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Women's Basketball | Johnson, Wales prove to be no match for surging Jumbos

As most Jumbos turned in papers, packed their bags, and checked out for the holidays, the women's basketball team had one thing left to do on Tuesday afternoon. Before heading home for the Thanksgiving holiday, the team traveled to Rhode Island to take on Johnson & Wales, and with an 82-25 victory over the Wildcats, the Jumbos more than earned their Thanksgiving break.



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Students mobilize to promote awareness of genocide

Students in Professor Paul Joseph's peace and justice studies class are currently camped out on the Tisch patio to present their student-made film on the genocide in Sudan, raise money, receive signatures for their petitions and give out pamphlets.



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Women's Swimming and Diving | Tufts falls to Conn for second straight season

If it's any consolation, the women's swimming and diving team started out this year exactly the same way it started its record-breaking 2003 season. For the second year in a row, the Jumbos were upset in their first meet of the year by the Connecticut College Camels, 177-117. "I think everyone swam really well overall," senior quad-captain Erica Weitz said. "The freshman really stepped up, and our returning upper-classmen swam as hard as they could. We really wanted the win, but we just couldn't pull it out." The loss puts the Jumbos at 0-1 on the season, the same record they started with at the beginning of last year before rattling off seven consecutive conference victories in preparation for the NESCAC meet at the end of the season. "We're only going to go up for the rest of the season," Weitz said. "Last year, we lost to Conn College and then won seven straight, and I don't see why we can't repeat that this year." Tufts went into the meet down 32 points before any of its swimmers even hit the pool because the squad's one experienced diver, junior Jess Schwartz, is abroad this semester and coach Nancy Bigelow's freshmen were not ready to compete. "It was frustrating because we didn't have any divers and we lost a lot of points because of that," sophomore Dierdre Cannell said. "Connecticut College is a really strong team, and although we lost, we tried our hardest and there really wasn't anything that we could do differently in retrospect." Despite the lack of divers, the Jumbos swimmers still put forth a valiant effort to try and make up the difference. They were led at the meet by Weitz and freshman standout Allison Palomaki. Weitz placed second in the 200-yard butterfly (2:16.41), narrowly missing out first place in the event by under half a second to the eventual winner, sophomore Ali Wilson of the Camels. In addition, the quad captain took second place in the 200 back (2:17.70) and first place in the 400 Individual Medley (4:49.74). Palomaki, swimming in her first collegiate meet, showed little nervousness, taking second place in the 100-yard breaststroke (1:09.51), missing out on first place by .75 seconds to Connecticut College freshman Katelyn Brochu. Palomaki had the last laugh, however, as she touched home first in the 200 breast (2:28.84), dominating Brochu by over five seconds. Tufts also received solid contributions from three of its other standout first years: Tia Bassano, Monika Burns, and Bianca Spinosa. Bassano gave Connecticut College senior captain, NESCAC Champion and Nationals attendee Kate Kovenock a run for her money in 200-yard freestyle, taking second place in the event for Tufts in 2:00.54 seconds. She gave Tufts some much needed depth in the short sprints, placing fifth in the 100 free (57.19) and fourth in the 100 fly (1:05.19). Bassano also swam the first leg of the 400 free relay team that took first place, giving Tufts an early lead with a strong split time of 57.45 seconds. Burns established herself as a threat in the backstroke events with a third place finish in the 100 (1:07.62), and a fourth place finish in the 200 (2:24.53). Spinosa made a name for herself in the butterfly, taking third place behind Weitz and Camel sophomore Ali Wilson in the 200 (2:20.29) and second place, just 1.5 seconds off the lead, behind Kovenock in the 100 fly (1:00.50). The Virginia native joined Bassano in the 400 freestyle relay team, swimming the second leg of the race in 58.21 seconds. "The freshmen really stepped up on Saturday, and it was really exciting to see them swim so fast during this time of year when we've been training really hard in practice," Cannell said. "As the season continues they'll continue to contribute a lot, especially to the relays where they'll be a really strong force." "The freshmen are going to be a huge part of our success this season," Weitz added. Tufts also got strong contributions from sophomore Jess Bollinger, junior Katie Mims and senior quad-captain Suzi Ascoli. Bollinger, Tufts' strongest distance swimmer, gave Tufts a one-two finish in the 400 IM, finishing behind Weitz in 5:00.34. She added a third place finish in the 500 Free (5:28.47) and a second place finish in the 1000 Free (11:12.78) to complete a successful day in the water. Mims and Ascoli finished second and fourth, respectively, in the 50 free, but were only separated by half a second. The duo also went 2-4 in the 100 free, with Mims racing to second place behind Kovenock. Finally, the duo swam the final two legs of the victorious 400 free relay, with Mims clocking in the second fastest split time (55.93) of all of the competitors, finishing only to Kovenock (51.09). Ascoli added her fourth place finish in the 50 free with a fourth place finish in the 200 free (2:04.25), missing out on third place by a fingernail to Connecticut College sophomore Liz Lingo (2:04.22). The Jumbos are next slated to face off against the Wellesley Blue a week from tomorrow in Hamilton Pool. The meet marks the first of three consecutive home meets for Tufts, who will follow up the tilt with the Blue with home meets against Bowdoin and Brandeis on consecutive Saturdays to round out the semester.


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'Finding Neverland' doesn't want to grow up

Last year, when the live-action "Peter Pan" (2003) soared into theaters, "Finding Neverland" - a kind of behind the scene look at the classic's rearing - was shelved. Unfortunately for both films, the two needed each other (perhaps they should have been shown back to back in theaters). The modern-looking "Peter Pan" (2003) never got caught up in the fantasy that is Pan, relying too heavily on computer technology and not enough on fairy dust. "Finding Neverland" suffers the opposite effect: it retreats into its fantasies when it should be tearing them down. The film, directed by Marc Forster (of "Monster's Ball" fame), is based on Alan Knee's play, "The Man Who Was Peter Pan." It tells the story of J.M. Barrie, the eccentric children-loving playwright who penned the kid classic. Barrie (Johnny Depp), who is caught in a tepid relationship with his wife and a disastrously received play at the theater, meets Sylvia Davies (Kate Winslet) and her four boys in the park. The boys soon take to the odd man, playing games with him and acting out fantasies. It's also during this meeting that Ms. Davies tells Barrie about her husband, who, according to her, has been dead of "cancer of the jaw" for a year now. This would be all well and good if it weren't for the fact that in real life, Sylvia's husband, Arthur, was in fact alive and well during this time. And apparently, he wasn't exactly thrilled with Barrie spending all of his time with his boys. So, wait a minute: is Sylvia lying to Barrie in the film or is there something even more devious going on? It turns out that Sylvia isn't lying. For the purpose of the film, Forster and screenwriter David Magee decided to pluck the poor man right out from under his own roof and discard him. To be fair, this killing off of Sylvia's husband isn't exactly an outrageous bowdlerization of the source material. It's simply the stuff of adaptation. Like so many films that are borne out of the lives of real individuals, certain events, and even people, are often expunged from the screen. However, Forster's film could have used the drama. After all, the only individuals who even raise their eyebrows (besides a whole bunch of townspeople who you never actually see) at the man-child are Sylvia's mother (Julie Christie) and the most suspicious of the boys, Peter (Freddy Highmore). But, beyond these two characters - who both eventually fall for the charms of the playwright - there isn't much struggle to speak of. Since no one will steal the fantastical carpet from under the boys' feet, nature eventually steps in to spoil the party. Sylvia turns ill, and after much prodding she finally agrees to see a doctor. Yet, even nature is airbrushed, as the lung cancer that the real Sylvia suffered is turned into an inconvenient cough. Perhaps the biggest expurgation of all may be in the film's depiction of how Barrie comes to acquire guardianship of the boys. According to the film, Sylvia left the boys to both her mother and Barrie. In reality, however, Barrie forged Davies' will in order to gain guardianship of the boys. Why Forster rids his film of such a fascinating conclusion is beyond me. You can't write a better ending than that, and Magee doesn't. This is not to say that "Finding Neverland" is completely barren. In fact, it's almost impossible not to revel in the magical theater scenes that grace the screen toward the end. Take, for instance, what the film does with a soaring Peter Pan, who is emptied from a camera shot in order to allow a theaterful of wannabe Pans to take flight in his place. It's a common enough technique - countless video games utilize this kind of first person perspective camerawork - but Forster somehow manages to make it seem fresh. "Finding Neverland" has another thing going for it: Johnny Depp. The actor is at times wonderfully mystifying in his role as the wacky playwright. Yet Depp, for all of his talents, gives too pristine a performance to actually make up for the film's shortcomings. Somehow Barrie's quirks don't feel genuine. For a man who spends his days inventing elaborate pirate and Indian fantasies, Barrie comes off like the guy next door. Depp's performance is too much of Ned Flanders and not enough of Captain Jack. There is an intriguing story beneath the pretense of "Finding Neverland." Yet in its quest to expurgate anything that might offend its audience, it manages to drain much of the real drama as well. When the actress playing Wendy calls out for her children in the midst of the stage version of "Peter Pan," she is referring, of course, to the orphans that Forster has invited to the production. "Finding Neverland," in its tidy treatment of all things Pan, calls out to children in much the same way. But, unlike Barrie, Forster will find that his audience isn't full of orphans: only adults who know better than to believe in such fairytales.



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Concert Review | Boston, Bewilderbeasts, and Badly Drawn Boy come together

The stars hanging behind Badly Drawn Boy at Avalon this past Friday night shone like singing dreams, "song-lets." As Badly Drawn Boy (a.k.a. Damon Gough) and his rotating band played a packed set replete with an intermission, he gradually shed light on the meaning behind the dreamy lyrics his fans have grown to adore. Donning his now expected wooly hat, he enabled the audience to see the person that in recent years has become clouded by his famed persona, a position he's grown to increasingly resent since the release of his first album, "The Hour of Bewilderbeast," earned him critical acclaim in 2001. His latest album, "One Plus One is One," claws at the idea of fame. "Now everybody's waiting outside / Trying to feel what's going on inside / ... / Give me some peace," Gough wills in the disc's title song. You would think that opening both the CD and the concert with such an insistent statement would make for a caustic relationship with his fans. Instead, as the concert progresses, we see that Gough adores his fans as much as they do him. This dynamic connection between performer and audience largely comes from Gough taking off his mask as the Badly Drawn Boy. He exposes himself by explaining the meanings of his songs, allowing the audience to judge him as a man who has committed acts, as well as an artist who has penned songs. Yet, he wasn't sappy; he wasn't pretentious. Rather, he was a 34-year-old boy-turned-British-rock-icon who was genuinely upset that Avalon was kicking him out at 9:30 p.m. to reinvent itself as a club scene for later that night. Because of this unexpected time hurdle, Badly Drawn Boy took the stage promptly at 7 p.m., even though many concert-goers trickled in later, expecting an opener. In fact, the band Adem did open, with a short set while sitting cross-legged on the floor and surrounded by the 40 or so people who arrived early. Gough and his fellow musicians who comprise Badly Drawn Boy barreled through the first half of their show, which consisted only of material taken from his newest album. The limited amount of time wasn't the only reason why the beginning of the show felt rushed; Badly Drawn Boy also seem to realize that the audience hadn't quite fallen in love with the new work yet. While the audience swayed and did the "white guy shuffle," they appeared unfamiliar with the latest songs. Only after the intermission, when Badly Drawn Boy began playing their older work, did those girly yelps truly rush forth in praise of the music. The cello and horn duet which introduces the first track from "Bewilderbeast," "The Shining," heralded the end of intermission. Though also playing songs from his "About a Boy" (2002) soundtrack and sophomore effort, "Have You Fed the Fish?" (2002), Gough showcased his nostalgic and troubadour-esque catalogue. Much of his sound relies heavily on the combination of various instruments, from strings to guitar, drums to flute. They combine to create a sort of futuristic folk sound that might threaten to fly away on the listener if the songs weren't rooted so deeply in their lyrics. Throughout the show, Gough spoke to the audience, calling out their collective name, "Boston," like he would an old friend's. True, this was his third concert at the Avalon, but while chain-smoking on stage and drowning the butts in strategically placed martini glasses, he seemed at ease. He acted like the six hundred-some-odd people in the audience were old buddies he was performing for with pride. Sharing anecdotes ranging from why he named his son Oscar Bruce (Bruce Springsteen's "Thunder Road" made him want to be a musician, but Bruce is a "s**t name," so Oscar it was) to the reasoning behind the second album's name (his four-week-old son bought him two goldfish for Christmas that year), he invited the audience to see the scrapbook of his last few years. As Gough walked the stage from end to end, frequently reaching down to the sea of outstretched hands, the concert felt more like a reunion than a strict performance; he even dedicated one of the last songs to the Avalon itself. But before the management turned off the lights on Badly Drawn Boy's starry night, Gough sang a warm finale to his stateside friends: "I've got a good, good feeling tonight / A feeling that something is right." And it was.


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7 Questions | Matt McCarthy

Full name: Matthew Justin McCarthyNickname(s): McCarthox, Big Mac, LegolasBirthdate: 9/12/82Zodiac sign: VirgoHometown: The Fields (also home of my ace in the hole, Sean Hayes)Favorite athlete: Wade BoggsFavorite Tufts athlete: We call him Marathon Man ... he's the kid in the gym who flails his arms around. All things considered, junior hockey forward and all-around rebel rouser Matt McCarthy is a man amongst boys. I mean, seriously, a 22-year-old junior? But disregarding that fact, McCarthy is the unofficial Mr. Tufts, even if he wasn't in Friday's pageant. As an out-of-hockey-season employee at Olde Magoon's Saloon, McCarthy often had to spend his Friday nights soberly going about his business while all his Tufts comrades gawked and stared. Poor kid ... err, man. It is just this kind of stick-to-itness which separates Matty from the rest. I caught up with McCarthy while he was roasting marshmallows with Trakimus on the Quad. Before he could throw his mallow-roasting partner into the fire, Seven Questions ensued.1) So you've been getting a lot of airplay in "Seven Questions with Tim Whelan" lately (Erin Connolly and Ariel Samuelson, to name a two). What gives? Ulf (Samuelson) was thinking about me while doing "the greatest thing ever," and I was still on her mind when she answered your questions. As for Dunee (Connolly) and the others, I suppose I'm just always on their minds.2) They say hockey players are often collecting social security while still in college. Are there any senior citizens on your team at the moment? Most of us can pass. We get matinee price at the movies, but [senior forward Jason] Boudrow is the only one actually old enough to collect social security.3) If there was a rink on campus, how much cooler would you be? If there was a rink on campus, girls would like me and I would be ridiculously cool, but neither are gonna happen.4) Word around the campfire is that you might be living in DU next year. Don't you have to be a brother to do such a thing? I'm seriously not "technically" a brother yet. However, I feel that my participation and devotion to the house may land me a room next fall, but first I have to make it through pledging this spring.5) Who do you feel holds the campus (or somewhat off-campus) social scene down better: 298 Boston Ave. or Delta Upsilon? Since football ended, DU is the place to be. However, our late night intimate and exclusive soil room is where the ladies want to be, but instead of Finnish dwarfs staying with us we have Alex Rovzar.6) Favorite hockey movie? (disregarding "D2: The Mighty Ducks," the obvious choice) We have some webcam footage from 298 that we compiled into a real good movie and, for the most part, the people we know on camera are hockey players. There's another hockey movie I like, though. I don't know what it's called, but I do know Jessica Powers has a leash on [Seven Questions alumnus] Chris Decembrele.7) Have you seen "The Cutting Edge?" Would you ever consider trading in the black skates for the white ones with toe-picks (in other words, would you consider doing figure skating?) I'm always ready to try something new. However, it is tough enough to find a partner who can keep up with me in the layher [layer], let alone on the ice.- by Tim Whelan


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Orchestra Review | 'Discover' an exciting and lively brand of symphony

When asked why she wanted to attend an orchestra concert this weekend, a sixth grader said that she thought it would be "an occasion to listen to a peaceful kind of music." Benjamin Zander, the conductor, replied, "well, you're in for a shock!" Indeed, Thursday night's extraordinary "Bose Discovery Series" concert by the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra, featuring pianist and well-known Gershwin interpreter Kevin Cole, was an experience that was anything but tranquil or boring; the works by Ravel, Gershwin and Stravinsky are so thrilling, personal and intoxicating that each often ends an orchestra program on its own. Located in Harvard's beautiful all-wooden Sanders theater, the concert had an intimate (if not somewhat cramped), personal feel - rare for a concert by a full-sized symphony orchestra. With the resonant interior and musicians just several feet away from the audience, the sound reverberated clearly and forcefully. Zander was himself one of the best parts of the evening. The "Discovery" series allows him to briefly introduce each piece before playing it, and his British accent and charming personality helped to bring the music alive. He spoke for both seasoned classical music lovers and beginners, telling anecdotes about each piece and composer, and he had the orchestra play important excerpts beforehand so that nobody would miss them. Another highlight was Cole's performance of Gershwin's Concerto in F. Commissioned so that Gershwin could write something more "serious" to be played in concert halls (his "Rhapsody in Blue" is considered too "pop-ish" in some circles), this piece was the first jazz-inspired work to accomplish just that. The Concerto opens with a Charleston-inspired rhythm, continues with a wild toccata and features a slow, blues-inspired second movement with a sexy trumpet solo; you can picture George writing it alone in his 20s New York apartment, in front of his piano, cigar in mouth. Cole is said to play exactly as Gershwin had in his short, 38-year life, and he meets such high expectations. He's everything a piano soloist should be: confident, radiant and exuberant. But his uniqueness comes from, as Zander mentioned, his truly American traits: he is optimistic, clean, hard-edged, "fantastically exciting" and not filled with the "old world neuroses" that a European counterpart might experience. The concert opened with Ravel's "Valse" and closed with Stravinsky's "Petrushka," a program order that would be reversed by most other orchestras. But Zander, always communicating directly to the audience, said that he felt "Valse," while on the surface a fun, catchy, whimsical waltz was actually too subversive and pessimistic to be stuck at the end. The beauty of this "Discovery" concert, however, was that he then proceeded to tell the audience why. "La Valse, Choreographic poem" starts with a soft, barely audible, low bass chord and continues to pick up until it gets to a colorful, fast dance pace. In a work of contrast, Ravel paints a picture that is both bright and murky, soft and loud (the two dynamic extremes come within one second of each other). And just as we're ready to put on Viennese evening wear and start dancing, Ravel ends the piece with an abrupt five notes in machine-gun succession. This was, after all, written right before WWII in a euphoric, relieved 1920s Europe, and this was Ravel's warning shot. Stravinsky's "Petrushka," a musical story in four parts, was accompanied by a projection of the composer's own words explaining the plot of the music. In short, three puppets are brought alive during a fair, and a tragic love triangle ensues between the nice Petrushka, an evil Moor and a ballerina who likes Russian folk dances. At the end, the Moor kills Petrushka, a magician turns the characters back into puppets and the story ends on Stravinsky's characteristic C and F-sharp - known to symbolize the composer's own personal agony. The orchestra performed the incredibly dense score enthusiastically, and navigated the clashing meters and complicated dissonance with no problem. "Petrushka" helped usher in a new musical era at the beginning of the 20th century and still sounds modern today. Russian folk songs are scattered throughout and musical vignettes, such as a fun, organ grinder scene, bring the story alive. At the end, the audience in Sanders Theater was on their feet, excited and screaming "Bravo!" at the tops of their lungs. The Boston Philharmonic, not even fully professional (some are amateurs and students), makes classical music less stuffy and more accessible. As another sixth grader wrote of classical music when asked why he wanted to hear the concert, "some people say that it's bad, some that it's good. I'd like to find out for myself." Here's an opportunity for everyone to find out for themselves.


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Adoption should be based on love

The debate over gay marriage has been in the headlines for nearly the past year, but the topic of gay parents has faded into the background. A new Tufts-New England Medical Center Professor of Pediatrics study shows that children raised by homosexual parents have no differences from those raised in "traditional" families. Using over 25 years' worth of data, this study could draw attention to the issue of gay adoption.


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Words for the soccer team

This is a special note to the soccer players who felt their only recourse was to lob accusations anonymously at coach Ralph Ferrigno in The Tufts Daily ("Players accuse coach Ferrigno of exploitation," Nov. 18). Stand up and name yourselves. If the matter is personal or concerns the team only, then I suggest you handle it in the proper forum. Hiding behind anonymity in this case suggests, among other things, that you can't stand by your words because of your credibility. If you're still worried about your playing time, you are totally missing the point: you have slandered your coach publicly and now do not even deserve to wear the uniform. I watched and played with the team a couple of times this year, and they cannot suggest they would do better with another coach. Their 8-6-1 record seems pretty generous to me. As for you former players who spoke against Ferrigno anonymously, shame on you. What exactly are you hiding? If your game eroded while at Tufts or you feel the squad didn't achieve what its talent could have, you need to look in the mirror. If anyone thinks Ferrigno works at Tufts for his own personal enrichment, you are missing the obvious fact that coaches in Div. III college soccer aren't in this for the money. You do not understand what has motivated this man for the last 15 years. He's used his camps to promote Tufts Soccer, yet everyone fails to recognize that fact. Ralph has stoically handled incredible adversity and worked very hard to realize his oft stated goal: to make Tufts men's soccer the best team and program in New England. Cynics have called that vanity, but I would prefer to play for an ambitious coach, and I'm very happy we won Ferrigno the New England Championship he deserved in 1994. It's a mystery to me why the players criticize Ferrigno for purchasing a computer for team use, then acknowledge that the computer was used for reviewing video as a team. Sure, we could all use an LCD projector, but grow up and make the best of things. I wish we'd had the ability to review more tape while we were at Tufts (it would've saved us from having to watch the 1989 FA Cup Final repeatedly). In addition to reviewing video, Ralph used the iBook to create a wonderful video that generated incredible alumni interest in the program. The alumni game this year was attended by over 30 former players, many who donated to the University as a result of the experience. Former players reading this may know that I also had a difficult time with Ferrigno during my four years on the squad. Like many players, I had issues with playing time, discipline and managerial style. Like many players, I had to sit on the bench for the first time in my life during my junior season. I had trouble with the decision and how it was communicated to me, and I channeled my frustration into negatively judging Ferrigno's every move. Since graduation, I've often regretted the way I responded to riding the bench that year. I almost ran myself out of the program that season, but I discussed my feelings with Ferrigno in several private meetings, and I learned quite a bit about him. He cares deeply for his players. He wants the best for the program, but he does not (nor should he have to) deal with petulant, arrogant, immature players. The problems I had weren't because of Ferrigno; they were because of me. I hope that these anonymous players will do some self-reflection and come to the same conclusion that I did. It's a tough game, Tufts is a tough place to play and I've seen a lot of Tufts players become paranoid about their game. It's really the player's problem if he can't emotionally cope with the situation. Ferrigno's is an English style, with which many players are not familiar. It requires the players to take responsibility and make things happen on and off the pitch. If the players are waiting for Ferrigno to magically intervene and make them feel better, they need to understand that it's really each teammate's own responsibility. Ferrigno is available and approachable to discuss such matters. I know that for certain, as I did so several times during my career. Ferrigno's style made me a better person and a better player, and I've never adequately thanked him for that. Thanks Ralph. You have had tremendous success at Tufts, and it has been well deserved. Normally, I'd suggest throwing this whole squad out and starting anew, but I know there are some really good lads there that still deserve to wear the sky blue.


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David Cavell | Double Down

@bodytext: You know what I haven't written about in a while? The Red Sox. Let's change that. First off, just as I predicted, I remain as invested in the Sox as always. Although I'll be disappointed if they go 1-161 this season, in all honesty, they could win a total of 10 games in the next two seasons and I'd still be happy. You just cannot top this season. It's impossible. Pulling off the greatest comeback in baseball history? Make that perhaps all of sports history. I have to keep reminding myself, however, that one championship isn't the end. I'm a normal fan now and normal fans aren't satisfied by one title every 86 years. The 2005 season must be played. Truly great teams return to be champions again, season after season. In an era absent of dynasties, it would be even more impressive were the Sox to pull it off. To do so, however, Theo Epstein and the Sox management must figure out what to do with their free agents. The Red Sox are in a totally unique situation this off-season. Four of our starting players are free agents and another 12 role players are also eligible to be signed by other teams. In light of this massive potential player turnover, I've decided to offer some unsolicited advice, player by player. I'm probably more qualified to do this than you realize. Like Theo, I grew up in Brookline, love the Red Sox and am Jewish. Both our fathers are professors. We're two of the most lusted-after men in the city. What more do you need? Give me a little bit of a lisp, gel down my hair and I'm the general manager of the Sox. 1) Pedro Martinez, SP: Let's start with the biggest free agent on the list. Here's my analogy: Pedro is like "The Simpsons." Remember when "The Simpsons" were still tossing 97 mph heat every Sunday? Well, no more. Yeah, it's still "The Simpsons," but their fastball now tops out at like 92. Sometimes you're still pleasantly surprised, but it's clearly not what it used to be. That's Pedro these days. He's still Pedro, and against teams that haven't seen him before (the Cardinals, for example) he's still masterful. But he needs an inning or two to figure out what he has on a given night. The first inning is always a horror show. That being said, what would you replace the Simpsons with? "Malcom in the Middle: The College Years"? In my opinion, seven innings of Pedro is better than eight of almost anyone else, even now. He's still got an extra gear for the playoffs. And he's still Pedro. I totally agree with the Red Sox's contract offer of two years at about $12 million per year, with an option for a third. It's exactly what Curt Schilling gets and it's exactly what Pedro should get. I'd say the chances of him signing that contract are 85 percent. Pedro will be back. 2) Jason Varitek, C: Varitek is the quintessential team leader. Tek is everything you could ask for in a catcher. He's tough, he plays fantastic defense, hits well and handles pitchers well. If you have any doubts about what good veteran catchers can do for a team, check out what Ivan Rodriguez did for the Marlins. The wild card with Varitek is Scott Boras, the money-thirsty agent who has taken it upon himself to ruin the sport. If Boras really wants a 25-year contract worth several billion dollars, the Sox will have to look elsewhere. I love Varitek, but the Sox team has leadership. We cannot overpay for an aging catcher, great as he may be. Damien Miller is a great option for a year or two, and minor leaguer Kelly Shoppach should be ready in two or three years. The Sox should offer Varitek three or four years at about seven or eight million dollars per year. I'd say a three-year deal worth about $23 million sounds right. He's fantastic, but not so fantastic that we should overpay. I'd say the chances of him returning are around 70 percent. 3. Derek Lowe, SP: Bye bye, Derek. What's amazing is that Lowe pitched his way off the Sox this postseason. Had he continued to stink we might have gotten him back for cheap, but in those last two playoff games he basically won the Mass State Lottery, and a one-way ticket out of town. The Rangers should get him, as he makes a lot of sense for that team - which, I guess, is neither here nor there. Lowe is incredibly talented and should be one of the better starters in the American League. But for some reason he isn't, and he's never going to be. We won't offer him a contract. Chances of him returning are about 0.000002 percent. 4. Orlando Cabrera, SS: Minor leaguer Hanley Ramirez should be ready in 2006, or at the latest 2007, and he's going to be really good. It might be prudent, therefore, to use an inexpensive placeholder like Pokey Reese. On the other hand, OCab is the Columbian Manny. Everyone on the Sox loves this guy. How could you not? This guy takes happy-go-lucky to a new level. One of my favorite stories from this season was OCab's ongoing efforts to mess with Manny; hiding his batting gloves, stealing his helmet to wear at the plate, hiding his socks in the locker room, etc. Not to mention that he is fantastic defensively and clutch at the plate. If you couldn't tell, I love the guy. But signing free agents shouldn't be about personal feelings. If we can sign him at $18 million for three years, I say do it. I'd almost be willing to slightly overpay for him. Chances of him returning are about 50 percent. That's the end of the big names. Of the rest, I'd say we should try to keep Curtis Leskanic, Doug Mirabelli, Scott Williamson, and Gabe Kapler. Mirabelli will probably leave to start meaningless games for the Rockies or something. God, I can't wait for 2005.


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Brian Wolly | Wolly and the TeeV

The next five days of food, family and fun are a great time for reflection and much deliberation about how you can pretend to do schoolwork while not doing any work whatsoever. It is also, naturally, a period of gratitude, of thanksgiving. In keeping with the spirit of the holiday, here is my television-related list of what I am thankful for. Thanks to reality television. Yes, I hate the genre, but it has spawned a magnificent scripted program in "Arrested Development." The v?©rit?© photography owes itself to the documentary style adopted by various reality shows. Thankfully, creator Mitch Hurwitz forewent the "testimonial" gimmick that has never shed its banality. Two of the show's highlights include Will Arnett's goofy rendition of the hapless and sleazy Gob and Michael Cera as the pubescently repressed George-Michael-reminding anyone who watches him what it was like to be an awkward high schooler. I haven't had a weekly must-see comedy on my schedule since the glory years of "The Simpsons." Thanks to Ron Artest and the Detroit fans. Since the Red Sox victory, there really has been nothing to talk about in the wide world of sports. College football is essentially non-existent in the New England; it is rather sad when a competition between two Ivy League schools is the high point of the season. Parity has killed much of the excitement in the NFL, making any games before December uninteresting. Thankfully, the NBA has intervened with a brawl of epic proportions. The jaw-dropping battle between Indiana hoopsters and Detroit fans should carry the news cycle until the final two weeks of football and baseball's winter meetings. Think of it this way: if it hadn't been for Stephen Jackson's sucker punches, we'd still be talking about Nicolette Sheridan dropping her towel on "Monday Night Football." Thanks to GEICO for renewing my faith in advertising. Whoever runs the ad campaign for the car insurance company had better be sweeping the Clio awards. Two spots in particular stand out: the "Tiny House" ad, which brilliantly spoofed reality programming, and the relatively recent "cavemen" ads. In those ads, a stereotypical adman explains how switching to GEICO online is so easy that even a "caveman" could do it. The camera then pans out to a studio set, where a caveman/cameraman says, "That's not cool, man." Guess you just have to see it. Thanks to "Jeopardy!" for giving dorks a good name. Ken Jennings has become something of a household name due to his unprecedented run on the show, earning $2,355,001 since June 2. These past two weeks, the quiz show has been running its College Championship edition, featuring my good high school friend Ari. Tonight, he's in the second of a two-episode final. He's a bigger dork than I, so if he wins and reaps all the fame and fortune that comes with a "Jeopardy!" championship, I have something to hope for. Thanks to Tufts Computing and Communication Services (TCCS) for not wasting our tuition money by giving into ESPN's ridiculous demands for $50,000 so Tufts could air their programming on the Tufts cable network. When the cable giant Comcast is having disputes with ESPN, you can't blame TCCS for its resolve. I'm as big a sports fan as any other Jumbo, but my fandom has its price and the Worldwide Leader in Sports has exceeded it. And to continue to harp on this point... No Thanks to ESPN for giving capitalism a bad name. Do they really have to hold out and charge more than every other station combined for a couple thousand college students? It would be as if Barnes and Noble had a bookstore on campus and charged exorbitant prices merely because it was a "Tufts" bookstore. Ahem. The short end of the wishbone should definitely be passed to Michael Powell and the FCC. Their blatant disregard for the First Amendment and shameless kowtowing to a few right-wing prudes is reprehensible. It isn't the FCC's job to dole out enough fines to frighten affiliates from airing "Saving Private Ryan" on Veteran's Day. Jeff Jarvis, former critic for TV Guide and current blogger, uncovered on buzzmachine.com that of the supposed 159 complaints about Fox's "Married by America," only three were original. The rest were copies of a form letter. So, by charging Fox $1.2 million, that comes out to a $400,000 charge per complaint. Maybe this is the key toward paying for the war in Iraq: get the FCC to sponsor a few fundraisers. Mr. Powell, I hope you get the plate with the marshmallow-less sweet potatoes. Burnt stuffing to producer John Wells for his single-handed dismantling of one of the best dramas in television, "The West Wing." After the ingenious Aaron Sorkin left the show because of a contract dispute, Wells has infused the program with the same melodrama and shallow character development that killed "ER." To steal a joke from the fansite televisionwithoutpity.com, viewers shouldn't be surprised if one of the White House staffers had their head cut off by Marine One. Maybe the show will rebound, but until then, Wells should realize that the success of "The West Wing" lay in its clever writing and strong characters, not weak melodrama and unbelievable plot developments.


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Inside the NFL

While Week 11 didn't exactly simplify the playoff picture, it did leave one fact crystal clear: At the very least, Eli Manning will be a good NFL quarterback one day. At the most, he'll be his brother. Wait just a minute, the kid (and he really is just a kid) has started one NFL game. Is anything actually revealed after one game? This is a valid point. A million different things could happen to derail Eli's path to stardom. New York is the toughest place in the world to play and has stolen away many a promising career. But all signs thus far have pointed to a fairly well-grounded guy, so let's just assume that Eli doesn't crack up. Looking at yesterday's game against the Atlanta Falcons, Manning was 17 of 37 for 132 yards with a touchdown pass and two picks', and Manning's New York Giants lost 14-10. Not exactly thrilling. But since "Inside the NFL" gets paid the big bucks to look behind the numbers, this is what you missed if you didn't watch the game: Either Jeremy Shockey and Amani Toomer developed some weird undying loyalty to Kurt Warner, or they were both on the take on Sunday. The two combined to drop nearly 10 balls. Put some flesh back on those hands and Eli's 27 for 37 with 230 yards. In addition, the drops themselves show something about the incredible ball that Manning throws. After getting used to Warner's telegraphed lob jobs, Toomer often couldn't snap his head around quick enough for Lil' Peyton's passes, which were generally thrown hard, accurately and right on the break. As a side note, this is one of those tiny differences between a 10-6 playoff team and a 9-7 just-missed-the-cut team. In close, important games with a rookie quarterback starting, playoff team receivers raise the level of their game - they don't drop it, no pun intended. And Manning showed definite flashes of brilliance: His touchdown pass to Shockey was thrown around three defenders and on a frozen rope. On one play, he evaded a potent Falcons pass rush, moved outside of the pocket, drew forward the flat defender and then lobbed a first down pass to Tiki Barber. Not to mention the fact that Atlanta boasts one of the best defenses in the league, especially when defensive lineman Rod Coleman is playing, which he was. Manning looked poised and comfortable in the pocket, despite offensive line work by the Giants that was only slightly less miserable than usual. All of this is fun for Giants fans, but it might have an implication for the NFC playoff picture as well. If Manning can pull a Rothelisberger and continue to improve, and the St. Louis Rams continue to play the kind of football they did in their loss to the Buffalo Bills, then the Giants could very easily win the sixth playoff spot with a 9-7 record. Swinging to another branch of the Manning family tree, Peyton is ... well, there is no appropriate adjective to describe Peyton Manning's current level of play. Yes, you have to win a Super Bowl to be great, and he hasn't, and won't this year unless the Indianapolis Colts' defense steps up. But Manning running that offense is beautiful. Downright hypnotic. Right now, Peyton's on pace to smash Dan Marino's single season touchdown record of 48. If the offense continues at that rate and the defense gets just a little bit better, there's no reason why Indy can't run the table. The problem is that unless they win out, the Colts are going to have to play a round 2 playoff game on the road against either the Pittsburgh Steelers or the New England Patriots, both coming off bye weeks. Looking at the rest of the AFC, here are some quick picks to finish off last week's playoff predictions: The Pats, Steelers, Colts, and Broncos look like the safest bets to make it, in that order, leaving the Jacksonville Jaguars, San Diego Chargers, New York Jets and Baltimore Ravens to fight over the remaining two spots. 11-5 might be necessary to make it in the AFC this year. The Jacksonville Jaguars have an incredibly difficult remaining schedule and may have lost their ticket to the dance when they got upset by the Tennessee Titans this week. They're out. This leaves at least one 7-3 team not to make it. The Ravens looked miserable in their win over the Dallas Cowboys. They face road games against New England, Indy, and Pittsburgh. It will be tough for the Jets to make it also, and the decision's almost 50/50, but in any 50/50 decision one would do well to abide by the following maxim: Always, always, always bet against Kyle Boller.


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Squash | Teams put up mixed results against stiff competition

Historically, Tufts University has had very strong squash teams, but this year both the men and women's teams are hoping to take it to the next level. They got off to a pretty good start in a series of matches at Dartmouth and Harvard held over the weekend. The men, facing some of the top teams in the nation, went 2-3 against both NESCAC and national competition. They lost a tight match to Colby (4-5) on Sunday afternoon at Harvard and fell by a larger margin to Williams (8-1) earlier in the day. Playing shorthanded because one of their top players is abroad, they managed impressive victories over George Washington (5-4) and Middlebury (6-3) on Saturday at Dartmouth. They also fell to Navy (9-0) on Saturday. On Sunday, the women had a big win against Colby (7-2) and fell to a strong Williams squad (0-9) at Harvard. On Saturday the Lady Jumbos lost to Bates (0-9), while defeating Connecticut College (7-2). The records for both teams were not outstanding, but they were facing stiff competition. Both the men and women's teams at Bates and Williams rank among the top 10 teams in the country. Unlike most Tufts sports, squash teams are not separated by division, so Tufts was forced to face bigger schools with stronger recruiting programs. Given this, coach Doug Eng was very pleased with the performance of his teams. Eng noted that the women are particularly strong at the top and bottom portions of the lineup. "We have very strong number one, two and three players, and we also have a lot of depth. Nicole Arens, Eliza Drachman-Jones, Rhonda Barkan and Liz Thys are going to be very tough for teams at the bottom," Eng said. Drachman-Jones, a senior and one of this year's co-captains, was encouraged by her team's start to the season. "Overall I think we performed really well this weekend," she said. "Bates and Williams are really tough teams, and a lot of our newer players may not have been used to that level of play, but in our last match against Colby we were beat up and tired but we put everything into it." "That match was huge for us," Drachman-Jones continued. "It was the first time we have beaten them in four years." The Jumbos were led by sophomore Erica Adler, who won 3-0 against Colby at the No. 2 spot. Freshman Rebecca Rice was victorious at the three spot and senior Nida Ghouse notched a victory at No. 5. All of the matches at the lower part of the lineup also went to the Jumbos. Drachman-Jones, Thys, Barkan and freshman Micela Leis won at the sixth through ninth spots, respectively. Sophomore Jules Avrutin went 1-3, playing against some of the top squash competition in the nation at the No. 1 spot. Eng was equally effusive in his praise for the male Jumbos. "The freshmen played fearlessly this week," he said. "Jake Gross is a top 10 player in the country. He's probably the closest player we've had to an All-American in 15 years." Eng felt that the victory over George Washington was the most important match of the weekend, while the team's performance against Colby also showed potential for the future. "The win over George Washington was real big for us," Eng said. "They are ranked 20th in the nation." "Colby is ranked 19th," Eng said. "Both our teams haven't beaten Colby in 11 or 12 years; I would've loved to have done that, and we came very close to it." The freshmen helped carry the Jumbos to victory against George Washington. Gross won at the No. 1 spot, and freshman Kris Leetavorn won in five games at the No. 2 spot. Kriete won in three games at No. 5, and sophomore David Linz emerged victorious in a five game battle at the No. 6 spot. Freshman Lee Kellogg rolled to victory at the nine spot without losing a point. In the 4-5 loss to Colby, the four victories for Tufts came from freshmen. Gross won again at No. 1, while Nelson Schubart was victorious at No. 3. Jonah Peppiatt and Kellogg won at the eight and nine spots respectively. "This weekend was something good to build on," Eng said. "We're off to a good start." Eng singled out the captain of the men's team, senior Fernando Kriete, for his inspired play. "Fernando showed a lot of heart against Colby," Eng said. "He came back from two games down, but he couldn't quite put him away in the fifth game. It would have been nice to have a win over Colby, but I think if we played them again we'll beat them because we were missing some guys." "We're a young team, so I think it's important to set a good example and play extremely hard," Kriete said. "I'm the only senior on the team, so a lot of that falls on me." The men will only get stronger when junior co-captain Spencer Maxwell returns from a semester abroad. Maxwell projects to play at the No. 2 or 3 position for the Jumbos. The Lady Jumbos will have even more depth when juniors Joelle Polivy and Sarah Lucas return from abroad as well. Eng has high expectations for both teams for the upcoming season. "I think the men can win the Summers Division," Eng said. "The Summers Division consists of teams ranked from 17-24; we'd like to qualify for the Hoehn Division, which is one level above that. In order to do that, we'd need to be ranked at least 16th, but it's doable." "The women have a shot at qualifying for the Kurtz Division, which is the second highest level," he continued. "We haven't reached that high in a few years. We're going to have a very good year. We're a team to beat and the women know how good they are. I'd say it's the best team we've had in five years."


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Senator resigns from body two-weeks early

Junior Shaun Glassman resigned from the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate this week, effective immediately after criticizing Senate procedure as inefficient and describing it as "torture."



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Stephan Vitvitsky | Global Forum

In March 2001, President George W. Bush declared that "Kyoto is dead" and that the United States would not move to ratify the Kyoto Treaty. Arguing that the treaty would harm the U.S. economy and deprive Americans of millions of jobs, Bush firmly rejected the global warming protocol that the majority of the world supported. From Bush's short-term economic perspective, withdrawing from the Kyoto Treaty was a sound economic decision. However, from a long-term economic perspective, the withdrawal from the treaty will inevitably lead to long-term economic problems and missed economic opportunities. In Bush's words concerning the Kyoto Protocol, "I won't support a plan that will harm the American economy and hurt American workers." Bush's description of the plan, to an extent, is quite true. Low pollution emission standards placed on coal, oil and nuclear power plants throughout the country would have immediately increased the price of energy. As a result, many industries would have been forced to raise prices to compensate for higher energy costs. Thus, households, businesses and even the government would have then had to begin paying much more not only for energy, but for goods and services as well. This is not to mention how the prices of gas, heat, air conditioning and other vital sources of power and comfort would increase. Because companies, firms and businesses would have had to reduce inventory due to higher costs, they would have had to eventually decrease wages and cut jobs. For example, if it had become more expensive for Gillette to produce razors because of higher energy costs, the company would have been forced to reduce the amount of razors produced and eventually fire workers. Overall, according to Environmental Protection Agency statistics, the Bush administration estimated that signing the Kyoto Treaty could have resulted in up to 5 million unemployed workers, as well as reducing the U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by one to four percent in the next 10 years. Signing the Kyoto Treaty could have created a situation like the 1970s OPEC oil shocks, in which everyone would have been affected, not simply one industry. So Bush's choice to pull out of the Kyoto Treaty was a sound economic decision. However, the administration's analysis of the economic impact of the Kyoto Treaty is flawed because it has only been viewed from a short-term perspective of 10 years at the most. Long-term economic analysis of the Kyoto Treaty is necessary for a complete comprehension of the protocol's economic effects. The United States is the world's greatest economic power, as well as the world's greatest pollution producer. As global warming worsens annually, the frequency of hurricanes, erratic weather, droughts, floods and other bad weather conditions increases. These atmospheric conditions have the potential in the next century to seriously damage the farming and crop-holding industries and any industry that relies on water transportation, as well as coastal cities. Not to mention that the recent hurricanes have caused billions of dollars in damages. Withdrawing from the Kyoto Treaty did not help ameliorate this potentially devastating economic situation. Unless U.S. industries are forced to reduce emission rates today, as the Kyoto treaty would have done, long-term economic problems will occur due to a vastly erratic weather system. The U.S. withdrawal from the Kyoto Treaty was also a problem from a theoretical economic point of view. One of the keys to economic growth is technological innovation. Signing the treaty would have forced the U.S. government and American firms to urgently invest and search for new energy sources and fuel-efficient technologies. This will be costly in the short-run, as was investing in the auto industry at the end of the 19th century or Thomas Edison's system for electric lighting. But this will create jobs in itself, result in revenues for businesses and profits for investors and introduce new services to consumers. Just as the development of electricity helped our economy grow significantly 100 years ago, so will the development of new sources of energy and fuel-efficient technologies help our economy grow. Withdrawing from the treaty created less urgency to develop new, innovative energy technologies and sources and thus will take much longer to develop. This leads to the final long-term economic problem that withdrawing from the treaty created. As the supply of fossil fuels gradually decreases in the future and may even run out in the next 100 years, the price of energy will rise significantly and pose a serious problem for the U.S. economy. Catastrophic economic conditions will occur when the supply of coal, oil and natural gas runs out; that is, unless there is an alternate source of energy or fuel-efficient technology available. So, though Bush may have helped our economy today by not signing the Kyoto treaty, he may be destining the long-term U.S. economy for failure by creating little urgency to develop new energy sources and technologies. The effects of withdrawing from the Kyoto Treaty are difficult to quantify and determine, as there are many factors to measure and analyze. Yet it is clear that the United States' withdrawal from the protocol was a good short-term economic decision but a bad long-term one. If America had adopted the Kyoto Treaty today, it may have put many people out of work and hurt an already sluggish economy at first, but ensured a strong, innovative future economy, not to mention a far healthier environment. Signing the Kyoto Treaty could have created a situation like the 1970'sOPEC Oil Shocks in which everyone would have been affected.ed: leahStephan Vitvitsky is a junior majoring in Economics and Political Science. He can be reached via e-mail at Stephan.Vitvitsky@tufts.edu.


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Men's Swimming and Diving | Jumbos top Connecticut College to open season with strong start

The Jumbos opened the swimming and diving season with a busy weekend, one of only two weekends this season that will feature back-to-back meets. Tufts had entirely different goals for the two meets as well: to open the season with a show of strength at Connecticut College on Saturday before traveling to Boston College (BC) on Sunday to show that it can compete with teams at any level. It did both. While Sunday's meet at Chestnut Hill to the Div. I Eagles went down in the loss column for the Jumbos (1-1), the contest marked yet another instance of Tufts athletic teams being unafraid to take on competition outside of Div. III. Following in the footsteps of Jumbo track and cross country teams, not only did the Jumbos compete, but they showed that they belong. In the loss, many Jumbos put forth strong efforts despite fatigue from the meet a day earlier and a stiff preseason workout regimen. "[The meet at BC] was a test to see how well we could swim while tired, and many of the guys performed well under that pressure," senior tri-captain Seth Baron said. "This part of the season is a time where Coach tries to break down the swimmers by increasing the workload and intensity at practice, and we were certainly feeling it." "[BC] was a tough competitor," Baron continued. "But I think we showed them that Tufts is not a team to blow off, as we had a lot of close races that came down to the hundredth of a second." Baron's fellow classmate and tri-captain, Mike Rochette, agreed that the meet against the Eagles was a positive experience. "It was good to face some tough competition early in the season to gauge where we are," Rochette said. With Sunday's showdown against a school whose athletics department will rack in untold millions of dollars this New Year's, the Jumbos knew how important it was to open the 2004-05 season with a win at Connecticut College on Saturday. Led by a pair of strong relays that opened and closed the meet, Tufts downed the Camels 169-102. The Jumbos came out strong against Connecticut College, taking the meet's opening race, the 200-yard medley relay ,and not looking back. With a veteran team of junior Jon Godsey on the backstroke, senior tri-captains Rochette and Baron on breaststroke and butterfly, respectively, and sophomore Justin Fanning anchoring on freestyle, Tufts took the medley in 1:40.34. That was only the beginning of the day for Baron, who excelled individually as well on Saturday. The senior provided two more first-place finishes, taking the 200 butterfly in 1:59.17 and topping the field in the 400 IM (4:25.03). Also securing a pair of individual wins' along with a relay triumph was Baron's junior teammate, Brett Baker. Baker opened his day with a first place result in the 200 freestyle (1:48.41) before sprinting to a victory in the 100 freestyle in 49.09 seconds. Later, the junior displayed versatility in the 100 butterfly, posting a second place finish in 55.67 seconds. To cap off the day, Baker led the Jumbos to a win in the 400 freestyle relay (3:22.61), swimming the first leg, followed by Fanning and a pair of freshmen, with Sean Sullivan third and Chris Wallace anchoring. The entire freestyle relay team put forth strong efforts individually. Along with his anchor work on the medley relay, Fanning finished second in the 200 freestyle (1:50.39) before taking third in the 100 butterfly (56.70). Sullivan posted a winning mark in the 200 backstroke, swimming it in 2:03.81, making it a two-win day in his first meet as a Jumbo. Wallace also had a solid opening meet, taking second in the 50 freestyle (23.69), along with his relay work. There were many other big days in the pool on Saturday for Tufts. Junior Todd Putnam posted strong dives, sweeping the events off the one and three-meter boards. Along with his medley leg, Rochette provided second and third-place finishes in the 100 (1:02.88) and 200 (2:25.60) breaststrokes, respectively. On Sunday, the senior tri-captain was one of only two team members to win an event against the Eagles, as he captured the 50 breaststroke in 28.27 seconds. Sophomore backstroke specialist Ray Radovich swam strongly, topping the field in the 100 backstroke (57.83) before providing a third place result in the 200 in 2:05.60. Following his leg of the medley, Godsey put forth a strong showing in the 500 freestyle, finishing second in 5:12.53. The junior capped his weekend in style as the only other Jumbo to win a race at Boston College, taking both the 50 and 100 backstrokes (25.80 and 55.79). The team took Saturday's meet very seriously, putting forth its best possible lineup in the absence of juniors Jason Kapit and Greg Bettencourt. "We put forth one of our best lineups just to see what everyone could do," Baron said. And I feel that people performed up to the expectations for this part of the season. We had a lot of strong performances, like Brett Baker and Justin Fanning in the sprint freestyle events, and also Sean Sullivan and Ray Radovich in the 100 and 200 backstroke." With some brief time off for Thanksgiving ahead, the Jumbos will return in December with three home meets at Hamilton Pool against Babson, Bowdoin and Brandeis before finals. By Dec. 11, the dual meet season will be halfway over, but the immediate future appears promising judging by the team's early results. "Now that we are into our dual meet season we will be busy competing almost every weekend," Rochette said. "So we are just going to try to improve each time we swim."


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Meaning with honor

The faculty committee should be applauded for its recent decision to make it more difficult for Jumbos to graduate with honors. In raising the minimum GPA for Latin honors the faculty has set the bar higher for future students and ensured the value of an honors degree from Tufts.