File #4329: "Suffolk Journal_1993Mar24_vol51no20.pdf"

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Sports

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,ik . . 111

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.-dlll,1993

()Uth for th~_ t time
firs.

THE SUFFOLK JOURNAL
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Suffolk University's Stude.~ t Newspap_ r
e

State O.K.s
Suffolk's
razing of
Tremont St.
buildings
has made several trips to the balling ulc. Fourteen teams wru be in Myrtle
~gcs, sharpening technique, 'strt:ngth- Beach next week, and Suffolk will cal,
cnlng their bats, and gcning their anns ·drink and sleep sohball while they arc
in shape.

go.J:~~~!~~o~=~~~~
'

there.

R~u;i~:;::lhi~;~a~~~:~~~

magtSwithothcrteams.''saii:IRuseckas. role as a leader as well as a talcmcd
Thcrearcschcdulcdin-unifonngames, alhlctc." Ruscckas said. "She's a team
thoughRuscck.asisnotyetC'.crtalnlflhc
Co111/1'11ud on ;,axe I I
games will count on the regular schcd-

lcey eliminated ·in first
td of playoffs
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_.J

:Olson

Slaff

By Lawrcncc M. Walsh
Journal Staff
The Office of Environmental Af.
fairs last week, approved Suffo'lk
University's petition for permission to
tear down the office buildings at ti0120fumontSt toclcarthcway for·the
am.struction of a new law school.
Susan Tierney, environmental af.
fairssccn=tary, wrotcinthedeparuncnt's
approval, .. because of the deteriorating,
and unsafe conditions of the two buildings, earl y demolition is dcsin=d."
Previous approval for the demoll-

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Continwtd on paft 10

SOM opens professors
evalutions to student revi~w

SGA delay executive
board ·elections

st four games

By Steptwue Snow

t scvcnproved
IC-Rams. They
~ffs. but a5 the

an eight-team
>thavC-ahomethefirstrou.nd
)travclt~ n -

facc Sout.ti:m

The hockey ~ was knOCkcd out bf tlic playoffs by
Souther Maine, 4-3, last )Vcdncsday.
Filt fh olo

1thcRamspre1cd Southern

ICOJ'ecarllcr ln
fclltothemthc
ou.nd 4-3 last

P()CrcdSoulh~c Dah Smith
~tcouldn'tput
: net wilh the
lidinthcn:gu-

Jams-alsohlta
posts in their

Suffolk goal.
Southern Maine advanced
10 Wt night's champlol'Wlip
gamcagalnst number one seed
UMa.ss-D~ooth with a 4-3
winovct>lonalnlhcsemifinals
on Saturday•.
"It was a disappointing finish 10 the season," coach Bill
Bums said, who has k.d the
Rams· 10 three Sll1.ighl playoff

""""""''

Bumssummoduphistcam 's
stopped 16 of season w~ 'he stated, "We
: facul In the never really jelled and I alOS,.

" It has been a long battle for
over a decade," said Briggs,
"but we finally won." Briggs
"Measures motivate," said played an lnstrwnental part ln
Professor Warren Briggs hf making the evaluations public
computerinformlllionsysu;ms, and on rescn-e in lhc library.
n=[cning to the rucntly won
The documents arc Con" battle:' of mWflg Sllldcnt's taincdinabindcrmarkcd"conevaJuations of School of Man- ~tlaJ." Jtprovldes an.ovcragement raculty accessible in alf'swnmary .of the SOM unlhcMlldrcd F.SawyerUbraJy. dergraduate division, JS well

By Lorraine M.X.. Palmer
Journal Staff

iakclhc ECAC

tribute some of It to the fact
that we had a lotofnewplayers
who were still gelling to know
each olher. "I think after that
good streak when we won n~c
in-a-row and we were 10-4, we
lostacoupleof games and with
It maybe some confidence."
However, lhc teani's future
docs look bright Next year,

the Rams will have many experienced playcr.i rcruming to
lhcllneup.
ContinU<d on pagt J1

as an overall summary of the
SOM graduate division.
It also contains a two page
computer printout with responses to 14 questions about
facull.y members and their
couhes. Also1vailablcan:thc
syllabus• s used by each faculty
member/ for the panlcular
c;ourses he or she~-•
ColtJinU<d on pa.1t JJ

Jouf?W Staff

- -====-Atycstcrday'sStudcntGovemmcnt Association D,1ccting;
executive board mmlnadoos
that were scheduled to take

~werccontfhuoduntllncxl
week. due to confusion over
who was CllClly eligible for
thcposltlom.
However, the Student l ,udi•

CLAS approves curriculum changes
mcnts. scht.duled to go •into
cffe.ctinSeptcmbCf 1994,contain significant changes in the
'The Faculty Assembly of ,.,-rEauction of math requircthcCollcgcofLibcralArtsand mcnts, the rcplac.cmcnl of the
Sciencc.sapprovcdonMarch9 logic course with an ethics rcallproposedc:hlngestothcoorc qulrcmcnt. and the 11:iditlon of
curriCWwn , to include a new another JClcncc rcqulrcmem.
sixcrecitdivcnily~rcmcnt.
E.dwud J. Hints Jr.• chair•
Thenewcunk:ulum recJlU'C- man of the Bduc:ational Policy
By Lawrence M. Walsh
Journal Staff

C.Ommhtcc. said for the mos1
part. the majority of ~ curriculwn ~ill rcmainintacl. with
some minor adjustmeyits.
'1bc changes clearly reflect
what is happening on other
college campuses as well as
therealworld,"saidHarrls.
Pointing to the new div.er•
si~y requln=ment. J{anis 5',ld.

"Qtll1U>ldlvenlty_..,,,...
is cieady the major chanp"

Whcnlhcfaa,JtyAaemblyfirstlOOkuplhecurrleulum
changes a'-'lhelr mcctinJ three

sity"'IU _ _ _ lhc
weeks ago, the cultunl diver•

discussion, with facllltyinem-

-

COnJinwd o,. pag14 lhc
....... -

·

clary Review Board. which
governs the judicial bnnch of
SOA, met after the ~ I
and came to a dedston on lbc
ellg:lbWty ~remenu 10 run
for.the Execudve 8oan1
Rocco Ciccarello, so.A.
Prcs:ldent. aft.er meedna: wtth
the SJRB, stated, "To be ell- A
glhlf; for an ~ r e board
posltieNJ.lnthc I993-I994 ICI
CaltlinMtd 011 ptlgr: 14 r ·
~

s

(

'

'l I I I I , ''
I)

~ II

I

I

Suffolk, _ GH.adds t
M
~twom.,n~d
opod- ~jolal cffij
.... ..-Utdv<nllybli

12

_,,,....,..
...,.,....,_biol· ~
Two new 1111):n. mcdk:a1

rst time

THE SUFFOLK JOURNAL
.

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ult)' -'-1117 ofdlo CJoDoa,,
o f ~ - ... 25.

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. 1belalllalJX-1o

Suffolk University's St~dent Newspaper

,er the. spring break.
Coralyn Bta1y/Jour11t1/ Staff

ourtecn teams wiU be In Mynlc
1
ncxt week, and Suffolk will cat,
and sleep sof\ba11wh.lle they are
~or Ktni Sweeney is lhc Lady
captain this year. " Kerri fitslhc
s a leader as well as a talented
:," Rusockas said. "She's a team
Contin11tdo11pagt II

State O.K.s
Suffolk's
razing of
Tremont St.
buildings
Byl..awJmCCM. Walsh
Journal Staff

The omce of Enviromi.cntal Af.
fairs last week approved S uffolk
University's petition forp@russlon to
tear down lhc office buildings at I I~
120 fumontSL to clear the way for the
construction or a new law school.
Susan Ticmcy. environmental af.

fairssccrewy,wnxcinthcdepa,tmcnt 's
approval, "because of the deteriorating
and unsafe conditions oflhe two build•

I in first

ings. early demolition is desi~"
Previous approval for the dernoll-

----lion-0f..tJ~buildins1=0$.d<""'""-hnffll-...-olM'l,"""a,n~r.,ii',i1IT,ai@i~rnijm:,.;,sm,n;;::,;;;;,,;;;;;;;..,;;:;;;;::;;;;;;;;:==== I-- ~
Co111inutd on pa1t JO

&9M opens professors

SGA delay executive
board elections

evalutions to student review
By Lorraine M.K.. Palmer
Joumal Staff
"Measures motivate," said
Profcssot Warren, Briggs or
c.omp111erln!ormatlon syst.cms.
n::ferring to the recently woh
"batlle" or making studcni 's
cvaluations or School of Managcmenl faculty accessible in
thcMlldrcdF. SawycrLibrary.

" It has been a long battle for
over a decade," said Briggs,
"but WC ftnally won... Briggs
played an instrumental part in
making the evaluations public
and on reserve .In the library.
The documents arc containedlna bindcrmadr.ed"confi dc:ntial." It provides an over- all summary of the SOM undergraduate division, as well

as an overall summary of the
SOM graduate division. ·
It also contains a two page
computer printout with re•
sponses-lO 14 questions about
faculty members and their

courses. Al.soavailablean:the
.syllabus'sUS(4bycachfaculty
member for Ult pa rticular
courses he or she teaches.
Co111i111ud on pagt IJ

ciuy Review Boanl, which
By Stephanie Snow
govcm, the judicial branch of
Joufltl]. Staff
SOA, met aft.er the meeting
- - --'-----Atyesti!rday'sStudcnlGov- and came to a decision on the
emmcnt Association meeWlg, cUglbWty requirements to run
executive boud nomlnallops for the Execudve Boani.
Rocco Ciccarello, SOA
that were scheduled to take
p1acewaecontlmieauntllnext Pres!~ after ~eetin& with'
week. due to confusion over the SJRB, stated, ~ be eliwho was cXIClly'ellgiblJ for gible for an eucutive board
po~ltion i9 the 1993-1994 aca
the p0Sillons.

However, the Student Judl-

tribute some of it to the fact

th.al we had alot ofncw players
who were still gelling to know
eactiOlhcr."lthink: aftcrthat

g~ ~ whch we won five
ln-a-row and we were 10-4, we
lostacouplcof.gamesand w!lh
ii maybe some conlidencc."
However, the tcam's·futurc
docs look bri ght. Next year.
lhe'Rams will have many ex-

perienced players returning to
the lineup.
Con1i11iu:d 011 pagt l I

CLAS approves curriculum changes
ments, ~ to go inlo Commiuee, said fo r the mos1
effect in September I994, con- part. the: majority of the cur
tain significant chanics in the riculwn,,.,illn:mainintact,with
The Faculty Assembly of reduction of math require- SOmem ino r ~ c n t s.
'1bechaniesclearly reflect
the College ofUben1 Arts and ments, the replacement of the
Scicnccs approved on Man:h 9 logic course with an ¢ucs re- what is happening on othet
cge campuses as wdl a.s
all proposedclwlg'CStothcoore quirement. and the addition of coU
the real world," said Harris.
curriculum, to include a new anolhcr science requirement..
Pointing to the new di~cr• ·
Edward J. Harris Jr., chairsixm:dit<ivmltyrccp.tlrement.
Byl..awn::nceM. Walsh
Journal Staff

ThcnewcwriculumrtqUlrc-

8

man oflhcF.ducltlonal Policy

sily requirement, Harris said,

"CwlUnldivCBity~ .
is clearly the major chlnp"
When the Faculty Aacm,.
blyflrsttoolcupthccurriculum
changes at
mcctinl du=:

-As._ociation
s
Student Leadership NOi
Available in Student Ac
Administrator of
Faculty Member ol
Advisor of the
:,u _ sung He1
q
Outstartd_jpg S,
Outstanding J1
Ou.t standing Sopl
Outstanding· Fre
Outstanding Orga
Female Athlete of
Male Athlete ·or t

their

weck.s ago, the cultunl diver•
sityrcquln::mCJi:cbabwedtbe
discussion. with facul1y IDCDI•
hers raising conccm with die
COll_lillWd °'! palf'

N~minate as many people as
Nominations due back to Stude
by Tuesclay, April 6 ·

I

Suft'oJk, MGH adds two medical programs to curriculum
search ror potential thcnpscs, in& t h e ~ txlm5 or
but al.so open a new student becoming llocnsod ndlation
lhmplJlswillbc,equia.dlO
mllltdinCLAS.
As stalt:d in the proposal. patticlpale In clinic~ trainlng.
1bc two new majors proMOH will provide the necessary racuJ.cy, classroom and vide those lnlcrcstcd In rad.ia.labomory space at no cost to tion therapy-with lheopportuSuffolk University. The pro- nitytocxpandtheirlcnowle.dge
gram also rcquircs MGH per- by ·galnlng hands-On cxpcrisonnel to leach some of the ence wilhsophisticatcd equipmenl at MGH.
courses.
MGHstatedthatlhcywen:
1he only restriction of the
program Is lhat MGH cannot excited with the coUaboration
guarantee clinical experienci: because either degree would
to all students in the program. provide excellent training for
Accordingtothcproposal.only studentsinterestedinthcmedi15 to 20 students will be al- cal field.
Thc new majors would help
lowe.dtocnroll inthepracticum
inlhc recruitment of new theraat a time.
However, the proposal states pists in Massachusetts where
there is a severe shortage 0 1
th.'.lt students will 001 be rcquircdtocompleteapr:icticwn. people inLCrcsted in becoming
Onlystudcntsintere.stedintak- radiation therapists.

1bctwom.:)od~dcvel- mapnwalqpetdb)'MOH.
Aa:oollna ID die proposal,

opod lmW&h ,Jo.. cffo~ by ·

\bes..ffolkUnl....ity-.i, lhohoapilil wishes to develop

~ the. pb~

~

and afour-je.arbachelororsclence

department. -

...,.. ....... "~'"'""""

~ ~ = .~noWhavelSSOCiatc
en! HoaplW.
The Initial

.

MGljls hoph,g I O • or~ the ~ or education for
radlationlhetapislsandcxpccts
dW I four-year .degree will
eventually become required
ICl'OSS lheUniledSwes.
MGH stated in the proposal
· ltW they are willing to pay
tuition for their therapists to
IOCnd ... program and hop<
· the program wlU attract prospective lherapists IO worlr: at
the hospital.
By offering the program to
0

13

incoming freshmen, SuffolJc
will not only aid MGH in the

Larcenies continue on campus
By Scou Newman
JoumaIStaff

Larceny ls once again on the

· rise at Suffolk. According to
. Oflicer Jimmy Lee, reports of
i~s. being taken from sru- ·
dents and faculty membcr!i arc
as prevalent as ever, and should
continue to rise as we near the
end of the semester and final

and isolation.

but it ·s better to be safe tt.:i.ro
Also,peopleusingthelocker sorry. Ahdmos1o~nifsomerooms on the second floor of one seems like they do not
0
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Oho
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Student Leadership Nomi!lations. Now
Available in Student Activities Office:
Administrator of the Year
Faculty Member of the Year
Advisor of the 'Year
Unsun1;i°Hero
Outstanding Senior
Outstandfog ·Juni~r
Outstanding Sophomore
Outstan.ding Freshman
Outstanding Organization
Female Athlete o ~ the Year
Male Athlete of the Year

as

Nominate as many people you would like!
Nominations due back to Student Activities Office
~y Tuesday, April_6 at 5:00.p.m.
.

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By V. Gonion Glenn lII
Journal Staff
After-brief speeches and I question
and answer period, the Suffolk Univeislty Black Student Unk>n elected new
offi~rs for the 1993-1994 ~ le
yea,,
Mirroring last year's elections, there
were fi vc candidates on the ballot for
the four positions of pRSide:nl, viccprcsldent, sccrctary, and treasurcr. 1bc
only office contested was vice-presldenL

In their two minuLC speeches, lhc
cal)didates, Diane Cad for president,
Leona Odom and ci!eb Dcsroslen for
vice-president, Rashita Clarke for sccrctary, and Ulanda Oliverfortrcasurcr,
were asked to answer thre.e basicqueslions:
.. Why arcyou.running7,""'Whalcan
youoffcrBSU?,''and''lfelectcd, what
arcyour expcctalions·ofBSU7"
"Ba.sically, I want us to,do more
lhings for the comO)unity," said Oark,
whol&terwa.sdectcdpresident,ciling
thcneedformorcattent.l.bntoWarosfhe
education of young people.
lnhcrspccch,Oadalsolaldouthcr
plans for a tutoring progt1.JD at the
RoxburyBoysandGirls',Clubthatshc
would lrnplemCnt in'Sep<cmber, a program which she described as ''all set."
She said that Ill she would need would
be able, dedicated bodies for It to work.
When asked how she wou1d motiVale BSU to take part in-this and other
programs, Clad said, "My concein Is
with the people _ ho come to the
w
mectings.. .iflhaveto ·get' you to do it,
then you 're not going to be that conccme.d.''

lice, upon my 5t4blccredenlills, I am vlccprcsli
your man," said Caleb Desrosiers, who
was elected over Leona Odom for the
vice president's position.
.
Being the only mile seeking an office wlihi.n BSU, he said "I
am ... a.shlmcdandappalledat~lack
o( c:onlributlon from the black. male in
regar'ds lo BSU administ rative
rcsponsibillty.. .l feel that it is m duty
9
to step up and take Lhis c'hallcnge::
Desrosiers saidthatcomm"atlon
and using himself as an example could
. bring in more active black males lO
BSU. He 11$0 suggested that BSU can
keep the cu~nt membcl'S if they fi_ d .
n
out from them .What Is needed. in eSu.
Desrosiers admlf1ed that he has not
been as active 8.1 he would have hoped
to be, ~t ISSUred tbarhc would USC his
experienccanddcdicatlontounifyBSU
into wooonl as a team for the future,
Whe:n askedhowhcinlcndcdtowori.
with lhc president-elect, he i;csponded,
"Our goals arc lO work diligently to--

treasurer.'
For I 1
Ollte to

sccreurr:

andherC4
inwortJ.n,
Involved
wouldbe1

When 1
forBSU t
or us to~
work. ..I h
bicttertha

. ap
AtCSi foi-1

un100.·~~

....,..,,__"""",=--cReJ,om-stmnhHx--➔--~em,..;on1>ar""'1itan,,.,....-,r:,....,"""'='a11r,=i,;,r,stcp;--w
on-going programs. such·is the tutorial make surf that
made as soon as possible to
prog~.tokeepmembers&Ctivelyin~taOarte
• extension 8 111 and be as devalved.
forsecrcwy,also
tailed with the descrip~on as

Association Presents
kb

BSU chooses le_ders_hip
a

1

lie.cs and desks.
Officer Lee suggests that
everyone should carry their
valuables, such as wallets and
purses with them, even iflhey
are only leaving fora very shon
time, rather than leave them in
book.bags, because thieves often go through bookbags and
purses in search of small items
such as wallets or money that
they can conceal andleavewJth
unnoticed.
Ort.en many items Iha! are
reponed missing are found.
According to Officer Lee, in
most cases only the money is
missing and the wallet or purse
remains otherwise intact. If
someone has reponed an item
stolen, they should contact
Suffolk police .'.It ext. 811 1 in
ol11crtocheck if that item has
been retrieved and claim it.
Retrieved anicles are held by
the police in excess of three
months and then donated to
neighborhood chari1ies. Officer Lee: encourages people 10
inqire about lost items regularly in order to reclaim them.
Officer lee also encourages
students to repon a person or
persons that seem suspicious.
He states, '" II could be oothing.

possible such as what they an:
wearing, and physical trails
such as facial hair. build, and

""If you arc wondering about my
caoahilitic.-. In hold this orc."1.illinusnf-

latkofpacticipan
Wd. "It's nitlful I

race.
Suffolk pollc.c also has a
composite artist on staff to
ITlak.e a fairly accurate description of any suspicious person
on campus. lbcsc descriptions can also be helpful" in
identifying roaming Lhieves,
who travel to the various colleges inthea5"~ciallydurKlgexamtimcs.
Police department s at
Harvard,Boston University and
othe~ a'n:a scltools have contacted Suf~olk police and
wamedthemagainstsuspicious

people on campus. Suffolk
police also usc these deseriptions in order to report sim ilar
activities here to warn. other
schoob.
As exam time approaches.
holden to your valuables, even
if you are just going to get a
book in the-library, keep your
Lhings insight. •
Police say We .can combal
this problem together, ifeveryonewoJtstoP!°\CCleachOlhcr.

'

By Kevin l:.ombardi
Journal Staff
eight-pen,on selection committee
m:ently,startedthcyeartychangingorthe
guard for Progiam Council by naming •
people to seven of the 12 available positions.
The commiuec, c.onsisting or outgoing
An

•. I

P.C. PmlidcntJavicrPagan,ouigoingP.C.

Vice-Pmiidcnt Gina Ciaramitaro, Student
Govcrnmcnt Assocwion President Rocco

Ciccarello, SGA Vice-President Lou .
Grennkl, Dean of Students Nancy C.
SIOU,Din:clCa'ofSIUdcntActivitiaDonna
Schmid!, Grad.ale Auiltaat Gloria •

q.n,y,andComicilot-•-sura-DomMlmcili,IClected1Cva1peoplc
to fill pomionson P.(:'. forlhe 1993-1994
IChool yes, carta Chit monlh.

nucsekctedare:Cmdi'J\11"in,preaidcnt: Rob Prczioio, ¥q-paldMt: JenniferBroob,tresura; TinaPacbcco,Special Evcnbchair. RimaEI-Hou, S.and
'Orill chair; ChriJtina Walsh, l't:i:fOrmilll
,:-:-~~andKrim!Pada.

Allorthcldcctiolll•activemcmben

of P.C.,bul noneoftheeriltin1 memben
willbercbnlin&totbdroriginalp(llilDII
for the tollowin1 acbool year~ Both
Cianfflillro~ Plpn feel dlOleldeclt:d
~Qllllificd 'blheirpomiona;
The ftffllhliD1 five poudont. Daytime

Proarim,ni.1chair,Pulllidtydllir,-:retay, . . . .I IO dlc ..,..._ . . . . . .
tant IO die ~ will be filled
,ometimc: by dlo ml oldie aemca:la', ac-

......,.,,,.._,

.

'lbeSlflllklowllll

Wcdnclday,_Muth24._191J3

Suffolk, MGH adds two medical programs to cur~iculum
Thctwomlj)rswcredevcl·
llvoulh a Job< effort by
thcSUffolk Unlversitybkllogy
dcputment. the physics and
_
engineertlfg ~ e n t . and
oped

Daj)r:swusugar;mdbyMGH.

sea,dl for po(dltial therlpiSUI,
also open a new student

Aa:oftllna ., die proposal, but

the hospital-wishes to develop maitdtna..;.s.
As Swed In the proposal,
afour•)'CM'bachelorofsclencc
degn:eforthcirradiationthera- MGH will provide the neces-wy faculty, classroom and
~ ~-nowhaveassoci.•tc Jabomoty space al no cost to
ml Holpttal.
MGR is hoping to upgrade Suffolk Univer.;ity:. The proThe initial proposal of the the standanis: of education for gram also requi~ MGH per0
radiationtherapists~cxpccts sonnel 1 teach some of the
that a four-year degree will courses.
TilConlyrestrictionofthc
eveptually become required
program Is that MGH canno1
acrossthcUnltedSwes.
MGH stated In the proposal guarantee clinical experience
that they arc willing lO pay to all students in lhc program.
tuition for their therapists lo Accordingtolh:proposal,only
aucnd the program and hope 15 to 20 students will be al· the program will attract pro- lowcdtocnroll intheprac1icwn
spective therapists to work at at a lime.
However.lhcproposalstates
the hospital.
By offering the program 10 thal s1udents will not be reIncoming freshmen. Suffolk quircd1ooomplcteaprncticum .
will not only aid MGH In the Only students interes1ed in L'ik -

~~=-

lllf the certiflcalion cums or
becom~ llocn1ed radjatJon
menpiscs wtµ be required to
partlclpalelncllnk:aitraining.
1be two new majors provide lhosc lntctcstcd In radiation therapy with the opponunltytoeipandthclfknowJcdge
bi_Jaining ~-On e,;pcricnce with 50phisticate.d equipment at MGR.
MGH swed that they were
excited with the collaboration
be.cause dther degree would
provide excellent training for
students inlCrcsted inthemedical fid<i
1bc new majors would help
in I.he rccruitmentofnewtherapists in Massachusetts where
there is a severe shortage ut
people interested in bccomin~
ljldiatlonthcrapists.

Larcenies continue on campus
By Scou Newman
Journal Staff
Lan:.cnylsonceagainonthe
rise at Suffolk. According to
Officer Jimmy Le.e. reports of
items being taken from students and faculty membert arc
as prcvaJCl\tas ever, and should
continue to rise as we near the
end of lhc semester and final

and isolation.

but it's better to be safe 11",a11
Also,peopleusingthelocker sony. Andmostoftenifsomcrooms on lhc second n00i.,;f one seems like they do no1
the Ridgeway building. as well belong they quite often do no1 ,
as faculty member.;' have re• andthestudcntssuspicionsan:
"l6R~rom-o( W LI CCL Rcpotts shoul

Student teadership Nominations Now
Available in Student Activities Office:
Administrator of the Year
Faculty Member of the Year
·
Ad:visor of the Year
Unsung Hero
Outstanding Senior
Outstanding Junior
Outstanding Sophomore
Outstanding Freshman
Outstanding Or-ganization
Female Athlete of the Year
Male Athlete of the Year .
Nominate as many people as you would like!
Nominations due back to Student Activities Office
!>Y Tuesday, April 6 5:00 j,.m.

at

licc~f~r~~- suggeslS that ,
everyone should carry !heir
valuables. such as wallets and
purseswill1them.even if they
areonlylcavingforaveryshort
time. ralhcr than leave them in
bookbags. txcausc thieves of•
ten go through bookbags and
purscsin scarch ofsmallitems
such as wallets or money that
they can conceal and leave with
. unnoticed
Often many items that an:
reported missing _arc found..
According to Officer Lee. in
moslcasesonl ylhe moncyis
missing and the wallet or purse
remains otherwise int.act. If
someone has reported an item
stolen, they should cont.ac1
Suffolk police at ext. 8111 in
ordcr1ocheck ifthalitcm has
been retrieved and claim ii.
Retrieved articles are held by
the police in exL"es.s of three
months and then donated 1
0
ncighbo!tioocl charities. Officer Lee encourages people lO
inqi": about 1 items regu0s1
larly m order 1 reclaim them.
0
Officer Lee also encourages
studcn(f 10 report a ()CISOO or
persons that seem suspicious,
He Slates, ·· 1 could be nothing,
1

~~I

:fi!:n
~ i : i :ed~~
tailed with the description as
possible such as what they an:
wearing, and physical traits
such as facial hair, build, and

BSU chooses leadership for:.·c oming-year
'1twon't'\vort."shcsald..
Ulanda Oliver, who·was originally
slated to run for vice President. de·
minu~islon, to run 1

By V. Gordon Glenn Ill
Journal Staff

_
:=~1:,-5'

After brief speeches and a question
and answer period, the Suffolk Uni Ver•

"lreallzedthat(thc vice-presidency)

sily Black Studenl Union elected new
offic.crs fo r the 1993- 1994 academic
yw.
Mirroring las1ycar's elections, lhcre
were five candidates on the ballot for
the four positions .of president viccpresident, secrclary. and trcasurcr. 1bc
only office conteslCd was vice-president
In their two minulC speeches, lhc
candidates, Diane Oarlc. for president,
Leona Odom and Caleb Desrosier.; for
vice-prcs:ldcnt. Rashita aaru for sec•
rewy,and UlandaOliverfortreasurcr, fice. upon my stable credentials, I am
were asked to answer three ba.slc ques- your man." said Caleb Desrosiers, who
was elcctt.d over Leona Odom for the
tions:
"Why are you running?.""Whatcan vice president's position.
you offer BSU? ," and "If elected, what
Being the only male seeking an of•
arc your expectations of BSU?"
fice within BSU, he said " I
"Basical.1y, I want us to do more am .. ,ashamed and appalled at the lack
things for the community," said Oark, of contribution from the black male In
who later was dcctcd president. citing regai-ds to BSU administrative
lhc need form ore au.ention 1oward.s the responsibility .. .l feel that it is my duty
e.du_alion of young people.
c
10 step up and take this challenge."
Desrosiers said thal communication
In her speech. Carle.also laid out her
plans for a tutoring program at the and using himself as an example could
Roxbury Boys and Girts' Club that she bring in more active black males to
would implcmem in September, a pro- BSU. He also suggested that BSU can
gram which she descri bcd"as "all set" keep the cum:nt members if they find
She said that all she would need would out from them what is nccdcd in BSU.
beable,dcdicatedbodles forlllo wort..
Desrosier% admitted that he ):tas not
When asked how she would moti- been as active as he wo'iJld havehoped
vate BSU to lake part in this and;other tobc, bul assured that he wouldtlschls
programs, Qark said, "My cone.cm is expcrienccaJXldedlcationtounlfyBSU
with the people who come · 1 lhe into working as a team {or the future.
0
meclings... ifl have to ·get' you lO do it,
WhcnaskcdhowhcintendcdtowoJt
riot going 10 be that con- with the president-elect. he responded, ,
"Our goals arc to work diligently to-_

ls a big rcspon,ibllity and !hall would
lack In that responsibility.'' said Oliver,
who reasoned that ~ job would keep
.bet from attending every BSU meeting
and fulfllllng that rcspomlbllily.
In accepdllg: the trca.!UtCr's job and
its responsibilities. Oliver a.1ked BSU
to keep up with bet u she attempts to
keep up with BSU. She said that she has
experience with dcallng·and"handllng
money in church as an usher.
.
Sothatlhcreisasmootht1an.1itlonof
power, Oliver, along wlthotherdecltd
vice prc.tident, and not a .secretary or a officers, will be nmning • couple or
treasurer.''
moelingsaftcrsprtngbtcak.acconting
For a record of her qualifications. ro current preiklent Aym:m Y.ancey.
tlaite told. of her experience as the
All the new offlce11 of BSU, along
fi the Athletics Dcpartm l with newly eleaed officers trom" Che
and her CO~m for unity within e:i Suffolk University Hispanic Assod•·
in wortlilg as a team to !(cep mem~ . lion. and the Asian American Assocl.a·
Involved as well as lnformcd, which· tionwillbo·swomlnai.lhe•ninthannual
wouldbconc0rherdutlesassec!Cwy. "Pa.ssingoftheGavd"ccranony,Mon•
When uked abobi° hci expectations day, April 12, al 3 p.m. ln Sawyer 308.
forBSV If dected, she said, "ll lget all
This ceremony Is held aery year to
of us to wolt. together, to make BSU acknowledge the exchange ot leader·
wort.. .l hope that we qn make it even __ship and academic excellence ,within

sccmarr

~=:~~:r!~~~:statcdlhc =roi1:1:i::1.:=~ ncedforBSV to make astalementas a prcs_dentanddircctorofmultl-culturpl
l
union. " We e"xJ5t.OOtlflt'snotunifled, affairs. -'_•
·• _
:

:C~~fte

on-going programs, such as the hi tori al
program, to keep me fibers actively involved.
"If you arc wondering about my
caoahilitic.~ to hnld thl!. nre.~tieinus or-

race.
Suffolk police also has :i
composile anisl on s1aff to
make a fairly accurate description of any suspicious pc!$Oll
on campus. 1l1esc descriptions can also be helpful in
identifying roaming thieves.
who travd to the various collcges inthc arcae!p:Ciallydur•
ing exam times.
_ Police dcpanments a1
Harvard, Boston Unlver.;i1yand
other area schools have contacted Suffolk police and
warned them against suspicious
people on campus. Suffolk
police also use these dcscrip•
tions in order to report similar
activities here to wam other
schools.
As exam ti.me approaches,
hQldonto yourvaluablcs,even
if you arc just going to gel a
book in the-library. keep your
things insight
PoliCC say we can combat
this problem together, ifeveryoncworkstoprotecieachothcr.

By Kevin Lombardi
Journal Staff
eight-person selection comipittee
reccntlystartcdlhcycarlychangingorlhc
An

PREPARE . NOW f'OR.
THE JUNE EXAM!

guard for Program Cowicil by naming .
people to seven of lhc 12 available p(&i~
lions.
The committee.consisting or outgoing

P.C. President Javier Pagan, ou1going P.C.
Vice-President Gina Ciatarnilatd,Student
Govcmmcnt As3ociation PresidentR.IXCo
Ciccarello,., SGA Vice-Pre1idcnt Lou _
Grenwald, Dean of Studenls Nancy C.
StoU,DircctorofStudenlActi~tiet:Doona

Suffolk Class , Begins:
Wednesday, ·Mar~h 31

=:~-~~;:so=·or~::C~~~==
sum-DomMarindli.lClec:&edaevenpeople
toftllpoeitionsonP.C.forlhe1993•1994
:1thool ye., earlier thiJ mcinlh.

a.a.mrom:1 Pa,- kd ttae ldcclcd

willbcrtemnin1totheiroriginalpositions
for'lhe followin1 achool year. Both

Tholeselecled~CandiTulpin,prcsi•
den!: ~ Prezioeo, vk:&-president; Ja,-

~qualifledfortheirpositions..
The ranainbta: Ov-e ~ Daytime

_

niferBroots,b'eUCr,iini.Pachcco,Spe-- Propammm1 ~."Nllicityc:hair,aecrocialEventschair,~El-Hoa, Bwand ary,aailclnllDthe~and . . .
Grill chair, Chrutina Wabll. PaformiD1• .cant &o lbe ~ will be fi1kd .

___

I~~~. ~-~Pidioa,

........

:
.
klllldimebylbeeocfoflbeaemeala",IIC-

Wednesday, Mln:h 24" I ~

dical programs to curriculum

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

.,.....,byMGH.

search for potential lhenpiSLS,
but al.so open a new student

wishes to develop . puutet In 0.AS.
As stated in lhc proposal,
Jrichelorofscicnc:c
elndationthcn• MGH- will provide the
~w have assoc:iatc sary faculty , classroom and
Jaboraw,y space '11 no cost to
l)opingtoupgradc Suffolk University. The pro:S of education for gram also requires MGH perr.plsts~cxpccts sonnel to teach some of the
-year degree will courses.
1hc only restric~on of I.he
become· required
program Is that MOH cannot
nitedStates.
:cdlnthcproposal guarantee clinical c,:pcricnce
'C willing to pa)' lO all s1udent.s in the program .

neces-

heir lhcrapiSlS 10
rogram and hope
will attracl pro•

ACCOrdingtothc proposal,only
IS IO 20 students will be alJowcdtocmollinthc practicum

rapists to wort at

at a time.
However.the proposal states
1gthcprogram 10 lhat students will not be reuhmen. Suffolk . quiredto complete apr.icticum .
, aidMGHinthe Only students Interested in tak -

In& the ccniflcation exams or
bc<:<lnljng licensed radiation
thmpi~ will 'be required to
partlclpatclncllrucaltraihing.
1bc two new majors pmvlde those ~ In radiadon therapy with the opportunltylO~thclrlcnowledge
by "&aining hands-on Cllpcricnce with sophisticat.cd equ ip-

mcruatMGH.
MGHslaledthatlhcywcre

excited with the coUaboration
because either deg~ would
provide excellent trainin g for

sludcnts interested in the mcctical field.
The new majors would help
in lhe rccruiunent ofnewtherJ-

pists in Massachusetts where
there is a severe shonage u l
people interested in becomin~
radiationlherapists.

cenies continue on campus
ltlNewman
nal Staff
1onceagalnonthe

1k. According to
[ly·Loe. reports or

taken rrom sru- ·
:uUymcmbcdarc
ts ever, and should .
iscaswcnearthe
emcstf" and final
y rooms and cue library mthe
llblcareasofthcft,
he enclosed space

and isolation.
Also,peopleusing the locker
rooms on the second floor of
the Ridgeway building, as well
as faculty members ' have re-

but it's bcuer to be safe 11': :t"
sorry. Andmostoftenifsomcone seems like lhey do not
belong they quite often do no1.
andthestudentssuspicionsan:
~ m m • or · co11 cct. Repotts shoutd-hc·
flces ar.ddeslt.s.
made as soon as possible w
Officer Lee suggests tha, extension 8111 and be as deeveryone should carry their tailed wilh lhe description as
valuables.such as wallets and possible such as what they an:
purses with them.even if they
1
areonlyleavingforaveryshon :u:~ri:gra: :a':;,s~~:l~n ~
time. rather than leave them in race.
bookbags, bccause thievesofSuffolk police also has a
lcn go throug h bookbags and composite anist on staff to
purscs in scarch of sm allitems make a fairly accurate descri psuchaswalktsur111oncytha1 tion or any suspicious person
they can conceal and leave with on campus. These descripu~ticcd.
tions can also be helpful in
Often many items that are identifying roaining thieves,
reported missing arc found. who travel to the various colAccording to Officer Lee. in leges in the arcael)Ctiallydurmost cases only the money is ingc.xamtimcs.
missingand lhe walletorpursc
Po lice department s -al
remains otherwise intact. Jf Harvard, Boston University and
someone has reported an item other area schools have constolen, they should comac1 tacted Suffolk police and
Suffolk police :11 ext. 11 111 in warned them against suspicious
order to check if1ha1 item has people on campus. Suffolk
been retrieved and claim it. police also use these descripRetrieved articles arc held by tions in order 10 repon similar
the police in exec~ of thro: activities here to warn other
months and then dona1 to schools.
ed
neighborhood chari1ics. Qffi.
As exam time approaches.
ccr lee encourages people to holdonLO yourvaluables. even
inqire about lost items regu- if you are just going to get a
Jarty in order to reclaim them . book in the-library, lt.ccp your
Officer Lee also encourages things in sight
students to repo rt a person or
Police say we can comba1
persons thal seem suspicious. thisproblcmtogclher.ifcvery•
He stales, " It could be nothing, oncwortcsto protcct cachother.

n~- ---1._.,,.,.,._.,
.

ts
Now
Ince:

like!
,s Office

..• The Sul!O!k.Jowpal,

SG1
Col

BSU chooses leadership for coming year
By V. Gordon Glenn Ill
JoumaJ,Staff
Aftq brief speeches and a questJon
and answer period, the Suffolk Univcr•

sity Blaclt. Srudent Union elected new
officers for the 1993- 1994 academic

'""'·

Mirroring last year's clcction.s, there
were five candidates on the ballot for
the four positions of president, vice•
president, secretary, and ~urer. 11v:
only office contested was vice-prcsidenL

In their two minute speeches, the
candidates, Diane Qark for president,
Leona Odom and caJeb Desrosiers for
vice-president. Rashita □arke for secretary, and UlandaOliverfortrcasurer,
wereaskedtoanswer thrcebasicquestions:
"Why are you running?:· "Whal can
you offer BSU1,.. and " If elected, what
arc your expectations of BSUT'
"Basically, I want us to do more
things for the community," said Qart.,
who later was elected pn:sident. citing
the need for more attention towards the
educalion of young people.
In her speech, Oarlt..also laid out her
plans for a tutoring program at the
Roxbury Boys and Girts' Club thal sl'le
would implement in September, a program which she described as "all scl"
She said that all she would need would
be able, dedicated bodies for it to wort..
When asked how she would motivate BSU to lake pan In this and other
programs, Qart said, "My concern is
with the people who come to the
mcc1ings.. .iflhave 1
o·get' you todo it,
then you're not going to be that conce rned."

ficc , l!pon my stable credentials. I am
yourman."saidCalebDesroslers, who
was elected over Leona Odom fqr the
vice president's position.
·
Being the only male seeking an office within BSU, he said " I
am ...asbamed and appalled al the lack
or contribution from the black male in
regaids to BSU administrative
responsibility.. .l feel that it is my duty
to step up and take this challenge."
Desrosiers said that communication
and using himself as an example could
brin&: i~ more acllve black males 19
BSU. He also suggested tha\ BSU can
keep the current members if they find
out from them what is nccdcd·ln BSU .
Desrosiers admitted that he has not
been as active as he would have hoped
to be, but assured that he would use hls
experience and dedication to unify BSU
into wort.ing as a team ·ror the future ..
When asked how he inlc~lowort.
with the president-elect. he responded,.
"Our goals are lo work diligently to-,

on-going programs. such as the tutorial
program, to keep members actively involved
" If you are wondering about my
caoahilitic.~ lt1 hold this nre.~tieinus or-

vice president. Md not a secretary or a
treasurer."
For a record or her qualifications,
Oarke told of her experience as the
secretary for the Athletics Department
and herconl:cm for unity within BSU
in wortlng as a team to ~p members
involved as well as Informed. which
wouldbconeofhcrdutiesassecrctary ..
When asked about hcrexpccta110f1!!
forBSU ifelccted,shesald, "lflgetall
or us to wort. together. to make BSU
wort. ...l hope that we can make it even
better than it was this yea,:."
· aaru, in her conclusion, stated the
need fo r BSU to make a statement as a
union "We exist. but if it's not unified,

ii won't work," she said.
Ulanda Oliver. who was originally
slated to run for vice president. de·
cided. in a last minute decision, lo run
fortrcasurer.
" I realized that(the vicc-prcsidcncy)
ls a big responsl~Uily and that I would
IacklnUWresponslbillty,'' saldOliver,
who reasoned UW her job would lt.cep
her from attending every BSU meeting
and fulfW.lng that responsibility.
In acc.cpting the treasurer's job and
its responsibililics. ouv'cr asked BSU
to lt.ccp up with her as she attempts to
lt.ccp up with BSU . She said that she has
experience with dealing and"handllng
money In church as an usher.
Sothatthcrcisasmoothtransitionof
power, Oliver, along withothcrelected
omcers, will be running a couple or
mcct.ings after spring bfcalc, acconllng
to current president Ayanna Yancey.
All the new offtceri of BSU. along
with newly elected offlcm from the
Suffolk University Hispanic Assoda7
lion. and the Asian American Association will boswom In at the ninth annual
"PasslngofthcGavel"CCrcmooy, Mon•
day, April 12,11 3 p.m. in Sawy~r308.
1bis ceremony Is held every· year to
acknowledge the.exclwlge of leadership and; a;adcmlc excellence within
these organizations and ·ls hosted by
Sharon Artis~Jackson, assistant to the
president and dlredOrofmulU.cultural
affairs.

ByVl

. '°"
Uyou're l
. .,..,_.,
-.did,..
-tyl
-rally

balll";200•

lnl-

........

lal:bed_,di
,lneeffi

toplhor,I

..-E
joined fon

make sure that things arc in shape."
Rashita Qarke, who ran umie¢SCd
forse<Rtary,alsocommentedonBSU's ·
lack of particip:ints in the elections. She
said. " It's oitlful lt1 have a nre~ident. a

~

mim Saffi
...... U'i

p,ao.,llld

---1111
\lrJ<ao,eil

P.C. executive board selected
By Kevin Lombardi
Journal Staff
An eight-person selection 'COmmillec
recen tl ystanedthcycarlychangingo[the
guard for Program Council by naming
people seven or the 12 available posi-

PRE}?ARE NOW FOR
THE JUNE · EXAM! -

,o

tions.
'The committee, coosisting or outgOUlg
P.C. PresidentJaviuPagan,outgoingP.C.

Vicc-PresidentGinaCiaramiwo,Sludcnt
Government Auocialion PrwdentRocco
Ciccarello, SOA Vlce-Prc1ldcnl Lou
Grenwakl, Dean of Studcn~ Nancy C. .
Stoll,Dircc10rors1udcn1ActivitiesDonna
Schmidt, Graduate Assistant Gloria
Cooney, andC~il of Pres£denu TreasurerDomMarinclli,aelededaevenpcople
to fill po.!litionson P.C. for the 1993-1994

sc~e::.:=~Jp~i-

dent; Rob Prerlmo. vico-presidMt; Jen.
nifcrBroob. trcsurcr:TinaPacheco, Spc•
cial Events chair, Rlma fl-Hoa', Bar and

Orillchair;Christin&Walsb,Pafonning

,:::i~~andKrimlPldio&.

. __ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
Allofthcacloclionsare~vememben
oCP.C .• buc noncotthccxisting mCfflbcn

willbcretmninglothci/originalposilions
for the followina school year. Bolh
Ciaramitaro and Papn feel dme 11ekctcd
att; qualulCd for their positions.
The mnainint five polilions. Daytime
PropamU1chair,Pllblidtycbair,tcere,,
.-y, aailtllll10thcprcaidcnl.,md--tan11Dlbcrice-puideat.willbcfilled :

::::;.~ofthclCIDCSla',IC•

··. Suffolk Class ·13.e gins:.
Wednesday, March 31

,.

The Sul[plk /oumol

ming year
it won ' 1 work," she said.
tnanda .Olivcr, who was originally
slated to run for vice president. de·
cldcd, In a las! minute decision, to run

The Suffolk Jownal

and fulfilling that rcsponslbllily.
ln acccptlna: the treasurer's job and
ils rcspo~ibilitlcs, Oliver asked BSU
to k.ccp up with her as she anempts to
k.ccpupwithBSU.Shcsaldthatshehas

experience with dealing and handling

money In church as an usher.
So lhat therc lsasmoothtransltlonof
power. Oliver, along wlthotherclected
or a offic.crs, will be runnlna: a couple of
mcctfngs aftersprina btcak, 10COrdlng
)ns, to current presldcn1 Ayanna Y111eey.
the
All the new officc.ra of esu. along
1cru with newly elected officers from thc
LSU
:,crs
Uch

Suffolk University Hispanic Associatlon, and the Asian American Assocla•

ByVlkjBcman,1

:vcn

ac.lcnowlcdgc the exchange of leader•
ship and academic excellence within

these organizations
lthc
asa
fled,

/oumo!St>ff

lfyou'Je not a tnnsfcr stu·
dcnt.did you'CYa'wontlerwhal
thclnlldcofanolhcroolkgcOI'
wlivcrslty IOOkcd Ute? Are

="; !ca~=
~

:::S,ht:zr

at,In meffort to bring Boston
area co0qes and unlvcnitJcs
to1cther, Junior class Vice
Prcsidenl Efren Hidalgo has
joined fqrccs with Student
Govemmcnt representatives
from Sgffolk. Northeastern.
Boston U,dJ¥cnlty, Bentley

ColleFandBollOnCollcgito

~

lbe I:ata-CollcpalcStu-

-ClcMmmcrlFoNm.

This oonccpt is based on the
As.sodatlon.-of Colleges and
Unions lntemllional Conference that wuhdd at the Uni·versity of NeW Hampsh1rc
which Hidalgo attended. ''This
forum Is ba.sed on the larze
conference, with a more local·

Curricul':'m 1,ompagt 1
language of the rcquhemcrt.
q u~m~:rn;iro::~ityw:~
worded, "Students will be re•
quired io lake two onc-scmcstcrcouJSCS which focus on the
expcrtcncc:s and cultures of
groupsitrlditlonally'undcr-rcp-

rcxnledin.thccurrlculwn.Onc

orthcscCOWSCI will dell with
at Jeut one such group within
theUnltcdStatcs.Thescc.ood
course willc:xamlncnon-wcsl0
iu:=~=e~:! ·the em cultures ou4ide of the
UnitcdSwcsand/or·theroleof
=~':!i=bdl::!
women or sexual minorldcs in
rentlssuesoncampuscs. "Each societies ouWde the United
mooth the meeting is at a dif- States."
Michae.l Ronayne, dean of
rercnl school so we can get to
knowthcotherreprcscnw.lvcs a.AS, said the cultural diverand their campuses." said sl_l.y requirement change was
the subject or discussion of
Hidalao.
flidala:o heads the project faculty wanting IO preserve.
fromSuffolk,andlsinthcpro- culwredlvcrsltywithoutgetccss of gctting suppc>n from ting inlO the sludy of gender
theadqltnlstntion. -

m;~

"""·

and Is hosted by
Sharon Anis-Jackson, assistant to.the
pn:sldcntanddlrectorofmultl-cultural
affairs.

(

rr===':C:::L":A':S":C';"u,S,1:°'c'u m~C;;;ha:::'n
= :;l;::u:;
:::g::es:==71
Effective Fall 1994
6crcdits

Sophomore English

Additional class. ENG 216 World Lllerature, to
fulfill requirement

3crcdits

Molh

Math !OS, 100, 152, and 161, fulfill requircuienL Math
101 will s1..IU be offered, but will not fulfill requirement
3crcdits

Applied Quantificatio~ Skills

CMPSC 117 Using Computers,CMPSC 121 - FirstC.oursc
In Compute,s, CMPSC 131 - Computer Science I, or Stat.isUc.1 will fulfill requirement
Jcrcdits

Ethics

Phil 119. 120. 123, 127. w\U rulfill requirement
OllturalOiversity

6crcdits

CourStJ may be doublt cou11ud

Two course which focus on cultural groups, in and outside
lhc U.S .. which have traditionally been underrepresented in
the curriculum.

tlonwlllboswomlnatthenlnthannu'a1

ary. "PuslngoftheOavcl''cc.remooy,Monlons day. April l2, at3p.m.lnSawyer308.
tall
Thls CCJCmony is held every year to
ISU

l'}9S

SGA enters lnterColliegate Forum

for treasurer.
"I rcallud that(lhe vicc,.prcsidcncy)
Is a big rcsponsiblllty and lhat I would
lack. In that rcspon.slblllty ,'' said Oliver,
who reasoned that her job would keep
her from attcndinJ every BSU meeting

Wednesday, Man:h }:i:

examinatlon of one group
whig) is traditionalJy underrepresented in the curriculum.
such.as.women, racial minorities or sc:iual minoritics.
1hc won!ipg for second required coursc in diversity was
changed to read. the examinauon or non-western cultu~
outside the United Swes, or

cicty and lhc more diversified
campus population.
1hc diversity requirement
will be a double counted requirement. whichmeansaclass
in history or government may
also be able to fulfill the div~rsity rcquircmenL
Other ctwigcs approved by
the Faculty Assembly were the
rcduc~ or the math requirements from six to three credits;
thcaddltlonitueec~trcqulrcmcnt In quantification skills In
computers; replaccmcntofthc
three credit requirement in phi-

losophy IO a course in ethics;
and the raising of the science
requirement from eight to 11
credits with the addition of an
integratcds"tudicslikeclass in
science.
Ronayne said topics of further discussion will be the formuladon-of a list. of classes
willfulfill thedivcrsityrcquire-

mcntand-whatchangcswillbc
rcqulredoftnruferstudcnlS.
, 1hc changes to the curricuham will 001 take effect until
the fall semester of 1994.

Now that Spring Break is over...

The Suffolk Journal

Nunse.nse
By Karen M. Young
Journal Slaff
Last year·s hit movie "Sister Act," starring Whoop!
Goldberg. portrayed nuns In a
way they are not nonnally per~
cclved. The film made the au- ,
dlencc laugh at the ridiculous
way in which the singing and
dancing ~ were portrayed.
The city of Boston has their
own verslonof"Sister Act" In
the
musical
comedy
'"Nun~ensc." which is currently
in Its seventh year in Boston. ·
"Nwisense," which is JUrl ning at the Theatre Lobby lo- _
catcd on Hanover Street in the
Nonh End. Is the swry of a
groue of nuns from the Little ·
Sister of Hoboken orc!er who
arc forced to put on a variety
showtocammoncytoburythe
four nuns they arc storing in
lhcirfrcezcr.
"The nuns were among 52
"Thelliale
who died or food poisoning
aftcrcatlngataintcdmeaJ preMclaughlin, an
parcd by sister Julia. 01111.1 of
God. The nuns had earned theywlllbefincdt
enoua:)l money to bury 48 of of Health.Five of
their sisters but purchased a ingnunsconvergec
VCR forthcconventinsteadof SLHderi'sSchool
bJ n the remaining four.
The" nW'L!I desperate! y need s w.
the money to bury Jhc nuns or · 1hc nun jokes

s;,•

It's Time to break a leg at the ...

Spring/est '93 A uditi!]ns

Blizzard stran~
ByPaµJMacEa.chc m

NOW FOR
fNB-: EXAM!
'.l ass Begins:
.y) March 31

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

Tuesday, March 30 at 4:00 p.m.
Wednesday;March 31 at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, April 1 between 1:00 and 2: 15 p.m.
Do you have any talent? - whether it be:
~

~
•comedy
• music
*dance

*skits
*song
*production

and Karen M..Young

Journal Slaff
The northeast part of the nation cannot complain about having another dry
. winter. Rccord-bn:aking ~wfall has

fcllacrossNew.Englancf:dr1'ppl~aover
70 lnchcs of snow in the area this
win!U.
A large winter storm gave Suffolk
studcnls an auspicious beJIMln& to ·
thdr sprinJ breaks, dumpin& up to 15
lnches'of snow In and around the Bos1Dn a,eL

Please come and be ii part of the show that
_
celebrates the talenf of Suffolk University's
Students, Faculty, Staff, and Alumni. If you have
lll!Y ques_tions, or wish to be a part of1his excitin
• talent/.variety pr~ductioo in ·any way, please
contact: :Vicki at 573-8237. ·

Adverse weaihcr conditions put a
damper on travel plans at Bosu>n's
LoganAJrport. Thousarmoftravcllet1
were strh:lcd at Logan AJrport for
sevenldays a the runways were being

-

1be lhrce Boslon IWions were tell-

lna viewcn lO call thdr a1rtincs befoce

hcadinl

to the airport. 1be tnVdkn
who aucmptedtocall the airtlncl heard

an c:ndlcss tmy s;gnal.

Plowtc
The~

.... ,

fo=IIO

lhdrftla,
olr-

·noon.

,.......,
Once

m utbet

The Suffolk Jownal

Wednesday, Mardi 24. 1993

SGA enters InterColliegate Forum
This oonccplis based on the
By Vlkj Bernard
Association of Colleges and
Journal Staff'
Unions lntcm.adonal c.onfer•
encc that was held al the Uni•
If you're not a tnmfer stu· versity or New Hampshire
den(.didyoucvcrwonderwhal whlchHldalgoattcndcd. ''This
the inside or aoothercolle1e or forum Is based on the large
university looked like? Arc conference, with a more localthere really those "hallowed iu:d ISpCCl." said Hidalgo.
halls.., 200tcatclassroomS and
Representatives from the
fn1 housc:I with Ivy vines at• diffel'Cllt schools will meet
Uld>odtodlcbuildlnp?
once a month.to dlscuss cur1fn In efl'Oft lQ bring Boston
n:ntlssuesoncampu.scs. "Each
~ col1qcs and universities
month the meeting ls al. dlrtoi,cther, Junior clus Vice rert:n1 school so we can ge1 to
PrT:sidcnl Efren Hidalgo has tnowthcothcrrcprescntativcs
joined forces with Student and their camp.uses," said
Govemmcnt representatives Hidalgo.
from Suffolk, Northeastern,
Hidalgo heads the project
Boston University, Bentley from Suffolk. ~ is inlhc: pro•
CoDcgenlBos&onCollcgcto ccss or aeUing support from
form lht l a l c r ~ Stu- lhc:ldmlnlstntion. ~
dc:nl O o v ~ ~
· .

Curri,c ulum 1,ompagt I
The orlalnal diversity re•
qulrcment proposal was
worded, "Students will be re•

ql.iln:drotaketwoonc-~cstcrcourscs which focus on the
expcrtences and cultures of
groupstradlllonallfundcr-replC1C:Nedlnlhc:curricul1,1m. Onc
or thc.1C cowscs will'<kll with
a1 Jcast one such group within
the United States. The second
courscwillcumlncnon-wcsl•
em cultures ouL$1dc of the
UnitedSlll.CSand/orthcrolcof
women or sexual minorities in
societies outside the United
States."

Mk.hie.I Ronayne, dean of
a.AS: sald the cultural diversity rcqulrcmcnl chsnge was
the subject of discussion or
faculty wanting to preserve
cuJIUre diversity wil,houl gel•
ting into the study o r gender
roles.

LifeS-tyG.

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

language of ltll;. rcquircmerw.'.

CLAS Curriculum Changes
Effective Fall 1994
6crcdilS

Sophomore English

Additional class, ENG 216 World Literalure, 1
0
ru1fill requirement
Jcrcdits

Mall>

Math 1()5, 109, 152. and 161 , fulfill rcqulrcmenL Math
lOI will stlU be offered, bul wiU not Mflll requiremem

)credits

Applied Quantifications Skills

01PSC 11 7UsingComputers.CMPSC 121- FirstCou™=
ln Com pule rs, CMPSC 131 . Computer Science I. or Statistics will rulfill requirement
)credits

Ethics

Phil 11 9, 120. 123, 127, will fulfill requirement

Q.iltural Diversity
Coursts may IN double counttd

6crediL\

Two course which rocuson culrural groups, in and oulSidc
the U.S., which have traditionally been undc~prcscntcd in
the curriculum

cicty and the more d1vcrs1ticd
campus population.
The diversity requirement
will be a double counted requirement. whichmcansaclas.s
in history or government may
also be able 1 fulfill the div~r0
sity requirement.
Other changes approved by
the Faculty Assembly were the
reductionofthemalhrequirementsfromsixtothreccredits;
theaddition thrcccrcditrequiremenl inquamitical.ion skills in
computers; replaccmcn1 of the
threccrcditrcquircmcntinpfu-

Josophy to a cou~ m ettucs:
and the raising of tl1c: science
requirement from eight to 11
crcdilSwiththe.additionofan
integratedstudlcslikeclassin
science.
Ronayne said lOpics of fo r•
thcrdiscussion will be the for•
mu1ation of a List of clas.scs
willfulfillthcdlversityrequi rc •
mcnt and what changes will be
requhcd or i.ransfer studcnlS.
The changes to the curriculum will not take effect umil
the fall scmcsf-l?.r 1994.

Now tbat Spring Break is over...
It's Time to break a leg at the ...

The Suffolk Journal

"\Vednelda)', March 24, 1993

Nonsense a f!evilishly

goot

By Karen M . Young
Journal Staff
Last year' s hit movie "Sis•
te r Act," starring Whoop!
Goldberg, poruayed nuns in a
way they are not nonnally per•
ceived. Thc film made the au•
dicncc laugh at the rldlcuJous
way In which the singing and ·
dancing nuns were portrayed.
Thcci1yo·reoston has lhc:lr
own version of"Sistcr Act" in
the
musical
comedy
··Nunc-ensc," which is cum:ntly
in its seventh year in Boston,
"Nunscnsc," which Is running at the Theatre Lobby located on Hanover Street in thc
North End, is tl1c: story or a
group of nuns from the Little
Sister or Hoboken ort!er who
~ forced to put on a variety
show to cam money to bury the
four nuns they arc storing in
their freezer.
The nuns were among 52
who dlcd or food poisoning
aftcrcatinJ a tainlcd meal pre·
pared by Sister luli:i, O.llJ of
God. The nuns had earned they will be fLned by the Board
enough money 10 bury 48 or of Health. Five o·r the rcmaintheir sisters but purdlascd a ingflWISconvergeoolhcMount
VCR forthcc.onvem instead or SL Helen's School audltoriwn
and pul on an unforgettable
bu in the remaining fOur.
The mw desperately ~ S W.
The nun jokes fly fast and
the money to bury the nuns or

furious as the group sings and
dances to the delight of tl1c:

audience. Thccastorthcmusi•
callsoutstanding.ucachlCCnC
lsmoreet\joyable thanlhc: pre•

Lewtt)lstheRcvercndMot
or the Convent. Hetdeelllb
putcha.,c • VCR is the rca
why the nuru had·to P.111 on
pcrfonnance.
· ·

er

VOW

, Sister-Mary Regina (Karon

Mary

nut

(Maryann 2'Achau) Is ln chi

Spring/est '93 Auditions
By Paul MacEachcm

Tuesday, March 30 at 4:00 p.m.
Wednesday, March 31 at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, April 1 between 1:00 and 2:15 p.m.
Do you have any talent? . whether it be:
*comedy
*music
*dance

*skits
*song
*production

Please come and be a part of the show that
.celebrates the talent or Suffolk University's
Students, Faculty, Staff, and Alumni. If you have
any questions, or wish to be a part of this excitin
talent/ variety production in any way, please
contact: Vicki at 573-8237.

and Karen M. Young

Journal Staff
The nonhcast part ofthe natlorican•
not complain about having anolherdry

winter. Record-breaking SOOWraU hAs •
fell across New.f.ngland, droppin1ovcr
70 ~ Q f snow in the area this
winter.

A large wirucr storm gave Suffolk.
students an allSIMdous be&iMlng to
their spring bleaks, dumping up to 15
inches or snow in and around the Bos·
Plows clear the lltCcts of Boston after the Bllzwdof'93 oversprin1 break.
1011 .....
The storm dumped more than a fool or snow in the aru. ·
... Adverse weather conditions put a
Carolyn Btaryllolll"Nli Staff
damper on travel plans at Boscon's
L.oganAJrport. 1housandsortravcllc11
Travcllcn hopin110 villl the ICali!:I
AJ a rcault. many travellers were
, were lltlndcd II Logan A1rport for forced to bd.lhrou&fi.Cheh>WIOKC if onthccasccmscaboardC).pcricnce:dthe
sevcnldays IS the NIIWIY, were being thdrruati: wuonc of Che few tlw took 1ongelt dcbys, 11 many major airport,,
off' from Logan Airport SWlday after. ~ Kennedy and La Guwia In
The three Boaon llallons were &ell· noon.
New Yort, wac closed because of thc
Once at the ailport. the travcllcrs
Many travcllm were stranded umil 1
were met wilh kq: lilta or rup1 can-who atlclDJl(C9 Ip call the airtlnes heard cdlalionl lndevmloap:l"Unatowalt Tuesday. when planes were flnally tak·
iDuJtietricdtoacbcclalethclrruahlJ.
onadcabusyslpl.
Con1UUUd on me 6

-

=W:·.°.:c:1,:::~c::
:

.......

The Suffolk Jouma}

Wednesday. March 24, 1993

'sGA· enters Inter-

Collieg..ate Forum

-

dlo ...,-OJllcpalc SIU-

-

-

Forum.

thcldmlnlstntion.

.Lif
eS-ty[es

Curriculum frompagt I

language of the requirement
The original dlverslly req ui re ment proposal was
WOf'dcd, "Students wlU be reThis oonocpt is ba.sed on_
tbt quited &o l&ke two one-semesByVlktBcmard
Association of Colleges and ter courses wtuch focus on the
JoumalStalT
Unions Intcmational Confer- e11.pcrlences and cultures or
ence that WIS held al the Unl- g:roupstrlditlonallybnder-repIf you~ OOl a umsfcr a:u- VtBily or New Hampshire rcscntcdlntbccuniculwn. One
dc:nt.cld you ever wonder what which Hidalgo al1cndcd. ''This ofthcsecowsca: will deal with
thclnddcoranochcrcoUegeor forum Is ba.sed on the large at least one such group within
wdve11lty looked Ute? Are conference. with a more local- lht United Statcl. The second
oourscwlllcu mincnon-wc.st1herc really tho9c "hallowed ized aspect," said Hidalgo.
halls", 2001C1lciassrooms and
Representatives from the crn culwrcs out.tide of the
frat houcs with Ivy vlncs at- different schoolJ will meet UIUtodSt1tc1and/orlhcroleof
tachcd lO thc bulldings?
once • month to discuss cur- womcnorsuualmlnorldcsln
,1n .. etrorttobfin& Boston reru issucsoncampuscs. ··Each societies out.side the United
~ colJqtl and unlvCISldcs month the meeting Is ti a dif- SW,,,"
Michael Rcmync. dean of
toldhtr, Junior class Vice fert:sll school 50 WC can gel to
President EJ'l'UI Hidalgo has knowtheothcrrcprcsc:ntalives a.AS, stld the cullur21 diverjoined rorce1 wllh Student and their campuses." said sity requlrcmcnl change was
the subject or discussion of
Government rcprescnWives Hldall(t.
from Suffolk, Northeastern,
Hldal&o heads the project faculty wanting to preserve
Boston Unlvcnlty, Bentley from Suffolk. and Is In the·pro- culture divenily wllhout gelCoDc,eandBol&OnO:i;lkgcto cess or settina suppon from ling Into the study of gender



CLAS Curriculum Changes
EITectlve Fall I 994
6crcdi1s

SophomOrc English

Additional class. ENG 216 World Utcrature, to
fulfill requirement
Jcrcdiis
Mlllh JOS. 109. 152. and 161 . fulfill requircme1i"t Math
JOI will stlU be offered. but will not fu!OII requirement
) ctcdlis

Applied Quantifications Skills

o.tPSC I 17 Using Cornputers, CMPSC 12 1- AntCoum
In Computers, CMPSC I3 I • Computer Science I. or Si.a ti.sties will fulfiU requirement
J crtdits

Ethics

Phil I 19, 120. 123. 127. will fulfill requirement
OJ.ltura1Dlveni1y
. 6 credit,
Cou.rsts may b< doublt cou.nttd
Two course which rocus on cuJ1ural aroups. in andoutsi<k
the U.S., which have traditionally been undcmpre.scnted m

~curricu.lum

euminatlon o r one group ciety and the more diversified
which Is traditionally undcr- campus population.
reprc$cntod in thc curriculum,
Thcdiversity requirement
such as women, racial minori- will be a double counted reties or suual minorities.
quirement, whichineansaclass
The wordlna for second re- inhistoryorgovemmefltmay
qulrt.d course In diversity was al.so be able to folfill the div~rchanged IO read, the e11.amina- sity requirement.
Other changes approved by
lion or non-western cultu~
outside the United States, or the Faculty Assembly were the
reductionoflhcmalhrcquiremcnls from sl11. to lhm:crediis;

losophy 10 a course m ethu
.:).
and the raisin& of the scicnccrcquircmem from eight 10 11
credi1swiththcaddi1ion ofan
integra.tcd studics likeclass in
science.
Ronaync"
said topics of fur•
ther discusslon wlU be the formulation or • 11st or classes
willfulfiUthedivcrsilyrcqui n:mcnt and what changes will be
rcquired ofu-ansfer swdcnls.
The change, to the curricu•
lu.m will flPt take dfect until
the fall semester of 1994.

Now that Spring Break is over... . 1
It's Time to break a leg at the ...

Spring/est '93 Auditions
Tuesday, March 30 at 4:00 p.m.
Wednesday, March 31 at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday, April I between 1:00 and 2:15 p.m.
Do you have any talent? - whether it be:
*comedy
*music
*dance

*skits
*song
*production

Please come and be a part of the show that
C\ilebrat«:5 the talent of Suffolk University's
Students, Faculty, ~ ff, and Alumni. If you have
any questions, or wish to be a part of this exdtin
talent/ variety production in any way, please
contact: Vicki at 573-8237.

_The_s_u11_olk...,Jouma1
____________ _____ ___ 2'.,,.m3_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ )
w_ec1 ,_,. .... ...
,

Nonsense a devilishly goo~ spoof
By Karen M. Yoong
Jouma1 s wr
La.st year·s hit movie ..Sisler Act. " starring Whoop!
Goldberg. portrayed nuns ln a
way they are not nonnally perceived, TilC film made lhc audience laugh at ttic ridiculous
way In wh.lch the singing and
dancing nuns were ponnyed.
Thc cityofBoston has lhclr
own version of "Sister Act" in
the
musi cal
comedy
·•N~en.sc,''whlch ls currently
in ils seventh year in Boston.
"'Nun51;nse;· which is running at the Theatre Lobby Jo.
catcd on Hanover SIJCCI In lhc
Nonh End, is the story of a
group of nuns from the Uulc
Sister of Hoboken oree·r who
arc forced lO put on a variety
show1oeammonc.y tobu.rylhc
four num they are storing in
their!reezer.
Thc nuns were amon& 52
'"111eLittle Sisters of Hoboken ," OU> r) JClm Pflemf Mary Calllnan. lt'Jron·l.ewl1,
,
-,
who died or food poisoning
after eating a tainced meal preMclaughlin, and 'Monica Tcschcs. "Nunsensc," now in ir'1 seventh year, is p~yins at '!'hcatre Lob~ in B ~: •
pared by Sister Julia. Oll!IJ or
God. The nuns had earned thcywiUbefinCdbylhcBoard furious asthcgroupslnpand Lewi1)isthcRcvercndMochcr of lralnjllJ the MV1ccs 111: the
enough money to bury 48 of of Health. Five of the rcfnaln• dances to the delight of the of the Convent. Hcrdcdslon to convent She lonp forlhcday ·
their sisters but p u ~ a inglVJllSoonvcrgeoothcMount audience. Thccastoflhtmusl- purchase a VCR ii the reason when lhc wlU be Ible to take
VCR forlhtc.onventlnsteadof St Helen's School auditorium callsoulSt.UWilng.ascach!CCtlC why thcnwu: had to put on the ovcrSlslcrMaryllqjni'1posi•
and put on an •unforgeuablc ls morccnjoyablethanthcprc- performance.
lkmpf R.evcrcnd Molher.
bu
lhc remaining four.
The mms dcspenitcly need
Iler . ~•ry Amnesia
~
~
The nun jokes fly rast and
Sister Mary Regina (Karon (MaryannZ&chau) lslnctwge
the money to bury lht nuns or
po"'buud 011 poJt 6

Blizzard strands travellers in Boston
By Paul MacE.achcm
and K&rcn M. Young
Journal Staff
The northeast part of the nation cannot complain about having anolherd,y

win~r. Rccord-bfeaklng snowfall tw
rc1iacrossNew.England,droppingover ·
70 inches of snow in lht area this
winter.
A Iasge winter storm we Suffolk
students an ausplclou.s bcJiMing to
lhdr sprlna breaks, dumping up 10 15
lri:hcs of snow in a n d ~ lht BosPlows cleartbcstrccU of Boston after tbc Bllnardof '93 over spring break.
10n uu.
The storm dumped more than • foot of snpw ln the aiu.
Ntvene wuther conditions put •
Caro/1" Btaf7/JoflT1tOI SIO/f
damper on travel plans at Boston's
Logan Airport. ThousandsoriraveUeB
Travcllen hopln1 to visit the llaltl
>J • tUWt. m..y travdkn wen:
were stnlnded ll LD1an Airport for forccdtomk.lhrouJhlhcmowtosccif onthcustcmscaboardc>.pericrxxdlhc
sevenl days a the runways were being thcirftlstitwuonebfthefewlhaltoot lon,cscdclays.•manymajorairportl.
o i l - Lopn Ahport Sunday aft<,. lncl!Jdina ICcnncdy Ind La Guardia ln
The three 8os&on atatiCN Yr'Cre tcU- noon.
New Yort. waccbcd becaua:orlhc
inJ vlcwcn &o call their a1r1incs before
Once at the ahpon. lhc uavcpcra
heading to the airport The tnvdlcrs were met wtlh lone UICI or rup1 can'Many travdlera wei:e Sltlndcd urtll
who ancmpted tocall the alrllnca hew cellalionl indfflllJonserUnca to walt Tuesday, whcnplancswcrcfinallytak~uthctriedtoacbccWcthclrffl&hU.
In endless busy si&JW.
Con1it11ud 011 po~, 6

-

.......

Fonda shows
tough s_de in
i
"Point of No
Return"·
By Jamca McOonouJh
Joum.al Staff
0



John Badlam·• ..Point of No Reium" 11 a very cn&cnalnlng ranake
the l991 French thriJlcr "La ~
Nlktta." Itl111toaftlmthatprovldela
sw--makinc role ror Brid&d Fonda.

or

suy1nsc1ooeoa1Uonpn,1......,

or No Rdum'" 1s • non-aop
ICdonpiclu,elnwltld,-pllys
M,alo. ■ c:op,cllllaa .... ...

"Poi.-

fonncd by -rhc Afp:tcy"to be ma--

pertlnlhcn.,OabltdByme("Mlllcr't
~pllyslflalo'•-·llob.

Boanclna -Jut -;car·• awful perforhit mance In
.. Cool
World", Byrne ha1 fun reveallna
COlllbuutlOflpoJt6

Wemcaday, Man:b 2A, 19,93

Wcdnclday, ....,,, 24, 199'.I

1llcs.trolk-

111c - -

M,ulc'tuslpmc:raononly
• ~ k n o w" bui&.
TbcftlmckvatytusiSlllf)-

of-Lbc-art , actton

sequences

with the OdbLc sto,y of a
tnppcd In a world or

woman
.-.

/I, (

Ute the 1981 Katheryn lnthcfilmlsby,crcenveteran ·
Bl,elow rum ..Blue Sled" and Harvey Ke.Itel. Playt.naactw1991 'I RJdleySoou Oarwln- acter known only u "'The
ner -rhelma 111d Louise", this Ocaner," Keitel provides a
plctun: displays an imrqQl.SC smaU. but darkly comic take
ftarcformlmlJtholcadn::na-

Mon: than 300 swdents from Atl&nu-aru wlivenltlcs muchcd to the:
Capitol building and burned lhc swc Oag to protest I symbol of Confederacy
emblu.oned upon IL
1bc students assesnblcd 11 Monts Brown College for the rally to support
Gov. ZellMlller, who IJ leading a movement to remove the stars and crossed
bars symbol or the: Confederacy from the GcorJi• naa.
Despite: Mlllcr's p&cunot to bum thcflaa, the students set lton fire. Amid
chants of ,.bu.m, baby, bum" from the crowd of mostly blacks, a few whites
and mcmbc:n of the media. the Dag went up In names."More than SOO police
officen, hellcopler,, and SccJCl Service agents were stationed around and
above the Caphol.
One Allanta police orticcr, who wished to remain anomymous. said the
strongpoliccprcscnccwasbt.causcthcydldnot wantarepcatoftheriotsthat
followed the Rodney King verdict In Los Angcle1 last May.
''lbc bad eggs mlghl want to cause trouble. that's why we had to staff up
so we would be well pre~ for thc worst-case scenario," the officer said.
However, the student tumoul wa.s considerably lower than expected by
both thc police and student organlurs.
Lawrence Philpot. one or the organiurs of the rally, said lhey had been
expecting between 3,000 and 5.000 prolcSI.Crs, but only about JOO to 500
shoWCd up,
'1here was a deliberate: attempt by the media as well as the polhlcal
structure IO Wldcrmlncourcfforts," Philpot said. '"Tllcy know that we had the
potential to ge1 nwnbert; that's why lhey went to such lengths to undcnnlnc
our efforts."
While Miller was not present 11 the rally, he sent a letter to the students In
an at.tempi IO disa:iurage them from buming the Rag.
"It would insult many GcolJlans just as lhc current flag insults you,"
MIUersald. " Ir.you bum the flag 11 the capitol, you will ally yourself with
those who want IO fly if over the capitol'forcvcr."
1bc sludcnl·Ieldcrs disagreed with MWer, saying that buming the flag
would send a visible message or their strong opposition.
1bc Dag also was put through a mock trial, and was round guilty ofbelng
a symbol or oppression.
Black and white SlUdcnlS alike said they felt that the flag was racist and
should not be flown above public buildings.
1bc SIUdcnts al.so said they did not support reverting to the pre-1956 flag.
Sludent leaders, who propoc an entirely new flag design, saw the prc-1956
Rag u symbolizing and honoring the Confederacy.
.. We shall noc have the fascist Oagor 1956 reformed back to \hC racist flag .
ofprc-1956:'saidLa~Jeffrics.lcadcrofStudcntsror African-Ameri-

on anoU"cr Pf'Orcss1ona1 a.ssas-

Bridget Fonda. Like her fa-

11,

HUii i

-~---uao_..._._ . . . .
5-foc---....._--.____.--....i

~

Ing off on I regular schedule.

Driving was also a treacherous ordeal with 1ccldcn11 and
abandonmenlS doctlng the ma•
jor ancries around the city,
slowing1hc effons of plows.
Governor William Weld
~ on LcJevlslon to encourage people not to drive
un1CSS it WU an emergency.
Even lhc very reliable MassachuscW Bay Transportation
Authority hid the prcscncc of
mind to stun down lhc busscs
lnlhcGrca.icrBostonareaaftcr
5 p.m. Bus service [n WorccslCr was tcnninalCd before 2

..w-

-..c.l_.,_. ..... .,.....,_.... u-_..s-,T....t
S--S-.-1
M, y 18-Jww 26, 1993

The Blizzard or '93 even made travel by 4-whcel dri ve:
vehicles difficulL
Carolyn Btary/Jo ,unal S1a/f

Travel /rompagd - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

................ ,...a-. ... --.«111 ........... _..,._...._'°....._ .....,.._~.-

s _ . :.T-199) 11.__U.-., ...... llnfol....,.__.

S-S-.-11

Jww 29- A.ugwc 7, !99l

~ - b o d i - k p l & . , . , . . . l l, l"Jc.161111U-6000

.....,.i,,_tfflS-T_........_....,._......, ........ . .
_ . . , . . _ . , . S . - T - f f l ~ A -. l l - JOI ,
.,__MADJJII 0t r.. . . ._.._,......,.,1l/ )u-66ll
VES! l • - • .... -,.df•---U.--,.S--.T..,,.lftl
_...,. .... .....,,,/ . . -T..,,.b,,,AoaalD

/111/1

LET US HELP YOU LAND THAT
SUMMER (or fall)

Student Protesters Burn State Flag

.
Unc-pumpln1 actloo 1eenc.s sin hlrcd 10 kill Magic. He
However, all metaphors with an 1ntensc performance S\lpplies the film with comic
~icf that pcrfcctly balances
aside. "Polnt of No Rdwn'.' Is byfondL
In last year's ..Singles" and the movie.
an advc:nbuc rum tllll accomAn~ whO llkcs exciting
pUsbcs what It sw Ol.ll to do: "Slnglc Whltefemale.., Fonda
Provide ~cncc, with a fe- showed only a g.Umpse of her action films will Cl1)oy "Point
male ICdon hero that would acting abllhles. In ..Point ofNo of No Rc1um. " Director
( .. Stakeout" ,
make Andd Sd'lwarzencucr Re.tum", shc ison full-throltfo. Badham
MOChcr pw performance "Wargamcs") keeps the audiproud
ence cntclUined. Exccpc fo r
thcfilm'sabysma!cndlng, it is
adefinitewinncr.
However, the real reason to
sec "Poim of No Return" is
mous rcla.tlvcs, she Is a superb
talent

,,111111, 1•1c1I

snow uptohighcrlcvclsagainsi
p.m.
Thousanm of residems lost thecars.
Withthlslatestlnascricsof
electricity during the great
saorm. LakcviUcresident.Julic s1orms, even the toughest
Colonna had IO tn.vcl north skinned native New England·
with her baby after her home ers have had enough.
"I hope this Is It." said 711 •
lostpower. .
"Without clcclricity, my year.old Jean Caruso, an Ar·
stove doesn't v.-ort.: oi my re- llngtonresldcN.. '"Thlshasbccn
frigcrator. l justcouldn'tla.kea one of the worst wlnlCr1 in a
chancewlththcbaby... CdOMl longtime."
,.;<1.
Hopefully, now that spring
Other rcsidenlS broke their is orficiallyhcrc,lhclastorlhc
backs shoveling, digging out snowy weather Is behind us.
aft.er I.he storm. Digging out This may be the last lime we
cars wu an especially difficult grumble about the snow (or
task. u snow plows packed the lack of ipow) in the northeast

Nunsense from pa,, l

- -- - - -- -

JOB!

·

CO-OP
JOB FAIR

Thursday, March 25
Noon -2pm
Sawyer Cateteria
Swnsored By
SUFFOLK UNNERSITY
Career Services & Cooperative Education
20 Ashburton Place, Boston, 02108
(617) 573-8312 or (617) 573-8480

S'I.7.l'JYE'}(J'£'£jjff])1£,1{J

can1nci:=-llonthcCapitol on Feb. 22.about 15 flag protesters were

:"R!,~;'
=-;~'£S
[~:--;:;;:;-'
1__1:·;·~~;;~~~;m;m!lss~lo~nc~,5M~rt~in~L~•thc~,~Kl~ng[:l§ll~.so;n~o~fsl;•~lntl~-;;::-::;::--:::::-::-;~'J.r S'UE,~9-/,~'ir'l( m .==:;--;;JL~J
~ J".'EIT)l'En
rr,·rr,o
_ "'
·v

.. ,,_._M -. -a.a.a;.,_if-~1Mornee-Toselies)t5-ant1,1-wl~incsilrthe"'so"';_ _
R-O .. T.

FINANCIAL AID

you reguatior6 requireJur,e Mve bo<Towed ltv""'1 ancounselingnin"I'" program,an.
are graduating Suffolk
educalio the form of
provkie

H

in

feda(al

and
Urvversity to

loan

"Exit lntl!fV\ew: Exh Interviews will ba offered on Iha lollCMing dates:

Monday, March 29J 1993

Thunday, April I, 1'93
Monday, April 5,1993
Thundly, April 8,1993
Monday, April ll j 1993
I'hursday, April lS, 1993

10:00 Lnt. J 5:00 p.m.
10:00a.m. ,..Jl:00 p.m.
10:00a.ll) • 5:00 p.m.
10:00a.m.- ~:00 p.m.
10:00 Lm. - 5:00 p.rn.
10:00 Lm.. 2:00 p.m.

Please note 1nt8MewS will ba condUded on the hour in th& Office of Fanancial Aid and
will only require 20-30 minutes of yo<, lime. Unffl you attend a,, Ext lnteNiew and
complete Iha required paparwork, you will not ba cleared for graduation with the
Reg~lra(s and Studenl Accounls Office. (lhal means no cap, gown, diploma,
~ansc,1)1 o,
wm be ,e1easec1 to

grades

you.)

Contact the Office of Financial Aid, 8th floor
Sawyer at 573-8470 if you have questions,

cannol rcmembcr who she is bchau aoo.tfwis make the
a.ftcrbclnghllonthchcadwlth audience laugh al thls truly
a cruclfi11.. She is shy and insc- entertaining song.
cu;s1er Robcn Ann ( Kim
Niemi) Is the trouble maker or
lhc group. She is the understudy to the other nun.~ and
longs IOhavc her chance In the
spolligh1.
Sisicr t.1ary Leo (Patricia

mo:C:r::r~m::i~:~
singsa balladabouthcrsc.hool
days at SL Oalre's school.
Nicml'sbcautlfulvolcemakes
this one of the most enjoyable
soogs of the pcrfonnancc.
Tosc.hesstwsJhcshowv.ith

Mcl...aughlin) is a novice who
hopes to 0 ~ day be the first
ballerina nun. She is disappoin1ed that the Reverend
MolhC( will not let her wear a
lllluandCJ:plainsthatthis could
kccphcrfrombccominganun
ballerina.
Eachmcmbc:rofthelalentcd
castisgivcnhcrchancctoshinc
in the spotl lghl. McLaughlin is
!JUiy hysterical as she dances
around the stage in her ballet
sllppcr1 as she demonstrates
w~' moming is like in lhc
convent and dances through
her prayen.
2.schau and Lewis try to
outdo each other Ofi "Just A
~upl'a Sisttrs." They bump
lfllO each other and try to Steal

her hilarious portrayal of Sis•
tcr Mary Amnesia. In one of
the best scenes or the play.
Tosches uses a nun puppc1 10
cncouragethcJinglcwomanin
the audience, who wereJivcn •
nun applications before the
performance began. 10 join the
LilllcSistcrsofHobok:cn.
"Nunscnsc" Is I must•KC
musical for au Cal.holies and a
uu1 for people or all other
fallhs. 11 isoncofthe barzains
or thc Boston theater.
SrudcntgroupdCU11ca.,bc
purchased for as little as $11
for selected pcrfonnances. For
mo~inforinatlonontlcketsand
pcrfonnances, call 227-9872.

: ; : ~ ~ 1 ~ : a . :~~:~~;1!~rri;:~!:nRa1;6avls :bcmathy
Jr.(O>S)

;JYL: "L/

Jn,

J J

./1..L.J

1

'J..J

_I .

Students Endorse Gay Rights
lowaStateUniversity'sstudcntsenatcreccntlypasscdarc.solutionrecommcndlnglb11partncrsofthesamesexbcallowcdtoliveinmarricdSIUdcnt
housing.
But It wasn'I until after five hourt or Intense debate. ''II started oot very
·lo&ical and rational, then b became emotional.. 1bcre wu a lot of fear. Some
pcoplejustdonotbcllcveinrccogniilnggayoiblscxualpcople." saJdEtlc

.:====u:

./

~ ·~
. · ·. ·

· · '·:..,. ·· ;,'. :·'.; i .~
0

/. ,

1
" ~

~--~J--'" · .:~.
.
.

.

· ,. ..

H';!~:'!8'
~y~ow domestic
parfucrt or gays and Iesbl.an:s access 10 university scrvleca, fadlltics and
in.suranccbenefitsavailabldreeotatrcclucedratcstospousesofhctcrosexual
students and faculty members.
"'
"We are the trailblau:rs," Haintllon said. "We'~ still gcttina feedback,
positive and negativ,e."
Falrtreatmentofsame-scxdomcstic panncrshasbcenahotlssuconthc
campus since Last fall when a nomOSCJ:ua1 student when asked to Un ln
married student ~ g with his partner was denied, and appealed to
President Martin JiSChkc:. Jischke was expected IO ma.kc ·a decision on the
is.nie after spring brcak.(O>S)

Book Tells How To Launch Car~rs
Ethics IJ an imporunt consideration for graduating JC(Uon as they launch
thcircam:rs; according to a new book.
"Success wil.hout honesty ls failure," says RJctwd Fein, aulhorof "First
Job" and placement director for the school ofM1111gCmcnt ll lhc University
ofMllUIChusett.s 11 Amherst.
1bc book give., advice about how to Identify and cmphas:iu posldve
charactcristic.,,resumedraftlnganddifficullintc'rvlcwingqucstlons.Ql~sions of ethic., in the job search m placed throughou1 the ~(CPS) .

APRIL 2, 1993
6:45 p.m.
Sawyer Cafeteria
$6-00w/Ld_

$8.00gen.

The Suffolk: Jownal

W~y. March 24, 1993

/1 11111/ /J11/1

este.r s Buro State Flag

LET US HELP YOU LAND THAT
SUMMER (or fall) JOB!

lent! from Atlanta-iica universities marched IO the
1mcd the state Oag to protesl a symbotorConrcdcracy

bled at Morris Brown College for the raµy to suppon
Is ICll:Hna a movcmcru to ranOYe the star5 and crossed
rifcdcncy irom the Gco,iia n..,.
asnottobumlhcfiaa,thcstudentssctiton file. Amid
bum"' from tliccrowdofmostly blacks. a few wh.ilcS
:dla, the flag went upin Dames. "More than500policc
m Seem Service agents were sw.loned uound and

co· or
JOB FAIR

officer, who wished to remain anomymous. said thc
was because thcy did not want a repeat or the riots that
King verdict in Los Angeles last May.
u wam to cause uouble, thal's why we had 10 s1afrup
ircparcd for the worst-case scenario," the officer said.
:nt tumoul was considerably lower than expected by
Jdcnt organizers.
one of the organizers of the rally, said they had been
JOO and 5,t'.XX) proicstcrs, bul only aboot 300 to 500
>eBtc aucmp1 by the media as well as the political
:ourcffons," Philpot said. "1bcy koow thal we had the
:rs; that's why they went to such lengths to undermine

present at the rally.he sent a letter to the students in
age them from burning the Dag.
any Georgians just a.s lhc cum:nt flag insults you,"
um thc flag al the capitol, you will ally yoursc.lf with
· lt~verlhccapitol forever."
s disagreed with Miller. saying thlU burning thc flag
message of their strong opposition.
1t.1fthrough a mock trial. and was found guilty or being
01

m.

udeni+ alikc said lhcy fell that the fl ag was n,cist and
1bovc public buildings.
aid they did notsuppon reYCJ'ling to the pre-1956 flag.
propoc an entirely new Dag design, saw the pre-1956
nd honoring the Confederacy.
the fucisl flag of 1956 reformed back lo the n1Cist nag
wrcncc Jeffries, leader of S1
udcnts for Afrlcan-Amcrion the Capitol on Feb. 22, about 75 nag protesters were
mmissioncr Martin Luther King Ill , son of slain
.rtin LuthcrlCing Jr.. and Fulton County
mm1ss1
thy ID, son of civil rights Icade Ralph Davis Abcmalhy

Thursday, March 25
Noon - 2 pm
Sawyer Cafeteria
Sponsored By
SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY
Career Services & Cooperative Education
20 Ashburton Place, Boston, 02108
(617 ) 573-8312 or (617) 573-8480

STU'IYE9{,'I L'E5'l'D'E'R,5
P'l('ESE9{, I
'
Af'E'lJI'E .U S'll:J:[OL1(:f'EJJS
~'V

rtantconsidcration for graduating seniors as they launch
ilng to a new book.
I honesty Is failure," says Richard Fein. authorof"First
.ditcetorfor the schootor Managemcnt11 lhc Univcrsi1y
l Amhc:tst.
acMc:c about how to Identify and cmphasiu positive
imcd.raftlnganddifficul1ln1crvlcwingqucslions. Discus•
ic.job search arc placed throughout lhc book.(CPS)

1bc week before Suffollc students went on.spring break. the
studmlbodlc.1attheUn!YcrsJtyofMassachusctUatAmherstaild
Musachu.scm Insdtuce or Tcchl¥llOIY bodl passed conuovcrdal. non-bindlna: resolwions. The rcsul1 wu a clear message
bc1ng sent to bolb of their !Chools' administr.at.lons and the

.
'

.

~ f''I. ---·· ~""'·......o::r_..,,._,
·APRIL 2, 1993
6:45 p.m.
Sawyer Cafeteria
$ 6.00 w/i.d.

~
c...... , --.s,.-..

~~~~~i:ia:;n-:;:::~

''YO don't get any more out of us.
u

a rcso1udon caWna upoo the school to amend i1.1 h&ri.s.wcnt

We' re state workers!"

policy 10th.al it Is not ~ctiVC orme speech.
Apart of a nallonwldcdebatc OYtrfrce speech and the need IO •
be more scmllivc to the needs or tndilional mlnorillcs, " MIT
the

policy Is worded so that anything pcrcciyed as creating a hostile
environment is a violation of the policy.
Students at MIT compwncd the policy could be used to quash

::i=:t:::;:~~':!';:U:W~:

-Said two stau' wo,UF"s tn0vi111 a pNblic addrtss
podiwn: Tliey stood Np twf sa.id a few words. WM11
SOIMStwk11tSJHUSi111bJc(ap,ud,theyrtspoNkdwi1h
thisqw,tt.

L~tters to the Ed~tor

the policy.

1ru!"::~.:..,,~~~".:,:~.;;=.n"':':!::.;:;= Special note of thanks
sbowd

two schools
be commended for their enterprises ·and
I would like to.thank Joe Cawley, Graduate Assistant
fortiwde.l tt&tcsanincrcdlblcamowuorcoul'IFt04tepoulSidc
the accepcecl norins of socicty and take on the wipopular main- in lhc Srudcnt-Activhies Office. for all the help he has
giYm me In J;llanning boih itlC Family Program and the
Sbam iaues.
All lOO often, ~ today are qui~ to accepl I false <lisplayillg of the AIDS Quill.
He ha.s spent couni1ess hours misting me and he
percepdoa 1'l!_~ Y are po~rtess apinst the cstabUshmcnt of
,ovcrmncnt and universities. At UMASSIAmhcrst and MIT. should be actno~gcd and congradulatcd for all the
·
they havebrokm thatpercq,don. In the 1960sandcarly 1970s. wotic he has done,
,, Thanks,_
Joc!
studenllwould
for
sit-Im and
even
the mOlt mundane iaucs and were able to pin many of the
l.ibcrtic:a we enjoy today. Formo~ than adecade.. the passion and
<;ouncil
power of ltUdenb exercising their political voice has been

, Proiram

Academy didi:i't snub

':.:.,'.:,~:::;::.=;, -.....:,=•:.::.i~ -~~lcolm X, Spike Lee
:

.

I after five hours of intense debate. "II started ou1 Ycry
then It became emotional. 'There was a lot of fear. Some

How To Launch Careers

Student Leaders
Show Their Courage

" " ' : : " ~ .. · - •• lniUadv.. llkethcsetwowu

sily's student senate recently passed a resolution rccom•
11 of the same sex be alk>wed to live in muricd srudcnl

W<.(CPS)

~==========

w - . - " 4, 1993

greater society,
Al UMASS/Amherst. students passed by a' two ID one margin
anon-binding resolution which legalized the use ofmarijuana on
their can pus. Proponents drove their message home that marijuma Is a safer ~ a n a l drug tmn alcohol and won the Yotc
1!JTI to 983 in an unu.sually hca"'.Y VOW' tum out
1be resolution wa lruliated by the C-aMabls Re.Conn Qwi..
lion. headcd'by UMASS/Amhcrst SIUdcnt Lance Brown who
wuacandidate for state rcpn::se,uatJvela.st year, whlch'will ask
theschool'sstudc:ntpcmmcntto inform Oovemor w illiam F.
Weld of lhc Sludeots decisjoo and call for the oessalion of th:

1dorse Gay Rights

:llcvc in rcc.ognldng gay or blsexuaJ people, .. said Eric
of the OoYcnuncnt of lbe s1udcnt body.
!so encourages the admlnislnlllon lO allow domestic
d lcstilans access to u.niYcrsl1y services. facilities and
1
ailable free or at reduced raJ.es to spouses of heterosexual
members.
blazers," Hamllton said. "We 're slill getting feedback.
_
•c,"
same-sex domestic partners has been a hot issue on the
'all when a homosexual s1udcn1 when asked 10 live In
,using with his partner was denied. and appealed 10
.chkc.. Jlschkc was expected to make I decision on the

·• 'lbe-- ,.

$ 8.00 gen.

_
packed• room to, notprocc.u. but attempt toup0$CLeutchcr's

i~lhccommaltaryaboutSpiteLcc's"Malcolm X"

~arll'C'llslonistpast.
Where lb.is incident differed from thc tradition.al campus
dissent Is that it was Initiated by faculty members and not lhe
students, The student leaden: ol\.,hand were there more 'as
obscJvcrsthanprotcstcrs. 11iciractionsafterthefactwCA:more
of ronYcyers of student frustration , but gained no roncessions

wriucnbyOordonOlfflnlObeveryintctcsl.ing. Thismovie
was by far Ille- best movie I saw all year. The n\oyie was
entawn1n.&.andinl(!ffllll}Ye_andKgaYemcmorcof1.scnse
,
or who~~wuandw_
hal...hcltoodf.orehan l cYcrhad
bcfcwe. Overal.l,1t_wasdcruuldy worth mrS6.75.

ldanocagmcw:i~?<-'donhowtYer. l lh,111klhcAcademy

fromlhc~vcm_y.
i
· 'The admi.Qlfttalion.cvmbc!o~lhc prolCSI was over, took it
lJl?O'lltsclfto announce lls-~ o r the.student's privUcge to
fn:cdomofexprcssion. thusqucllingAQyfurtherdcbatcamcemIng the appn:,priatefonnsof spcechor lhc role and rcsponsibiliticstodlecrcata"sodety. .{No(e,onaprivatccampus, spcech is
a privileae and not a ript.)
With a ftcc:t1na: &llmP!t, the only group to remember lhe
Leutchcrcontroveny were the people at the hcattofthe maucr.
lhc Oimlnology Cub. When they ldempted to keep this Issue
andthclrcrcdibW')'altheforcfronlofthecommwlily'sattcntlon
by !p(lOl(Wing anodler .dcbalc on ~ ~death pcna11y, hardly
anyone toot DOlk:e. ,
We should herald ~ leadership aqd conviction or these
-leadcnatMIT, IJMASS/Amhcnt. lDd thc Crimlnology
011b for taking., iq,opularposidon and breaking fnxn the

: ; : : ; : r e m : ~ = = : . ~ ~ ~ ~~
11wnumerou.ucleviaioinineenicwswilhMr.Lcc bcrorc.;.l after die rclcale of bis movie, in which he ~med the
produoenaod themotionpk:1urccompany thatbelped make ·•.
"X" (QI"~ givifls him cllough money and Sl.lpport. The
problcmw:i~the~yA~isthal:i1'1theproduccn
and the moti01'1 plCture comparue, 1h11 vote to nominate
pcoplefor~awanh. Spike.Lccisagn;ai film-makcrand
allDSlbusUICSSmln,bul~he~tstowin~my Awards
~...:.~:':e~~':::O~~theWking. This year's
movbaetalltheawards. "X"isna:i:!:c~:r~.:Uo!:
thatmakcl)'OIIWl:lfflallovcr. "X"mate,youthink. "X"is
atwdrnov;e. "X"llnot "Howard'1Bnd"or"Unrorgiven"
Spike made aomdhiag vtty difftl'ffll, something lhal som;
-juat doo'r litc.
WIIIIII'm lr)inJ10ay.Oordon,Ulhalir "'X"taugh1mc
.. lllllnllre:aD.
aboutMalcolm'1lircudwbalhellOOd,for,wtwc1sccould
, We._. M Su.ffo1.t can only hope the
of ow- ..~ Spikcl..ee utfor? lthoaahtlhatwuthe~hcmadc"X".
Jeldm,.. br;da])laerCandfumft:,baw;tbc.aamcconvlcdonwhcn ~ • • ia die ~only 10 wiaawan:ta, he should quit
. . daecoacslD mnd up ~ rthc rtgtuofthc llUdcof. body and

.....

reg

_..

-

JUIIIBehric

The Suffolk Journal

Wednesday, MaR:h 24, 191J3

LET US HELP YOU LAND THAT
SUMMER (or fall) JOB!

CO-OP
JOB FAIR

th

,,
,,
1d

••
ri -

hy

rncnt

"'

me
<rlc

Thursday, March 25
Noon - 2 pm
Sawyer Cafeteria
Sponsored By
SUFFOLK UNNERS ITY
Career Services & Coo~rative Education
20 Ashburton Place, Boston, 02108
(6 17) 573-83 I 2 or (6 17) 573-8480

STlFD'E'){__rJI/EJttJJ'E/.RS
'P'R..,'ES'E!J./J
Af'E'DI'E'VYIL S'U:PJOL'l('J'EJIS

.
.

.

.

Ilic

·"
"
the

'"'
the

APRIL 2, 1993
J!vo

...Said two stalt workus moYi1t1 a pllblic address
podiWIII. They stood "I' and sa.id a few word.J. Whtn
somts1udt1ttspa.ssingbycfapptd,theyrtsporultd wi1h
thisqMOtt.

Letters to the Editor
Special note of tl_tanks

I would like to.thank Joe Cawley, Graduate Assistanl
rn the Student Activities Office; for ab lhe help he has
given me in J?lanning both the Family Program and the
All too often, students today ~ quick ID acccp( a false displaying or the AIDS Quill.
He has spent coUJUless hours assisting me and he
pcn::cption th!, they ate powede.u qaiMt lhe cst&bllshmcnt or
JOVmDCtt nfwllvenitles. At ~Amherst and MIT. should be acknoledgcd and congndulatcd for all the
they have brokf:n lhatpercepticn In lhe 1960s and early 1970s, wort he has done.
l_banks, Joel
SIUdc:ntswould
foiralliea,sit•lns and lest
·
even
the moa mWldlne Issues and were able to gain many or the
Program Council
1i&eitic:a wecnj)ytoday. Formorethan adccadc, the passion and

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

power or ltUdera exercising lhdr political voice has been
notabtymlaing.
'Ibe clolesl thing1D aprot.estorlnJtiallvcslikelhc$etwowas
the hsl November's prol.cll against the appearance, of Fred
l...cutcber on campus. Ncarl)'. twa hundred smdent.s and faculty
1r~thccomlrlf.:DW')'lbout5pib1..ee'1"Malco~X'° ,,.
packed a room to, notprot.cst. but attempt to expose LeulChcr's
wrincn by Gordon Glenn to be~ intcrcstin1. Thu movie
NW revisionist past.

Where this incident differed from the traditional campus was by rar lhc best movie I saw all ye., The movie was
entertaining and inrorma.tive, and ii gave me more oh sense
dissent ls that ii was lnillated by faculty members and not the
snsdcnts. 1hc student leaders on hand were there mort: as ofwho Mak:olm X wuand what he stood foe than I ever had
before. OveraiJ, il WU'"defutildy worth my $6.75.

fromtheunlvcrsiry.
1be .ldminlstration, even beforc.the protcsl was over, took ii
uponitself1Dannounce i1Ssupportforthestudent'sprivilegeto
freedom ofexpression, thus quelling IRy (urthcrdcbale concernlng:the appropriate formso r ~ or tl£roleand rcsponsibililies totheJreatcr society.t'No<e,Ol'laprivatccampus,sp«diis

: in

CU$·

QJlOI'E o:r TJfE. WE'.E1C
"You don't get any more out of us.
We're state workers! 11

~a:::ye':of=f=a~::t::c::~~~~: A~:,n::::~=~;'::!\~=:

u1d

nch

The week before Suffolk students wen l on spring btcak, the
studentbodiesatlbelJnlversl1yofM&UIChuscasatAmherstand
Massachusetts lnstl&ute o(Technol.Pgy bo¢. pasxd comrover•
sial, non-binding resoludons. The result was a clear message
being sen1 to both or their SChools' administralions and the
g:rcuer society.
·
AtUMASS/Amhcrst.studcntspasscdbyatwolDonemargin
anon-binding n:solution which legalized lhe use or marijuana on
theireampus. Proponcnls drove their m~e home lhat marl•
jUMll Is a safer n:aulional drug tJwi. alcohol and won the vote
l!JTI to983 ln an u.n~y heavy votcrtumouL
1hc rcsolullon wu lnltlatcd by the Cannabis Re Corm Coali•
lion, headed by UMASS/Amhctst student Lance Brown who
was a candidate forswc ~ v e last year, which will.ask
lhescboo1°s.swdenl government to inform GovemorWllllam F.
Weld or the sludenls dcclsJon and call for the oessatlon of the
arrest and prosecution of marijuana possession on campus.
The samcday,studcntsatMITapprovcd bythe samemargin
a re.solution callio.s upon the school ID amend ilS harassment
policy so that it Is not restrictiVe or free speech.
Apartofanationwtdcdcbalcovcrfrccspccchandthenecdto
be more SCtUitive ID the nctds or lraditional mlnoritic.,, ·the MIT
policy is won:lcd so lhalanything ~rccivcd as creating a hoslilc
cnYironmen1 ls a violatiOO of the IX)ucy. •
Students al.MIT ~plainr.d lhc.poJlcy could be used to quash
political SP,CCCh orcrilidsm the school. Still, the administmlon
has not rdentcd on making anexcepdon for political speech in
the policy.
Allhough we here at Suffolk may or may not agree with the
iniliatlvqdebatcd a;.OChers schools, the student leaders oflhesc
two schools should be oommended for lhcir cnlCfpriscs and
fortitude. lt takesanlncrcdl.blcamountofooungetostcpoutsidc
the accepted norms of society and take on the unpopular main-

Academy didn't snub
M;alcolin X, Spike Lee

.

'>-

Student Leaders
Show Their Courage

6:45 p.m.

Sawyer Cafeteria
$ 6.00 w/i.d.

$ 8.00 gen.

aru!"'y wayofmatiaglhcpeoplcaroundhim very111g:ry. I
""w numerou.slclcvilionin&emewswilhMr.U.C, beforcand
a1\cr the relcac~movic. in which he slammed the
produccn and lhc motion ~turecompany that helped make.
"'X" f<I" not alving him enough money and 1uppor1.. The
problernwilblhc~yA~ is lh11 i1'1theproducers
~ =':,1~
~lm~m
u martbusincaman,bullfhe wantstowinAcadcmyAwards
hehutolhiit upandlet lwmovicdo lhctalking. This year's
awanbwilJ.benodifferentthanlu1,wbc:relhcmos1.popular
moviaptalllheawards. "X"is notsomecutesyfonmovic
thlunakes)'Ollwarmlllovcr. "X"makelyoulhint. "X"is
"X"U:not"Howard'11!nd"or"Unforgivcn".
Spite made IOlftCdting very different. something lhal some

:;:,:,:=:.s::=

• pri~ileac an'1,Dot • ri,tu.)
With • flcetlng gllmpee, the onl)' group to remember the
l...eu~rcontroversy were the people 11 the heart o(lhe maucr,
the Oimlno&ogy Cub. _ hen they ananpt.cd ID keep lhls Issue
W
andthelrcrcdiblllly11theforefrontorlheoom.munlty'sancnllon
by spoosodn, anocher debate on the death penalty, hardly
anyonetootnodce.
J
We should herald the leadership and convict!on or these
lbmlf.lcadersatMIT.1.JMA.S&Amhellt,mdtheOtminology pc:,opk.im;'plain doa'llike..
.
Clllb fo, taking an unpopular positiOQ and brcating from the
What I m lr)'ina lo ay, Clordon., 11 lhat lf"'X" taught me
JlllillllrcaD
aboul MaJcow '1 life~ whit he~ foe, what else could

•hard~.

We bn 0 Suffolk can ooly lq,e lhe rat or our"~
a

"""'.... .

ltUdcntbody and

--

=~tt!cOf'l~~~~:'~S::;·x-:.

kldem."bodlprac:ntandfuciue.bavethewneoonvktionwbcn aow:

.._._.,..._.10 llandup for the rtJtuofthe

Jim Bdwlt

qwt

w-,,Maidl:1<,1993

Thc_
Surroa-·

"Hillary Bashing"
Degrads All Women

Student Leaders
Show Their Courage
1bc week before surrolk students went on spring break, 1
11c
student bodies at the UnlvcrsltyofMassachuscus II Arnhem and
MusachuscUs lnstUute orTcchnolo1y both passed comrovcr.dal, non-blndln, resoludons. The result W&!I a clear message
bdng sent IO both of lhclr school!' admlnlsU'allons and thc
grulcrSOCicty.
At UMASS/Amhcrst. students passed by a two IO one.m11gin
a nm-binding ~lulion which lcgalhcd lhc use ofmarijuana on
lbtircampus. Proponents drove lhc.ir messaae home UW marijv.ma ls a safer siauti<:Nl drvg than alcohol and won the vote
l!Tn 10 983 ln an u.nu.su.ally hcavy vow-tu.moul
The resolution wu Initialed by the C&nnabis Reform Coali•
lion. hcldc:d by UMASSIAmhclSl student Lance Brown who
Wu a candldMe fo r sw c representative last year, which will ask
lhcschool '1 student govemmenc to Inform Governor William F.
Weld or the swdenU decision and call for the ccssat.lon of the
arrest and

prosccutJoo oimartjuana possessJon on campus.

The same day, students at MIT approved by the same margin
a resolUdQ(I callJna upon the school to amend Its harassment
policy ,o that it Is not restrtctlVe or free speech.

A pan of anationwide dcbalc: over free spcedl and the nc.ed 1
0
be more sensitive to the ncedsohraditional minorities, the MIT
p)licy is worded so that anything pcra.ivcd as cruting a hoscilc
environmcm b: a violation of the policy.
Students al MIT complained the policy could be used to quash
political spccchorcrttJdsm the school. Still, the administration
has not ~lentcd on making an exception for'polltical speech in
the policy.
Although we here at Suffolk may or may not agn:c 'wllh the
initllli vcs dcbalcd II OChcrs schools, the student leaders of lhcsc
two schoolJ lhould be commended for their enterprises and

)
Hillary Clinton has dcmonsuatcd that she will not fulfill the role of the
stereotypical Mfim lady." She will be a key figurehead in the political
rcfonns that will hopefully take place over the hc•t four years.
However, hci promises to be activelfinv olvcd in the process of these
reforms have not been welcomed by many Americans, Disparaging remarks have been made regarding her feminist views and her interest in lhc
government. She has been criticit.ed for her choice to work aft.er the birth of
,her daughter and vocing of her opinions. Although she is one of the bcsl
lawycn in the country, the gCl'ICnll public see.ms to doubt her ability to

QJ.laI'E QJ''l'J{'E 'WE'E'.K

"You don't get any more out or us.
We're state \\'orkers! 11
..SfJid rwo S'/Qlt MYJrUrs mo ..i111 Q public addrtu
podi1UJ1. Tltey siood .,, tJNl said a few words. Wht11
somf! s1wk,11spa.,si111l,yclapptd.tlity rtspotldtdwitli

1lusq11Dft.

Letters to the Editor ·

most women.

Special note of thanks

I would like IO,lhank.Joc cawlcy, GradualC AsslSWll
in the Student Activities Office. for all the help he has
given me in planning both the Family Program and the
All too often, studcnls IOday arc quiet. IO accept • false displaying of the AIDS Quilt.
He has spent cowukss hours assisting me and he
pcn:cpdon thll tbcy are powerless against the establlshmcnt of
govcnwcnt n1 unJvcrs.ltJcs. Al UMASS/Amhcrsl and MIT. should be acknolcdgcd and congradulalcd for all the
woft he has done.
lhey have broken lhacpclCCpCion. ln the 1960s and early 1970s.
swdtnllwowd
forrallles sil•in.s and
ICSl
even
tbc moll mWldanc laucs and we.re able IO pin many or thc
liberties wcenP)' today. Formorelhan •decide. the passion and
power of IWdents ucn:lsin1 their political voice has been
1
-yl!l)aln&'Thedolc:ltthlna10 aproc.cstor init1ativcsliu:~twowas
the tut November'• protest against the appearance or FM
Lcutchcr on campus. Nearly two h ~ students and facul ty
I round thecommmtary aboul Spike Lee', "Mlllcolm X"
packed a room IO. not prolCSt. but attempt toe.pose Lcutchcr's
Miu.en by tJ:onlon Glenn 10 be very int.ctestina. Thi• movie
NadrevlslonlstpuL
Where lhls incident differed from I.he traditional campus wasbyrarlhtbestmovic l sawallyev. 'nlemovlcwas
dissent Is 1h11 It was Initiated by faculty members and not the tnlCRainin&.and inrormativc. and it give me more of I sense
or who Malcolm X was and wlut he stood for than I ever had
SQ.ldcnt.s. 1bc student leaders on hmd were ~ more as
before. OYcnb. it wu dd'u\ildy worth my S6.7,.
obscrvcrsthanproctstcrs. lbclrxtion5 after
were more

fortitudc.lltakesanlncrcdibleamountofoouragetostcpoulside

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

lhcacccpccd nonnsofsociety and take on the unpopular main•

Academy didn t snub
Malcolm X, Spike Lee

the fact

ldono11gecwilh0ordonh0wcva. lthinkthcAcadtmy

of ronvcyers of 5tUdc:nt frustration. but gained no conccssioos Awanbatemotepoliticalthanlhcyareracist. Spi.kcl.cclw:

from~univcrsity.
1 tuMy wayq{mak:in1thcpcoplcaroundhimveryangry. I
1bc administration. even before lhi protest was over, took it saw numaou.a IClevilion inlemcws wilh M,. Lee. before and
upori itsdflO amoww:e its support for the student's privilege to af\cr the rdcale ·or his mov:ic. in whkh he slammed the
freedom of c•_presslon. lhus quelling any futthcrdcbale conccm• prodUCO'land the motion pict~company that helped mike
ot
ing the approprlatc forms of speech or the roJc and ~poMlbili• "'X- C not 1ivln1 him cnouah money and support The
tics IO thcgrcatusoclcty. (Note.on a private campus, speech Is probicm wi th the Academy AwardJ is th:1111'1 the producers
and the motion picture companies 1h41 vote to nominate
• privilege and not a righL)
Wilh a Occtlng aJJ.mpsc, the only group IO remember the. people rot lhe awards, Spike Lee is 11ru1film ,mllcr and
a smart hwincssman. but lfhe wants to win Academy AwardJ
LcutchcroontrovcB)' were the people al the heart of the maucr, hehutolhutupandkthismovicdothcwtina. Thllye.ar's
the Oiminolo1Y Cub. When they au.empted to ucp this ISS\le 1wudswiUbenodiffCfflltthanb.sl.whcrethcmostpopular
and lbelrcrcdibUlty at the forefronl of the community ·s lltcnllon movicalC(allthcawards. "X-isnoltomccutcsyfunmovic
b y ~ ano1h" dtbale on lhc doalh P=il)', lwdly lhltmakcayoawwmallover. "X-matcsyouthlnk. M
X-ll
111yonel00k notice.
a twd movie. MX"llnot MHow1111'1EM!Mor "UnfotJivet1M.
We SMU!d herald the Lcadcrship and ronviction or lhcsc
dilrmnt, tca1c,1-that some
lbdftlcadcn: ll MIT, UMASS/AmherSl. and lhc Ohninology
Whal: I'm tryul110ay, Gordon, ll 1h11 lrMxM
taught me
0Db for taking an unpopular posldon and brc&klng from thc
abou1Malcoba'1 lifelftd wbathcttood C whatclsccoukl
ot.



--

sua:ecd.
Although the role of women has changed dramatically over the past 50
years, the thought that women belong at home with the kids and not in the
worlq,lace prevails. Women arc taking on m o r e ~ than ever by
working while managing a household and caring for their children, their
efforts often go without rcc'ognif.ion. Women a,c still deemed inferior by a
society wtuch refuses to recognize their needs, goals aqd indcpcndc:ncc. ·
While previous first ladies conformed to the politically correct sreteotype
of the happy housewife, Hillary Clinton is ?>urage.ous enough to fight the
political pressure to conform to.such standards.
She is a highly intelligent woman who will make a huge difference in the
shaping or our country in these difficult times.
However, Hillary Clintoo is not only a political figure, but also• symbol
of the working woman, a true 90'1 woman. Regardless of her politicaJ
views, she represents the millions of working women in this country, as
well as the multitude of female students who wish to better themselves by
attending college. She is a positive role model for yo~g girls who a,c
uncertain about their goals. Her .su,;ccss in her can:cr is an inspiration to

=n_:c=-~;;'

-

We here M SUffolt can only hope lhc rcsa or our "stuclc:nt SpikcLccukb'l lthou&htthatwulhcrcaonhcmlldc"X-,
lfSpikc'1 In the bulincu only 10 win awards, hcahould quit
leaded." bodaprac1'1Candfututc,havethesamcconvictlonwhen
tM·dlleCIOIDCI IO stand up forlhc rilhb orlhc SlUdcnc body and
Jim Behrle

By making disparaging comments abou1 lhe firsl lady, we npt only insult
her integrity, but also the integrity of alJ American women.
wt)ch a pcnon makes a degrading remark about the first lady, it shows
. that person's iplC:nnoc and his attitudes toward women in &cncnl.
It hls become quite obvious lhac the gcncnl public is amid of women
with intdlig,cnce .who arc in a position t o ~ impottant ~
Women make up a majority of the populllioo, yec we are treated u
minoritica. Such inscnsitlvity and ip,oranoc is uncaUcd for. Gmdcr roles
• arc not u cleady•
dcfincd at they were SO years ago. Women have p\adc

- - mgahili,g accepunce ,pd egua!ity, bul WO Sliil have a
long wa~ to.&~·

Wcdnclday, Man:h 2A,

1
:,,,

The. Suffolk Journal

"Hillary Bashing"
Degrads All Women
\ 11 d1, ., l!11111pl

l'LJIYI'E OJ' TJliE, 'WE'E9(
... 't get any more out of us.
don
We're state workers!"
' rwo natt worku-s movin1 a public addrtu
Tltty stood 11P aNi said o few word,. Wht-11
vhntspassingbyclapptd,tliq rupanthdwirli

tiers to the Editor
:iaµiote of thanks
I

1llke to.thank Joe Cawley. GOOuatc: Assistant
dent Actlvltlcs Office, for all the help he tw
ln planning both the Family Program and lhc
i '. of. the AIDS Quill.
, spent countless hours assisting me and he
: acknoledged and congradulaled for all lhc

wdonc.
llw\lu, Joel

Program Council

demy didn't snub
colm X, Spike Lee
llhecommml:lry about Spike Lce'1 "'Mlllcolm X'"
Gordon Glen n to be very intcrc.sting. ThiJ movie
r lhe bes! movie I saw all year. The movie was
llJand Informative.and it save me mo~of a sense
lloolmX wuand.,.hathcstood forlhan l ever tud

rveni.J, it WU definildy worth my $6.75.
lagrtewith Gmdonho.-cYU. lthink theAcadcmy
l:morcpoliticalthanthcyareracilt. Spi.kel..cehas

1y ofmati.n1lhepcoplcaroundhimvcryangry. I
t0ui 1Cleviaoninlcmcw,withMr.Lcc,bcf0rCand
rdcaseoJhis movie, in ,vhich hc slammed the

,and the moc1on picture company that helped make
OI 1ivin1 him enough money Ind support The ,
ritbtheAcadan y Aw.i.rdsisthai il"s the producers
IIOlion pictun: companies UW voce to nominacc
r ~ awanis. Spike Lee is a grca1 film -m3kcr and
J incaman, but ifhe wanu to win Acadcm y Awards
:hut upandkthis mov.Cdo the talling. Thisyear'1
ill bcnodirrera,1 than Wt, who-e the most poput111
;t all the awards...Ai.!notsomecutcsy fun mOvie
• you warm all over. " A makes you think. "'X" is
Nie. "A is no1 " Howanl'1 End" or "Unforgiven",
de IOffldhin& very different, somelhing that some

-~don'tlike.
r m iryfn, IOay,Oordon, is that if "X'" taught me
Jco1m' 1 lifeand,vhathc 1tood for, ,vhatc bccould
:ut(ol'1 1tbou,tll lhatwuthereuon hcmadc"X".
1ln the busineu only 10 win awards, he should quit

-

Jim Behrle

Hill;ary Clinton has demonstrated that she will not fulfill the role of the
- terco<ypica1 "first lady." She will be a key figurehead in the political
s
refc;,rms that will hopefully take place over the hext four years.
However, her promises to be actively involved in the process of these
reforins have not been welcomed by many Americans. Disparaging re.
marks have been made regarding her feminist views and her interest in the
government. She has be.en criticii.cd for her choice 10 wo'1t after the birth of
her daughter and vocing of her opinions. Although she is one of the best
lawyers in the counuy, the genera] public seems to doubt her ability to
succud.
Although the role of women has changed dramatically over the: piw SO
years, the thought that women belong at home with the kids and not in the
worlcplacc prevails. Women arc taking on more responsibility than ever by
working while managing a household and caring for their childral, their
effort's often go without recognition. Women are still deemed inferior by a
society which refuses to recognize their needs, goals and indcpcndc:ncc.
While previous fim ladies conformed to the politicaUy correct saen:otype
of the happy housewife. Hillary Clinton is courageous enough to fight the
political pressure 10 c.onfonn to such standards.
She is a highly intelligent woman who will make a huge diffcrcncc in the
shaping of our country in these difficult times.
However, Hillary Clinton is f\0t only a political figure, but also a symbol
of the working woman, a true 90's woman. Regardless of her political
views, she rcpr:esents the millions of working women in th.is country, as
well as the multitude of female students wtio wish 1 better themselves by
9
attending college. She is a positive role mode\ for young girls who are
uncertain about their goals. Her success in her ~er is an inspiration to
rrtOSlwomen.
By making disparaging comments about the firs1 lady, we no1,only insult
her inWgrity, but also the integrity of all American women.
When a person makes a degrading remark abou1the first Lady, it shows
th!',1 pcrsori's ignorance and his attitudes toward women in general
h 1w become quite obvious that the general public is afraid of w ~ •
with intcllip,ce who arc in a position 10 make important dccls!onsWomcn make up a majority of the population, yet we are treated u
minorities. Such insensitivity and isnorance is uncalled few. Gam roles
are not as clearly defined as they were S0~1r1,o.'womai·ha~ made
tremendous strides in pining acc:eptance ari'd eqt.iality, bul: we still have a
long wa~ to_
s~-

0

CL

s

A

Wednesday, Mlldl 24, 1993

10

"Hillary Bashing"
Degrads All Women
\nd11 ,1 l!11111pl
Hillary Clinton has demonstrated lha1 ~ will no1 fulfill the role of 1hc
S1erw1ypical .. firs1 lady. She will be a key figurehead in the politica1
reforms that will hopefully take place over the hexl four ycan;,
However, her promises 10 be actively involved in lhe process of 1hese
reforms have not been welcomed by many Americans. Disparaging remarks have been made regarding her feminist views and her interest in the
government. She has been criticized for her choice 10 work after the birth of
her d~tcr and voting of her opinions. Although she is one of the bc5I
lawyers in lhc country, the general public seems 10 doubl her ability 10
M

sua=I.
Although lhc role of women hos changed dramatically over the pa.st 50
years, the lhought lha.t women belong at home with_ kids and not in the
the
workplace prevails. Women arc 1aking on more responsibility than ever by
working while managing a household and caring for !heir children, their
efforts oflco go without recognition. Women ~ still deemed inferior by a
socie1y Which refuses 10 rccogni7..e their needs, goals and indcpcnd:ence.
While prcviou., first ladies conformed 10 the politicaUy correct stereotype
of lhe happy housewife. Hillary Clin1on is courageous enough 1 fight the
0
political p ~ 10 confonn 10 such standards.
She is a highly intelligent woman who will make a huge difference in the
shaping of our country in these difficult times.
However, Hillary Clinton is not only a polilical figure. bu1 also a symbol
of lhe working woman, a true 90's woman. Regardless of her political
views, she represents the millions of working women in this country. as
weU as lhc multitude of female students who wish 10 bcner !hem.selves by
attending college. She is a positive role model for young girls who~
wtcertain about their goals. Her success in her career is an inspiration to
most women.
By making disparaging comments abom the fo~t lady. we no1 only insult
her integrity, bu1 also the in1cgrity of all American women .
'
When a person makes a dcgnding remark about the first lady. it shows
lhat pclSOn 's ignO!B"CC and his attitudes tow~ women in general.
II has become qu.iie obvious Iha! lhc genCl1ll public i., afraid of women
wilh intelligence who are in a position 10 make important decisions:Women make up amajorityoflhepopuJation, yet we are treated u
minorities. Such insensitivity and i&Jlorsnoe is uncalled for. Gender roles
are nOI as clearly defined as they were 50 years ago. Women have made
ttemcndous strides in pining acceptance and equality, but we still have a
l?"g wa~ '°.I~·

omestic vio;ence arc ram ant in our socic

issues resu.11from the idea that a woman's place is in the
aubservient to her husband.
· ~ such u HilJary Clin1on may have the potential to
some oftl\CSC atti~ regarding gender rola in o u r ~buhing"" not only degrades our first lady, bit it degrades
These lllti
in order for women 10 ·

lbc~(

lbc. SufroJk Journal

'

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Commencement Ushers
To Assist With
Law School Commencement
8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
and/or
CLAS/SOM Commencement
12:00-4:00 p.m.
SUNDAY, MAY 30, 1993
WANG CENTER FOR
THE PERFORMING

ARTS
Sign-Up in the Student
Activities -Office A.S.A.P.
-H----------------+-

)

Th
~DI

wit

rec
·tht

s

Boston Fue Departmerit extinqush a fue in a officlc building on
Beacon Street on March 12.
Lawrtnct WaJsJt/l011rf14! Stoff

Building from page/
SUffolk because they did not "-'Cdvc a
waiverforftllngancnvlrom:iental im•
pact study on the dc$truCtlon or' the
building.
Brian De.lory,dlrcctorofthe Bosu>n
Redevelopment Authority, said the
hurdle gaining permission for demOll•
lion has been o v ~ and now Suf•
· folk can move forward with the pur•
chase and construction.
Among theconcem.tofmany in the
local down&own area ii Suffolk: tearing
down the buUd.lng Jndkaving a vacant
lot for an exLCnded period of lime.
Apartofthe&ppro\latror~molli.Jon
is a requin:menl that Suffolk must negodalC an agreeme:nt wilh ~ M¥51·
chusctts Historic Commission as to
what will happen if mnsbUcdon docs
noc proceed on a specified time frame.
_w c ,,
vew
location of Suffolk Law School on
Tremont StJtet u a major P.art or the
rev.ilalludonofthcarea.has~dthatlf
- Suffolk does not begin constnaction
wilh 15 monlhs of <lemolltion. It may
impJSC financial penalties against the
unlvCBily.
Dcloty said the fines, lf ~ . ~
only a developmenl mcdwusm de·
ligncd to teq, thenew ~ o n on
.a progressive x:hcdule,
Suffolkhasbeenncgoti-1n,forseveralmonthsfor theaoqufsltionofpro~
· trty with Ill current ownen, Olyrhpia
& York, a world-wide devdopmcnt
· company which is in dire financial
SIBiU. •
Since the announcement that negotiations bqan, local preservationists
have opposed the dtstN:ctiOn of the
• TrtmontStreetpropenyandhavelobbiedforSulfolklOrehabillWCthepro~
erty.
AntonlaPollack,oftheBostonPres•
ervadon Alliance, Wd she was dlsappoinledbythcdedsion,butwashappy
Suffolk •arced to construct the new
Wildin& tn a timdy fashion.
The puervaUon alliance tw been
flghling.topuerveseveralDownlOwn
Crosslngbulldings,andto,savethearei
from new-pa,ting lots. Pollac.k com•
.mc:nledthatthclotsdonotcontributeto

the growth of the dlsu:la and act as a
brttdlng ground for criminal activity.
Pollack--.sakl she ~cvcd that Suf•
folk ·w gone through the proper

pro-

cess andtbat\hcnewbuildingwill~
tiaveadetrimcntl;llmpactontheareaa.,
demolition of Other buildings will.
. ''This.is unique site because there
will be a building to replace the tw!d·
ing being tom down." said Pollack.
Last weclc, the Boslon Globe re•
ported the new buildina will cost.Sµffolk $60 million to build. David J.
Sargent, ~dent of Suffolk, 101 the
4
Suffolk Journal last semester the new
building would cost somewhel'C be·
tWCCll $35 mllllon 10 $40 million, bul

a

Re1

"

Jow
men

:hUu

en ,

Se<
• ofc
clig

Spc
. dia
•~SRIC(I nee , year
na
acquire the WomCf!_'s Oty Cub build•
Ing on Beacon Stn:et fell through.
Paying $7.2 million dollan for the
Beacon, Hlll man.,lon, Suffolk had
planned to open an aiumnJ association
. ~ t y and move Its admirustntivc
office., Into the buUding.
Theuniversltybackedoutofthedeal
when SCVeralprescrvationiJt and communil)' groOps opposed Suffolk's expansion Into the residential side or" the
hill.
LastSeplcmber,Su.ffolkmadeabond
Issuing of S32.91 mlllion. Nearty $20
milllonofthclssuingwc:ntto refUW"IC•
ing of the bonds used for the purchase
of the Student Activ,lt.ies Buildina: and
theconslruct.iOJloftheRidgewayBulld·
ing. 1bc remaining funds will have
been eannaited for the acquisition of
additional property, namely· the
Tremont Street sites.
Sargent told the Journal fn an Inter•
view last semester tha1 Suffollr. would
be applying for federal gnnu, launch a
capif:llcampalgn,IPdusebondlssuing
IO raise money for the construct.ion of
the new law school.
Additionally, SarJent said, any cos1
accrued by the acqulsldon and COO·
structlon of the new law school bulld·
ing would be burdened by the law
·school

edit

vai

, Be:
f

me,
mi~
sub:

Be
_I
. lllCI

wil
, .age

10

lbe SlaflJlt Joamal

The Swfollr.jow1
n!Li:

W~y. Mardi 2,4, 1993

Everybody Deserves.A
Little Attention!

Wanted!
Commelicemenr Ushers
To Assist With
Law School Commencement
8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
and/or
CLAS/SOM Commencement
12:00-4:00 p.m.

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 ever

SUNDAY, MAY 30, 1993
WANG CENTER FOR
THE PERFORMING
ARTS

Sign-Up in the Student
Activities Office A.S.A.P.

Boston F"U'C Department extinqwh a fU'C in a off°Lce building on
Beacon Street on March 12.
un,,r,,.u W"f1'1lovrt1al Staff

Suffolk Journal Excellence Awards-

Building from pa,, I
Suffolk because they did not ~ve a the growth of the district and act as a
waiver for ·filing an envlronmcnlal Im• brt:edlng ground rorcriminal activity.
Pollack said she bellcved that Suf•
pact study on the de$Wetlon of the
folk has gone through the proper pn>buildlnJI.
Brian Dclory. dircc10rofthe Boston ccu and that the new building will not
Redevelopment AulhorlJy, said the haveadetrimcruallmpaclonthearcaas
hurdle galnlng pcnnlsslon for demoli- demolition or other buildings will.
'"This is a wnique s1~·beause there
tion has been overcqme and rioW Suffolk can move forward with the pur• will be a building to replace the building being tom down,'" said Pollack.."
chase and construction.
Last wc:ck, the Boston Globe rt:·
Among the concerns of many in the
local downlOwn an:a is Suffolk tearin& poncd the new building will costSµrdown the building and leaving a vacant folk $60 million to build. David I .
Saraent. p~dens of Suffolk. told the
lot for an extenixd period of lime.
Apartoftheapprovalfordcmolilion Suffolk Journal last ~eskr the new
is a ~irt:mClll th.al Suffolk must ne- bulkllng1~uJd cost somewhcrc begotiate an agrttment with the Massa- tween $35 million to $40 million. but
chusetts Hlstorlc Commission as lO no firm figures have been made.
Suffolkha.sbcensearchlng fo r addiwhal will happen If consuuction docs
not proceed on a specified time frame. tional property for dus.room and or-

.

.

locaUon of Suffolk Law School on
Trt:monl Slrcel

1cespacc

yc.ar

a

acquire the Women's Oty C uti build·

u a major part or the Ing on Beacon Street fell through.

Paying $7.2 million dollars for the
Beacon Hill mansion, Suffolk had
planned to open an alumni usoclllion
faclllty and move hs atlmlnistrative
university.
offices ln10 the building.
Dclory said the fines, lf used, arc
Theunivcrsitybactcdoutofthedeal
only a development medwusm de- when several prcscrvadonisa and comsigned to keep the new ronstrucdon on munity groups opposed Suffolk's exa progressive schedule,
pan,lon lnlO the ~dcnl1al side of the
Suffo~ha.s bcenncgoli~lng for sev- hill.
Last Scpcembcr. Suffolk made a bond
eral months for ~ acquisition of pro~
erty with Ill CWTalt owners. Olympia l!SUlng of '1'2.9 million. Nearly $20
& York. a world-wide development millionofthe lssuingwcntto rt:fuwlci::ompany which ls In din: financial
revilallulionofthearca,twsaidlhatlf

Suffolk does not begin c:onswcdon
wi th 15 months of dc:molltlon. It may
Impose ftnanclal penalties against the

straits.
'
Since the announcement that ncgotiations bepn, local prac:rvationlsu

have opposed the dcsltu;ction or the
Tremont Strt:et property and have lobbied forSutrolktort:habilllaletheproperty.
Anlonla Pollack. of the Boston Preservation Alliance. said she WU dlsappoinled by the decision, but WU happy
Suffolk agrcc:_s1--1o construct the new
buUdlng ln a timely fashion.
The pn:scrvation alliance has been
iight.lng&oprcscrvescvera!Downtown
Crossing buildings, and IO save the area
from new pa,ting lots. Pollaci. com-

:r'i::~=li::n~~

theconstructionoftheRidgcway Bulldlng. The remaining funds· will have
been urmaikcd for the acqulsition of
a~ditional property, namely the
Tremont Street sites.
Sargent told the Journal in an interview last semester that Suffolk would
be appying for federal grants. launch a
capltalcampalan, and use bond issuing
10 raise. money for the construction of
the new law school.
Additionally. sarxeni said, any cos1
accrued by the acqulsldon and consuuctJon of the new IJw school buildIng would be burdened by the law

mcntedthatlhc lotsdonotcontribute lO school.

Nominate our staff and sections in the following categories:
Reporter of the Year:

Best Sports Story

of:JC::~
:;

.

urn; .

.

sto
For the most significant and outstanding contribution to the Suffolk
Fo~ singl~ ~s~ sports ryi
the
Suffolk 10
.
.staff
Journal in reporting news, fea tures, specialities, editorials and com- ~~bc;:i~co~ncd~ n~portct or ~ u ~ po~sec~on. lnllCI'
mentarics, and sporu. This award is based on'the number o(contri- ;
b. ~
Y accuracy. sty e,a comprc nsivecoverage
bu lions, writing style, accuracy, and assistance given to other reportsu !}CC
ers and editors.

:;the

Best Specialltles Story

.

ForthesiriglcbCsupccWtiesltory&omanyofthc Sutrolk Joumal'1
specialties or spcciil interest. sections. writ~n by a Journal staff
For the most outstanding section of the Suffolk Journal in the areas rc:poncr,contributingreportcr,orspccialtothcJouma.t:Wmncrwillboof coverage, page design, accuracy. style and.organization. Sections
detcrmincd by the accuracy, style, and comprehensive coverage of lhc
eligible ror consideration are News, Lifestyles. Sports, Editorial, subject.
S~itics, Campus Spotlight, Nubian Record, Business Page, Media Careers, International Exchange, Al~mativc Ure, Voices or

Sectlon of the Y
ear:

editor and the staff of the section. The SGA special election page and
For the best opinion co}umn, commentaJ)', or editorial by a o
Valentine's Day page are ineligible for this award.
staff writer or Suffolk student Nomipations will be considered on tha
1
. basis of reader's response. 6ominator's convncnts, clarity..._ subject

.
~ =~~a~es:;~~Y~:::nJ,:: raculty; staff, llnd non-Suffolk
For the single bes~ news story wnt~n by a S~ffolk J?umal staff j
, member or conlributmg reporter for the year. Wmncr will be detcr• t
.
/
· mined by the accuracy, style, and comprehensive coverage or 1he Best Photograph
Best News Story

~~=~::

subject.

. uti:;~~:=: ~~~:!s~i~~:j:::ob~:t:nalws::
: to a coacspond.ing story (if any), quality of the print, and·appeannce.
, Certain file photos, public relations photos, rn»lance photos. wire
For the single best fea ture story wnttcn ~ya Suffolk ~oumal.Slaff ·1/photos, and photos appearing in the Voices.of Suffolk are ineligible.
member or contributing report.er for the Lifestyles section. Wanner
will be determined by the accuracy, style, and comprehensive ccivcr• ,
age of the subjcc~


Best Lifestyles Story

.

Quotnif the Year
For the best "Quote of the Week," as judged by our reancrs.
determined by the most nominations received. The top ~quotes
will be named as nominees. Quotes from stories, commentaries, or
entries with the nomination process which did not appear in the
M
Quote of the Wed/' arc ineligible.

Nomination forms will be available March ;25 at the Student Activities Office and the
.Suffolk Journal office.Nominations ·s hould'include the reporter's and section's name,
story headlines, specific examples of their work, and the date the story appeared in
th·e paper. Awards will be given .at th~ Suffolk Journal Excellence Awards _ eremony,
C
• time and date to be announced. Nominations will be accepted until April 16.
.

.

.

'

12

Wednesday, March 24. 1993

1bc Suffolk Journal .

Wednesday, Much 24, 1993

SOM J,ompag, / - - - - - - - - -

"More than three million women have been battered each year
by their husbands or boyfriends and I ,500 more have been
murdered. Every I 5 ,econdsa women is battered and every hour
240 women will be battered."

Domestic violence: a crime not to be ignored
Domcstlcvlolcncc Is not acrime that
should be kept behind dosed doors,
although IOfflC may disagree. ll Is a
nadonal problem that needs to be rttogniz,cd more by the federal and st.ale
govcmrncntas wd1 as the community.
Not as a crime of dnJI or alcohol abuse
or a.s n.pc. bul as lhc crime of domestic
violence.
According IO lhc National: Crime
Survey. men commit 95 percent of alJ
assaults against lhclr spouses. Wire
battering. which results in more medical injury than ra pe, ls defined a.saman
trying to gainconlIOI by usingphysical
force on his partner. More lhan onethird of• alJ women tn:ated in emergency rooms were there a.s a result of
domcsUc violence.
M<nthan~millionwomcnhave
been battered each year by their husbands or boyfriends and 1.500 more
havebocn murdered. Every 15seconds
awomcn isbaltcrcdandcvcryhour 240
women will bcba1tcrcd. This abuse not
only arrect the women, but it also affects their children. thus will inOucncc
futurc socialpa.uems.
1be number of children ,..,;incssing

It b the mb.slon

By Cheryl Curtis
A Commentary
domestic violence each year is 3.3 milllon. Oncofthcprimerusons a woman
will not leave an abusive man Is because of lhc children. There is a threat
that If she leaves the abusive rt:lalionship, the childrt:n may be taken away
from her or harmed lhcmselves.
In an abusive home, lhe mother can
become unstable and unable to cart: for
the children. Without lhc proper counseling or support. childrt:n may tum to
drugs, get involved with the wrong in
ganp, perform poorty in school, and
dcvelopobnoxious auitudes just to draw
ancntion.
This may seem only like a threat lO
the family but in the. long run it is 3
lhreat to socic1y because the dcceriora•
tion of \he famil y structurt: impacts all
of society. not just the panicular family.
A s1udy done by a California state
prison found that 93 percent of lhc
women who killed their panner had
been bittered by lhem. Ou1 of lhe 93

£nd the Jntennon

percent. 67 percent said they dkl it to
protect their children.
Eachycar40pc~tofabusivefamilics UC turned down by shc.llCl'S due 10
lack of sp.tee. So where do they tum?
To the st.rccts7 Whal effects does this
kaveonthe children?
'The Massachusetts Coalition for
BancredWomenServiceGroup inBoston says. the state shOuld make getting
a rcstrainingorderan easlcrproccssand
lhe restraining otdcrshould becnfon:cd.
This could al Jcas1 keep the abuser away
on a temporary basis.
Also lhe federa l and state government need to trelldomestic violence as
ahulthandsocial issue. There Isa need
to educa1e judges of the imporuncc of
lhls issue so that women can get Imme•
dia1e responses to their problem .
WomenshOuld be infom1ed 1f theirexhusband or ex-boyfriend Is belng re •
leased from prison.
More money should be alloca1ed by
the slalC 10 provide more shclicrsi,pacc

and ttcabnent facilities. ln\ 1914 there
were no shelters, no community acknowledgment or any laws to proLCa
women against domestic violence. Today, there arc 1.400 shelters and mort:
than 2,CXX>programs lOeduclitc women.
chlldrt:n, and society about domestic
society. lberc has been progress over
the years but more isnccclcd. especially
in tenns of funding.
Money could be used for low-in•
come and affordable housing or mort:
emergencyshclten:.Olildsuppon laws
could be enfon:c more stringently if a
women docs get lhc cour,gc to leave.
Health care could be provided for the
woman and her children.
By lhc time you have read this an
average of 16 women have been battered. This needs to come to an cod.
If you would like furthe r information regarding domestic violence or
would like to help, call the Mass Coalition for Baltcrt:d Women Service
Group in Boston :u (617) 426-8492 or
Casa Myrna Vasquet. (6 17) 262-9381 .
Cheryl Curtis is~ comrib1uing
rrporrer ro thr Suffolk Journal.

I C4C
of the lnten:ultural Aff'.alrs CommlttN: to,

• Add to-the Sutlvlk communNy's .aw.m:nes,s .and .tpp,'Cd,ttton of Its muttH.ac.cted 1n1em.attoNI dimensions

• Conb1bute to the loc..al communtty·s ~ - - ol the realities ol .an lncrc.ulngty lnrerdependent world .u ,dccted tn

Many schools like MIT and
Harvard publish extensive, detailed
evaluations of their faculty and
Suffolk should at least make
the evaluations accessible.
anyway.
sist.am al the Mi ldred F. Saw.
Brigg s said that many yerlibrary,saidthatnotmany
schools like MIT.and Harvard SOM srudcnts have checked
publish e:.:1ensivc. decailcd ou1 the evaluations and feels
evaluationsofthc.irfacultyand that unawmncss of avallabll•
thal Suffolk shou ld at least i1y may be a factor.
make the evaluations acccsKen DiBlasi, junior. marslbl:e.
keting. said he knows that the
He feels that by making the evaJuatiOns art: now avallable.
infonnatlon available. faculty but docs not think many SI\I•
wtll strive to improve their dents will t.akc advan1.age or
teaching methods. 'illcrc is them . " I think it 's mort: word
nothing like measuring to im• of mouth that detennines how
prove quallty.'}ltt-.sald, "be- they will choose their classes.
cau.scmcasuremolivates."
I think the teachers will be

College Pres Service
Students reccritly found a
swastika and graffiti on a wall
in aHarvudUnlversity'donnltory where scvenl Jewish SlU dcnts live, lhe Harvard Oimson reported.
Abigail s. Kolodny . a
sophomorcwMdlscovcrcdthc

~

Nomination for lntercultural lnltlatlw flwcirds
Suffolk University's lnterCuJtural Affairs Committee (ICAC) Is soliciting nom inations for our lntercultural Initiative Awards.
The three ategortes of recipients are: student; faculty. staff or administrate~ and alumnus or alumna.
Crtterta for nominations lndude, but are not llmlted to, the following : Initiative kl the development of lntercultural
programs, leadershlp and presentations In the community, participation In International and lntercultural acttvltlcs
sensitivity to cultu ral diversity, and encouragement of harmony, respect and undetstandlng among people'.
'

1992 Aw.m::t recipients: , James (!lrtstlan, da.s.s o f 1993 ; Paul ·Korn. Profes.so( of ~ o g y Services; Sharon Lee,
MEd. 1987; Pat Walsh, Special Rccognltton Award.
·
·



199 1 Award rec.lp le.llts: Rachelle M. Tayag, da..ss of 1992: Judith Dushku, As.soc.late Professor, Government
Department, Suffolk Unrverslty: and Robert W . Ward, JD78, Assistant Professor, New England School of Law.

1990 Award rcdptents: NJcolc Alexander, cJa..ss of 1992: Valerie C. Epps, PTofes.sor of Law. Suffolk Law School;
and Nora.I L. Toney. MEd88, Teacher; David A . EJlls School . Roxbury.
The awards will be presented at the lnterCultwaJ lnltlattve Award Recep tion on Monday, April 26, 1993, In the Vice•
Preskjent's Conte~ Room. One Beacon Street, 25th noor, starting at 3:30 p .m . / ~

In lhe bltematlOnal Student Office Ridgeway Building, 3rd Hoor, telephone number

ccedcd in making evaluations . thing else."
public in SOM. the issue of
Brigg.s said that the availwhclher CLAS will follow abilityoftheev aJuationshaslO
their lead Is now the question. be made mort: widely known.
Briggs said thal some SOM butsaysheisverye,;citedth3t
raculty members and himself Suffolk has started making ac.
arc c:onccmed about lhe qua!- cessibility IO evaluations an
ity of a.AS courses and feel issue on campus.
they should be made acces-

McNaught to wed Volpini
Anomey and Mrs. Stephen
R McNaughlofStondwo arc
pleased to announce the engagement of their dau1hter
Jcannlnc Renee to,.John D.
Volpinl Jr., son of Mr, and
Mn. John 0 . Volpinl Sr. of

Saugus.
Jeannlne.

1989 graduate
ofOlrla Call,olk: High School
inMIJden.ll.amcmbcrofthc
Arcbtr Fellows Hon:,r Society
at Suffolk university. She will
sndualc thls spring with a
major in O>mmunk:ations and
a m..lnor In Public PoUcy and
Adm!nbtndoo. Jcannlne will
attend Suffolk University Law
School In the fall
Jc:llnlla1917gradu&lcof
Saugu llighSchool ... sr""·

Students, RELAX!
ALL SCHOOL PAPERS
PROFESSIONALLY TYPED INTO WORD PROCESSSOR
SPELLING CHECKED
QUICK TURNAROUND
OUTPUT ON LASER PRINTER
CALL DEENA
(S08) 788-1700 • FRAMINGHAM
LOCATED l...aS 1llAN 5 MINS. FROM RTE. 30 & SPEEN ST. JNTERSECnONS
ON YOUR WAY 10 nm MALL. DROP OFF YOUR PAPER

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I

GetioC-Sawcesfwdetals.
IICd from Sak:m SweCoUqe
in 1992. He is associaccd with
Metropolitan Life lnsul'UICC

Company as an ACCOWU Rcprese,nWive in Medford.
A June. 1995,......., II

,.........

13

vandalism, told the paper she offic!alssaldlhcrcwuapoul•
wu ~deeply offended" by the bility that non-students were
acL KQk>dny, who Is Jewish, responsiblcJor the lncldcnL
said Others In her dorm were
Ac.cording lO the. Oimson,
slmllady lmrriflcd.
several swasliku appcattd .In
The incident was under ln- theelcvuorofanothcrrcsidcnvcstlgltion by the Harvard po- tial building In Noveapbcr,
lice. 8eclu5e Lowell House promptina:lludtnlslOn:tpOnd
was open to ouUidcrs for a Ith a wrlttcnpctitioncondemn-R:Ce1U opera and other CVenlS, lng lhc lCt.

the Sulfolk Com~un)'Y

• P"1l'V1dc support to the lrltemattoMI members of the Suffolk UnNen.lty c.ommuntty

:;,;~~=:.-~~ovalloble

By making syllabus's eas- siblcaswell.
ily accessible. Briggs said lhat
He said because half of the
thequality ofthcm will be en- courses that his students ~
hanced. Ellpccwiol\l, objec- rt:quired to take are in a..AS.
tives and week-by-week as- he feels that he should be ab~
signments wUl be of better IOadvischisstudcntsoncourse
quality If faculty members andprorcssorselectlon. Withknowlhcy will bcreviewcd,he out the availability of evalua-""tiol'LI, he said he can not ad·
Copies of syllabus's arc equately advise his stoldcnts
available In the Dean 's office, because he hlLS nothing as a
but by including them with lhe basis of evaluation.
cvalu.atlons, they arc easier for
He said he Is concerned for
swdcnts IO access.
his students and whether or not
Accord.Ing to Briggs, skep- they arc getting their money 's
tics of making lhc evaluations worth and thinks it Is unfair to
student accc.ssible rcu. why thc5ll.ldcntsnotl0haveacccss
potentially embarrass them- IO such evaluations.
selves when students probably
Vicki M . Ford, library aswould not care or use them

The Suffolk Journal

Swastika found in Harvard dormitory

THE GENIUS Of

R.VOIIUTY"'

eor,or..~i-..m~~Cldoa.MAm121,11 • . . . - ~ ; . . . , , ..

Wcdnc.wy, Mateh 24. 1993

The Suffolk Joumal

13

ka found in Harvard dormitory
~

vandalism, told the paper she officlalssaldtherewuapoulwas ~
deeply offendcdRby the billty that non-swdcnts were
ccntly found a act. Kolodny, whO is Jewish, resporu;ible for the incident.
;raffidonawall said others In her dorm were
According 10 ·the Crimson.
IUvCrsftydorml~ sim ilarly hOrrificd.
several swastikas appeared in
The lncldem was unde r in• the elevatorof aoother residenera!Jewlshstu·
HuvardOim- vcstiglUon by the Harvard po· tla I building in November,
lice. Because Lowen House promptlngstudcnts&orcsponcl
. Kolodny, a was open 10 outsiden for a lthawritteopctitJoncondcmnodiscovercdthe rcccru opera and other events. lng the act

Tbc~loun\al:

J:

1

<'

W~y.Mll'Ch2Ail91>3 tl

. --"-~
You_.......,_"'_""

1111:1

AIDS 101 - GET THE FACTS

-...~-----~
•---~
lhlnday, Apt 1, 1993

By Lomlnc M.K. Palmer

-386,1:00p.m.

Joum.al StaJJ

woold be benclicial Ir a.AS
provided the same opportunity
forlhcm .

Now that the School of
Management has students

biology, said " It's better to get
an overall opinion or what 1

....... _ _ . . ...... tabitlg:

e. Tlwsi-,mdHV-Aldo • TheFacta

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SPRING '93
Lowell Lecture Series
'Etfucatwn at tlu Crossroads
WEDNESDAY, Relighting the Candle of
. Emlltnce Ac'flMARCH31
America
4:00P.M.

rr-t- - - - --MARYA.COLLINS
Founder, Westside
Prepartory School,
author; subject of movie
"The Marva Collins
Story"

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Ronayne to seek faculty interest
in _
r~fease of prof. evaluations

WEDNESDAY,
APRILl4

4:00P.M:

The Case/or
Structural Reform
Through Private
Innovation
BENNO SCHMIDT
ChiefExecutive'
Officer, The Edison
. Project; former
President of Yale
University

Amy Hanncu. sophomore,

many different opinions, be·
cause certain studmlS like different kinds of prorcssors: ·
Nelda Valeri, junior, elemcn1ary education, said she
wouJd dcftnatdy take advan•
1.1ge or lhe opportunity or student access to facully evaluations.
11\C overall reactions of
years ago. members or SGA a.AS studenlS 10 this ls.sue
went lnl.o the classrooms and
was that ii would be a good
did their own courx and pro- Idea and Yr'OU.ld help them defcuorevaluatlons. Thcprojccl !Cnnlnc what professors would
wu called "Of Course," and best for lhcm as individuals to
the resu1ts were published and take when dctennining lhcir
sold for a nominal fee in the cla.ssschcdulcs.

cafCLtriato~restcdstudcnts.
Ronayne views the Idea or
The a.AS faculty dc:ddcd
student's evaluations of racagainst combining thei r cnd- ulty being made available 10
of-th~ scmcsltr evaluations students as a "mixed blessing.
whhthcSOA 'srcsu.lU,andthc Sometl.mcs lhe most popular
Issue has not been raised again professors arc nol the most cfWllllnow.
fa:tive," he said
With the SOM evaluations
His advice 1 students who
0
on res"erve In the library. some want to know more about pro0.AS students feel that it

He said that getting an approving evaluation and doing
an effective job or teaching a
subject can be two different

Di~=~

things.
On rcnccllng on his under-

graduate professors as a student,hesaidtha,t.he would give
hisprorcssorsamuchdlffcrr:nt
ratingnowasopposcd10when
he was a graduadng senior. In

ByOvisOlsi
JoumalSW
A• lhe 'Nallonal

""'""'"""Cup"'

dolCt and cloxt, the I
mlkln·1tbieirmoveup1
the Btuint go 9-l. cl

Mthin one point of II
place Quebec NonJiquc
poi.nil behind the Ad:
aion-lcadift&MoncreaJC

gradua!c SCOOOJ, Ronayne rcaliz..cd the undcl'Jradulle pro-

fessors ~t he liked so much
then did not teach him a third
or whaJ. othci- students In his
classcswcrcta.ughl.·
Therefore, he concluded
"s1udcnt c.valuations need to
be taken with ,~
grain of salt."
and should only be taken a.s
one factor in deciding facully
choices ·in course selection if
a.AS dcci$iel (0 make them
11Cc.essible to students.

SGAfrom".",e1
dcmicschooJyear,astudenlmust came I dcba.tod i.ssuc due 10 lhc
be ek:cled 10 SGA prior 10 De- numbcrolmembusinSGAwcre
cember 1992and ICfVCd the rest · ekclcdinOcloberdurinJlhcspeoflheiermthrouJhlheducofthe cWekctionJheldfortheClassof
eucutive board nominations. 1993.
AnjcJe

D aim

Ciccarello

l&ael lbal all

olf,ca are available but• mem..--CRm&-havc.at...l,e.aao~
e1peric:ooeonSOA to qualify for

asked

Lou

Gtt.cllwald, chairman of lhc Stu·
Review Board, if
hewould like1omBke1rulingon
wheUICt or noc lhe peop&e ,..ho
11teteelectcdinspccialelections
could run.
Greenwald. SGA. V"ice Pn:sidcnl, tugeacd dial nominations
be cxtcndcd until DCXt To'cck 10
lhaiamoredcftnitiverulingcould

1p01itionontheElccutivcBoard.
The c:o,utitution, however, b
vaauelboutwbailu.actJyayeard
in rclcrence 10. according to
Ckarello.
Theprobk:m concem1ng ,..hat
~tutcd a ~ on SGA be-

be"'-in<d.
The SGA abopassed a motion
lhalSGAmcrnbcrswhohlvcbcell
scaled fCI' one year and outaoing
seniors be abk 10 nominltc and
voceon theeu.cutive boardekcLiORL In past years, only mernbctsofthe ne11 yea,'1 SGA were

~

..i.,=...,;.- - - -1-- ----'"'

yea•• eu:eudve boud.
Bccaute of the uleAlion of
the nomination period. the election of the eucutive board ril
not llke place al l'ICJ.I wed"s
tcheduled but in two
wee.ks time.

neit

ineeti,,-'u

( 'la-.;sified
Spring Brule

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$4.(Xl)+-per~Mlnyprovide
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rnom&board+otherbencfi11!
will follow each program. If you plan 1 aqend the .. Noprcviou.strainingorleachlag l993UWt1tmdbrtdlln:a..For
0
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nceptlon(s), pita.st RSVP. S7J-86/J.
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Suffolk University

l.equelCUOftcome,

evalua!ion.1 or their professors professor Is like. When you, whoarccffcaivcteactJ:rs," he
on n:scrve in 1hc MIidred F. ask your friends. you can get said.

Sawyer Ubruy, the dean of
thcCollegeofLiberal Ans and
.sciences , Dr. Michael R.
Ronayne will ask a.AS fa,cu.lly the.lrvlews on the Issue to
see lftbere Is any lntcrcst ln
providing the same documenl
for Cl.AS sludcnts.
As a student govemmenl
wociation ptojca abou1 10

DOI

fcssors bcrore taklna classd
with them, It to talk to the
thalrmanoflhcdcplrtmcnlttw
the profC$SOr bdonp to or a
memberoftheflCUllythatyou
can trust "The faculry knows

P.O. Bo12.f.JO, Miami, fl:31161 .

381MAD

...~:0-

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·,-=:n...

Wccblday, Man::b 24, 1.993

You...,~ lnill<ld lO-the 1993
-•ndHumona...lma~

AIDS-101 - GET THI;; FACTS
1l!lndar.-Ap,jl 1, 1993
- An:hor366,1:00p.m.

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....... --.--lho~
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SPRING '93
Lowell Lecture Series
'Eaucation at tfie Crossroaas
WEDNESDAY,
MARCH31
4:00P.M.

WEDNESDAY,
APRIL 14
4:00P.M .

Relighting the Candle of
Excellence Across
America
MAR:VACOLLIN
Founder, Westside
Prepartory School,
author, subject of movie
"The Marva Collins
Story"
The Case/or
Str11c111ra/ Reform
Through Private
ln11ovation
BENNO SCHMIDT
Chief Executive
Officer, The Edison
Project; former
President of Yale
University

·T hat lectures art fru and optn lO the public. Bolla
ltcturtswillluheldinlht C. WalshThearre.Arectption
will follow each program. If you plan to antnd tht
·receplion(s), pita.rt RSVP, 573-86/3.

Suffolk University

Suffolk Sports

Romiyne to seek faculty interest
in _
r.e!¢ase of prof. evaluations
would be t,enefictal If a.AS
provldcdthesamCoppottunity
for them.
Amy Hartnett. sophomore,
biology,sald"lt'sbcUcrtoget
rail
· ·
f hal

By Lominc ...«.K. Palmer
Joumal Staff
Now that the School of
Management has s tudents

cvalllllionsoftheirprofcsso,s
on ~rve in the Mildred F.

:ro~~r

1~:~ ~ ~

ask your friends, you can get
many dlfferem opinions. be·
cause cenaln students like dif•
fcrcntkindsofprof~rs."
Nelda Valeri , junior, el•
cmentary education, said she
would dcfinately lake advantage of the opportunity or s1udent access to racuUy evaluaLions.
The overall reacti ons o f
CLAS students 10 this issue
was thal ii woul4-f>e a good
Idea and would help them de·
tennlnewhatprorcssorswould
best for them as individuals 10

Sawyer Library, the dean o f
the O>llege of Liberal Arts and
Sciences, Dr. Michael R.
Ronayne will ask a.AS faculty their views on the issue to
see if there is any lntercsl in
proVldlng the same document
for a.AS students.
As a student government
association pro#( about l0
years ago, members of SGA
went into the classrooms and
did their own course and profcssorevaluatlons. lhcproject
was called ..Of Course," and
the results were published and
sold for a nominal fee In the
cafeleriatointercstcdstudcnts.
The 0.AS faculty deckk:d
against combining their endof-the• semester evaluations
withtheSGA's rcsults.andthc
issue has not been raised again
until now.
With the SOM eva.Julllio ns

take when detennining their
class schedules.
Ronayne views the idea of
student's evaluations o f faculty being made available 10
students as a " mixed blessing.
Sometimes the most pol)Ular
professon; are not the most cf•
fcctive," he said.
His advice io studenlS who
want to know mo re about pro-

on reserve in the li brary, some
CLAS s1uden1S fee l that it

Don't write the Bruins oft in-the playoff$ just ye

·fessoB before tlklnl classes
with them, Is to talk to the
chainnanoflhcdepartmCnllhal
the professor belongs to o r a
merqbcrofthefacubythalyou
can trust. '1be faculty knows
whoarccffcclivcteachcrs,"~
said.
He said that getting an approving evaluation and doing
an dfoc tlvejobofteachlng a
subject can be two different
things.
On reflecting on his under•
graduate professors as a student.hcsaidtha_thcwouldgive
his profcssorsamuchdlffercnt
ratingnowa.sopposcdtowhcn
he was a graduating senior. In
graduate school. Ronayne realized lhc undergraduate pro•
fessors that he liked so much
I.hen did not teach him a third
of whal other students in his
cla.sseswerctaughl..
Therefore. he concluded
"s1uden1 evaluations need 10
be taken with a grain of salt,"
and should only be taken as
o ne factor in deciding faculty
choices In course selection if
0.-AS decides to make them
accc~ible lO S!U
denls.

ByOuis Olson
Joumal Staff
As lhe National Hockey
League seuon comes lo a close
andtheStanleyCupplayoffscdge
cloJerandclo,er, thcBruinsare
makingthcitmoveuptheAdams
Divisionstandings.
The month or Match has seen
the Bruins go 9-3. climbina 1
0
within one poin1 or the sccood
plllCCQuebcc:Nordiqucsandfive
poinlS behind the Adams Division-leadingMoolrCl! Canaditns,

SGAfrompas<1
demic,choolyear.asiudentmu.st
be decled 10 SGA prior lO Decembcr 1992and,en,od lhctcst
ofthetenn lhrough thcdaieohhe
executive board IKNl'linalions."
Article D aLto stalel that all
olf~ are available but a mcm-

came :a debated iuuc due 10 the
numbcrofmembcninSGAwe.c
cloc1
cdinOt::tqjlcrduringthcspccial elections held for the Class of
1993.

be determi.ncd.
ThcSGAaLtopasscdamotion

UUUSGAmcmbcrswhOhaw:.bccn
sealed for one year and outgoing
seniors be able to nominatc·and
voteonthccJtocutivcboardclec•

tions. In pasi years, only mem•

CJt~ha~~=r::~ =~a":':c~cE'=iicc=~~~ lh< :'c..o;;Jtl~~"'~•f~=
apositklnonthcEJ.ccutiYCBoard.
The constitution, however. is
va1ueaboutwhalcuctly1yea,is

in reference 10, according lo

=~~==::~ne°:1m=

~~kmcooceming wtiat
constituted a year oa SGA be·

th:»amoredcfinitiverulinacould

nat year's executive board
Because o( the cxleMion of
lhe nomination period. the clcic•
tion or I.he executive board will
~=g\:~hed~:~tin~;
wccb time.

( 'Iassif'icd
Spring Break:
CANCUN, NASSAU

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Organiu a small group for
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Call t (BOO)'GET-SUN- 1

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~envelopck>:Tr.avdtNC.,
P.O. Box 2S30,Miani,FI..ll16 1.

381MAD

"1000

ltJUITCIIIIIWIDI
l'WISIIIIIO&TBI
,._WIIOCUUI
No ....... NoCllilll.

~:,

,,.■.'::tl.o.a

The SUffolk JOWDII . ·

r ,

with Andy Moog speamcading
theclub'11ate11resurgenoe.
Moog has regained the form
tbthastakentheBruinsto' the
S1.anley Cup finllls once and the
WalesConrerencc finab 1wice-iii
thelastth ruyears.
Moo g's n:cord i, cum:.n Uy21 13-J. with a3.s6 g03ls agairul
avcrage. Hisgoabapinstfiaure
isn'tasimprtSSive u roolcic John
Blue·,. but Moog has come up
wilhlhcbigsavela1dywhen1hc
learn has oecded it. in the closing
minutesoracloscgamc.

~~-=.rs_:;,'.!:

::::!.~~":i=

e11inaoal,apiaaawn,e..wllb
0..halcdipa,dhispm-i•
animpftatvel..92..Sllu&iw.a ous caRICl'-WP for poina in a
lheBntimalieJitim,acblctllpfor &UOft, Md leads die Bruins in
Moo1,whichwillberadeddur· &O&lt (41),..., (80), poslts
inathe riJOrtJlllplayolfachedwe (121),po,r,,er-playpt(ll)and
which hu leM\I playing evtsy pmo-winnina ao.lt (8),
Olherdayduringaplayoffsc:rics. '
JocJuncau,DmilriKvartalnov
AJ for the team's offenx., It and Sieve Leach will give the
hasnwiagedtodealwithlheloa Bruins an addiJional scori ng
ofC&m Neely, thanb mmtly in punch in tbeplayoffs.
partlOAdamOa~.Oatcs,prcviWbethcctheBruinshavedepth
ously known 10Jely forhisusiJIS or not,cvcryono knows that their
tof~SLLouisBllaeslinemuc playo(fllXl0Cll,«lacktbercof.

willhinponthcpb
Neely.
'
Nady ii now pl

ewiry~-pne,
five(lltfc:dy'aaoal

OllthcJIOWU'P'-1,•
p~dwlcafew•
in the playoffs, the
have10matc~m
Withabcallby

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

limitf«dusyear's •
Bruin,.

W - y....... 2A,}1>93

layne to seek faculty interest
eJ~ase of prof. evalu~tipns
· would be t,cneflclal If a.AS r~rs before taking classes
provldr.dthcsamcopponunlty with them. is to talk to the
for them.
chainnanofthedepanmcnlthat
Amy Hartnen. sophomore. · the professor belongs to or a
111 the School of biology,said"lfsbettcrtogc1 mcmbcrofthcfacu1t)'lhalyou
,Cnt has s tudcnu an overall opinion of what I can trust. '1bc faculty knows
softheirpn:ifcssors prorcssor Is like. When you whoarecffcctivcteachers," hc
: In the Mildred F. ask your friends , you can get said.
lbrary, the dean of many different oplnions, be·
He said lhat gc1ting an ap:ofLlbcral Ans and cause certain students like dif• proving evaluation and doing
Dr. Michael R. fcrent k..inds of professors."
an effective job of teaching a
-.iill ask 0.AS fie•
Nelda Valeri, junior, cl- subject can be two different
•lcws on the issue to cmcntary education, said she lh.ings.
c is any int.crest in would dcfinatcl y lake advanOn rcnccti ng on h.ls underthe sarnc doc:wnent 1
agc of the opponunity of stu- graduate professors as a s1ustudc:nu.
dcm access to facully cvalua- dcm.hcsaidlhathcwould give
tudent government tions.
hisprofcssorsamuchdiffcrcnt
ll prop:t about 10
The overall reactions of ratiognowasopposedtowhcn
, members of SOA CLAS students to this issue he was a graduating senior. In
the classrooms and was that it would be a good graduate school, Ronayne it •
iwn course and pro- Idea and would he.Ip them clc· alizcd the undergraduate pro" ·
liJM;M.K. Palmer
umal Staff

The Suffolk lowml.

Suffolk Sports
Don't write theBruin·s ott'inthe playoffs just yet
ByOuisOlson
Joumal Staff
As 1he Na ti onal Hoc key
LcqueseuoncofflC!toaclose
andthcSlanleyCupplayoffscdgc
clolCI" and clo9Cr, lhe Bruhu arc
matln1 their move up lhe Adams
Division standings.
TIie month of March h:u socn

an· =~~
=

""ilh And} Moog spcarneadin1
the club's la&cst n:smJcnce.
Moog ha regained the ronn

Blue, who ,ports an
ra:ord.iHmonathck:lpe'deadenUl,oallapiul·avrn,e.wiah

a.a...

BreuHull,hutatt.novercbcrole

~:::;~~"':!:r:::

~I, which will'bcneededdllt-

ollhoBnaim'prmar)'p)ICXll'tl'.
bas ccliped bu: prm.
DI.II. c:anxr-lli1li for poinU in 1
ltUOD, and ltlds the BruiAs in
goab (41), MSis1I (80). points

WalcsCon rercncefinalstwicein
thc last lhrcc years.
Moog ·sra:ordlscurrcntly28•
\J.J. Wilh a 3..56 goals against
average. His gO,lJs against figure
isn' tasirnpre.ssivell.'lrooldeJohn
Bluc·s. but Moog 1w come up
with the big s:ive lately when the
team h:isoocded it. in the closing

inglhcrigonJ1,Uplayofhchedule
which hu lcams playing every
Olhcrday dudn&•PlaYOffscries.
As ror the team's offense, it
hasmanag~todca.lwithlheloss
ol"Cam Nocly. thanks mostly in
pantoAdamDalcs. Oatcs.previ•
ou.slylcnown,olcly forhiJUIUU

j!iiiiiii&&ii5i&i~m,.
;,.,""•''_,"i,Jo,e&gii;"".,'·~-11w <■ SLl..oWIBlues~
onnu9'

11

o.ae.

( 121), power-play goals(22)and
pmo-winnin& aoab (8).

Joclunc&1J,DmitriKvartalnov
and Steve Leach will give the
Bruins an addiJional scoring
punch in the playoffs.
WheltatheBntlnihavedq:,th
or not, everyone knows that their
playotr1uc.:oess,orllckthercoC,

willhingeonthcplayingtimeor
Nttly.
Nccly ii now playing•on an
cvery-oeher-pnc 1c:hcdule. All
five of Ncdy'1 goab have come
onlhcpowcrplay,andwilhpower•
play chancel rewandf•betwocn
in the playoffs. the BIUW will
have to make the most or them.
Wilh ·a healthy Neely and a
shatpMoogingoal, thesky ' sthe
limitforthiJyC:ll"'svenionorlhe
Bruins.

-A.

=~:=p::::::!~ :::::~,~c!~:t~:

iu~~Q)u~~=

take when c1c1ennining their
class schedules.
Ronayne views the idea of
student's evaluations of foe•
ulty being made available 10
students as a "miJtcd blessing.
Sometimes the most popular
professors arc not the most cf.
fcctivc," he s:i.id.
Hi s advice 10 students who
wan! 10 know mon: about pro•

of what other srudcnt.s In his
classes were taug.hl.
Therefore. he concluded
"s1udcn1 evaluations need 10
be 1aken wilh • grain of sal1."
and should on1y be taken as
one factor in deciding faculty
choices in course selection if
CLAS decides to make them
accessible to students.

10l yc:ar,astltdcntmust
to SOA prior to De·
92andscrvcdthen:st
lhroughthedateorthc
tioardnomlnations."
U alto staaea that all
availabk but a mem•

carncadcbatcdissueduct0the
numberoCmcmbeninSGAwcn:
elcctedinOctoberduringthe spe•
dalelectionshc ld forthcCliusor

bcdctcnnincd.
ThcSGAal!lopassed amotio n
thnl.SGAmcmbcrswhohavebccn
sea ted for one year and oulgoing
seniors be able to nominate and
votcon lhcCJtccu ti veboardelec•
tions. In po.st years. only mem•

~ ~ , ,.~ ~
,on SOA toqualiry for

="',;~~Re •
~

were published and
nominal fee in the
>intcrcstcdscudent.s.
.AS faculty decided
imbining their end·
:mcstcr evaluations
GA'srcsults,andlhc
IOt been raised again
IC SOM evaluations
: in lhc library, some
udents Jeel that it

Frompag~ I

1993.
Cicca rello 3sked
LQu
Greenwalil., chainn:ln or the Stu·

fo~ •°"" r
7 •-=;;~· ;~ ~ bcrsorthenc1tycar'sSGAwcre
OiteCffoilOiniiiileffi!ToteOrl

11theBJtccutivcBoanl
li tution. however, is
•whaeuctlyayearis
lCe co, xcOrdin1 to
dent, suggested that nominations
beCJt&endcd until ncJ.t wock so
thatamoredefinitive rulina could

iblcmconcemingwhat
l ayearonSGAbe·

i,oo • ·

9:30.
12:00-2:00
1:00-2:30
1:00< 2:30.
1:00 -2:30 ·
1:00-2:30 .
1:00-2:30
1:00-2:30
l.'llll-2:30
J:00-2:30
1:00 -2:30

l~:n&
1:00-2:.,0
1:00• 2:30

ncuycar 's uccutiveboatd.
Because or the CJ.ICnSion o r
the nomination period. the elcction or the executive t:dvd-will
not take place at next wock"s
mocting as scheduled but in two
weeks time.

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~~

Wednesday, Ma«::b 2A, J993

lbc Suffolk Jowml

16

Suffolk Sports

dty interest
1
duations
.4.S ressors bcfOre· iaking classes
Jty , with them, Is to talk to the
chalnnanoflhedepartmcnlthat
ire, the professor bdong.s to or a
get mcmb,crohhcfacu1tythat you
t a can trust '1bc faculty lcnows
,ou

whoarccffc<:tivcteachcrs," hc
said.
He said that getting an ap.
proving evaluation and doing
an effective job o f I.Caching a
subject can be two different
things.
On rcOccting on his under-

get
be1ifclshe

;tu-

graduate professors as a student.he said that he would give
his professors a much different
of ratingnowasQPP.OSCdtowhcn
sue he was a grajuatlng senior. In

Don 1t write the B1,"uins off in the playoffs just yet
ByOuis Olson
JoumaJ SWf
As the Nalional Hockey
League sca.,on corncs to a clost
andtheSlanleyCupplayoffscdge
clOICI' and cio,er, th e Bruirui arc

with Andy

MooJ

spearheading

thccl ub'11.alcs1rcaw-gcncc.
Moog has rqaincd the fo,m
that has 1:1kcn the Bruin.s to the
Stanley Cup finab once and the
Wales Confel'C nct finals tw ice in
the last three years.

makingthciTmove upthc Adams
Division standings.
TIie month of March has sun
the BJ'\lin1 ao 9-3. climbing 1
0
within one point of the second
place Quebec Nordiq!JCS and five
poinu behind the Adams Divi-

13-l , with a 3.56 goals agairun
::ivcrage. Hlsgoa.ls apinstfigure
isn'1asimprcssiveurooDCJohn
Blue's. but Mooe tw come up
with thebig.ravclatclywhcn lhc
tc::IITI h:u netdcd it, in lhc closing

sion-lcading Montrca!Canadicns.

minutcsof1closcgame.

Moog's rcconiiscurrcnlly28-

Blue, who sporu an 8-8-4
recud,illfflOl'lllhcleape'1Jead..
min aoa&aapwtavaqc,with
an impa&lve2.92and hu a.ivcn

theBI\W\l.alepimalebactupCor
Moo1,whichwillbenecdeddurlnatheril(Jf0Ulplayoffac:hedule

"'hich hu ie.ama playing every
othadayduringaplayoffscrics.
AJ for the team '1 offense, it
twmana1cdtodcalwiththc.loss
of Cam Neely, lhanb mostly in
pan10AdamOuca. ~cs.prcvi•

ouslytnown10lclyforhlsassists
IOformerSLLouisBluealinemalC

Bl'CUHull,hutakcnovcrthernle
olthlBn&ial'primarypl .-::cRJ.
Olscl baaecl.iped hill previous canirz-lup! for pointl in a

:=c.~ :~~'°:
( 121), powcr-9lay &oals(22)and

gimo-winnlna sO&ll (8).
Joe Juneau.Dmitri Kvanalnov
and Steve Leach will give the
Bruins 1n addiJioilal acori_ng
punch in the playofra.
WhelhertheBNinshavedcpth
oroot.c~knowsthattheit
pla~fI IUCCCU, OI' 1aclt thereof,

willhinaconthcpuyingtimcof
Neely.
Neely ii now playio1 on ui
C'tla)'--oda•gamc ac:bcdulc. All
(ive ofNcety·1 gollt have come
oothepowa-play,andwilh powcrplaychancclfewandC•betwocn
in the playolTI, the Bruins will
have to mike the most of them.
With a healthy Nocly and a

111c--

Wcdnclilay,Maitb2

A Grin
AIDS Quilt]

sharpMOOlingoal, thesky '1 thc
limit for this year's vcnlonofthc
Bruin,.

graduate school. Ronayne rt: ·
nllzcd the undergraduate professors that he liked so much
then did not teach him a third
of what other s1udcnts in his

:,od

deiuld

s to
lCi r

classes were taught.
Therefore, he concluded

1 of
fac -

"s1udent evaluations need 1
0
be cakcn with a grain of salt,"

: 10

Ing.
ular
1cf-

and should only be taken as
one factor in deciding facul ty
choices in course selection if
0..AS decides to make them

11ho

accessible to students.

pro-

,the

bedelcnnincd.
The SGA aim passicd a motion
lhalSGAmcmberswhohavebcen
seated for one year and outgoing
seniors be able to nominate and
votcon thcuccutiveboard clcclions. In pas1 ycan, only lflcmbersofthcncltycat'sSGAwcrc
o~anifvolc7'm
nu1yc3r'1 u.ecutiveboard.
BecaulC of the u.lcnsion of
thc nominationperiod.theckclion 6{theu.ecutivc board will
not take place at next week's
meeting u scheduled but in two
wttb lime.

spe-

ssor
Lo u
Stud. if
gon
who
ioos
rcsi-

tions
k ,o
ould

f:i1&;!~~ •
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~~

,.i;:,t;;:L. ..

ByN.E.Eacobar
Joumal Staff

Promoting awucness ~
at Suffolk University ls lhe
main,oalofd:dsyear's armuaf
-llldllllaunSavlces
symposium. The symposium,
tltlt.d ..AIDS 101: Get the
Pac:ts," willbchcld'lbursday,
April 1 in An:her 365, froo1 I
p.m. to 2:30 p.m. '
Aaerafiveycarbiatulfn:m
me IDpC, EHS faca1ty 1n oonacc:dan with lbe AIDS Acdoo

:m::=::
changing body or knowledge

of AIDS raeardL.

"Ourfocusistotatethlngs
that seem to relate to what is
gain, oo In people's e,j,crlence. whether It is something
lhey think about or dW they
~ uocon.,ciou.sly aw~ of,"

P.ducadonnllfuman.Sctvia:s
dwrpcl'IOO Dr. ci1en Esktdal
said. "'The dala has chan&ed
since we have done ou.r last
1ympolium on AIDS back in
o..imehave~m . 1988. Moll.ofusdon'ttcepup

16

111c Suffolk Journal .

Wednesday, March 24, 1993

A . rin, Reminder
G
AIDS Quilt Displayed At Suffol~

THE SUFFOLK JOURNAL
.

)

Suffolk University's Student ~ewspaper
Volume 51, Number21

~

Hill, Boston, Masuchuscw

Wednesday, March 31, 1993

Nominees for
SGAexec.

Snow, Rain drench playing fields;
many games delayed
By Chris Olson
Journal Staff

By Mike Cloherry

Pho1os By Carolytt Btaty, Jo~rttal Staff

"A~S 101: Get The _
Facts" lecture coming to Suffolk
ByN.E.E5cobar
Journal Staff
Promoting IW&la'ICS!I he.rt:
at Suffolk University 1.5 the

mainJOl,loflhlsycar's annual
EducadonnlHw:nanSetvk:es
symposium. 111c symposium,
dUcd .. AIDS IOI : Gel the
Facts," will be held Thursday.
April I in Archc.r36S, from I
p.m. IO 2:30 p.m.
After a five yearbillUI flODI
Ibo topic, EHS focully In con•_ , wilh tbc AIDS Acdoo
<bma.Juee have dcvdoped an

agenda thal will hopefully aid
students in undcrslanding the
ch:angina body or tnowlcdgc
or AIDS research.
"Our rocus Is to La.kc things
lhal seem IO rclll.C IO what Is
golna on ln people's cxpcri•
cncc, whether It Is something
they ihlnk about or that they
ltC unconsciously lWlt'C Of,"
Education and Human Services
chahpcnon Dr. Glen Eskcdal
said. '"lbt data tw changed
since we have done our l.asl
sympolium on AIDS back in
1981. Mostofwdon'tll:cepup

with iL"
Ballolti Leaming Center

Dircctor and Associll.C EHS

sources available at Suffolk students stating that this Issue
University in tcnns or provid- Is not only timely, but someIng infonnatlon, free scrccn- thing vital fo r surviving In

Prorcssor Susan lbaycr 1w ings, lcstlng, rt:fcrnl sources,
been working closely wilh the and counsding. AIDS hand•
AIDS Action Commillee to outs and pact.cu will also be
provldcspcakerswhowWlalt available for anyone wishing
about topics ranging from more lnformaUon.

=~=!:~.;:;
who arc HIV positive or have
full-blown AIDS. Bothspcalt•
crs ate Infected wilh the virus.
DircctorofHcalthScrviccs
Marprct Fitzacrald will also
bespcakll'I& on HIV/AIDS~

today's SOClcry.
A reception, free and open
IO anyone wi&hing to atlc:nd.
will beheld lntheMuoccConfcrt:nce Room (Archer 110)
immediately following the
:o~:c~:~umAI~~ symposium.
quilt on campus during OJJ.
Formort:lnformationonlhc
tun! Diversity Wcck,organlz• symposium contac1 Michael
· m arc upcclina nothing less Plante at lhc Department or
than a full house. Sofar,TUC.- EduCllionandHumanScrvlces
Uons to the AIDS symposium ('73-8261).
arcposllive, withamajorityo_
f

ictday and the race for vice-president
promiSC$ to be 8 dogfighl with lhree
people vying for the posL
·
Judy Dunn, a junior TqKUCOlarivc,
::::~~g~':!~h~:~cs oan:~ : : .
n
;
Richard Joyce, a 10phomou rcpres,cn.
~
siblc.
tative, and Efren Hidalao.-junior vic.eMlny bucb&II ll'ld aoftball pla:yin& fklds ate
'The fie.Id conditions for baseball
prcaidcnt,all rccciveclnominationsfrom
mow rau and m::c&1 be.Ivy raiDI..
1
' - - - -u.id - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - -· theirpcen.
:n,:.?.rc ~~ ~,h~:~
Nelson WO - that the-softball
5
0
The men's tennis team hu-.1:to-,._j --tfid...,rload originally rifux.d his
Nelson. "Most of our games arc away 1camfaccs~same1ituation. Although pcrience<I some problems due to the nomination for vice-'president buf acgames. so we' re at (our opponent's) lhc Andrew J. Poupolo field, the home advcrscwcalherconditions.The domed ceptcd the nomination ~ ucood time
mercy.
fieldoflhcladyRams,i.sclcam!ofthc: roof at the Owtc, River Tennis Cub it wu offered 10 him.
Hidalgo also m:cived a nomination
'Thiss1
onn isinforawh.ilc," Nelson snow, "'thc:infidd i.saquagmireatthis collapsed during the bliu.ard. and will
1
have 10 be repaired.

(or president and joined ~icbeUc
poi~~:°::it:i~=c~workout
1n the time bcina, the tennis Leam is McGinn, ciccutiveboardireasurer,the
--i'=llw..S'"-8(><Mcr....>d11"""1ci..___jinfu~!-C'lies.""'-'~·ll-Deedto gct i11 usi11g die i11dvorfacittti~to
'IRtcmti;tate-seekinr-the·post.
nopposed. will
now. ~~~:;;~~~~~:~an outside Hills Tennis Club and Belmont Hill , Erika Christcnsqn, U

;~r:'; ;PJ:

awareness of this terrible disease that has
touched so many of us.
The "Names Project" wants to show that these
people who have/al/en are more rha,njust numbers, zhay are individuals.
..,
Th e spectators who ,•iewed the quilt talked
_g_
ap,b02!U~t];ho~w~lh!!'.<l'_.!!!a/l/_l!!,ha~v'.!'_e}!
h!!Jadr!.J.!. · :t,(/LJWJ1.la;,£Ii _ __ _+-rif. r
ones/all prey to the wa ve of this deadly vlJ':, As
each panel is added to the quilt, everyon'e of us
is eventually bound to know someone who has
been infected.
The AJDS quilt is not only a memorial but a
warning that no one is invulrierable to the tide of
this epidemic.
The AIDS quilt was spo1Jsored by Program
Council, SGA, COP, Counseling Center, Student
Activities, Dean Stoll, and President Sargent.

Executive board nominatiOClS for lhc

Studen\ Govcmmcnl Auociatioo, de,,
layed for a week, were opened up ycs-

.

Sections of the AIDS quilt were displayed in
the Ridgeway Gymnasium on Wednesday, March
10 and Thursday March I I in o.rder to spread

-1---

By Stephanie Snow
Journal S1.a.ff

As if the "Bliu..o.rd of '93" didn't
wreak enough havoc on the baseball
fields in and around Boston, las! week 's
additional snow rail and lb.is week 's continuous rain have pul a damper on lhc
schcduk.d sians of the Suffolk baseball
and soflball teams.
Season openers haven't gone as
schcdulW for both clubt, and adhering

-

:::~~ls~~;~ tl~;ga!:
:::~~::i~~~s~.~pcning

School.

SGA supports concept, split on
specifics of E-Board voting
By LaWtt.nce M . Wal sh
~oumal Staff
The S1udeo1 Government
Association last week passed a
rcsqlu.tion that will allow for
thcfi.mtimCallout-goingmcmbCf'softhcSGA10v01eforout
year's uecutive board. While
the majori1y o{ the membc;l5
ravorthislCtion,thcrcrt:mains
dissension over the rcaolution.
'J"heorigina]modon,moved
by Lou Greenwald, vice pn::si.
dent 'Of SGA, called for the

"'°"'p;vi!epcobe~

The• motion was aubscquently amended by Tad
Fwi.do, prc:si~ of the Junior class, so that all out aoing
mcmbcrswouldhavetheprlvi•
lcgc of \!Oting.
Furtado said it w going 10
i
be vcry. ciclusive in who wu
aoingtovoceandthatwuunfair.

.,.;1:~~~r::
mea,bcn," Kid Fwtado.
Tnditionally, thcaccutive
board bu bioco cboac.a w:lua.ivdy by the inoom..ins mmi·"'
bcnbip of the SOA, and Cleluded all outaoma members ·
from votina on the comi.aa:
yea.r's lcadcnhip.

to exiting senion. Gremwud
said that every Kmor on SOA
cares cnouah about SGA that
they would retum Odil year if
RoccoCiccu-.110,,,...ldau
they could and have the upcrience 10 contribute 10 lheso- o( SQA, WU ~ 10 CX·
lcction of the eucutive boud. teDdin, votiaa privi.Jeaa to
"IlhinkitiabeDeficilltos,ct
a nw.y people u poui~ 10
. .·...io-Wlld. .
the new abould VOie wic:h the

::".!....""':,"'.'!:t:::!

new because they arc the ones
who arc going lO have ,o worii:
wilh them.•
• ~aidthcn:isnoth-,
ingprohibitingthescniorsfrom
voting for the accutive board
in the constitution, althouah
tbcybavcnevcrdooeitbcfore.
He),iiitcdoutthatmanyothcr
schools in !he area allow their

Undergrads, grads coinplain
;wont fitness center
Some say law students abuse privileges
·

By Nancy Sodano
JoumalSwf
Thoua.h Director of Alhletica James E. Nelson hu not
hcatdanyoomplain11conccrnina the fitness cenccr In the
Ridgeway bwJdin&, many ltU·
dcoubavehavebccnputoffby.
tbe we of the c:cnta- b)' law
:::::;.:onthenewa• ltUdcmsandtbeirapparentdis.Someju&tilicationforallow• reprd for sharing the facilitie,.
ing the seoiors and outgoing
A Suffolk Univcraity junior
mea,bentovotclltliefactthey
have aawd in the SGA with who wiabea to remain aoonydmedi&iblefo,theexcc:utive _ , bu cloon&ecl hu funca
boud and bow their aperi- CCDter wort~t ICbcduJe in
eoce and performance lcvdL order10aVoidcertainindivic»
Phil FahoDe, oext year'1 ala. She fcda thit many of the
junio, noe pai<leot. sud, "I Suffolk La• amden&I arc Ndc
fdt that aa:lion abould be aJ. and am,pnl towarda the u:nlowed to 'YOU; becallse they dcrploJala in thefltDCN cm-

:::.:;;.boiscapoblc~
COltdtuuitlOflJltlll'2

were done, theyClmcup IO,me
.and fold me to get off. Oac oC
theffisigocdupforitat.e:igluio
thcmoming10usctbe.lD.IChine
at IO. Tboscarcn'ttberulea,"
~said..
·
A pcnon can a.ign up rol'a •
cardiov~ machine _
w~
som~nc ll pre_s,cnlly UllDI tC
A dcs1patcd bfflC can DOC be

l
·