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Wendell Phillips finalist Hersh to speak at Commencement

Eitan Hersh was selected from six finalists to be the only student speaker during this year's Commencement exercises. The finalists for the Wendell Phillips Award spoke in the Coolidge Room of Ballou Hall last night. They were judged by the University's Committee on Student Life, a group of students and faculty. Hersh was surprised he was selected. "I did not expect to win. I'm obviously happy about it. I'm nervous about speaking at graduation." Hersh, a philosophy major, spoke about the importance of taking an interst in politics. He also praised the other finalists. "The six people in the final round were exceptional individuals." Hersh said. "I honestly would have been happy with any one of them getting it." The finalists were asked to respond to the question, "How do you balance the goals of speaking your mind on a divisive issue while also seeking widespread support for your cause?" The first three students to speak were seniors Chike Aguh, Zachariah Baker and Hersh. Aguh focused his time on building bridges and consensus while Baker discussed how "advocates run the risk of alienating people outside their campaign" and how they "must be able to relate to the opposition." "On a divisive issue we care about, it's hard to compromise on values," Hersh said. The last three finalists, junior Annette Farrington Kramer, senior Matthew Pohl, and senior Zeleka Yeraswork, declined to address the question and focused instead on other issues. Kramer discussed a number of issues she believed in, and compared them to the abolition of slavery, which Wendell Phillips championed. Pohl's speech concerned his documentary film "Mission to Marriage." He discussed interviewing former U.S. Representative Bob Barr (R-GA.), as well as his experiences talking to people regarding same-sex marriage in the United States. Yeraswork spoke about how "our attention has been perversely captured by terrorists" and voiced concern over little media attention given to African civil wars because "we are selective about who we care about." Each finalist was allotted three to five minutes to speak. click here to see the correction for this article


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Loi To | The Social Entrepreneur

This past weekend on my way back from work in Dorchester, where I teach English, I tried to think of all the different things the average Tufts student can do to become a better member of the Tufts Community. Here's a list of 10 things I came up with: 1. Say thank you to a Tufts worker. A simple thank you to a member of Dining Services, Mail Services or Dowling Hall staff can make both your day and their day better. Be grateful for the essential services they provide that enable Tufts to be a world-class university. 2. Think about what you do before you do it. Before you attempt to pee all the cheap beer you drank at the party on some Somerville resident's yard, or leave the newspaper you were reading on the T behind, think about the negative affects of your actions. Would you want your front yard to have traces of urine? Or sit in a dirty subway car? 3. Go running - outside. New England weather is very quirky. It can be blizzard conditions and 15 below zero one day, and 50 and sunny the next. Instead of running on the claustrophobic track at the Gantcher Center or the crowded treadmills at the fitness center, vary your beer-belly erasing workouts with runs outside. You'll get to see more of the outside community and ease the wait for a treadmill at the fitness center for others. 4. Smile. It seems simple, but not many people do it as they rush to classes and try to run away from the cold. A little smile to a stranger will make both your and the stranger's day better. 5. Have an open mind. Are you adamantly opposed to the Republican Party? Do you really know what it means to be a Republican and what it means to be a Democrat? Instead of shutting out the opposition's views, try listening to them. You might learn something new about the other side and yourself at the same time. 6. Volunteer. It feels great to have an impact on the community. You can help at a soup kitchen, tutor kids, paint a mural or set up a fundraiser. Tufts has many opportunities for volunteering to help an endless array of deserving causes. You can find opportunities for service through one of Tufts organizations, or just find a worthy cause on your own. 7. Read the newspaper. Tufts students get the Boston Herald and New York Times for free, and Tisch Library subscribes to almost every periodical imaginable. Next time you have a little down time, try reading the newspaper, either in the print or online edition, and learn about what's going on in the world away from the Tufts vacuum. 8. Have some patience. Things in life do not get done instantly, so the next time you are waiting in line at the student services desk at Dowling or waiting for the Joey, don't get upset because you are not the first in line or the shuttle is not right in front of you. A little patience goes a long way. 9. Attend a Lecture. Every year, Tufts brings hundreds of renowned experts and fascinating lecturers to speak about their life's work. Go hear celebrities like Andy Rooney speak about his life in the television world, or former secretary of education Rod Paige talk about his experience as a top-level government official. Lectures offer a fresh breath of air away from academia and into the real world. Plus they almost always have some sort of food available. So go for the free lunch, and maybe you will learn something fascinating that you knew nothing about before. 10. Shovel your sidewalks. Anyone who has walked near a residential street when there is snow on the ground knows how hard it is to walk on un-shoveled sidewalks. Living off-campus has added responsibilities along with the added independence, one of which is shoveling snow. The 10 things I outlined here are just a small number of ways Tufts students can become better members of the Tufts community. In no way is this list meant to be comprehensive or all-encompassing. Rather, it is a springboard of ideas of how to make life here at Tufts better for both the individual student and the overall community. What I think Tufts students should do is come up with their own lists of how they can enrich the social and intellectual atmosphere on campus.Loi To is a junior majoring in political science and Russian. He can be reached at loi.to@tufts.edu.


The Setonian
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Alex Bloom | Philly Phodder

If you missed NCAA basketball on Saturday and Sunday, shame on you. CBS carried the biggest games of the weekend (Duke at University of North Carolina, Illinois at Ohio State, Syracuse at University of Connecticut), so you have no excuse. This weekend in college basketball was earth-shattering (in the sports world, that is). Top-ranked Illinois lost its perfect season in a season finale drop to Ohio State on a three-pointer with six seconds left. No. 2 North Carolina scored 11 straight points to beat No. 6 Duke by two in Chapel Hill. No. 3 Kentucky blew a four-point lead with 1:11 remaining to lose to Florida 53-52 in what's hopefully a preview of the SEC tournament. No. 4 Wake Forest snuck by North Carolina State on a late runner by Chris Paul. No. 7 Kansas got destroyed by Missouri. And that's just the top seeds. Currently, college basketball is undoubtedly the most exciting sport among national sports. If you're a sports fan, you should be watching college basketball right now. This sport easily tops the NBA in excitement and likeability. I'm convinced that if March Madness coincided with the MLB playoffs, people would watch the tourney (assuming the Red Sox aren't playing the Yankees). This nation has a disease (and the only cure is not more cowbell). March Madness fever is taking over again. What makes college basketball so much better than the NBA and the other storylines in national sports right now? College basketball has more parity this season than in many years past, which will mean a great tournament. Take the Big East, for example. The best teams in the Big East are Boston College, UConn, Pittsburgh, and Syracuse. But even next weekend, when we know who has won the Big East Championship, it will still be undecided who the "best" team in the conference is. Boston College beat UConn and Syracuse, but lost badly to Pittsburgh. UConn beat Syracuse twice and split its two games with Pittsburgh, as well as losing to BC. Pittsburgh beat Syracuse twice, and yet Syracuse was ranked ahead of both UConn and Pittsburgh before last weekend because Pittsburgh has two losses to West Virginia as well as losses to Villanova, St. John's and Georgetown and UConn has losses to Notre Dame and UMass. Syracuse beat Villanova, West Virginia, St. John's, Georgetown and Notre Dame. Feeling a little lost? The Big 12 has the same problem between Oklahoma State, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas and Texas A&M. The SEC is a little garbled between Kentucky, Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi State. And the ACC? Let's not even go there. Then there's the overwhelming amount of exciting players. Even without Carmelo Anthony, Ben Gordon or Dwight Howard, the NCAA still showcases some of the top talent in basketball. North Carolina has the flashy Rashad McCants and the powerful Sean May. Wake Forest's Chris Paul is one of the best point guards in all of basketball, NBA or NCAA. Duke's J.J. Redick can shoot the lights out, even though he missed to beat UNC on a last-second three on Sunday. Syracuse's Hakim Warrick can explode to the basket and dominate in the paint. At 6'7", Francisco Garcia of Louisville is a threat as both a sharp-shooting forward and savvy point guard. And the point guard trio of Dee Brown, Luther Head, and Deron Williams could lead Illinois to their first Final Four since 1989. Additionally, college basketball is a nice breath of fresh air from the free-agent talks in the NFL and the steroid scandal in Major League Baseball. While the majority of the media is focusing on how much Samari Rolle and Derrick Mason can snag from the highest bidder or debating the size of Barry Bonds' head (it's wicked big), these kids are playing their hearts out to win a championship. NCAA basketball is about a love for the game. Many of these athletes could easily have followed in the paths of Kobe Bryant, Kevin Garnett and Lebron James, jumping right to the NBA to become multimillionaires. But they chose to pursue an education at college while learning the game from respected coaches like Mike Kryzewski, Roy Williams, Jim Boeheim, Lute Olson, and Jim Calhoun. Finally, there's the NCAA tournament, the most exciting three weeks in sports. In March, I end up declaring a three week holiday from ... everything. I get so caught up in tournament frenzy that on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, when there are no games, I will even resort to watching (gulp) NIT games. Sixty-five teams. Sixty-four games. Only one can end the season with a victory. Unlike the NBA, it really is "win or go home." There's nothing like it in sports, anywhere (except maybe the Accenture Match Play Championship in golf). Just last season, for example, seventh-seeded Xavier made the Elite Eight (which I picked in my bracket) and battled Duke, only to lose by three. Eighth-seeded Alabama upset both Stanford and Syracuse to join Xavier in Regionals, where they lost to UConn, the eventual NCAA champs. Tourney time is the only time of year when you care about teams like Creighton, Southern Illinois, Manhattan, and Pacific. So if you really are a true sports fan, you'll spend your next few weekends planted in front of the television. You won't want to go out. Just watch the most exciting showcase in sports: college basketball.


The Setonian
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Men's Tennis | Singles Preview

Tufts enters this spring aiming to improve on last year's 7-6 record and No. 22 national ranking, and strong singles play from the team's veterans will be a key to accomplishing this goal. Senior co-captains Rifat Perahya and Adam Yates will be leading the way at the top of the singles line-up. The 2005 roster boasts eight returning players, five of whom cracked the top starting six spots. The Jumbos will need that experience playing in a NESCAC that owns six of last year's top 25 teams in the country. Perahya will play as the No. 1 singles seed for Tufts for the second year in a row. He has compiled a 33-16 record in singles play and returns to Voute Courts this year as one of the nation's top competitive Div. III competitors. Perahya was one of 32 players selected for the NCAA Singles Championships held at Bates College. Last year the line-up was bruised by sidelining injuries, as two key singles players did not compete for the full season. Yates and junior Paul Roberts will be looking to stay healthy to win matches at the top of the lineup. Yates only managed to challenge one opponent last year - he had to take a seat due to leg injuries and a fractured hand. The senior co-captain, who has accumulated a 20-12 career record, aims to be ready for action after spring break. The Jumbos are deep this year with 11 players potentially fighting for five spots. Yates and Roberts, if healthy, will be challenged by fellow juniors Jon Rubenstein and Ben Alexander, sophomores Sean McCooey, Corey Keller, Matt Gallin, Geoff Loh, Craig Kunkes, and freshmen William Fleder and Kenny Leavitt for a starting position. "We won't know who's playing what [position] until the last minute," Yates said. "The only set positions are Rifat at one. Other than that, it's up in the air." The starting line-up at the beginning of last season consisted of Perahya at one followed sequentially by the only graduated senior, Jon Bram, Alexander, Roberts, Rubenstein and McCooey. By the end of the season, Roberts was sidelined with injuries and Rubenstein and McCooey each moved up a slot, with Keller filling in at the number six position. "I think this year we have an excellent chance to succeed," Keller said. "Losing only one senior and gaining a few talented freshmen should enable us to place within the top three in NESCAC." Alexander had a 7-5 record in dual matches in the No. 3 and No. 4 positions while Rubenstein was 6-6 playing anywhere from No. 4 to No. 6. McCooey and Keller stepped up as freshmen last year to hold down the end of the starting roster racking up a total of 13 wins and only six loses in dual matches. This year Fleder is the top recruit and is expected to earn a starting position. He and Leavitt are both from the Northeast, hailing from New York City and Longmeadow, Mass., respectively, and will be competing against men they faced in junior competition. "Fleder should be playing top six, he's been doing very well in challenge matches," Yates said. "Leavitt is also a freshman and has a shot at varsity." There is no shortage of depth this year for the men's team and this will prove to be one the strongest weapons the Jumbos have this season. Coach Jim Watson also has more time to devote to the squad after stepping down from the women's head coaching position to coach the men full-time. The veteran coach, who was named New England Coach of the Year in 1989 and 1994, is entering his 24th season as head coach. "Having Coach Watson as a full-time coach has proven beneficial because he has been able to focus on individual improvement more than last year." Keller said. If the men can stay healthy and the depth proves strong, then Watson's lineup could be achieving more successes this spring.


The Setonian
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Blind admissions

I understand President Bacow and Dean Coffin's rationale in composing their Viewpoint yesterday ("Need-blind admissions: Setting the record straight," March 7) to "set the public record straight" on need-sensitive admissions at Tufts. The fact that this Viewpoint represents one of the only efforts at engagement of either of these administrators into the life of undergraduate students, and a faceless one at that, is shameful. In my past four years at Tufts, upper-level administrators like President Bacow, Dean Coffin and Provost Bharucha have increasingly neglected their role as student-friendly educators in an institution that prides itself on its commitment to undergraduate education. Nowhere is this as clear as in the Admissions Office. In the interest of full disclosure, I spent the better part of three years working in a variety of capacities in Admissions. I started as a work-study file clerk, moved to be a volunteer tour guide, coordinated student overnight visits, and finally worked as an April Open House executive board member. Last spring, in response to a column I wrote about the public relations-orientation of the college admissions industry, I was summarily dismissed from my meritorious service in volunteer positions, personally attacked and threatened by admissions officers, and called too "high-maintenance" by Dean Coffin. If Dean Coffin and his colleagues in Admissions were truly committed to the education of young people and Tufts' own pledge to public service and civic activism, their operation would bear little resemblance to that currently residing in Bendetson Hall. Most notably, they would be engaged with the undergraduate community well beyond freshman orientation. Admissions officers are, to use a term coined by education writer Jacques Steinberg, "the gatekeepers" to a college. How can one decide appropriately who belongs inside the gates when he or she has no idea what actually goes on inside there? The majority of admissions officers at Tufts and similar institutions nationwide are recent college graduates in their mid-twenties, temporarily serving in that job for two or three years before figuring out what they really want to do. Others in college admissions are career admissions officers, moving from school to school, with no loyalty or connection to an undergraduate institution, but only a perfected sales pitch that could sell Tufts or Yale or Trinity. Their secret trick? The mythical aura that embodies the entire college admissions process for the overworked, overpressured high school senior convinced that the review of his application by the gods on high is a complete and objective review of his first 17 years of life. The Admissions Office knows very little about what actually goes on at Tufts. To be fair, there are a few recent alums working in the office. But on more than one occasion, I have heard admissions officers give factually incorrect information to students, ranging from curricular options to student life. This is in addition to countless instances where the truth has been twisted in an attempt at spinning the true situation (our horrific residential life system comes to mind). Staff turnover rates are so high that those who do come to Tufts cannot be reasonably expected to learn anything about the true character of the school beyond what they memorize out of a viewbook. The students who get involved with Bendetson's "Student Outreach" are self-selective. Beyond being happy at Tufts, they have yet to realize how over-hyped the entire college application process is, yet to be disillusioned by the Bacow administration's uniquely paternalistic, yet neglectful, approach to undergraduate life. They are the students who like talking about themselves and their lives once a week to hundreds of strangers. Certainly, there are students who, like me, begin their careers as tour guides looking to help high schoolers make difficult decisions, attract the best possible students to Tufts, and make their school better. But as any candid experienced guide will tell you, "student outreach" is an unpaid public relations internship, and straying from message, no matter how valid that real message is, will get you canned, or at least scolded, if the powers that be ever catch wind. In shaping the entering class, Dean Coffin and his staff set a tone for this school. Irresponsibly, though, they fail to pay attention to the tone set by students already here. For them, the Tufts experience is the biennial photo shoot scheduled for their promotional materials. Sadly, they do not recognize that our yield rate and endowment are undoubtedly connected to students' levels of contentment and feeling of worth while here, and that they thus have a vested interest in understanding and improving student life. The admissions office takes advantage of the real, live Tufts students who volunteer their time and energy to them, using them until they have no more exuberance to give. Every time an admissions officer sees me on campus (usually in the campus center, because lunch is really the only reason to leave their insulated domain), they glare and make a snide comment or some other unprofessional gesture. This has become particularly humorous to me of late, as graduate school admissions officers are bending over backwards to impress me. But I have an edge up on the process now, an edge that I did not have four years ago. I realize that admissions is a game, that admissions officers know very little about what your experience will actually be like, and that most could really care less who attends their school as long as their SATs, yield and diversity rates are high. I do not think that Dean Coffin and President Bacow actually achieved anything positive in writing their Viewpoint, except maybe covering their own rears. This should be a familiar outcome to President Bacow, whose angry morning-after Naked Quad Run e-mail from 2002 will live on in infamy. Both these men talk about what Tufts is committed to on a daily basis, but I personally have had enough of the talk. After four years of idling, the administration has finally adopted a reorganization of undergraduate life, which remarkably resembles the Vice President of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering system President Bacow eliminated when he first came here. Perhaps now we will see evidence of the commitment to students I have been hearing about since my admissions information session in February 1999. Meanwhile, I challenge Dean Coffin to engage his office in the reality that Tufts life is, beyond damage control like yesterday's Viewpoint and his firing of me.Adam Pulver is a senior majoring in community health and political science. He can be reached at Adam.Pulver@tufts.edu.


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Marissa Beck | Eat This!

Alcohol. It does a body good ... in moderation, that is. But let's be honest, this is college. And moderation is not necessarily in the typical college drinker's vocabulary - especially with St. Patty's day around the corner. In moderation, however, drinking can be good for you! And it's not just from red wine that we may reap the health benefits of alcohol. Though red wine certainly has potent antioxidants, cardiovascular benefit has been observed regardless of the choice of alcoholic beverage. This is due primarily to the ethanol found in alcohol, which has a positive effect on the lining of blood vessels and helps your arteries maintain their elasticity. In addition, the American Heart Association (AHA) asserts that moderate drinking appears to be good for the heart and circulatory system, and probably protects against type two diabetes and gallstones. Let's make a toast! Alas, there's a catch. Although drinking has been linked to a lower risk of heart disease, men should have no more than two drinks a day - and women no more than one - to gain this benefit. You'd think that if one drink is healthy, the more the merrier, but the problem is that a high alcohol intake decreases alcohol's protective antioxidant effect. The government's new 2005 dietary guidelines for Americans say that those who choose to drink alcoholic beverages should do so "sensibly and in moderation." One drink counts as 12 ounces of regular beer, five ounces of wine, or 1.5 ounces of 80-proof distilled spirits - which can equal out to a measly sip, regardless how heavy some drinkers might be. In a large wine goblet, this serving only fills one-third of the glass - don't be fooled into thinking you are only drinking two glasses when the wine glasses contain up to 12 ounces, or when the beer glasses hold 24. If one 24-ounce glass is half-filled, then you have had your quota - I hate to tell you to do the math, but that is what you need to do, unless you want to be the cool guy who whips out the measuring cup at the bar. No matter the occasion, it's still important to remain vigilant about how much alcohol you consume. The risk of consuming too much takes the fun away from "drinking to your health." The AHA states that heavy alcohol consumption raises the risk of high blood pressure, heart failure, diabetes, and pancreatic and liver failure, not to mention severe dementia. Don't mean to scare you right before St. Pat's day, but it's good to keep these facts in mind if you intend upon hitting up the keg stands. Another reason to cut down on the amount you drink is that, if consumed in the proper proportion, alcohol can slightly increase HDL ("good") cholesterol. Non-drinkers, don't fret: you can do regular physical exercise and achieve the same raise in HDL cholesterol. In addition, resveratrol is a flavanoid found in alcoholic beverages that may prevent platelets in the blood from sticking together, which might reduce clot formation and the risk of heart attack or stroke. Okay, so this is all great for non-drinkers and for cheap "one-beer-wonder" dates who can drink moderately, get drunk, and still receive some health benefits. But what if you know you want to drink more come St. Patty's Day and are still concerned about your health? If your plan is to go out and get obliterated like a sloppy Joe, I can't help you there. But if you're looking to be a cautious drinker, here's the bottom line: the number of calories varies depending upon the drink. Calories add up drink after drink, and if those extra ones are not burned off, not only is weight gain inevitable, but the positive health benefits that alcohol is said to have certainly won't apply. A good rule of thumb: mixed drinks are usually loaded with sugar and calories. Such delicacies would include favorites like a Cosmopolitan, Sex on the Beach, whiskey sour, daiquiri, or even a margarita! Drinking on an empty stomach is also not such a hot idea. First off, it can make you pretty sick, and that's definitely not fun. Secondly, those who drink alcohol without food might be more likely to develop high blood pressure (hypertension) than those who drink while eating. Realize your limit and be aware that health benefits can arise if you consume alcohol in the proper amount, especially when complemented by food. Studies have consistently linked moderate consumption of alcohol to a reduced risk of heart disease. Let's drink to that!Senior Marissa Beck, an English and Art History major, works with the Strong Women program as an assistant manager and personal trainer for the Tufts Personalized Performance Program. She can be reached at Marissa.Beck@tufts.edu. This column is written in conjunction with Emily Bergeron, R.D., the editor of the Daily's Balance section.



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City Briefs

Somerville police chief abruptly retires Somerville Police Chief George McLean abruptly retired Friday, Feb. 25 after a long history of tension with Somerville Mayor Joseph Curtatone, according to the Somerville Journal. "Despite any professional differences we may have had, I respected him," Curtatone told the Journal. "I wish him the best." The mayor's office ordered McLean to turn in his gun and badge before leaving on Friday, which several police officers called a "slap in the face" after the former chief's nearly three decades of service. Curtatone spokesman Mark Horan said, however, that the order was standard procedure for the police department. Disagreement regarding hiring decisions, scathing reviews of leadership, and inter-office criticisms created and exacerbated a rift between the mayor's office and the police chief, according to the Journal. "He served the city a long time. I wish him well ... Obviously the mayor and the chief had philosophical differences," Somerville Alderman at Large Dennis Sullivan told the Journal. Captain Robert Bradley has been appointed acting police chief for the time being.84-year-old man struck in parking lot, police need to corroborate driver's story Gerry Dinitto, 84, was killed in a CVS parking lot in Magoun Square, Somerville, last week after an SUV backed into him, knocking him to the ground. Initially, Somerville Police Lieutenant James Polito told the Somerville Journal that Dinitto's injuries did not seem life-threatening. An ambulance was called as a safety precaution, and Dinitto died at Boston Medical Center from internal bleeding in his head. The driver of the SUV claimed that he had looked behind him before backing up, but failed to see Dinitto. "No charges have been filed [against the driver] up to this point," Polito told the Journal. Police are looking for witnesses, however, to corroborate the driver's story. The driver's name has not been released.Wrestling coach, Medford resident charged with sexual abuse A Medford man who had worked in many Massachusetts schools as a wrestling coach was arrested for sexual abuse, according to the Medford Transcript. Everett Bower, 32, was charged with indecent assault and battery on a child over 14 years of age, as well as dissemination of harmful matter to a minor. A 17-year-old boy recently came forward and described incidents of abuse when he was 14 years old. Bower allegedly kissed, hugged, and touched the boy, bought him alcohol, cuddled with him naked, and told him he loved him. "It's definitely an ongoing investigation," Middlesex District Attorney Spokeswoman Melissa Sherman told the Transcript. "The prosecutor said in court that she anticipates additional charges." Assistant District Attorney Michelle Margolis said that she expects more people to come forward now that the first boy did. Bower coached at three area schools in recent years, and is currently unemployed. According to the Transcript, Bower is due back in court April 4 for a pre-trial hearing. -- Compiled by Bruce Hamilton from the Medford Transcript and Somerville Journal


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Boston Ballet's 'La Sylphide' soars while it dances

Fairies flit, witches curse, and peasants race across the Scottish highlands in a colorfully scored romantic intrigue. It's the stuff of high fantasy managed best by the grand ballet, and this weekend and last, it's the Boston Ballet's "La Sylphide" at the Wang Center. The two-act ballet, which marks the midpoint of the company's five-program season, is a great success, making it an early contender to serve as season's high point as well. The second of three balletic incarnations of a young man's ill-fated love for the eponymous sprite, "La Sylphide" is an important seminal work of romantic ballet. This version premiered at the Royal Danish Ballet in 1836, four years after the first was danced in Paris. (The third version, the one-act "Les Sylphides," is set to Chopin and remains a staple of many major repertories.) This "Sylphide," composed by Herman L??venskjold, is taken directly from the RDB version, with choreography adapted from August Bournonville by Sorella Englund. Englund, a legendary Bournonville dancer, has shown herself a faithful interpreter here by preserving his characteristically buoyant simplicity in her Boston Ballet setting. The plot is as airy as the dancing: James, a young Scot, leaves his fianc?©e Effy at the altar to pursue an ethereal wood sprite with whom he has become enamored. But cursed by a witch he petulantly spurns, the object of his affection dies at the very moment of her capture, leaving James heartbroken and Effy married to his rival. The charm of "La Sylphide," however, comes less from its narrative simplicity than from its whimsical character choreography. Effy's girlish turns and frolicking footwork contrast sharply with the sylph, who, sprite that she is, is all fluttering pointes and graceful extensions. The witch, Madge, limps evilly around the stage, while James' pursuit of the sylph is executed in exhilarating ballon. The piece's intrinsic merit aside, it is an almost perfect ballet for this company, whose personnel and history leave it well equipped to tackle works dependent more on control and panache than traditional form and technical alacrity. Soloist Karine Seneca was exactly the right lyrical dancer for the sylph, even though Sunday matinee press passes left this reviewer wishing he'd seen the preceding performance withbig-gun principal Larissa Ponomarenko's in the role. The relatively simple choreography was most noticeably effective in the corps de ballet, usually wince-worthy in their unison dancing. But in "La Sylphide," such sloppiness was evident only in some poorly synchronized entrances, after which the corps' dancing was crisp and confident. Particularly noteworthy were an energetic highland fling and a remarkably delicate sylph chorus in the second act. Here, as elsewhere, Yury Yanowsky's James was a wonderful compliment, nimbly landing his bounding ballon in front of the sylphs' delicate tone with gravity-defying lightness. His passionate assurance also countered Adriana Suarez's vigorously sinister Madge, a role Englund herself will dance twice during the course of the run. It's exciting to see the Boston Ballet handle an important piece with such considerable flair, raising expectations for the remainder of the season. However, dance appreciators would be well advised to approach the season-ending "Sleeping Beauty" with a modicum of trepidation, as the company's ambition is rarely a match for the scope of ballets so thoroughly steeped in the classical tradition. But with another weekend of "La Sylphide" approaching, audiences will be momentarily content with such refreshingly capable dancing.


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King, Senate hope to create more all-freshman dorms

As undergraduates get ready for the upcoming housing lottery, several administrators and students are working to implement changes to residential life on the Hill. On Sunday evening, Director of the Office of Residential Life and Learning Yolanda King addressed the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate about converting Hill Hall to an all-freshman dormitory and reserving Miller Hall for sophomores. In addition to changing the make-up of Hill and Miller, several senators are working to ensure that a tiered lottery system will be in place next spring. This system would separate each class into "high," "medium," and "low" brackets. A computer system would keep track of each student's numbers and tier so that no student could by chance receive extremely low or extremely high numbers all three years. This system would be most useful for juniors, who have the fewest options for on-campus housing. Juniors who had already received a number in the high bracket would know that they should look for off-campus housing. "If someone gets a bad lottery number all three years, it often leaves a bad taste in their mouth when they leave [Tufts]," junior senator Jos?© Vazquez said. As a result, Vazquez said he thinks these students would be "less likely to contribute back to the University." Vazquez, who worked on the project last semester, reported that there is still work that needs to be done to implement the tiered system. "We're talking to the right people, getting support from the right people, and we are definitely making more progress," he said. King is one of the administrators working with the Senate to complete this project. She said she is meeting with the TCU Senators to examine how viable the three-tiered system would be, based on the original proposal they submitted. The Senate is now waiting for the technological aspects of the project to be worked out. For example, Web Center, which announces the lottery numbers, would need to also include a database for every student that would record a history of their lottery numbers. "We're waiting for the go ahead from SIS online, and once we know it's possible, we're going to take the ball and run with it," Vazquez said. Meanwhile, senators and administrators are working out the logistics of converting Hill Hall to an all-freshman dorm. Since freshmen at Tufts are not given single rooms, the current singles in Hill would house extra residential assistants (RAs) and academic tutors. Excess singles may become study lounges, or, in the case of two adjacent single rooms, a wall could be knocked down to create one double room, assuming the costs are not prohibitive. Miller Hall will in all likelihood become an exclusively sophomore dorm next year, as King does not anticipate that any rising juniors and seniors will bid for double rooms there. The single rooms in Miller are designated for RAs. The Senate is also looking into future improvements with regard to residential life. At the housing lottery on March 17 and 18, senators will hand out a survey to gauge student support for a universal JumboFob. If enough students endorse the proposal, ResLife will look further into creating a universal JumboFob for Fall 2005.


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By the Numbers

With spring break fast approaching and many students booking flights to locations far warmer than Boston, the Daily looks at all things airplane-related. 78% Americans who approve of the soon-to-be-imposed federal airline dictate that makes bringing matches or cigarette lighters onto planes illegal9% Americans who describe themselves as "frequent flyers"44% Americans who describe themselves as "occasional flyers"47% Americans who say they "rarely" or "never" fly68% Americans who think that passengers should be allowed to use their cell phones while flying (and that the current ban on doing so should be revised)68% Americans who think that recently implemented airport security procedures "have been effective" 30 billion Amount of money the U.S. airline industry has lost since Sept. 114 million Amount of money Continental Airlines lost per day last month19 Current number of JetBlue flights out of Boston's Logan Airport each day100 Number of daily JetBlue flights out of Logan expected by 200825,000 Frequent flyer miles/points needed on most bank cards to earn "a round-trip coach flight within the 48 contiguous states" 50,000 Frequent flyer miles/points needed to earn "an economy round-trip to Europe"3 Men whom a federal appeals court ruled last week can sue American Airlines, which the men say took back their job offers after learning they had HIV 1 Expedia.com's rank in the recently released "Keynote Customer Experience Rankings for the Airline Industry" 2 Orbitz.com's rank3 Travelocity.com's rankThe statistics cited above come from Gallup, the Economic Times, the Mercury News, the Associated Press, destinationCRM.com, and the Daytona Beach News-Journal.


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CORES helps ease new immigrants' transitions

When Marcos Garcia immigrated to the Unites States, he was a member of a very small population of new Salvadorian immigrants. Garcia experienced firsthand that new immigrants have limited resources available to them to help ease the transition. As a result, Garcia set to work founding the Committee of Refugees from El Salvador (CORES) to help immigrants like himself with the challenges of acclimating to a new country, language, and culture. The Somerville-based non-profit organization helps immigrants attain visas and complete related paperwork, in addition to offering English-as-a-second-language (ESL) classes. To date, CORES has come to the aid of tens of thousands of immigrants from El Salvador and other Latin American countries. Tufts sophomores Bridget Kearney and Matt Malinowski became involved with Teach-in-CORES - the language class component of CORES - last year, in its first semester of development. When the then-sophomore coordinator was preparing to go abroad during this school year, Kearney and Malinowski stepped up to recruit other Tufts students to serve as teachers. This semester, about 25 Tufts students are teachers. Working in pairs, the students are responsible for designing a presentation of the curriculum, coming up with homework assignments, and creating activities for the classes, which meet for two hours per week. For freshman Laura Bannet, who volunteered as a teacher last semester, the most challenging part of the program was teaching students who spoke a different language. "[Sometimes] I could tell that [the students] had no idea what we were trying to say, no matter how many ways we tried to act it out, draw it, or explain it," she said. "We're so used to being students, and being on the receiving end of things, [being] at the mercy of the teacher, who can make the class so wonderful and entertaining or so dry and dull," Bannet said. "We're always complaining [about] or praising our teachers. But now we are teachers." CORES, Malinowski said, is an opportunity to put those critiques to good use. Kearney agrees that her experiences as a student have helped shape her success as a teacher: "Because we are students right now, going through the same thing, we can understand the problems they have with [acquiring] all that knowledge," she said. Though Malinowski tutored informally during high school, CORES was his first sustained teaching experience. "I always looked forward to [class each week]," he said. "Because the classes are small, we became really close to our students. It's really fun to watch [them] learn. With each passing week, they become more and more relaxed. Their confidence grows." Bannett also enjoyed her time as a teacher, mentioning the students' "appreciation of our help" and their "self-motivation to learn." A primary goal of the program is to "promote integration - mixing culture from the immigrants' homeland with the culture they find here," Malinowski said, adding that CORES helps immigrants to "meet and interact with Americans and get used to the culture in a [comfortable] environment." This year, CORES has been revamped with the goal of introducing a more structured curriculum. An entrance exam has been added, and the students will be tested at the end of the semester to determine progress. But "the teachers still have a lot of room for creativity in their teaching," said Kearney, who added that students often come to class with questions about culture, as well as language. In the future, Kearney would like to see the program move toward accreditation. "At some point, I'd like it to become more of a certification program; something that the students can write on a resume and have something that's a little more viable for being more professionally trained," she said. Malinowski would like to explore the possibility of "bringing [CORES] students to campus, for perhaps an informal chat or discussion with Tufts students who may not even be part of the CORES program so that interaction isn't limited to the teachers." He believes Tufts students would benefit from a greater "awareness about the country of El Salvador - its history, its culture, and also about issues facing the immigrants while they're coming to the Boston area and the greater New England area." Kearney and Malinowski show no signs of slowing down. "There's still a lot we can do with [the program]," Kearney said. After their involvement with CORES, Tufts students have found themselves prepared to take on new opportunities. "The demand in East Asia for native English speakers to come teach English is huge - companies in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan are all [seeking to] connect native English speakers with schools," said Malinowski, who spent several weeks in China teaching English this past summer. He said that CORES led him to that experience: "CORES inspired me to want to teach more." Kearney has been equally satisfied with CORES. "We receive no monetary compensation," she said. "It's for self-satisfaction - that you can contribute, give back, and not just take." "You have one-on-one communication [with the students you teach], and you are just watching these people take in everything that you give them, watching them grow," Kearney said. "As far as service projects go, this is the most rewarding and fun."


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Extraordinarily wrong

There are few in this country who doubt that our priorities have changed since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, as many Americans have become hungry for security and freedom from terrorism. The Bush administration moved quickly in the wake of the attacks to act on a large variety of legislation and executive orders that would give American authorities more freedom to fight those who intend to harm America. One of the policies revised a few days after the planes hit, while Ground Zero was still smoldering, was that of rendition - the policy of sending those suspected of crimes, usually terror-related, to other countries for interrogation. Although many in the Bush administration publicly contend that rendition has prevented attacks, it seems much more likely that it has given America's reputation a black eye and wasted resources on policy that is morally inconsistent with the stated goals of this country. It is foolish to expect democracy to reign supreme around the world when the United States pays scant heed to the details of due process at home. Unfortunately, the Bush administration has spent an extraordinary amount of time and money trying to justify the selective denial of rights to prisoners in the War on Terror. With the policy of "extraordinary rendition," foreign citizens suspected of terror-related crimes are transported around the world without charges or trial as part of America's efforts to bring "justice" to terrorists. One of the claims made by unnamed officials in the New York Times yesterday was that the policy of rendition saves America money. After all, the officials stated, interrogation is a costly process; why not get other countries to foot the bill? What we should be asking, however, is why taxpayer dollars are being used to ferry prisoners around the world and to pay the Americans overseas who supposedly supervise their detention. Perhaps the most troubling aspect of rendition is the suspicion by many that it might be used for torture of suspects. Several stories have emerged regarding how terror suspects were transferred overseas and tortured at America's behest. Although such tales have not been confirmed by our government, the mere fact that we are sending those we suspect of crimes to countries with dismal human rights records, such as Egypt, Syria, and Pakistan, is cause for plenty of concern here at home. Some justify our policy towards terror by stating that the ends justify the means. Don't believe it. We cannot fight a war for world freedom while indefinitely imprisoning certain "suspects" around the world. Every person who claims he was tortured at the hands of Americans in captivity will proclaim his story, true or not, from the mount as an inspiration for those disgruntled to rise up against America. Even worse, every suspect that is "rendered" to another country undermines our own moral standing as we ask others to take steps towards freedom. While we may need to use the sword to reach the olive bough, we must not use that same sword to stab lady justice in the heart.


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Correction

An article last week ("University's admissions policy leads to under-representation of Asian-Americans," March 3) contained a number of inaccuracies and mischaracterizations of the University's admissions policy. The Daily apologizes for the errors.



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Jeff Volinski | Stop Whining

Perhaps you are one of the millions of viewers who have been swept away by the cultural phenomenon known as "CSI." You're not alone. CBS claims that "CSI" is the most-watched television show, ever, on any planet. My goal is to change this. Those who watch the show, and are therefore most likely entertained by anything that blinks or is "bouncy," might be surprised to learn that "CSI" is actually an acronym for "Crime Scene Investigation." I, however, believe that it should stand for "Clap, Syphilis and Impotence," three of the conditions which I would rather have than watch this show. Nevertheless, this column is about why horrific things can be so horrific, so I reached for my pad of paper, my pen and my bottle of extra-strength Tylenol in preparation for the show. I wasted one Thursday night taking in two episodes of "CSI" just to figure out what makes this show so intolerable. Is it the acting? Is it the fact that the CSI team has a computer program capable of solving every problem that has ever manifested itself on the show? A mere 10 minutes into the program, I was given a gift as enlightening as the 10 Commandments: "Other than the fact that he's deceased, he's in excellent physical condition." Brilliant! Quite possibly the single dumbest thing that I have ever heard. Wait, what's this? More excruciating Jerry Bruckheimer dialogue? "Gentlemen, start your shovels!" This line was particularly humorous because it came at a time when I was beating myself over the head with a shovel to take my focus off of the show. It's no secret that "CSI" features some of the worst dialogue in recorded history. In fact, I believe that CBS could increase its ratings for "CSI" by completely eliminating spoken word from the show. The characters could use a system of simple hand signals and grunts to communicate with each other. Why stop there? Let's save some money and eliminate the unnecessary sexual tension that the characters provide by getting rid of said annoying characters and replacing them with semi-intelligent mammals. This is beginning to sound a lot like "CSI: Gorilla," and I think it sounds great. In addition to being able to watch a highly trained squad of forensic apes conquer today's toughest murder mysteries, we can watch them scratch each other's backs and beat their chests when they discover the hidden vaginal fluid on the ceiling of hotel room 122A. Of course, you cannot judge any show without first subjecting it to the patented Television Pickup Line Test. In the Pickup Line Test, which can be applied to any television show to test its adequacy, selected quotes from the show in question are extracted and used as pickup lines on unsuspecting men/women/gorillas. If the pickup line succeeds, then the show is a winner. Enough clarification; let's get to the test! For the first iteration of the test, imagine that you are in a bar, sipping on your third Jack and Coke of the night. You're wearing your favorite cologne/perfume, you've outfitted yourself in your favorite collared shirt/pair of tight black pants, and you've gelled/conditioned your hair to the extent that you could enter hardhat areas/places where only people with really soft hair are allowed. You see a gorgeous potential mate sitting at the bar basking in his/her femininity/masculinity, so you stroll up confidently and deliver the line: "You know what I like about flesh decomposing in soil? It's predictable." Oops. Well done, Frankenstein. That injured party will be lucky if he/she ever falls asleep again after hearing that gem of a pick up line. The first "CSI" line has officially failed the Pickup Line Test. Moving on to subject two. You and your wingman have made your way to the local bar to pick up some ladies. After some heavy pre-gaming, you feel pretty good about yourselves and your chances. You have your eye on two stunning college girls situated at the northeast quadrant of the alcohol-distributing facility. You finish your fermented barley malt solution, head towards them, and deliver with unequivocal bravado: "We're going to need your clothes." Immediately one of them punches your friend in the face. As the attacker goes to ice her hand and your friend lies unconscious, you try to console the remaining casualty. "What do you really want?" she inquires right before you deliver "CSI" quote number three: "I'm gonna need to get a DNA sample from you and take a look around your place - is that cool?" Game over. Thanks for patronizing our establishment, do come again. That's three strikes for "CSI," and as we all know, no television show that fails the Pickup Line Test is even remotely watch-able. Unfortunately, I am going to have to end this dialogue about why "CSI" is a horrible show and why nobody should watch it. Realize that I did not even discuss the terror that is "CSI: Miami" (and David Caruso's unmatched talent for delivering low-pitched, monotone one-liners in conjunction with his astonishing head-tilt) or the fact that there are actually more editions of "CSI" than there are cities and towns in the United States. Someone needs to stop the virus that is "CSI," and I'll be damned if it's not me. Jeff Volinski is a senior majoring in mechanical engineering. He can be reached at jeffrey.volinski@tufts.edu.


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I, like, need to find myself, in Paris

Inevitably, after only 20 minutes of driving, the suitcase that was stuffed at the top of the middle of the back seat would fall on me. I never understood why we had to pack so much for only a week or two. It did not matter how far away we were driving from Houston - San Antonio, Texarkana, Phoenix, Savannah, Kennebunkport - the golf bags took up most of the space in the trunk, so the middle seat was always filled, forming a canvas wall that had illusions of Incan grandeur. "Don't worry about it," my mom would say from the spacious front seat, "You're little. You've got more than enough space back there." Thanks, mom. She was right, though. As soon as we were on the road, she'd hand me a coloring book and some crayons and I would quietly entertain myself for what seemed like much too much time. It was mostly in this fashion that I have visited 40 of the 48 continental states (not to mention 36 of the states' capitol buildings - my family has a strange fascination with them). QUICK!!! Fast-forward to now! The broken record from friends who are thinking about going abroad: "I just don't know, Neil ... I mean, I, like, feel like I just haven't seen the world. I just don't, like, understand the way it works. So I'm going to go to London for the year. I just can't stand the way people in this country think! They're so backwards!" As the little Yiddish man sitting in the corner of the 2nd Avenue Deli snacking on a pickle with one boney finger raised says, "Achaaaaaah!" (Don't forget to pronounce the -ch like you're hacking up a loogie.) Here is the point and the problem. You think you don't understand the world? And you think that a year in London will help? Let me tell you something: you ain't gonna discover it there (much less anywhere else you go to study abroad). (But I keep all of this to myself. Nod and smile. Nod and smile.) "No, Neil ... It's like this ... I, like, just don't know who I am. I need to find myself ..." That's fair to a certain extent. You want to find yourself. I need to find myself - don't use that expression. You should know where you are. At least be honest to yourself, what you want to do is figure out where you want to be and who you want to be. That's a more fair course for self-questioning. "So you think you'll find yourself in London?" I ask. "Yes!" You exclaim enthusiastically. Let me tell you something, 40 percent of our campus goes abroad. Why? Sure, we could point to the University and its encouragement of study abroad programs. We could also point to people's interest in a greater chance at self-discovery. It is here that we are misleading ourselves. You want to know who you are? The wrong place to go looking is in another country, in another culture and in another language. That is not the first step - that is the second step. The first is knowing where you come from. How many students on this campus were born and reared in a northeastern state? I would assume a majority. And of that majority, how many go abroad with the goal of self-discovery as one of their main motivations? Again, I would assume a majority. Finally, of that majority, how many have spent a good deal of time traveling around the United States, the place under whose passport seal they travel so freely to other nations? Yup! You are correct! You've won the brand new Ford Windstar! A majority. I feel like I have a good grasp on what this country is about. I understand the types of people that exist in the different regions of the United States, not because I have given in to stereotypes, but because I have eaten in their restaurants, chatted with them over fajitas, corn fritters, crab cakes and fresh caught Pacific salmon. I have walked around their towns, felt the different climates, and noticed the different architecture. I have seen Old Faithful, walked on the beach in Orange County, gotten blackjack in Vegas, danced in a honkey-tonk in Nashville, fished off the coast of Miami, and spent 20 minutes looking at Monet's Waterlillies at the MOMA. This same sort of thing is what people do when they go to Europe or New Zealand for a semester. Why not try it in your own country first? You want to understand the world? Fine. But don't be too eager. Start with your country. This nation is not just made up of people from West Orange, New Jersey or that mysterious void that everyone just calls Outside Philly. If you travel around a bit, you might start to feel more comfortable with the rest of the nation, and you might understand that it is not necessarily the Northeast versus everyone else. You might start to understand where you fit in the United States. Once you understand where you stand as a citizen of the United States, then go and try to understand where you stand as a citizen of the world. Neil Hirsch is a senior majoring in art history and classics.


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Men's Swimming Wrap-Up | Finish at NESCACs sends two to Nationals

Interim head coach Adam Hoyt could not be more proud of the men's swimming and diving team's performance this season. Under his leadership, the team set eight school records, had 11 National B qualifying swims, had six swimmers earn All-NESCAC honors at the championship, and qualified two swimmers for the nationals meet over the Feb. 25-27 weekend. The meet followed a regular season in which Tufts finished 6-0 in dual conference meets. "I was really proud of our team," Hoyt said. "I think the guys worked really hard this year and they deserved the results we saw in this championship." Hoyt, who had been an assistant coach at Trinity for three years, proved himself here as Tufts finished with a 7-1 dual meet record and was undefeated in the NESCAC, suffering its only loss to the Boston College, a Div. I team. Tufts capped off its successful season with a fourth place finish out of 11 teams at the 2005 NESCAC championship meet, finishing about 729 points behind first place Williams. The upperclassmen were the key to Tufts' strong performance this season. Seven individuals earned National B qualifying times but only juniors Brett Baker and Jon Godsey are officially swimming in the Div. III NCAA's. Baker qualified in the 200 meter freestyle with a time of 1:41.53 seconds. The star freestyler is seeded eighth in the NCAA, only two seconds slower than top seeded Chris Pearson from Carnegie-Mellon. Godsey qualified in the 100 backstroke with his time of 51.83, which seeds him 14th overall in the NCAA. Senior Seth Baron missed the cutoff in the 200 butterfly by only .21 of a second. In addition to qualifying two swimmers for Nationals, Tufts had six swimmers named to the NESCAC All-Conference Team. To qualify, a swimmer must finish in the top-three in an event at the championship meet. Baker earned All-Conference honors in the 200 and 100 freestyle, as did Godsey for his second place finish in the 50 backstroke. Baron also earned All-Conference honors for his third place finish in the 200 butterfly. Sophomore Greg Bettencourt qualified for his third place finish in the 200 freestyle. Tufts relays are also represented on the All-Conference team. The 800 freestyle relay of Bettencourt, sophomore Justin Fanning, Baron, and Baker finished second and the 400 freestyle relay of junior Jason Kapit, Bettencourt, Fanning, and Baker finished third. The individual performances from the meet were the highlight, but it was a team effort at championships that earned Tufts its 1,133.50 points at NESCACs. "Team performance as a whole far exceeded my expectations." Hoyt said. "Everyone had lifetime best swims." Some of those career bests were enough to break Tufts records. Baker broke Brian Herrick's nine-year old 200 freestyle record of 1:42.33 by 0.8 seconds and Godsey bettered his own record in the 50 backstroke by .06 of a second. Godsey also broke Herrick's 100 backstroke record by about three tenths of a second in his leadoff swim of the 400 medley relay. Baron bettered his own Tufts record in the 200 butterfly. His time of 1:54.27 was exactly one second faster than his previous record. Kapit broke the 400 individual medley record with his time of 4:10.56. The 800 freestyle relay, 200 medley, and 400 medley relay teams also broke school records. The diving team also contributed to Tufts' success at the meet. Junior diver Todd Putnam, whose performance has been crucial this season, placed seventh in the 3-meter event to earn Tufts 356.95 points. Part of the team's successful foundation was set back in January. The men's team conducted a three-week training trip in Florida during that month, putting the squad in great shape by the time they tapered for championships. Coach Hoyt is looking forward to next year as most of the swimmers are returning next season. "As my first experience as head coach, I couldn't have been happier." Hoyt said. "I couldn't have asked more from the guys."


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This is not Cinderella's Ballroom

Ballroom dancing may evoke images of awkwardness at weddings or sparkly, old Hollywood classics, but it's more than polished dresses, flowery hair styles and sparkly shoes. Ballroom is a fusion of art and sport; combining athleticism, coordination, and practice with the artistic expression of emotion through music and costume. Tangoing down the T on Saturday, the Tufts Ballroom Dance Team competed in the 14th Annual Harvard Invitational Competition in Dedham, Mass. with some success. Sophomores Aarthi Ananthanarayana, Davit Nguyen, and Masha Pindrus lead the team, which recently took first at an earlier competition at Boston University. Sophomore Sheena Keller, who won first place in Gold rhythm at Harvard on Saturday, is aware of some misconceptions about the sport. "It's kind of a secret world," Keller said, "People who aren't in it don't really know much about it." With such specific categories and styles for the dance, understanding the lingo - like "gold rhythm," for example - can be as difficult as dancing the steps. Ballroom dance is divided into four separate levels based on the dancers' experience. The competition heats up with each level: newcomers, open, bronze, silver, gold. "Rhythm" refers to the dance category, which in the case of Keller and her partner, Boston University student Sam Alter, consisted of cha-cha, rumba and swing. Judges look for a certain showmanship from the ballroom dancers; they consider strictly technical aspects such as form and choreography as well as the presentational aspects, like costume. "There are a lot of rhinestones," Keller said, "When you're out there on the floor, you're out there to impress." The Harvard Invitational held contests for four dance groups: American rhythm, American smooth, international Latin, and international standard. American rhythm includes dances such as swing, American rumba, American cha-cha, bolero and mambo. American smooth features dances like the foxtrot, waltz and tango. International Latin consists of international cha-cha, jive, samba, paso doble, among others, and international standard has dances such as the waltz, tango, foxtrot and quickstep. While some find these dances to be old-fashioned, Keller and her companions beg to differ. "The rumba is the dance of love," Keller said, "the way that you're dancing is expressing some of those ideals. I think it's really sexy." Freshman newcomer Megan Chang agrees. "Come see a Latin rhythm open dance, it'll shake up your view." But due to the team's schedule, that can be difficult. This year, the team has only managed to perform for Tufts during orientation, in order to recruit new members. Since then the members have been too busy competing to give a second show at Tufts. The team requires a high level of commitment; practices are often and mandatory. Practice is vital, because dancers learn new styles and steps at each lesson. There are organized lessons twice a week and individual practice is expected. The competitions themselves require sacrifice, too; while many are asleep on Saturday mornings, the team is often strapping on heels, perfecting their posture, and waltzing away their weekend. This level of commitment has allowed the team to improve and take home ribbons. Freshmen Rob Cole and Jen Woodman placed first in both the American rumba and swing division in the bronze division. Gold level team Davit Nguyen and Leanne Andruszkiewicz placed third in Viennese waltz. Also among the winners were Tom Rodda and Lisa Cerrone, Peter Navarro and Meena Bolourchi, Davit Nguyen and Monica Kim, Rob Cole and Jen Nichols, Brad Morrison (independent) and Masha Pindrus.-Stephanie Vallejo contributed to this article



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American Hi-Fi puts its 'heart on parade' for new release

Guitarist Stacy Jones of American Hi-Fi has a happy-go-lucky attitude about his music, and it has carried him to where he is today. This attitude captures the mood of most of the band's albums and their third offering "Hearts on Parade," which comes out March 29, is no exception. With eleven tracks of bad-boy pop brilliance, Hi-Fi appear to be taking their place on the world-stage as the Backstreet Boys of the alternative adolescent world. The Daily had a chance to chat with Jones as he took a break from the band's current world tour. Cheerful and optimistic, Jones was enthusiastic in promoting the new album. "It's a batch of new songs that we really love. We made this record on our own time and didn't have to answer to anyone else. It's a labor of love, really." Jones described the making of this 'labor of love' as a triumph after their "bittersweet" split with Island Records, who Jones claims was not promoting them enough. Since moving to Maverick, they've built a studio in what used to be the home of Hole guitarist, Eric Erlandson, and have been given more leeway to do things their own way. American Hi-Fi has pushed their geeks-turned-rock-stars-take-revenge-on-the-world shtick to great heights. The track "The Geeks Get The Girls," the album's first single, includes the lines: "Even losers can get lucky sometimes/All the freaks on a winning streak/In a perfect world all the geeks get the girls." This song pulls listeners right back into the high-school lunchroom with loud, cheerful guitars, background hand-clapping and that distinct Blink 182-ish adolescent whininess that wins the hearts of many. The Daily asked Jones what motivated him to write this song, and Jones launched into a story about being at a club and spotting an amazingly beautiful girl at the bar. At his friend's prompting - "Dude, you gotta give it a shot" - he went up to her, made small talk and embarrassed himself, or so he thought. Considering his attempt a failed one, he went home dejectedly. A few months later, however, he bumped into the same girl, who asked him what had happened to him that night, as she had wanted to give him her phone number. So, quite simply, the song is about what could have been, or what should be - in an ideal world of course. Does Jones get all the girls now that he is a rock star? "I don't really think of myself as a rock star. And as for the whole groupie thing ... no ... not really ... haven't really been there." Showbiz has not entirely sucked the band in yet. In fact, Jones still comes across as a record-obsessed teen, rather than as a hotel-trashing rock star. "We wear our influences very proudly on our sleeves," said Jones. "I still listen to stuff like the Beatles, and the Stones, Beach Boys, Fleetwood Mac ... our albums are a reflection of what I'm listening to at the moment." Jones described the band's music as undergoing a 'continual identity crisis.' On their latest album, the British band Blur provided great inspiration, "but there's always a strand that will make us American Hi-Fi. We make pop so we're not Radiohead." Well no, they're certainly not Radiohead; their tunes are catchy enough to be sold as ring tones (although Jones seems unwilling to acknowledge this corporate trade-off: "I don't know anything about that...I don't even know how to use my phone properly.") But never mind that, the band's happy-go-lucky-ness will probably override any artistic and corporate hurdles that pop up, and leave them smiling on the front page of Spin magazine sometime in the near future. For the moment, Jones is pumped about how well the tour has been going. "There are no haters in the audience. Everybody's leaving with a smile." Now that's what we like to hear.


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