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MovieReview | Returning Bridget Jones strays from the edge of reality

"Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit." "Police Academy 2." Virtually every straight-to-video Disney movie ever made. All were sequels to highly successful movies, yet are now collecting dust somewhere on the back of rental store shelves instead of enjoying the longevity of their originals. Yet in the wake of excellent follow-ups like "Spiderman 2," and "Shrek 2," sequels have been gaining respectable ground with critics and movie-goers alike. "Bridget Jones: Edge of Reason" was supposed to be one of those sequels. The media buzz and lofty predictions that swirled around the second installment of 2001's "Bridget Jones's Diary" were considerable. Sadly, at the end of the day, this sequel is more of a "Very Brady Sequel" than an "Empire Strikes Back." The most glaring inadequacy of "Bridget Jones: Edge of Reason" is that it fails to preserve the down-to-earth persona of Ren?©e Zellweger's character that had delighted audiences in the first film. For females aged 16 to 65 who were bored to death with impossibly perfect leading ladies like Meg Ryan and Julia Roberts, the klutzy, clumsy, realistically flawed Bridget Jones had been a breath of fresh air. But despite new male director Beeban Kidron's attempts to re-create that same Bridget the second time around, the mystique is gone. Sure, this Bridget is still a wee bit chubby and more than a little awkward, but she is no longer the girl's girl, the unglamorous antihero; she is not the if-she-were-a-real-person-she'd-be-my-best-friend comfort object she once was. The new Bridget faces fantastically melodramatic social, career, and romantic situations the likes of which real single women only read about in trashy supermarket magazines. The soundtracks say it all; the glitzy, hip-hop stylings of superstar Beyonc?© have symbolically usurped the classically feminist anthem "I'm Every Woman" from the first album. And so the music that had once embodied the unrefined, original Bridget Jones has now transformed her, like Meg and Julia, into that popular girl from high school you could only dream of being friends with. But like all sequels who fail to live up to the legacy of their predecessors, just because they're not as good doesn't mean they're not any good. "Edge of Reason" still has the general appeal of all chick flicks. The ability to celebrate the highs and lows of feminine life to a degree that makes any man in the theater thoroughly uncomfortable. This alone would ensure that "Edge of Reason" did not meet the horrible fate of any "Police Academy" sequel. Beyond that, the richness of the supporting cast will guarantee at least semi-success for "Edge of Reason," as its dynamic comedy is still very much intact. Although they've all been caricaturized to the brink of un-reality - Mr. Darcy (Colin Firth) is more loyal than Fido, Daniel Cleaver (Hugh Grant) is sleazier than a used car salesman, and Bridget's posse of friends is cattier than the "Sex and the City" girls - it is completely forgivable. Humor abounds with scenes like the historic "fist fight" between Darcy and Cleaver, proving once and for all that British men should stick to duels if they want to project even a shred of machismo. A rare combination of physical humor and witty repartee manages to strike the perfect balance between "Dodgeball" slapstick and "Gilmore Girls" banter marathons. And, yes, the Granny Panties make a cameo appearance. As a whole, the film is not as mundanely mainstream as its portrayal of the leading lady would have you think. Simply by settling the usually unanswered question of what happens to the damsel in distress after the handsome prince rides her off into the sunset, "Edge of Reason" separates itself from its romantic comedy sequel counterparts. Of course, the lilting voiceovers of passages read from Bridget's diary are just as refreshingly clever as they were in the first film. So should "Bridget Jones: Edge of Reason" get filed between "Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid" and "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle" on the rental store shelf? Hmm, that's a little harsh. For now, Bridget Jones can sleep soundly knowing that she was the last rat to make it off the sinking S.S. Sequel. But how close did she come to toppling overboard? Let's just say that Bridget Jones has pushed her sequel capacity to "the edge."


The Setonian
News

Inside Fitness | Friends clash over different eating, exercise styles

I know you're not a psychologist or anything, but I have a problem and I figured that since you write this column, you probably have experience with it. I have a friend who is ... well, I'm not going to beat around the bush. He's fat. But that's not the problem. The problem is that he gets annoyed whenever we eat out together and I try to eat healthy, or if we're hanging out and I tell him I need to go to the gym he gets upset, saying things like "Is the gym more important than our friendship?" or "You are obsessed." He even told me once he thought I had an eating disorder. How can I explain to him that I am not going overboard with my healthy lifestyle? Is he just jealous? What should I do? - Paul Vamder, Syracuse University There are many different ways to refer to a person who seems to be overly health conscious. "Bitten by the iron bug," "exercise-obsessed," and "narcissistic" are just a few. But aside from providing your friend with even more words to assault you with, you could try sitting him down and having a conversation with him. Many people who are out of shape simply don't have the drive to immerse themselves in a healthier lifestyle. Being in shape just isn't important enough to them, so it is understandable that they can't conceive how something they deem unworthy of any of their time consumes so much of yours. Another possible reason for your friend's attitude is that he feels that perhaps you are trying to force your lifestyle on him. I know from experience at Tufts that if a person doesn't feel like subscribing to a different lifestyle, he'll fight you tooth and nail to resist your efforts to convert. So think about your interaction with him. Do you ever suggest that he change his eating habits or join you in the gym? Perhaps he feels uncomfortable eating around you because he thinks you are judging him. One important aspect of being a personal trainer is the ability to read people. Maybe the problems in your friendship stem from insecurity on your friend's part about his own weight. Or, perhaps you hit the nail on the head in your question; maybe your friend is just jealous about your work ethic, and is making an attempt to sabotage you. That does sounds kind of catty and 90210ish, so I don't think it is the solution. The important thing to remember is that any lifestyle decision is intensely personal. Your friend's decision to criticize your choices probably indicates a dissatisfaction with his own life, so my ultimate advice is to try and help him. Resist the urge to argue, and get to the bottom of his feelings. Perhaps all he really wants is to get in shape, but is too self-conscious to ask where to start. Just settle this argument. I say that the bottom line is that you need heavy weight to grow. My buddy says form is more important than weight. Who's right? - Some guy, Hill Hall Form. Form. Form. Form is the most important aspect of weight lifting. Yes, there are different schools of thought on the importance of different types and methods of stimulus and work placed on the muscles. However, improper form means doing the exercise wrong. It means inviting injury, it means lawsuits, it means broken equipment. It means people whispering about what an idiot you are behind your back - "Did you see that guy yesterday? He was doing pelvic thrusts to get 225 off his neck!" So before you go out into the gym and crush your ribcage trying to bench 405, make sure your friend teaches you proper form. Once you have mastered the form of an exercise, you can start to slowly add weight. But once again, ALWAYS emphasize form over load, or you'll have a very short lifting career.


The Setonian
News

NESCAC Honors | Castellot named to All-NESCAC first team

Sophomore forward Ben Castellot was honored by the 11 NESCAC coaches last Friday when he was selected for the All-NESCAC first team. He was one of just three second-year players to make the first team, and was the only Jumbo honored by the league. "I was a little bit surprised," Castellot said. "I was injured for the first part of the season, which made it more surprising. It's a good feeling to know that I could come back, compete at a [high] level, contribute, and be recognized by the NESCAC coaches." Castellot scored four goals and assisted on one other to place him second on the team with nine points this fall. He earned NESCAC Player of the Week honors for the week of Oct. 11 after playing a vital role in Tufts' 3-2 upset over Bowdoin. In that match, Castellot scored both the go-ahead and overtime game winner to give Tufts the advantage. Other NESCAC soccer notables were Williams junior midfielder Josh Bolton, who came away with Player of the Year honors, and Middlebury freshman David LaRocca, who was the league's Rookie of the Year.


The Setonian
News

Music Review | Lil' Jon, the Southern king of crunk, returns

What is crunk? It's get-people-on-the-dance-floor club music that combines synthesizers, modified electric guitars, machine sounds, and a few catchy lyrics layered over booming bass lines. No one does crunk better than Lil' Jon, whose latest studio release with the East Side Boyz, "Crunk Juice," dropped in record stores yesterday. The crunk genre exploded into the mainstream of American hip-hop in 2003 with hits like "Get Low" by Lil' Jon & the East Side Boyz. Crunk is part of a strange revolution in hip-hop coming out of the South. The popularity and airplay of crunk has grown slowly since the late '90s but, chances are, if you're not from Florida or Georgia, the noise is likely to be relatively new to you. It seems strange when broken down, but the music Lil' Jon has become so skilled at creating out of noise can border on electronica on one extreme and punk on the other. Rap lyrics don't always blend smoothly with a beat that grates against itself, trying to move in two different directions. Still, the jarring sounds of crunk are reaching more listeners and fans each day. Crunk, like beer, is an acquired taste. "What U Gon' Do" is the lead single off "Crunk Juice," and it features the East Side Boyz singing call-and-response lyrics over one of the deeper crunk beats on this album. The bass explodes then disappears in distortion over and over again. The same distortion starts to capture voices at the end of verses and a synthetic whistle hold up the refrain melody. The beat belongs to a more ominous strain of Lil' Jon's work, represented by a few tracks on this album. But this track will still pump you up. Lil' Jon is a producer/rapper who knows that his real talent is creating beats, so "Crunk Juice" features a long list of featured artists including: R. Kelly, Usher, Ice Cube, Ludacris, T.I., Snoop Dogg and Nas. Ice Cube gives a stand-out performance on "Real Nigga Roll Call" reminiscent of his own club hit "You Can Do It." Cube always raps angry and his emotion feed off the hard-driving beat on this one. R. Kelly and Usher are featured on separate but similar tracks. The pounding of crunk gives way to sugary melodies to create a sub-genre which could be called Crunk&B. These tracks are designed to capture more of a female audience more inclined to R&B ballads. Lil' Jon even sings on one of these tracks, thereby increasing his credits to producer/rapper/singer. Even though Lil' Jon & the East Side Boyz rented a mansion with a recording studio in Miami to work on their latest album, the sounds of other regions influenced the creation of "Crunk Juice." "Aww Skeet Skeet" resembles a go-go joint that could have been lifted out of a Washington D.C. night club. An audience can be heard in the background. The live feel totally go-gos along with the use of a full drum battery. Lil' Jon doesn't produce every track. The legendary Rick Rubin adds a menacing track to this album. The Neptunes also get in on the production; their stop and go, up tempo beat hides some trance melodies in the lower layers. The release of "Crunk Juice" has become an event in its own right. The appearance of so many featured artists and producers confirms that Lil' Jon and his brand of hip-hop have made it big. Other artists want to be seen with Jon because of what he can do for their careers. Crunk has made it. For a limited time the album will be sold in a 2-disk special edition with a bonus DVD. Also, a local radio station WJMN 94.5 is running a contest featuring a chance to win a $25,000 shopping spree with the king of crunk himself, Lil' Jon.


The Setonian
News

Influenza deserves more attention from public health services

Since the flu is a dangerous but easily preventable disease, it should receive much more attention from the public health community, Dr. Stephen Morse told an engaged crowd in the Aidekman Center for the Performing Arts last night. "Influenza is one of the most common and transmissible infections," Morse said. In a normal year for the flu, thousands of people die from a disease "preventable with a vaccine," he said. Morse is the principal investigator and director of the Columbia University's Center for Public Health Preparedness (CPHP), a branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) established in October of 2000. Morse works with the CPHP to create a public health workforce to deal with epidemics, bioterrorism and infectious diseases. "Where's My Flu Vaccine?" was the title of yesterday's lecture, as well as the question Morse addressed. "We'll be talking about influenza, but we won't hand out samples," Morse said in jest. The lecture, sponsored in part by Public Health at Tufts (PHAT), was intended to increase awareness of the effects of influenza, a potentially lethal virus that is too common to strike fear into the heart of the public. Influenza is characterized by chills, fever, headache, muscle aches, sore throat and a dry cough. The flu affects mostly children and the elderly as well as those with people with compromised immune systems, and can be deadly. "Its incubation period is just a couple of days," Morse said, which makes the elderly and children the most vulnerable to infection. "People are infectious a few days after they're infected, quickly reproducing the virus," he said. The flu's scattering effect is tracked by several organizations, including the World Health Organization, which has approximately 75 labs taking samples from infected people and following regional strains of the virus. The U.S. Influenza Sentinel Physicians Surveillance, made up of a group of doctors, is another organization that studies influenza by taking the percentage of doctor's office visits with influenza-like illnesses, as reported by each doctor. An estimated 30,000 people die from the flu every year, though "we don't know, nobody knows the exact number," Morse said. He said influenza is such a serious public health problem because it is infectious, quick to spread, and deadly. "The problem with the flu is that most people who get symptoms related to the virus don't go to their doctors expecting to get better," Morse said. An estimated 36,000 deaths per flu season between 1990 and 1999 were attributed to the flu. Last year was not a good year for the flu, according to Morse. "A good year," Morse said, "is less than 10 percent infection rate." Morse said that his work is focused on surveillance and early warning to avoid epidemics, as well as pandemics, which are widespread epidemics that affect a large portion of the world's population. "Additional to surveillance is public education as a major concern of [epidemiologists]," Morse said. According to Morse, public health education is underrated and can save thousands of lives.


The Setonian
News

GOP should practice what it preaches

The wheels of government are turning in Washington, but if the Republican Party continues to ignore its elected opponents across the aisle, it may be headed for a flat tire. The spot as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee was far from guaranteed for Senator Arlen Specter (R-Penn.) after he implied in post-election comments that Supreme Court nominees wanting to overturn Roe v. Wade may face a Democratic Party filibuster. Although in recent days it has looked more and more like Specter will indeed get his chairmanship, the events that put his ascendancy in doubt are very troubling. After he won the election two weeks ago, President Bush and other Republican lawmakers pledged to work with people on both sides of the aisle for the good of the nation. The intense scrutiny afforded to Specter in the wake of his comments, however, suggests that Republicans may not be prepared to practice what they preach. It is no secret that the Republicans would not have been nearly as successful as they were in this year's election if not for the support of religious and moral conservatives. A full four-fifths of those who cited moral values as the most important factor in their vote (22 percent of the electorate) voted for Bush. The catch to this is that Bush's values-driven supporters are now expecting the White House and the solidly Republican Congress to return the favor by taking a hard conservative line on social issues such as abortion and gay marriage. What the GOP needs to remember, however, is that it would also have not been elected without the support of moderate Republicans, who tend to vote red based more on fiscal issues. Some of the most publicly touted Republicans (read: primetime convention speakers) are members of the party's moderate wing, including Rudy Giuliani, John McCain and Arnold Schwarzenegger. It is certainly difficult to conceive of the election turning out similarly if the Governator and his moderate peers had not stepped up to bat for Bush and the gang in August and afterwards. If the GOP is interested in remaining in power it must remember to moderate its positions, especially on social issues. Taking the line prescribed to Senate Majority Leader Frist by the religious right is a good way to not only lose the support of party moderates like Senator Lincoln Chafee (R.I.) and Senator Olympia Snowe (Maine), but will also alienate moderates who cannot always be counted on to toe the GOP line. Bush and his allies praised the results of the election and preached unity and service to all Americans in the wake of a bitterly divisive campaign. Early signs, however, do not look good for either compromise or for social moderates. Specter simply stated that, based on his over 20 years of Senate experience, the Republican administration would have to deal with the other, Democratic, side of the Senate. The alarm with which the Republican Party viewed this potential dialogue should rightfully scare proponents of bi-partisan cooperation. Not only could an uncompromising, rightward GOP swing stall Washington, but it may well cost the Republicans dearly in 2006 and 2008.



The Setonian
News

Adam Pulver | Unintended Consequences

I remember the first time I was offered a cigarette. It was in seventh grade. I was walking home from TCBY and saw a girl I knew from school, Susan, standing outside. Susan was the toughest girl I've ever met, and still have met to this day. She had transferred to our school after being expelled from the other school in the district for beating the living daylights out of another girl. She dated high schoolers, wore her JNCO jeans real low, had lots of piercings, and cursed a lot. At that time, I was having some trouble in school. I was an easy target of bullies as a pudgy, uncoordinated, nerdy, artistic, "new kid" with a big mouth. I was the last one picked for sports teams, and the first one slammed into a locker. But no one messed with Susan. Susan and I chatted for a bit before she reached into her pocket and pulled out a pack of Marlboros. With a cigarette held between her lips, she asked me if I wanted one. I didn't really respond. I had never been with someone my age smoking a cigarette. Noting my nonreaction, Susan laughed and commented, "Hah, I didn't think so. You're not really the type." At that moment, I could've tried to buff up my image as a tough guy. I could have gotten Susan to think I was cool, and maybe she would've protected me. I could've said, "On second thought, yeah, I'll have one." But I didn't. Smoking is not a matter of courage. In fact, it takes far more courage to resist the multitude of pressures encouraging smoking than to give in. You've got the "tough kids" like Susan. You have media images of glamorous movie stars smoking cigars and cigarettes. You've got cigarettes being sold at every corner store, gas station, supermarket, drug store and Wal-Mart you pass through every day of your life. We grew up with Joe Camel, the Marlboro Man, the Virginia Slims tennis tour, the Winston Cup of NASCAR, huge billboards and magazine ads for Kool, Salem and Parliament. Real courage is resisting all of this, and resisting the notion that if you're not an overcautious sissy, a rugged military man, a coward, you would inhale burning tar and one of the most addictive substances on earth on a daily basis. Despite my ability to resist Susan and her Marlboros, despite the fact that the Surgeon General's report on the link between smoking and mortality was released forty years, despite the fact that 400,000 people die each year of smoking-related illness, despite the fact that our generation has been told of the dangers of smoking since we were in elementary school, millions of Americans still smoke. This is not a matter of individual choice. Rather, this is a public health problem. Secondhand smoke has been proven time and again to increase cancer risk in nonsmokers. When I go out at night, I smell of your smoke, and sometimes my clothes stink for days. I have to sit in a separate section of the restaurant so I can fully taste my food. But, yes, the primary health effects of smoking will directly affect you, the smoker. But when you are too sick from emphysema to go to work and begin to collect social security disability insurance, who pays? When survivor benefits are given to your children because you died at age 40 of a massive heart attack, who pays? Who pays for the loss of productivity from the workforce? Who pays for the millions of smokers who receive their healthcare from the government when they need a lung transplant or palliative care before they die? Society, that's who. Smoking is stupid. There is no rational explanation for smoking in this day and age. But society has no obligation to let you do something stupid and harmful to yourself. Even if you are so reckless as to want to smoke cigarettes, the rest of society has every right to be concerned for you and your health. If you are a true friend of someone, it is your obligation to do everything in your power to get them to stop smoking. I have a few of my own strategies:1. You cannot smoke in my house, my car, my backyard, my bathtub, my closet, my porch, my garage, my outhouse.2. When you leave a party for a cigarette break, I will loudly tell everyone you're going on a cancer break. When you come back, I will ask if you're dead yet.3. I will not kiss a smoker. If I wanted to lick an ashtray, I would. 4. If you leave your cigarettes around, they may disappear.5. I will not stop my car for a cigarette break or to buy cigarettes.6. I will always insist on sitting in non-smoking seating at restaurants. Smoking is not a small risk. If you are a regular smoker, the risk of you developing a related health condition that significantly reduces your lifespan is pretty darn big. I agree that there are risks worth taking in life, but there has to be some potential benefit in the calculation, and no other way to achieve the same benefit. So smoking gives you a rush? How about going for a run, climbing a mountain, or even masturbating instead? (By the way, smoking will make all three of these activities much more difficult over time.) Tomorrow marks the American Cancer Society's annual Great American Smokeout. I urge you to join me and millions of Americans in working to help rid the country of this nasty habit. Because while it doesn't take courage to smoke, it certainly takes courage to try and quit. Friends don't let friends slowly kill themselves with flaming tar sticks.


The Setonian
News

Captain Stovell up to challenge

The men's basketball team is about to kick off its season, and senior Reggie Stovell, for one, is looking forward to it. The team will turn to Stovell, who has already proven to be a key player, to help make up for the loss of two juniors who are not returning, Blaine Lay and Scott Armstrong. He says he's up to the challenge. "This is basketball," Stovell said. "Things happen, and guys are expected to pick it up. From moment to moment anything can happen, and I'm always ready." Stovell, a power forward who measures 6'5", missed the first semester last season due to an injury but still finished with an average of 11.4 points and 5.0 rebounds per game. According to his teammates, he's a good post player with a killer outside shot, and he's only going to get better this season. "No one has seen how good he can really be," senior tri-captain Andrew Kaklamanos said. "He can be the focal point of our offense. If he's healthy, I don't see too many people in the league that could stop him, especially not one-on-one." Stovell will be leading his team off the court as well. He was recently named a tri-captain, a decision fully supported by the original two captains for this season, seniors Kaklamanos and Jesse Belodoff. "The coach asked the other captains and we said he deserved it," Kaklamanos said. "He's really been great, helping the young guys a lot. He's completely earned it." Stovell is eagerly anticipating the prospect of leading his team to a winning season, and he also welcomes the chance to erase any negative reputations he might have earned in the past. "This is definitely new for me because I have spent a lot of years in the doghouse," Stovell said of his role as captain. "I think I pissed a lot of guys off in the past with my attitude and so forth. This year, it's really a year for me to show the guys that I'm on the same page as they are as far as trying to win and as far as being a teammate, one of the guys, basically. That's what I'm striving for as a leader." According to Stovell, the players on this year's team are already showing that they can work well together, something that was lacking last year. "It was very obvious that some of the guys on the team were not as hard-working as others," Stovell said of last year's team. "That caused a divided team. This is a totally different team. We're really looking forward to this year as being a big year for us." Stovell, for one, is ready. He spent his off-season training and preparing himself physically and mentally for a winning season, and he has high hopes for the team. "My personal goals are my team goals," Stovell said. "I would like to have a winning team and I'd do anything to help my team. This is my last season, and I would like this to be my best season from a team perspective and from a personal perspective." But for now, he's just focusing on winning the team's first game this Friday. "We're not perfect at all," Stovell said. "But we're showing improvement day by day and that's what matters. We'll be ready for Friday when we play Washington University in St. Louis."


The Setonian
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Tim Whelan | Some Kind of Wonderful

I'd bet dollars to dimes that most of you are college football fans. The pageantry, the generic filled-to-the-brim stadiums, the bands, the colors, the innocence of the players. Well, scratch that last one. But all of it captures your interest. You would spend whole Saturdays scouting the SEC if you could, but that just wouldn't be socially acceptable. We live in one of the top sports fandom regions in the entire world, we have more colleges than any region in the entire world, but our allegiance to our biggest college football team could be better. Boston College beat West Virginia 36-17 on Saturday, a win that propelled the Eagles to their highest ranking since 1994 (19th in the Coaches Poll). With a 7-2 record overall, a 3-1 in conference record and a win against their toughest competition tucked in their pocket, the Big East is in their hands, as is their fate. But the skeptical, knowledgeable bunch in New England say "They don't have Miami and Virginia Tech on the schedule this year." And they would be correct, for those teams are now in the ACC, which the Eagles will join next year. But what is troubling is that there are more who would say "Who cares?" Many of us grew up supporting BC because there was no other team to root for that was on TV every Saturday. But the ties often end there. BC is kind of a fraternal place, where pulling for the Eagles often requires having family members who have attended THE Jesuit school in the region. BC and Holy Cross, the other Jesuit used-to-be power until it joined the Patriot League, which is mostly scholarship free, had quite the rivalry as recently as the mid-'80s. There are even stories of a helicopter landing right beside Fitton Field in Worcester to airlift Doug Flutie to the Heisman Trophy ceremony after his Eagles had defeated the Crusaders in the final game of the regular season. But those days are long over as far as that rivalry goes. Since Flutie's Heisman run, there have been flashes of region-wide interest in Chestnut Hill's team. Remember David Gordon's kick to beat No. 1 Notre Dame 41-39 in 1993? Besides that fateful kick, there has been a steady stream of 8-4 or 7-5 seasons supplemented with trips to bowls that some legitimate BC backers don't even watch. But the Eagles have accomplished a great deal, enough that they deserve more recognition than they have gotten. Or at least they deserve to be as adored as, say, South Carolina, a school that has had nothing more than a couple of seasons of moderate success but still fills their monstrosity of a stadium. By comparison, I can't remember the last time I saw Alumni Stadium without empty aluminum showing. There are certainly reasons college football fans in the area aren't as ga-ga over their Div. 1A team as those at, say, Nebraska.1. There are so many schools in our area, our football Saturday's are occupied in other ways. In Texas, folks will watch their high school teams on Friday night, then hitch up their trailer and head to Austin to go see the Longhorns the next afternoon. That's just the drill. But we simply have a wider range of viewing options for our Saturdays. Bates-Colby, Bentley-Stonehill, UNH-Northeastern. Not only that, but the talent in the region is distributed to all of these schools. Granted, the amount of high school talent in New England can't hold a candle to that of basically anywhere else in the country, but we like to convince ourselves otherwise. 2. Not only are some in the region indifferent about BC, but there are many who loathe them. BC is the big brother, the bully of Boston. It stands in the way of recruiting for every other school in the area. Most importantly, because this is where most hatred stems from, schools may be a little jealous of the Eagles. They are prominent athletically on a national scale, and what school would not want the "Nationally prominent" label? Thus, those associated with Holy Cross, Northeastern, Harvard, Boston University, UNH, UMass, Providence and others distance themselves from BC-dom. The prominence of hockey, with the main rivals being among the schools listed above, also breeds a legitimate dislike between schools who, in some Midwestern or southern state, would probably merge to form a superpower state school. Or at least that's the dream.3. We have the Red Sox Let's face it: Fenway Park at playoff time is the closest thing to a "real" college football atmosphere this town has ever had. Yahoo fans, undying supports through thick and thin, these are the qualities that characterize Sox fans and big-time college football fans alike. When we talk about the free agent period, writers exhaust their lungs and their typewriters with their attentions turned to Signing Day. And I don't buy the Patriots having that same grip over the region. Maybe now they do, but remember, as recently as 1992, their games were blacked out on local television because they couldn't even come close to selling out the smallest stadium in all of football (Foxboro Stadium). With the landscape changing oh so much more with the move to the ACC next season, and teams such as Florida State and Virginia making the trip here, the tired BC routine will be getting another boost- if it hasn't already, with their recent surge. They have athletes I've never seen them have (last year's tenth ranked national recruit, Brian Toal, is playing linebacker for them as a true freshman. Since when does BC get those guys?) Things are on the up and up. Now the public must buy what the Eagles are selling.


The Setonian
News

The thinking behind Republican policy

I wrote my Nov. 8 article, "How Republicans Feel" as part of an effort to show the greater Tufts student body that just because one does not concur with the general political climate at an elite eastern institution, it does not mean that this person is ignorant. I also hoped to open an honest dialogue of ideas between Republicans and Democrats. I am pleased to see by the responses in the Daily that much of what I set out to do has already been accomplished. However, it would be remiss of me to not respond to some of the allegations brought forward by some campus Democrats. In his article, "The irony of a vote for Bush," Joel Wertheimer alleges that President Bush essentially duped me into thinking that he supported the ideals in which I believe, when he really did not. More specifically, Wertheimer claims that Bush is not a true advocate of free trade. He cites President Bush's imposing of quotas on textiles from China as an example. However, Wertheimer ignores the political reasons behind such a policy decision. He fails to mention that the Chinese have violated WTO rules in 2001, 2002, and 2003, while also manipulating its currency. Moreover, Wertheimer forgets that this past spring the United States successfully resolved seven pending trade disputes with China without resorting to lengthy WTO litigation. Wertheimer needs to also take a closer look at the new Conservatism espoused by the Republicans since the Reagan Revolution. Tax policy advocated first by Reagan and now by Bush cannot simply be labeled supply-side economics. Bush also believes in Monetarism. Monetarism frees Bush from traditional worries about large deficits, because monetarists hold that deficits will not cause inflation, so long as the Fed prevents the supply of money from increasing faster than the economy's potential. While in an ideal world Republicans would still like to see the size of government reduced, this simply was not the world Bush faced during his first term in office. The first year of Bush's presidency was marked by an inherited recession and terrorist attacks. Bush was forced to increase spending in order to create the Department of Homeland Security and remove the Taliban from Afghanistan to insure American safety. At the same time, he had to fight the inherited recession, which could only be deepened by the terrorist attacks. He believed, and I believe, that the best way to fight the recession was to cut taxes. Not surprisingly to neo-conservatives, and contrary to what liberals want you to believe, Bush's tax cut policy was largely successful. The recent recession was actually the shallowest post-Great Depression recession. To suggest, as Wertheimer does, that it is not truly a tax cut but a tax shift to future generations is foolhardy. People predicted the same demise to our national economy in the 1980s as our deficits were reaching record highs. However, these critics conveniently forgot their concerns as Monetarist policy laid the groundwork for the booming '90s. However, to be honest, I do hope that Bush or his successor will take the steps necessary to reduce deficits as the economy recovers. I simply do not think that the past four years were an appropriate time to be worrying about the deficit. Wertheimer claims, reminiscent of John Kerry, that while the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq may have been just, they could have been conducted differently. To say that the war in Iraq suffered from a "complete and utter lack of preparation" is simply false. The U.S. attacked Iraq on May 19, 2003. Within three weeks, Baghdad had fallen. Within 4 months of the fall of Baghdad, an interim governing council was in place. By December, Saddam was captured, and by June of 2004, a new Iraqi government was in place. Now, for the first time in their nation's history, they will be having elections in January. No one said that liberating Iraq would be an easy task. Insurgents, whom we are now ousting in Fallujah, have clearly made the task more challenging. But the presence of a few thousand radical insurgents does not mean that there is a civil war or that democracy will be impossible. As far as the morality issue is concerned, Mr. Wertheimer can not possibly imagine what I have against gay marriage. Then again, I cannot possibly imagine what liberals have against an innocent, unborn child. It is condescending to suggest that I did not know what exactly I was voting for when I cast my ballot for George Bush. Worse yet is the feeling of Sabrina Pinto, who in her Nov. 11 viewpoint, "How wrong are thee? Let me count the ways" wrote that I made a mistake "in believing that people would actually care about how Republicans feel." Clearly, judging by the responses published in this newspaper, many people do care. This nation will truly be in trouble if more people take the attitude of Ms. Pinto. If people stop caring about the opinions of others with whom they disagree, and if these same people begin dismissing contrarian thought and opinion, it will be a sad day indeed. Until then, I hope that people will continue to truly care about ideas that come from both sides of the aisle.


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Let's Talk About Sex: Part 4 in a 5-Part Series

This article is the fourth in a five-part series looking at sex on campus. The articles will be based in large part on anecdotal evidence, asking the question "How do we behave sexually at Tufts, and how aware are we of the risks?" In the past year, Health Services has administered 109 tests for syphilis, 720 for chlamydia, 674 for gonorrhea, and 223 for HIV. Margaret Higham, the Medical Director of Health Services, notes that every single day Health Services treats at least one person for a sexually transmitted infection - and that these statistics represent only the individuals who are symptomatic and interested in treatment. One of the most common STIs for people of college age is human papillomavirus (HPV), which can lead to genital warts. Seeing as condoms do not eliminate the risk of transmission - as condoms do not cover all areas affected by the infection - and transmission is possible without the presence of symptoms, HPV is easily spread without the knowledge of either participants. (An STI is something that is possibly asymptomatic, while an STD has to show itself.) "Condoms help, but do not completely eliminate the risk," Higham said. "This is true for herpes as well, because the virus is found on the skin, so any direct skin-to-skin contact, particularly with friction, can spread the disease from one to another." One Tufts senior was shocked this August when her OB-GYN called her to say that her routine pap smear had been irregular. She had been dating her boyfriend in a monogamous relationship for six months and they had been using the pill as their form of birth control. "He did not realize he carried HPV; thus it was an unpleasant surprise for the both of us," she said. "He was only the third person I had ever had sex with, so I felt relatively cheated by the system of life." The student's initial sadness quickly turned to anger. "As I read more, I became really angry simply because I had broken up with the boy from whom I contracted it, but was still involved in the emotional aftermath of the relationship," the student said. "I felt hugely betrayed and taken advantage of." Though this student has not yet had new partners to inform, she still had to call her ex-boyfriend to explain that she had HPV and that it was from him. She saw him as a "legitimate partner" and therefore felt "knowing my own sexual habits I thought for sure there would never be a chance I could contract an STD." She knew of the risks but, like many of her peers, used to think she was "immune" from STIs. Other students stayed with their significant others even after contracting the disease from this person. One senior at Tulane University got three STIs from her current boyfriend. "We used condoms at first - I had been tested recently and he believed that we had no reason to worry," she said. It was not until she had gone to get a routine gynecological exam that she learned she had gonorrhea and chlamydia, just a few days before she left for a semester abroad in Europe. "I felt very stressed and frustrated," she said. "My boyfriend felt guilty and disturbed because his ex had cheated on him and he imagined that the diseases had come from those encounters. I felt stupid for just not having him get tested before we had sex without condoms. I've been on birth control for years and we honestly just got lazy." When this Tulane student returned from her semester abroad, her mother told her information that she had been sitting on since the beginning of the semester: her pap smear had shown abnormal cells that turned out to be high risk HPV, which can lead to cervical cancer if untreated. "I was so outraged," she said. "My boyfriend was riddled with guilt." Higham supported what the student's doctor told her. "There is currently no real test to look for HPV in men or women carrying the virus without any signs or symptoms," Higham said. "The vast majority of people don't know they have it because they can't see or feel anything. Unless the pap smear is abnormal, there is no way of testing." Higham went on to estimate that as many as fifty percent of people between the ages of 18-24 have HPV in the genital area, whether or not they are cognizant. This student had to have surgery (a procedure called LEEP) in which doctors scrape the dangerous cells off of the cervix with an electrified wire. Patients bleed for about ten days after surgery, with general discomfort. Due to the fact that even casual contact can lead to an infection now, it is very difficult for this student to prevent a reoccurrence, particularly in light of the fact that she remains with her boyfriend. In the meantime, she continues to get pap smears every few months to monitor the containment. The Tufts student's treatment has multiple stages and is plagued with uncertainty. "If my body has rid itself of the cells, then I will feel extremely fortunate and just be extremely cautious in the future," she said. However, there is a likelihood that the condition will persist, and even worsen. In this case, she will undergo cryotherapy, in which the cells are frozen and removed. If this fails, she might have to consider the removal of part or all of her cervix to prevent the spread of cancer, a "debilitating" procedure that would keep her from having children in "any normal way." Though the student will undergo more intensive testing over Thanksgiving break to search for pre-cancerous cells, she finds solace in the fact that "the benefit about being a young woman with HPV is that if you are under the age of 30 and not bearing a child your body can typically rid itself of the malicious cells, pending sexual contact with that particular partner is terminated." The Tufts senior has since had one partner, under the influence of alcohol, and they used a condom. She did not inform him of her HPV. Though this knowledge has changed her outlook on the future, she is not letting it change her present. "As of yet I know I am more cautious and aware of my sexual behavior, but I haven't let myself behave all together that differently when it comes to passion, or the heat of the moment," she said. "I know that I should always include a condom, regardless of my birth control status, but until I find out about the progression of my particular case of HPV, I refuse to stop living as the typical college student." "Don't let laziness jeopardize your health," the Tulane student said. "When I look back on all I went through and how willing my boyfriend would have been to get tested had I only required it before we had sex, it is the most absurd thing in the world to me that I didn't just have him do it."


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15 years ago at Tufts

On Nov. 13, 1989, The Primary Source released a statement expressing regret at the offense created by the publication of a poem and an article in their October issue. A complaint was brought against the Source by the group Students Organized For Awareness (SOFA). On Nov. 13, two fraternities - Sigma Phi Epsilon and Psi Upsilon - announced plans to appeal the decisions of the Committee of Social Fraternity and Sorority Life which recently placed three fraternities on warning status and one on probation for the year.On Nov. 16, a Tufts student was among 15 students arrested at Senator John Kerry's office two days earlier after the students staged a sit-in at the office. The protesters demanded that Kerry issue a statement making a commitment to the pursuit of peace in El Salvador, according to the arrested student, senior Kelley Inselmann.


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Marissa Beck | Eat this!

Whether reading a nutritional label or a newspaper article, we want to trust the facts. I'd therefore like to clarify the role I play as a columnist and the role of the various health centers on campus. Contrary to what others may argue, fighting obesity and practicing healthy eating habits are not just an effort to lose weight. No one would argue with the assertion that skinny isn't healthy. But by no means are the articles I write, nor any of the other health-related ones published in The Tufts Daily striving to make people look like a model. Proper nutrition plays a serious role in health issues. Examples include lowering risks of cancer, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, osteoporosis, cognition (such as Alzheimer's disease), arthritis, cataracts, and sarcopenia - all of which lead to impaired quality of life and decreased longevity. In my first column (Sept. 29), I suggested that it is good to eat vegetables because "they provide different types of beneficial nutrients like beta-carotene in carrots, tomatoes, and peppers, or vitamin K in spinach and broccoli," not to mention the phytochemicals they contain that can prevent cancer and heart disease. I hope this clarifies any assumption that eating pizza with veggies isn't just an attempt to lose weight. Nor is it pop nutrition information, but rather, advice based upon factual health benefits recommended by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for a healthier lifestyle. Further, in order to evaluate whether or not the problem of anorexia is greater on campus than obesity, one would have to assess this through the Tufts Longitudinal Health Study. One thing is for sure - under no guise are the articles in the Daily aiming to promote weight loss. Luckily, we are part of a community with access to plenty of health-related resources that promote healthy living. The undergraduate program is connected to a network of faculty at the world-renowned Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition, where students can opt to take classes if they so desire. Female faculty members have access to the Strong Women Program, which helps implement safe and effective strength training programs. There is even a Strong Men counterpart! In addition, the Tufts Personalized Performance Program (TPPP) is unique in the nation, helping students achieve fitness-related goals. Should this be of interest to you, information is available at http://ase.tufts.edu/physed/ppp/main.asp. But what about those who believe eating healthy meals and going to the gym still won't guarantee health? Well, wearing a seatbelt won't necessarily prevent an accident from occurring, and putting on sun block doesn't mean you ward off cancer. But protecting yourself doesn't hurt. Popular to contrary belief, people don't exercise just to lose weight. Last April, I wrote an article about exercise as a stress-reliever, featured in the Daily's "Balance" section, and I mentioned that those who exercise go to sleep faster, are more refreshed, have sharper memories, better reaction times and a higher concentration than non-exercisers. Exercise also slows down the aging process, can increase a person's aerobic capacity as one gets older, reduces the risk of heart disease, and prevents certain types of cancer. So next time you see someone sprinting on the track or knocking off 30 minutes on the elliptical, don't assume it's just to fit into a pair of jeans. Working as a personal trainer with the TPPP, I am asked constantly by my clients "what to eat." Of course we have clients who want to lose weight - and this is a goal that we work with just as we would help someone gain strength. But for the most part, people are curious as to how they can maintain a healthy lifestyle, and that's what these resources are here for. Obviously, this is a school that is highly in tune with your health needs. I can understand the outlook of someone who is sick of being bombarded with the fit-society mentality - our society is very conscious of appearances and is over-stimulated by images. But neither my articles nor the other health education provided here is forcing anyone to look, eat, and exercise in a certain way. The resources on campus serve as facilitators for sustainable health ethics - not as a conspiracy to keep people thin.Marissa Beck is a senior majoring in English. She 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 the Balance section of The Tufts Daily.


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Grad student community struggles with politics of TA unionization

Pro-union graduate students are not changing their approach to grad student work conditions despite an unfavorable ruling by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) concerning graduate student unionizations. Under the current NRLB's standing, Tufts University is not legally obligated to recognize a graduate student union. Those in favor of a graduate student union insist that the oppositional framework of a union is necessary for real reforms to be made, but proponents of cooperation with the Tufts administration say that progress is being made. Currently, the Graduate Student Council (GSC) works to improve life for graduate students in the School of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering (ASE), according to GSC President Amanda Pavlick. "Our representatives sit on numerous committees at various levels of the University, giving us excellent visibility and a voice to the administrators that is not only heard, but welcomed," Pavlick said in an e-mail to The Tufts Daily. "Each year we are encouraged by the progress we are able to make on behalf of all graduate students at Tufts." University President Larry Bacow and Robin Kanarek, dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, said graduate students should work through the current institutional structure in order to improve their student life - and expressed their dedication to the students' well-being. "We are willing to talk with graduate students about life here," Kanarek said. "Our goal is to help them." Kanarek said raising the stipends of teaching assistants (TAs) was "a priority" and a cross-departmental effort, but added that the TA experience did not count as student employment in her view. "I really don't see students as employees - teaching is an important part of the career," she said. "What I learned as a TA is what allows me to get up and teach, not my research. One of most important things is how to effectively communicate whether you learn to be a professor or go into business." Kanarek said the University was working to find money to increase TA stipends and that the University was aiming for equivalent, or better, stipends on the level of its peer institutions such as Dartmouth or Cornell. Union supporters, however, assert that a formal and standardized contract of working conditions is necessary to ensure a fair work agreement. Joe Ramsey, a Ph.D. student and organizer for the Association of Student Employees at Tufts (ASET), said isolated actions taken by the administration to improve student life do not always constitute a comprehensive improvement for the graduate student community. "Plain old requests won't do it," Ramsey said, asserting that a union would force administrators to "act on issues and meet with [students] in a way that they won't otherwise." Without a union and a contract, Ramsey said, the administration can change policy with regard to the students' employment without prior discussion with TAs. He cited an example when, a year and half ago, drama TAs received a wage increase, but at the same time, their workload nearly doubled. Effectively, Ramsey said, their wage "didn't go up in real terms." Ramsey said unionization would actually benefit the University in the long run and provide better-quality instruction for undergrads. The grad student unionization movement began during the 2001-02 academic year in hopes of brokering a contract with the University ensuring a minimum stipend across departments, healthcare coverage, and a say in decision-making. Students had been encouraged to start the process by a ruling by the NLRB holding that students at New York University (NYU) had the right to unionize. The NLRB, composed of five members appointed by the U.S. president, is responsible for interpreting the National Labor Relations Act, legislation that enables private employees to unionize and fight for wage and benefit reform. This summer, the NLRB reversed itself in a controversial - and some say partisan - decision regarding students at Brown University. At Tufts, the unionization process had been stalled for nearly two years since the Tufts administration impounded a unionization vote, appealing its legitimacy pending approval from the NLRB. Little exchange appears to be occurring between the parties, however. "I don't see much dialogue," Ramsey said. "I don't see the University addressing issues of stipends and healthcare in a meaningful and comprehensive way." Kanarek said Ramsey and other pro-union students had not approached her about any of their concerns. "He doesn't seem to want to talk to me," Kanarek said of Ramsey. "I wish he would. I would be really pleased to talk about a lot of these issues." While many graduate students at Tufts support unionization, there are others who do not. The GSC has maintained neutrality on the issue since it first arose three years ago. According to Pavlick, this neutrality is a result of the GSC's desire to represent all Tufts graduate students, not only those who support unionization. "As a council we decided that, as the representative body of Tufts grad students in Arts, Sciences and Engineering, it was in the best interest of all if we take no stance on the issue," Pavlick said in the e-mail. "The GSC's mission is to represent all ASE graduate students." Because only some graduate students receive stipends from the University, those who do not would not be considered employees if a union were established at Tufts, and would therefore not be eligible for union membership. "As a union necessarily only represents those it classifies as employees, the GSC has chosen instead to work for the interest of all graduate students rather than a select body," she said. According to Pavlick, the GSC works with the University to try to "to increase student funding and availability of benefits," she said. "We take a realistic approach to this, each year evaluating where change is most opportune and working with administrators and trustees to bring about this change." Many had hoped that the NYU case was the first step in a trend towards unionization nationwide, and efforts towards unions, still in progress, were continuing at other universities, including Columbia, the University of Pennsylvania and Yale. The NLRB overturn of the NYU case stalled this progress, perhaps permanently. And perhaps unjustifiably, say critics, who assert that the change in the board's ruling was due to partisanship. Risa Lieberwitz, a professor of labor law at Cornell University's School of Industrial and Labor Relations and former field attorney in the NLRB, said the decision was indeed political - the board was split along party lines and it overturned itself after two new members were appointed by the Bush administration. The new Republican appointees, she said, had "a very different view of how to interpret the National Labor Relations Act - they viewed the law in a way that was consistent with the pre-NYU decisions," she said. Such a reversal was not unexpected, she said, due to the NLRB's reputation as a highly-political body. "It's not unusual to see decisions overturned," Lieberwitz said. "The controversial nature of labor issues and the political nature of NLRB appointments can lead to a lack of stability in NLRB precedents." Kimberly Johnson, who worked as a graduate student volunteer during the NYU unionization campaign, said the NYU union has been successful in the eyes of TAs there. "It's been pretty awesome." Johnson said that departments' stipends have increased to $18,000 per year from as low as $10,000. "It made a huge difference." Annual wage increases, healthcare coverage, and office space were other gains Johnson cited as a result of the contract - as well as a newfound and unexpected solidarity among students. "Moving outside of the department really built a kind of community that wasn't there before," she said. "In order to win we actually had to go out and talk to everybody." Efforts towards unionization, Johnson said, are still continuing in private universities nationwide. "The decision means [universities] can't have an NLRB election - it doesn't mean people can't organize themselves and pressure people enough to form a union," she said. "NYU didn't have to strike to do that, we had hoped that by changing the law that people wouldn't have to do that." "Most universities did it through striking and a lot of direct action, and that is what is left to us," Johnson said. More coverage on graduate student life concerns and efficacy of unionization will follow next week.UNIONIZATION PROGRESSOct. 2000 - NLRB recognizes NYU grad students' dual status as students and employees, legitimizing their vote on unionizationApril 2001 - NYU administrators agree to bargain with the graduate student union Nov. 2001 - Grad students begin their push for unionization begins at Tufts UniversityApril 2002 - Tufts students vote on unionization; votes are impounded because Tufts appeals the vote to the NLRB on the grounds that its graduate students are not technically employeesJan. 2004 - President Bush appoints two conservatives, Michael J. Bartlett, director of labor law policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and William B. Cowen, principal attorney for Institutional Labor Advisors LLC, to the NLRBJul. 2004 - NLRB rules that Brown students should be recognized as employees and therefore are ineligible to hold a vote on unionization.


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TV Review | mmy-award winning 'Race' picks up speed for 6th season

CBS's Emmy-award-winning reality series, "The Amazing Race," kicked off on another continent-hopping journey last night. In the show's sixth season, host Phil Keoghan will once again lead 22 contestants around the world to face various physical and mental challenges, aiding their hopes of coming away from the show with the $1 million prize. "The Amazing Race" has gained popularity over the past five years as viewers realize that this show is much better than the average reality fare. The series is kept interesting without sinking into the extreme gross-out gags of "Fear Factor" or the sleaze of "Real World." For those unfamiliar with the show, the rules are straightforward: the teams, consisting of two contestants each, race around the globe, stopping at 11 cities in the course of 30 days to complete challenges and eventually reach each checkpoint. No cell phones are allowed, each team is given a limited amount of cash to spend, and the teams don't know where they are going next until they have reach the checkpoint immediately prior. At certain times throughout the race, the last pair to reach the checkpoint is eliminated. If the pair is not eliminated during that leg, they usually are forced to start the next leg with no cash. This means they have to beg it off of locals or find some other way to get to where they need to go, which can make for some interesting situations. One piece of unsolicited advice for "Amazing Race" casting directors: enough with the models already! They've been given spots on many past Amazing Races, and this season has not one but two more couples who use their beauty as means of making a living: Hayden and Aaron, both 25, and Freddy (34) and Kendra (also 25). Hayden is afraid of both flying and heights, which should be interesting on a show that involves traveling over 25,000 miles and nonstop physical challenges. Speaking multiple languages also helps, but neither Hayden nor Aaron are fluent in any language but English. Another couple to watch is the formerly dating, spinning teacher/personal trainer pair Adam and Rebecca. "Amazing Race," like most other reality shows, reportedly searches for people who will freely voice their opinions and run their mouths off at every opportunity. This explains a lot about their choice in Rebecca. In Rebecca's pre-show bio she declared that her first impression of Adam was that he was gay, and that her biggest fear about going on the series is "that Adam and I will kill each other and will not be able to finish the race because we will be dead." Don, 69, and Mary Jean, 66, are the standard older couple, who usually don't make it past the first couple of episodes. But these particular grandparent representatives might actually have a chance. They've been married for 20 years and have traveled to six continents. One thing's for sure: this season's "Race" won't be lacking personality. Some of the other pairs are Gus and Hera, a father-daughter team, Lori and Bolo, who are a pro-wrestling couple, and high school buddies Avi and Joe. Joe is self-described as a cross between "Jerry Seinfeld and Yoda," and says that Avi is "George Costanza meets Napoleon." "I can't sing, dance or act, but I am a character; reality TV is perfect for a guy like me," declared Joe. He continued, "Besides, I get to travel the world with my best friend, and have a chance to win a huge prize ... without kissing Trump's tush."


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Offensive production vital to Jumbos' season

Key to the basketball team's winning ways the past two seasons under coach Carla Berube has been its ability to put a lot of points on the board. Last season, the Jumbos finished the regular season second in the NESCAC, dropping an average of 70 points per night on their opponents.


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TV Review | Branson's show trumps Trump's

Richard Branson, billionaire, mogul and action-seeking daredevil, is completely insane - but in the best way possible. Somewhere, in the midst of watching stunts like a tea party on the top of a hot air balloon sailing 10,000 feet in the air, or passing a baton while standing on the wings of a plane as it flies upside down over the English countryside, the realization dawns that this isn't just another reality rip-off of a certain popular Trump franchise. In fact, Branson's "The Rebel Billionaire" makes "The Apprentice" look, well, second-rate.


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Moderate Powell will be missed

Secretary of State Colin Powell's resignation is an expected, yet distressing, loss to the Bush administration. Powell was a voice of cautious moderation in a government viewed abroad as shockingly neoconservative and unilateral, especially with the advent of the "War on Terror" and the offensive in Iraq. Powell's departure, along with six other cabinet resignations, could signal a shift further right for the Bush administration.


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Forget the facebook, take it to the next level

In the intensely complicated world of sex, romance and relationships, it is sometimes tempting to want to simplify things. To end the pointless small talk, cut out the frustrating mind games, avoid the awkward confrontations and finally be truly honest.


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Brian Wolly | Wolly and the Teev

There's a current cultural trend that reminds me of an old Chris Farley sketch on "Saturday Night Live." It is the one when he interviews Paul McCartney and asks him if he remembers when he was with the Beatles. If Farley were interviewing a Tufts student, he'd probably ask, "Remember that time when Hillary Clinton came to speak and then two days later it snowed? That was AWESOME."