File #4355: "Suffolk Journal_1991Sep25_vol50no2.pdf"

Text

June Orientation

Athletics
S.U. athletics: A new era
by Doreen Matta, Athletics
The fitnw ccn1cr it fully.equipped

wilh ua1ionary bicycles, rowina
machinci, trcadmilli,stair simula,ion
machines, frtt wciahts and a variety or
muscle strcnathcnina equipment.
The Athletic Dcpartmcnl welcomes
you 1 Suffolk and extends an invitation
0
to you 10 1ake adva111a1e of these facil illes u well u the proarams that arc
offered. Studen1 athlctcs can tr)' out for
a varsity team in the sporu or baseball,
baskct~.crou country, aoJr, hockey,
M>C'Cer,softballor1ennis.
For studmts in1crcsted in DOn-varsity
prOIRfflS the'fC arc inuamunl volleyball
and basketball kques. lhc:chcmll1club
OI" aerobics classes. And, fOI" those who

. Suffolk Univcnil)' Athletics entered
into a new and excltina ,ra this year wilh
thesnndopcnil\lor its rlritl)'DUW,iwn ,
fitneu CCfltcr, locker rooms and physiotherapy room. ll)CKfadlitics, kx:ated in
the Rldacway Buiklin1 on Cambrid1c
Street, orrcr students an on-campl.lS
opportunity to 11rengtbcn their bodies
while dcvdopina their minds.
Tbt rull•lize 1)'11U1Uium has • main
basketball cou.n and iwo side intramural
cowu. In tddi1ion. thctt are aca>mmodations for voUcyball. aerobics and other
indoor activilics. The IYffl is also hoffK'
coun for the univmi1y's men's and
women's basketball learns.

prefer 10 workoul on their own, there arc coach,. Tony Furna coaches JOlf, Bill
Burns lS head coach for the hockey team
There are three Cull-time starr people and Rlchud Levenson coaches both
in the Athletic Department, an office men's and women's tennis.
.
secretary and two padua.te wistantJ.
lncte1tCanric.1yofwor~-1tudy_po51James E. Nelson is the director, men's tionsirr,~bktkdcpa!tn:icnta\'1.1.lablc
bukctball coach and teaches a Theory ror students. These Jobs include team
and Practice or Alhlctks course. Auo· manqcn, intramural officials, and supciatc Director Joe Walsh coaches base• ponstafffor 1hc1ym, fitncuccntcrUld
ball women's baskctball and croucoun- office.
1ry. 'Doreen Mauatli 1he assistant athletic
ThcA1hlcticDcpar1mcn1 ild~ica1td
dircaor womai's basketball uristUlt 10 Kmn1 1hc student populatt0n at
coach~dhcadcoachofwomcn'ssoft• Suffolk by providin1 compctlti~ and
ball.
recreational IICl.ivitics thal broadm a SIU•
The remainder of the Yanity tcanu arc dent's education. The challcn,e to com•
coached by part-time members of 1hc mit)-ound/toal)fOlfU!lOfc:11ierciscand
dcpanmcnt . Fabian DcPdu Is soccer fitness is waitinJ for you at Suffolk .

The Suffolk Journal

,m:: 1ym and fitness center .

Volume 50 Number 2

• Wedensday, September 25, '1991

Kiely ,Cullen r~sign
from SGA
Cullen has been• valuable member of
the SGA. During her freshman year she
initiated, and wu the driving fora:
behind, Suffolk', recycling program.
Her most rcccn1 accomplishment was the
sophomore cl1156 picnic over the ~ummcr.
Overall , Cullen was known for puttin_g
100 percent into every project in ~ h
she became involved.
Belmonte acted qukkly 10 rill the
~«utlve Board seat durina the second
mectina oftheSOA. Nominations were
opened and ScnM>f President Joe Cawley •
was dccted 10 the po5ilion.
AttheWntmcctiq,RobcnPrcrioso,
wphomorc vice president, assumed the
presidency of the clw by appointment
of his fcllo...,.clus rcprcscn1a1ivcs. The
rcmaininJ sophomore Rats will be filled
durinJ 1he upcomina freshman class

by Mary Sidi.II Halpin

More than just academics

Su(folk 's Student Go\·ernmcnt Ano·
cia1ion began the new year on an
uns table note as two of its sophomore
members. Kathy Kiely and Tammi
Cullen , re,igntd from their positions
shonly fo llowing the beginning or
cla»n.
Vi« president of the SGA EJtccuti•·c
Board and president or 1he wphomorc
class. Kath)' IOcJy wu unable 10 rcturn
to Suffolk 1h11 semester. Tommy
Bclmon1e, prcsidcn1 of SGA, said 1ha1
Kiely', primary reason for leavina SGA
and Suffolk wu because of perwnal
financial problems.
. Accordina 10 Belmonte, Kiely had
e,·cry intention of rctumina to Suffolk ir
shccouklaffordi1, but it tumcdou1 tobe

by T im Ervi n
Suffolk University provides an cxtensi\'e list o f extracurricular
activities and organizations.
Taking part in the intramural or varsity sports programs, or just
gelling involved with a club, will enha nce your college experience.
The clubs at Suffolk encompass a wide range of in1eres1s 10 ac•
commoda1e any studem. Whe1her you join Program Council, a fraler•
nily or sororily, WSUB 1elevision, WSFR radio, o r the newspaper
or yearboqk staff, you will gel the most out of your college life. By
joining the golf, tennis, hockey, basketball o r baseball teams, yo u
will b( able to compete athlc1ically as well as academically.

~:!

1

1

~:::.:1:i~

~~~:~

on ly
;!~,:~gn:v~~v:~~~!~~c;o r~s~r
y~u y:i~r :a~~:r:~:
and build relationships that will last a lifetime . Don ' t miss o ut. get
involved .

RECREATIONAL ACTIVIT IES
l)
2)
3)
4)

Intramural Baskc1ball
Aerobics
Weig ht lifting
Volleyball

S} Foosball (table soccer)
6) Ping Pong
7) Dome H ockey

Suffolk ABC's
continued from pg.6
11) the J o u rnal: This is the official newspaper of the student
body . It contains news about Suffolk as well as features concerrting
Su ffo lk li re and a nnouncements or mec1ings etc .
_ 18) O~~ Beaco n: This refers to the university's a~~iniSlrative
offices which a re located on the 25th noor o f the bu ilding at One
Beacon Street.
.
.
_
19) ~H~ SIG SIG (Phi S13_ a Sigm a)_ The only soron_ty a t S~f.
m_
:
folk_a1 this time. PHI S IG SIG 1s involved m many community service
prOJCCU 1h_rou~hou1 the year as well as events such as t_ ra1 s.
h~
20) Pnmo 1: An oft he¥d )','Ord around Suffolk -1h1s 1s a good
o ne to know. PriDlo's is an Italian eat•in/ta_
ke•oui r~auran~ located
a block and a half down Mynle Street (which r:un_ perpe~~acular to
s
Hancock Street) . They have wo"!derful Ra violi Parm1g1ana a nd
Chicken Salad!!
. .
21) Rat a. k.a. lb~
bskellar: This is a party/ dance us~ally held
once a month on a Friday afternoon . Each ra t has a u mque, fun,
and exciting theme and is held in the cafe - 1here's free- food .
22) ~d&e~•r: S_ ffolk's newest addition loca1e_ on Cambr:idge
u
d
Sir~. This butldmg 1 home to o ur brand-new fu ll-sized gymnasium,
~
we1ght-~oom, A1h le11 ~partment , BLC, Dean of Students, th e
~
nd more.
Journahsm/Co mmumcallons Departmc_ , _
n~ a
_
23) SA~:- ~lands fo r Stud~nt ~cuv1ties Cenier · SA(? is . th e
Student A~t1v1t1~ Office. SAC ts adJ:t,ce?t to Fenton and 1s home
to Suffolk s various clubs and orga~azauons.
~ ) S~wyer: Home to _
the library,_ the . caf~ , th e SOM
iK!rrunmrauve offices, the Regutrars, the F1nanc1al A.id Offi~~- 1he
History Department,, the O~vernment Departmem , th e Sociol?gy
= : . 1 t , 1he Media Serv:tccs, the copy center, th e Suffolk Pohce,

The resianations of Kiel y and Cullen
onl y underline the problems 1hat the
SOA and other or1aniutions have Cll•
pcricnced in rccruilina me1iibcrs u a
unive11ity•Mle problml of apathy.
Piuy-backln1 the upcomina freshmanclcctioruwill btthcclcction for thc
1wo sophomore 1oeau, u well as two
scnior1,e1ts.
Resign SGA continued on page 4

r--. Suffolk's ESL program receives
grant from Riley Foundation
25) SGA (Sludenl Govcmmcnl AssociaUo n ): This is 1he repre•
sen 1ative body for all full-time undergraduate studcnis. II deals with
financial and academic concerns of the students as well as issues
pertinent to undergrad studenu.
26) SOM / CLAS: SOM s1ands for School of Management. CLAS
s1ands for College of Liberal Arts a nd Sciences.
21) Sprlngfesl: Suffolk 's ann ual celebration of the arrival of
spring and 1he·end of classes (and the coming of su mmer) , A ''1alent
show" pu1 on by studems, facully and staff.
28) TttPple S lrttl Fair: An annual street fair held in la te April
on Temple Slreet. Features live entertainment, carnival booths
sponsored by various clubs and orgaoizrujons, food, and prizes. Don't
miss out 00 the fun when if comes around'
29) T KE (leek) (Tau Ka ppa E psilon): This is Suffolk's all-mak
fra1erni1y which works on community seryicc. proj~s 1hroughou1
ihe yea?-as well as special events such as· rats.

30) T rtt-Ughdaa: The annual lighting of Suffolk..s own Christmas
tree deco rated with ornaments made by t he various clubs and
o rganiiations. The tree is put up in 1he counyard across from
Donahue.
J I) UM S: University Media Services, localed on ihe 9th noor
of Sawyer. A great resource for class projecu requiring art work ,
UMS provides everything from clip-art 10 stick-on letters for posters.
32) VHlare: Suffolk's literary magazine filled with the creative
work of Suffolk students, faculty and staff. Be sure to contribute
a poe_v:r:-a short-story, a photograph or a drawing.
.:JJ) WS FR: Suffolk Free Radio - Suffolk's own in•housc radio
station pipes music into 1he offices and student hangouts (the Fenton
Lounge, the Cafe. , .)
34) WSUB: Suffolk's own television station. Video tapes various
Suffolk events and produces own Suffolk programs .

able 10 move up earlier in the program
dcpcndin1 upon 1hcir proarcss. Al tbc
end or the proll'ffl, thcstudcnu are well
prepared 10 enter collcie mainstream

byJc1u1HcrW•II
Suffolk University's ESL (Enalish u a

~~ ~:t~:)p~~ru-;:, r;:~'!n~

co~S:S&,-.n1 hu enabled ESL to expand
and offer the studenu mo re help as well
as knowledge. AccOrdina to Rodriaues,
the money 11 currently being used
towards: Two new pan-timc-bilinJual
tutors (one~
wlth.1 Hilpanic backgrouDd
and the other • Cli.lncse backg:rpund),
history and math prorcsso11, cullural
actMties, panics for the. st.00".nu,
IJ)Clkm, a rcsoW'0C library for ESL,
a stale house tour and • trip to the

wu given by onc'or the wealthiest foundatiora in Bostofl, the Mabtl Louise
Riley Found11ion.
The ESL proaram at Su(folk has
helped mU1)' lansuaae miDOrity students
from Boston and iu vicini1y in the
process or intcpatina into a four-year
college dcarcc program. Accordina to
Fernanda Rodriaucs, proaram director
for the ESL proara,n, -42 ncw•udcnts
0

ana

==~':!.~~::!~i::::

arammw. The majority or the students
are Asian and HiJpanic, al1houah this
year 1hc program his a Ruuian, a
Pakistani and a Polish student .
'The proa,am, which was implcmmtcd
in 1989, has cvolYed andexpandediincc
iu conccp1ion. At the beainnins or lhc
school year, each new student isaivcn a
CELT (Comprchcruivc EnaJish Lao1uqc Exam) to determine the appropriate coursework for !hem. The student is
then pla~ on either a.n ckmenta.ry or
lntcrmcdiatc level, dcpendina on their
lan1ua1e ability. Studenu cntcrin1 on
.the •clemcntary level arc in a two-year
program but do not rccrivc course credit
un til 1hey move up 10 1he intermediate
level. Rodri1ucs no1ed that students ve

Sutro!k Vni.,c:niiy aod The Bolton Hcrild ~ the rn Mayon{
ri,hl): Palric:k J. Pwodl.
R~-v. G111ylllnd Elli..,H1&la, E6w.vd Dol'lf~. Suffolk Prulcknt 0fli4,J.
Sugt-llL and M1)'0f R1)'IIM)fld L Flynn. (SuIToll: Uni¥fflity pllolo).

elections.

~}c~::ri:t. available for

Sophomore representative Tammie
Culkn also rcsiped from her positioo in
theSOAlcaislativcbody in lhccarlydayi;
of thiss.cme:ster.
,
Cullen , a two term SGA mcmbe,,
made her resi1na1ion announcement
soon after Kiely's resiamilion became
omda1. Elltaiuating circumstances ~ere
cl1edasthcrea5011forhcrresignation.

dcbal&. Pidumi 11N1 (Iron\ ldl lO

Mayoral debate held
at Suffolk University
Suffolk University 111d the Boston
Herald sponsored 1he fint Mayoral
debate, for the City or Boston bctwccn
incumbmt Mayor Raymond L. Flynn,
the Reverend Gra)'land Ellis-Hq)er, and

issues can not beaddrcs.scd. He declared
th.at the community and, not tbcachools
were ne&)ccting the children.Hqlcr's cmphuil b:uhe debate was
on Boston·jobt; for Bolton people. Durina bard CCOnomie-tima we must keep
tlic paycheck in the local communitic,,
Hqkr dcdarcd. Hqkr aucrtcd that the
Flynn administration did not acknowl-

record u Boston's " neighborhood
mayor," Both Hqlcr and Doherty ha Ye
extensive private ~tor ~ackpo_
und.
Reverend Hqler is the founder and
5CNOf pastor of the Church of the Uni1ed
Communily in Roxbury. Edward
Doheny hu been the president or the
Boston Tcachffl Union for l~pul 8

Flynn's friendship with Commissioner
Mickey Roachi, and auackcd the rcluc• ,
1ance of a clvilia.n review board by lhc
administration. This wu the only Wue
Flynn refused to &ivc a rebuttal oommrnt
on.
Flynn's position wu that lhe city's
divcni1ywas"sctoi,d1onone,"andhis

~~

===~t=!~=~:

by Patrida Cobb

,::!~ rioe::~~ Do~~;.:;~::; =~t:;~~
relentlessly attacked Flynn'• g year prcss. Ha&)er madcfurt hercrltlclsmsof

debate wu • moderated by : : : : : : i ~ w ~ ~ : .

~~;:~~~!~~:!'~!>~

I

M~~=~~n'1buicfOCUJis
on fundi111 fol the Bos100 community. Greene and City Hill Bureau Chief, Joe
Accordina to the Tlifl Foundoriori Sciacca, Krvina u panelists. A widevariRtporltr, the foundation is mainly in- ct)' of toplca were disawcd including
1ercsted in ''improvina the quality of life Boston raKlcncy laws, Police review.
for people In MusachUJCtts, particular- board, )'Outh scrvicc:s, public education
ly in the Boston area, •: and aivcs " par• 111dthcci1y'1divenl1y.
ticularconsidcraUon1olhenccdsofchil•
Dohertycontffldcdthatjobqualifica•
llrcnand youth.'' A rcp,cscntativefrom tion1, oot residency law1, should be the
the fou~tion wu not available to buis for hlrina for Boston Jobs. He
speak_ wit~ ..
stated that teacben with seok>rity mould
Julio Jurunez, a former ES_ student not lose their jobc on the bads or red·
L
andcutT~llyaJunior_CISmaJora1Sur- dcDCy rcq"Wrcmcnu. On the stanoc of
folk, adnu1s 1~.~t had 1t 1oot been for the affumathe acdon, Dobaty 1Upported it,
ESLpro;iram 11wowd ~beensoawful but notradaiquotaS. Abo, bcSUUCll.ed
I w~ul_d ve dropped out. .
public school chUdren arrived a11Cboql
J1m1nez bcpn at Suffolk in 1989, the surfer hull.JU, abuse, drua addicdon,
same year 1hc ESL program began. PClvcny and lack or parcotal 1uidance,
ESL continued on plgc 9 Even with the schools best efforts, these

~

tiall)' on city projects. Aynn defended

apimt the Hqler attack on thC'public
rdatioruorihcpoiiczdcpartmcntdeclar•
ill.I that the.city did not need an)'OTle
divldiq the police rrom the oommunity,
bul hdpioa 10 brioa them IOJetbcr,
Flynn alsochallcnpd Hqler'1 oooten•
tion tbat tbc)'OUl.h ofthccicyta,dnoprograms ava.il.ablc ror recnatiGD o,
sodaliz:ina exocpt Cbez VOU1 JlolJer.
abtinaR.lnt. Hewmlontonamcaaa•
tmsin list or prOSJ&llli offend in the
oommunity for youth, claim1aa to hdp
"cnlil,bten" Rev. H qla.
The tone oftbc~c was ,twp and
a1timcs11acedwithwit,c:spedallyfrom
Maroni debate
continued on page 4

page 2

The Suffolk Joumo..l Wednesday, September 2.5, 1991

OP-ED

Editorial

He's Baaaack! !

The D.eath Of Communism

byC1pt1lnAu1
ar
A little piece or me has died in the past rew weeks. The spcctor o r the
Soviet Union has ceased 10 ui.s1 and with the dea th or Lenin's grand social isl
experiment we are ldt with a world that will never be the same again .
When I awoke that ratdul Monday mornina last August, 10 l'ind that
Mikhail Gorbachev had been overthrown by the '' hard. line'' communislS in
the Kranlin, I was overwhelmed by a reeling or relier. Al sick as it may sound,
the world seemed, to me, asiri1 were back in perspective. The ''Red Menace' '
was bal::t, the Berlin Wall would go back up, the lron Curtain would ran. and
the western world wouJd go back 10 living in rear of a nuclear holocaust . It
docs sound bizzare, but lha.t was the world I arcw up in and the beliers 10
whidi I had been indoarirwed. It was the feeling or being safe in fear , instead
or fearing the c hanges of the unknown .
I still remember the time when I was in the Army and we nt o n patrol
afon& what is now the former frontittof East and West Germany. It was a
~untin,g place of barbed wi.r:e, warning signs, watch towm. and 1wo rnassivr
armies ready to dash at a moment's notice. The uneasy solitude or that border
of democracy and freedom was nothing less than frightening . On the border
it was qsy to sec why they dubbed th is silent conOicl "Cold War .'' these
slghugavc me the impression that even o n the warmest day it would still be
cold on that barren landscape.

page 3

The Suffolk Journal W ednesday, September 25, 1991

'-"=--The reawakenina of ethnic pride and the subsequent desires for these
groups to havcsclf--de1ermina1ion has the same potential for violence as the
actual diuolvemem does. The world shou(d be worltin1 toward a greater
cooperation and mutual trust, instead o f perpct:ually subdividing imo mcaningless terriloria l boundaries. And , even worw, allowina the fervor of the
ec hnic a nd cultural prides to clash and ovcnvhclm one another . We arc o ne
world. o ne people, and we share a common home - Earth. We need stabilit y.

No one won 1he ''Cold War ," 1he communists lost power, control, and
drove their country's socio-economic structures into the 1round . The Wcs1,
a!though scill in com ro l o r government, has lost the confidence of the world,
11 was stability . Contained within the .. Cold War" there was balance. 1raded substantial proaress for security, and have also driven their economics
The politicians, 1hc military s1ra1egist , and even the people of the respective into the ground . As time passes, we shall sec 1hat both sides lost more than
alliances llnew there would never be a war between NATO and t he Warsaw the re ever was to 11ain .
Pact . Nevertheless, we stood poised on thcedxcof destruction, flirting wi1h
disaster , waiting for the inevi1ablc war that would never come.
To end the foolishness of petty in1crnalionalcompc1ition we need a more

cohesi ve, unified wo rld . A world that needs no armies, no weapo ns. and has
The Cold War provided the world with order . As dangerous as i1 was, no fears or annihilation . A world that would devote its resources toward 1hc
there was alwa)'I asenscorperspoaivc; every nation, government , and person development of humankind, where no o ne goes hungry, ho meless, or ill. A
had a sense o r when: they belonged and what 1he parameters o f the actions world with researches devoted to solving the mysteries of t he universe, stud y.
were.
ing and traVeli ng to the stars , and building better machines. A unified world
is nothing less than U1opian, but no o ne ever said that wishfu l thinking was
Now the sL1tucs of Lenin have met the same fate as the Berlin Wall , we bad.
must be aware of the potential fo r chaos. The coup, in failure or success, had
As events cominuc 10 unfold in tht!-k>rmcr communist 11i·orld, I can't help
a tremcndoUll polcntial for bloodshed . The fact th is transi1ion in the Soviet but th ink about where all o f this might be leading us to. What does it mean
Union, which actually began six years ago, has only claimed a hundred lives
10 us? How will these change$ affect our lives? The o nl y absolute in all of 1his
is a miraclc . .UnJikc the massacre in Tiencnman Square in China or the civil
l~e ''old'_' worl~, is gone and never will rec um . Indeed, a little piece ofmc had
war in Yugoslavia, the disillus ionment or the Soviets' has bttn relatively died . A little piece of all of us has died .
peaceful.
Lawrence M . Walsh
Unfortunately, the failure of the communis1 central govcrnmen1s in
Eastern Europe has awakened the latent emotions of natio nalism and ethnic

~!~~~.t:C~~~~t~~~:L' t~~~!~o~~~~;~~~'!.:r~d~a~~S:~

The Suffolk Journal
28 Derne Streel
Boston, MA021M
Room 116

tcchnok>gy, once designed to make the world a smaller place, has become lhc
very Instrument making the Y{Orld larger and funhcr subdivided. Instead or
moving 1oward further world unity, the fall of communism is pushillg the
people of the world further apar1.

Edil oriar'lioard
..... H eather A . Swails
. ... ,<\.dam ltfendon~

News Editor

at the Oookstowa. We've all cxpericnccd
111ndilgcuwor5ecvcryyear.

My favorite iru1ancc this year Wai
when I tricdsellinabad:oncofmytcxt •
books and the Boolmowa clerk informed me (graciously, o( cour5t) 1h11
1he tc.r1book was no longtt bdna pub-lishcdandnoprofcuorwugoina1ousc
ii (Translalion: we don't (eel like givina
you any money toda y). Th11 means my
U9.25 textbook was wonh as much as
the Soviet niblc.
Low and behold, what do you think I
spo1 on the 1hclf1wo weeks later? You
auc:ucd it: the EXACT s.amc 1cx1book .

~;a:~:~.~i:-=~:=P=~

Freshmen boys iwd girls, wdcomctoSuffo!k Univcrsi1y. Use
really feel bad for the History majors
the common sense you should
(yup, cvcuthelibcral ones). Some of the
have by now in makiq your
U .95 -SI0.95papabacltsthcybuyatthe
c:arcer choices and in the way
Bookstowa are worth SO.SO each (If
you conduct yourselves around
you're lucky), and or counc the wondcrSuffolk or I will cat you alive in
ful professors you had (or have) require
my column this year!
5 or 6 o r ihesc paperbacks.
No, before the CIA, IRS and FBI
No need to engage in selling illegal
comelookingformcalongwithK"Vera.l dn115 on the IUttt when you have a
screaming Freshman mommies and dad- univenily monopoly on lhe now of tv<I·
dies bccau5e I threatened their precious book informa1k>n. l'msure you've ;iota
KMU and daughters, relax. My above an• horror 11ory or two or your own to tell
nounccmcnl is NOT a threat: h's a about the Bookstowa. I only hope and
promiK". Believe me, its bcltcr to act a pray 1he Books1owa with ils paten1cd
slap in the face verball y in a collcaiatc Surrol~ Depreciation remain a Suffol k
newspaper than It is toge1 screwed in the University phenomenon. I would hate to
mccuof8os1on. And, while school can sec my newc:aror house wind up like my
be II lOl of fun, not using you r common old textbook I
sensc' WiU get you In a fut of trouble: if
Like a areal man once $aid: Well ,
noc physically, nnancially. Boy, you fnlh, lh11'1 the iw,ws, a nd I am o ulta
have no idea Freshman boys and ,:iris, here! I
how many times I wished I had a Captain
Avatar to tick me off and m_ me think ,.......,.CAr. T=A'°'I,-,"VAT"'A'°'R"'•s"T"'O"'P"'1, - ,
ake
1
P
N A "'
0
•bou1 m)'Klf and ""'hat I was doing when
REASONS WHY'TKESUfTOLK
1was a Freshman . So take my advice and
BOOKSTORE IS A WONDERFUL
l~'st;~:r:~;J/;~ri:~c:;~u:o:

PLACE TO SHOP

Lawrence M . Wals h

• Applications are available In theStudeoc Activitic!I Cencer bt11nnint
Monda y. September 23, 199 1, and are due back Friday. October
25. 1991.

If you have further questions plea.se contact the Student Ae11vi1Jes
Office at 573.8326.
'---'------------------'

At the .S.G.A.
by Tom Belmonte
Praklc nl , S.G.A.
As I sat down to wrilc th is aniclc on
behalf of my collc11aucson S.G.A., one
succinct quo1e from a Sprina is.sue of 77w
Suffolk Journal ltood out.in my mind.
In that Spring issue Reporter Lawrence
Walsh llatcd 1ha1 '' ... with !he dcpar•
turc of Lisa Masciarelli, the S.G.A. was

~~~ri~

11

The Fall Elections will take place on
Sept. 21--0c:t . I, 1991 (Mon,-Wcd.)"lbc
voting booth& will be open from 10:00
A. M.-2:00 P.M. in the Sawyer Lobby.
We wislrall studcnu 1he bcs1 o f luck Jn
1heir candidacies for clw office., also
encouraac ,.11 students to come out and
vote for thrir class officers; this is yOur
time 10 ehooK" who you wan t to rrprcK"nl you and you r intcresu.

wi~C-:u:~ ·t;; •;h:-1ia~e~J:;

Anothet point of major interest was

~!~h~~:C:,S,~ti;;>~~~:~~=~
S.G.A. has seen t\l(O resignations with.
tbc11an or classes. Both Kathy Kiely and
Tammic_Cull~n uatcd J.hal thc'y had
c.rtenuaung circumstances that kept
th;Cm fro!" continuingat Suffolk . Kathy

~~=i",!~:tao~i:::~~h~~:=!
prcxe::u and search, the S.G.A. is pleased
tOIUUlOUnccthat Dr. VkkJ Karoso(the
Communications & Journa.lism Dept.,
wasou r selcct.ionl(tbcrwppoiotcd. To
somcofyouthismaycomeas no surprise

I . Plcamc o(waiting in long line only

:'!s~=~u~ak!1:~~m::

lO.

My ne....-est ad~iuon 1his ycu is a Top
10 Lisi . Now, before all you David
Lettermen fans call NBCa.od taJk them
into suing me for unauthorized use (or
somcthina equally foolish), top JO lislJ
::~~l~:a:i:~

~:i=

i1

o~:~!:c w~~:d~~telc~ck~~
needed.

:f:nd

;~~ i::::~t~~~:•~~!ekm~:~

OU! !hat iu a '"cash only' '

~:,fr

=~·· =le::~!;~;
~

:
1 i ~~~~~~~t:!~v:~
y!a~r!~~=~·: = i ~ ~ ! ~ehcrco":3:=

Davidlcttcnnen! I
Check out this ttee k11 Top IO Lisi. h
deals with our wonderful Bookstowa.
This year, che ''new'' Booksiowa·has a

7. No smokini, drinkina o r caiing
allowed (but you c•n buy all the
ciaucttcs, drinks and food you
want).

bchindS.G.A.'sro:ycliqcampaipand without her help).
also was.a Sophomore elas.s rcprcscn1a.
live. We wish both ladies the best of luck
Last, bul far from kast, is the SWUI or
in aJI that Ike futurchokti r9r thtrn.
student budgets. S.G.A. Trcaswcr

; : - ~ =~~;~:';°~~~~~is=~i:

6. Convenicntlay-a-wayp!an.

T.1.:~:':~~~h~h~~:::t~

5. f~~~t=c~s~o~:~
(Book cm, Oanno!!).

¾~;~ b:iv~~:;

(nothing new) and just try selli~ book
back at the end af 1he year . You'll be

4. Wondtrful convcnationalists at the
0
1
3. ~:: ;~: : : ::~ up auys or (or

~:~~~~rn!~c~~!~:~:;,r,u paid

.......... Sandra Giannato
.. Paul Ring
Nicole DcSis to

no~:~~. :~~~e:e:!~!h~~i~•= !!~'.
ing when ~;,u find one of those smiling
faocsB1 thcBookslowa tcllina youyou'rc
m1i1lcd to rccdvc SIO for a book ihat
cos1you U5 .2l just three lousy months

ai rls) while waitin& In one of lhree
perfectly maiaht t heckout lines.
2. Oea., visi ble sians everywhere so
that you can find all the books you

..... Candida Ferreira

~op.r~~~~- wha1 ...,.c call Suffolk

I. YOUHAVEAWHOPPINOTWO

Yea, gana. Accoun ting teaches you
a bo ut the various method i; o f

WHOLE WEEKS TO RETURN
YOU'REBOOKSANDGETJ00'9
OF YOUR MONEY BACK!!

trida Cobb.Nicole Oc:S1.wi, Chrut1nc Fiugcr.ud. !r>UI')' SllSlll Halpin,
Anne.lie Slancmyr. DWl.l Soctcnscn, Ron v,ning, Jennifer W:&11,
~nM. Ynun1
AdvilOI')' Board IO be. announced in the IICll issue

• Both fu ll- 11od part-time Seniors with a 2.5 o r higherG.P.A, and who
have been active o n c lubs and organizations at SuffoJk Unlversily
a nd/or public semce in their home communily are enooura,ed to
apply.

9. Where else can you pay more lhan
SI00.00 for two swcauhins wonh
less than S20.00cach?

:~~J~ knows, we need all the lcrts we

r:,'.o,:~

Who's Who

In American Colleges & Universities

;~:~~kbou;r:~:s su:;:lk u~~:~oa~~;
(nothing new), cl01hinapric.csuc insane

The Suffolk lournal •~ the official newspaper or thc campus communi1 y and
orfcn che opponunuy to gain practical cxpcnence in journalism and its
rcla1cd r~kb. All st udcnb, rqardlcn of major . arc invhcd tocon1ribu1r 10
the prodUC'IIOn of the Journal . The vkwscxprc:ucd 1n thr:sc pages arc in no
11i·ay meant 10 renect those of the school's administration.

E(litor•ln-Chicf .
M3naging Ed itor .

Guns ...,ha1? The Capta1nii backl
Jusl like you knew the firu day of
.school had arrived, it became incvilablc
1h111 I 111·ould 1cturn. For those or you
111·ondcrin,, n1mor11ha1 1hc Captain was
.. foru-d 10 rcsian hls column due to
health reasons.. were about as 1rue as
those nycrsyou read allover 1he unlversity about how great ii is to join a fra1.
And I wouldn't be the Captain if I
didn' t speak directl y to tbc Freshman
clusinmyownspedalway. WeU,hacil
1oes:

Applications Are Now Being AccEfpted for:

~

::~~:.1is:';:~~~:=~h~;~r:::
doublc-dcdininabalanccwilh thclaucr
two methods bcin1 the accelerated varid)'. Bui nothln, In textbook Aa:ountina
can cxpla.in Suffolk Depreciation. Its
uniqueandunusualanditonlyhal)pens

need .

1

Noit: The opruons idwicicd by
Captain Avatar in hircolumN are
thole hckl by !he
cdlton anclstafT or The SufTolk
Journal. Any complaints may be
dinx:ICd to the CapCain.
·
not nc:ocssarily

~=~::u ,:s:ias::~:,/S::
~~~::a=::.
=~=~:ie~~n:;~~

::=;:r.c~~::,~x:=:=
.,-:c!::.,-:ir~

~~u8:!n~=~~cd
Joe C.wley was then clcctc4 10 fill come loan S.G.A~~eetlng1opvcthcir
o~cen!:S~i"\!~ :,:U~!i~t~!:~~°:r_=.~~
- ..

r:~y"::!':t::,t:O:t: :c:c:~~~::'. ~~=:~:u;:~~:u~
~ : ~ h a~~f=:~ S~~;a.~~

In addi tion 1 the Sophomore Ow student budacu for the year .
0

vacancics,theS.G.A.isalsosccldnatwo. ln condulion,youca.Dplainlyscctlw
Senion to fill vacancies forClassRepre- we have come to lhc dawninJ or a new
sentative. We wis.h all intctestcd pan;c. era. S.G.A. has come through with new
~~n~r~~i::!~:~:::::~~~:
AttcntionfreshmanlThc:rcisstilltime
foryou toninfor yourclas.s orriccnas
well. You, will need to choose a Oass

:~::!°~~:~'!.P;:!C:;~::!>:t~~

have already completed lhc
nomination proocss, so find out about
them andS.G.A. byattcndingooeofow
meetings. (Tuesdays, 1:00 P.M. Room
S42 1;du.ringtheActiviticsPcriod).
partS

:fc:i'i~~d:,,~~~1=::~'~J:
will be rcwer quest.ions about student
finances under our new bud1ct.i0$
polidc::sthisyear. ShouldanyariJchow-

;!~~~~

(R~co~; ~r ~:
Caitcrorcall u.sxll22}. Wecocowqe
youto1ct involved andenjojwhatSuf.
folk Univenityhastooffcryou. Always
remember S.0 ,A. is hard at work for
you(orwearc''yourvoloconcampw;.' '

The Suffolk Journal WcdncS(lay, September 25, 19

page 4

page 3

T~e Suffolk Journal Wednesday, September 25, 1991

OP-ED
Suffolk briefs .

He's Baaaack!1
byC11ptalnA¥llllr
G ue ~~ whiu? Tht Captain ;~ bad!
Just like yo u knew 1he first d11y of
sc hool hnd arrived, ii became inevitable
1ha1 I wou ld rcmrn . For 1hosc of yo u
wondering, rumors 1hat the Ca ptain wu
••forccd to resign his column due 10
health reasons" were aboul as true as
those flyers you read aJJ over the univcrsity about how great ii is to join a fi at .
And I wouldn't be the Cap1ain i( I
didn ' t speak dlrcct.ly 10 the Freshman
das.sinmyownspccialway. Wdl, hcrcit
goes:
Freshmen boys and girb, wc l•
comc10Suffolk Unlv,mlly. Use
the common sense you should
have by now in making }'OUI
career chokes and in 1hc way
you conduct yourselves uound
SuHolkor I will cat you alive in
my column this year!
No, before the C IA , IRS and FOi
come look.in& for me along wilh several
JC'fcamins Freshman mommies and dad dies because I threatened their precious
sons and douahtcn, relax. My above announcemcnt is NOT a threat: it' s a.
promise. Believe me, its better 10 11c1 a
slap in 1he face verbally in a collegiate
newspaper tha1i ii is to get sc rewed in the
meeuofBoston. And, whilc: sc hool ca n
be a lot of fun, not usina your common
sc nsc· wm get you in a lht of trouble; if
1101 physically, financially. Boy, you
have no idea Freshman boys and girls,

Applications Are Now Being Accepted for:

al the Bookstowa . We've all upc:ricnc«I
ita11ditgcu; worsecvcryyca1 .
:O.·ly favorite ins1ancc th is year was
whcnltricdscllingbackoncofmy le.\t·
books and the Bookstowa clerk in •
formed me (graciously, of course) that
the textbook wa.,; no longer being publishedandnoprofessorwasgoingtousc
it (Translntion: we don't frcl like givina
yo u any money today). Thal means my
U9.25 textbook was worth al much as
the Soviet ruble.
Low and ~hold, what do you think I
spo1 on lhe shelf two weeks later? You
aucsscd it: the EXACT same lCJCtbook .
Brand new ones, even!! Can you beliC'\-'C
il1 Every y~, 1he :iame 1hing happens. I
really feel bad for 1hc Hislory majors
()'\Ip, even the liberal ones). Some of 1hc
U.95-SI0.95papcrback$theybuya1the
Bookstowa arc worth SO.SO each (ir
you're lucky), and of course 1hcwondc1·
ful professors you had (or have) requirt
,or6ofthesepaperbacks.
No need to engage in selling illegal
druas on the st reet when you have a
univiersity monopoly on the now of mn ,
book informat ion. I'm sure you've gol a
horror story or two of your own 10 tell
about the Bookslowa. I only hope and
pray th e Books1owa with its patcmed
Suffolk Depreciation remain a Suffolk
Universi ty phtnomcnon. I would hate to
sec my new ca, or hoU$C wind up like my
old tu1book!
Like a area, man once said; Well,
folk1, lbal 't 1bc IM'91'S, and I am ouna
hen"! !

~:,:':1:t:~~!:::~: l:~ca;:rh~~ ,-,eA
C "°'PT=A:elc,A,aV,,-ATO"A:-OR:,:""T°'O:;;-P-:,1,.....,
N
'S
0
about my5dfand what I was doing when
REASONS WHY THE SUFFOLK
I was a Freshman. So take my ad rice and
BOOKSTI)RE JS A WONDERFUL
bencfil from my expe rience: use your
PLACE TO SHOP
common sense on and off campus. De

:~;~~ knows, we nffli all the lerts we
IOr.~is~~w:~;~d~i;:,~t~rc:~~s ~:~~
Lcnermcn rans call NBC and talk them
into suing me for unauthorized use (or
somethipg equl)lly foolish) , top 10 lisu
~=~=1~::!:~

~~~~~J~ ~~

;h:~J ~::::1~~~/~~~~;'~i~

f~'.o,:~
David Lettermen!!

Check out :his week s Top 10 List. It

~:~\:!~

t~~'..;;;~c~~k~t°:;!t~:/~

lO. ~

:.:t:::c,.-~~:d~~clet~ck~~
1

needed.
9. Where else can you pay more than
1100.00 for 1,.·o swcatshir1s wo r1h
ICS!i than 120.00 cach1
8.

:c~~~~ ~;~~i~fsi~ l~~=s~n~:1~1.~

line.
7. No smoking, drinking or catinll
::!:~~1cs(~u~rfn~~

c:~

b~~ll

Who's Who

In American Colleges & Universities

by Orfkff Ja- Lee
CriRIC Prtvmdoa Offku

• Both full · und purt-timc Scuiuni wi1h a 2.5 or higher G.1' .A., anJ who
have hccn ac1h•e on cluhs and organizations at Suffolk Unh·crsi ty
:111d/or puhlic sc rvlL'c in th ei r home communily are encouroged W
:1pply

WHAT IS CRIME PR£VENTION1
Crime prevention is defined u " the
an1icipation, the recognition and the appraisal of a crime risk , and the initiation
of some action to remove or reduce it."
This definition ooven all a.specu: of
crime and loss prevention, from home
and business socurity surveys, to reducin& employee: theft or sboplifling, to per•
JOnal crime pmcntion tips that should
hdp to reduce a pcnon~ vulnerability to
crime. In other "'OfWi, crime prevention.
ia· a proven, Yaluahlc, educational tool
~~:1a~~~~10 prFVcnt us rrorn becom-

• t\pplic.:mions an: 11\'ailablc in the Student Activi ti es Oenh:r beginniqg
Monday. Scp1crnbcr 2J , t l)() J , and are due hack F'ridll)', October

2S . 1•>91.

If you ha \'C further qucslio ns please co ntact the Swdem Aclivitics
Officc:1t 57.l,f1J2fi

At the S.G.A.
by Tom Ht:lmontt
The Fall Elections will taki: place on
President, S.G. A.
Scp1. 28-0ct. J, 1991 (Mon .-W,ed.)Thc
voting booths will be open from 10:00
A1 I sa1 down lo write thi1 article on A.M .-2:00 P .M. in the Sawyer Lobby.
behalfofmycol lc.agucson S.G .A ., one We wish all 1tudcnu the best of luck in
•uccinct quote from a Spring issue of 77at their ,;andidacics for class ofrtce. I also

: ~:~~~~~=ii:

1

f:{{:~\~~r;;~!t~~c=~~~ ~:w~;~:~
~::c~rii:r:~~~s~~ y!:~
Walsh staled that " ... wi1h the depar- time to choose who you ,aru 10 reprc·
turc o f Lisa Masdarclli, the S.0.A. wa.s sent you and you r interests. "
entering a new era .. '' My fellow
members will attest to the fact that
Another point of majo, interest wa.s
1
~=~1
;'!~:r1t~~s~:it;e~::ci:
1

~~~~'.

~~~=_i~Tt:~ °~~~:~ih~;:,~i:::~

t h : ; ~ \ t : ~ :~;~:~;t~:/:~
Tammie Cullen stated 1ha1 they had
c,ncnu:11in1 ci rcums1an1;CS that kepi
them from continuing at Su rfolk . Kath y

::::e~~h[)~~~ ~ ·~~u:~
Communications & Journalism Dcpc .,
was our selection 10 be re-appointed. To
some of you this may come as no su rprise

~:=~o~:i~:

;;~

~h~;1~h;~,~~: !n::~·i~ ·t:~!!i~~~~ ~h~~v:~:

o't

i~;i~~;

~:;: r!~C:n:~~~:t;h:::r::~~r: ::ch~!~~ca~;~~~tc;~~
behind S.0.A. 's recycling campaign and wilhout her help).
1
1
:~
Last, but far irom least, is the status of

y':~ ~~:.~: :i:~~~~~~~ ~! ~::;~

want)

;;i~ :::!:i; i~';°i,:~ :c~:~s~::ii:;

6 . Con\'enicm la y-a- wa y plan .

.. new" about the Suffolk Bookstowa.
Textbook prices arc unbe lievable
(nothing new), clothing prices uc insane

5. Pica.sun! of being grtt ied by Suf•
folk's version o r Hav.·aii Fivc•O
(Book em, Dan no!!).

8

~:~~h~n1 1 1n~n::u,~:r:c~rl~i~~:~~
~:w
lucky if you act 25~• or what you paid
for it (no1h in11 new here, chhtr)
While Freshman read ing th i1 might
not care. you 'll remember what I'm s.a~ing when )'OU find o ne of lhO)(' sm,hng
faces at the Book.stow& tdlingyou 1 re
·ou'
entitled 10 rccch·c Sl0 for a book that
cos t you U5.25 jus1 three lousy months
ago. That's what we call Suffolk
Dcprcciation .
Yea, gang. Account ing tcachc~ you
about the va ri o u 5 method ~ of

4 . Wonderful convcrsationalim at the

~:~::~~ti::::~:~:;:~~~h~j~~~:
doublc-decllnina balance with the lat1cr
two methods beina the accele rated vari•
et)'. But no1hing in textbook Aa:oun1in11
can explain Suffolk Depreciation. lu
unique and unusual and it only happens

~:d

What is Crime
Prevention?

in

~!I ~~:~~~~u~~:~1::_:o~:~:}; by

~:;~~:~;i,~~:har!r~':;~~

Tammie an d Kathy, the S.G.A. saw the sin~J uneofthls year to sec that studC!lt
1
~~::=~~=ir :~s;ias:~::~~nt.R~~: ~l~~~u~=n~:%~;~a::!::~:a;!:
JOC' Cawley was then elected to fill cometoan S.G.A.mceting toJivc1 heir
Kath y's position o f vice presidcm 011 sugges1ions, compl aint1, or com,me~1s

r~

2. Clca1. visible sigru c,·erywhcrc w
that you ca n find all 1hc books you
nttd
1. YOU HA VE A WHOPP ING TWO
WHOLE WEEKS TO RETURN
YOU'RE BOOKS ANDOET 100~,
OF YOUR MONEY BACK!!

: : : : : ~:t.~~i!o~:~a!:\:~
11
will be filled in the coming Fallclcctioru.
These positions arc the Vice President
(ldt by Prc: oso), and a Representat ive.
d
In addit ion 10 the Sophomore Class
vacancies, theS.G.A. is also seeking two
Senion 10 m l vacancies for Class Representaiivc. We wish all interested parties
10 draw nominat io n papers at the Smdent Activities Orficic as soon as pos.siblc.
Attention Freshman ! Therdsst.ill time
for you to run for your class officen as
well . You will need to chooSe a Class

:~~~:~c=~~:di:::c;~~~~~~
work with othe r Student groups in•
eluding: Program Council, Council of
Presidents and Beacon Yearl.look to pass
stude nt bud11et1 for the year.
In conclusion, you can plainly sec that
we have come lo the dawning of a new
era. S.G.A . hascomethrouahwithncw
members, talents and idcu for the gain
or all students. We anticipate that there
will be fewer questions about student
finances under our new budgetina
policies this year. Shouldanyarisehow-

NOTE: The optnlOIU lid~ by
Captain Avatar in his columns are
not occcssarily lhosc. hcld by the
editors and staff of Tiie Suffolk
Journal . Ally CDmfilainls may be
dirtclCd lO the Capcain.

=~:::s:nntia~:.p;:~~c~;~:~~~~t~~~
parts have already co mpleted the
nomination process, so find out about
them and S.G.A by attcndina one of our
meetinp. (Tuesdays, 1:00 P.M. Room
542 1; durina the Activities Period).

(R:;~o~; b:f
Center or call us x8322). We cncoutagc
you toaet involved and enjoy what Suffolk Univcnity has tooffier you. Always
remember S.G.A . is hard al work for
you for we are "yourvolceoncamput."

chcctout rou mers.
3. Gica1 place 10 pick up guys 01 (01
girli) while wai1in11 in one o f three
perfectly straight checkout li nccs .

~~~ ~~~:n~n~~~~t~

Art show and sal1
by Diana Socn"nscn
Once asain, the art show and sale
sponsored by Proaram Council and
Trcn1 Graphics took place in the Sawyer
cafeteria last week.
"Come in and visit our extensive art
sale," said Cathy Staub, who handed OUI
pamphlet.& al thc,door of the cafeteria.
With her help, she.showed me just about
evcrypossibleposteravailablcforanyin•
dividuals ' taste, rangi ng from the
Rcnnaisancc 10 American modern and
absttactrcaJism .
MOit of the poslm were spread out on
various tab les and were divided by artist
or by category. The an , how itself
proved to be rather small in siu and consisted Cfl tirdyof commercial an. No student an wu on hand for viewing or
purchase.
·
There Kfflted to be a consistent pthcrin1 around onc of 1)1c 1ables, namely
the one containing the black ind while
photography of world rcknown artist
Kim Anderson.
Romantic pictures featuring couples In
love tended to have the attention of
many female student.I. Humor post~ of
Murphy's Law and other rules in·achool
and Jove had the inter«\ of most of the .
men.
·

In addition, the show had a wide variety or music, movie, wi ld animal and
nature KCnes, and travel an. ,
Studcnihdpcrs al the show wierccx,mpensated for their work wilh discounts
and free selections.
The next an show and poster sale is
scheduled for after the Christmas break.
Student helpers will be needed for that
showuwcll.
With pricesranainJfromS2.SOtoS28,
less than hair of what 1hcy arc in the
store, they arc affordable and even easier
1oob1afo.
·
Art lovers w.ill be ab le to get more informaiion through the Student Activities
Office or Program Council.

At times (such a.s now) I will offer a
prevention method I.ha.I acansso obvious
thal it will be d i s ~ by most people,
Bui I 'll ti.kc a ctwic:e, and begin by
warning.evcrypnc that theft ofptfSOnal
belonaings in the libraries at Suffolk is a
co nti nual hcadacbe.
With that u.id;hcrc cx,mes the obvious: Do not leave personal valuables
ltjCh ll5 wa.llffl, purses or pocketbooks,
1
personal stereos, etc., una.ttcnded in the
library. It takes only seconds for a thief
lO grab and run while you gd a'~lcor
make oopies or use your locker, but at
least you should take )'OW' valuables with
you . It ma)' be inconvenient, but consider the alternative. I stress this to
women especially, who ar~ by far the
greatest victims or this type of criffls, u
most carry pod:etboob in addition to
bookbags.
There arc direct-line cmeramcy
phones in the Sawyu Llbiar}' that arc
connected 10 the Univcnity Polia: desk
in 1hc Sawyer Building. lf anyone seems
suspicious or out of pl.ace, if you feel
uneasy abouLJl:lem, don't hesitate to .,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
r~~i;{iypc of coo~~;n is dc;cl•
oped between the Suffolk community
and I.h e UniVC{Sity Police the result
would be lhat fewer Of you, 1hc Suffolk
Community, would become yet anoth·cr
victim of crime.
Aaain I would like to remind evCtyonc
that if there arc any questions pertaining
JO Crime Prevcnlion, I can be con~ed
at 57).'83]]. Questions, or ideas arc
always welcome.

REMINDf.ll:
The parking spaa:;s in fcon1 of the
Sawyer Building arc for handicapacccs.s
only. This goes for weekends also! The
handicap s1udients and faculty deserve
some consideration, 10 please do no1
park in these spot.I. Vehidcs not authorized to park in this zone will be ticketed.
Also, no parking !n the loading zone or
on Temple Street.
Also, do not lock bikes to •he railing
or the loadi na dock in rr.,,11 of the
Sawyer Building. 1bcsc bikes will be
removed. Motorcydes should 1101 be
parted On the sidewalk in front or any
buildings either. Thiscanresul1 inasub-staalial fine (S40.00). These vehicles
should be parked in the lot next to the
Donahue Building.

Mayoral debate
continued from page I
Doherty. Flynn appeared increasingly
~tles.s a.s the dcba1c went on. Hagler
~as surprisingly P?li~hed in his USCf·
uons of the defi~en1es o r the Flynn

°:o0~:ts~= t~~

The panelist, Joe Scia
that the debate was lively
~a~t:::r:·~~t/~!~o~
~~~::is~!:~~~:u~'iJ:':
other hand Leonard Ore
paiiclis1,wasalittledisapf
that evcry 9 nc knew 1hc m

~:U:Or~~d
~~/;r:~::::=:
pubhc schc_,ols, b~I _isolated them from 24~will narrow the field 1
thco1herc~1yaa~.
/w'. forthcNov.2ballot.Sufl
The 1u~1cnce consisted ~r supponcrs will be sponsoring future<

~~!~'!:~~·u:~
·
:

~n!:~:~!~c!fs~~;
tcmporuy issues._
01
tunately, the debate wa.s no! widely
i,ublicizcd to the Suffolk community,
and nOI televised 10 the acncral public.

Resign SG

~~n~h!n!~!;er~:~n~i~:~~;;
questions from media. President David
Sargent commented the dcb11c 10 be a
amt suc:ca,. He stated tha! future
debates would be held including coun
refom:i ..Dean Ron~ync rc'!'arked that
the ca_nd1da1es were mtcrcstma. Ht also
promised more events In !he fu ture.
When uked about lhc lack of students
t~ c Dean res~nded that the student
uckcts were limited to only 25.

continued from p1
Other SGA Hap1
Since Tommy Belmont
Dan Jachning for SGA
semester, many pcopl~
J achningwouldsliUbe an
of student government.
Yes,Jachningisstillan
or SGA. He is now a sen

page 3

.mal Wednesday. September 25. 1991

The Suffolk Journal Wednesday, September 25, 1991

page 4

Suffolk briefs
II
Jlexptneoccd
his yea, .. a~
ntorm y 101 wa clerk inroouut)that
~r bcin& pubJi Join110 use
ecllikt1hin1
1a1mnnsmy
hun1uchu
loyou1hinlt: I
ksla1ttT You
mttrxtbook .
myoubtlicvc
n1happtM. I
t1tory majors
1. Someor1he
hcybuya11he
>.50 uch (i r
c1hcwondcrhavc)rcqulrc
scllin1 illcpl
have a
:nowor1cx1 eyou'vc1011
uown 1otell
nly hope:nnd
iu patented
aioaSuffolk
would hate to
nduplilt:emy

Who's Who

In American Colleges & Universities
• U h full- 111.J par1 -1i m eSc11iun1 w,th 11 .:!.5 or h1g,herU.l'.A.• and 11.•ho
o1
have h t.'CII aclh•c on cltlhs 1111d urg,11ni.tnl 1
ons Bl Suffolk Unive~il)'
and'o r puhlic ~ rvh..-c: 111 1hc1 r home l.'O mmm1il y are Cll l.'O urag,t.-d to
Hpply
• Applicmiuns ure ;l\'ailahlc in the Student ActMtlcs ( ~ uh:r lk.,ginning
Mo nday, September 2.l, I •~) I , and arc d ue back f-' ridny, October

2S, 19') 1.

If )'Ou hu\'e fonher 4ucs1ium, plelbe ._,011rnc1 1he Smde111 Acu vitle!>
om..~ Bl S 1J -RJ.:!6

I )'OU

: ~: Wrll,
d I am ouua

STOPIO
SUFFOLK
NDER nJL
OP
l'l lt'lmcpay
the bool:$ I
aymorc 1han
1tshins 11.· onh
on1linconly
"cuhonly"
1 or ca1in1
&
buy all the
j food you

:ted by surwaii Fi•·c,O
nalil11111hc
•1uysor tor
oncor1hrtt
(OUllinn .

•erywhcrc: w
1cbooks you
'P INOTWO
> RETURN
>GETIOO,,.
ACKII

...... ""

~
ldbylhc
Suffolk

~maybe

)

Applications Are Now Being Accepted for:

At the S.G.A.
b)' Tom Bcimonlt'
Prffldcn1 ,S.G.A .
As I u 1 down 10 write: 1h1s 11.nick on
bt'halror m)' collugua on S.O.A., one
1uccinctquotcfrom1Sprin1issl1Cof'TM
Siiffolk Journal stood ou1 in my mind .
In 1ha1 Spring Issue Rcponcr Lawrence
Walsh staled that " .. whh the dcpar turcofLisa Mascia,clli, lhc S.0 .A . was
ente ring a new era .. " My fellow
mcmbt'rs will ann1 to the fact 1ha1
no1hin, seems 10 bt' more: t111c in th~ pasl
two wCt"ks of 1hi1 Fall scmntcr o r 1991 .
S.0 .A. husecntworesi1nalionswith
thc11an of classes. Dolh Kath)' Kiely and
Tammie Cullen staled that they had
c,11cnua1in1 circums1anccs that kc:pl
c}lcm fiymcontinuin1at Suffolk . Kathy
will be missed IIOI only as the Sophomore
clwprcsident, butabouourcxccuuvc
board u Vice Praidcnt . Tammie, u
many of you know, wu 1hc main force
behind S.G.A. 's r«)'("lin1 campai1n and
abo was a Sophomore class rcprC$C ntativc. We wish both ladies the bcsl of luck
in all that the future holds for thc:m .
In response 10 the v ~ left by
:r&mmic and Kathy, the S.G .A. saw 1hc
Sophomore clau appoin1 M.obc:n
Praiosothcir ncwclas.sprcsidcnt.Scnio.Joe Cawlc)' wu 1hcn dccted to fill
Kathy 's position or vice president on
cx«u1ivc board . This now lcf1 1wo
vacancitlim thc Sophomorcclw, whkh
will bt fiUedin 1hc comin1 Falldmions.
These posil\ons arc the Vice Prcsident
(\cf! by PrcziOk>), and a Reprcscntaci vc:.
In addition to the Sophomore Cl111
vacancies, the S.G.A . is also sccldn, two
Seniors 10 fill vacancio for Class Rcprcscntativc. We wi1h all imcres1ed panics
10 draw nomination papers a1 the Siuden t Aclivities omce as soon as poMiblc.
Auentioo Freshman! There ii, uill 1imc
for )'OU to run for your class officen u
well. You will nttd to choose a Cius
President. Vice Prcsidcn1, and four (4)
Rcprncnta1ives.Someofyourcountcr pans have already complt'led the
nomina1ion proceu, so find out about
thffl\ and S.G.A. b)' aucndina one of our
mcclinp. (Tucsda)'S, 1:00 P.M. Room
S.2 1; durinJ 1hc Activi1ies Period).

The Fall El«uon1 will 1akc: plate: on
Sept. 21-0ct. )., 1991 (Mon.-Wed .)Thc
voung boolhs will be open from 10:00
A. M.-2:00 P .M. ln 1hc Sawyer Lobb)'.
We wish all 11udcnu lht' bcs1 o r hu::ik in
1hcircand1dacics rorclusofficc. I aho
encourage all students 1ocomc ou1 and
vote for their clan officers; this is you,
lime to chOOSl' who you wan1 to rcprcscm )"OU and rour mtcrnl~.
Anotller point or major int erest w;u,
the appoin1mcn1 of 1hc S.G.A. 's f1M;Uhy
Advisor . Afm a thorough application
process and search. 1heS.G.A. is pleased
1oannounccthat Or . Vicki Karns of the
Communica1iom1 & Journali1m Dept .•
wasoursclcction1obe1c-•ppointed. To
somcoryouthismaycomtas nowrprisc
1inoc: S.G .A. and Vkkl have worked wdl
asa1iaminlhcput. We all thank Vklti
forhcrdcdicatKfflandinme!ilinS .G .A.
(We could no1 \earn and im prove:
without her help).
Last, but rar from lcas1, is thcil.Bl \1$0f
Jt11dcn1 budgtU. S.G .A. Treasurer
Rocc0Cicca.rcllohubttnharda1worlt
since June or1his yea, to sec that studcn1
funds arc monitored and spent wisely.
All 1tuden1 1roups arc c:ncou.rqed 10
come 10 an S.G .A. mcctin1 to Jive 1hci1
sugges1ions, complaints. or comments
about srndcnt finances . Afm conlinuln1
diKu.uion about fundin&, S.0 .A . will
worlt 'with 01hc1 Student ,,oups in,
cludin1: Program Council, Council or
Presiden1sand Beaton Ycurbook IOpaM
s1udc:mb11d1C1sforthcycar .
In rooclusion, you can plainly sec that
we have come 10 the dawnin1 or a new
era . S.G.A. has come through wi1h new
members, 1alcnu and idcu for 1hc 1ain
of all s1udcnu.. We andcipa1c 1h.a1 1herc
will be fewer que11ions about srndcnt
finances under our new bud1ctin,
polidcuhisyev. ShouktanyariJchow•
ever, come by our orrice and tell us.
(Room 3 17 or the Student Activities
Center or call us x8322). We cncouraac
you to set involved and enjoy what Suf•
folk University hu 10 o ffer you. Alwa)'S
remember S.G .A. is hard at worlt for
you for we are "your voloeoncampus."

What is Crime
Prevention?
byOffkcr J aanLtt
Crime Pn:vaitioll Offbr

Ar t show and sale held by P.C.
by Diana Socruscn
Once apin, the ar1 show and sale
sponsored, by Program Council and
Trent Graphics took place in the SIW)'ff
cafctcrialuiwttk .
"Come in and vish our a.tensive: an
WC," 11W Calhy Siaub, who handed 0111
pamphlcis ai the door of the caft'lcria .
With her help. she showed me jusl about
evt'f)'possiblcpos1nava.ilablcforanyindividuals' 1as1c, ran&ing from the
Rcnnalsancc to American modern and
ab1tr1C1rcalism.
MOit or the: posicn were spread out on
various tables and were divided by utis1
or by catc1ory. The an show iuelf
proved to be rather 11nall in size andconsiJted entirely o f commercial an. No student 1ft wu on hand for vicwina or
purchue.
There 1«mcd 10 be a consi1:cnt plh·
crin1 sround one of the 1able1, namely
the one containing the black and white
pho101r1phy of world rtltnown anist
Kim Anderson.
Romantic pictures fcaturin,co uples In
love tcoded to have the atten tion of
many female srndenu. Humor postcnof
Murphy~ Caw and other rules in school
and k,vc had the int nest of mos! of the
men.
In addition. the ,how had I wide vari•
cty of music, movie, wikl animal and
nacurcKCnes,an4travcllft.
Student hdpcrs a1 1he show were com•
pcnsated for their worlt with discounu
and free ttlcclions.
The DCllt art 1how and poster sale is
scheduled for after the Christmu brta.k .
Student helpers will bt nccde<! for 1h11
1howuwcll.
Whh prices ran&in1 from S2.SO 10 S28,
lcs1 than half of whal !hey UC in lhc
store, 1hcy uc afrordablc and eYcn win
to obtai n.
An lovers will bt able 10 &Cl more information 1hrough the Student Activities
Office or Pro1ram Council.

WHAT IS CRI ME PREVENTIO N?
Crime prevention is ~fined as "the
an1idpation, the recoanition and the appraisal of a crime rislt, and the initiation
of w mc action 10 remove or reduce ii.··
This definitio n coven all aspeCLS of
crime and Jou prevention , from home
and businesuecurity surveys, 10 rcducina employee then or shoptiflin.g, 10 pcrwnal crime l)f"CVU!tion tips that should
help to reduce. pcnoD'I vulocrabilil)' to
crime. In other words, crime prevcn1ioo
is a proven, valuable, educational tool
that can hdp to prevcn1 us from bec:omin11 vktim.
At times (1uch as now} I will offer a
prC¥cntion method that IOCDU IO obvious
that It will be dismislcd b)' most people.
Bui I'll taltc I chance, and begin by
warnin1cvcryoncthatthe(1ofpersonal
belon,.i.ap in the libraries at Suffolk iJ a
conti nual bead.1€hc.
With that aid, here comes the obvi•
ous: Do not leave pcnooal valuables
such u wallcu, pun,cs or pockciboob,
personal stereos, etc., unaumdcd in the
library. lt1akesonly1CU>n&:for a1hicf
10 Jlllb and run while you get a book·or
make copie!i o r u.se your locker, but at
lea.st you should take your val!Wllc:s with
you , II may be inconveoiml , bu1 con•
/ ""',sider 1hc alternative. I stress this to
·
women especially, who are by far 1he
1rcates1 victims of this Jype of crime, u
most carry pocketbooks in add ition to
bookbags. •
There uc dircct•lioc emergency
phooes in the Sawyer Library 1ha1 a,;e
connected to Lhc University Police desk.
in theSawyer Buildiq. tr anyone seems
1uspici011.1 or out or place. if you fed
~:::Sri/:bou1 _
thcm, ~oc•~ hesi1a1c _1o t - - - - - - - - - - -~
/

~~c~~~i~:!::~t~

0~t:!1:0
and the Un1versity Polic.e the result

~~~!~:~t~=:~~~i:!~:~:

victim of crime.
Apinlwowdliketorem.indcvcryooc
!hat if there arc any qucllions pcru.ining
toCrimcPrC'\ltntion , l canbccontacted
::w!!!!!t/~?."cstions

:.r

ideas arc

itDUNDIER:
The puki ng spaces in front of 1he

Sawyer Building arc for handicap aa:c:u
only. This goes fo,- ."ccltends also! The
handicap 11udcnu and faculty dcsnvi
some consideration, so pkue do not
parkinthcsespoU. Vehicles not author.,
iud 10 park in !his zone will be tkkctcd.
Also. no parltin1 jn the loadina zone-or
ooTcmplcStroct.
Also, do not lock bikes 10 •he railing
of the loadin1 doclt in
or t&c
Sawyer Buildin,. n-c bikes will be
removed. Mocorcydes should noc be
pa.rited on 1hc sidewalk in fronl of any
buildinss either. This can result in asub-stantial fine ($40.00). ThCK vehicles
should be parked in the lot next 10 the
Donahue Bwlding.

rr.,.,,

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

Mayoral debate

ih!h1
~:::~~:~·}.':ii~:;~~~~~~r!::
continued from page I
Haalcr were nol pusho~m_and Fl~nn
had come• long wa~ m hH 1pc1k1n1
Oohcrjy. Flynn appeared increasingly ::::~~!:~~fo!i~:~d~b~~c.~~~
restless u the dcbat~ went_9n: Ha&]n other hand Leonard Greene, lhe Olher
~u surprislo1ly P?~hed m his assn- panelist, wua link disappointed. He fdt
ooos or the dcflCKlltt'S of the Aynnthatevnyonckncwihcmainiuoesiobt

~~r~~d ~~l~ais:~;;!'t~ asked and !h~rewer, n~ new'surprlscs.

hoots, but isolated them from The prc h minaryclcctmn Tucs., ~pl .
cil)' aaencics.
24, will narrow the field to two ~nal1~ts
1
au~icnc~ ~Mist~~! supponm :~ ~s~!:1:;~,~f!~!~;::~~
~il~:~t~c!S~f;ol~~u~C:~u::~ temporary ISSUes,
lunately. the debate was 001 widely

public
1~

!11~

:';~1~:!:t!u,z::c:!':i~~~\~:
1
1

~ ~~~~=~!::~! ~~~

q uestions from media. President David

!:!cn;~c:~!~~~=

l~u=r:
debates wouJd be hdd includin& coun

~;~;i!d~~:d;::i~i:s"~~!~i~t:~ncc
BothBclmonlcandJachninJSpoli:cln
detail about ihc SOA bud&CI, uyina
Ihere had btto preliminary discussions
andpro~brou&htu pandhopdully
~:ik~gci will be pUSCd In roughly two
·
Bud1C1ary Pcforms _.,_arc also in the
wo~ks in di rect r~po nsc 10 problems
wh.ch SGA encountered last >',Pf.J. Thc1
~h~re~i.
: :.~~Pbu~&~i:~
l)'Slcm.
.

:J:)' ~~

:i:c!t~!::ii

1
m~:~u:;=,:::~:
1
: ':t~~h~!:: '':n':':;':!;~
cluscs. The elections will be hdd on
21 1
OtbttSGA Happellinp
12 : _
Since:Tommy Bclmonte'svict.oryovn ~o!uffolk I.D. is req uired in order 10

Resign SGA

continued from page l

~c:~i::~~~~ ~

!~

SGf

: o ~ i = ! : ~ai::,=n~~~t~ !!:~:hn::nfor
president lut
·
promised mo re events in the future.
. •
>' _peop c w1;mdcrcd if As_
alwa)'S,SOAwclcomcsallstudenu.
When ultcd abol\l the lack or s1 udcn ts J~ch runa would itill be an active member to voice their questions and/or concerns
:C1t!!:cr;:~o

~1:~ ~~~

1tudcn1

° ~~~~:::~~~~~•~n.activc member ~cii;;!f~

~~1:~r~~~"::t

ofSOA . He is now a stn1or rcprcsmta- ex tension 8322.

::c::

------·
The Suffolk Journal WC<lnesday,

The Suffolk Journal Wednesday, September 25, 1991

page 4

Sµffolk briefs
Suffolk grads succeed in tough market

What is Crime

Prevention?
by Orfkn Jaaes Ltt
Crirac Prevcalloa Offittr
WHAT IS CR IME PREVENT ION?
Crime prevention ii definN 115 ''the
anr.icipation, the recognition and the appralsalofacrimcrisk,and 1hcini1i11ion
of some ac1ion 10 remove o r reduce it ."
This definition c.ovffl al l a.specu of
crime and loss prevmtion, from home
ind business security surveys, lo reducing employee the fl or lhoplifling, lo personal aime prevuukm lips that shollld
hdptorcd1JC1r1pcnoo'1vulncrabilit)'to
crime. In ot her wor&, crime prevention
is a proven, valuable, educational tool
thal can help to prevent us from becoming a victim.
At limes (such IJ now) I will offer I
prevcnlion method that IOCl1lS so obvious
that it will be ddmiucd by most people.
But I 'II ta ke a chance, and begin by
wamin1 cvCf)'onc that thdt of personal
bclohgings in the libraries a.I Suffolk ls a
co ntinual headache.
"'\
With that said, here comes the obvious: Do not leave personal valuab les
such as wa llcu, purscs o r poclmbooks ,
personal s1crco1, elc., unaucnded In I.he
library. h takes onl y ~ d s fo1 a th ief
to irab and run while YOU get a book or
make copies or use your locker, but at
least you S!\Oukl take yow valuables with
you . It may be inconvenient, but co nsider the alternative. I stress this 10
women es~ally, who are by far the
grca1es1 victims of th.is lypc o f trimc, u
most carry pockcibooks in addition 10
book bags.
There arc direct-line cmerieocy
phones in the Sawyer Library that uc
connected to the Univenity Polite desk

~~!~cis::: ~:~d~~~~'"'.'~f~:~~

by Betsey McDowell
Cam,Suvlcu

byDlan•Sotrtnsen

Onct' again, the: an show and sak
sponsored by Program Council and
Trent Graphics took place in the Sa111·yer
ta fe1crialas1wcck .
" Come in and vi5il our extcnsiv, an
sale,'' said Cathy Staub, 11,·ho handed ou1
pamphlets 11 the door or the cafeteria .
Withhcrhclp, shcshowcdmc juMabou1
evtt)'possiblepostnavailablcforanyind ivid ual.!i' 1a.,;1c, ranging from the
Rcnnaisanec to American modern and
abstract real ism.
M051of1hcpo51enwnc~rcad ou1on
various tabla and were divided by an.isl
or by tategory. The art show itself
proved 10 be rather small in siz.e and consisted entirely of cornmcrcia.l art. No !du·
dent ar1 was on hand for viewing or
purchase.
There seemed to be a con.sistenl gathcrin1 around one of the iablcs, namely
the one containin1 the blatk and while
pho1ograph y of world rcknown artist
Kim Anderson .
Romantic pictures featuring couples in
love tended to have the aucntion of
many female students. Humor posters of
Murphy' s Law and other rulc:s in sc hool
and love had the inccrcst of mosc of the
men.
In addilion, 1hc show had a wide variccy of music, movie, wild animal and
naturcsccnc:s, and tra vel an.
S1Udcn1 helpers at 1hc show were compcnsatcd for their work with discounts
an d free selcc1ions.
The next art show and poster sale is
scheduled for aftcf the Christmas break .
Student helpers will be needed for that
show as we ll .
With prices r&nging from 52.SO 10 528,
len than half of what they arc in the
store, they arc affordablf: and even easier
10 obtai n.
An \overs will be able to gel more infonnation through the Student Activitic:s
Office or Program Council.

~ by Adam

Mendonca

~;;:n'it~u• them, don'l hesitalc 1o t - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

tr 1his type or coopaation is developed between the Suffolk c.omm unit y
and 1hc University Polkc 1hc result
would be 1h11 fewer or you, lhe Suffolk
Community, would become yet ano1hcr
vic1imofcrimc.
Ap.in I would Hke 10 ran.ind everyone
1ha1ifthcrcareanyquestions_
pcnail\!ng
to Crime Prevention, I can be contacted
a, .HJ-8l3l . Questioiu or idcls arc
al,,.·ays ,,.·elcomc.
REMINDER:
The parkin1 spaces in front of l hc
Sawytl' Building are fo, handicap acceu
only. This aoes for weekends also! The
hand icap stude nts and facult y deserve
some co nsideration, so plcue do 001
park in these spots. Vehicles not au thor•
iz.ed 1oparkinth isz.o ncwill be1lckc1ed.
Also, no parking In the loadi ng zo ne or
onTcmpkStreel .
Also, do not lock bikes to •he railing
o f the loading dock in fr... ,t of the
Sawyer Buildina. These bikes will be
removed . Mo1orcyclcs should not be
parked on 1hc sidewalk in front o f any
bu.ildinasci1ht1". This can result in 1sub1tantial fine (540.00}. These vehicles
should be parked in the 101 next to the
Donahue Building.

Mayoral debate
c ontinued from page I



What seniors can do to prepare

Jt 'shardtObclicvcinScp1cmbcr, but
1hc final yu.r of a 1,enior's academic
career will pau by quickly, and suddenl y
they will find themselves looking for a
permanent job, or tryina 10 decide on
graduate school.
National stalis1ics indicate 1ha1 only
about 15pcrccn1ofallcollqcaradua1es
secure 1hdr jobs throuah the on-campus
rccruitin1prooess. Therefore, there are
other imponan1 job search methods
graduates m1.11t use in o rder to ident ify
and find the job Ibey really wanL
According to Paul Tanklefsky, the
Director of Career Services and
Cooperative Education , 9)'.7 percent o f
1he class of 1990werc in iradu1tc sc hool
01gainfuUyemploycd1year1flergnu:luation. Thi1i nd.icates1h11Suffolk1radua1£$arcsuccecdinainthejobtcarchby
doing1wothinas:
l)focusing1hcirscarchaccordin1toa
careerobject iveand2)utilitln1av1riety
9( job search methods and tools.
In fac1, Career Servkcs data for the
classof1990indicatcsthat 32 .5pcr«nt
of the class found their positions 1hrouah
nctwork ing, 20. .Spe'iccntthrouahusi ng
resourc" avai lable at Career Servi«s
(co-op, inte111Vlip~_j9b,Jpin, the job
notebooks, 1he emPloymcnt ncwslcllcr,
and the alumni ne twork), 21.7 percent
throuah a ncw,papcr ad, 11.t pcrcen1
throughdircctoon1actwithancmploycr,
8. 1 per!!entthroughaplacemcntagcncy,
and5.9pcrccnt throughothcrme~. In
other words, a va riety or job finding
f rtch nique5and resources were uliliud in
seciiring meaningfu l employment.
For 1his year's senior, tt\c job market
they will encounter remains very competitive. There arc. however, several employers who are expanding and hiring.
And there arc even larae corporate
cmploycrs,seeminJlyin a cost-cutting
mode, who arc hirin, selectively. This is
evidenced by the number or job notices
received by the Career Services Orricc
each week. The key faaor In landing
1hese jobs will be the ability 10 ferret
them out.
Certai nly, a sinior's preparation for
tbc job search will be VCf)' important .
Each tcnior should be wing 1he next
several months to position t.hemsdves to
hit the around running with a multipron,ed job sea,ch that can .be 1wta.iocd
throuahout the time ii will take tosecwe
a job.

REMINDER TO STUDENTS WITH
PERKINS LOAN and/ or INCENTIVE
LOAN AWARDS for the Fall 1991 Semester:
Come lo lhe Student Loan Ofllc, lo sign the
promissory nole(s). (7th Floor Sawyer Bnlldlng)
Failun, lo do so will result in lhe cancellation of
your award.

Herc's what the Office of career
Services and COClpcrativc Education
recomme nds for this preparation:


I) DEVELOP A FOCUSED J OB
OBJECllVE. Employers indicate to
Career Services that they clearly prefer
candidates who can articulate what they
wan t 10 do and why they want to do it
over candidates who indicate tbal they
are " ~ t o be open." lfyouarehavina difficulty findina rocw, visit Cuccr
Services at 20 A.thburton Place for
individu.al wis1ancc.

1991

IMPORTANT NOTICES
FROM STUDENT
ACCOUNTS OFflCE

News Briefs

Art show and sale held by ,!.C.

Sepr=l!<r 25,

NOVEMBER 1, 1991 is the FALL
DEFERRED TUITION DUE DATE!
Fall 1991. Tuition must be paidJn full in order to
p~regisler for lbe Spring 1992 Semester. Spring
pn,-ngi.stradon begins Novemj,er 4th. In order ·
lo pas., in your Spring 1992 regislnldon form you
mus(:

I . Have a zero balance from Fall 1991

2) RFSEARCH POTENTIAL EM'and/ or any other prior semester.
PLOYERS , IN DUSTRIES AND.
2. Have al least 1/ 2 payment for Spring
FUNCTIONS. Use the career employer
a nd association directories, on-tine
19921courses.
1ys1cms, and professional and business
publications in the Career Services
Library and in Sawyer Library to
develop a target list of cmployn-s and to
become knowledaeable about your
on · B o ston 's Beac o n Hill
chosen field . Use events duri ng Career
WeekinNovcmbcr1ogaiho:rtarcer and . __ _;;:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

SuFFOLK 'liNivERSITY
......

~

industry information.
3) D EVELOP
A . QUALITY
RESU ME, A STRONG (?:>VER LETTER STYLE, . ANP E FFECTIVE
INTERVIEWING S ~ . Attend

=

~:~~~1
:r;~C:Sa:~:s~~t::
inmvicw, and get feedback from profes
sionalsinyourficld.


4) BEGI N TO C~TE A PROFESSIONAL NETWORK. Use 1hc Alum ni
Career Advisory Network. (in Career
Services), professional .,_associalion.s,
campus events, and clubs•and personal
contacts to develop a network. Having a
network in place whcn Y begin your
ou
search is a key advantagt in this compccitive job market. Without a network,
ajobh untcrwillhavcdifficul1yaa:e:ssin1
the "hidden job marker_:• which is the
U>urce or more job opponunitics than
Myothcr.

"Layingtbepoundwork oow, bytakina advantqc of the resowccs availab le
throu&h C:Jrccr Services, c:an really make
a tliffcre:noe u ilic graduating.senior
enters the job market in the spring,"
Tanklefsky cmphasiz.ed.

::::::v

GO BACK TO THE BEACH!!
COMETOTl'IE

■e19Clh

--~

f.RIDAY, SEPlEMBER 27TH

4:30 .• 7:30 P.M.
IN THE SAWYER CAFETERIA
SUFFOLK STUDENTS'ONLY
PROPER I.D. REQUIRED

ANSWERS

ENTER TRICYCLE RACES
WITH CASH.PRIZES FOR
1st, 2nd and 3rd PLACES!

* ** FREE ADMISSION ** *
SPONSORED BY PROGRAM COUNCIL

page~

·n.e Suffolk Journal Wednesday, September 25, 1991

page 7.

The Suffolk Journal Wednesday, September 25, 1991

Student health insurance increases

Suffolk Lifestyles

by ChriJliH Fllz1,,.Jd
Healthin.wranccatSuffolkUnivcrsily
was increased 19 percent for 1hc 1991 1992 acad(mic yea r. The hcallh insu rance plan is adminb1crcd by 1hc
Chickerina Bcndi1 Plannina, Inc .•
throuah which 1hc John Hancock Co. is
theundcrwri1er.
Suffolk Univcnit y was able 10 coll« I
more premiums lha n they paid out,
althouah lhc univcnity sho uld have col-

1/ik.J,ngs doc!( in 'Boston

lccted more. Additionally, -Suffolk Uni•
vcrsity raucd $70,000, but paymcnu
were due 10 the Chickering Bendit Plannina, Inc . in order for the coiapany 10
profit . The University placed money
1ow11ds employing a company 10 pay insurance claims, u well as sending InfOf•
ma1ion an d brochures.
Acc:o,dina 10 Karen b-1'.ancy, Director
o f Health Services, ''Standard insurano:
companies ai m for a lou ratio of75 ,et·

:First stap in trans-.91.tCantic journey

'J I tliou.sani years ago ...

'Europe arul J,tnuric.a 'Ult.rt 6rou91it
togttfitr 6y tlu 'V,fjngs ...

::ic::-:a~

make reuqnablc profits av~: ,:::,ud~~u~;cr:•~ : :

" Lui year the lnsuranc:ccompanyc:ol- areat dcaJ or time i.sspcnt-oo immuniza•
Icard $480,015 in prcm.iwru a.nd paid lionl,i.nsurana: andhealthcduationpro-

:~:!4:;!'!:~~•

whkh rcpresenu
Suffolk Univmity paid o ut 100 much
indaims, whichrcOoe11thtira,ea1crlou
ratio than ind1&1try llududs .
Continualreuonsf.ortheritcinhcalth
iruurancecan be factored with 1he hlah
medical inflation rile in Ma.ssac hl.lsetUi
pan.k ula.rly In Bos1on.
"Because: Boston is a medical mecca
with stifrcompetition, medialinsurance
i.sa1ahipratc oflJpcrcen1mmpared
10 the national avcraac, whch is at a
lower tile or1.,._, •• said Maney.
.
H1aher health lns~rucc rates has
caUKd budact constramuon the univcr•
sily health snvkes. " In the pas1," said
Maney, "the Oepa,tmcnt of Healt h
Services has em ployed two full-time

~~:~i!~~:h

Jnsunmce Plan
hu ri&cri, it has much to offer l.,he 11u-.
dents at Suffolk Univmi1y. Many
servka suc:b u , 1motinJ; cessation
claua, alcohol/AJOS awa,encis proara,ns,CPRU'alning,and " istributiooor
d
bln h conirol devices (which is the most
co mmon reason studcnu come to the
health omce)arcoffercdat the Depart•
mcn1 o fHealt h Savic:a.
Surfol k University health insuranoe
plan is a suilablc altcrnalive to those
siudcnu whodonoc havc<Kherhealthin•
suranc:c covcr•ac• Compared to Blue
Crou'1 Mana.Jed Ma;or Mcdiea.l Plan,
which cosu SI ,600 a year, the st udent
health plan provides basic medical
coveragcat asubstantiallylowercos1o r
5490 per ye&r.

Travel agencies hand out
unapproved ads

ltyAaltdk,Sl11M'ISlfT
For&d the fact 1hat Columbus was the

rant peBOn from Ewope whodbcovcrtd

invites

Amcric.1 ... 1000 ycau 110 Lclr
EiriUM>n landed in Vinland - 1h11 Wal,
the name he pvc North America.
Tocommcmon.tc the memory of Ldf
Eirik.uon, and o r his fantulic voyqc.
three rcpUCI. Vik..i11J.1h\ps left Bcracn,
Norway, May 17 (Norway'1 lndc•
pcndcnc:c Day) to make the same 5,300

All students, faculty, staff, women
and men to attend a reception

mi~:1~hip, O AIA, is 10 hact
rq,lica of the lar1cs1 vikina ship found in
Norway, built in 850A.D . Oaia was the
1oddeu of earth in Greek mytholoJY.

'Sinu tlim ...
our (q11nuua9, of tlu woruf
Fias grown faster tfian

This trip is 10 be the boc:innina of a
new Crl, a time whcrr we arc to
strcnathen lhc l.ies acrou the cold , bia
blue Atlantic Ocean, and to transmit
meuaaes or cnvironmcna l concern.
The 1hrcc ships will make ah<M11 20
stops alona thtir roulC and final dc:flina•
lion: Washingto n, O.C. Some other
places 1ha1 they have vi.siled arc;
Reykj1vik. Iceland; Nuuk, Greenland;
S1. John's. Newfoundland. and now
1hcy have arrived in Bos1on .
Boston is the ri,11 Hop in America,
and they an ivcd here ScPl,. 14 - almost
rou, mon1hs from the diy they left

at th e Munce Conference Room ,
Archer 110, on Monday, October 7th

our stn.st,;to taq c.are of it ..

from 3:30 to 5:30 p.n'l .

COME CELEBRA TE
THE W
OMEN OF SUFFOLK

No,..,.,.

Alona with thdr arrival the kxal Scan·
dinavian community, in coopc-ra1ion
...,;th the Bolton National Historical Pa,k
and the National Park Scrvkc planned a
...-cckcnd of Scandinavian cultural
:11ctivw:ics.
Some o f1he i:vcn1s you could find on
the proaram ~re: Scandinavian da nce
dcmonsu11tions. Scandinavian fol ksongs, Nordic cos1u1nc sho•,u and a1Jo a
jazz proiram ~pttformcd b)' Tone
David.Kn • vocal, Kris1 in Haugcndal .
vocal, Peuer Wcurc . 1enpr lllll, Odd
Arvc Hjorungdal • piano, Andreas Elikl
• basl and Johan Svcuon • drums. All or
them arc st udents from Scandinavia, 11·
tcndi111 Berkley, the colleac of niusk.
"
fhey played : A Ni1h1 in Tunisia (Dizzy
Gillespie). The Wail, Thll Titi na Called
Lo,·e and Donna Ltt (Charlie Parke r).
I do bdicvc that the propu,1111-u truly
appreciated, especially by 1hc Amniauu
with Scandinavian aocalon. Qui1e a few
of th em had dreiK'd in their naclonal
a>Auma. and Olhcn were tryinJ hard 10
look 1he way WC bdicvc lhc vi kinp
looked.
It was a very nkc day, and 1hc
o,pnittn shoukt be happy that 50 many
peopk showed up, cvco tbouah the
wcatbcr wun't the most preferable.

cent in order 10 purchue re-lnsuruce, medical per50nnd. ThU year, however,
administer dalm payments, print the 11.arr hu been cut in balf."

Classified Ads
·-s,m,-,,.. .....
WANTED:

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

, _ • .,.... .... em._

CHELSEA -

Only S595 1or 2 Bdrm
Condo. Ind. .... uvy. Pl<Q. No .... Min.

to Downtown. - 235-6462

''J,(pw ..

O'
~ollo.Best-~;~=
Nmau, ~

. Jamai:a.. Dayuanl_

hebt&. IU rnn:~b"mn .

1vt must stt tlit. rit]lit wurst almuf
antf optn up a ntuJ era.'

_!, 2 2 2 ~ 2
~

-

APARTMENTS FOR RENT

=::n~:_~~
CHELSEA -

STS, tht leader i'I oolegltmtrr.oel needs
motivated Individuals and groups to
No Fee. Min.
promote Winter/Spring Break tripe. For
lnformatloncall
.. Student Travel Servic:es, Ithaca, NY at

Only S595 tor 2 Bdrm

1-800-648-4849.

Help Wanted

st:;;::;:;:~n::J:n~:::a ~chanJr •

Ht:1i1Wavt Vacatloaa. l ac. b lootlDa
ror bricM. per10Ub&t llldh-ld uak
&op,-ok Olll'EaropeUlll:lia1•ad

majoring in MarU ting. ShL is
a freshman Mre at SJJ/[olk, and
begins hLr yrar as a staff wn·ter
for TM Suffolk Journal.

~!i,<iol...,._ ........
• YacaUoal ud Ma ~lwcb. For
-on ■faraatloa,call G"'°'1' at

pllotoo by-s.,_,.

(9:00am - 5:00pm)

Travel Sain Repr--,tattwi

(IOO) 3,S.-WAVP..

'

1

u•-~A-•un
____,

BEST COMMISSK)NS PAID!

CALL IUN SPLASH TOURS,

"One travel company prcs.idcnt wu
canvusing lhe Sawyer ca.fcteria with hil
Oyen. Whenhc1ottomy1abkwbcrc l
wucawia, I reminded him·t.hal he didn't
have perminion to be on ca.mpul, lhe
Suffolk police were aware that bedic:ln' t
have pmnission, and then I asked himtO
leave. He did, leaving a trail of his
Oyers! "
"This does notha ppcn with aJJ trips
ind Oyen o n campw. Many nude-nu
have aonc with 1hclc c:ompaniel and had
succeuful trips," she added, bul adviKd ,

~ ' : : , ~ ~.loob like a umvenuy,
1 has been brouaht to the ancntion or
1
the Student Activilies office 1h11 so·mc
studenU have been taken advan11gc or
by some df·t.bele companies. •
" Dwina the FaJJ se.uon, we continu•
aJJy ,et phone calls from "udtou or
parcnu sa)'i.na that thei r aocommoda•
lions were poor, they had a problem with
truspocUtion, Of" were asked !Of more
moncywbm they acit to thcirdellination,"WdSchmid\.

the better chojce,"
"There ls more or a line of responsibility 10 Suffolk Univeni1y and Proaram Cou.ncil from lhe (WICtioocd
travel agencies),• • Schmidt c:onduded.
The next time yo'u see a Oya prnmisina you a mcmonblc weekend, always...
rcmcmbeno look for the Student ActiYitics Slamp o r ApprovaJ. This l)'llcm Or
aampinawuJciiincd~ prouic:ctbeiiUdcn u, 50 you'U knoW that the trip' is

Rdlablc Toun, Party Time, and
Mardi Gras, have been conllclcd aQ,d
told the correct procedure for. posting
and/ordiitributinalnr~ atS14ffolk . Continuioaappearani:a.of n yenm
lhc clasuoonu.and cafeteria stands u
cvldeDCe that these companies are continuina to vi9latc the.univcn:i1y',-policy.
Schmid1 cited one instance or advatislna without permission:

=~==~:'t!rd'=

M~:~1 1 ~:,k~1!: iC"~C::}!lt~~:::i~~~:,, ~dd.
~:::e:;~u:: ~~
neocl lO pe.y an extra amount or mone y responsible r«Oymthat.don't have the
for "Krvices." On another occasion 11amp on chem. Jr you come across a

11udcoU arrived in Montreal and found piece of information or advcrtfsemcn1

their h<Kd to be compldcly booked. chat you arc interested in, but it ls"not
Their only option wu to sleep In the stamped, ao 10 ttic Student Activities
lo bby.
Office and they'll check it out.

Alpha Phi Omega events

SELL ~ , : 0 - ~ P S TO
JAMAICA • CANCUN
_,._... 1

There arc trips Ofp.niud by Proanm
Counal 50 studenu won ' I have to worry
about extra scnice · recs or lacking
accommodations. In fact, there is an
orrtdal ""'ontrcal uip being orp..niz.ed by
the Special Evcnu Cooimittee of Proaram Council for • weekend in
November.

For the pul two or three years, travel
1our companies have i:omc to Suffo,lk to
solicit Sludcnu. Companies , uch as
Pany11meTOW"I, Mardi Oru, and Rdi abk Toun bad represmwivcsltlndoutside o f tbc Sawyer Buildl11.1 handina out
thcirnya1.
NOi only have 1hcy stood ouuide·of
the buildmp, bUt they have co me ln10
the SaW)ff cafeteria and many of the
dusrooms. ~ding 10 Suffolk Univeni1y PoUcc. this la noc only passing out
informatio n without pcm1iulo n, but
trcspa.uing o n Su ffolk University
property. ,
We've aJJ seen the stamped Oyen and
pos&enaroundcampw. ltUthcorricial
policy or Suffolk University for all
posters and Oyer1 IQ be diltributed
around campw to be stam ped by lhc
Sludcnt Activities Office. All campus
act.ivilia arc allowed up 10 30 pc)ilcnor
nycn, while Off-campus Oya1 arc
limited 10 five copies.
/
''Suffollt Uni vcr,1ily's poster polidcs
are for the aood of the clubs. or.,aaniz.a•
dons, univcni1y d,cpartmcnu. and pro-grams, " o:ptaincd Donna Schmidt,
direc1or ofstudcnuctivitics. "We want
to aive prc(ci:cnoe to Suffolk Unlv~ity
PfOll"&DU,ao!I _ vcnu. V:,e arc l_
c
iws1.en1

we.

--~'~-=~·~771=~'--

"" "'-Cood•i•

f"""" Hall
,,:=.a~C:::S'.•.;::i ~~ni~ ,surrolkNiahtUPmi',lna.m. Tickeu
from p.m.

=

o~ Oct. 2

9

tO J

diffCRDli;Jthat it~tbeonlyllalional ~ ~ j ~ : v ; : : o : : ! ' ~ = « . ~
co-eel la"VICC fratemity(IGQIDl)UI .
iDdude Cil)'-)'Qr and SUffolt'S blood
Thi.I r~ . Alpha P"! <?mcaa's drive. .
Alpha Phi Omlp
will be partidpatutJ ,a many will be baYin,Opcn H0Ulel1?C1Sept. l9;AJpba.PbiOmcp',rUll evmtwillbc

~cr.~~-

l from 1 to 2:30 p .m, in

The Suffolk Journal Wednesday, Scp1emt;,cr 25, 1991

THOMAS COOK / CRIMSON TRAVEL
Suffolk Universlly Prog"m Council pr~ nts ...

National

MONTREAL ~ - .
Salur,lay lo Monday

.Congress considers expanding
grant eligibility
lly Jam Sdlllffa
CPS WuhbtttOII Corrupond~n,
WASHINGTON (CPS) - Studenu
may rtnd more in,nu in thrir financial aid pactqa.
HiJMf cducalloa auociatK)[I$ have
been r11htirq to expand put digibili1y
while simul1aneously arallll1J Lhat •
decade-Ion& tttod toW&rd lo&n-bucd ud
should md. 'Their bank will climu this
rau when Conara,s rewrites the Higher
Educilio n Ad , the blueprint for all
fedcrala.idprograrm .
500n

Nationalscudcnt leaden say tbc battle
can be won lrscudcnuarcwillin, to join
lhcfray.
.. It IJ going to be an incredibly tough
bank and you nm:I 10 c:aU your congress.
mm." sakl Selma Doog, lqislalivc
dirmor or lhc United Stales Student
Auocia1ion.
The House Postsecondary Educauon
subcommiucc led the rcau1horiza1io n
dfon, hold ing more than 45 hearing,
duringtheJj1Ut1woycars.
The subcomm ittee has l'inishcd its
hcarinpandlscxpcctedtobcginmarking up the bill early this fall . Mark:u'pi~
the crucial phase for all bills. That 's
when congrwional represen tatives go
over the bill section by s«tion, propostng new rules 10 rcplacconcs 1hcydon01
agree with.
When lhc subcommittee fin ishes, the
House Postsecondary Education and
Labor comm ittee will examine the bill
before it goes to 1hc full House for
deba te. Any secdon or the bill can be
amended a1 any point in 1he process.
The Scna1e abo will begin later this ran
marting up ill version o f !he Higher
Educat.ion Act . Wben 1he House and
Sfflate pw 1hc.h versions of the ,1ct. a
conrercncc committee v;;,j.l try to combinc: thc two bil!J into one. which mu.st be
approved by both hous.cs.
"Wtdon 'twattttotrttJUII
systt,n wh~rt only tire •.,,.,, po(JrtS/
41Ul1M vu1rlc~ sllldtnts
mn101otDUt1t."
Dona said thiJ mart -up proccu gives
suKltnts a cl!am:e 10 flJ/II for proposals
they favor, such M.JWitchin1 flflfflciaJ
aid cmpba.sis from ioaM to grants.
''AkMorpc!Opltuy, 'Whatdirrcrcnce.
docs ii maktcocall your congraaman"!'
But a lot o r chances ha ve: 10 be made and
congressmen do read their mail,'' Dong

said.

" We wan t 10 make sure 1h11 middle
income students get Pell 1ranu and arc
eligible for Stafford loans,'' Don1sakl .
"We don't waru lOcrcatc asygcm where
ooJy the Vf:rl poorest and the VCf}' richest
.s1udcnts can 10 to coUe:gc. ••
The Educatioa De:panme:nt and the
Dw.h Klministntion arc proposirq more
modest chan.acs. Their rccommcodatioas. ddivcrcd lo Congrcss earlier this
summer , would expand the muimum

Pell grant from Sl,400 to U , 700, but ii
wou ld , esuict the: granu 10 the neediest
.stude:nu.
The adminisua tion, however, wou ld
expand loan pro,aim for middle-class
nudcnu. The Stafford loan limit would
go 10 Sl,SOO for first • and second-yea,
.swdcnu and to U,000 ror third-, founhand fift h-year Rudeou . Graduate
.students could get uptoS7 ,500aonually.
Abo. 1hc limit for Supplemc111al
Loans for S1udcnu would increase 10

$6,000 for undergraduat es and S10,000
rorgradua1cs.
The administ ration plan would create:
UOO achie:vcmc111 scho larships "for Pell
grant recipients and it would expand outreach programs 10 low-i nco me
tomm uni ties.

Cha rles B. Saunders. a senior vic-c
president wi1h the American Co uncil on
Educa tion. said mo~1 lawmakers were
looking ror way,; 1 help middle -class
0
families afford college: wilhout taki ng
out too many loans.

$119 .., ..- ,,,.... _,,.,.,
Join your rcllow s1udcn1s on our fun-fill~cd:cnd to M~ntrcal. We

will depart Government Center Sa!Urday morrun, for our scenic mo1or•
coach ride to Montreal, lhrough Southern New Hampshire and
Vermont . (Proof of Ci1izenship is required for when we cross the
border). We will arrivcmid-aflcmoon in Montreal at our accommodations, the apartment style h01cl:

Manolr Le Moyne
2100 Ouest de Maisooneve
Montreal, Q uebec
You'll bt: located downtown - right in the ccnmof all thcact1on . Space

is limit~ 10 just one coach, and rcscrvationsare:confirmcd first come,
firs! served. Sign up coday!

Your Montreal Weekend lnclude'.5 All of lhe Following:
• Roundtrip lransportation via 1cmpcrarnrc-con1rolltd, restroomequipped motorcoach .

• 2 nights hotel accommodations at the apartment-style Manoir Le
Moync, based on quad occupancy, SI 19 per person : ttiplt
occupancy, SIJ9 per person: twin occupancy, SI 59 per person .
• All

room ta:ces and gratuities 10 chambermaids.

• Services of an experienced Thomas Cook Travel Tour 8cort.
Please note: You will be required 10 proyjde Proof of Ci1izcnship when
crossi ng lhe Canadian/ U.S. border. ·
S25 dtposll due by Septtmber JO , 1991.
Balance due Otto~r 9, 1991.

ITHE Crossword.

I ' " "
I '

-

The council has proposed raising the
muimum Pell graot 10 14,.SOO and Cl•
pandi ng eligibility 10 families wi1h incomes up 10 S4S .OOO.
The America n Auoclation or University Students, wh ich rcprcscn11 more
than lOO 51i.tdent governments, held ill
19ll0 nationalconrcrenccin Washin.iton
when the rcauthoriution proceu bepn.
TIie participants lobbied Con,rcs.s for
the day, visi1io.g manben' orficc:s 10 tell
lhcm bow lmporta.111 incrc:a.sed financia.l
aid was 1otlleavcngc 51udcnl.
AAUS president Daniel Laboviu said
the association's big push now is to incrcuc student power by re1is1eri ng
11uden1s 1o votc.
" If they 10 out and v01e, then they
have more o r a chano: or gcuina listened
10," Laboviu said. ''I f you don'! vote
1hcnyouarcnotreallyacoruti1ucnt.' '

Saunde:n agreed 1ha1 s1udcnu nttd to
make 1hcir o pioioru known.

The group included lh tx rccommcndations in a 2'-pqe proposal 1hat it sub• mined to the ,u bcommiuee.
.'

"S1 udcnts ingcneralnttd1 omo ni1o r
wha1 the co mminces a rc doin g° in both
housa of Co ngrw and express sup.
pon,"hcsaid .

Labovitt.saidallstudenunttd 1owri1c
thcirrcprc:scntatives.

byC.F. Murray

COURT RULI NG J AMS
PROCEDURES FOR
PHOTOCOPIED M ATERIALS

(CPS)- Srndenu likely will be pa)1na
morcthisycarastheresuh o f a fedc, al
court ruliilJ that requ ires commercial
copy centers 10 gel pcrmiu 1 10 photoon
copy course matcrial.s.
It's all because o f a U.S. 01s1nc1
Coun 's ruling last ti.l arch against
kinko's Graph ics Co, p ., whkh o"'n)
about JOO copy shop, n1111o n,.,1dc, mo)t
o f them near ca mp u,c, J udie
Constance Bakt1 -Motl c)' ruled 1hat the
chain's popular .. profcno, pubhshmg"
program broke copynght lav.1.
Under the program . pro feuon could
c1catcspccialtcxisfor 1hc1rclu..nby
picking and choos1n1 ucerpo from
books, newspaper and maaa.unc art1c~
and mher ma1e:rial.s. and 1hen ha,c
Kinko's reproduce and bind 1he:m
1oge1her for the profcsr.o, ·, lt udcm, .
Kinko 's had argued that Jb photo•
copyi ng coru1itute:d " fa1r use·· unde,
federal copyri1h1 law, because II wu
educational in na1urc. but the Judie
rcjccted 1ha1claim .
The ruling applies noc 1us110 K1nk o'i
but 10 any other copy shop that p1od1KC:S
counc pactcu. It means they all muw an
publ.ishtn' pcrmbsion for everything
1hcy photocopy, adding "umc and cost
10 the ed ucational p,oces,," said
Adrianna Fou, spokeswoman for the:
Ve ntura , Calif. , print com pan y.
· Thcclwpac ke1sare:cos1ingmore1h1s
year because publishers arc finally get •
1in1 paid royalties fo, their material .
And gcuing pcrmif sion to reproduce
copyrightedmat erialta kesumc.
"It can ta ke days and even v.·«ks fo,
pub1ishcnlogCI back 10 us ,' ' Foss ~aid .
"Professors arc just now bringing us
the materials,"
" It's reall y slarting 10 snowbalJ.··
agreed Scott Bullard of the: Nationa l
Assodation or Colle1c Stom (NA.CS).
The Ohio-blSCd association , which

~at:~
:!

" Where the punch comes 1 that the
s
admmisuation only ravon grant~ for the
nccdic:st ," Saunderssaid.

USSA, the primary studcn1-rw1 klbby•
ina orpnizalion, bu bcco pwJw)g 10 expand Pe:ll a,an1 e:~bility10 ramilies wi1h
incomes up 10 S49,000 and to re-open the
S taffo rd loan program lo all ll ude:n ts,
~dim or income. It lllso wants 10 increase Pdl grant awards and 10 make
1hern an e:ntil lrme:n1, which would prorcct chem fro m budge! cuts.

·

Novcm~r9-ll , 1991

National

co~t~'.::b1!~C::"::i~~~
projcctin M1yaserviccto~andlc co pyrigh t requests for about JO o r iis
members. It pwu IOCXtcnd the SCMCt' in
Occober to all o r ill members.
This is how it works: A professor
brinp: a !in or 1he needed materials for a
ccnain dau to the campw; hoohtolC:.
which in tum , forwards the list to 1hc
NA.CS 10 SC"Curc copyriaht pcrmWion .
" We'rcavcra.ginaundcr IOday11ogct
all 1hc permissions for a eenain clan, ••
Dullard said . Whi le it's a " 1e:rrifk1urn•
aroun d ," Bullard uyt it donn ' t match
what many copy shops did Wt sc hool
year, when, in many instancca:, -course
materials could be ready ovcmigh1
because the SboPII didn'I bother 10 &ct
pcnniss.ion from publishers.
The rull cff«u of lhe ruling availability or copied materials and how
mllCh more 1he materials wilf\cost won'tbeknownUn1ils1udenurcturn10

~~:f~~1!~·u::::::c;7o~~~

.....
TV-

DOWN
1 Goal lor!MIIJ

.._

Jllac,Kudl

. ...........
:n FtfMte

- =--·- ......-.....
4MUl'l-910,WMI

IM!hracMeelld

1.ludea'• .."

1:=:ra.

111.0ftdonl'lert
1lCOINCJof!Non

13 :::tl'llfll

25~-

aTu.lNW1"t

210-lorofflca
»W-■mP--"

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,._

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r.n..Dlcw • illlltww;t.r.aU.&C.. •Jll'lr; l'Nl:.lwod. •
& . . , i . - - - - ~•~ll'pll~Cl..k•M!..&pioJ.,_ ,

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~

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- - . ~ ~ -M:1111:a.llt..• ~ l:lllll'llall&'-s•



,._'"- , C.. ft. • Slft &Wito.~C.,. • Tlirllea(llfnl•'IIICWT'l', ~ S

...:..."":" ~~

l~ - - - - - - • • 1 11..:ia10

At your service
by Ron \'laing
The CO-OP/ Caree r Scrvicc:s office is
one:ofthc many hidden resources here al
Suffolk 1hat ls nOI being taken advantage
or. Remember, you're payin& for these
servic:cs whet her you use 1hcm or nol.
I wasunawareofCarccrScrvi«s until
the end of my sophomo re year. Once I
heard what they had to offer, I went over
10 Z0 Nhbunon Placc (the: bllilding.ncxl
to Sawyer that looks like a honeycomb).

~~~~n:::~~~d~f f . ~ : = ~ ~ ~ y : ~ c ~ : r t ~

CO-OP advilor was Pat Yates ana she
gctsfourllanrorthchcfplhcp...emc. It
1oolr. me sevcra,J visiu until y.,c found the
part-timcjo bthat llikcd.
The best thing about CO-OP at Suffolt is the fact !hat I'll 51ill be graduating
on time, but with that cxpcricocc on both
my transcript and my resume. (No r.Y
c
year plans ~c,' lilr.e Nonheastctn).
My recommendation 10 anyone who is
loot.in, for e;it her full- or pan-time
wort, to ,ive: Career Scrvica a c:aU. ll\C)I
have linings and contacu for jobs in
almOll CVfrl l'idd. The Suffolk c/w

worklOfflClhirqout. lryou rcnocsurcif
it's for you, then ju.st stop by and find
ou1.

I NEED YOUR HELP! I will be
worlr.in1 on a story about st udcnu who
have had problems with pro fessors
rcgardln1: lncomplctct, arade ehan,ct
and thc like. If Interested, plcuedctcribc
your 1101)' In I to l pqa and dro_p It ~ft
attM JOURNALorfloeto~yatte~n
with your rwn~_and pho~ nu~bcr. I ~
thcnbe1cttln.a1ntouchwtthyoufort h11
futurc 1tory.1lwlUI Untilnu1timc ..•

ESL° program -receives grant
continued from page I
"They didn't ha ve:a counse1oro1 a director then," said Jimin~z. a nati ve: or
Honduras. •·Now it"s much more
sophis1k:a1cd. ·• Jimmez curmuly works
at the Ballotti Learning Cen ter helping
former ESL s1udents out wltll their

minority) kidt u they move into undergraduate studies,•• said De Marco.
De:Marco·roeb 1ha1 the BSL program
is one: of Suffolk"s "most nwlr.clablc
proarams," as well as ''one or the few
wa11 1hc 51:hool itftllingthcmission1he

coursework o r any ot her problems that
may develop.
Diane De:Marco, a Foundation Rcla•
tion Coru;ultant for Suffollr. ,.a.lb the
ESL program '' fant astic.'' DeMarco
worked witll RodriJuca: in writing lht
propoglfortbcgranitothcR.ileyFoundauoo. "ESL is viewed u themo'sl completc way to service and retain (lanpage

foundcrintcndcd.''

.

' 'Witll ESL, Suffolk remaiM tr~ to
Ju minion ,•• said f>cMarc:o.

Entertainment
'Go West Young Man' Michael W. Smith
A Record Review
by KarH M . Youag

M~ I W. Smith is a Grammy

::~~=
dl!~:!ffl1t:'!,°f; ; ~
togivc tcxtbooktanolhcrtry.
Smith hu recently crossed over to I.he
" It may be 1h11 some raculty will
popchanswi1hthest.1CCCS1or hiscu.rrcnt
decide that ordering full textbooks
sinalc .. PlacclnlldsWorkl." 1huong
mak"es more sense , " seid J im can be found on Smilh't sixth aJbum,
Lich1cnber1, communications consull"Oo West Youn1 Man."
ant for the Association or American
"Oo West Yourq Man" is• c:olkction
Publishers, a New Yort -bue:d group ~ofwcll•wrillcnSC>Clplhathavcmcssa.gcs
that rcprucntcd eight textbook
for 1he listeners. The alb\lm atablishcs
publishers in the cue agairul Kinko's.
· Smi1h u a talented songwriter and
'' ll could temporarily tlow down 1hc, pianist, uwcllasaJUller. Hisdntinctive
move toward custo mized 1exu ,"
vocal sound is complimented by the
Simpson agreed. Out publishe rs. book- musicianship or Smith and b.is bffid.
stores and associations art ge:arin1 up to
The tillc treck is• song about walking
ha'ndle copyright pcrmluions electron• away from 1hc evil ways in life and movkally by computer, meanin&professors
ing towa rds the aood.. The song hu a
could gel the O'K to reproduce ~~tcrial catchy chorus and a fabulout guiaiar
almost immediately, Simpson sa1cl.
50Jo.


''love Crusade"' isoncorthemorciatcreuirq:10ngsoothc,album. Tlicwcalt

supcrb. 11 isthcmosi movirqtonaonthe
record .
:

s1 or scylcs.o n the record.
ty
" Place In This World" showcases
Sl'llith's talents. His vok:csounds better
o n chis tract than on anyothtrtraclr.on
the: record . There is also some cxcclle:ot
piano playinaon this u-ack.
"For Yo u," the next sin&lc, is the
most uniqucsonaonthealbum. An echo
cffcd.aeat.cdbyatalk:boxsivcsthcaon1
a funky sound.
"How Lon1 Will Bc Too Long" and
' 'Apw;Oci"'arclhcwcakcs1 soD&5on
the albuffi . They arc Gospel sonp. A
ehoil'lin&1 thcchoruscsofbothsonp.
The h1gb point of the album ls
''Emily." .. Emily" is a song about ttie
4i rf~tics one races when trying 10
deddewb.attodowithhislifc. Thcpiano
pla)'inaac:companyingSmitb'svocalsb

H~~arc~:ro5;~::'cr~ou ~ album. "Seed To'Sow'' has an
tion o r children sinain& the chorus In
Luganda.n, the laquagc o f a smaJI
Arrkan country. There is also 10mecx•
ccllcnt hom playi ng bctwcat Ycnca:.
''Crou My Heart'" is about ftndirq an
CYerlastin1 k,vc. The beautiful melody
malr.ca:the10na V toudtiq.
frl
The album dOICI with "1990," an
instrumental which shoWI the mu.skiaoshi p of Smith'• band. Al the md or
" 1990'' a vok:c says, " To be conlin ucd ."' The voice makes the listener
wonder what Smith'• next album wiU
souodUkc. l r ' 'GoWcstYourqMa.o"b
anlndkatlooo r Sm.lth's rutdrc l'CICOl'dt,
!he not aJbum should be more or the
quallty10G11uddiltmctive10WMU 1hal
made ''Oo Wat YOUI1JMan' ' a hi1.

;:~~=~!o:=:::j:.

3uc- ·

page 10

-11

The Suffolk Journal W'ednesday, September 25, 1991

The Suffolk Journal Wednesday, September 25, 1991

SPORTS
Men's - Women 's X-Country Opens S~ason
hy Nkolt DtSislo

Introducing the accowit that gives you extra credit.

BayBank delivers the ~ 1 accnunt on campus: The new Student
Value P..tekage! Save time and money wi th■ The Bayllank Student \lalue Checking A<count wnh no
minimum balanc:e requirement and a free rompanion Savin~ Acrount
■ The Bayllank Canl for cash 24 hours a clay. Make as many
witlldrawals as you U at over 750 BayBank X-Press 24" banking
k,
machines- with no added fees.
■ Bayllank X-Pms Cbeck: Use your BayBank cam with
X
-Press Check just Uke a check al s1
ores, restaurants- any place
tru11gioomes Maslf!Can!'.
■ lltser'Yt f.red.JI overdraft protection attached lo your
checking acmum.
■ A Bayllank v1sa·or Mastm:an! .
·

Get credit you cm use for books, a trip

home , or any unexpected expense
lb get the Smdem l\llue Package,
all you need is a valid school I.D.
You qualify for X-Press Check, O\~r-

drah protection. and a BayBank
credit card if you're 1 or older and .
8
h.we r)O record of bad credit.
So ge1 the acoount that gh-es
you more-including the Card that
does ii all. Open a Studen t l\llue
Package at the nearest BayBan k
office today!

TIit Suffolk Univcn11y womtn'1
crou-coun1ryccam isoffandrunnin1 !
Thcir rarstmectwasSaturday,SeJll . 14
II Rtals CoUt ae. Thert wert fi \·t lc:ams
11 Che Rq:is lnvhational, Suffolk tltd fOf
four1 b with Babson Colltgc. Salve
Rqina WIS fi nt with 17 points, Reg1
)
second wit h 49 poi nu, Gordon Collc1c
thi rd with 91 pointJ lllld Suffolk / Babson
wi th 105.
There wcrt 40 runncu in lhc m«i .
First for Suffolk (9th overall) was
Brid&ld Toland, a junior and 1wo-scason
MVP.
SccondforSu(folkt l lthovc raJIJwas
Kelley Costin, 1 ju11ior. Cru1in had a
trtat rrcs hman year wi1h the Ra,m. but
lastyu.r1ufr.ercdwilhinjurics. Th1sycar
sht'1i n 1ood hcalth.
Third for Suffolk was wphomorc Kim
Hara,ovt whose performanct was far
lhcad o( last yu,11 this time; founh was
a1 udii Vi&Jit u i, 1 junior newcomer 10
1hc team; fi(th WIS Lisa Capplis, a hcsh•
nian frc m Quincy; and sixth was
Rhonda Pieroni, 1 sophomore transfer
$1udt n\.
''We uc: very encouraged about ticin1
wh h Babson , who we los t 10a couple of

lime\ las1 year, and comina so close 10
Gordon," said Joe Wal.s h, head coach
and oraaniur of 1he women' s croucountry ttam.
"There's a lot or room for improvemcn1. Thcrt wtre five runners most o r
last KISOR. Wt'vc doubled o ur numbers
(1hisycu), ..·hichhelpsin 1
1"1linin1andin

mccu."
A key runner for Suffolk , Joanna
,\.1cGou n y u1rfcrcd an an kk injury and
will be ou t for a couple o f weeks.
McGouny is also I center on the bukctball 1eam.
"Wt have a 11ron1 nucleus with
Toland, Costin, and Hararov c. Flow
much the newco mers improve and how
quick ly will determine the season," said
Wabh.
The men's crou-country sq uad is
lookin1 &ood H well , Transfe r student
Tommy Lynch rrom Mcdrord i1 expected 10 hdp the Rims become I major
contender in all mttts. Lynch recently
panicipatcd in a road rtce of 1300
runners and came in tenth. The team is
lookina for w mc low lima: from him.
John Lockt and Dan Picard , returning 1und-out Kmor runners, art also
coun ted on heavily. Other retu rning
vc1cran1 art Lou Greenwald and John
Fabaloro {both sopho mores~. Lut year

r~AT

Date

oi,ponent

SEPT 14 :~~:~(;;:~/

Time

The Rams have abo recruited two
athletes ftom other athletic pr0trlml
hero'atSuffolt.
JoeAmko,'a hoopsta, has been ruonina lhrouah the awnmer and hu looked
good in the pre-KUOn. Dave Manca,,
former MVP on the bucball 1cam, will
bcrunnin1along wi1hAmic:,cF.I
"They arc aood athletes and I hope
they hansmd into good runners here II
Suffolk," said Walsh . " Eve,yoac'I
happy chcnumben~up. Our ,oal.Ja to
do wdl in tht November 16 ECAC

med,"
The mC'Ct U 11 1hc Bi1hmin11on
campus o r Statt Uniffmty of New
York. There will be 30 diviJ.ioa chree
schools there when Suffolk hies New
York ,
Wals h h1S beerihcre 11 Surfol ~forll
years and i1 a Suffolk ,niluate. He
stancd IS lhc Intramural director and
usbtan t baseball coach.

:!:~ ~:~

SEPT 2 1 St. Anselm's College
11 :00 8:30
ln!J. (Women)
St. Anselm 's College
Inv. (Men}
12:00 8:30
SAT SEPT 28 Conn . Col1ege lnv. (Women) 11:00 TBA
Conn . College Inv. (Men)
11:45 TBA
SAT OCT 5
Pop Crowell Inv. (Women)
11 :00 9:00
Pop Crowell Inv. (Men)
12:00 9:00
SAT OCT 12 BabsonColl. lnv. (Women) 11:00 9:00
Babson Coll . Inv. (Men)
12:00 - 9:00
TBA
SAT OCT,19 M.A.1.A.W. tnv. {Women)
SAT OCT26 Open
TBA
ECAC Inv.
SAT NOV 2
TBA
NCAA Regional
SAT NOV9
Aaat. Colch: larryO' Toole .
HHd Coach : J oseph M. Walsh

. VARSITY @ LF
FALL 1991 ·

,

!!!!!!

Day Date

Opponent

THU
THU
THU
MON
MON
FRI
SUN
MON
TUE

1:00
LITTLE FOUR (SUFFOLK)
BOSTON UNIVERSITY (BE
NTLEY) 1:00
1:00
LITTLE FOUR (CLl>.RK)
1:00
LITTLE FOUR (W. P.I.)
1:00
LITTLEFOUR (BRANO
EIS)
1:00
SALVE REGINA COLLEGE
NEW ENGLAND IN
TERCOLLEGIATE TBA
NEW ENGLAND INTERCOLLEGIATE TBA
NEW ENGL,'ND INTERCOLLEGIATE TBA

SEPT 12
SEPT 19
SEPT 24
SEPT 30
OCT7
OCT11
OCT20
OCT21
OCT22

HEAD'COACH: TOIIY FARMA

,:he Fl"'- Ceater II -

o~ ,rom • u~, p.m. uc1

ii available for all Suffolk

sludtnlsLocken and
· sbowus are allo a:-.n.b&e:
Feel free to coiitact tlM
Albte6cl

Depa,IDield If yvu

are lntfftlted In min& tlM

Fitneu

cenhr

or

partldpalin& 011 one ot ~ mahy Suffolk aportl teamL

- VARSITY S,OCCER
FALL 1991

Dep■n

SAT

JOURNAL
SPORTS
STAFF

,wn.

CRO~ COUNTRY - FALL 1991

~

JOIN THE

they didn't have much runnin1 u pcricncc bu1 1f1c:r contin ued improvement
they will certainty lcnd a hand (ora root)
1o tbe tcam.
Freshman l(cvin Moorhowcand Phil
Salvatori, boch rrom Canton, arC the
newruyson I.he block, roundiqou1the

OPPONENT

SEPT 19
SEPT 21
SEPT 26
SEPT 28
OCT1
O<;T 4
OCT7
OCT9
OCT1 5°
OCT 19
ocr22

TIME DEPART

WENlW)lRTH INSffiUTE (H)

DAY DATE
MON
SAT
THU
SAT
TUE
FRI
MON
~
TUE
SAT
TUE

3:00
11 :00
3:30
11 :00
3:30
7:00
3:30
3:30

o Worcesler State
'

o Nichols yOlleQe
O Framlngt,am State
ANNA MARIA COLLEGE (H)
@

'

Northeas\em University

oE
astern N ne
azare·
qi Eme!¥'n CoHege

.... . r~I'

·
o- Colliy-Sawyer College
@ Salve Regln~ College .
o Mass. Maritime Academy

1:15°
8:30
1:00

9:00
1:30
5:30

2:00
2:00
4:00 1:15

1:00 10:00
3:30 1:00

Head Coach: Conalantlne Perju

;

Depart
11 :30
11 :30
11 :30
11:30
11 :30
11 :00

WQMEN'S TENNISr.
SCHEDULE - 1991
TIME

DAY

9126
9128

1]-iU
SAT

100
HWS

TiiU

1(l.110 EMERSON COLLEGE

H/A

DATE OPPONENT

.lliU
SAT
TUE

10,l1

GORDON COLLEGE
ENDICOTT COLLEGE
WORCESTER STATE
COLLEGE
EMMANUEL COLLEGE
WORq:STER
POLYIECHNIC INST.

HEAD~: l l c h i . -

3:30

A

11:00 H

3:30
3:30

A
A

11:00 A
H

2:00

pap: 1~

The Suffolk Journal Wednesday, Sept.cm~ 21, 199 1

sday, September 25. 199 1

SPORTS
Men's - Women ' s X-Country Opens Season

Bank

"'1ue
.,
1•

at gives you extra credit.

new Student

byN k o le~Sls10
The Surfolk Univcmty women 's
c ross<0untry team is off and runnin11 !
Thcirftntmcctwas Saiurda )·,ScPl . 14
at Rc&is Collcac. There ...·ere five ccams
1t thc:RtpSlnvi1ational.Su ffol k11tdfo1
foun b wilh Ba bso n College. Sah·c
Rcaina was first with l7 poinu, Regi s
second with 49 poinu, Gordon Colle11e
third with 91 poinu and Suffolk / Babson
wit h 1
05.
There were 40 runners 1n the m«t .
Fim for Suffolk (9th overall) was
Brid&id Toland, 3 junio r and 1.,.·0-sca.ron

MVP .
Secondfor Suffolk(l lthm·c rall)was
Kelley Costin , a j un ior. Cm 1in had a
great frahman year with th<' Rams. but
las1ycar1urrcrcd wi1hinjuncs. Th1))'<'1U
she's in iood heallh.
Third for Suffolk .,..as sopho mo re Kim
Hararovc whose p('rformance was far
ahead o f las1 y<"ar at 1hii; time; founh wa.s
Oaudia Viglicni, a junior newco mer 10
the team ; firth was Lisa Capplis. a fresh•
man from Q ui ncy; and sixt h was
Rhonda Pieroni. a so phomore' tran sfer
studcni .
' ' Wcarc vcryenoou rageda bouthcina
with Babson. who we lost to a couple: of

take as many
!" banking
Jwith

SAT
SAT

SAT

any pl" '
SAT
l

your
SAT
SAT
SAT
SAT
SAT

Date
Oppone nt
SEPT 14 Aegis (Women)
Slonehill (Men)
SEPT 21 St. Ansel m's College
Inv. (Women)
St. Anselm 's College
Inv. (Men)
SEPT 28 Conn. College Inv. (Women)
Conn . College Inv. (Men)
Pop Crowell Inv . (Women)
OCTS
Pop Crowell Inv. (Men)
OCT 12 Babson Coll. Inv. (Women)
Babson Coll . Inv . (Men)
OCT 19 M.A.I.A.W. Inv. (Women)
OCT 26 Open
ECAC Inv
NOV 2
NCAA Regional
NOV9

Head Coach: Joseph M. Walsh

Time
11:00
11 :00

B:30

B:30
TBA
TBA
9:00
9:00
9:00
12:00 9:00
TBA
12:00
11:00
11:45
11:00
12:00
11:00

TBA
TBA

·-·

meet."

Opponent

Time· Depart

THU
THU
THU
MON
MON
FRI
SUN
MON
TUE

LITTLE FOUR (SUFFOLK
)
BOSTON UNIVERSITY (BENTLEY)

1:00
1:00
1:00
1:00
1:00
1:00

OCTL
O
CT11
OCT20
OCT21
OCT22

LITTLE FOUR (CLARK)
LITTLE FOUR (W .P.I.)
LITTLEFOUR (BRANOEIS)
SALVE REGINA COLLEGE
NEW ENGLAND INTERCOLLEG
IATE TBA
NEW ENGLANDINTERCOLLEGIATE TBA
NEW E
NGLAND INTERCOLLEGIATE TBA
HEAD'COACH: TONY FARMA

Fitnus center or
' partidpatipc on one or the
l!WlY Suffolk aporu teams.

VARSITY SOCCER .
FALL 1991
TIME DEPART

DPPDNpn\

DAY DATE

WENTWORTH INSTITUTE (H)
SEPT 19
SEPT 21 @ Worcester State
SEPT 26 @Nlcho~ College
SEPT2B o FramlnghamState
ANNA MARIA COLLEGE (H)
OCT 1
@ Northeastern University
OCT4
@E
astern Nazarene
OCT7
@ Ernew,n College
@Co)6y-Sawyer College
'
SAT OCT19 @sa1v; Regina College
TUE OCT22 @ Mass. Maritime Academy

MON
SAT
THU
SAT
TUE
FR
I
MON

~f

~~~s'

3:00 1:15
11:00 B:30
3:30 1:00
11 :00 9:00
3:30 1:30
7:00 5:30
3:30 2:00
3:30 2:00
4:00 1:15
1:00 10:00
3:30 1:00

Head Coach: Constantine Perju

WOMEN'S TENNIS
SCHEDULE -1991
~

Day Date
SEPT 12
SEPT 19
SEPT 24
SEPT 30

Tb~ flbM51 Center b now
o~ rrom 8 L m-9 p.m. and
is uailable ror all Suffolk
students.
Locken and
shower, are also available.
Feel rrtt to contact tbe
.Atbletia Depo.rtment U you
are interested ln using tbe

T he meet is at 1he Bighmington
cam pus of State University or New
York . The re will be 30 division hrec
sc hoo ls the re when Su ffolk hits New
Yor k.
·
WalshhasbccnhcrcatS uffo lk forll
yea rs and is a Suffo lk gr1i:tuatc. He
starttd a.s the intram u ral director a nd
a55is1ant bascb.all coach.

Asal . Coach: LarryO'Toole

VARSITY GOLF
FALL 1991

JOURNAL
SPORTS
STAFF

The Rams have also recruited two
athletes !to m oth('f' a thletic programs
hcre·a1 Suffo l.t..
,
Joe Amko. a hoopster, hu been run •
ning thro u&}t lhe summer and hu looked
11ood in the pre-1eason. Dave Marstu,
fo rmer MVP o n 1hc baseball learn , will
bcru nningalongwithA.m iCO," Tbey arc &ood a! hl ctcs and I hope
they 1ransend into aood runners here at
Suffo lk, " said Wabh. " E VCT}'ODC'i
happy1hcnumbenarcup. Ouraoalisto
do wcU in the November 16 ECAC

Depart

9:00
12:00 9:00

JOIN THE

they did n' t havc m uc hrunninaexpcricnce but a rtcr conti nued improvement
they will cenainly lend a hand (or a foot)
to the team .
Freshman Sevin Moorhouse and P hil
Salvatori, bot:h fro m Canton , are the
new 11,1yson the block, rouod.inaou t the

CROSS COUNTRY - FALL 1991
Q!l

tt wilh no
{in~ Acoount.

!11nes la.st year, and coming so clo1e IO
Go rd o n," said Joe Wals h, head coach
and o rga niicr o f 1he women's croH•
coun n ytcilm .
" There's a lot of room fo r improvement . There were five runners most of
last Kason . We 've doubled our numbcni
(this yearJ, ...·hich helpsi nt rai ningand in
meet i.' •
A key runner for Suffol k, Joanna
l\kGouny suffered an an kle injury and
.,.,,11 be out for • coup le of weeks.
l\kGounyisa lsoaccnteronthebaskct•
ball1eam .
"We havc · a sn o ng nucleus wi th
Toland, Cos1in. and Ha rgrove . How
muc h 1hc newco mers improve and how
quickly willdcterminethe5,tason,"said
Walsh .
The men 's cross-cou nt ry squad is
loo kmg good as wd l. T ransfe r st uden t
T o mm y Lynch fr om Medford is u pcc1ed 10 help the Rams bcrome a major
co mcndtr in aU mttu. Lync h recentl y
pa rtidp,utd in a road race o r 1300
runnersandcameintcnth . Thctcam is
loo ki ng for some low limes fro m him .
John Locke and Dan Picard. return •
mg stand -out se nior r'unncn, a rc also
coun ted On hea vily. Other rctumina
V<" lerlns a rc Lo u Greenwald and Jo hn
Fabaloro (both sophomores ). Last year

11:30
11 :30
11:30
11 :30
11 :30
11:00

DAY

DATE

.THU
SAT
TUE

OPPONENT'

91'26

THU
SAT
THU

GORDON COLLEGE
9128 ENDICOTT COLLEGE
10/1 WORCESTER STATE
COLLEGE
10/3 EMMANUEL COLLEGE
10/5 WORCESTER
POLITTCHNIC INST.
10/10 EMERSON COLLEGE
HEAD COACH:

TIME

H/A

3:30 A
11:00 H
3:30
3:30

-~-

fl

A

11:00 A
2:00 H

-•2
-

The Suffolk Jownd Wednesday, September 25, 1991

pag,:12

X-Country Opens Season
1 year, and comina w clow 10
1
, " ~id Jot W1lsh, hdd coach
:•nizcr of 1hc women'• crou•
1c's a lot of room for improvehere ,,,.·ere five runncn most of
on. We've doubled our numbers
r) , ,,,.h1thhclp$intrllinin1andin
, run ner for Suffol k, Joann.a
rt)' iuffncd III ankle inj ury 111d
ou c for• couple of wcc,h.

11yis also acenteron1hcbaskct•
ha\" a s1ron1 nucleus with
C

Costin, and Hararovc. Ho,,..

1c nc:11,•oomcn improve and bow
""illdc'!crmincchcseason,"said

men ', c1os~<0un1 ry squid b
good as well . Trarufer u u<knt
Lynch from Medford II ex•
o help the Ra1111 become a major
,Cr in all mtttJ. Lynch recc:1J tl y
atcd in • road race of 1300
andcameintcnth . Thcteamii
for so me low times from him .
Locke and Dan Picard, rc1urn1d--out senior runners, arc also
I on heavily. Other rCturning
1 arc Lou Grccnw,ld 1nd JOhn
·o (both w phomore1). l.as1 year

1hcydidn'1havcm~hrunnin1uperiencc but after conti nued improvemen t
1hcy will cauinly lend I h111d (or I foot)
101hc1e,m.
Freshman t(cvin Moorhouse and Phil
Salvatori, both from Canton, arc the
new 1\1)'1 on 1he bklck, roundi"I out the

,um.

The: Ranu hi ve Ibo recru ited two
athldCI from other lll.hlctic program,
hcrea1 Surfo lk.
Joe Amk o , • hooi»tu , hu bttn rvn•
ni"l lhrouJh the summer and has looked
aood in the pre-scuon. D1vi Marstu,
former MVP on 1he bueb1II tn m, will
bcruanin1alon1wi1hAmice:-

UC

JOINTH·E

STUDENT GOVERNMENT

AssocIATION
CLASS OF 1995

JOURNAL
SPORTS
STAFF

Ihope tii•--------..

"Tbc)'
they trarumd JOOd,ood rvooen here at
Into athletes &Dd
Suffolk," said Wabh . "Everyone'•
MW, the numbm are up. Ow- goal ii to
do well in 1he Novembn- 16 ECAC
med."
The mtte IS II !he Bi1hmin11o n
campus of State Univenity o r Nrw
Yo rk. There will br JO division thrre
schools there when Suffolk hi11 New
York.
,
Walshhube<rnhere atSuffolkfor ll
yea rs and i1 a Suffolk ar1du11e. He
started as 1he incramural diroaor and
a..uhtan1 baseball coach.
•\

The Suffolk Journal Wednesday, Sep1ember 25, 1991

On September 30, October I and October 2, 1991 elections for
the following positions will be held in the Sawyei:___Lobby:

Tbe F1€nas Center is IIOW
open rrom 8 L m-9 p.m. and
lS available for all Suffolk

FRESHMAN CLASS:

students.
Locken and
showen an also available.

Fll n eu

center

• President
• Vice President

fee l frtt 10 contact lhe
Athlelics l>epArtmtnl if you
art interested in using the

• Representative

or

partJdpatln& on one of the
many Suffolk sports tams.

• Representative
• Representative

VA~ITY SOCCER
FALL 1991

-FALL 1991

Time Oepan
11 :00 9:00
12:00 9:00
11 :00

8:30

12:00 8.30
/omen) 11 :00 TBA
len)
11 :45 TBA
men)
11 :00 9:00

1)

12:00 9:00

,men)
1
n)
1en)

11 :00
12:00
TBA

9:00
9:00

TBA

OPPONENT
DAY~
WENlWORTH INSTITUTE (H)
MON SEPT 19
SAT SEPT 21 o Worcester State
THU SEPT 26 o Nichols College
SAT SEPT28 o Framingham Slate
ANNA MARIA COLLEGE (H)
TUE OCT 1
o N~ern University
FRI OCT 4
o EastemNaz.arene
MON OCT7
WcO OCT9 . o Eme!¥)nCollege
TUE OCT 15 o C-Olhy-Sawy,r College
SAT OCT 19 o Salve Regina College
TUE OCT 22 o Mass. Maritime Academy

TBA
Aut, Coach: Larry O'Toole

:OLF
~1
1:00
1:00
1:00
1:00
1:00
1:00
UEGIATE TBA
UEGIATE TBA
UEGIATE TBA
,NTLEY)

ARMA ·

11 :30
11 :30
11 :30
11 :30
11 :30
11 :00

• Representative
SOPHOMORE CLASS: • Vice President

TIME DEPART

3:00
11 :00
3:30
11 :00
3:30
7:00
3:30
3:30
4:00
1:00
3:30

1:15
8:30
1:00
9:00
1:30
5:30
2:00
2:00
1:15
10:00
1:00

• ReP,resentative
SENIOR CLASS:

• ·Representative
• Representative

-

/

Remember that it is your responsibility to elect those members
of your class whom you feel will represent your interests the best.

Head Coach: Constantin. Perju

WOMEN'S TENNIS
SCHEDULE - 1991
TIME

DAY

DATE OPPONENT

.THU
SAT
TUE

9/26
9128

THU
SAT
THU

GORDON COLLEGE
ENDICOTT COLLEGE
1(),11 WORCESTER STATE
COlLEGE
1(),/J EMMANUEL COLLEGE
1(),/5 WORCj:STER
POLYTECHNIC INST.
1(),/10 EMERSON COLLEGE
HEAD COACH: Rich'--

If there are any questions or concerns regarding thi/event ,
please call : S.G.A _office at 573-8332 or the Student Activities
Center-at 573-8320.

;.

H/A

3:30

A
11:00 H

3:30
3:30

A
A·'

STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
YOUR VOICE ON CAMPUS

11:00 A


2:00

_ 1__c;

page 12

The Suffolk Jouma.l Wednesday, September 25, 1991

The Suffolk Jou1
The Official Student Newspaper Of Suffolk University
)

.

'

.

Volume 50 Number 3

STUDENT G OVERNMENT

AssocIATION
CLASS OF 1995

Kel

Suffolk exploring possiblity of
expansion on Bea·con Hill

Sen
o1

On September 30, Octobe(,I and October 2 , 1
991 elections for
the follow ing positions will be held in the Sawyer Lobby:
FRESHMAN CLASS:

• President
• Vice President
• Representative
• Representative
• Representative
• Representative

SOPHOMORE CLASS: • Vice President
• Representative
SENIOR CLASS:

• Representative
• Representative

Remember that it is your responsibility to elect those members
of your class whom you feel will represent your interests the best.

If there are any questions or concerns regarding this' event,
please call: S.G. A. office at 573-8332 or the Student Activities
Center at ;:,73-8320.

SGA completes
fall elections
The Student Govcrument Auociation
held ill llllnual fill elections to fill KAU
forthefreshmanandsophOfflOfCd&SICS.
Allfreshmcnscauwcrcopen;thevice

Suffolk seeks to improve support .
of .students on academic probation
in e : n r ~ or lnten:oUeiiatc ldiv·
Jlles,-.Jthouah they may maintain man•
by Ht:1tlrlffA.S-'b

bcnhlpinvariouldubland~
" f ome,tl)eillucoll:lciiml: oa Makmic

" l biowvf:rffewstudenuwhoc:ndup probation ii• dillkutt one for•• ·

ro~:!e~=,:~:r:t~=Jed'aer' :~J;o::~=~00
10=; :,u~a:

LynnettcCondltofor1hepresidcncyof

theclwof l994.

· Pren

a.1m

1~
·
whm. Pirri wu put oo probation two piaocau
The efforu of M~n1 and Pi!rl, yeanqo, ·propoeeto _alk toun;aany .md, 11
t

tative le&lS or 1he frahmen class.,
• time when 1he CLAS i.nd SOM ui (ac:f9n whkb helped thole audmtl
The 50phomore class fiUcd the 1wo placin1 emphasis' on the retention of retaf1n1able academic lla.tldiq-. ~
11
students on academic probation and
· The.ctioolwa.ntstoS,ytoreacboU1

::!~~~~~;==:
offtci.&I

ud we

~

op::cn~~::tb~r:r'!e~~:
presidency of the frcshmandiu.
aroupd.
catbyc.astdll,LindaDaatis,Anthony

tlnsuW

Gerri Manning, who is work.in& with 11uden1,ftwuone of my~b!Bda lmsucc
Surrotlr.smiorTammiPirritolearnu totrytowork onlhk••facukJpmm."·
ADll

co~~ni1~1:t!=~~u~~n,an
academic stand.in& committee, whOK
membership comprises facul1y and administrator1, each aemestcr rc;viewl I.he
campaip.
academicncordsofallau4,enuenrolled
Theaenior clau, whichallOhutwo inCLASand5qM.
unfilled •represenLative tells, had no
The committee tries 10 identify any

,,, Y OUR VOICE ON C A M PUS

~

~ ::!'.~~~C: =
=
=:~;:d~~~~~::i:~~i'~:O~
an~J:!~:~ =
~:0";~~:o!~'fo~~cc:=:~!~ :r~~o=:=.~= =~. ~:i~~==
~
presidcncy.andoncrepraentativclCat

Mary O'Alb• wu elected to the vice•
presidency and JOiCph Ve.Ila WU dcc:tcd
10 1he one represcnwJve seat. Nci1hu
candidate wu challeuaed in their

ST U DENT GO V ERN M E N T A SSOCIATION

labll

,n,_
., .....

candidales nmnina in thit eio;- 11udmu who are n~

:!~i:=~~~
JeMCe
added.

Pl&blic l
ICdle

ate o (

I

~

Advanc

there's.
that nccch to be
we need to undcrltand (the din
facton) before weallb pWueuoaably,"

aaidMUWJll.



While Mann.ina hu worked . with
students in academic jeopardy

lll&U!'• ~uate Sodo&oa majon, lhe does not know

~~~'!::~:e'::!'*~ :"coc'!.iW:U!:::!:n~ ;~e::=::m-=~Off,
did.ala
fmiabed in a thlce•••Y lie.
studenl, who
be
and
1bat

are1::m.~~=

it coolaCU the
may then
putonacademicprobation.

she
Pini .-ouJd like to speak with
' wide• crou teetion of •udmU

ba~~u:::=:=

u

=-l

andacccptanceoftbepoaitioDJ. •
P ~~.:,~~ . . . . . . . b ~
wbo
He P.
Voter tum out th1a fall n1 moderate. and meet rc,ularly with advisors. Stu- .-aat to
to • _._ _... caperi- mca&.

·~~~8!::!;.ote~~
vota cut.
-

=:~~~~°:

..a

Acadellllc ~
~orrx:a o r ~ Suffolk coadaued OIi Pl- 5

1