.
·wcLB's Operations Director, Rob,crt Ouisiy said that Lhosc program•
ming doc.isions
made before they
knew they were heading in a country

were

direct.ion.
Christy u.id that the programming
staff wu playing with the idea of a
counlr)' form at for over • year and a
half. What finally~nSlilllled the switch
was• study recently conducted which
found out tha1 1Mny Bostonians had•
"grassroots" intc:rest ineounuy, Olrisiy
ualed, "Boston was 1he only top 10
radio muke1 without • cou nt ry
itation ..• (while) adult cornemporary is
an over populated fonnal here."
Ouisty feds that country music has

improved greatly o,i~r the past few
years. Heclaimsthatduriog the80s,the
music Jost iu twang. " It became almost
a soppy pop music," he said.
This had been seen in artists such as
Kenny Rogen. He continued 1 state
0
that artists such as Garth Brooks and
Clinl Black have broughl back uadi•
tional "rock 1nd roll" demenu back to
country much like Johnny CllSh did in
the60s.
'
Christy fcclstoday'scounuyis more
Cotttilu1td fNllt 7

°"

6 (

The Suffolk Journal

Wednesday, April 7, 1993

Fanueil Hall meeting house reopens after restoration
By Paw Mace.chem
Journal Staff
When most people visit
FaDUCilHall, thcyu.suallydoso
(ortbcquaintshops,ratm.UOlS,
and night life.. Visi1ocs usually
pus the stJUclurc 1ht11 made
Fanuc.ii Hall the lhriving mu-

kct=::;~~=~
fortw'lcS in ·dupping and lfade,
proposed to mark his success ·
and repay his hometown by
building lhe ball in 1741.
Thc lower level or lhc hall
was divided inlO ""8lls... Meat,
vegetables and other productS
could be purelwcd here. The
citizenry KCeptcd lhc large
meeting room on the second
nOOl'u their official 1own hall.
In 1761.FanueiHW.lbumcd
to the ground. and was quiclcly
rebuilt. financed by public lot1cry. h was in this new hall

JaaaOtis,Samud Adams and
theotbttSonso(Libcrtyread-iedtbemsclvcstofighlforinde,.
pcodcncc with the dawning or
tbcRcvofutiooaryWu.
Uoconsti111tional bills such
a.s lhe Sugar Act or 1764, the
S1amp Acl or 1765, and olhcr
British laws inspired the hall to

~=!~•

America's'1:radleof

In 1805, with the Bos1on
populous growing. Charles
Bulfinch was asked to expand
the ball. ln an amazing tcchni•
Fanueil Hall Mccling House, reopens after cxicnsiYc restoration.
ca.I design for the time, he
Carolyn Btary/Jo~rno/ Staff
doubled the width and height of
thcbuildingwithoutalteringthc
basic style.
Acccsibility ramps for the plan.asitappcarr.d inthc 1700s.
liam Uoyd Garrison, Charles
With theadoptionofthcCity SufMCI' and Fredcriclc Douglas handicapped arc being im• The Ancient Honorable AnilChancrin 1822,iownmcc:tings spoke during rallies aube Hall. proved, as well as gcnctal pub- lcry Company will occupy the
cndcdandsodidpolitkalactiv• PreKrvationofthewtion, Ian· Ii<: safeiy in lhc Hall.
founh noor.
ity in the hall. ii It.ill kept the pcrancc. and womens suffrage
The ranger station and maiThe Great Hall now has a
klea of revolutionary freedom were also discussed. Daniel new spc.tker syStCm. Thc ardu• k:cts will be on located on the
in the 1840s and 1850s. Anli• Wcbst.cr, Jefferson Davis and ous task or renovating the dcli- ground noor. The second floor
slavery advocalC$ such u Wit- Susan B. Anthony were among caic light: sysicms with com- is occupied by the Great Hall.
those who spoke on these is- plete rewiring was also com• The first floor will have exhibits to show the his1ory of 1
h1s
plcted.
su~ The idea$ o( these fearl ess
The painting ~hat domina~ed historic landmark.
Fanueil Hall is o somewh,11
leaders of independence shine the end of the Great H11II has
throughwiththiswittypocmby also been restored in an attempt forgotten landmark, being over•
0
Francis Hatch in 1958: "Herc 1 bring out iL~ original bril- shadowed by the obvious food
ora tors in ages past/H ave liance. New interpretive uhib- anddrinkthat is availablcthcrc
mounted their allacks,/Un- itson thc marlcet floor are being One may bcucr take pride m
dauntcd by the proximity/Of provided. Historic remnants of New England tradition by beearly marli::cl sigl1!l have also ing familiar wich the culture
sausage on the racks."
orcd. Audio-visual surrounding the area.
As • national l~dmark . been rcs1
(dcdicau:din 196J)thcNational programs arc now uvailablc 10
Before going 10 your fav orPark Service and lbe city of hclpvisitorsbc11trintcrprctthc ite waicring hole, stop by the
Boston ismnkingevery attempt history of the bUl!idng.
building that wos the -model 1
0
to preserve Fanueil Hall. The
The National Park Service every other shop in the ara.
building ts 1h the final sugesof has attempted as closely u pos- Fanucil Hall.
bcingrcpa1m
sible. to keep the original noor

A'{TENTION
GRADUATING
STUDENTS!

The March . 25 , 1993
deadljn{! for inclusion in

. · . (I.fl.on

tickets for · the
' Commencement
Exercises
will
be
exte_ ded until 5:00 p.m.
n
on Thursday, April 15.
The drawing will be held
in the Dean of Students
office on Friday, April 16.

new country music station
:h in Febru-

me,c_iss 108
and added
1g~duh "lop
I Want," by
IMadonna's
•cvcnsiancd

,w.

rcctOl',Rob;c progra.m1beforcthey
in a country

1mp,o,·cd greatly over the past few
direction.
Chrisiy said that 1~ programming years. Hcclaims that during the 80s, the
staff was playing w11h the 1dca of a music lost its twang. ''It became almost
country fonn111 for 0\'er II year and a a soppy pop music," he said.
This had been seen in anists such as
half. Whntfinally cons111u1cdthe switch
was a study tteently conducted which Kenny Rogers. He con1inucd to state
found out that many Bostonians had a that anists such as Ganh Uroob and
"grass roots" in1era1 in country. Christy Clint Black have brought back lnidi·
stated. "Bos1on was the only top 10 tional "rock and roll.. dcments back 10
radio markcc witho ut a cou ntry country much like Johnny Cash dW in
station... (while) adult contemporary is the 60s.
Chris1y feel s today's country is more
an over populated fonnat here."
Collrin ,ml on pagt 7
Oristy feels 1 country music h~
hu1

The new deadli ;e of
Thursdag, April 15 , 1993
will allow more eligi ble
students to be included in
the lottery. If you have any
question s about the lottery
or commencement, please
call the Dean of Students
office at 617-573-8239.

- ~pface

Derne.street Deli
Breakfast.

Lunch

· Coffee

*** Serving Suffolk Students.***
For More Than 20 Years

Located In the heart

or Sull'olk's cam, OD die corner CJt
' Derne ud 1maple

Slnda.

1



Call for talie out
742-1~9 ,

The Suffolk J~

'

Wednesday, April 7, 1993

Wednesday, April 7. 199)

By Paul Macf.achem'
JoumaJSwr
Wbeo most people visit

fanucil Hall.thcyU1¥1,llydoso
r01thtquain1shopl,1C1WaUOU.
and nia,ht life. Visitors usually
paSI the ltNCtUR: lfw made
Fanucil Hall the thriving mar•
k.ctplacethatitistoday.
Peter FanuciJ, who amassed
ro rwnes in shipping and trade.
pn>p050d co mart his success
and n:pty his hometown by
building the hall in 1742.
The lower lcvd or the hall
was divided into "5tllls." Meat.
vcactablCI and ocher productii
could be purchased here. The
citiu:nry accepted the large
meeting room on the second
nooras their official 1
own hall.
In 1761.Fanucil Hall burned
10 the gmund. and was qwckJy
~ilt. financed by public k>ttcry. It wu in this new hall

· me

.sons

as the Suga, Aa of 1764. the
Stamp Acl of 1765. and other
British laws inspttd the hall to
be called America's "Cradic of
Libcny."
In 1805. wnh the 8os1on
populous grow,na. Charlci
Bulfinch WU asked to elpand
thchall.ln anamalingtochm•
cal design for the umc. he
doubled the width and height or
thcbuildingwithout altcringthc
basM:stylc.
With the adoption ofthcCMy
Chanerin 1822,townmcetlnp
ended and so did political activity in the hall II still kcpc the
idea of rcvotutionary frttdom
in the 1840s and 18501.. Ano,
sl1vcryadvoc:a1CSsuchasWd-

By N.E. Esoc:bar
Joumid Staff

Fanue1I Hall M~ng House, reopens after cxlCnsive restoration.
Carolyn Bt:aty/Jmm,af S,ufj

ham Uoyd Garruon, Charles
Sumner and Frederick. Douglas
spoke during tallies at the Hall
Pracrvation of the union. tcmpcranoc and womens suffrage
were also d1scuucd. Daniel
Websacr. Jefferson Davis and
Susan B Anthony were among
thost.who spok.eonthcscis-

.,o.

ATTENTION
GRADUATING
STUDENTS!
1993

The 1dci., of thac fc:i.rtc:ss
IC'adt.r.. of 1
ndc~ndcnce shine
through w11h 1h1 wmy poem by
s
Frunc1 H:11ch m IQ58 "Hert
s
orators in ago pas1 H11 vc
/
mountc-d their attack.s./U ndauntcd hy the prox1m11yJOf
\llu~gconlhcrack.s: '
As a nuuonal landmark .
C
dahcutcdm 1963)thtNllional
l'Drl,; Scrv,cc and the c1 y of
1
Bm ton 1~ mukmg evcry111tcmp1
IO prcservc- Fanucll Hall The
bu,khns ·~ m thC' final SUJCI of
bC'mgrqxurcd

Accuib1l.uy rampli for the.
handicapped arc bcmg im-

proved. as well as general publM: safcty m thc Hall.
The Orem Hall now has 11
new speaker system. Thc arduow: tas.li:: of rcnov111ing the dcl.icalC light systems with complete rcwinng was also compl""'Thepamung 1h:11 dormnated
the end of 1hc Gre:11 1111II ha.,
al~ bttn rcsiattd m an 11t1cmpt
1 bnng 001 it, ongmal bnl•
0
lrnncc Nc:wm1
erpr~•uvce,.,h1b1t, on 1hc mar~C'I O
ooratrbcmg
provided. H1stonc remnants or
C'Jrly markc1 sign.~ ha,·c: al~
been rcs1ored Aud10- v1~ual
programs arc now av1
11lablc to
hdp \' IS tlOn. bc11cr 1111erpm !he
h1
:,1ory of1hcbu1 hdng.
The Nauonal Pad: Serv i("('
has aucmptcd asclosclyas ~ s1b1C'. 1 kec:plhc: ong1nal noor
0

plan,as it appcarodi nthc 1700.
The Ancient Honorabk And.
kry Company w,11 occupy the
rounh noor.
The ranger Marion and markcu wtll be on located on 1hi.gmund floor. T h e ~ f1oo,
1 occupied by the Grc;al Hall
s
Tlw: first floor w1U bavc c•h1i,,
11.s 10 show the history of th1,
h1~1onc landmar\:
Fanuc, I Hull is a some1,1. hJ1
fOfl(>Ucnlundmurk. bC'mg o\,:f
,hlldowcd by the obvJOU~ fr11,!
11nddm1k thac 1 11va1l11bkthl·n:
s
One: muy bctttr tllii.e pndc 111
New EnglanU trudmon by h..·mg fom1
11ar )llllh thc cuh un.·
~urmundmg the area.
Before go,ng 10 your (:i, (lr1c W
1 lllenng hole, SIOp by tho:
bu1 ldmg thDt was the model h•
c,·c:ry other shop m the arrJ
hnuci! HaU,

Wcallh:iletm!onc~intlfllCwho'l
Mlll'C~anfn>ftofactmand~ts
noth1ngbu1anawfulpmlongtd~ilcrcc. We
trwcallbmlthcn:andMallhalcL lnlln.c
rcwmiruirsof'ICfflJl'.v.'1:k.nowwluamw
be hkcto b\-c 1n that world of silence.
In the nc:wcnme 1hrilb ..HeurNo Evit; ·
l9fI7AcalbnyAv.-.W\W'lnCl"MarftM.111in
p.xtrJ)'~ Poru:ind pmon:11 ~.&100' Jilhan
Slumh:1n. an ~ aro fosty deaf
V.'(111\an V.' hO m;l(h•c:ncraly get, Ulvol\·td
w1lha rcp,ner(.John C. McGmky)uymg IO
crJCk I nng or OOfNpl oop..
When ht is kllkd. Mat11n·s charJC11.T
(ind,, hmd(ttwn«I up ....; th h.a.~onlyothcr
fncnd. ~ owner Ben Korlill (D.B.
Swo.:ncy,. Togcthefd,cylaUldlanlfM:Sbg;itaollthalbnngsthcmtothcbnnkcL~
lharownlivcs.
M2wngiva; 11 very !iObd pcrfaman:r m
tt.s role she hdped acu With thc film's
dn:ClorRobmGnx:nw:akl.Str:isthcstrong..
YTml.!,aVV)'hc:roent.arolc ""tudt tssccn
cmcrgmg more and n'IOft: from Hollywood

"""'

Althoughthcn::is alcrdcncyforscmed
~btlm'ssccnes10WMglOWardscxagg,erabrulP thcrn ulm la'
ccnrolundmakcsthcm work fa-hcrUSCld
C'/ag;w-N lu.
Occai&oic M:ll.lm·s chanlacrtssosdfrtlwa.Swnn:yisOL'it:&!ithcpcrfca(Oll.Hts
p.:rformanccusthcuwkward. bunt>hng Ben
1JOn. she smoothly

issol\llOOUU\almuma;wculma;tfOf},'Ctthal

httsac.1JO&llrldl'IOlad-lilting lulua.
Thcn= isnomxho,x:khiding indu!i
dumsynt\ltOOC.. lnfuct.i,orneofthcmovic·s
mon: humoroos scenes center around
Swo.:ncy'~dnrac.u:rllfldhasUWJ1T111a.Hcts

r-,

!J:luting Place

The drawing will be he ld
in th e Dean of Stude nts

Breakf' st .
a
Lunch

lO\' C 11." He said country has gencra1
cd
a nc-w young adult 1ntercs1 and reports

10fiustratimallin thcoouneof 1 fcw

1'heonlytaer"inlhismovicWb>R2lly
docsnotb::bwi$~tartinShacn.WMlche
tries hard 10 pit sanclifeioo thcroic of
l..Jcuiman Phil Brock. lhc. opcra-lovin&,
rmso.un rol:ttry JnBSCCrmind. he canes otJ
acunglikcawcal.: Moblcingpininttado(a
conup a,p on the take.
Th: writm: of thc movie~ dlllk t1'1:11
ooonc mthc :iucicncrwillnotic:e thcq:ulcm:: in which Brock. lives. Corne on! lfla'rnl Affimv,.uild have bcO'lonwthisworm
longbcfon:thr:~gotanywhcrcrcwhun.
HythclnllCheis~movie~
wlllbcthanld'ultobcpitOUlof'thcirmiscry.
Th: otalOOl'I or how thr: movie deals
Wllha lcadq lady who IS dcafisC'JICCllcn.
Throughlhc.16Co(mrbEaandn:movalo(
50.llld in sevoul key SiOCta, audinu SC
ta.'SCld into Madin's own~ o(tdplcssn::55&'5 a killcrm!ks hcr.
To: mwxic:nl l'CSJXlfL'iC5 the
fodsatealsocbetolhc.incvi&ableronwa
which develops bctwcm Swccncy and
Madin. Thcrmiombip 1S aliuindat il:
IS fullofdo;ela'l:Sclro awkward noncnl5
Mcan allrclatc lO.
8c:carlc~~mJCaaofgnwilws
SO. thc l"Orrafl'.:Cis &a: IO devdop•aslow
JDCC. which makes the audicru en about

umu

""""""""

Dcsp!carathcrwcak.pkllincand!Of11e
wmb wloguc. Madin and Swmr, make
tha.!i mcMC work for them by fillq it with
iRcnsc emooons and tmlling nuncra o1

.,.,..

-----

..Hear No Eva:· IS a mu9.-SCC rmvic ror
audion:swhoan:willingtofoiegothr:IUIW
ISl'lOUf(o(\mrc:uwJ ainca11"&Cllthe

Coffee

*** Serving Suffqlk Students *~*
F9r More Than 20 Years
\,
Ul!"'led ln the heart

or Suffolk's campus,

on the corner or
Dorne and Temple
SlrttlL
l Call for take out

,,

742-1449

.


~
ro~-me""'Switdl WU made
known. Tht station plays mostly con-

~~~·~,i~;~:::;.::~.:;;i.::

«m~:,,:,:~80,by c
od,y·un-

=

~..

~~:~. ~;;s~;c;~:. :::!:~
1

:ir7b:; ~ : . ~ r i t ~ : ~ ~

m"'" ,b,,... ' " ""'"' ' " '"' 80,100
m:irkct 11nd feel II will n()( work m lht

H, ,.;.
old mosi< p,o.
gr.i.mmcd is compatablc with contem•

!:~,11:::'i~~s::0~~~~::;

Ph;IH,,... ,hqwogr.m,d;"''"'"
1

offi ce o n Frid a y, April 16.

Th e n e w d ea dlin e of
Thursday, April 15, 1993
wi ll a ll ow mo re e lig ibl e
tude nt s to be inc luded in
the lotte ry. If you have any
ques tions about the lotte ry
or commencement , please
call the Dean of Students
office at 617-573-8239 .

.......

=~~:i,~~~!;;'coumryisanove1ty

Dern· Street De11·
e

1

·-----

~"iJ.fi,Jj~~71-n:;,.;;.~~---~----l --~~::.,:':;;,.'.-.--.,., .m-..-,-..-"'-'_w_"_"'"'" .,-""
:
. .. --,-,- -. _" -Su.
avon,; .
e , _/

; - -f~t~i:c~k e~t~s;i~f~o~r:-~t~h~e:--"1~9~9~3~l t- - -1
~
;
C O m m e n Ce m en t
. Exercises
will
be
extended until 5:00 p.m.
on Thursday, April 15.



"Hear No Evil" acting
makes the movie

Fanueil Hall meeting house reopens after restoration
Jamel Olis. Samuel Adams and
other
o1 Libcny ,ud.
iec:I thcmsclVcs10fightfor 1ndependcace with ~ dawning or
the Revohwoaaty Wu.
Unconstitutional bilbi such

The! Suffolk. Journal

=~~~ ~~n:;:i~ 1 ~e~,~~~

..,,;oo. WKOX.·

:~,:~;:~n:~: rcc~~7 ~t':;~~::;r:=~;,!~

opinions a~u, country being back. in
1
Bo~::.~":c: ;;:c~;~h;,;:;,~~;1:'.~:d:~ ~:~:~:~li;7s:;i:h~:=n:
sunC$ that when the club was Roxy'~. a11d is ..dated" by their current (onnalthc d3ntc noor wu packed when Billy
He clarified that WBOS is stffi1irth
Ray Cyrus· "Achy Brcaky Hc(n.. was place in the 25.54 dcmogn,phk:s area
played.
and docs not feel WQ.B will in1crfcr
Mcteer feels country wdldo fine so muchwiththeirnwnbc:n. HCffOOstatcs,
long as "the gencnil mcdia id over 1bc station tbatshould really worry is
stereotypical ideas" tm1 country has Oldies 103.tt
few Boston listeners and realize lhc
There have been rumqurs that jau
trr: mendous upsurac 1n (1115 especially $Wion WCDJ which has just been sold
among baby boomcrs.
10Gn:atc:rMcdi1 will become Bos&oo'1
WQ.B 's ratingsnumbcrshavcgonc competing coun~ sr:,tiO~. An cm•
up I poim in each demographic area. ployec at the statJon made 11 clear thac
mcludirta age ind gender. studied. nofinaldecision basbccftnude. lflhcy
Christy pid, "Anyone who denies a do decide to foUow the. footsteps o(
count~ following in thi1 market is WCLB, Christy said, "I welcome the
blind."
competition..,
wct;P, had ~ir library built up by
ll('VC'I

will."

ch,•'"'""'

)

A child from a local school came 10 Suffolk 1 panicip:uc in Child', Crime
0
and Safety Day. lasl Friday. The event was sponsored by 1hc Criminology
Club and the Suffolk University Police Dcpanmcm.
Jtnni/,r K,~ JJ01<rnu/ S,qj/

Indecent 1,om po8, s
Redford al.so has a number or scenes
that show why he was soch a sensation
in the seventies. His low key. almoSI
relaxed mannerisms in the film arc
renunisccnc of his former coUaguc
Paul Newman in h.is ~ar winning
perfomlaOCC in Man inScorccsc·s·ihc
Color of Money."
Even though N
lndecenc Proposal" is
a competent drama. it has its share of
silly would-bcmctaphoricalsccncs. The
most laughable is a scene in· which
Dillna and David have sex atop a pile or

money. How poetic.
And of course. no Hollywood film
would be con1plctc withoul I ha ppy
ending. .. Indecent Propcml" is not immu ne. Like m0$1 recent movies. happy .
cums to sappy real quick.. and by the end
p( the l'ilml predictability takes over
and proves th111 Holl ywood has 1bsolu1dy no imagination when ii comes to
ending a pic1urc.
This aside. Adrian Lync's " lndccent
Proposal" is enjoyable and turns out
fine pcdonnanccs by its three stan.

A
TIENTIONAILFINANCES1l/OENTS!
ATI'ENTIONALLFINANCES1l/D
ENTS!

The Suffolk University
Financial Management
Association
cordially invites you ·to attend
A GENERAL MEETING FOR
- ALL FJNfiNCE STUDENTS

to be held Thursday, April 8th 102 p.m.
in Sawyer 708
The Financial Management Association is a student
organization which promotes the educatJon and skills
of Suffolk Uni~ersity Finance Students· through a
program consisting of:
•panel discussions with industry professionals
•lectures OD current issues a,;d trends in the
Finance industry
•job search skills workshops
•and much more!!!

For Further Information Please Call the
Finance Department at 573-8396
ATIUITION AIL FINANCES'ruDENTS!
ATIUITIONAILFINANCES'ruDENTS!

i===a,;;;;;a=========aa.aaiU

Wednesday, April 7. 1993

l ht Suffo lk Journal

W - y . >.pri/,7,

g

Springfest talent begins rehearsals

--

By Tony Dellorco
Journal Staff

cl • fc:w

-""'"""'
• While he

""""'"

:ccmcsdf
~
Nealt ofa

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

em!lrwc:r-

~
-=-=
1du.~'Nmtl

~ncartum.

!iudictas

A child from a 1
ocul school c:unc- to Suffolk to p.in11;1p:11c m Child's Crim r
and Safely Day. l11i.1 Friday Thcc,enl ""II~ ,Jl(Xl~orcd hythc Cnrmnology
Club and the Suffolk UmHrMty Policr lkp.anmrnt

Jr,uufr~ Krlli~llm•r"u/ Stuff

"""'"""'
""'""-

Jndecent 1"'"'""R,.,

'l hctplc:ss-

,....,..

,_
~""""""

""" ond
U:intlutit
d"""""'"

opauslow
: cutabo.Jt

""'"""'

""""""'

Rcdford al50has1 numbt-rofscencs mOnt) How J)O(:IIC.
that show wh y he wa:i. such a scn~ution
A hJ of course. no Hollywood lilm
m thr scvenu~ His low key. almost ""'0u ld t'C complc1 w11hou1 a happy
c
relaxed m11nnen sms m 1 film arc cntlmg .. lndccc n1 Proposal",~ not ,mhcrc mimscen1 of his fonn er colle;;igUt mul'l(' Lllr;e mOSI rcce nl mov,cs, happy
um~ wsnppy rc:1 qu1ck. und by the end
1
l>ttul Newmon m h1~ Oscur wmmng 1
pcrfomumce m Mani n Scol'('csc·~ "Thl" of the fi lm . prrd,c1ab1\11y talr;cs over
:,,nd prove:,. that Hollywood has 1bsoColor or Mone y."
Even though "lndecen1 Propo~I" ,~ \u1cly no 1magm:i.oon whrn 1 comes to
1
11 competent drama, 1l has 11s shurc of endmga p1ctu n:.
Th1s11s1dC, Adri an Lyne·~ "Indecent
sillywould-beme1aphoncol scenes. The
mosl luu3hablc 1s o scene 1 which Pruposul" I \ enJOya blc and cum~ O U(
n
Diana and David have
atop a pile of fine pcrfom11mcc-. by its three st.a n..

ll('ll~ c/

"'"""""'
llrJICOlllhc

pan of the
Will made
1
ostlycon•
oday's any said that
o far back.
musac:proth contcm5 progr.i,mr A.M sistcr
,rognlm d,ed positive
ing back in
!

does, not

omcountry
rc nt fomun.
isstillfifth
aphks area
Nill interfcr
cm:m statcs,
lily worry is
,rslha1jazz

stbccn w ld
neBoston's
,n. An cm•
it clear that
1ade. lfthey
1
00Uleps or
,clcomC the

As the biltcr Boston winier
of 199Jcomcstoaclosc:, Suffolk talent arose from hibemBtion u tryouts for this year's
Sprinsrcst took place on Thursday. April I.
lbeevcatisagn:atopponunity for all Suffolk students to
5lwe lhcir actina, aingina and
musical ability in fron1 of !he
spolli3hL
For her first lime. Communica1io ns proren or. Yield
Karns will take hold of' lhc
reigns as faculty coordina1or.
Paul MacE.achem will be the
musical director.
Ron Vining.a Suffolk aJumnu5, has been appoin1cd usiJtant direc1or. Finally. Ted
Colburn w11s named produc1ion designer and 1cchnical di-

""'°'·

ATTENTION ALL FINANCE STUOENri!
ATTENTION ALL FINANCESTUDENTS!

The Suffolk University
Financial Management
Association

to be held Thursday, April 8th 1-2 p.m.
in Sawyer 708
The Financial Manage ment Association.is a sl~dent
organization which promotes the education and skills
of Suffolk ni versity Finance StudenlS lhrough a
program consisting of:
-pa nel discussiOI\S with industry professionals
-lectures on cu rrent issues and I rends in the
Fin ance Industry
-job search skills wor kshops
-and much morel!!

For Further Information Please Call the
Finance Department at 573-8396
ATTENTION ALL FINANCE STUD
ENTS!
A
Tl'ENTION ALL FINANCE STUD
ENTS!

l!aaa==..,,.=======;;-===;;,!_J

,-,.

Beth Turchan and Melisa
Dowaliby plan on doins a
parody of Saturday Nigh1
Live's ..Co frec:Tallc." Tun:han
hopes to add comedy flavor 10
the s.how.
She slllted. "MOSloflheaclS
last year, a hhoush 3rea1.
sccmcdtobe on a scrioussidc."
The two wanl to be pan of the
funny aspect of SpringfcsL
A very talented son1wri ter
and piano player. William
Drcshct will appear in scverw.l
acts. Karns felt he could also
be used in pllrt as background

music.forpoc:uyrcidings.
Vining SIited that people
who audition arc, for the mos1
part, not excluded from being
in the the show. Even if their
tryouu are less than satisfactory, !hey can find a place for
them somewhere in the show.
"We try 10 brins OUI
everybody's bes1 talent,"
Vining stated
Musicalactscanrangefrom
hip bop. to rock, to classical.
Karns hopes 10 imegnatc studc:nts from diffcrcni croc.s sec:lions or the college. Any s1uden1 is eocouNgcd to partici•
pate. She made clear, 'This
show is not open 10 just theater
majon:." Karns hopes that they
put 103ethcr the be:sc show they
possibly can.
More imponam.ly. she continued. is that people make
friends and have fun . "Putting
1ogcthcr a show is 100 much

no1bumping elbowsorovcmt:tr.
ingc:onvcnutions. The Ul.bles an:
docoflltcd with qua.int min.i-humlt's soh.'.udatSuffolk10fird11 cnne lamps and, occasionally1a
grta1. place 10 Sil down and have flower nnuignma,t.
Appetiutssuchubnatv:ttu.
dinno-. Hish on hill there is one
placcth.'.lll\MIWnOSphttc,charm. vcgctabkplates,snlad.and50Ups
and Wt}' food all in one. The lie awilnble for bctwoc:n SJ.95
Blad: Goose is I tcstllUl'Vllt that and$5.95. Tbcappccizaslftgood
brings classy dining to Suffolk sius, eoough fOf" two people to
students and othCB on Beacon 5harccomfonably.
Thcmcalslhemsclvesan: vcry
Hill.
The Black Goose, despite its goodproportions.Thereiscnough
location.isagoodsiu:drcsmu- forthepatrontofcdcomfonably
ranL lllwacapocir.yofaboutfifty full when leaving. Meals ~
pcople which &i YCS a cozy ~ frornlighlsandwichcstofcuucilk'
alf'rcdo. These nal5 are prier
spberetoitspautn\.
lnh:mickDerln::stawwtWl'C- ranged from $6.00 to Sl.50. The
is 1larzebclrthatpcoplcmaysil at Btack.Goosccanc:uertoasmall
fora drink while waiting for a nudgina for food or a raYCnOUS
tnbleor just for casual conversaSo.for g.n:atmeals. scopby
tion.
The peach m:uble WHCS can The Black Goose on Beacon
scat fourcomfonablyandlhcre is Street. open aftCT 3:00pm.
enough dbow room so you arc
By Mary A. D'Alb11
Journal Staff

.......

COP funds

upcoming
events

Get your resume ready and
suit clean~d for the

By Susan Vella
Special 1 the Journal
0
The Council or ~idenL\
last Thursday approved more
thun Sl.900 in funds for eight
upcoming s1udCnt orpnizcd
events.
Threcoftheeigh1allocation5
had to deal with the Temple
Street Fair. lhat will Ulk.c place
on Thuf5day. April 15. at the
Ridgeway Gym. These al locations made by COP for thr

Suffolk Univ~rsity
JOB FAIR!
r-T

priusco be given out during the
Fair.
The Pychology Club was al•
located $125 ror a fortune ieller

6:00-8:00 p.m.
Sawyer Caferteria

cordially invites you to attend
A GENERAL MEETING FOR ·
ALL FINANCE STUDE TS

Karns• 11ld lha1 this years
theme is ''Celebrating Suffolk
Talent." Sheantidpatcsagrcat
variety ol!alcnt, inc:ludingcomcdy, drama, singing and the
playin3ofmusic:alinstn1mcnts.
She revea led 1hat an 11
cappclla act with a "bugle boy
40i" 5tyle is scheduled co 1p-

A place with class close to
Suffolk - The Black Goose

Seniors & Grad. Students

sc-.

lmgitwith

cnVMCfa

1
9?~.

ABCS

Access
Allnet Communic~tions
Baycove
Best Business
Boston Company
Boston Fi ve Cents Savings Bank
Clean Water Act.ion
Council for Educational Exdtangc
Corporate Soft ware
D.C. Hcafih & Company
Deloitte & Touchc
Fidelity Investments
First Securities Service Corporation
Genzyme
Greater Boston Boy Scouts
Grant Thornton
Harvard Coinmuni ty Hea lth Plans
Hibbard Brown
IDS Finacial Services

John Hancock Financial Services
Key Program ,)
Keyport Life Insurance
Lechmere
Mass Mutual
Metropolitan Life
Mass. Department or Social Services
National Medical Care
Parametric Technology Corporation
Plymouth Rock Assurance
PowCrson Corporation
ROMAC Associates
Social Security Administration
State Streel Bank
The Shareholders Group
TILL Inc.
U.S. Marine Corps.
U.S. Office of Personnel Mg1.

U.S. Secret Service
U.S. Small Business Administration

Dress professi'O·nally and bring·resumes.

boothatthefair.ThcWtalloca·

tion that was made regarding
thefair,wu for theMarketing
Clubfortheamoum ofS600for
two chamcaturists.
Olher allocations came once
•gain from COP for the amount
of SI 50. for refreshments to be
served throughoul their last
meeting of the year, that will
la.keplacc:onApril 22. •



Crimioo"'""

Th<
0d, allocatedSIOO.foraguestspeaker
lecture titled Battered \\!'omen
Figlting~whichtookplacc
April I.TheHistoryClubhadan
alloauion for $500, for a lcclure
on April 6. in Sawyer 1121. Tht
Socicty.ofPhysicsmadconeallocation roe SISJ.40 for two Jcc.
w.rcsthatwilJbeheldAr,rillS,in
Archcr6JI . All o(lhcsc)cctun:$
willbegivenduringtheactlvitics
period
The last aUoca1ion of thr
mcctinguwa.s derived frmi the
HealthCarecrsOub,forSJOOfOf
thrceguestspcakcrsforllrirLobsterF°""theinformationrqwdingcheHcalthCarcenOub. .,.,; u
bemsclJW!dduringthenc,,tCOP

meecing.

.

TheSl;!!folkJo\&ra,aJ

Wednesday. April 7, 199l

Springfest talent begim rehearsals
By Tony Dclloroo
Jouma) Stafr'
As the biuer Boston winier
or 1993 comes 1 a close. Suf0
folk talciu arose from hibernation as tryoulS for this year's
Sprulgfesttookplaccon Thurs•
day, April I.

The event is a grca1 opponu•
nity for all Suffolk studenu to
share their actin,, singing and
musical ability in front or the
spotligh1.
For her firsc time. Communications professo r, Vicki
Kams will take hold of the
reigns as racul1y-coordinator.
Paul MacEachem will be 1hc
musical di~ 1
or.
Ron Vining, aSurfolk11lum•
nus, has been appomlcd au1Suan1 d1rec1or. Finally, Ted
Co/bum w:is named prod1JCuon designer and technical di·
rcc1
or.

Karns• aaid that 1tus years
theme is ''Celebrating Suffolk
TaJent.." Shcan1icip.iies1 grcu1

music forpocuyrcad1ngs.
Vining stated that people
who audit.ion are. for the mMt
varictyof11lcnt._lpclud1ngcom• pl/1'1, nol eacludcd from being
cdy, ·&ama, singing 1 the in the the s.how. Even if their
md
playingofmusic:al imtrumcnts. uyoutsarclcsslhansatisfac •
She revea led that an 11 tory, chcy can find ■ place for
cappclla llct with a '"bugle boy them somewhere in the show.
40s" s1ylc is s.c:heduled 1 ap- M
0
We try 10 bring ou1
everybody's be~l 11lcn t."
Beth Turchan and Melisa Vining nated.
Dowaliby plan on doi ng a
Musicll.lacucanrangcfrom
parody or S11urj!1y Night hip hop, to rock, 10 classical.
Live' s"Corfcc Talk."Turchan Karns hopes 10 intcgra1e scuhopes 1 add comedy OaVOl to dents from differcnt emu sec•
0
lhcshow.
Lions of the college. Any SIU•
She stated, "MOSIO(theacts dent is cncoun1ged to partlci•
las! year, ahhough great. pate. She made clear, '"This
~medtobconascriouss1de." show is not open to just cheater
The two want to be pan of the majors.·• Karns hopes that they
funnyaspcctofSpringfcst.
pu t toge1
hcrthcbcst showthey
A very talented 50ngwritcr pos.~ibly can.
and pi:mo player, William
Mote importantly. she con•
Drcshcrwill appearinscveral tmucd. is that people make
acu. Karns felt he could also friends and have fun . '"Putting
be used in pan as bad:ground together II show 1s too much



Wedncaday; April 7, 1993

A place with dass close to
Suffolk - The Black Goose
By Mary A. D'Alba
Joum:il Staff
h'ssohaniatSufTolk tofinda
greatplacco sndovmandhavc

dinner. High on hill dvn is one
placethalhasa~charm.
111d laSly food all in one. The
Black Goose ~ a ~ !hat
brings cla.uy dining to Suffolk
students and others on Bcaoon

Hill.
The Black

Goose. dcspnc its

location. is a good siz.cd rcstru.trant. It hasacapacityof about fifty

pcoplcwh.ichgivcsaroz.yanno-

sphcrctoilS~
lnthcmiddleolfCiWllrantthcrc
isa large twtha1 people may sit al
foe a drink. while waiting fo, a
l:lblc or just for casual corwcr..a-

oon.
The pc:ad, marble tables can
seat fou.roomfonablyandthcrc IS
enough elbow room so you are

Seniors & Grad. Students

Get your resume ready and
suit cleaned for the

Suffolk University
JOB FAIR!
Thursday, April 8, 1993
6:00-8:00 p.m.
Sawyer Caferteria
ABCS
Access
All nc t Communica tions
Baycove
Bes t Busi ness
Bos ton Company
Boston Fi ve Cents Savings Bank
Clean Water Ac tion
Counc il fo r Ed ucationa l Exchange
Corporate Software

D.C. Health & Company
Deloiue & Touche
Fideli1 y Investme nts
Firs t Securities Service Corporation
Genzy me
G reater Boston Boy Scouts
Gran t Thornton
Harvard Community Health P lan s

Jo hn Hancoc k Financ ial Services
Key Program
Keypon Life Insurance
Lcchmcrc
M ass Mutual
Metropo litan Lire
Mass. Department of Social Services
National Medical Care
Paramc tri~ Technology Corporation
Plymouth Rock Assuraqce
Powersoft Corporatio n ·

ROMAC Associates
Social Security Adminis tration
State Slrcet Bank
The Shareho lders Group

TILL Inc.
U.S. Marine Corps.
U.S . Office o f Personny l. Mg t.

Hibbard Brown

U.S. Secret Service

IDS Fi nac ia l Services

U.S. S mall Business Administration

Dress professionally and bring resumes.

notbun,'pin&clbowsorov~iring oonvcnations. lbc labb andccor.ucd withquaim nnni-humcanc lamps wxl. occas1
onall)'. :,
flowerwtaignmm..
Appctizc:rssuchasl:iru$hctb.
vegctableplatc:s.salad...isoup,.
arc •~le for bctwom S3 9~
andS.S.95. lkawim,marcgoo.J
sizes. eoough ror two people w

~comfonnbly.
Tiicmcalschcmselvcsarcvct)
goodJXOPOfUOOS.Tl'aciscnough
forchc piuoo1ofoc:lcomfortahl)
fuU when leaving. Mc.lls ~
from lightsandwicheslOl'cttuc:1111,•
al(rcdo. These meals lU'C poet'
,ungcd from $6.00 to $8.50. Th:
Black Ciooi5c can aucr to II sm:,11
nudging for food or a raveoca.,,

""""'"'

So, for great meals. stop b)
The Blad: Goose on lkac(\/1

Saffl. open af1cr J:OOpm.

COP funds
upcoming
events
By Susan Velln
Special 10 the Journal

The Council of PrcsidenL\
la.U Thursday appro\·ed molt'
than S1 .900 in funds fore1ghl
upcoming s1uden1 organized
cvems.
Threcof1
hee1gh1alloca11on,
had to dC'JI with the Tempk
.. Slleet Fair, that will cake place
on Thursday. April 15. at tht
Ridgeway Gym. These alloca•
lions made by COP for Ilk'
pru:ci10bcgivenootduring11K'
fair.

The Pychology Oub was llllocu1ed SI 25 fora fonunc 1cll«
booth at the fai r. The lnstallocu•
uon that was made rcganhng
lhcfair,wasfortheMarkeung
Club for theamoont ofS600 for
1wocharoca1urisL~.
Other allocations came om
again from COP for the amount
ofS ISO,forrcfrcshmenlS tobc
served 1hroughou1 their la.-!
meeting or the year, that will
wkc place on April 22.
The Criminology Oub w ai.
alloancdSIOO, foragucstsp:akcf
lcctuni tilled Baqcrod Womtn

FightingBack.whx:htoekpbc(
April I.ThcHisti;wyOubhadan

allocationforSSOO. foralccwn:'
on April 6. in Sawyer I 121. The
SociccyofPhysicsmadeoncallocation for SISJ.40 ror two kc·
tun:slhat will be held April IS.in
An:hcr63 1. Alloftht:se~

will be g:iveno.aring the ac:tivttJO
~riod.

The last alloc;ttion of 1hc
mcc:tingawas derived f'rom the'
HcallhCartiersOub,forSJOO for
thttcgucstspcakmforlhcirlob-

sterfca.q_thcinfonn:ttioorq;ard·
ing lhc Health CarcmClub, will
bcdiscusscdduringlhc:notCOP

-;,,,.

The Suffolk Joumal

Everybody Deserves A
Little Attention!
The Suffolk Journal has made tremendous strides in our performance
and coverage over the past year. This would not have been possible
without the hard work and dedication of so many people. In
recognition of this hard work, we ask you, our readers, to nominate
the best of the best on the Journal staff for the first every

Suffolk Journal Excellence Awards
Nominate our staff and sections in the following categories:
Best Sports Story

Report1r or the Vear:

For lhc single best sportS story of the year by a Suffolk Journal staff
for the most significant and outstanding contribution IO the Suffolk mcmbcror contribu ling reporter for the Suffolk Sports section. Winner
Journal in reporting news. rca1ures. specialities, editorials and com• wil Ibedetennincd by lhc accuracy, style. and comprchcnsi ve coverage
mcntarics. and spons. This award is based on the number or contri- of the subject.
butions. writing style. accuracy, nnd assistance given 10 other re po rte~ 3Jld edho~ .

Best Specialities Story

For the single best specialties s tory from any of tl)e Su ffolkJoumal 's
specialties or speciPJ interest sections, written by , Journal staf
For the most ou tstanding section orthc Suffolk Journal in the areas reporter, contributing reportcf, or special 1 the Journal. Winner wi ll be
0
or covernge, page design. accuracy, style and organiz.n1i9n. Sections determined by the accuracy. style. and comprehensive coverage of the
eligible for consideration arc News. Lifcsiylcs. Sporu:: Editorial . subject.
)
SJ>CG.ialities, Campus Spotlight. Nubian Record. Business Page, Media Carce~. International Exchange. Altern:uive Life, Voices of

Section of the .Year :

edi1 and the s41ff of the scc1ion. The SGA special election page and
or
Valent ine's Day page are ineligible for this award.

Best News Story
For the single best news s1 wrinen by a Suffolk Journal staff
ory
member or COfltributing reporter for the year. Winner will be dc1ermined by the accuracy. style. and comprehensive coverage e r the
subject.

stopm1onco umn,co
,
slaff writer or Suffolk stUdcnl. Nominations wi ll be considered on tht
basis or reader's response, )lomimnor's comments, clarity, subject·
maner, and style. Submissions from faculty. staff. and non-Suffolk
students or employees 4tC ineligible.
·

Best•Ph.oJograph

For the best pho1
ograph Loken by a Suffolk Journal staff or contributing photographer. Pho1os will be judged by the.art work, its relation
1 a corresponding story (if any), q4ality of the prin1, and appearance.
0
Best Lifestyles Story
Certain file photos. public r'C lations pho19s, frce•lancc photos, wire
For the single besl feature s1ory wnnen by a Suffolk Journal staff phoms. and pho1os appearing in the Voices of Suffolk~ ineligible.
member or contributing reporter for thc Lifestyles section. WiMCr
wil l be determined by the accuracy. s1yle. and comprehensive CO\ler•
age of the subjec1.

Quote or the Year
For the best MQuote or the Week. Mas j udged by _ ur n;pdcrs,
o
dccenn.incd by the most nominations received. The lop three quotes
wi ll be named as nominees . Quo1cs from stories. commentaries. or
entries with the nomination process which did not appear in lhe
M
Quo1c of the W~kM ineligible.
8IC

Nomination forms will be available March 25 at the Student Activities Office and the
Suffolk Journal office.,Nominations should include the reporter's and section's name,
story headlines, specific examples of their work, 3nil the date the story appeared in
the paper. Awards will be given at the Suffolk Journal Excellence Awards Ceremony, .
time •and date ~o be annoi:mced.' Nominations will be accepted until April 16.

9 •

Wednesday, April 7, 1993

The Suffolk Journal

r.10 ( n.cSuffolk Jowna.1 .

ody Deserves A
e Attention!

Cheating denies
us all of a fair
education

11ade tremendous strides in our performance
ast year. This would not have been possible
: and dedication of so many people. In
w
ork, we ask you, our readers, to nominate
1e Journal staff for the first every

Recent incidents and a number of seemingly discontented
s1udents have brougtlt lhc i.~uc ofcheating to the forefronl of
lhc university at a most critical time, approaching finals.
Rumors arc running wild 4J"Ound thc campus of an incident
intheSchoolofManAgemcn1whcrca s1udenttriedtosmugglc
an er.run out of lhc class, bul w. s caught by the professor.
a
Although this incident could not be verified al presstimc,
a number of studcnis in1ervtcwcd by the Journal seem to
confirm one thing, cheating is on the rise.
There islittlcwondcras 1 why cheating is increasing. Wilh
0
the economy sti II slniggling and ruition rising. every bit of lhat
precious time spent away from campus is mostly taken by
wort. ForSll.ldcnis buckling under the weigh I ofa heavy wort
schedule. burdening class loads. and fatigue, cheating can
become a favorable risk for some.
Forlhc minority, laziness and ignorance may make chcal·
ing tfleca.sicst way out of doing the legitimate wont hur.ctn:ds
of SuHolk sludcnts do everyday. These people hold the rcs1
of us in contcmpl ns they slide on by riding on the hard work
of others.
Andthenthc1C i,$thc lhitdclassofstudentswhochcat.lhose
who do not even know that they nre doing ii. Seemingly
hannlcss copying of 0$(:r papers. mu Itip.le use of pnpcrs for
different classes, and working in groups on lllke home exam.,,;
all can be com:trucd to be chealing in certain insl3nec.'i.
The wording of thc university 's cheating policy makes ii
clear that cheating is neither condoned oracceptable behavior
few Suffolk srudcnts. ycl it continues to go unChc:ckcd.
Aficr a slltdcnl went c the Evening Division S1udcn1
o
Association, both EDSA and thcStudcnl Government Associalion conducled investigations and have planned lo work
wilhlhc:adnunifuationonclarifyingthcchcatingpolicyand

nal Excellence Awards
nd sections in the following categories:
Desi Sports Story
For the single best sporu story of the year by a Suffolk Joumal Slaff
1tion 10 the Suffolk memberorconrributing reponer forthcS11ffolk Spons scction. Winner
:limrials nnd com• wilI be dc1ennincd by the ace uracy. sty le. and comprchcns, vc coverage
number of con1ri- or the subject.
cn to othcrrcpor1 -

Rest Specialities Story
For the single best spcciallies story from any of the SuffolkJoumo.J's
spcciallics or special interest scctio_ s, wrincn by a J?urnal _
n
staff
oumalinlhcareas rcl)Of1cr, contributing rcponcr, or special 10 the Journal. W10nerw1II be
niz.otion. Sec1ions dc1
cmlincd by the accuracy. s1yle. and com!')l'Chcns1ve con:rllge of the
sp<>cti, Edi1oriaJ. subjccL
usincss Page. Mc: urc. Voices or
Dest Column, Commentary, or Editorial
1r cdiroror special
For 1hc: bcs1op1mon column, conimcniliij. o. cdito, iaH,y-•--. al--eleccion pngc o.nd
s111ff writer or Suffolk studcnl Nominations will be considered on the
of reader's response, nominator's commcms. clarity, subject
matter. and s1ylc. Submissions from foculty, s1nff. and non-SuHolk
students orctnployces arc ineligible.
ffolk Journal starf
1ner will be dctcrBest Photograp h
c covernge of the
For1hc best photograph 1nkcn by a Su ffolk Journal siaH ~rcontrib•
u1ing phomgraph.cr. Photos will be judged by the art work, tlS rela1ion
1 corresponding s1ory (if any), quality of lhc print, and appcMlln:C·
011
Ccnain file photos, public n:la1ions pho1os. free -lance ptlo1os , wire
ffolkJoumal staff photos, and photos appearing in 1he Voices of Suffolk arc ineligible.
:s section. Winner
1
prchensive cover-

ba.,.u

'-

procedures.

: best ·QUOtc of the Weck.· as Judged by .our readers.
!dbythcmostnominat1onsrecc1 ved. 'The toplhrcc~uoccs
med as nominca:. Quotes from stories. commcntnncs. or
ith the nominalion process which did nol appear in the
flhc Weck• arc ineligible .

lable March 25 at the Student Activities Office and the
,tions should include the reporter's and section's name,
1ples of their work, and the date the story appeared in
o at the Suffolk Journal Excellence Awards Ceremony,
1
nced. Nominations will be accepted until April 16.

Q'J10'1'£ O!F'J!JlE. ~
"Enryone should have• healthy distrust
of govemmtnL Tna.st me."
-Dr. Robert •sob'" Rosenthal after he
told of u11 Incident between hims.elf and
1ht: Ce,ural lmclligencc Agency. ·

0

..

Letters to the Editor

,_ILL_

Program Council
refutes Walsh's opinion

.._

/

" And Propm Council has seen measurnble disap,
pointmcnts in the level of commitment and quali1y
events.." This totally bold-faced untruth was written by
Mr. Law~nccM. Walshiol&st wcck'sSuffolkJoumal.
We can·1 he.Ip but wonder bow Mr. Walsh defines
quality when we coun1cd lwclve mislakes • occunin,

·



··

But to 1he point. Program Council 1w ~ver before

:a;c:~~~:

~~~:;d~=i:,c~;!.~~~a~c~!~o~,:"!:;
but II few.
Now lets discuss our quality. Months of preparation
aces into plaMing any and every event that we run. In
September, surveys we~ di~ributcd to students all
over campus llfld we listened to your responses. We
attempt lO plcase u manf siudcnt.s-u we can: This year

conlfouing orienlation, and a required clause on every

::nc=.t~~~!p~~,:~~-:;~~y=~t~~

enough. ii must also be taught to the JXOfess<n. As a pan ot
theirprofcssionaJb'aifling.profcssorsooedtobcrc-cducated
on how students chc.al. what to look.fCX' during exams. and
wtw the tell-WC sip of cheating are.
In the ideal ~mic world. cheating never happens. But
•in the real world, we rulize that cheating will never be
Cflldicaled. Hopefully. throughstrictenfon::cm::ncandhashcr
pcna)tics, we can diminish the amount of cheating and
cqualiu the playing field for all students.
·

We explored Women's issues by sponsoring a lectu~
nd
~~m;'.:S and
self-dcfcmeclassesf«womeooocampus. Wceumined the AIDS i1a1e by hosting the local portion or the
AIDS Memorial Quill We helped promote Alcohol
AwarctlCSS Week by handing out Mocktails to students
in the Sawyer Cafeteria. We, aloog with other student
leader organizalions, have been working with the univcnity lO make renovations in the cafeteria lO aive ii a
more social atmosphere. We lr)' lO aivestudcnts a more

~ is no excuse for anyone to cheat at Suffork. We.
0
unlike manyolhcrschools. have the_
luxury of being able 1
appoac.hprofcsson:whoareusuallylibcraJ cnough toexrcnd
an u:tn hand. For !hose students who do chcal. they are noi
only che.ltingthcmsc:lvCI, thcyarecheatingthcra1ofusout

:::,•:::::!!en~~~::n:~:;:.m~!
cclcbratcthc holiday season by hosting' a Trcclighlina
and Menorah lightina ceremony and by running a
"Wiritcr Carnival" where we hosted free food. games
and novelties for studt:nll to enjoy.

'

'

,



krall.Y....

newspaper?!

co~~":!~11::;::~~SGA.FDSA.aodtbcdcaru
should seriously look into ~V!lffiping the entire policy to
include clear definitions of the w:,cedurcs for discipline and
levels of punishment. includingguidclinesfocthoscstudcnts
whowillfullywistanolhcrstudcnt iflcheating.
In addition. the university should make cheating and
academic excellence a major part of its ~lation program,

oh wrcduc:ation.

.,.,. '

ea.--

n:oction from the two governing organizations is the policy :::: : :
:~:::a;t~~~:e:too~ ;::
needs clnrificalion and redefining to make cheating more and Grill 's doubled over last years. We had well over

pro:::r~a:tllcchcnlingpolicyrowa/asrudcntsisnoi

'

., ~ , ln

0

a problem which. according to OW' repom from students. MS
been unnoticed or igno~ by many on campus. Initial

-· -..
-.........
---·
--~~--Kdfter!ellMn!

1 -M.W....

-----"':..:::s,:'=ii'a::.,,===•app'""•'-"oT1ia'1yruwviCcrccoga-as;.,ru=ir----Or1,nt,C'""hcr

j15

1f the Year

Wcdocsday, April 7, 1993

~r;:':;':_

~~=':;

c.,,;,.,, .. ,_,, ,o

,

J'

10

The Suffolk !oumal

W~y,April7,1993

I ,dit,,, i .. ,1

Cheating d~nies
us all of a fair
education

ff

"'
•-

-

AU

""""'
inhiu
Thi

. .. Bill
1lot'.

Recent incident.,; and a number of seemingly discon1
ented
students hnve broughl !he issue of cheating to the forefront of
the university nt a mos! criticaJ time, approaching finnls .
Rumors arc running wildaroundlhe campusofan incidcnl
inlhcSchoolofManagcmentwhereas1udentlried1osmuggle
an exam out of the class, but wns caught by the profcssoc.
Although this incident could not be verified at prcsstime.
a number of students interviewed by !he Journal seem lo
confinn one thing, cheating is on !he rise.
lnen:is littlcwOnderns 10 why chenting isincrea~ing. With
the economy still struggling and tuition rising. every bi1 of lha1
precious time spent nway from campus is mostlyUll;en by
wori:.. ForstudcntsbuckJing under the weight of aheavywod
schedule, burdening clns.s lo3ds, and fatigue. cheating cnn
t:ecomc a favorable risk fo r some.
Forthe minority, laziness nnd ignorance may mllke c heating the·casiest way out ofdoing !he legitimate worlc hundreds
of Suffolk s1udcnts docvcryd3y. These people hold the resl
ofus in contempt a.<; !hey slide on by riding on the hard worlc
of others.
And then there is the third class ofstudents who cheat, those
who do not even know .th~ they are doing it. Seemingly
ar
harmless copying of other papers. multiple usc.df papers f()('
different cla.<t,;e.s, and working in groups on take home exam.~
all can be con.<;trued to be cheating in.certain inStlnccS.
1ne wording of the university's cheating policy makes it
cleat 1h1u cheating is neither condoned or acceptable behavior
for Suffolk students. yet it continues 10 go unChccked.
After n studem went 10 tht: Evening Division Student
Association. both EDSAt111d lhe StudentGov~,mrnent Association conducted investigations and have planned to work
with the administration on clarifying the cheating policy !11\d
procedures.
Thcire orts s ou
app au
.
y ave recognize
a problem which. according to our re pons from s1udints. has
been unnoticed or ign0£1rd by many on campus. Initial
reaction from the two governing organizations is the policy
needs clarification and redefining to make chcnling more
compn:hcndable for students.

newspaper?!
But to the point. Program Council has never before
seen such large student turnouts at our cvcms as we
have seen t.his year. The average auendance al our Bar
and Grill 's doubled over last years. We had well over

While this will be a good ~wt. SGA. EDSA. and the~
should seriously look into revamping the entire policy lO
include clear definitions of lhc procedures for discipline and
levclsofpunishmc.nt.· includingguidc.linesforthose studcnt.<;
who wi llfully assist another student in cheating.
ln addition. ti¥: university should make cheating and
acadc.rrlic cxccllcncc a major pan of its orie ntation program.
its continuing oricn1ation. and a reguircd clause on every
professor's syllabus.
Buteducat~nonlhechcatingpolicylowardstudentsis nol
enough. ii mll&l also be taught to the prrif~. Au. pa.rt of
their professional bainirig. professors need IO be re<ducalCd

!~~:;~~::::c~;t~' ~~~!!::!e
~i~O~r1
but O few .
Now lelS discuss our quality. Months of preparation
goes into planning any and every event t.hat we run. In
Septembf;r, surveys were disuibuted to studcnlS olJ
over campus and we listened 1 your responses. We
0
attempt to please as many students-u we can: This year
we celebrated alack History Mon1h by hosting Darryl
Van Leer·s one ,nan play about Martin Luthcr King. Jr.
We explored Women's issues by sponsoring a lecture
~nd prcsent.ation on Women and Pornography in the
Media.given by Dr. Gail Dines and by co-sponsorina,.

on how students c~I, what to look for during exams. and
what the tell-tale sigffi of cheating arc.
In the ideal ocademic world, chcati~g never happens. Bui
in the real world, wc ~izc th.o.t cheating will never be
eradicalOd. Hopefully, throughstrictcnforccrrent and harsher
penalties, wc can diminish the amount of cheating and
equalize Jhc playing field for a.II students.
lbcrc is no.excuse for anyone IO cheat at Suffolk. We,
unlike~ other schools, have the_
luxury of being nblc to
~hpn>fc.$SOfSwboarcusuaJJyliberaJcnoughtocxtend
. ancxtrafland.Forthosestudcntswhodochcat,theyarcnot
only cheating themselves, they arc cheating lhercst of us OU!
of a fair education.

. :!~~e~scD~= :; :~:~; ~:e
AIDS Memorial Qui IL We helped promote AJcohol
Awareness Weck by handing out Mock tails to studcnU
in the Sawyer Cafeteria. We. along with other student
leader organizations, have been working with t.he university to make renovations in lhe cafelCria to give it 1
more social atmosphere. We try 10 give students a more
~liege campus-like atmosphere by hosting a comedy
rught and a movie night in lhe Fenton Lounge. We
celebralC lhe holiday season by hosting a Treclighting
and Menorah lighting ceremony and by running a
"Winltr C~mival" where we hosted free food, gpmes
and novelues for students 1o enjoy.

bi ...

"'•
.....
""""'

ho

-

~

Al',

.....
1'IIE SUWOLKJOIIIINAL
"Everyone should have a healthy distrust
of government. Trust me."

21-lllnif;-116
·-·

8-~11114 _ ·~ • (~17)5'73-1123

._.

F41iAE!ellcwrd

Letters to the Editor

;1!:;

~::~:a::t~

°"1.Ji1111t!d 011

pagt 20

•lbo-~------1111~--- -

,l!nl1WDalaliolf-otdlllce.'111e- pmj,le,ldao1:1£11iody
l. . .l!DlioY~aldllliswt,y<Jocqollulhlm'lc,,rl'-14iiolla-

-



-~ -

---

c-.-.....
~ - ' jJ>

....

-



1'.chllood~ --

-

...._
•1'mll

c...,

~

-,JLdi

...

Onm-lolsr.llmlBilC-.la

~•


pualy.
M)

,...,,

fora fi
h;

.,.................
::J::"'.:::..i-=.~ ........""................._ -·
............- ....

1Dlid

"Arid Progrnm Council h11s seen mcasurnblc disappointment, in lhe level of commitment and quality
events." This lotally bold-faced untruth was written by

'""'"'
_,,'
""'"
M)

: 11o....----pa,plod!llbo-..dd'-•clamolllcl,,d,,-

...

:Yelllll
dlo

Program Council
refutes Walsh's opinion

J
ffr':!

1"o
• - -~ ....... A-Sc:bolor
Ooo,plowo~alOdcnf;C-.
11c1,maea,,,,;;,,,,. 11c1o ............. "'bl!iil•Jl!llld

tam.

•Dr. Robe-rt "Bob~ Rost!mhal afttr ht
l(J/d tJ/ 011 incidtm bt!twun himself tJ11d
tht Cf'nlfal h1ttlligf'nct Agency.

~ : 1;:;~:~:~:a~:ni:Cl:~w:~:.s:~~!
quality when we cou.nted ~wclvc mistakes-. occorring

o!do
Rx
.cxpr:ri

..

■ Ibo

lad...,.

.

- R d o r ,onljahlooo....,_..,..

Ibo

wo,ld

o!tau
Th

"""""
""'"
~
oullix
noc.T

Th

~
·w;
_. ___ y_ _ _.....d!!Aaflllo(icllolW.· . """"'
---,.llo_,..
..... WJdt"!"'!irllmdy~by~-- - - ""'"
.
.
oa lld&llc
foriu

!!hen

M,

IO

The Suffolk Jowna]

Wednesday, April 7, 1993

/

w:!U:;/~;~s:,!~i:C;r:~::;~~c~~=

now

f IH I ,lllll

cleartha1ch<atingi, neilhmondo"'"1ornccepll!blcbcha,ior

I I,

II

You don't know what
you've got until _t's gone
i

P.1l111l I

)
Al some poirtwring my daily l'Cllllft Iain m:all hearing~ Qprcssion that ta echoed

inhi:sshocs."hmaysoundratlusimpleatfirst,b.llct'11ookalialedccpcl-.
Thilsa)qrcally,hithomcwilhmcbcca.isesgnc:thing11simpleas-.'llkingcan=ly
bcmkaiftrg:rarud. Theinability1DdolQfflC\Cliogn:,.irinclikewalkingcmameapM!cm
: : : ?·Nocbcqablc:1Dpcrformthemosti'OWnelN:Scana::mplddyakcryOlrncrmal

After I m:fflly undcrwcnr. a i'Qllft bu SUl'gC2)', ID oorrecll ~ baskabaD injxy,
IfClll'ld myself walking 'Mlh theoidofacane fora fcwQJ.ys. This was only ltcmpOnll)'
ri:a:ssity, since the injury is laling quickly, but it has-changed my pm;pec:ti~ oo the life
cl-.tl<oged
Fora fowslm mys I had an insight irtowhal it may be like tobehaodicawcd This
expcrieooecp.aicklyheiglurmmyawarencssofthem:c:dsclthisrm:,..cr.Iymwndcnaood
and ovatochd SCgJIE:d.d our p:,pulation.
Mytoougtucp.iiddylWIEdback1Dtenycarsagov.'hcnmy~sufferedascverc
a:ndnemtymorto.lstroke.In~o(theptlnandmeiulstresslhisstrokebnJuglt.hercmairm .
~andJQitivc. Hcthcnbmvdyfougl:i.backliomhisailmcntandwas~
pualf7-Cdooonc:sidedhisbody. Forthe.restofhislifehc'Nlllkedwilh awalkerorilaine.
My grandfather hm alwp~ been one: of my herocs,arit l10W with an insight into wb.it he
uncbwcntC\a}' cby. my ~iration for him ~gnl'frTI toan even higher level. In die ten
ycan he lived wilh his handicap 1~pncelard himoomplain. Howcwld ldoso ·now
for a fcwda_ys'?

«-who..,,,.,,_,

·~-116

THE SUWOLKJO)1'NAL
"Everyone should haYe a healthy distrust
of goYernment. Trust me."

• 8-MAll114 ·

..

•1

(617)5'13-1!23 ' ,

,,.....

•Dr. Rolwrr ~
subMR11stt1rhal aftrr hr
to/ti of
irlddtm lw rwtt:11 h{mstlf and
1hr Cmmil /111t:lligt 11u A.gt11cy.

w,

llsocmsp05W)lethattmdicappcd~oouldsccuxirlivcsas anexisleme in a

f41!1M1el brd
Linrnoce M_, Wala.t '

~

- - . 0 -'·t

Letters to the Editor

,

,1.,.

~ .. ,. ., .:t=

: ,,.

"~

1

.:,,r,~

·.;.1,
1

~

Program Council
f
W
I
re utes alsh s opinion

- 1'b

Lornlae M.I. ~

~

-It

.U lor, ·

·_, ,~

--~

.
Anllra '8m,f 1
..And Pmgrnm Council has seen measun1blc dlsa~
Assistant~ the,~ ! ,
pointments 1n the level of commitment and quality
1
ciation conduc1cd investigations and have planned lo work ;;;,~~·:;~: :'.1~a:~~f~~cdw:~ s~:r: 1
wilhlhe administrntiononclarifyingthe chcatingpolicy and We ca n't help but wonder how Mr. Walsh defines
..t

procedures.
qualuy when we counted twelve mistakes . occurring
Edmond~ ·
lbe1re orts s ou
app audcd. I hey have recogmzcd-innrny-i~•~dlinin"'es-ii~nmd,c-e-,,sammc-e«uilititioio,~,ofof'-r1lh,; -ji--..'....:~..,...~~P.dl~IOr~- " ' 5
•·
a problem which, according 10our repon.s from studcn!S, ha~ newspaper'!!
Kann M.
been unnoticed or igno'lid by many on campus. lnitilll
But 1 the poim . Progr11m Council hus never before
0
Ultlt.,ta~ .,.
~tion from the IW0 governing organiz.ations is the policy sctn such large s1udcn1 turnouts al our events as we
needs darificalion and redefining 10 make qlC3ting more have seen lhis year. The avcrugcauendlll\Ce at our Bar
Carolyia°Bmlr
com~hendablefor studenL-. .
-u.ndGriJrs doubled ovcrlast years. We had well over
l'Wo&lll.m- n
for Suffolk students. ye1 it continues 1 go unc~cked.
0
After a s1Uden1 wen! 10 !he Evening Division Srudcni
Association,bothEDSAandtheStuden1Govemmcnt Asso-

;1~~~r.

~
~

- -+-y
ouc/·,

While lhis will be a good start. SGA. EDSA. andtheck:aru. ~~ri;~~i~:t~;~. ~~~a~~~~:~~~rt:":a:;
should seriously look into revamping the entire policy to bot a few .
include clenr definitions of the procedures for discipli ne and
Now lets diSCuss ou r quality. Monlhs of prcparallon
levels of punishment. including guidclincsforthosesrudenL~ goes into planning any and every event that we run. In
who wi llfully assist anolhe.-studenl in cheating.
S<p«mb<r. ' "'"'' we,e dis,rib"'ed ,0 " ""'"" ,11
In 3ddition, the universily should make cheating and over campus and we listened to your responses. Wt
acadcmicexccllencca major part of its orienlation program, attempt to pleascu many students as weean: This year
its continuing orienuuion. and a required clause on every we cclcbr,ucd Black His1 Month by hosting Darryl
ory
professor'Ssyllabus.
Van Lttr's onenian plBy about Manin Lulher King. Jr.
Butcduc.3tion onthe chearingpolicy towardsrudenL~ is noE Wt explored Wo111c11' s issues by sponsoring a lecture
enough, it must also be taughl 1 1he pn.ifCSSOB.·As a p:lrt of and prescn1ation on Women ·and Pornography in 1he
0
their professional training, professors need to be re~ucatcd Media given by Dr. G11il Dines and by co-spoitioring
on how students cheat, what to look for during exams, and
whal the lell•tale signs of cheating an:
In the ideal academic world. cheating never happens. Bu t
in the real world. we ~il.C that cheating will never be
eradicaled. Hopefully, through srrictenforccmcnlnndharsher
penalties, we can diminish the amount of cheating and
equalize the playing field for all students.
1lM!f"C is no excuse for anyone to chea1 at Suffolk . We,
unlike many other schools, havethe_
luxuryofbeingable 10
approach professors wboan: usually liberal enough 1oex1Cnd
ID extra hand. For those students who do cheat, they are nol
only cheating themselves, they arc cheating therestofusoul
of fair cducalion.
8

\

The Suffolk J ournal

dw"ouib mytnin. I was tokl."You neYCrmilly know a nm, wtil )QI t-eve waikrd a mile:

hamdesscopying of olhe r pape~. multipleuse ofpapc~for
differen1cla.-..'iC..~. illldworkingingroups ontakehome eJtilm.~
all can be cons uued to be cheating in certain instances.
Thewordingofthcunive~i1y'schcatingpolicymakesit

Wednesday, April 7 , 1993

The part of president
beb!8
p,layed by BID Obiton

Cheating - denies
us all of a fair
education
Recent incidc:nlS and a number of seemingly discontented
students have brought the issue of cheating 10 the forefront of
the unive~ity at a most critical time. approaching finals .
Ru1110~arc running wild around the campus of an incidenl
intheSchoolofManngemen1wherea studenttried1o smuggle
an exam out of the class, but was caught by the profes.,;or.
Although this incident could not be verified at pr-csstime.
a number of students in1ervicwed by the Journal seem to
confinn one thing, cheating is on the rise.
There is littlc wondcras IO'Whychenti ng is increasing. With
the economy sti II struggling and ru ii.ion rising, e very bit of thnl
precious time spen1 nwny from campus is mo·stly taken by
work. ForstudenL-. buckJing underthc weigh I ofa heavy wot\:
schedule, burtlening clns.s loads. and fatigue . cheati ng can
become a fnvoroble risk for some.
Forlhc minority, laziness and ignorance may make cheat•
ingthccasiestwayoulofdoingthclegitimalCwoll:hundrcd.-.
of Suffolk studenL-. do everyday. ~
people hold the rest
of us in contempt a.-. they slide on by riding on the hard work
of others.

.

~~~e:o~~=

'=

::..
.

ea,, &dlton

....U.-~
'

~:C~=:~n%::t

~; ::;~;
~~
1
AIDS Memorial Quilt. We helped prom01e Alcohol
Awareness Weck by handing oui Mock1.11ils 10 students
inthc SawyerCafcccria. Wc.aloagwilhother student
leader organizations, have been working with the uni•
vcrsity tomakc rc.novationsinthccafettria togive ita
more social atmosphere. We try 1 givt students I more
0
college campus•lii.:e atmosphere by hosting a comedy
night and a mo~ie night in the Fenton ta,nge: We
celcb~te lhe holiday season by hosting a Trcclighting
and Menorah lighting cercmoay and by running a
"Winier C~mival .. where we llostcd free food. games
and novelucs for students to enjoy.
Contin11td on f)Qgt 20

n.

D'". ,

..,... .......
Mary A.
Priljedl c....... •f'•

· ,t

woridthatis.dativdyfureigntotheirnacdsandainvmien'.:es. Themajoritydoursociccy
oftotdo~oomicb"the.cxtradfor1itl3kcfjustto~arourdwilhaC3l)C.whc:dchtiror
walker. l..ife5CCal!I to ~ a little bil raster, while )QI move I lituc·bit slower.
Theknow~lhat«btncanachievewhal)Qlcanootso:mstolcavcSOOlChnficapped
pelS(Wdeptcsscdllild&uwatt:dC'kl:os~.fml. upootheirsiruioonasana:ed

= ==ving

~ •changes

11!"1 impnMmcnL I am pmd to irlxle my

. ·Wha()disxMrcdlllhispoittwaslh:w.difl"cmv.peopleW:Wthtirsiluatiooaoddisability
ctiffcrcraJy.Thmisgoodrcason10bclicYedmtthedetcnniningfacu:rhereis~mvio.ial'1
rutlook. TioseWOO~positivedtaitbcalr'MlhtheirJftdicamcr1.lhan~whodid
OOL The lifta' nsnaincd rc!Mivdy morecmsurned by their pain.
'
. 1b:n I thoughtabootmyownsilUltionapin. EvcnwithapositiYCoudook.-lobscrved
tmtilcmbe10Ugh1DgctaroimdBoslon'Mthany1ypeofphysi::al limitation. Thiscityof~
histoty~tradition~notcxaaJymovedir1otheprcscttinsof11TMUpgrB?fl8·itsfacilitics
(orish.lndic:aA)cdcitiZOIS.
'
WilhtheknowledgethltmyinP)'willptSS.andlhlllmylifewillgoooasit hadbdcrc.
l thcntmugtlaboolultx:n:whodidnotte~thislu.nuy.MY,toougltsdthcmv.e-eno1cl
symjXllhyorkudship;ratm'ofuuerespa.forlhcireffortsanddd.cnnination.
Many improvcmc:rlS ha~ been mPde ID ~ in-~
10 rm;b- them
..

.

.

.., llmimprovedCSIDblishcd

pn:,grMJS for the hBooic:apped. H~ . i t ~ to me th:lt ~ most 1mportart
mndicappcd Amcricam Im not been met.
~
A,apcople.wernJStnottaketheiw.dso(othm(orgrmudineventhesimple;fthings. ..._
Whltrrustdevek,pisanurncnzandingandscmitivilydlhe.m:dsdaB~
WtthulldEtalkabcu.divmilylhavehcardlittleaboot it inregardlOlhe.trueslt.Jman

ooodition1)himllirniwion. Whilegin;l,;,ilhucity,arnn<edoooteiw,g,e,w,phyml ·
abi!itie,!"'Yet.nge•.,,,~Thene,tlimeyouwalklll)ll<o<a>Hillpiau,cya,,,df
wi~a~limilabon. Thcn saya praycrofthanks.
·
'

The Suffolldowml ·

12

SGA to deliver dieating
survey resuhs to deam

Cheating """'""'"
rauh of their Kl.ions.
Myral..ennan,ofthcSchool
of Management, uid, ''then:

have been more cases thin nor•
two different c1uaes, it's still ' mal of studenu cheatina in
ByLawrcnceM. Walsh
chcatin,,.. &aid Ciccarello.
lhcirclassea lhis year."
JOW"DllStaff ·
" lthinlr.a.oyonewboaocsto
Tbese5CnbmetilSwcrcalso
Prompted .by cooccr111 Suffolk hu seen it hapJJCJI," cchoc,dbyNancyC.ScoU,dcan
brought be.fore tbe Evening said Michdle McGinn, Siu• of atudenu, who reporU that
OiviDOII Student Association. de.nt Oovcnune:nt Association ''lbe:re have been at ICU five
Rocco Ciccarello, president of treuurer, about chcalina at cues of academic dishones1y
I.he Student Oovcmment As· Suffolk.
this,year."
.
sociatioa,bcp.niovcstiglting
"l lhinki1'1 atanywtitution
Stoll dabortted that there
theprobtcm'ofcheatingatSuf• you 10 10. I think cbcatina is bu been a 1rowinat.rcndovcr
folk 1u1 November.
more (prevalcnc) in the dassa Lhc put three years amooa the
BegioninJ with an informal here than the paper bu yin& that student populationof cbc:Ming
survey cooductcd by SOA happens at other schools," in lheir claua, lhus compromanbers, Ciccard)o took it McOiM said.
m.isiog the academic in1e1ri1y
upon birilsclf 10 pcnooa1Jy · One of the possible solu- of lhe school,
ovcnc:e the fact findi n& mis-- tionsMcOinnsuiaated tocurt,
Several students ban al·
sion to see how much of I thenow o(chelting bthein- lcged lhltthcrehubccowidcprob1cm cbeatioa actu.aUy wu 1ti1ution or an academic honor sprcadcbcauo1iothcirclasscs
lfflOIII uodctgradu.llCI.
code. The honor code, com• in several different ways. One
Altbou1h the student _
gov· monJy ute:d at military ICld- student noted Mstudcnts usuenmmt bas ncva n,:dvcd • cmies and 10me private insti- ally sit near each other in lhc
complaint from• studcru con- tuti0n1. holds I student to their back or the room. where thCy
ccming cbealing. Ciccarello wonl. Once th e confidence his can Wk 10 cac.hothcrorlook 11
II.id he (ell it was imponan1 been breached. Wff pcoa.llics each other's tcsli.M
CDOUgh that it deserved the 11- IJ"C. impoKd.
The 5tudcr11 also mentions
LCOtiCHlo(thcSGA.
EfrcnHildago.ju.niorclass that m one case this year•
1
" I don'1 ste it u I high :~r:~or~n~::hi::~ : kllow cl1um11c was able to
problem. I sec II IS I bigger
obi.I
um bdorc It WllS

~:.~:; -:~:::~ !::
:~c:n:!:b,:~i:~thhcs:fi~
IQll

u well.

The survey, co nd ucted by

::;J, ;~:

bym;::~~::~

arKI personal interviews with
students around the campus.
They wen: looking for what
cluscscbealingoccurs in. what
ldndoftcststudentscbcaton.
and how they cheat.
'7httelff.diffcrcntkindsof
chcib~irdonTev
know when they arc chcatin&
because ir the lCSt is • take
homcor\11oingap;apcr1wteeror

~:~:S::!f:.i;~: :::::::::::~:.~:~::
"I see no cul gain in cheat•

~';!:~ ~~r~~il!4~~::

as a rcsuh or this un(11redge 1n

Jcae tbal tb01e ·who ll'C tt;.
Qncsiudent was concerned sponsible ror the bulk or the
cheatinatha11oe1 onabo1end
with the repercuuioni or such
widespread cheating. "lnfor• 10 br11g •!?out their efforts 10
mation gets irO;Und by word or friends.
One student commcm ed,
mouth and our credibility is in
c heapens
my
jeopardybecau.seo(whatthcsc " this
deg.rcc.. •.Suffolk's rcpot.11..ion is
1 1udcnts arc doing," be said.
0
"his unfortunate that these aoina down the dr11in due 1
siudents don't appreciate their incidents li.kethis.
Another srudt,lt detailed a
education." he added. "!C per·
a
sonischcaling,thcyarcchcat· casewhere 11tuden1prescnted
ing themselves.. In the long an oral repon on howtochca1.
The 11udcnt repons th11 his
classmate and presenter ~ad•
mill that he cheats in every
bas
class, and said that 11 works
every lime."
be
Michael Ronayne. dean of
the Collc1e or Ubcr11I Aru
and Sciences, stated that al-Dean Marucritc Ocnnii;. though incidcnu or chca11ng
arc becoming mo~ prevalent,
Dean o( Enrollment and
the university does not hive •
Retention Management
spccificcodeo(ethics, '"Theft'
is no honor system hen:," he.said.
run, they are the losers."
In response 1 incidenu hke
0
Another student has seen this MUJuemc Dennis, dean
kllow siudcnu using old lab or Enrollment and Ret.cn1ion
repons in order 1 leave their Management, 1ssens '"Theft'
0
labsmon:qukkJy. Fu.nheru• IS 11codc or ethics WC all should
amination revealed an entire li ve by. this son of action 1i;
underground netw0rk of old clearly not i1,"
cums, papers, labs and
Dennis s1-.1t:d, "Chcaung
projec::u that s1uden1s have has to be stopped. no1 IC·
passed on to one another.
«ptcd."
The ll\le problem itetually
goelidccpcrtrul.ntheproblcm
oCchealing itself. student5 al,owe<.

"Cheating
to
stopped, not
accepted."

pr~:~o;e classm111c failed
inst.i1u1ion,andi( you.rgoingto the next cum when he wu
cheat your way through it. then unable to obt11in a copy of the
your going to end up the way s«ondeum ,occotdmgtoour
you came in."
CH:curello said lhe SGA has
meet sevenl tunes with Nancy AlumnUS/ru"'pa'~ , - - - - - - - - - - - - : - , - - - c. Stoll, dean or students, and the final ," he s.a,d. '"The~
up, asked I question, loQked al
will be meeling 500n with rcuord.idn't malcemcllkethe
thcans~rs.andgou9goo1hc
Mlch1d Ronayne. dean of the rma1 and used my mid•lCfffl as
ICSL ..
College or Libera.I Arts and
final
ltwutoocasy."
One of the sar~ ways he
Scicnc:a,
rcnnan,
d"fff111y-srudecu1/4:bcarirl,yAdmitting he cbca1cd in
dean ohhe School o( Manaac• some classes bceaus.c he juR lookingovcrsomeonc'sshoul- buying copies or the test from
mcnt. w discuss the cheating didn' t undcmand the material, du.
work study s1udenu. " I've
problem.
"Always find the s.nwt kid$ never pa.id for an cum. but I
he said he cheated in most
classes just so he w01.1ld get a intheclass." hcsaid. MBccome know or at least one person
better &rade Of because it was friends with the kids who an• who paid SSO for a finance
so easy.
swerthcmostqueslionsinclass. ex11m,"hesaid.
Citing some or the lax 11tti• tukcthemtolunchorewtimes,
In his rour ycars11Surfolk,
tucles 1
oward cheating. he 1
old they'll be there for you."
he said he cheutcd in every
mcnt,studen1swho11rc
or one final where pennission
Other ways arc the more class except for one. problems
suspected or chcaling must
to cheat was aciually &ranted. conventionPI methods orcheat- in general managemcnL 'The
atlc;Jld a hearing with 1he
" I was taking a computer ing, cnb sheets and wn11ng on only reason I didn'1 chea1 ,n
Dean or Student ~rvices or
final with aproctOfadminis- your· anns and sltm. But. IC· that clw is because I couldn"t.
the Joint Commiuee on
tcnng 11. I went up to the guy cordin11ooursoun:c.thcsc11re ltwasall fieldwork."
CondUCL A dccisi0n ..:in
andaskcdhimirwccouldcbcat. mon:riskythanothcrs.
Half the reason he s.aid he
1hen be made regarding
and he u.id. ·Sure. rm ju.It
"Crib sheets arc tough be- cheated wasbecausco(thc lad:
proper punilhmcn1 for the
goingtorcadthcpapcr.· Weill cause the ~her can sec them o( cooperation amh11ist.1ncc
violation.
gathered around a desk and castcfthanothcrwaysofchcat- hcrcceived(rorntbcuaiTCnily
Punishments for chca11ng
took the final in a small group. iog. It' s bcucr 10 sil behind a in punui01 his degree.
range rrom a ,m1c or --r
It wu unbe.licvable."
girl with 'ang hair and tad an
..(Oealin&] helped bocausr
in the course 10 expulsion
When our source was at answer ,httt to the back or her the (acuhy and the administn·
or forced withdrawal from
Suffolk. he said 11 seven out of chair."
lion didn't want to help me
the univeni1y. Howc\er.
every I0finals he took.at least
He also said thcpro(cssotS because I always had a (tuaccording 10 the pol;cy,
.SO percent or 1hc class was themselves aid in the cheating ition) balance. That's why I'm
ICSKr penalties may be
visibly chcalina. "When I say by leaving answer keys lying so fond or Suffolk," he uid
Mwamntcd by the circum•
.SO pcn:cn1 or the class was outduringaaminations. "Dur- sarcastically.
stanca."
cheating I'm being (air. There ing an
in my Principles
He uid he (cit Suffolk will
The s1Atemcnt. however,
were probably more who were of Management class there do anything 10 aet. you into the
doe1 noc cllabonttc on
being Jess obvious than the rest were a 101 or kids going up 1 school, but will do nothing for
0
which circunuta.nccs moy
o(us."
the pro(cuorasking questions. you once you're there. "Jr you
wananc a lesser punish"I don't think that thepro- The professor had the answer weren' t ooe or the elite who
ment, or whac consliutes 1
ressors arc ignorant. bu1 ,r key lying right out in the OJ>Cn. wu involved in the clubs, you
lesser punisbmenL
cheating goes on right in Crom So I said the hcU with ii. went
were a

The Suffolk University

policy on cheaun1 states
thltl s1udcnts who have
derhOnstnUed ''unacccpu.blc
acldcmic conduct.. may be
upclled or forced to
withdraw from the univ~rsity.
1bc policy Slates,
..cheating on examinations,
plagiarism. and/or improper
acknowlcdgcmcn1 or
sources in co.a)'I or rc·scatth paper1, and the use
or a single cuay or paper in
more than one course,
without the pennission or
theiJlstruetor, cons1
i1utcs
unacceptable audcmic
ooodua."
Aca:udin1 10 the a.ate-

CJJffi'

nobodf."

oa

paga !had 1'

News and Information for and about the Students and Faculty of t!ie School of Management

)

.,..__
_,....._...,
r■

=~du
---~

.....,.

.........~-lllp
.
. ..,..._.,....
.. ~ -

-

...

..... pnwlde for

compemaMCdlal uan wmcccaaryapms,IO
hire I ab who 1111,y not})e maialy com::aaed •

1...,.•--l....
---...--...
r..--..-~

ln~y ownnperi,:ncetcu ~y•jtlatllmo
seYCf'llwomcoinpo&iti0111rlaatbmity. BDl lstiU aec

11n1wcdla:1011!11Je-bo.u, Vfllt'Jrue!5ittbal1woma
bmelCtldletopalthe._.i,.
-lwlll ...

~,......

lpc~.,
W,I

oploioola ................. r ~ j

llill_,._ia..-J........

111111-1a_.i...ttobo&wb=-::=

Suffolk student starts.
''blooming''--: business
Education a positive factor in success
Claudio spent

""

Cheating may result
in expulsion
by Andrea Rumpf
Journal Siaff

Business

•MOftBIIDDtll Ntwl

Todoy _ _ ..

al---

lbo)'.,.ulcodia-odla:"Myoo ..... -

...,.r,ar•Mjwpw,,,i,,11boby,ThoJaay....-

,__,i.., .... pot them lib this: "Whll pwll do yoo

~·----..
===-.::a..~
bove,.,""'l\ilm'I' WATOIOUTdlRLS!Doo' ttlllllli011

_,.....,,....__,lhcyt,iveoodpltotsi<Y""

dtooii:fli'll-'llldyoocaapolfldy,_._ ........,.

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

llliflo1eqlool:fotlllltililylo•......,.., ... -

~ fir11

rcw

on the dean's list while work:•
As tuilion and livlllg CA· in& fuU time. Aft.er a looi
pcnscs lkyroc:ket, many stu• period or painful indecision.
dents are findi01 it incrcu• Claudio decided to ucriftce a
ingly dirficult to focus com• 1994 gradual.ion date. in order
pletely on colleae while.work- to sa.fc m~ for his educaing full time. One Suffolk Uni• tion.
''WorkingfuUlimerorsomovcrsily student has dc,cidcd 1
0
comblt thccollcgiatcdilcmma. oneclsc took a loto(timoaway
Michael Claudio, a B.SJ
B..A.junlor, took a year off or
school 10 start his own floral time to promoting my own
design business, Tanglewood busincas, I hoped 10 accrue
cnoogh funding to 10 bac~ to
Ud.

~::~.~~:::r.:~=

schocSI full time.

N

arouDd parents involved with
horticulture and rooftop pr• ...,
den design, u well u ba.vina a
grandfalhcr involved in lhe

nower busiricn, this anistic:
U'lldc wu innate.

He began by entering a part.
ncrship in South Eqd Gardens,
a Boston floral shop. Meer
time there, he realized
that it would be Car more lucrative 10 provide floral services

some

CNitfn11td 011

paze 16

Ple°iffer receives grant from ~
Suffolk for research on Disabilities Act
By N.E. Escobar
Jowna1Siaff
TheSchoolorManaacmco1
hu a lot 10 smile about these
days. And why lhouldn't it?
Public Adm.ini1tnti011 chair•
pcnooO.v;dPfciffcrhujust
n:ceived IIOlOOCbultwo granu
to study the challenges whi~h
phyacallydmblcdpeople(l<Z
today.

The National lnslitute or
Rehabililation Research
(NIRR), located in the Depart·
mcnt or Education In Wa h•
ingtonD.C.,hugivcn Pf'eiffcr
1 $149,192 afant. In addition
to that. Sulf'olk University hu
also awarded Pf'eiffe.r and two
othcriac.archcn,onefrom the
Sbriv~s Center lo Waltham
and the other from ChiLdtcn's
Hospualln8oaoo, S5S,626

in additional fu nd.I.
Pf'ciffcr &aid that be and btl
rcuow f'CICIJ'Cbers applied f«
the pw in order 10 audy the
implementation oftbe AmcriCortliftud Oii P41C 14

14

'Merchandi'ie l\1anagement offered for fall
Throuahouthis ◄0y~ in

Speci•I to the Joum,.l

the retail ficld,Agababitnhas
. held vuious executive posiThc School of Manage- lions in the management or
ment will be offcrina once dqwtmcnt,speciality,chain,
aaain the martctina course discoun1.an4off-priccstorcs
"Mcrchandisc Mani.1emcn1 In New York and Boston.
"
(MKT 425) ror the ran 1993
Thcobjcctiveofthecourse
scmcstr:r. lt Will be taught by bcingoffcrcdistofurthcrcs-.
Martctina Department pro- t1blish. in SOM'1 Mlftctin&
fcssor Haig H. Agababian.
Ocpartmcnt.a"CcntcrforReAa,babian, hu served on tailing" and to bcucr prepare
the Suffolk Univcnity Ad- liUtdenlSforretlilinJcareen.
junctFacully forthcput five
~~ wi~ ~ an addi~~al
yUll as an instructor in Re- step U1 prov1dingthercWIU1g
I.ail Man1,1emcnt and Con- communitywithmorcknowlsumcr Behavior.
cdgeablc,rcalisticandcarcer•
Agababian is currcntly a focused gnduatcs.
management consultant anti
This clect.iVe course is for
provides professional ser- 11udentswhohaveacqui~•
viCCli to the retail indasuy. b&sicknowlcdgeofrctailing
He wu formerly the vice- bytakinJRetailManagemenl
pre1ident of 1he Harvard (MKT4l3)andforPrinciples
Coop.
of Marketing (MKT 310).

Thesubjcc::t mattercovered
will be the buyina function.
locatiog and choosina ven•
doff. prepari ng buying plans,
negotia1ing, . buyina malhematics, pricing, the merchandise bud&ct, purcbue plannin&, open-lo-buy, an4 merchandising and opcr1.tlng reports and analysis.
After acquiring some or
thcteyprinciplcsofmcrchan•
dising,siudcnts finishina this
course will be ready for scn.iorassisantbuyerresponsibilitics in retail stores, including stores in the food indus.

,ry.
~Merchandise Management'' will be orfcred on a
Mond•y. Wedesday,andfriday basis and will belisled in
the Fall 1993 course bulletin.

The Best Computer Sales for
College Students

COILEGE-ELECIRONICS
Personal Computers & M aclqtoshes
Printe rs• Laser & Dot Matrix
Asscssories & Software

Able to provide for all of your computer needs
Student owned and operated
Bo-. Zb-11

- -- -1-----~.-io~.J¼

'Tfie Scfi.oo{ Of 'Management
.Jll.nnounces
'Tfie 5tli Jitn.nual (jratfuate
:J-[ooaing Cere,rwny


Sunday, May 30, 1993
I0:00 a. m. - 11 :00 a.m.
Imperial Ballroon
Boston Park Plaza Hotel


If you did not receive an invitation h:tter and
reg istration form by mail, and would li ke te
participate in the Cere mony. please come to the
School of Man agement, Dean 's Office, 5th floor.
Sawyer Bldg.

The Suffolk Journal

W,doosdoy, Aj,ril 7, 1993

Wedoelday. April 7, 1993

The Suffolk Journal

BAP chapter recognized
which is open to bolh

By William Nabozny
Special 10 the Journal

men and

women, is very Jlrin&tn. AtSuffoUc. one mua be m:i n:ounting

In a formal ceremony on Sat·
urday, M1rc h 27 , Suffolk
UniYCl'Siiy's'School o r ~
ll'ICfttwalhonom!Uicrcccived
official rcoognition of iu Baa
AJph,e.cho,,.,,lhc,_Ddul

_,ondu-,;,manbcn.
8c:ca Alpht Psi. a national accounting honors fratcmity, is a
highly recognized rr1.tel'ID1y

--"'""""""""'"""
fciSion, prorrWJ&CI ddaMic and
kmcrshipcx«llcncethroughits
wdcli.mcmbership.
Theydolhislhrou... rcholas-

major, have complct.cd ~
diatcA.ccounlin&I,and havea).0
mininun s,ade pod avenge.
Thecbapler,ua wholc.must
cam aminimum numbcrofpoiiu.
camedtluoughvaripusactivitics
hddbySuff<>llt's•• ...,,
scmesterinordertopetitionfor

t121te~
-

-~Suffolk',d,ip,,lm
been pc:tidonina for mcmbcrmip

bCnndpn:,(cs»onalseminan.YOI·

and members of the new chapcr
wc«wnpmdau:d for their hard
work in acmcvi~ dus p l Spccu,J dww were also gi,·en to

u ~workwilhthccommunity,

ProrcssorBemieMeykr.faculty

,q,on,Jondna,o,J- advisor 10 the fr.ucnwy. ,.;ho has
lttmical~OCJTlpetilions been VfS)' active: UI getting 1hr
and other profcuional activities.
lniliaoonintothe~.

Pfeiffer f,Mopag< /J

petitionins cha~ to 1M honor-

""""'-

MAGNA
.,- ~
____, , .

w

------------

insights other people never have into
ing to him. laws arc not self-enforc- policy."
P{ciffer. • graduate of Roches1er
ing and therefore need an a1ency u,
Univmi1y, originally came 10 Bosoversee them.
The disabled, like anyone else. arc Ion in 1970, he Joined Surfolk as a
intereslCd in the 11c1 oversceiTlg o( pan-time instructor four years later.
ual
how these laws aro implemented noi In 1975 he joined the.university surf
·
only at the "gra.~s roots" level, bu1 the full-time.
" I spent 50 percent or my lime a.~
federal level os well.
Once the study on effectiveness is dcpanmen1 chair. 50 percent on the
complete, P{eiffer and his 1eam will coums I teach, 50 percent on this
write their recommendations 10 solve grant, and 50 percent on other profcsor 11,llevl11tc Q problems they en- sionnl ac1ivi1ies," Pfeiffer said wilh a
ny
coun1er. The team will ,ubmil r.heir laugh when 1rying to describe his
hec1ic daily sct'bUile.
Currently in his 19th yca_r here at
Surfolk , P{eiffer can now be found
cs antitadone. it is one that he feels very tive Analysis. which is required for a
MMtersof Public AdlQ.imslration, and
strongly about.
"It wu a natural for me," Pfeirfcr Disabili1y Issues. an elective, this SC·
said rcfening 10 the fact tha1 he him- mcster.
self is physically chall enged. " I have

cam Wilh Disabilities Ac1 . Accocd-

Workforce {1om,-1, 1J

...

•.

forthepo:sltwoandahalfye:n.
Al the ccmnony. the officm

cw..
---

CUM ...,.~

-

.

'-

we.We i ) . y _ f t a d _

at,DOadoa'1n,mimo,,......,.i lt■ns
, _ . , . . . ,.... ,pml,lem.~

~not.=
=~-c::..ow:ct

-,-1~skin10olboclror1&1bia ,..,.. _., ·doina. ■nd
■ri,IOnlbly-■-1...._...,.i.....

abirtcuttoolowT~ l lt,:&
shortet..sWns.udmybclic{ildlll.u

...... ,.. .... - - . i i , .

.............. ,bo,pn,blan, e.llhm
agajn, you may drink about the ocher
wafflca ~ Lbc olftee. l have bcca. lbc
....., o( "loob"
who
preltt 1ki,u down 10 their antics. But
it's bubUy wear what you wanr and
~y11~UICd to h.
'
I hgwe either they respect you
they don' L Even !hough I'm still a
adalt. I' ve boca womn, in offica

from...,._

°'

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

rou war, yoa'D I"

.........,.
Effll

.

woma,

who have

sm,"81,flclcsipaclolhc■."I

lmded by lbeauomplion 1h11
who 0'WD bmmeuel art

..w1ar-.1,,ntuil ·
in todaJ'• ICl<lely.
ll)'dlp"117,l--A

..,...__. OHNO!

_.,....lpftpn,OUlwb■l ,w•,.
-•-•lolbeoor-.;111oy

u

fact 1hal: k beard thal I have my own
com~, One uked, "W)lal ,l4 yoo
doT 1\eatber-loobd11myCIUl611Dd

yoo~•ijcl-.--···-,., dao'= ,__JOllnllll'l!I'
od,_or,

dtdJ own

buliDcsw art:

UitUXllly aa they should be. Fcjr ex-

....

mt

~~.............. 1'!"" :itl!

m•

...

A

...__,

&



r-,

-

- - - - - - - - - -- '

Anolher bia luue for women is a•

~

~~-Ai-=---

Get $400 1b U. . As Cash Back Or A Down Payment.
Plus, Pre-ApprOVed Credit For Qualltled College Orilduatea.
You took endless lests and endured ~ore at!nighlm lhan )00 can remembet It~ lime ID """""

the credit )OO're due - ,wngs on the R>nl ca( or
uuckri)OOl'dlokz.
And )QII' R>nl de2ler can help, Right l""I )lllr can_
,&,;., a 1400cash rebate on most new 1992 or !993
Foro ca,, or trucb in SIOCk, in addition ID other in·
c,ntlws being olf""1. ~ , d grdlJU5 aiuld make
..,.,, payment on ..Jtides less than $18,000 MSRP.
00

'ilu an.,..d!fer)Qll'fuspaymeotuplD md2)'
This dftr is avaiJ.iite ID "'°'F pis, pl m>OI
g,oduates and g,ad sdiool students g,aduatlng

""'-1Jamwyit993andDeam>er3i,t993
So huny down ID your R>nl duler and pidl up
some extra a,dtt - big szrings on • Rlnt car or

truck. You may .,.. be eligible for pr.,..pproYed
fi nancing, The Foro Cotlell" Grid!Jatt Pwthase
Progiam. Rlrmore-all: 1.-321.1'36,

·•

FORD D I ALERS

)

The Suffolk Journal

pril 7; 1993

:offered for fall '
The subject matter covered
will be lhc buying function,
locating and choosing vendors, preparing buying plans,
negotiating, buy_ina. mathcmatics,s:ricing,thcmerthandisc budget, purchase plannlna; open-to-buy, and merchindising and operating reports and analysis.
After' acquiring some or
lhc key pri nciples or mcrchan•
dislng, Students finishing this
course will be ready for senior assis1&nt buyerrcsponsi•
bilitics inrc1&i lstorcs,includ-in& stores in the food indust,y,
" Merchandise Management" will be offered on a
Monday, Wcdesday,andfriday basis end will be listed in
the Fall 1993 course bulletin

etJ1 in
ian has
~

posi-

lCIU o r

......

cht!n,

<on.

course
hcr csketing
rorReupan:
uecn.
ltlonal
ialllng
mowl-

:arcer) isfor
uircda
tailing
temcnt
1
ciples
10).

tles for
s

ONICS
oshes
ix

lputer needs
lied
Bry11n1212

ement

BAP chapter recpgnized
By William Nabozny
Special to the {ournal
In a formal cacmony on Saturday-, March 27, Suffolk
University's School of Manage1"°" was honored as it n:aived
officio.l recogn.itionofltsBcta
Alphaf'sicha~,thcl'hcl8Dclta

d,apa-, ondthd<""""""Bcta Alpha Psi, I national IC·
counting hooon: rratcrnity, i.s 11
·highly recognized fratemi1y
lm(Klghoutlhc,o;:ountingporession, promoccs scholastic and

lcadcrshipcxccllcnccthroughits
studa-. manbcrship.
They do lhis through scholaslicandprofossio n a l ~ voluntmworkwiththccommunity,
regjo,winlrotionalconfmnccs.
urlwc:almanusc:rip:ccmpctioons
nndotherproressionalactivitics.
Initiation inlO the fuucmity,

Pfeiffer from pugr /J

y

Prof~r BemicMeyler, facul1y

advio-iother111lCJTU(Y.Wholw
bccn~aciivcmgeuingthe

pctitioningch11ptertothi.; hooor,

arylCVCI.

------------

insights other people never have into
ing to him, laws arc not self-enfo rc- policy ."
Pfeiffer, 1 graduate or Rochester
ing and lhereforc need an •Aency to
University, originaJly came to Bosovcrscc them.
The disabled, like anyone else. arc ton in 1970, he joined Suffolk as a
interested in the ac1ual overseeing of ·pan -time instructor four years later.
how these laws "°e implemcn1ed not In 1975 he joined the uni versity starr
only al the "grass roc;,ts"' lcvel. but the full-time .
" I spent 50 pcrcerH' of my 1i me as
redcral level as well.
Once the study on effectiveness is departmenl chair. 50 percent on the
complete. PfeiJrer and his team will courses 1 teach. .SO percent on this
write 1heirrccommend11tions 1 solve grant, and 50 percent on other prorcs0
h
or alleviate any problems they en- sional ac1ivities." Pfeirfer said wi 1 11
0
coun 1 The 1
er.
eam will submit their laugh when trying 1 describe his
rcpon 10 seveml notable journals in hectic daily schedule.
Currently in his 19th year here at
their prospective fields.
Although this is not 1he firs1 re- Suffolk , Pfeiffer can now be found
• - M r lasses nuantitascarch nro ·ec1 this nt licv·analvst has
do1\C, i1 is one that he fee ls very live Analysis, which is required for a
Masters of PublicAdrninistration,and
strongly about.
"ltwuanaturalforme," Pfeiffer Disabili1y lssues.anclective,thisscsaid rcrerring 10 the fact tha1 he him- mes1er.
sclr is ph~ica1\ychallenged. " I have

11.

,tel

WC. We ~y50inc:limos fiJMIOUS'kl¥CS

ftarca

~ don't tum inio perverted
l pmonlllydQD..l havc a problcm.,M~

: :::~=~;~:. . =:~=n:n:1:

sbortct,s,Wru.andmybcliefi1 tbal u • ~
. 1
I
loaa aa you wear cJotlia taS&dl&Uy,
Em1 womea wbQ have
~
thcreshouldn' tbc a,problem. Buitbm buliocsses are SOD'ldttlca not ~ a s
again.
Olay think abou1 the oitw serl~ly 4l they should be. Fqr ex•womea U}lhe offtec. I have ~f:tbc amplo. l have '!)Y own bu&incas. While
vicwn or '1ooks"' frJ:,m. women who ttlt:iagtotwo pys, onebn:iuJbc up tbe
prefer 1kirts down 10 their ankfcs. Bui fief lhat. he heard that I have mY, own
it's basicall y wear what jOU )"ln1 and 'comP.lflt_ One uked. "W)al ctJ }'ou
~y1l~1
~toiL
, oo7""1;be01berlookcd at myootfiund
I
a !J>e, thq n,spcc1 you "' s,;d, "She tJes;gm clothes.
~I
of.
they doc' L Even though I'm still a fended b)' the wumpJjon that men
lbldenl,.J've bcca workiq in offices wbo own bushaia ait mvoJ
in
publicfor 1C¥myan.and rewlorfuMoa.batdliaia · lope
hat you wear, you' ll act irt ladly'11Qrieay.
you have on• twdcoect or• ., . B)' di,way,lprq,erelUA A

you

r"""'

n letter and·
)uld like t~
come to the
oe, 51h noor,

B .......-..., ,.-~~,.,
...,..Ip~ · ,.. ............ _...,...
.;Ii--·· .......,.,.._...OlfllO


siltllwtyaoconslill•-

:::..-=...-.Alioii, • ibe'"C:"'»•,~~
.
-

-rrs NATUIW.I

MAGNA

.....
Ffltin,

CUM

SAV

-----------1

Anolbef big _ for women is aiiuue

tbdi.

13

~
,...,.,..,,

F-150

cans Wilh Disabilities Acl . Accord-

Workforce frum pa, , JJ
{uate

whichisopcniobothmcnand
womcn.isvrsyscringcnl.. At Suffolk. one must be an aa:oonting
major, have completed I~
diateAa:ountina l,wxl__b:lvea3.0
minimwn g,wdc point averqc.
Thechap(cr,uawholc,mll§l
eamaminimumnumberofpoinl5.
earned through various IICliYiti~
hcldbySuffolk's chaptcr, cvery
scmesttrinonicr10pclitionfor
membmhip.Suffolk's~has
been petitioning fat mcmbcnhip
fortheplSltwoandahalf)'fflB.
At the t'CmTO\y, the ol'f,ccr.;
and members or the new chaptt'r
were congnuulalm for their hard
work in ochicv,ng this goal. Special thanks were WSO given to

tlley

.....~ . ., ..... ;.'II

lite

Get $400 1b u- As cash Back Or A D o w n ~
Plus, Pre-Approved Credit For Qua~ College Graduates;
You took endless tests and endured more all •
nighlfJS ihan,)OU C2J1 """'11ID<t Ill time ID reoeh<

the credit you're due - savings on the R>ni car or
uudt d your cno;c,_
And )Ollf Rlfd dealer c,n help. Righi l1(N( )OU c,n
reai~ a $400 cash rebate on mo.st new l992 Of 1993
Fotd cars or trucks in SIOCk, in :uklltion to other in·
a,nliws being offered Qu~iftO! gr.waifs oou1d nu1te
oodailll paymen1on ..ttides ies, ihan $18,000 MSRP.

bl caneYe11defer)10Urftrstpaymentupto lJ'.>days.
This dfer_
Js,avall,ble ID a>lleg, g,ad!. grad school
graduates and grid school students graduatllig
belMlen)anuary ~ 1993 and Dea,nber 31. l99l •
So huny down 10 your Fon! dealer and pidt up
some extra aedit - big savings oit a R>rd car or
truck. You may even be eligible br pre-approved
financing. The Fon! Coll•!!' Gr1duale Purchase •
Pqlam Rirmore inbmalioo call: 1-80H 21·15l6.

·FORD D l! ALER S

lS

Mazen hosts SOM
teaching seminar
By v . Oonton Glenn 111
Jouma!Siaff

,,
Michael Claudio and his partner Eli:r.abeth·Wittkow« opentia1 their busincu, Tana.lcwood.
~

out of 0.udlo's kitchen.

Blooming,,.,,,,,..,, 11
ro, private cnaagc.mcnts and
cornmucial accounts.
finals in June of I992:
he began his partnership with
Elizabeth Winkowtt and 1001'1
withdrew from I raail shopnn•
cnlCd busmcu.

~=

·,i.c

overhead or havmg a

storefront wun't tummgout as

fina ncially posiliveUS I hoped 11
would. I found a deeper nkhr
working with intcriordcs,gncn

and bridcs•to-bc. So Lu. and I
made the tranSilion back IOI O
cus1 design. working out of
om
home." Claudio said.
'"The fraldom o f not having
a shop and staff has enabled us

1 go aflCf largeraocounts such
0
as Lau na Ashley." explained
Cloudio as he put fini 1hing
touches on a bridesm1ud bouquet for the Lau~ Ashley bmbl

o.posibOn.
Claudio and h is panner

Wiukower have combined tbc:ir

B~Ql)IJo,,rNJJ SIQJ/

---------------

Whilelhcpict~may$eem
indi\lD.ll.ltalcntstooffcrawidc
range of sayles. While they all 100 n:,sy, and succa.s has
indulge in the romantic, whim- comcquiteqwckly,Cl■ udiobc­
sical lookofNewEn&land Vic- lieves tOt■.I dedication and folOJWI, their uuc .spcc::iabution cused energy were absolutely
lies in fulfilbng the wishes o( A«""')'.
.. lldoCltake ■ lot of energy.
lhcclicnL
Wittkower and Qa!J(ito rely but most 1mponantly,you have
on a close communication with to believe In yourself to make
brides and other customers 10 business work.'. said Oaudio.
inoorporJ1Clheclicnt'1lndividu· The two arc insp1rationD.I proof
that young cnm:prcncursh1p 1s
alitywilh thei r ex pcrusc.
While businc:5,5 is ''bloom- ahve in Boston. 1n spue of the
ing.~ they have asp1nu1ons to economy
Oaud10 plans 10 rccum to
expand thcir scrvittarcu. Right
now, Tanglewood Lid. IS com• Suffolk this summer and prepiling ■ mail order bnd■ I bro- pares to enroll f'u ll umc once
agam inlher.11.
chure.
"Lc:avmg sc:hool tt.mporanly
Bythecndofncll.t year.they
hope 10 extend .::mt.A the coon• h3s had a positive effcd on my
owards going back 10
uyudomingbridcsnndenh:mc• attitude c
mg in1erior design. IU of ftCJ.t sc:hool.'' he said. "I won·1 ha\·e
month. they wiU be upandm& to compn)m.lSC lhe qualny of
their opcradon into Maine and my education 10 keep up with
fi nancial obligations."
NcwYod.

Ontcachinaprofilcs,Pflaun
said lh11 lhey can be 1ood and
bad. They can be good, he said.
because lhey show • whole
system in 1caching, no1 jus1
survival tacocs. He described
as those that focused oo a " I do
1his, I do that" pnxcu.
The converution pan or the
seminar wu coup!~ wilh a
four part video presentation.
Two or lhem focused on the
concep!S oflhe inner and outer
self of 11udenu which can help
or inhibi1 the learning process
and the other two were CJ. •
ccq:u from ac:rualclas5C5 lcad
by Maz.cn
In defining 1hc KCtet 10 a
successful class, Mhcn u 1
d.
"You mU5lu.sumc1wodun11.Thosc two things, he lisied.
were "people as they are and as
they can be" and ·•a elw is not
a group, but II social guthet•

In an dfon 1 share success0
ful tcachina techniques, lhc.
School of Management hosted
a seminar last Tuesday in the
SOM Dean 's Conference
Room, the firu. in a scrici or
"Teaching Profiles" and developmental seminars on excellence in teaching.
The luncheon seminar, titled
"Bringing The Students In: A
Seminar on Teaching Exccllc:nce," aimed at havina ■ col•
le■ gue provide an informal
description ofhisorbcrteaeh·
ing format, style and philose>
phies and WU ~ by Profcssor M ■gid Mazcn.
1'hu is basically• seminar
forteachcrsto hclpthem leach,"
said SQM Associa1 Dean Ron
c
Sundberg. ''We' relr)'mg toget
more siudcnts m,·olved."
During hi) presentation,
"U (acuity want to 1mprovr Maun asked the quesuon.
teaching. they need 10 111\k ··Howdowedcs1gnthe chm'"°
about 11 ," said Profes&0r Lori Mazensuggcsu:d:"cn:.11eaproPant m hrr introduction or ac:tiveclass, anticipa1in1m11,Mazen.
to.kes and deal wilh them IS a
Pantadded t.hatthcpul'p9IC class. (Design) a suppom\ r
of Mazcn's prcseni.tion wuto enviroomcnt...
get convenation slllnrd and to
Mazen warned aga1 disnsi
use Mazen's suggestions 11s tancing from the class und ~ug•
teaching tools m some clauu. ges1ed being humorous as a
Maun, a n::cent w1Mer of tacuc 10 bndge lha1 gap he·
1he Teaching Excellence 1wccn s1udcn1s and faculty. In
Award. hu been using his tac· esiabhslunga•lasspcrsonaltics for U years wi1
hou1 com- uy . he sugges1ed dc1emuomg
plaint. dcscribtd his prc.scnta- m the firM cl ■n how relaxed
tion as "w1 Slhal(ht)becamc 1htclass "
comfortable m tcaclun&,"

'"'

GENERAL STAFF
MEETING
for the

Suffolk Journal
Thursday, April 8, 1993
• I p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Fenton 338B

~

- food and prizes!

games and booths!

All s taff members and
contributing reporters
are required to attend
All interested students welcomed!

- fun and entertaJ ning!

• for more information, contact the Student Activities Office!
Sponsored bJ Program Council

A~ards, editorial positions, and
direction of the newspaper
will be discussed.
For more info, call Larry at 573-8323.

Applications ror Student
Commencement S~tr
The Criminoloay Oub is showing

the film "WhiteJ1&Stice" on Apn16c.h m
Those scmon who wish to addreu
S927 1 1 I p.m. This film focusrs on his/her classmates at commencement
Canadian Law compared to lhe Massa• should now apply for this honor. This
chusetu Law. After lhc: film Profasor year' s Commencement Ceremony will
Howell will bold I discussion and be include for the fim time a fellow SIU·
open to questions.
dcn1 speaker selected by acommiuce of
our peen. faculty and approved by the
Job Fair Prep Workshop
Dean. All interested scnion mayob1ain
an application at the Student Activities
0n Tuesday, April 6th 11 l:~2:30 Office. The applications arc due no
1nS I008 ihcft; will be a Job Fa1rPn:pa• later than Monday. Apnl 5th 11 5 p.m.
ratK>n Workshop. T1us workshop will
be a great tool for lhc. Suffolk Un1vcr•
uty Job Fair on Thunday. Apnl 81h al
6~8:00 p.m. m Sawyer Cafetena.
Senior, and Gnduate Srudenu get your
resume ready and suits cleaned forth1s
Job fair because over 40 cmployeri. 11re

orolobol ""1ofcwn Cmpo,ation. ..;u· Women's Center
to snadcnu ~ his career path
to becoming Prcsidcru of the " Largest
Private Company In Musachusetu"
when ranked by 1992 revenue. He will
alsosharchisinsightsinto the job market. This event is Fn:eto studc:ntsanda
li&h1contincnt■ I breakfast wm be provided. Because of limited space, you
must RSVP at 573-83 12 if you plan to

,pe■k

.......

On April 23rd intheSawyerCafei&
ria from6 :00to8:00p.m. thc Womcn's
Center will beholting ii.unual Spring
Dinner. All faculty, staff, and swdcnu
arc invited to auend. Theri: will be
entenainment and good food. lf you
would like 10 attend call Tracey at the
Women'sCent.crtoRSVP at573-8J21.

Cburing Club Cookout
The Cllecring CJub is SJ)OlllOring an
c.nd or the y,:ar cook:001 on SalWdly,
May 8th from 12:t».5:00 p.m. II lhe
M.ITBriu'sf"tdd. 'l'brnwillbebamburgcrs, hot dop. soda,cbip1,and1 lot
more. food! Two wcck.s before the event
the checrina cliib will be givina s.1uden1.s 1ian•up lheeu ror teamS . Softball
games'Mllbcplay~allday.lbechampioos will receive Mhirts.Tbuc wiD
alsobcfrisbee. voUeyball, horsqboes,
and tug-a-war. Everyone is welcome.

ex peeled.

Lecture on Book
The Criminology Club 1 spon~ors
mg a lecture on the bOC>k entitled " In
Spite of Innocence: · Leading the discussion will be the aulhon of the book
who ue from Tufts University. The
topic of lhe conversauon will be focu.ttd oo those tha t were executed and
later to be found innocent. This wi ll
take place on April 81h from 6:30-8:00
p.m. 1n S427.

Leadenhlp Banquet
The Annual Leadership Banquet will
be he.Id on May 10th in the C. Walsh
Theater . The ceremony wbl,cb wiU
begin at 7 p.m. will biahlight' the
tchievCfflentsoflhcSuffqlkUoivc:ni1y
students. Afta the ceremony there will
be a rccepo00 in theSawya Cafc:ccria.

Campus Polici•F _!:ecture

inpuL You " ■ Suffollc swdctlth:avelhc
powertollOftli,we~choiccs(or:an
OJJUng
romc.a.n
ouutandina G)lk and female alhktc,
an unsung hero, outstanding f■culty ...
member,organlution,~adminiwalOr of the year. and also advi10r of the

On Tbunday. Apnl 8th at 1 p.m. 1n

,

Disawionoo laming Disabilities Recognition Day
The annual recognition day will take

/.

P.C. 'lemple Street Fillr
Prop.m Council willbeboldina the

year. Nomination fomu ate available at
lheSwdcotAclivitia:Qffioc.Allsw-

denta 1m stroa1ly eocounpcfto nomf.
l!&tc u many dcla'vin& capdidalc:a u
ible. Tbe oominatioa form, .ate
due M the Student Acdvhiei Office no
!ala thin Tuosday, April 6<h bys p.m.

place on Tuesday, April 27th a1 1:00 AnnualTemplcSt.Fairoo Apri) 15th
p.m. in C. Walsh Thealer. Thi1 is • inlhcRidpayOymfrom 12:00-3:00
major univeni1y event for the undcr- p.m. This year die Iheme will be ■
graduatesoftheCollegeofUbc:ral Arts cclebri,tion or the spirit aad the run that Spring Ball
and Sciences and School of Managc- Walt DuRe)' hu come to rqnscnL
()o Frid■y, May 14th from 7:()0.
mcnL Stu&nts will be receiving aca- SeveralclubsandorpaiutiOlllwillbe
demic awards. special athledc..scbolar- bostin& evffltS alooc with I Ylricty of 1:00 1.m. the Program Council will
spomqrthcSpio1BaD.formertynamcd
sh.ip awards and lhe Who's Who -in pmcsandcntertainmeot..Come(orthc _
,cn,,d.
,
c.omme.ncemcnt Ball It the World
American College and University re- food, prizes, and flln.
Trade Cenla", in the Hllbomcw Ballcij;ients will be honored. Please join us
FMA to bold elections
World Serles of Advertising room . C.Ckwls will bepn " 7 p.m.
in congratulating our Sludcnl body in
and a piano playerri-om New Yortwill
their achievements at Suffolk Univer1lie Financial Managemeni As~
0o April 17, 1993 at 8 un. the serenade ua. The COit ror this event is
sity. All are: welcome. Refreshmcnis
c11tion (F'MA) will be holding open
Mtrkling Club wiU bolt lhc northeast $30.00 per peqon and formal dreu is
will follow the cen:mOOy.
elcct.ions for lhe positions of vice-pres••
regional competition for The World required. W11eb for more information.
dent. treasurer.and secretary. The FMA
Series of Advertising. Approximately Ticlccu will be sold throughout the
MBA Executiv~ Breakfast
promotes the ~ucation and skills of
eiahi sc:hools wiU compete for~ best month of April.
S.U. Finance studCllts through a prom
Tuesday. April 13, 8:30 a.m.. Saw• advertisina campaign for the Saru_
gram consisting of panel discussions. yer 521. the MBA Associatioo and automobile. The compc:titiOn will be
/cc1urcs, and wortshops. Come to 1
hc Suffolk's Career Services & C001>1?'9- on thc4lh nooroflhe Sawyer Building
meeting on Thunday, April 8th from U\'C Education Office arc co-sponsor- and competition will be hckt through1:00-2.:00 p.m. in S708 1 find out ing the Spring,'93 Executive Breakfast out the d■ y. Formore infOf:!IUWon coo0
more. For further information call 573· Prosram. Mr. Alfred Slifb. Presidenl tact Dom Marinelli 573-8389.

8396.

-

ThrSrudc:ot '1PoiccAwmk-.dycu.r

CriminologyOub arcsponsonnga Ice•
ture on campus policing. L1. John
Pagllarulo of the Suffolk Universi1y
Police will be , pea.Icing about cur«rs in
the field of college campus law enforcement. All arc welcome.

The Psychology Oub will be pre·
sen1ing David Buchanan from the
Balloiti Leaming Center on Thursday.
April 8lh at I :00-2:30 in F530. The
foc us ofthcdiscussion wil Ibe on Leom•
ing Disabilitie&. The differcnl types
will be discussed and he will be open 10
all quesLlons. Refreshments will bt:

Spring DIDD<r

-

The Suffolk Journal

18

Health Watch

The· end ·or an~
odyssey
Suffolk student will graduate after_ years of on again off again. schooiipg
54 ·!."·,;,_
. i' ,·r•(
.··.
·_
.,.t.•H!.•

·:

By Mary Ellen O'Reilly
Spe(ialtotbeJoumal
S.uffolkUniversitystudi:n1and
Tt.xas native Olivia Joy (0. Joy)
Sen will receive her bachelor of
gcnemlstudicsdegrccthisMaythe·rulminat.ion of a degree pn>,
gram she began 53 years ago.
Sen. ff), is finishing her lac.!
cour.;c at Suffolk this semester
and will receive her degree from
Howard Payne University in
Brownwood. Te.MS on May 8.
She descnbes herself as a lifelong student.althoughshe ha'ITT'I
followc:dthetroditionalcoun;eof
highe:reducation.
Sen (formerty Olivia Shaw)
began her fonnal studies at
Howard Payne Onivmity inSeptcmtia 1940oosdil'>wwp. Fmm
J942to l94Jshestudiednursing
11t'8aylor University in Da11n.s.
but kft lo join the Woman's Air
Corpswhercshesavedasast:11.istialiclcrk. ShedcscribedSOO"!Cof
the e y e ~ kamingexpericna:s which ha\-c had resonnn<
influence throughout her-life.
Dunngherscrviceinlhecor,JS,
·o. Joy 's nascenl femini sm

ernoFi

when she rtjoctt.d an
emblcmatk: promotion w PriVllle

Fust~
Discrimirworypa-ticrsdfec-

tivdy denied women who appOod fui

promotion:'"'""""""

wereawarded:wtomaticPR:sm., tu.safter-oneyear'sservice.

The Suffolk Journal

withhoklingofthcircigh1perccnt
salary im-ease, the women oon•
ceded Thoughshewasforced10
accep1herelevatod.nlbeitimmatcrial rank. 0 . Joy st~ up foe
equali1yaiatimt:whe11fewwomen
were willing 10 rank.le men in

Disease's victims speak of risks involved with sex
By Kevin Lombardi
Jounµil Staff

po=.
Discharged from the corps in
1945. Sen then manied. had si,;
children and wonted for the nc,;1
20 yCil'S raising them. This situation. she said "did not make i1
concb:ive for me logo bad: to
oollcgo."

to help ~ghten futures.

T hank!; LO)'Ollr~tyduring lht 1992 campaign, )Wrlocal Unitai W:iy and its f:unil;of mo~
lhan200agtneiesmcuntinuingl0provide"manyvitalstniastoourrommunity including
• affonhble,quali1ylhycareforlow-ini;t)lllepaiml<i
• programstopll'fflltdome:!lic violere

• foodandlheherforlhthome~
• home healthcarefOflhcdderiy

On behalfdlhemotc"than 1.7 million local people being helped annually,thmkyou ror~pponing

lheUnitedWayclMaactimcnslby.

)

AIDS 101: Get The-Facts

.sujpc:s. Thcestablishmcnlptr
vailc:d. however, and facing the •

Howevtt. after working as a
legal and mcdicnl secrewy, Sen
In 1981.0.Joypwchasedher
aa:qxedap:,sitioninl972as first IBM computer and formed
Alumni Secretary nt Howard her own secrdruial 5CfYtCC finn
Payne Univez:sity w~ 111ition called S & S Associal.eS (Shaw
ben::fnserab\edhertolllkecoorses and Sen -her"s and herlrusbaixf s
frccofcharge.
rwncs. n:spectivcly). GraduallyIn J976shccame10Bostonto she acquired eight computers,
be with William Sen, her scrood hired and trained a staff and
husband.andectronicscngincer worked eight hours per day. siJ..
in Lexington.
daysper'Nttk..
Herc she took on lffllp'.)1111)'
Some or Scn"s assignments
SC"Crcroria.l assignmerus. Because includc:dmanuscri~.ncwsletters
she had developed knowledge of andotherwortforengincm;,psylBM equipment in the alumni chahempisl5andamcdicalcooroofficcatHowan:IP..i.yne,theagency mist. ""After about eight yem.~
quickly assigned her lo position.~ Sen said, "Suddenly I found out
m 18~. Thete she foond a niche that I had spoiled everybody- I
andoonrinued w work Ill IBM on ncvermi~adeadline. I warted
and off as a temporary so:rctaf}' every Otristtnas Eve for eight
forfiveyears.
years." She said she had very

19

Wednesday,Aprtl7, 1993

.·1

Sen _ a small group or pri•
and
wtesrcfusedio~oolhcirncw ...

interesting clients and worlr.: but
realized she had burned out
Acknowledging that her
'"strect"education hadtakcnhera
long way,shedccidedshenecded
loputthecapsaoneonthefoundalion of uperierus she had built
bycompleringhercollegedegree.
She said,_ "My mnin reason for
cloing itwasthatilwas justoneof
thost' unfinislied things that sat
out then:: ··
Needing onl y 19 hours 10
gr.i.duate. Sen queried Howard
Payne University lo ~inc if
she could fulfill her degree requin:ments1nalocaluniva-si1yor
by correspondence.
Afternarrowingtheoutstandingcreditsto l5(byvinueoflhe
nW'Sing training at Baylor), lhey
agreed ID waive her rcsidc:ncy
rcqui~L SencouldfulfiUlhe

est in genealogy (Sen has heJped
people trace their families, taugl11
genealogy and traced one line of
her own fwnily lo royal lines in
Fra.no:nndEngland),shediscovered one ancestor who served in
the Amcricnn Revolution.
This spawned her membershipin theNational Socictyofthe
DaughtersoftheAmericanRevolution(DAR)wht:rcshe~ser.red
11Ssirueaiw:lchapltl'regisrrar,smae
regentnndsU11.Corganizingsccrc"'Y·
She is also (lfCSident or the
Boswn Cha~· or the United
DaughtcrsoflhcConfakrncyand
is a member or the Sons and
Daughters of Pilgrims. She has
been involved in many inteJe'llingactivit.ics8Smcrnbersofthcse
groups,whichshesays'"promote
pa.triotism. eduait.ion and love of

Massachusetts.
Fol~~g graduation. o. Joy
Serendipitously, 0 . Joy was planstorelocatewithherhusband
reading the senior citizen's col- to their home on Manha's Vineumn in the Bost011 Globe and yard where she will continue her
happened ocross a story nbout a society memberships. Howevc:r,
program at Suffolk University her primary focus and lifetime
wherein seniorcitiz.enscould take ambition will be to complete a
courses tuition-free. "I picked it family tree spaMing ten gencr.iup the day I wns ttying to find a tioMandincluding 10.(XX)family
placi: to go to school." she re- momoos.
c,llod.
Bc:causcS<Xl"IClimesin.accunue
0 . Joy completed her Texas information ·can reduce a history
aM U. S. government require- wnomort:thanlore.Senwill
ments by oorrespondcn:c. ,I...$ insiSLon p-opcr binh, marriage
fall she enrolled in two English and death documentation in asccurses: BoSIOll- A Ci1y in Fic- semblingherfamilyhiswry. 'Tois
t.iq"n and writing worltshop. This wiUtakcthcrestofmylife,"shc
sefflester she is talcing copy edit- admined·
ing - the final requirement for
Seventy-live of these family
fulfilling the degree she spent a membef'S, including her 6 chillifetime earning.
dtcn. !Jgrnnck:h.ildrenandlgreatAbout her experience at Suf- grandchild, wiU be on hand 1o
folk Sen ramrkcd, "I have been cheerO. Joyathergroduationon
ve:ryintcrestedinthefactthatl've May 8. O. .Joyhopcswbeable1o
gottm along so well with the give beck lo lhcm what she oonstudents at Suffolk.."
sidcrs will bc her rc!l opus - the
But her formal studies and life compilation of the family tree.
,. .-6paienccs have only contribOnherlife'saccomplishmcnts
u1edw pun ofherlifo-longeduca- nndwhalliesahcod,Senrdlc:ctt.d.
''Youjuslcao'tgc:c5tagnanL I'm
tion.
0 . Joy's avocationa1 life is afinnbelieverthutyoushouldn't
uni~y tied to the_ _ evcr5t0pleaming. You'vego<1o
pl,nsshebasblif, vocational
stay. irurcsratinpeop&e,things ,
ation. Throughherim:Neinler- andwhat'sgoingonaroundyou."

People ma y not realize u. but the
Acquired Immune Deliciency Syndrome is not an epidemic , it is really a
pandemic (An epidemic over an especially wide geographic area), as Dean
of College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Michael R. Ronayne put itat last
Thursday's Aids symposium, sponsored by the depanment of Education
and Human Services.
Marlr: Latessa, or the Aids Action
Committee. gave a lengthy ex-plana1ion of how people can become HIV
(human immunodeficiency virus) positive and what they can do 10 protect
themselves from it.
,Whnt many people do not know 1s
that if you have HI V. it does not mea11
you bave AIDS . AIDS is caused by
HIV. which attacks particular types of
cells in the; immune system. Latessa
e,; p\ained, when he Wik~ about AIDS,
there are "no stupid qucslion_."
s
He illustrated. through the use of a
nip chan. all the stutistics of AIDS.
Latessa e,;plaincd that a late,; c9ndo01
1 the safest way to protec1 younclf
s
duringsc,;, except for celibacy.
There are more than I J million
pcop~n the world wit~ Al~S. and
that number LS skyrocketing with over
1,000 cases of AIDS being r~poned
every e1
gt ays.
Being HIV positi~e himself. Latessa
said his mission is to get the "message
across that no one needs 10 be HIV
infected." He strives to educate people
on risk reduction. transmission and
testing of the virus.
Latessa explained it is estimated
that one to 1wo billion people will have
been infected with H1v by the year
2020.
After Latessa spoke about the dangers and risks of AIDS. Bonnie
Hamann. ano1her victim of 1he HIV
vi rus. e,;p]ained what it is like to be

HIV posnive m the 1990s. She told

her story ofhowshefoundoutsbewas
HIV posilivc, and whal,it was like to
have to tell her fri ends and relatives.
Hamann e,;plained. arter she found
out all of her straight friend s abando nedher,shefelt"isolatedandafraid.
"She hod thought about suicide many
limes. and she feels the discrimination
towards people with AIDS is "unbelievable."

She told the audience. composed of
over 45 studenis and faculty. how she
had an anonymous AIDS test so her
insurance company would not find out
abou t it. According to Hamann, when
an insurance company find s out you
hove AIDS there isa good chance you

as thC topic was in 1988, and since
then.a lot or facts about-it have changed.
Eskedal commented, "It's bcen ·a
learning experience." Last year, the
symposiumcoveredthetopicofsexua1
harrassment.
Ron Fama, sophomore, uid " It' s
better to get infonnation about AIDS ·
from 1omeone who hu it."
Georgia Petropoulas, frahman, said
she liked the '.'informative input on
personal reeling$" from the victims.
Heather Hyre, sophomo,re, ex.plained that you. hear about .the suitistics all the time, but the symposil!,m
gave a first-hand account of what it is
like to have AIDS.
.

-:(;l!NERAL

SYMl'l'OMS

Unu.waJ21nOlUl(odor,oroolor

ridlsdw&efrompents.v.iglna,
or red1lm.

=-===;.:~_

>----~- o
e.-.--an•,--i, _
"'

GONORRHEA: Ld.--.~ ...
---■ -.j,ctrlc......., ...

111~•

---■ lladl.l,._lioo_.lltb,,mtl,ltnkorlpilllllOll'd.

TRICHOIIONIASIS; T,._.. •.

._-tilc'_.......,.,,llle...... Allltootlfi,
-~ , . . . . . , . . . -.._11mti.arrled..i
~!tr•

'

AIDS higher in students ~recruits
University students show a htgh~r
mcidenc~ or HIV infect.ion than military recruits, said a speaker at the second annual Summer HIV Prevention
Institute for Colleges and Universities.
'"Studies show th111 one in 500 university students is HIV positive," said
4,rolyn Parker, executive director for
Te,;as AIDS Network.
A re.cent survey issued at the International Conference on AIDS said nearly
half·of U.S. Army, soldiers admit to
hazardous sexual practices.such as failing to use''Condoms; the Daily Tex.an

will not have insurance much longer.
Hamann uplained that AIDS took
away all of her dreams. Although she
does not enjoy speaking about it that
much, she feels it is necessal')' for
people to lea.m about HIV and AIDS,
because they arc deadly.
According tO Robert Palmer, another AIDS vie Lim who &poke, there is
a lot lbout HlV and AIDS thaLpeople
do not know. Heu.id, "there's a lot of
discrimination out thert:."
According to Glen Eskedal, chairman of the education and human services del]anment, that this is the 7th
annual symposium spof150red by his
departmen1. Eskedal stated that the·
\~!Lime the 1yinpo1i~ reatu~ AIDS

Magazine_
prqmotes women's:health ·,.
Minbdla-will-bu~peti-

rcponed.
Although many universities in T~xas
have AIDS awa reness information
available through student health service
S,AIDSnecds tobediscussedina11
areas of campus life, Parker said.
"The AIDS issue needs to be ad·
d~essed in other areas, like history and.
English, because it's a phenomenon
that can no longer be ignored in their
writing and tcaeh.ing," she said.
The number Or deaths•from AIDS
alrcadye,;ccedsthaloftheKorcan;lnd
vieuiamWat1combined,sbesaid.

'

'

tionsl012US.colle(DCSaxlunivc:rsitiesw
gather~ signatures 10 send w f'lrst
LadyHillaryClimon,requestingtlwshe
makewomcn'staltha'toppriorily.
"Wcwanteducated....unenlOputpR:Ssure on ~ new adm.ini.stratiorf so that
·womm•shc:althcart:willbcaioppriorily
inthenewnaionllheahhcarcJW\," said
Cynl!:naS!part,dim:torofpublicrdations

forthemq;ar:ine..
Moredw.14.(XX) poslCrl willbcsentlO
the sdo,:ad colleges 111d ummi:ticl in
ApiltobcpollCdindoonumllallhcn

amn.Tbq:~mtbe~(Clfdl'C

·-

tcar-offperitiomwithroornfor~of

, The petitions read, "Dear Hillary •
RodhamClinton:We~youareaware
oftbeinequetiesinourbc:al!h~S)'ltml.
so we arc asking }'OU to take immedia&e
action:Pka-iegrllbwomm'sbealthatop
piorityonyourapnda."
Tho~-mapm:,will
incb:le artrles in1 rorum1 timed•~

""""'""'mylallhy. ·

"Wcarea:mrmtt.edlOdoinsaaubllanfive lmdc evecy mmtb lbm womm'• helllbcare. Thcreisawidcppbdwcm ;

:._
r~~)ond . . -~ .

20 ;!: Thc&lffolkJi

Health Watch

[)(fyssey
of on~ off again sdt~

T-be·Suffolk Journal

Suffolk Ji
n,,w-,
WASHINGTON

Ill

Wtdneldly, April 7, 1993 .

l..aDpdull:la. • OiJllill

.ci~~~

AIDS 101: Get The Facts

Government Affaits

Wubi.ngtoo ·Centa•s

·tem1lup~~-

Disease's victims speak of'risks involved with sex
By Kevin Lpmbard i
Journal Suiff

~

iiuremng clients and wod. but

d

rcaliu:dshehad bwncdOUt.

outU'Cl'C."
Noeding only 19 houn 1
0

cstingcnca)ogy(Senlmhclped
peoplcuacctheirfamilies,mugtu
genealogy and traced one lwof
herownfumily to royallinc:sm
fr.ll'ICe and England), she discm·cmd one ~ o r who served m
thcAmcricanRcvolution.
This spawned her mcmbershipinlhcNational Socicty of!he
OuughtmofthcAmcrican Rcvo-'
lutioo(DAR)whcicshr:hassr:rvcd
MSllllewklchD.ptcrn:gistrar.State
rt:gentandSUlleorgaruzing~-



g:ra4u:lte. Sen queri«i Howard

wry.

Payne Uni\·crsily to ~ n c if
JI

she could fulfill her degree re-

l

quircmcntsat11ocalunivcrsityor
by"'°"'~
Afternarrowingthc.outstandit,gcrcdit5to 15 (byvirtueofthc
~ trainin& at Baylor). they
agreedtowaiveherresidcnc:y
- . L Saicouldfulfill ~

She IS also president of 1h:
Boston OUlper o( the Unill:d
lbighlc:n;ofthcConfedo-acyand
IS I member of lhc 5offi and
Daughters of Pilgrims. Shc ~
been involved in many UUfC.'ilin&activitics as mcmbm ofdlCSC
grou~. which she says ''prornott
pllriolism, nb:i:a"tion and love of

Acknowledging that her
"strccl" OllJcalionhadlakenhcra
longway,Vled«n:dshenecdcd
ly- topnthecapstonconthcfoutdatw
'5
5,

lionofcxperim::csdichadbuilt

id

bycompletinghercolkgcdegrce,
Shcsnid. "Mymain reu.,;onfor
doing it was that it wnsjll.\t one of
those Wlftnishcd lhingl! lhat sat

IS
rs

d

y

-

Serendipdous.ty. Q Joy Wll5
rcidingthcseniotcitizen'scolumn in the Boston Globe and
happened 11Cro5S D. 5lOJ)' aboul 11
program m Suffolk Univcrsily

whcrcinscniorciuzcnscoulduikc
courses tuition-free. " I picked it
up the day I w11s1rying1ofindtt
place to go 10 school," she rc-

Followinggraduation.O. Joy
plans1oreloca1.ewithherhusband
10 thcir home on Milftm's Vinc-)'ard wl\ercW will continue her
society memberships. Howevi:r.
her primary focus and liferimtambition will be to complete a
fomily tm: spinning ten geno-.itionsand including I0DXlfamily

mcrnbe~.

,allod
Bccause50lllctimes 1
naccw-~
0 . Joy complcrttl l\el' TCJW ·infonnation ain rcwce a history
and u. s. govmuncnl requirc- to no mon: lhan kR. Sen will
lllCDlli by cooapondox:e. UISI
insisl on proper buth. marriage
rau·~ cnroUtd in rwo English and dcuh documentation ID a-.-cowsc:s: Boston • A City in F,c. sernh\ing herfanulyhisaory. '11u.,;
lion ar!(I wrillllg wooohop. Thu willt3.l:c:thc:n::S1ofm)' lifc.""she
qruoed
Sffl1CSla $he is laking copy l!dil·
mg • lhe fun) r r q ~ for
Sevauy-fivc ol lll(S(' family
fulfilling lhedegrec:she spm1 a membas. mdudmg her 6 thiltifetimccamin&,
&'ffl. I 3grand::hilacn3nd I grcl:·
Aboutherapericna:at Sul· grandchild. will be on h.1nd to
folk Sen rcrrarbd. '1 have been cheaO.Joyat hergrachl.1tionon
veryUlCrC:RCdinlhefactlhatl'YC May 8. O. Joyhopes10beablcio
io(lm along 10 wdl with thc gjvebatklOthem whar..sheoonwdeNs•Suffolk."
siden will be herrcalopus - lhe
But her formal sru<fiesand life compilationoftht'mmilytttt.
u~haveonlyconuibOn herlife's ~
U(c,dtopono(herlife-longcduca- andwhatliesahcad,Senrdlcct.ed,
"Youjustcan'tgctstagrQnt. I'm
0. Joy'1 avocational life is a flnn believer that you shouldn' t
llflM1Jdy tied to the vocatioral ever5t0pleaming. You' vegoc.io
uy irmmed in pccple, things
800fL Through heriricn,e'inlier- andwha1'1goingonaroundyou."

"°"

""""""'""""'·•--·

Peo ple may not reahu u. bu1 the
Acquired Immune Dcfit1ency Syndrome is not an epidemic . 111s reall y a
pandemic (A n epidem1t over an espctially wide geographic area), ~ Dean
of College of Libersl Ans and Sciences Michael R. Rona yne pu1 u a1 la.s1
Thursday's Aids sympcmum. sponsored by the dcpanmenl of Education
and Human Services
Mark Latessa. of the Aids Acuon
Commiucc . gave a lengthy e1.pbma•
uon of how peopk tan bocome HIV
th uman 1mmunodcfic1cocy, nus) pos111vc and what they tan do to pro1ee1
1hemselves from 11
What man y people do not kno,1 1~
1h111 1
fyou ha ve HIV, 1t doh no1 mean
) 'OU have AIDS AIDS 1~ cau . . cd by
III V. whic h 111 1 cb par11cuh1r type" of
:1
ce lls in 1hc immune syste m. Latc,.,.a
c1t plamcd , when he t;1lks about AIDS.
the re arc " no s1up1d quc ... t ion... : ·
He 11Jusir.ucd. 1hrough the use of 11
f11p thu n . a ll the ~u11is11c ... of AIDS.
l.:ilel>sa uplamcd 1h111 a late.\ condom
11 1hc s:i.fest way to protecc youn.clf
dunng SCJ. .CJ.Cepc for te hbac y.
There are more than 13 m1lhon
people m the world w11h AIDS. and
that number 1:. skyrochung wnh o,·er
1.000 cases of A IDS bcmg rcpont'.d
t'Vttye1g I ays.
8emg HIV posiu,·e himself. Latessa
M his m1ss1on 1 to get the ··message
Iid
s
across that no one needs to be HIV
mfectcd." Hcstnves to educate people
on risk reduc1ion. transmission and
testmg of the vuu~.
Latessa ex plmned 11 1 estmiatcd
s
thut one to 1wo bi ll ion people will liavc
been 1nfec1ed wllh HI V by the year
2020.
After Late:.sa spoke abou t the dangers and ris ks o f AIDS. Bon nit'
Hamann. anoiher v1
c11m of the HIV
\ 1rus. e1.plamed what u 1~ hke 10 be

HIV po~ll!Vt 1n Lhe 1990s. She told
he, ,.1
oryo fh ow shefoundou1shew11s
HI V posmve. and what II was \lke to
hb\e 1 tell he r fnend s and relatives.
0
Hamann explained. after 1he found
001 all of her ura.ighl fnends abandoned her, she fell "isolated and afraid.
··She had 1hough1 1bou1 suicide many
umes, and she feels the discrimination
1ow1rdti people with AIDS is "'unbehe\'lble."
,
She told the audience, composed of
ovrr 45 s1udcnts and ftcuhy, how she
had an anonymous AIDS test so her
msur.incecompany would not find out
about 11. Actord,ng 10 Hamann, when
an 111~un1oce company finds oot you
hll\'e AIDS there is I &ood chance you

will not have insurance much longe r.
Hamann explained that A.JDS took
away all of her dreams. Although s he
docs not enjoy speaking abou t it that
much, she feels it is necessary for
people to learn about HIV and AIDS,
because they arc deadly.
According to Robert Palmer. another AIDS victim who spoke, Lherc is
a lot about HlV and AIDS that people
do notknow. He uid,"there'11!01of
discrimination out there."
' Accordi ng to Gleo Eskedal. chairman of the education and human ser•

Gl!Nl!RAL
Sl'MPfOMS

pmls..

Un1151121 amou1, odor, or color
<idisdw!l'fnxn
O<n<IUtn.

_.,._, . _,._...__,,...._ .

QONORRHEA: ~--.t.~_,_,

~ 1 1 . . ~Cllll■O . . lllilltMlll.lnll.•,pilllcotd.

TRICHOMONIASIS: r...,.__~.

.~,...,---·--•mn1111.-~.
i l l t a M I I I S - ~ r l • ..... ~

s..llengbnds.

P.llninioo<rabclomon

.Magazine promotes women's health
Un1vers11y studenu show a higher
uv:1dcnce of HIV ,nfccuon than m1h1ary recru,u, said a speaker at the s«·
ond an nual Summer HI V Prc\'cnuon
lnsu1u1e for Colleges and Univen.mes.
""Studies show that one in 500 um·
versi ty studcn t.s is HIV posnive.'" said
Carolyn Parker, executive dim:1or for
Teus AIDS Network.
A rccenc survey issued at the lntema·
1ior111I Conference on AIDS said nearly
half of U.S. Anny soldie"rs admit to
hazardousscx ualpractices,such as fail ing to use condonu, the Daily Te1.11n

Laqgldinos.arr:sid

willbc_
presc:lltedhis1

as the to pic was in 1988, and since
then, a lot of facts about it ha vechanged.
E.akedal commented, " h 's been a
leaming eitpericnce." Last year. the
symposium covered the topic of sexual
harrassment.
Ron Fama, sophomore. said " It' s
belier to act infonnation abo ut AIDS
from someone who hu iL"
Georgia Petropoulas, freshman.Kid
she liked the "informative input on
personal feelings" from tbc v.ct.ims.
Heather Hy re, 1ophomore, explained that you hear abou t the statis•
lies all the time, but the symposium
aave I first-hand 1eeount of what it is
like 10 have AIDS.

Minbclla~:...mdistribultpctiOOOSIO 12U.S.coDeg,esandWUvcrsitieslO

rcponed.

AlthoughmanyunivcrsitiesmTeus pthcrso.adtttsignawrcscotcndtoFUSI
ha~·e AIDS awareness information udyHillaryCliru,n,~thalshc
available through student health ser· makcwomcn's hcallha·toppiority.
vices. AIOSnccdslobcdiscussedinall
'Wewamcd.icated wommtopit pesareas of campus life, Pa.rtersaid.
sure 00 the rrN IKDlioistratioo 10 that
·1ne AIDS issue nccdJ to be ad· "womeo'sbeahhcarcwillbeatoppicn.y
drt"Ssedin olherareas, likehistory aod inthencwoationalhealthcarcplan."said
enjhsh, because it's .• pheno.meno_ CyntbiaSwat,dircctorofpublicrclation.1
n
that can no longer be ignored m their for-the mapzme.
writing and teaching," she said.
Mordlll l4,IXX)pomswillbescnlto
The number of deaths from AIDS - lhc ldccced c:o1qcs and W1M11Jtie1 in
alrcadyexccedsthatofthe Korcanand Apilcobepolb:dindonmaadbi:akhcare
Vietnam Wmcombined,shesaid.
ceam.lbq_~rltbcpollalfcacure

,'

--

~--•·-'-

·

tcar-offpc:ritionswithroombluldrmsd
sia;naauu.
The petitions read, "Dear Hillary
RodhamOimon:Wetnowyouareawae

o(dleinequctiesinourhealdl~sysccm.
so we ll'C askina YtlU 10 take immcdillc
action:Pleasemakc'Mlfflel1'1 bcahh a10p

JriocityOO)'OOUCCOda."
The uplClle monthly mapzior., will
includeartklelandfcqunuimcd•help,
ing women scay brallhy.
"Wencommiat.dtoOOUWuubscanlive aniclc ~ month ·about wi:mcn's
heallbC1re. Thttcisawidepp~ ·

: "=~~)amltbltwhic:bwe

sentativeJoeKennedj
District of Massac~
on Capitol Hill. Ali
scholarshippresentall
M. Bwt:e, President<
Ion Center. and Robo
tor of Public Affai1
fl{YNEX

Govcmmenl

Laogadinos is an in
tative Kennedy's offi
sponssl>ilities include
deringbillsforthec

handling comtituenc:3
Aftagrai:luatioo, l
toanendlawschool u
politics.

Health Watch

needf!!
Fuada'

The Suffolk Journal

19

Wtdnad.ly,April 7, 1993

WAS HINGTON

Greaory
Lanplinos. a Criminology aod Law
major al Suffolk
~ received .a scholarshi p from NYNEX .
Government A.ffain to attend The
W ashi ngton Center's Spring ' 93 Internshi p Program.
r.angadi nos. a residcnt oJ N"linaton,
will be presented his award by Repre-scntative Joe Kennedy, rrom thoEghth
District ofM assachuseus, in his offices
on Capitol Hill. Also a ttending the
schoW$liip presentation arc Wi! liam
M . Burke, President or The Washi ng•
1onCcntcr.and RobenJ asinsk.i,Direc1or of Public A ffaits , representing
NYNEX Government Affairs.
Langadioos isan intern in Reprcsen•
tative K.cnncdy's office. His daily responsibilities include researching, o rdering bills for the congressman and
handling constituency relations.
Afttr graduaboo, Langadinos. plans
1oattcndlawSChoola.ndscd:acarecrin

I°""""'
im

umw:mty.

AIDS 101: Get The Facts
Disease's victims speak of risks involved with sex
By Kevin Lombardi
Journa l Siafr
People may not rC11hu 11. bu t the
Acqu ired Immun e Defic iency Syndrome is not an epidemic, 111s really a
pandemic (An epidemic over an hpc•
ciall y wide geogra phic area), as Dean
or College of Liberal Ans and Sc1-

cnce1 Michael R. Ronayne pu111111 last
Thursday's Aids symposium. sponsored by lhe depanment of Educauon

and Human Services.
Mark Latessa. oft~ Aids Action
Co mmittee, gave a le ngthy e :..plana uon o f how people ca n become HIV
{humun immunodeficu:ncy \'lru~ J posi-

tive a nd what 1hcy rn n do 1 protect
0

HIV f'IO.'> III Ye 1n 1hc 1990s . She told
her ~tory of ho w she found out she was
HI V pos111ve, and whr,t 1 was like 10
1
have m 1ell her friends and relatives.
Hamann ell.plained. after she found
ou1 all of her scraigh1 friends abandoned her. shefelt "isolated and afrai d .
"She had thoughl about suicide many
umes, and she feels the discriminati on
towards people w11h AIDS is "unbehevahlt"
,
She told the aud1eoce. co mposed of
ove r -1 5 students and facu lt y. how she
had a11 aoonymous AIDS lest so her
mi.uranct company wo uld not find out
ahou, 1 According 10 Hamann, whe11
1.
an msura nct company find~ out you
havt AIDS there is a good chance you

will not. have insurance much longe r.
H!lmann eJ.plai nM that AlDS took
away a ll of her dreams. Altho ugh she
docs not enjoy speaking about ii that
much. she feels it is necessa ry fo r
people lo learn about HIV and AIDS ,
because they att deadly .
According co Roben Palmer, another AIDS victim who spoke, there is
I Joi aboul HTV lll\d AIDS th11 people
do no1 know. He said, " therc'sa lo t o(
discrimination out there."
According to Glen Eskedal. chairman or che education and human ser-

11s the co pic w11s in 1988, and si nce
then, a lot or facts about it ha vechanged.
Eskedal commented, " It's been a
learning eitperience." Last year, the
sy mposium cove red thetopicofsaual
harraument.
Ron Fama, sophomore, said " It's
better to get infonnation about AIDS
from someo ne w ho hu ii."
GeorgiaPetropoulas,freshman,said
she liked the "infonnative input on
penonal feelings" from th~ victi ms.
Hea ther Hy re , so pho more. ex•
plained that you hear a bout the statiscics all the time, but the sy mposium
gave a fim-hand account or what it is
like 10 have AIDS.

»I~

:=J
injtuc:

. ,...,,i;
~

FoundM in 19]5, The Washington • former
Center offen coUcge 5tij(IQ,1$~.op- ' int.cmi'
porti:m ily to tlvc:-atid work in Was!u og- and cc!
ton.D.C.andcoexperienceriotonlythe publicJ
professional woi-ld , but the cultural di· onstral
venity of the i;i.ation's capital.
enhanc
More than 18,bOO students, ~ those i
senti ng 700 colleges and univcnitics
nationwide, have participatt.d in The particiJ
Washington Center's iQtemship_ and temshi
.1casz11

kl,

maintl
credit

themse lves fro m 11.

D: 1:.:-A~~
.....,_1' .... ..-:.:

Whu t man y ~opk do nut kno1<. 1~
1hat 1
fyou have HIV. 1t doc~ not mran

_,.;,-. ....·...
.,....._,.,_-• 1111111!"
....... ..,..

)'D U have AIDS A IDS is cau~cd by
HI V. wh ich auach paniculart y~.~ of
cells in the unmum: system !..uc~~,1
t' lph11ncd . when he Wik.'> about AIDS .
1hcrc 11re "no Mup1d quc,,11on~ ...
He illuslra tcd. throug h ll1t' uM: of a
01p cha rt. all the .'>llltis111.: ... of A IDS.
U11ess11 t1pl11mcd that a late.\ condom
I.'> the safest wa)' to protecl )'Oursdf
duringsex.cxccpl forcd1bacy .
There are more tha n 13 m 1lhon
people m the world wllh AIDS. and
1hat number ,s skyrockeung wu h over
1.000 cases o f AIDS being rtpon ed
tYery e1g t ays.
Being HIV J)OS IU\'e himself. Lale)Sa
::aid his mission 1s to get the "mcs...age
across th1u no o ne neMs lo be HIV
1nfctted." He stn Yes to educate peopk
un risk reduction. tra nsm1ss1 n a nd
o
lCSling o f the Ylf\l S,
Lntcssa cxphuned u 1s cs um atcd
lhal one to t WO bi ll io n people wil l haYC
been infected with H IV by the ytar

lf....._1111

_ , . . ............ NII!'
.

llll't- I U l - 1 1,
Ill MY lllTtllTI lllffllHJ,'

I

ni...11,-.,... ............ .

GENERAL

- • »' -·
...... U.1111[1 Wly, -

S\'Ml'f()~

'

Unusual amount, odor,orcolor
<l disdwgelrom-~

.,

""""'-

~/

:::.:::.::.-::·
. ,. .......................
l'a ■,



..... 11•111-llfllliia.

1-,..-.,..;~• -~· ■

HumingorJ)3in

11,hfnurinating.

ew,,;,,g" ild,Jng 2!00/ld
wgina.,lipolpenis,orrcctum.

2020.
After La1e...sa spoke about tilt' d:m•
gers a nd nsks of AIDS. Bonnie
Hamann. anot her v1c11m of tht' Hl 'v
virus. expla ined what 11 ,~ hkc 10 bl'



~
==,..

C

Somltlllal ta lNI .... . . , .

Umvcmty students show a higher
1nc1dcnce o f HI V mfccuon tha n m1h1ary recruns. said a speaker at the sec•
ond annual Summer HI V Prcvtnuon
lnsticute for Colleges and Un1 vers111c ....
"Studies show that one in 500 um veni ty students is HIV positive:· said
Carolyn Parker. executive director for
Texas AIDS Network.
Arecen t survcyissuedatthclntemational Conference o n AIDS said nearly
half of U.S. Anny sold iers admit to
haW'dous sexual practices, such as failing to use condoms, the Daily Teun

r.:ported.
Al though many universities 1n Texas
have AIDS awa reness informacio n
ava1lablcthroughstudenthealthserv1
ces. AIDS needs 10 bediscussM in all
areas of campus life, Plllker said.
..The A IDS issue needs to be addressed in other areas. like history and
English, because it's a phenomenon
thal can no longer be ignored in their
writinga nd1eac hlng,"she said.
The number of deaths from AIDS
already exceeds that of the Korun and
Vietnam Wm combined, she said.

''

MirabcllaMagazinewilldistnbutc pcti•

dons to 12U.S.a>Uegcsandunivmitiesto
gathcrswderltsignarurcsto.scndtoFll'Sl

udyHi!J,,ya-""""'"""""''"'
makcwcmco's taltha·t.oppriority.
''We want educated womcntopltprcssure on the oew administration so that
"fO'T1oCR'Sht.ahh~willbcat.oppriority

~~~~~
for lhemapzine.
M<ftthat l 4/X1Jposren will bcscntto
lhe &dcctcd.oollegesmd ,Ul'livc:diticl in
Apil'tobcp>StE:(lindonns ml bcalth care

""""''lbo!- ' oldle-.

tcar-offpctitionswith roomforwndreds oC ·
signarures.
The petitions read, " Dear Hillary
RodhamOin~ We know you art aware

oflheincqucoc:sino.arhcahhcarel)'Slffll.
SO WC ~ asking you to IBkc immediate
action:Pleasemakc'NMIICll' s hcalth at.op

prioriiyon,..,,,aa,da."
The upsca)c mordlly mapzine, will
include articlc:s and forums uned • hclping womcn •y bcaldty.
'We mecommiucd lo doing.a liUbmrr
tive ldidc CYCrY nJJnth lbcd womco's
hc■llh C.. ~ ii l wide pp bc:twcco •
Ila which WC know, M:i tbll wmcti WC
ck,," -

s-t.(Cl'S)

.

o,
"0u1

-~

The Suffolk l<MJ!AI

20

,

Wedo<sday, April 7, I~~ ,

'

(•J ..

Suffolk intern awatcied.NY:NEX scholarship
The Wuhinaton Center

WASHINGTO N

-

Grcfory

Lanaadinos, • Crimi~IOI)' and Law
najor at Suffolk University, bu received

I

Kbo lanhip from ~YNF.X

Govcmmcn1 ·Affairs to attend The
Washington Cent.cr's Spring '93 lntemShip Progwn.
L.angadinos, 1 resident of Arlington,
will be presented his award by Representative Joe Kcpncdy~from I.ho Eighth
Oi. uicc of Massac husetts, in hi,officcs
s
on Capi1ol Hill . Also attending the
scholarship presentation arc William

M. Burke. President of The Washington Center, and Robert Jasinski, Director of Public AITaits. reprcsen1ing
NYNEX Government Affairs.
Langadioos is an intern in Rcprcsen•
tativc Kennedy's orticc. His Wlil)" L'!'sponsibili1ics include researc hmg, o rdc rina bills for the congressman and
handling consl.ituency relations.
Aflcr graduation, Ungadinos 'plans
1011tcnd law school and set.le. a career in
poli1ks.

need and merit, on a competitive basis.
Fu¢' art provided by CQJ'PORIC and
- (oundalion donon nationwide.
NYNEX-bas bccn a•Supponer of the
Cent.cr's Nation.al Scholarship Pn>gr.m Since 1992. 11 sponsori
studco11 Wtio·auenclcollegcs or rcsid,;
i n i u ~ tt.iri1oryo(NCWYorltand
New Eng.laod·and who imem in Congress or. within other fedenl agencies.
,.(Air suppon an investment in the
fo11ire," said Tom Tauke. NYNEX Vice
Pruiden1oCO0vemmem Affairs, and a
Founded in 1975, The Washington ronncr Congressman Crom Iowa. '"The
Center offers college 51\ldcntJ the op- internship program COSlel1 confidence
omorrow's leaderi in
porhi nity 10 liveaiid work in w lShing- und educate1 1
1on. D.C.andtouperiencerioconlythe pubticpolicy. NYNEX is proudtodem•
professional WOtld, but the cultural di- onstra1e its ongoing commitment to
enhancingeducalionaJopponunitiesfor
vcnmy or the. nation's capital
More than 18.000 students. reprc• Lho k- in lhc communities ii k-Nes. ··
Any Suffolk University siudent may
seniing 700 colleges and uni versi ties
nauonwide. Nlvc participated m The part icipateina Washi ngtonCe nterins
Was hmgton Center's internship and te mship provided that he or she 1 at
scmll\ar programs.
kascasocond-semes1c rsophomorcand
Through iu National Scholanhlp maimainsatlcasta2.5GPA. Academic
Program.theCenterprovidesfuw,cial credil IJ anunged lhrough the um versuppon 1 scude.nts with de11'10fl5tnlled sity.
0

wadlin"mon

i;

· o:: :.;-A:..~•..::.:
.....,.n. ....
.....,,.... ......
.,.,...._,..,,,._ ...,..

........
.,..., ... ......, ..... . ..
~.llt

1-T-IIW-Tt
SH MY SllTEEIH ltll ■ IAY.
n.a11t,...1 a.c.... ........
...

...... ....,.......... ... .
................
___.
,. . .......... _.....
..
oattlllU1tteiwa,, 11N1Jtll!lati

................... TN .... _.

................ :w ....


l..,lllllw,-, 1.tlN,-.

•-

-'=-~-:

Somltlllllf1Dlnlllad~

\'

1



j;~i,

. ~ ·-,_~. ~

Letters -,.,,,'." - we are also here IO putcruenain•
.ment into iludenis' liva. We hal(e
brought a hypnotist to CllllpuS. We
hold oui afternoon socials, Bar and
GriU '1, at whic h we hosl lrce food and
sodas, we run contesu in which SN·
de.nu are able to win priu:I and the~ is
music and dancina • Ill £rec to Suffolk
students. We lllso bring enterta.inmem
into the cafeteria during lunch hour\!2,
add some Cun to a ,tudem', day: we
have had acarica1urjst, a one man sing•
ing show, a trivia cxpen who handed
out prizes and n reggae band which
lockedoffCullural Unily Week hcttat
Suffolk.
We have bought tkkets to bo<h Red
Sox and Patriots games and have sold
themtostudenua1discoun1priccs. We
havchad1 Victorianphotographcrcome
to the Student Activities Center as n
welcome week event. Laterthissemes•
ter, we will hold our annual Temple
Strcel Fair and a Spring Ball ~ the
World Trade Center for students 10
enjoy as the school year comes 10 a
close.
In his edi1onal. Mr. Walsh alsosa,d
that the~ is a low level of commi1mem
on Program Council• yet a nother false
statement. Euch and every Program
Council member gives I IO'l, to every
event we run. We med several timd
0l(er the summer as well as hold meetings every week and we anend a wed:•
end-lo.nirctre:u in addi1ion toa RUmber
of conrcrcnccs 1 be as 5Uc.ccsSfol as we
0
can be. If we are so uncommittffl, how
would we ho ld one successful event
after another• or bcuer ye1, why would
we even wam to????
We. in addition co school wo rk and
jobs. spend long hours planning events
to cn1enain and educate a.i\.' srudents
One migh1 thmlr: that with the over 25
cvcntS wt: plan. we must have a board of
over 50 11udents · nol 1ruc. Suffolk
Universi1y Program Council is successfully run by 17 dedica~l'dworking. extremely committed SIU •
dents.
Program Council as a whole is very
upset with Mr. Walsh ', "opinion"· o(
which he said he obtained by s peaking
with some s1udents. (We alwa ys
though1 one's opinion is fonned by
one's own belids1!) Asa student leader,
Mr. Walsh shou ld open his eyes and
look al what quali1y and commitment
really looks like. Dul as students.come
and judge for yourself. Come to the
next Program Council event and see for
yourself. fiB1-hanl1, lhe real definiuon
o( quali1y and commitment.
Signed.
Javier Pagan
GinaCiaramiiaro
Candi Tuplin
Kris1en Ciolkosz
Michelle Machado
Rob Prezioso
Tina Plcheco
Anna M. Marini
Kristen C. Padios
Jennifer Brooks

Lori F. Karas
Christina M. Walsh
Michel Resnick
Ktthy Reinsiein
Elise Rivers
Timolhy O'Neil
April Downing

(

W<doesday, April 7, 1993

Archives,,,,,.,..,,, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - water collected in the lowCM
p11t of the floor. there were
cardboudboxcsonthe floor of
unso rted documcn1s and it
soaked up the water like a

" He wasn't a pro£cssional
arch1vis1 and he wun'1
parucuJarygoodbuthe wuU\cr'c
everyday," says Robbins.
Hamann
a dded,
sponge."
"Somebody's gomg 1 come
0
Thearchivcshavebecn long along and do another history of
neglCJC!edsince 1986following the schoo l a nd whh the
thedcllhofarchi viscDKkJones. Umvemty's IOOlh anniversary
HlffllDl1anDr. DavidRobb1ns. comma m 20Cl6. there's aoing
Assiant Dean, arc the only '""'O 1obeallkmd5ofacuvi1y. Where
who have an interest in the 11r- 11.rc they gomg 1 get the infor•
0
chivesbutcanonl y1ake cun: of mmion~ Well they will ullk 10
them from time to time.
people but there won't be any•
"There is a trcmcndou~ body left from the beginning.
amount o ( work 1 be done, Suffol k w:is n't muc h until
0
cvetything's just piled up and Wo rld Warllandthcyw1 have
ll
photographs that are just shack to rely a loi on 1he written
allover theplace. NDlhingsm records."
ordcr.somearen'1cvcnlabeled.
Both Hamann and Robbins
lbcn of course you get waler ag reed 1hat the archives nttd 10
damagcwhichisthepi~."sUJtcd be soned out.
Hamann.
Robbins tried for a couple
Papers and docu mems 1h111 years 10 rc-<>fpmu them and
have ne verbecnsoned from the sayshedidtwothinbo(thcwk
former Presidenl's office were and began 10 put things in n:::i •
among the several boxes 1ha1 sonablcordcr. Hewasthentramw ffered water damage.
fcrrcd 10 the Deans off,ce and
Hamann admin !hat th,~ 1~ thcarch1veswcre"kf!vinually
n01 the firstD mewa1erha.~lcakcd without care c:1:ccpt when Ted
m the bllSCment. As you know gct.s II few minutes. It has been
1heS11wycrbuildingisnex1toa hkt' th.it fora few yCllJl,"
p;irkinglm andlhercis anirrow
..The h1s1oryofSuffolk Uni•
walkway betwee n chem
\·ers11y is not going to be as
Hamann st111ed th.it snow 111id complc1 as u should be," says
c
r-,un collects there and 11 !>t'CP,, Hamann. "i'be ,ob o( an an:h1
down to the basement h«auM" \1)t •~ IO go out and coUcct
11 has no where else- to go.
1nforma11 o n, c1rncu lu am
"Occasionall y since the hfc changes ;ind m1nu1O that arc
of the building. which isuround kept. A h1Mon11n can look m
1980, there has been mmor them andfi ndou1wh111arc.thcir
noodi ng but th is lime the dam• pmnts of \' ICW and fce hngs. II
age 1 bad," says Hamann. " If might not get collrclCd with no
s
we h:td an archivist doi ng some arc h1 vi)t."
l1lld o( minimal wrung they
Robbms :wkkd th:11 the arwould 001 have ldt the
ch1vesarcmasadstatc. '"Thmgs
hoard bo1tes on the floor hke that ought to be m order, to be
th:tl and if there was any h1
n1 fou nd easily.J ust gd put oul o(
thot there was w111cr, assuming order. Th• worst thing n
cirro
a pen;on that w:is there daily. thedamagc is thcordcrthatdid
they would've done somcthmg exist gcncmtes m10 disorde r
about it."
Then 111s a doubly hard task lO
lliearchivesholdssomcwhal put things m10 order when you
organized documents from ad- have this mass of dlSOrder. The
m1mstration offices. allkinds of labels arc wrong and tha1 will
BoordofTruStCCS minutessincc dn\·e any researcher mad. Now
1948, the Beacon yearbooks. the order is.complelly £1llsc."
missing one or two, a1so since
Hamann and Robbins have
1948, prolific law books from been advocating 1 "dea( cars"
0
GleasonAn::hcr, annualrcpon.s for an i11chiviSl, full or pano(thefaculi tiesandvarious s1ud• time, and heard through the
1es that were done.
grapevine that Louis Connelly.
Paper copies, such as the director of publtc rellllioru: and
SuffolkJoumalandcouncbul- spons infonnauon WM apletms w~ put on microfilm poin1 the Job.
ed
because or deteriorntion.
In contacting Connelly he
"MosiUnivcrsity'sdon' tpay ...said he is not the' archivist per·
much attention 10 their history say.
but Suffolk does," says Dean
·-rhc archives comes _
undct
Robbins."We havcalowqu11I• the jurisdiction of the library
1tycarc aCourarchivcs. A con- and l doresearchfonheschools
cemo(theUniversity'shiswry. benefit but I ha\·cotherduties.."
past and development and how
Judy Minardi, d1rcctoro(lhe
that shapes the p ~ t is being human resources de~cnt
neglected and with out good confirmed that Connelly 15 not
!U'Chives you can't put a good the archivist but had an under•
ovcn,icw together."
standing that he would help out
Robbinswrotethe historyof with the iask.
Suffollri: UniYCrsity J5 years~o
Hamnnn siatcd thal it all had
and admits lhe arehives were 10 do with money and hopes u
aredfor byDickJonesbutthey wt:reachtheanni~ 1111
wcren'torpriiud.
SuffolkwillrtittlVCIOffiCgifts.

&'rit--

ft,e

'ibcre would be IZt archivist
down lhere if Suffolk Univdsi1y had the money to pay for it.
It's a low priority and they arc
trying 10 keep tuition down u
muc h as possible," added
Homann.
Robbins believes the neglcctedarchives has nOlhUJ& IO
do withthiswater damage. The
neglect isthercbuti(i1wasd,y,
the documcnt.s could sit down
thercfor2.5yearsandstrcsses
that it is imponant not lO lei that
tmplicalion stand.
"Issues o( wucwal integrity
o( thc building is really quite
different and one o ( the obsessions of the Universi1y ts the
condition with it's physical
plant. Now lhat the water got in
there and did damage is an acute
irony because one thing we do
beuer1han anything else seems
1 have gone wrona:·
0
Suffolk University doesn'1
make an effort to make the
rccordsavailablebccausco(the
dissanay down there and this
unfonuantc leak.
"Wcarc not in 1hcrealmos1
begnighted seament where his•
1
orical rc.cordJ arc found bu1 we
arc l10l where we should be,"
added Robbins.
The:trchivcsatt thin toprescrvt 1hc material abo ut
Suffolk's h1stocy and according
to Haman n.preservation is the ,
key word here.
·"They reflect the li(e ofthc.
school." says Hllfflann. " I have
real motive for the archives,
maybe: this will bring ~ me att.cntion to them."

The Suffolk JOllfflll

21

University Archives~
_he }mtory of Suffolk
t
By Ka.. Oolcimascolo
Contributing Report.er
The University Archives
was moved Crom the dank
basement or the. Mt. Vernon
Streelbuilding 10 nea.1 if not
commodious quanet1 in the
Sawyer l.ibrnryin 1982.and
fo r the fine time a policy to
guide the work o( the
University Arc hivis1. Dick
JonCJ, wu writt.cn.
However. Dick Jone, died
in 1986, and the Library
Director. Ted HamaM was
obliged to leave the position
unfi lled because o( the need
atthattimc10 reduce staff
costs.
During 1he following year
Associate Dean Dr. David
Robbiru, on a part ti me
basis, cleaned up the a rchives, and cleared out much
dupl icate and out or.scope
mat.crial and began to '
anangc some o( the impor1an1 documcnts.
Hamann has gathered and
amngcd some. o ( the nan·•

dard Suffolk publicatioru but
many documents have been
simpl y dumped into.the
Archives in cardboard
shippina bo1te1 where they
are Jen almost completely
.. inacceuiblc.
In 2006 Su(fol\- Uoiversity will be 100 years old, an
age whic h will be cause for
celebration o( its ric h and
varied lire and, no doubc, the
publication or a new history
o r the school.
However, u Suffolk
Univenity matura beyond
the 1pan of I human li(e ti me
lhe historian can rely with
ICU ■ nd less confidence
upon o~ 1cs1imony to
describe the hls1ory or the
school.
As later histories are
being researched. the hist~
rian will be'Corced to rely
more and more upori docu•
menu. It is the £unction o(
the Univcrsi1y Archives 1
0
gather, arrange a ndpreserve
documents by. and about 1he
university.

Have a news tip?
Call the Suffolk
Journal!
573~8323

FOR STUDENTS

,,

OPEN OFFICE HOURS WITH
PRESIDENT SARGENT
_/

TUESDAY, APRIL 13
1:00- 2:3.0

President siirgcn1 invil<S you 10 nm wilh him - oo appclinlmcn1 """""'l' 10:
I) ask questions
2)cxpresscxn::,ms

3)S\l88fSlidcas
4) ldl him why you like Suffolk
· Please lake advirttage ri lhis oppcrnmily 10 speak with an nm lhe PtcsidcnL

HE WANTS TO HEAR FROM YOU!!!
251h floor - One Beacon Strccl

Wedneaday,

Wednesday, April 7, 1993

AfWil 7, 1993

Tbc Suffolk Jowml

Alamo running series returns to Boston
To fill the p05irion ol execu- a>uldsenoeon,~bomd. secretary bu1 both declined the
live board sa:mary, the cunm1
MichdlcMcGim,SGA T"8- position.
aecutivc board decided 10 open surer,SIBUd, "NooeofthecUgible , What happens next is i,in•
upthepositiootoanyrttuming rnembenWanllhepodion..,it ,ckar. ROCCOCiccarcllo,SGA
memba', ,egM!lcssdhow long --willbeopencduplo.#l)'reeuming Presidcnl, said that theCIJIT'Cfll
hdshehassawd.
member,rq;adlessolhowlong cxccutiveboarclwouldmectto
Thiscomadictslheexetutivc theyhavcscrvedonSGA."
decide what route to take in
boacdruling~•ooupleofwecks
McGiM pcrccivcd oo ~ fiqingthevacancy. Aso.fpress
ago that SIEled only people who Ian with this ruling bocau.se no time, Ciccarello was unavailhad hem dcm:d as d Doc. I oncwhowudigjl>kcpased ablefor commentoa wba1had
an irurcst in the positicn
been decided.
Thismovcwould opcnupthe
In his speech for the vicepoaiorlco Beth Evans. who has presidency, Hidalgo slated,
bccnuoofficiallykcepngthemin- "SGA must go before: ou r
utcsforSOAsincclhercsigmtioa goals."
ofAlmonyARzalone,~
Heellplainedthattheneeds

!clau iqmauative and former

'. SO:hc~

from

. S1H

:,5

=

IIOIII

to officially

takcthepositionbccausethisis
onlyhcr fi1S1.scmcstaon SGA.

th~f;e::~

personal needs or beliefs. He
slrCSSed that the students arc
the main priority. He streSscd

·Fan trompa8 ~u

SJIS
Sm
Sffl

tage for the: playoffs.
IIIIUCH
For the first time in history.
IIIICN
footbal l is making major new's
-....
$175 intheoff-scuon,asfrccagency
MOICOW'
SSH hasalready h1da majorimpac1
ISTAIIIILia..rd . from~ on the league The biggest
on. newsmakcr has been Reggie
mdtd.fftsSlqtt:ttochlf'ec. White and hi s continuing
search fora team.
Besides the major four
• •
sports, golf is making major

Fnsf.:m~ro

7 2 9 - - ~on
~

~u:\:%~:f:;y

::d~:i: t:it :~:;~~.;~
:

CIINow ,

Mas1ers,willbcplaycdinGcorgia.
Of course around here
people arc just gcnring for the
Bost~n Marathon on April 19.
I have to admil that the race
does not intercs1 me 100 much,
cspcci111ly since large cub has
comeinioplay, but I knowtha1
there: arc: many peopl.c whS, get
utrcmcly excifed over it.
As you can sec, the eiCi1e•
mcnt in spons is grca1er1now
than at any other period of the
year. So enjoy it now, ~use
you won't be abfe to
ii
again untilncx1year. ·. •

*-"

Collcac studcntl can join up with
l.lumni to support their 1ehools and
compctea.loogaidcru.nninalegencb Bill
Rodlen and Frank Shorter when the
Alamo 5-Miler& Alumni Rally returns
10 Boston on Spturady.
The unique format allows inctiviclual
entrants to aitomatically be a team mcmbcrforhis or hcrcum:ntorformcrcoucge
orhighschool~cxxnpetcforcashdonaDOOI IO IChools and irdividual Jrizcs in
Vllf'KIUI BFcalCBoriCI totalling $10,00).

tha1 SGA mus1 "set a standard veteran of SGA, McGinn said
or behavior."
the most important thing she
The other candidates in the leamedwhileamcmbetofSGA
race for the vice-presidency was how IO wort in I group
were Dunn, Falzone and Joyce. and how to express her feelErika Christenson, running ings for an issue.
unopposed for ueasurc:r, nev•
Rcspor,ding Jo a question
crtheless prepared ~~pecch. In asked by a membcroftheaudi•
her speech she responded 10 eocc concerning how to get
uMamed critics who said that people to trust SGA. McGinn
she had "done nothing" this stated that "word of mouth",
pas1ycar.
talki ng lO people and telling
To dispute this claim, them aboul SGA, was the best
Christenson slated her cllpcri- way to convince them.
ence as Chair of lhe recycling
When asked what her goals
program,her~n;:honbring- were for next year, McGinn
ing an A™ machine to the said. "Everymembcrhasagoal.
Suffolk campus and her in- Every member brings somcvolvemcnl in the Treasurer' s thinginlOtheol'&l!n.itatlon. My
manual.
goal is 1 make sure that every
0
McGinn, wl\o thought she member gct.s what they want
would have COIJ!petition. pre• done."
pare,d a resume with her ac•
The new executive board
compfubmeatiandCllpc:l}Crv;:e willbe swominonMay IOthat
as wdl as as~ h. A two year the annual Leadership Banquet.

WI

I

+:z

9:30-12:30
. 10:00 - 12.-00
, 10:00-12:00

12:30. r,u
1:00-2:00
2:00-4:30
4:00·

'Emp!oy~ nt Prayer
Mllf)', Our Lady or lhc miraculous medal
You once experienced hardships and

" I will sh~ your goodness with others
That 1hcy ·may know your power with God

difficu1ics

Aod give him Honor and Glory
May the God or Suength and encourni:emcnt

w,

- 'Education

at tfie Crossroads
WEDNESDAY,
APRIL 14
4:00 P.M.
C. WALSH
THEATRE

The Case/or
Stmctural Refonn
Through Private
/1111ovation
BENNO SCHMIDT
ChiefExecutive
Officer, The Edison
Project; fonner
President of Yale
University

This lecruu ts are fru and open to the public. A
reception willful/ow the program. Ifyou plan to attend
the receplion(s), please RSVP. ar 573-8613.

Suffolk Univ~rsity

=

by day believe more and more and be
101ally coovinced or t'!c power, of the
reality, or the surcncu and unconditionaliiy

M'lly- day

Help me to find aomc suitable employmcnc
'Through my wotk I WADI to mecl and grow
1piri1ually
Help me IO find a job tbai leis me provide for
myself BPd tbo5e who depend on me
I U'llSt taun8CUJaic Mother to-hear my pnyers
andlolcrCcdcformc

of Gods love for me
May I more and more: be aware tbtu I am wi1h
Lord and walk io his prucnce
And Jcsu1, Holy Name, I pny, Amen

-~

·r10 ''-"
Spring Break:
CANCUN. NASSAU
m,m$29<J
Organiu: a miall group for
FREE trip
Call l(8~}Gef.SUN-l
MathTuitoriogformost JOO level
math classc, for mini. ft.e. Help
wi lh pauing BME . Leave

mwage at 513-8323.
I NTE R NAT I ONAL
EMPLOYMENT- Makcmoney
leaching English abroad. Japan
and Ta'iwan. Mike $2,000·

:;~===:
Noprc:Yioustra.inin&orleaehin&
cer1ific11e requi red! For
lntern uional Employment
JJJOlfllD, call the lntc:nwioaal
Employmco1 Group: (206) 632t 146 ext. JS023.

CRUISE SHIPS HlRlNG • Earn
$2000+1month.SummermdC11t.Cr
employmtntavlillb'lt..Nouperielu
necwary. For pn)JRm can 1-206634-0468eit Cson.

ALASKA
SU MM ER·
EMPLOYMENT • fisheries . ·
Earn $600+ plweck in canneries
or $4,000+/month on fi shi n&

boats:Frt.eb'&(lSpOftltioo!Room
& Board! Mal~ or Female. For

SPRJN(; BREAK '93
Cancun, Bahamas, Jamal ca from
only $399! Da;1on from $149!
Organiu: asma.llgroupandtr.ivel
FREE ! Call NOW! New
England's Largest Spring Break
VacaJl_ons 80()..328-SA VE.

Adnrtlst

lo The Journal·.
It Pays!

employmcn1propvncall l-206S4S-4 J55 cxL ASOi3, ,
•EXTllA INCOME "9J"•
Eam$200-S500wecklymailinJ
1
993UW11invelbrochwu.Foc
morcinformationseodf!=l!address
ltlmptdeitvdopeto;Tn.vcllNC.,
P.O. BoJ12SJO, MilmLFL33 161.

381MAD

CODI.

11000

lf.MTCN~

ft.WIJIOIIOll'IIIS
-WIIOCW&
No~Noat.

.:-=:,

-=:.""L...

Thcgrandpriu:wilJbe,thcm:dl.cbow
Endovmicntfund;a$l.500domtionf!Om
Alamo Rent A Car to lhc school wilh lhe·
most alumni c:orucuahts.
The Alamo series was a:inceivod by
Lebow, organiur of lhc New York Ciy
Marathon. looiVldual race winoers will
feve free use of Wl Alamo l'CfltaJ car.

.°""' """'° ""°"' -

"""'

willbcSl.(XX)each to lheOpcn,Ml.Slcn
andScruorM1mer1clwesv.inningtcams
in both male and female divisiom; ~

lndmo,.......,;..iy, mlhelOCOOdllld
lhudpl,a,. nwellldfanlloOpmllld
M.-:rstcam1;and$2.5010lhetopnlkle
and female hi&h ICbool teams.
Thcserie&aboc:ontDUCloneolthc
peatelt,m:i~rivahicsinkq:distance runnina between Rodaera
(Wcdcyan '70),four-timewimadbodl
the Boaon and New Yort:Matahons: Ind

shol1a- cv• '69}, 1m u.s. Olympic
m&rlthon aokl and 1976 Olymp6c mar.
thoosi.lvcrmedalilt.

Rwwnm\lCJqllaClllr.dmi
500unl-~lndhis!>
inihcfintlouryean:d,-Caaia
Thciaoe.wt.ch...imcathell
""' lhe Millt Run ln<itiooally t

~~v:u~

==••,.d,..jini
b
YOU can act mart inf'otmalioll

ina Dave MdJ[llM,y S,,O,,, En
ll932-9393. •

.

_ - .
µ

.

ports·

FINAL
EDITION

ne Sjdhlk JOlll1UII

- Wedwdoy,Aprll 7, 1993

Baseball
rebounds
from
tou_gh time
in Florida
By Edmond 8ro5nan
and Chris Olson
Journal St.a.ff

THE SUFFOLK JOURNAL)
Suffolk University's Student Newspaper
Volume 51, Number 23

Beacon Hill, BoclOn, Mauachuletu

Wednesday, April 14, 1993

Suffolk offers
many alternatives
to cheating

Sophomore Scott Dunn has got•
ten 1hc job done o n the mou nd as
the baseball team has done better at
home in Mauachuscns than they
rared in Florida. They have aonc 30 since comi ng home .r1cr aoina a
diu ppointing 1-5 in Florida , bri91ing 1hcir record 10 4.S.
On Muc h 28, 1hc Ra ms de•
11roycd Wentworth 10-4, H Dunn
pi1chcd 11 complc1c aamc to pick up
lhc victory. The game was lied 4-4
after the fourth inning, but Dunn
1hu1 down Wcn, wonh for the rcs1

o
l!'
A Great Time To Be A Sports Fan :h:b~:~: ::~ Jo~~ :,o!~c~::
~ 1

board.

lL- - -=========~ »
Ranacrs will not make the playoffs
Amazi ngly, Suffolk WH able to
By Edmood Brosnan
w~~',:::~~--g , ° =·i•,•_".:,=- ;ii!~~'i:-';,i
== :~~;Ea,r =:-:~Leo ;:
ii.:~~n1Uion,~in; :•; tluce-~Hw.,';,y; ,bd01;.;d,;_f.,~rn;:;.;:.,i~;i:,.Jch!ii'. '; ,~:~;_;,';,js:~:~~ll1 p~.;,~: ~:.; i~-~~.::,;; ~•~Journal Slaff
Thcrecanbenodoubtlha1lhis isthc
,pan of the year for sports rans.

=-~

belt

There is more acing on during lhis
than at any other time of the

1be baseball season i1 upon us and
cverythinJlctl]Uallrightwiththeworld

=~~~°:;:~,~~ear°7.

aftermoreconsidenuionilseemslhat
~~~~s~:~ lcgitimatc cha~

forfirstpt.c:einthcAdamsDivision
withMonuealandQutbec. Bos1 has
on

Wa ls h .
the
Ram ,
pl ayed
agg rcsivcly, scoring two runs on

:;. run plays and steali ng five
d

Wc wci"ealso treaudco thechampi- ~~::::a.:~n:;:i~;:: : :1
1

ooshipgameoftbeNCAA Townanmem
00 Mooday and what• pme it wu.

:~::::~~=~:cc:;:,:
game,

~na

the 77-71

an almost auto.matic row IJ)ints.
Tbisistbe.lastyearwcwillgcttoscc
thcuadilioanJ NHL playofrfonnat, u

victory ::,!:':X~'!.r";tc:o
10

O

IOal~g

~~:

::;\v°i:rc:::n:,c:=::

Ca1chcrTim Murray had two hiu
and two walks and Rob Zcytoooian
and Mike Reidy each had two hits.

ii!:, ~::t

0

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

O;~ ;~1

1

N°::m~:!~";".,, iicouldn'ihlvehap- rQ~~~go and New York have
bad.
pened 10 a better guy. Webber's iaum- ctioched .playo(f ,pois in the Eastern
We were lrcaled to a good opening ing of ~er players ~ the game Conference in the NBA. ~re could
day .:S we got to ICC cwo expansion - 'es.:n~nJOyaDle fo wate h aod leads 10 IIClUallybe1woexpansionteams-in the
ieamsplaytheirfimgames"
.Thc:Aorida co Al~ I . !here were many upsets in i,JayofTs.u it looks like the Charlotte
Marlins inthejrdebut 11Artedou1ona
Homeu will makei11Ddeithcr Miami
positive nottwith16-) victoryoverlhe the ioumameru, lhe biggest probably Of Orlando bas an outside shot at get•
Dodgers.
being Salli.I Clam's victory over Ari- bog the ei&hth spot.
It wa.s good to sec 1h11 the Aorida zona in the ftni round. Another big
The Celtics are oow fourth io the
fansknewhowtoactatarcgularscason surprise wu California's upset over East but wjth a cbaoce ol ovenaking
game. u they taunted Daryl SU.w- Oukc. uJuon Kiddprovcdtha t becan Cleveland for lhe third spot. If they
beny.
play wilh the big boys.
finish founh they will probablY like oo
The Colonw() Roclcic& did not fare
AhoatthiJtimeoftheyc:ulheNHL New Jcmy in the firsi round of the
aswcll.losin,totheNewYorkMeu3- and NBA seasons are winding down playofTs,buc if they come in third they
0 oo • (our-bitter by Dwi&hl Gooden. and playoff races are in full heat
Will probably meet Atlanta, • more

: ::~: n1~~:1t:~~:~a~~:~rr•y
On Sunday, Suffolk pulled ou1 a
close 3-2 win over Merrimac College as Dunn picked up the uve,
recording two strilceouu in the
ninth.

Mike Jewiu alfo pilchcd • goo4
game, leaving after 1bc sixth with
1he score 1ied at I. Marty Nastasia
pitched in the seventh and eigh1h,
aiving up one run .
The Rams scored I.he g1me-winoing run i~ the e iJhth a, Reidy led
off with a walk a nd wu 11criftccd
to Second by Zey1ooniaa . Loud

Hope(wly, Ooodencanrctumlo hisold
(o~RcdSoiwcreabletopuU ouu
~1 win in Kama, Oty behind the
...._pitchia,ofRoserClemea111ad

0

JcfflbwclLDoll' tptyourboSUup
: ~ . ~ - - ~ - ~: , , : ,
~
I
ua.-

r .. .
u.;

(.

-

N ~ ~ = = ~ : ~ c : ns:

w ~ ~ t : : ~ : : ~~

theWest.

: ~n:~nb;~:n~:~~h:i~~
-::o.:u:,


some open spou and clubs Ile also
jockeyina for hom&-ice advlfllqe in
dlep&ayoffs.

afta'~=~--==

but the Oippc:rs apd the Laun are
virtual klckf forthosetjlOU. As in lhe
NHI.. bu.ketbalJ lcaml will DOW bo

in the ninth . Shormop Scan
BrinlcleybadtwohitafortheRams.
Suffolk came back and beat

is• ,ood dlance tbat dle New York

auernpbnatopiilbome-courtadvaoCor.rttuudM flOlt 22

Wentworth on MoDday by a 5-0
score H Tqm Fiab pilcbod I com~lcte-aame, three-hie 1l1111oat.

By Lawreape M. Walsh
Journal Scaff
Suffolkprovides,b.ltwholhebdl
wanes 10 go7 If yoo' re smart

Ol>OU&li ID g<I um collcF Ibo,,

taitein tbelCIDCller."
Mmyltlldena:p.itotfgcaing

you should be smart enough to

Evans.fills final seat on
SGA Exec. Boa·r d

seruon prepare or
lastsetoffinah they.wilJever
like H undergraduates and
mcmbcn of student •orpniza•
tiOI\I ready for their deplrtwt.
from their offices, poc cla:ced
IIUdcnt lcaderwillnotbevmturiog ("' from govemmenL
Rocco Ciccarello, ouc-aoioa
pruidetlt or !he Saudent 0o....

=~;::::c:1:.=:

recaryforlhel91)3:l~term.
By StephanicSoow
Sbe w11 the only candidat.e. . day o1ght to the Stoneham UJournal Staff
Junior~vesAnne tnryBolrdofTNICCC&. '
TheSbJdcntOovemmentM- Condo.naodJudyDunn.FresbOccarellowa.sdl!aadtothe
sociahcinappn>Ycdyescerdayto man Reptaeotati_ RicJwd boan:looApril&hdurin&rquv11;:
suspend.fortbel99'l-1993ycar, JO)? 10d
Rq,r&- 11r town elections lhrou&h
the ruling that stated• SOA ~ v e ~ - ahcoe all d&- ~
F
cm'lplip(orooeoftbe
membermusthavebecoe_kcted clincdQOIDllllbonl(ortbepm twovdm:1atsootbeballoL
by Doc. I to be cli11ble for an
falzoDe--.com~ted that
His family has a tmdioon of
aecubve boud p01itioo.
peop1~pirobablydcc:linethepo- aaving in local politics, his r..
Thccurrcntcxccutivehoard litionofeuc:utivcboardsecre- "tber, Cosmo CiocareUo Sr., iJ
detjdcd to open up the position wy bcameo(the tmslel tbM the cum:nt chairman of the
tb any retumiog member, ro- aaccrmry1CC1D1to_
pmupwilh. StoocharnBoardo(Sdcccmen,
gan:lleuofhow lona hdshe hu Hewealontoexplaiotbltwhm CiccardJo said be ran for the
,m,od.
• mlstlke,is made, for a:.~ post became he want to get inThc suspensioooftheDoc:. I someooe s name bcloe mis- volved in politics, pll'ticularly
decistofl Wu nccasary when spelled. peopk:_tend to make a munic:ipll policies.
none~ the digilile caodidates bigdcalabouttt.
"ldon'tWll1tomakeita
for secretary were io&crested io
Roc:coCicardlo.SGApr:lt- c:an:erinpolitic:l, butlwlOlto
lhopoot.
denC,coammttd~tver,JX>: ~iolocalpolitics." he
This move enabled Beth litionontbee:ucubVCbolrdll llid.

E v a n s , ~ ~ imponant. He 0 : ~ tblt
Annamae Arlaal.h,. IOWO
tivc. CO NO and subtequelllly be
Co,,liu,tido,a~ll
clerk fo_ Stoneham, aald
r
doetcd•esecutiveholrdtee-

Sopb9morc

. Ckamloran1~inciffipaiao aplrw acveral other

wrir&incandidaaaandbyfar
moeivedtbedlOllvotesarnooa

ihefldd.

·

,

a Arse:oaultsaidbyJawawrir&

crim. .
Ciocardlo said tblt ho ii oppoacdeolbedimiaMicllofdle
library IDdllid lbat.bewill be
-wom-.:wi&bdlcl0WD't~

commfaeeinordc:rtocucWla
inCMdiclllemedstoncdve11 aodmllinlliothelib,ary. .. .
!tut• many voces. it wov1d
Ititbefacu:rc.Cic:cardlciuid
tab:tobeoorninatccl forablllot
p:11ition. Ciccatdlo rccdvcd
152 vOCCII IDd ooly ocedcd .SO
YOUS to he comidacd.
Amooa Cic:cllello' • chief
co110C1111 UI the tin&ncial diffi~ the town is cum:ntly m
and uvina the library from
b e i n g ~ under bud&ct·
arycomtnints.
Stoneham is CWTUldy ~
oin,1Slmillioabladptdeftcit
aodtbelibrlry'1S,OO/:#)hud,.
ac:tbecameltllpl.lalNo\l~
her(orcuaSlordl!l'tollalldlo