Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.

Archives

The Setonian
News

Students plan spring break travel in spite of global instability

The possibility of war with Iraq has incited mixed reactions among students regarding their spring break travel plans. Plummeting airfares have encouraged more students to go abroad, but increasing fears of anti-Americanism and terrorism have made some students worried to leave the country. Student travel agencies STA Travel and Student Universe report that some customers have cancelled their plans for spring break. Most students, however, are not taking the threat of war into account for their spring break plans. "While I am aware that there are certain threats to traveling, I feel that we [Americans] need to continue living our lives, and that includes traveling," senior Erika Robbins said. Robbins plans to travel to Montreal and Quebec with friends over break. Anecdotal evidence suggests that Robbins' attitude towards travel within the next several weeks is echoed by students across the country "Most students are choosing to travel to Europe and the Caribbean and don't feel that the possibility of war will threaten their experience," an agent for Student Universe said. Airfares to Europe are unusually low on many different online search engines, including Expedia, STA Travel, and Student Universe. The growing probability of war at least partly explains such low-ticket prices during what is the high season for some destinations. Airlines may have also dropped fares because of the perceived threat of terrorism. As the United States pushes for war, many consumers expect retaliation from militant Islamic groups, and are discouraged from flying. Freshman Thomas Singer plans to take advantage of the low airfares to Europe. "I don't understand how going to London can be cheaper than flying home to Atlanta, but I'm still ready to take advantage of such a great deal," Singer said. Both STA Travel and Student Universe said there is still time to plan spring break trips. Trips to the Bahamas and Mexico are the most popular option for college students, according to STA Travel. Undeterred by potential war, biology professor George Ellmore is leading a group of 15 students to the Bahamas to explore tropical ecology over spring break. STA Travel reports that trips to Europe, especially to London and Paris, are growing in popularity. "I traveled right after September 11," said Jessica Harris, who will travel to England and Wales. "It was a little scary, but you realize life has to go on. You are letting the enemy win if you sit in your house duct-taped in with a gas mask." Although some Tufts students are deterred from traveling by the current instability in the world, many students agree with Harris. "I think terrible things could happen anywhere and anytime, and so it's important not to let fear overpower your life," freshman Ariana Milman said, adding that "it's just important to be cautious and as informed as possible." Many students, including many freshmen, choose to head home over spring break, but their decisions are not usually rooted in fear of traveling. "Being so far away from home, I liked the idea of spending a week at home and grounding myself," freshman Melissa Marver from Minnesota said. Some students will be traveling with Tufts sports teams over spring break. The cycling team will train in California, and the track team will travel to Myrtle Beach, SC. Other students will spend their spring break volunteering. The Leonard Carmichael Society [LCS] is sponsoring Volunteer Vacations, through which Tufts students spend a week involved in volunteering activities around the country. Though most students' spring break plans have not been curtailed by fears of war or terrorism, those fears are not completely absent. Freshman Amaya Wilhelm expects to visit friends in New York City over the break. She had originally planned to travel to Paris, but changed her mind. "I'm not too comfortable going to a country where the majority of the people are severely anti-war and some anti-American," she said.


The Setonian
News

Ask Angie

Q: Angie, I'm on birth control pills since my boyfriend and I are sexually active. I still make him wear a condom when we have sex. I am afraid that the pills won't work so both together seem better. I am also kind of grossed out by the idea of him not wearing a condom. He thinks it feels worse and really wants to go "natural". What should I tell him? A: Assuming you're taking your birth control pills correctly, this method of contraception should be 95%-99.9% effective, and the addition of properly used condoms can only help your odds of preventing pregnancy. The pill is typically meant as a sole method of birth control, so the odds are very much in your favor if you decide to try the condom-less route. He needs to respect the fact that you're uncomfortable with uncovered intercourse, but at the same time you've never done it so you don't know if you'll be as "grossed out" in practice. There are other reasons besides cleanliness to keep the condom between the two of you: birth control pills do not protect against sexually transmitted diseases! I have no idea how long you've been with your guy, or how much you know about his sexual past -- but unless he's willing to cough up some proof that his genital area is totally clean, you've got a good reason to keep his parts covered. Q: Dear Angie, I've had a crush on a friend of mine for quite some time. I finally got the nerve to tell her how I feel, only to be rejected. Now, months later, after we've both found other people, she changes her mind! When I see her now, there's an awkward sexual tension. What should I do? A: The grass always looks greener on the other side of the fence, and that's precisely why I'd take her "change of heart" with a grain of salt. The only reason she's interested at this point is simply because she can't have you anymore. The thing you absolutely shouldn't do is leave your current significant other for this girl, no matter how sincere her feelings are _ it's most likely that the second you made yourself available, she'd lose interest. Giving her the benefit of the doubt, supposing she suddenly realized what a catch you were, she's still in no position to be bringing it up now. Maybe if the stars align correctly something will someday blossom between you two, but for now that's not an option. A certain level of sexual tension is normal between friends because of past histories or feelings. It should not, however, impinge on your friendship and respective relationships. If she continues with any meddlesome flirting while you're around, you might have to sit down and talk this out _ perhaps giving her a "rejection speech" of your own. Q: Dear Angie, I have two problems. Number one is that I have two roommates _ my roommate and his girlfriend. The second problem is that I am friends with both of them, so it's hard for me to tell either one of them that they spend too much time together in my room. They hardly ever go to her room, so I have to deal with them being together in front of me and it is really distracting when I'm trying to work or even sleep. Next year we are planning to live together but I don't want to have the same problem again _ this can't go on. How can I talk to them without losing my friends? - Seen too much A: You said it yourself, this can't go on, and you've obviously had enough. You've been so accommodating to them and so far offered no objections to their behavior, so they've probably thought that they weren't doing anything to upset you. Before you sign yourself up for another year of this suffering, you need to talk to both roommates and work something out. You're all friends, and emphasize that point before you start the discussion. Tell them it has nothing to do with either of them personally, but it's hard enough for any college student to just have ONE roommate _ two roommates could break anyone down! You need to express that you miss having private time, and that perhaps you'd be willing to make yourself disappear from the room once in a while for them to spend time together elsewhere in exchange. I would suggest not telling them that they spend too much time together in general, as it may be construed as you insulting the nature of their relationship. The bottom line is that you are uncomfortable with the current state of affairs, and will not live this way next year. Your friends may be annoyed at first, but they'll get over it. Once you're less peeved at them, you'll probably all end up becoming closer friends.


The Setonian
News

Microsoft developing Hardware-Based Security

Microsoft is developing a hardware-based security initiative that would make computers more secure and protect copyrighted material. With the new system, codenamed Palladium, information technology officials could use cryptographic hardware keys rather than software-based passwords to lock up secure information including student records and prevent illegal copying of materials. While Microsoft bills Palladium as "the next-generation secure computing base," critics say it could curb the Internet's free flow of information, and in the process give Microsoft too much control over colleges' digital information. Palladium is supported by publishers because it would give them greater control over their material by allowing them to lock a document so that it could only be viewed on a screen, and disabling the copy, paste and print functions. It would also limit users' ability to run unauthorized copies of software programs. Palladium's software components will be included in the next version of Windows, expected out toward the end of 2004. The new version of Windows would work with new hardware components currently under development by manufacturers such as Intel. In order for users to view Palladium-based documents, they too would have to be use a Palladium-based computer. Computers without the Palladium core, such as Macintoshes and PCs manufactured before the new version of Windows is released, would be unable to decrypt the documents. Computers will not be able to be retrofitted with the Palladium standard. For a college to invest in Palladium would be a massive undertaking because all computers would have to be equipped with the new encryption. At Tufts, hundreds of computers would have to be replaced. Even if colleges decide not to embrace Palladium, they may face enormous pressure to buy into the system, especially if publishers of books, journals, software and other electronic content adopt the Palladium standard. This pressure worries many in academia, who believe that publishers would use Palladium to bar some uses of digital material which scholars argue that they are entitled to under copyright law. Doug Herrick, the associate director of data network operations with Tufts Computing and Communications Services (TCCS), said he could "never see Tufts using a program like Palladium," and he foresees Microsoft facing much difficulty getting users to upgrade. "Right now I can't imagine Tufts using such an intrusive system," he explained. "We already have our security measures and Palladium wouldn't fit into those measures." Microsoft claims that Palladium would give all users more control over their digital property. According to Brian LaMacchia, a software engineer working on Palladium, colleges have been demanding more computer security. "It's a two-edged sword," LaMacchia told the Chronicle of Higher Education, acknowledging that commercial publishers are also demanding more protection for their works. Professors at Tufts agree that publishers have the right to control how their work is used, but also realize that they can easily abuse Palladium. History professor Jeanne Penvenne has already had many difficulties dealing with the fair-use issue. "Tufts spends a fortune to get subscriptions, yet I find it infuriating how I can't use them; I can use them once but not more," she says. Penvenne used to make reading lists for her classes, but once she had to seek permission for every article before redistributing it, she became bogged down with writing permission letters. She said she could not be a good teacher if she spent all her time writing letters, so she stopped using the articles altogether. According to Penvenne, if the university is going to invest in Palladium, they must think it through. She says the University needs a staff dedicated to fair use issues; not having teachers do what she calls "donkey-work." Professor Lee Minardi of the School of Engineering respects the rights of publishers to restrict their materials in ways they see fit, and sees Palladium as a way for publishers to keep up with the digital age. "Publishers have the right to be able to charge for an item or to give it away for free if they want to." Minardi equates the publishers' dilemma with the issue of the music industry trying to stop file transferring because they still function on an antiquated system. Students have responded to Palladium with mixed reactions. Freshman Margaret Hunter sees the possible benefits. "It would definitely help to stop violations of copyright laws, but if people want to plagiarize, they're going to find a way to plagiarize," she said. But some students worry about the costs of implementing the new standard. "Hacking is [not] a large enough problem on campus to justify the cost and restrictions of acquiring Palladium systems," said sophomore and TCU Senator Adam Koeppel. "[Microsoft's] tactics force consumers to continuously upgrade their operating systems forcing manufacturers like Dell to accept Palladium as a standard, and replace conventional computers with exclusively Palladium systems." Koeppel believes that Palladium is too much of a restriction of information for too little a gain in security. According to David Rice, a security consultant and adjunct faculty member in James Madison University's graduate program in information security, students are not going to "consciously go out and buy a product that necessarily limits their ability to do what they want to do," he told the Chronicle. "They'll definitely buy a product if it means security for them. I don't know if they're going to buy a product if it means security for somebody else."


The Setonian
News

Lost American heroes

The face of television has changed in the past decade -- and not for the better. There've been some good things, for sure. We've witnessed the rise of reality television and Fox's realization of its destiny as a network of unabashed trash (well, that and The Simpsons). That's right, I think these are actually good things. Reality TV will settle into a niche over time, just as sitcoms and talk shows have done. And come on! Fox is so shamelessly over the top that it's become an art form. The vaguely Australian butler on Joe Millionaire (and the momentous pre-commercial music) blew my mind. No, these things aren't bad, and there are other advances. We've seen new channels appear: multiple cable news networks, insanely-specialized movie choices, nostalgia networks like TV Land, the Technicolor hallucinations of the Cartoon Network. Digital cable has given us around-the-clock information on upcoming shows. TiVo has made channel surfing obsolete. Soon, high-definition television will make the drawbacks of VHS more apparent than ever. So what do I bemoan? When I was growing up, there was a certain genre of show that I adored, and it's vanished. To me, it was the epitome of high drama on television. I'm talking about all of the lone-man-against-evil series. Think Quantum Leap. Knight Rider. And the granddaddy of them all, MacGyver. There were my meat and potatoes, my everyday entertainment nutrition. Each followed a single character through an endless succession of nefarious plots, guest stars, mysterious and exciting locations, and occasional recurring plot lines. Sure, there were sidekicks and organizations to work with -- people like Al and Gushie and Ziggy, and shadowy institutions like the Phoenix Corporation -- but the focus was on a lone man making our world better. David Hasselhoff will never do better work than he did as Michael Knight. It didn't matter if they involved time traveling through beauty queens and monkeys or driving around in a witty talking car or building a satellite dish out of a wet towel and the underwire from a bra. These were shows about courageous, solitary heroes. They were everywhere in the '80s, and now they've disappeared. (Please note that I do not consider The A-Team a part of this genre. Sure, the mercenaries are a virtuous and ragtag lot and they fight injustice, but they're just too numerous. Each episode has one or two new characters at best. No dice.) It's not that these shows have all been cancelled -- understandable after all these years -- but that no shows have stepped in to fill the void. Where's the charming, resourceful Renaissance man? Where are the serious undertones and comic montages? Shows don't even do the opening credits in the same style anymore. I could (and can) recite the entire Quantum Leap opening monologue, and hearing the music brings every clip from the credits back to mind. These shows had nearly endless possibilities. By traveling to new locations and stepping into different roles (particularly in undercover missions) for each episode, the characters stay fresh. MacGyver could do something different every week. No getting stuck in courtrooms for him. Take that, Law & Order! Unfortunately, shows often disappear after cancellation even when they would have a dedicated audience of one (me) in syndication. I'm glad that Scott Bakula is gainfully employed on Enterprise, but I'd trade the Star Trek spin-off for one more season of Quantum Leap. The closest I can get to a Knight Rider fix on an average day is by watching Boy Meets World and waiting for Mr. Feeny to speak. William Daniels has one of those Robert Stack kind of voices that you recognize no matter the context. It sends chills down my spine to hear his voice coming from a man rather than a scanning red light. These shows had action, drama, morals, disguises, strange scientific twists, and affable leading men. They featured bizarre organizations with mysterious purposes and funding. And they're gone. Some may argue that this genre still exists. They cite The Pretender and Alias as modern-day successors to the lone-crusader legacy. I cry foul. First of all, Jennifer Garner may be hot, but she isn't good-reason-to-spend-another-hour-watching-television-on-Sunday hot (besides, she's working for the CIA. A real vigilante never works for the government. See flaws in later seasons of The A-Team). Second of all, The Pretender and Alias aren't Quantum Leap or Knight Rider or MacGyver. You can't even SPELL MacGyver with The Pretender or Alias. Third of all, I don't watch either of those shows, so you're clearly wrong. And even if you're not wrong, that isn't the point. I miss my old shows. I miss the ridiculousness and the action and the drama. Seriously, I feel that Quantum Leap was an outstanding show. It had its lighthearted moments, but its mission was a heartfelt one. I won't stand you bad-mouthing Quantum Leap in my presence. So stop it. Some may argue that I'm still wrong, that you can watch MacGyver on TV Land at midnight, that Quantum Leap and Knight Rider can be found on the Sci Fi Channel. Hmm. Interesting point. But they're not on enough, nor are they on at convenient times. I can't take myself seriously if I stay up until 1 a.m. everyday just to watch MacGyver. Sure, he can turn a coffin into a jet ski, but he can't restore missed sleep. So what do I really want? I want TNN to pick up these shows and run them all the time (just as they have done with Star Trek: The Next Generation, Miami Vice, and American Gladiators, to name a few), preferably in place of Blind Date and Real TV. Look around the local networks. Friends is on three times per day, but I can't watch Quantum Leap? For shame. But there is hope! The good people at TNN have preserved some pieces of '80s cultural history already, and I have high hopes that they will continue to do so. Besides, Young MacGyver is coming this fall.


The Setonian
News

Electronic sports and midterms a lethal combination

In my last semester at Tufts, one would think that I'd be the master of everything school related -- and until this past week I would have said that was true. But, then an old affliction came out of the closet and bit me in the rear end. What is this disorder to which I refer? The answer is Midterm Produced Electronic Sports Based Attention Deficit Disorder (MPESBADD). In layman's terms, this affliction is known as "I can't do my midterms because I'm too busy giving in to my desire to play miniature golf and fantasy basketball on my computer, and Madden football on my housemate's Playstation." However, it's not the ADD part of my affliction that has doctors dumbfounded -- medical professionals have Ritalin for ADD. No, it's the cyclical nature of the MPESB portion of the disorder, the fact that it only rears its ugly face in March during midterms, which has doctors baffled. Here are my symptoms. Don't be alarmed if many of them sound familiar. You may know somebody with this terrible disease. Hell, you may even have it yourself. Now strap on your seat belts while I take you on the wild ride that is MPESBADD. In October, I agreed to sign up for a fantasy basketball team with some friends. I thought it would be a great opportunity to keep in shape for the fantasy baseball season --but, it turns out that fantasy basketball is just plain boring. So from mid-November until just three days ago I didn't check my fantasy team. Then on the night where I realized that I had to read 500 pages and write a paper for one class, write a short story for another class, do all 300 pages of reading and a take home exam for another class, and that I had an English paper due the next day for my fourth class -- lo and behold I decided to check my fantasy team. To be completely honest, it took me about 45 minutes to log into my Yahoo fantasy account because it had been so long that I had actually forgotten my password. But I refused to be denied. After a hard fought battle with Yahoo's password protection system, I managed to access my team. Much to my pleasure, I discovered that I was in fifth place in the league (out of 12 teams), despite not having touched my team in approximately four months. So immediately I set the goal of winning the championship -- with 20 games left in the NBA season, and Kobe Bryant on my team, I figured that anything was possible -- and then I started wheeling and dealing. I studied my starting lineup for approximately 30 minutes and then released two of my starters, Chucky Atkins and Todd MacCuloch, who are currently on the injured list. I replaced them with Richard Hamilton and Nene Hilario. Subsequently, I proceeded to propose trades to seven of the 12 other people in my league. After sending out the trade proposals, it would have been a good time to start doing some school work, right? Wrong. Instead I went into the kitchen and cracked a celebratory beer -- "To the championship," I said, before tossing it back. Suddenly I remembered that my seven-to-eight-page English paper was due the next day, it was already 11 p.m. and I only had two pages written. So still buzzing from the celebratory beer that I had just chugged (yes, I'm a light weight), I settled down to write. I got through approximately 3/4 of a page before I got the sudden urge to play Madden, a game that I love, but hardly ever have the time to play. With at least one assignment due in each of my four classes over the next week, I suddenly had time. I went into Matt's room where I found him and CJ in their usual 12 a.m. position, sprawled out watching King of the Hill. "Turn this crap off," I said. "Let's get a game." "Nah, dude, we're busy," they replied in unison. "Come on, I just need a little Madden break, I've been working for hours (alright, 45 minutes max). Just come on, I really need to get a game NOW," I yelled. "Dude, you're obsessed. Cool out," CJ responded, before he closed the door in my face. Whatever. After I sulked for 20 minutes because they wouldn't stop watching TV and let me play Madden, I concluded that the run-in with my roommates was all for the best because I had (and still have) an ungodly amount of work to start, never mind finish. So I went back to my computer, where I proceeded to finish up the last 1/4 of a page which I had started before the whole not-being-allowed-to-play-Madden incident. Suddenly, 1 a.m. struck and I still needed five more pages in my English paper. Perfect time to get serious, right? Wrong. Perfect time to play golf. I ran into the kitchen and found a rag and then hustled back to my room to start polishing my golf clubs. This decision to polish my clubs was foolish for a number of reasons. First, there was snow outside. Second, it was dark outside. Third, I have golf clubs, but I don't know how to play golf. After the stupidity of what I was doing hit me, I decided to go play 18 holes anyway. I headed back to my computer and typed in the web address for my favorite golf course,www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~pyang/flash/miniputt.swf, which, not surprisingly, I had not frequented since the same time last year. Sure it was mini golf, so I only got the opportunity to work on my short game, and yes it was on the computer, but after 18 holes I had worked up a disgusting sweat and my stomach began to cry out for food. I rushed back into the kitchen and devoured a Power Bar and washed it down with a bottle of Gatorade, which I only keep around the house during midterms season. Then it was back to my computer for another round. The course is a par 48 and in the first round I shot an awe inspiring 32, but then I got sloppy in the second round and shot a nine on the par two 14th hole. The nine really ended up hurting me and I finished the second 18 with a disappointing 38. In retrospect, I should probably have showered, finished up my English paper, and then maybe even started my other work. But, at 4:30 a.m. after a long evening of sports and one page of writing, I was sweaty, tired and defeated. I went to bed with the hope that the next day would be easier, and that finally -- after four years of searching -- I would finally do what the doctors haven't done -- discover a cure for MPESBADD. When I finally wrapped up my English paper at 11:50 a.m. the next day (it was due at noon), I ran to turn it in. Unfortunately, when I returned to my house, instead of continuing to be productive, I went back to golfing.


The Setonian
News

Romney's budget cuts affect our waters too

Governor Mitt Romney's budget cuts for this fiscal year have been a hot issue in the local news. The negative affects of his cuts in state employee health insurance and local campus funding, upon which most of the publicity has been focusing, have raised much public concern. There has been, however, a lack of attention shed on the detrimental impacts of Romney's budget cuts on our waters -- a serious problem that affects us all. Due to the reorganization of state programs to accommodate the budget cuts, an award-winning environmental program -- the Massachusetts Watershed Initiative (MWI), has been eliminated. The MWI, launched and run by Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs (EOEA), is a coalition of state and federal agencies, conservation organizations, businesses, municipal officials, and individuals that protects our natural resources and ecosystems on a watershed basis. In other words, it is a group of organizations that have agreed to approach the network of waterways, such as the streams, rivers, groundwater, etc that drain into a common body of water, bounded by the 27 designated areas of land, as one collective entity -- a watershed, rather than individual ecosystems. There are a total of 27 major watersheds in the state of Massachusetts. Each watershed provides its own unique situation, and therefore the restoration efforts for each have been similarly unique. For example, in the Buzzards Bay watershed, wetlands were constructed to control storm water runoff and protect the severely threatened shellfish population. As for the Cape Cod watershed, the problem of animal organic waste run-off was dealt with by constructing fences around the stream to restict animal access. In facilitating the recognition of each watershed's unqiue problems, the MWI program has improved the efficiency in resource allocation by directing our taxpayers' money to resolve the areas with the most critical needs. The MWI has also improved the coordination of government agencies and promoted the shared responsibility of watershed management. In a nutshell, it has effectively protected and restored our water resources. Since its implementation, the success of the MWI program has shown nothing but groundbreaking environmental results. Sadly, however, just as the program reached its pinnacle of success, it had to be abandoned due to Romeny's cuts in environmental budgets. Due to the termination of state funding for the program, critical monitoring projects and funding for science to better understand how the Mystic River watershed system works are in jeopardy of being stopped before all the data has been gathered. Many watershed team leaders have also been laid off and asked to return to their home agencies. So far, the program has been eliminated for less than a month, but the negative impacts have emerged at an exponential rate and are evidenced by the surge in pollution in the Mystic River. I am most disappointed with Romney's justification for eliminating the MWI. He claims that since the program is so well-established and has achieved its goals, it should be able to stand on its own without state funding. This is ludicrous since a program can only maintain its effectiveness with funding and support. I am additionally disappointed because the MWI is a nationally recognized program that has triggered much interest from other states and has revolutionized the nation's environmental decision-making. It is a program that all people of Massachusetts should be proud of, yet Romney has eliminated it. For this reason, I would like to call upon all Tufts students who care about our waters, to please voice your disapproval towards the elimination of the Massachusetts Watershed Initiative. You can do this by writing a letter to Governor Romney and address it to: State House, Office of the Governor, Room 360, Boston, MA 02133. Alternately, you can fax to 617-727-9725. Marilyn Tang is a sophomore majoring in International Relations.



The Setonian
News

Students form initiative against intimidation

For the past three weeks there has been a movement on campus to establish a Students' Initiative Against Intimidation. The aim of the initiative, which is also the name of the students' group, is to create an anti-intimidation clause in the Tufts charter that applies to and is observed by all student groups. The group was co-founded by Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate representative Cho-Yau Ling and Debate Society Vice-President Aravinda Rao A recent intimidation incident at the University of Virginia (UVA) -- where Daisy Lundy, an African-American Student Council candidate, was attacked in front of her car in a school parking lot -- encouraged Ling and Rao to make a much more concerted effort to raise awareness at Tufts. The initiative is not yet formally recognized, but there are plans to apply for funding early next semester. "If you look at the number of bias incidences that occur and the things that are said in these incidences, you will eventually see that the Tufts community isn't as safe as people think it is," Ling said, although he was unwilling to give specific examples of intimidation. One of the main goals of the initiative is to raise awareness at Tufts among students and student groups. "As long as Tufts students take responsibility to rid these sorts of biases on campus, then we've taken the best and largest steps at making our campus free of intolerance of other's diversity," Ling said. The Tufts charter currently has an anti-discrimination clause, but no anti-intimidation clause. "As a Bias Intervention Team member and as a senator, I am shocked and horrified at the number of bias incidences that occur on campus," Ling said. Though they would not specifically define intimidation, both Ling and Rao agreed that intimidation is usually subtler, and that there should be a distinct line drawn between intimidation and discrimination. For example, threatening verbal abuse or offensive graffiti may not be easily detectable, and should be considered intimidation. The group has already drafted a basic outline of the clause, and there are plans to show the draft to senators and leaders of student organizations for approval. Once it has been discussed, the hope is that a contract to commit to the clause will be signed by representatives of all of the student organizations. Such a contract, Ling and Rao said, will bring issues of intimidation into the discussions of student groups and generally raise awareness of the issue. If any group breaks the clause, there may be some sort of enforcement. There are already several anti-intimidation organizations active on campus, such as bias intervention programs and the peer educators. Because the administration and faculty run these programs, the new initiative is the first entirely student-run anti-intimidation program to be attempted. This is another driving reason behind the establishment of the new organization, Ling and Rao said. According to them the administration's programs fail to reach the level at which intimidation incidents are occurring -- the level of the students. "The first step we have to take is to first reach out and get students and student organizations to deal with this problem on their own, and not let the administration do it for us," Ling said. The most startling aspect of the UVA incident, Rao said, is that UVA is a very liberal campus. This means, she said, that something similar could easily happen at Tufts. "If this could happen at UVA, why couldn't it happen at Tufts? Events like those of UVA can only be an alarm for other Universities to take action for their own community. The Students' Initiative Against Intimidation is just one of the many actions that must occur to make this campus safe and to ensure that incidences like that at UVA do not occur," Ling said. As a Hindu living in Saudi Arabia for 15 years, Rao has had personal experience with discrimination and intimidation. A safe atmosphere is very important, she said, and the way to achieve one is to build an organization that does not "talk down." The group needs to provide a common focus on intimidation instead of a handful of programs operating at once. "Pre-emptive measures need to be taken," Rao said.


The Setonian
News

Trade deadline looms for NHL

The trade deadline is today, and it looks like Toronto and Colorado are fighting to get the most players before midnight tonight. The Colorado Avalanche has picked up San Jose Sharks defenseman Bryan Marchment, who is one of the toughest and ugliest players in the league. Suspended more times than Robert Downey Jr.'s license, Marchment is a fierce playoff performer now playing for a team that at times has been said to have too much skill and not enough brawn. Marchment should get along well with Colorado coach Tony Granato, who was the ultimate tough guy himself. Who's next from San Jose to go? Supposedly, San Jose already agreed to trade Vincent Damphousse to the Avs, but the trade was hung up on the restricted free agent's salary when Colorado balked at his price. Also going in the San Jose fire sale is Sharks power forward Owen Nolan, who was traded to the Toronto Maple Leafs over the weekend. Nolan scored two goals in his first game for the Leafs against the Vancouver Canucks, already making the Ontario native a fan favorite. After that, well -- anyone. San Jose forward Teemu Selanne has a player's option on his contract for next year. However, if he signals that he is not interested in playing anymore for the Sharks, they will be forced to trade him, rather than lose him for nothing after the season. Selanne has said that he would like to stay in San Jose, but not if the team keeps trading away all its veteran players. Toronto, missing the Bryan Marchment trade, went after Carolina Hurricanes defenseman Glen Wesley as its second choice. And the Leafs and Avs are still looking for more. It's rumored that the Leafs are talking to the Edmonton Oilers about defenseman Janne Niinimaa and the Avs's name has been attached to nearly every good player in the league. But do not forget about the other playoff contenders. As the deadline approaches, the flurry of trades is rising. The Western Conference leading Dallas Stars have picked up Buffalo Sabres forward Stu Barnes, Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Lyle Odelein, and are believed to be getting the Montreal Canadiens' Doug Gilmour. Dallas is making sure that it has all its bases covered before the playoffs with these trades. With Barnes, the team has insurance in case Bill Guerin doesn't come back. Odelein will add to the team's blueline depth, and Doug Gilmour, despite his age, is the kind of clutch playoff performer and leader that any team could use. In the meantime, the Eastern Conference leaders are trying hard to not get left behind. Despite the team's recent bankruptcy, the Ottawa Senators traded for rugged winger Rob Ray from the Sabres, considered by many Buffalo fans to be the heart and soul of the team. Buffalo is also looking to offload the rest of its roster. Center Chris Gratton is rumored to have already been traded, and defenseman Alex Zhitnik is next in line. All of these trades show that teams like Toronto, Colorado and Dallas are serious about making runs at the Stanley Cup this year. None of the names traded so far are of the superstar variety, but with the grind of the NHL playoffs, depth on the roster can count for a lot more. Notably absent from most of the bigger trade rumors are the Philadelphia Flyers, the New Jersey Devils and the St. Louis Blues. That the Flyers and the Blues not getting in on the action is definitely strange, as none has the kind of roster right now that would be able to take the team to the Finals. As for the Devils, they may be looking to trade young forward Scott Gomez, but look for them to go with what they got, and to be very difficult to beat. Sign of the week that you need to get better accountants Washington Capitals winger Jaromir Jagr was charged over $3 million in back taxes by the IRS last week, right when his team sits only two points up on the Tampa Bay Lightning for the South East division's lead. Washington fans are crossing their fingers that this won't distract the superstar forward, since winning the division would allow the Capitals to be seeded third in the conference instead of seventh or eighth.


The Setonian
News

With Great Power

It's been said that there are only two things someone could find endlessly interesting. The first is another person. The second is a real good story. We can enter the same story again and again when its themes are universal. A great story will hold up a mirror to ourselves and our time -- showing us what we share with men and women of all times. There has been much talk presently over former President Bush and current President Bush and the tremendous conflict that approaches for our nation. Perhaps it'd be wise to step back from the daily headlines and consider those universal themes of fatherhood and power. The two are not unrelated, and we might see this more clearly through one of my favorite stories: last summer's movie, Spiderman. In our story, Norman Osborn is a father who hardly sees his son. He's the CEO and the brains behind OsCorps, a defense-contracted engineering company. Norman's 17-year-old son, Harry, having failed to live up to his father's standard of success, is a real disappointment. Norman turns away from his work only for the time it takes to buy Harry something. Harry has no special significance in his father's eyes, but receives equal treatment _ as a pawn. Norman finds Harry's friend Peter to be far more interesting. Peter Parker, boy genius and class nerd, shows the kind of technical prowess that Norman is more than willing to exploit. Norman Osborn never neglects an opportunity to dismiss his own son in favor of Peter. Peter Parker has no father. He does have an uncle. Uncle Ben, both in his character and relationship with Peter, is the antithesis of Osborn. Ben believes in honesty and good, solid work. He lives modestly and loves his wife, Mae, more than himself. And it is quite clear that he loves Peter for who Peter is, not what he can do. When Peter fails to meet his uncle for the house-painting job he promised to help with, Peter does not face a raging lecture when he comes home late that night. Instead he finds a prepared plate of dinner in the fridge. Ben's sweet note attached exudes the kind of love that chides misbehavior but proves a constant willingness to forgive. Ben embodies that grace that any awkward boy needs to be loved into the man he ought to be. Norman Osborn and Peter Parker. What happens when great power enters both these lives? Osborn grabs power for himself. In a desperate attempt to save the company he's made his life, Osborn tests an experimental body armor on himself. He is given great strength and formidable technological power. His own power begins to seduce him immediately. At first it pleads and promises. If only he would give it free reign, Osborn argues with himself, his power could fulfill his every desire. So Osborn accepts the mask of the Green Goblin, killing anyone who would stand in his way. Before long, the Goblin mask is not persuading Osborn, it is commanding him. The power of the Goblin overshadows Osborn, and the mask becomes the person. Peter does not avoid having problems with power. Yet Peter suffers not from using power, but from not using it. Peter's power is thrust upon him. He is bitten by a radioactive spider that endows him with superhuman strength and agility and the ability to walk up walls. Peter too, seeks his own desire, and uses his power at amateur wrestling, aiming to buy himself a car. When he is stilted by his bookie, Peter stilts him in return by not stopping a looter he could have easily caught. In Peter's eyes, this was simply not his problem. This inaction would prove fatal, not for Peter, but for Uncle Ben. Later the same night Peter finds Ben the victim of a mugger _ the very same robber he had let go. Peter realizes that Ben had been right with that old fatherly wisdom: 'with great power comes great responsibility.' Peter becomes Spiderman, ready to make the problems of others his own. Osborn and Parker's decisions soon bring each other into conflict. In one of the key scenes of the story, the impact of the fatherhood in both lives shows its greatest effects. The Goblin makes Spiderman an offer: "Why do we fight," he says. "You and I are exceptional people. The teeming masses out there exist to prop us up. Reject those ungrateful weaklings and join me, and we will rule together." People are still mere pawns to the Goblin; if his own son was merely a means to an end, how much more disposable are the citizens around him. To the Goblin, it is the right of the strong to rule the weak. How does Spiderman respond? His reply is as powerful as it is simple. It is 'naive' in the eyes of many. It is something Uncle Ben would say: 'No. That wouldn't be right.' Peter knows there is a right and a wrong in this world. Though he is strong, he would rather become weak so that the weak might be strong. Peter's convictions do not save him from more trouble; they actually cause more of it. The Goblin, enraged, wages a war on Peter's loved ones, bringing the two of them to a climatic final scene. The two are alone, and the Goblin is near defeat when he suddenly pears to change, appealing to the bond he had with Peter as Osborn, the desire to be 'the father you never had.' Power has so corrupted Osborn's being that he's not above lying and deceiving his enemy over the most precious of human longings: for a father's love. Peter sees through the deception because he knows what a real father's love is, and is confident in the father Uncle Ben was to him. The Goblin's death-trap, meant for Spiderman, is sprung on himself, and in dying he gasps a shameful, 'Don't tell Harry.' Corruption comes full circle as Osborn's tool of power, having become his Master, becomes his own destruction. What can this story tell us about today? It's much more fun for the reader to think about that on their own. But if I had the ear of President Bush and his administration, I might highlight a few things: The lesson is clear that unchecked power is sure to corrupt; no man or woman is free from its lure. Yet we also see that wrongdoing will not go away by being ignored. Someone's problem could be anyone's problem. "With great power comes great responsibility." There is no hint of trite or irony when Uncle Ben says this. It is not a boast. It is not meant to be an arrogant swagger, justifying an unrestrained 'calling' to remake the world. It is also not an excuse. It is not meant as a sneer to intimidate into inaction or frighten into complacency. It is a sobering call for humility and for courage, and it means what it says. For what it is worth, in our situation a rough family comparison in the application of this truth might be illuminating. Our 41st President, in his recent speech, spoke of the consistent impression he made on his children of the value of self-sacrifice and service to the public. President Saddam Hussein has instructed his sons on how to build lavish palaces for themselves, enforce a secret police, and kill the opposition. George H.W. Bush made every possible effort to help his sons into the political life, and then let them go to lead their own lives. Hussein's favor towards son Udai as his heir (to a 'republican' Presidency) began to fade when Udai was partially paralyzed. Positions that could have been Udai's went to younger brother Qusai. Udai, not happy with such limited power, appeared to be enough of a potential 'problem' that many in the Mid-East in the summer of 2001 wondered if Hussein would 'solve' Udai the way he had other 'family problems' _ with a bullet ("The Republic of Kings," Sahar Kassaimah). George H.W. Bush's happiest day of his life came long after his presidency, the night when both his sons became governors. Who is more likely to know, at least, that justice is not the rule of the stronger? I pray it is our President.


The Setonian
News

BEATS Bangs Everything at Oxfam

When freshmen Stephen Leichman and Jonathon Gais came up with the idea of BEATS, or Bangin' Everything at Tufts, they had no idea it would become so popular so quickly. The band performed for the second time this year on Friday at a jam-packed Oxfam Midnight Caf?©, and their 45-minute routine left the audience in awe. "I'm actually so happy and completely blown away at the same time at our increasing popularity," Leichman said. "I feel we're at a point now where about half the campus population knows us and half doesn't, which is awesome." Gais and Leichman modeled BEATS around groups like Stomp and Blue Man Group, basically combining "entrancing beats and rhythms with the added coolness of a visual aid leaving you watching, jaw on the ground," Leichman said. The group worked on five distinct beats during practice, all of which they played off of in some form during the show. "The first beat we came up with was more of a multi-layered jungle beat," freshman Vijay Nathan said. "We then created a Latin-sounding beat. We also had a beat that emulated something that was a cover of a Safri Duo song, and then we had our hip-hop beat, and we finished with the jugs." The band started its routine with impromptu free styling, creating intricate rhythms by banging drumsticks, spoons, and forks on tables, dining hall trays, bowls, trash cans, mugs and cups. After dazzling the crowd with solos and fast-paced, electrifying beats, the performance became more interactive, with band members taking volunteers from the crowd to perform on stage. The drummers established a steady hip-hop beat, and the volunteers got up in front of the crowd and started rapping anything they could think of. "[The rapping segment] was definitely one of the highlights of the show," freshman Anjuli Singh said. "It was extremely entertaining to see my friends get up on stage on the spot and freestyle rap, because it's not something I get to see everyday." The group took its steady hip-hop beat from the previous segment and transitioned to their third segment, which Nathan called "more of an upbeat, funky version of the base hip-hop beat." Two performers held down the base hip hop beat while the other three drummers played rhythms that played off of each other like a conversation. Each of the three performed solo, and then gave the other two a chance to respond. Meanwhile, the two base players worked to get the crowd involved, screaming and clapping to the soloist's beats. But it was the final segment of the show that really left the crowd jaw-dropped, begging for more. "Every time we have practice, people bring in objects that they think would sound good," Nathan said. "One day, someone brought in two water jugs, and the 'water jug routine' was born." The segment based around two, one gallon water jugs that Nathan started off holding, with his back to the audience. Sophomore Shaharris "Shon" Beh started a slow, and Leichman and classmate Jordan DeLiso joined in. After about 25 seconds of slow drumming, Beh kicked Nathan in the leg, causing him to curl over with his back away from the audience. As he came up, he turned around, screamed, and held the jugs above his head. With the crowd yelling and clapping, Beh, DeLiso and Leichman dove into a fast beat mixed with what Nathan called "battling solos." Beh would solo for one or two measures, and then Leichman and DeLiso would each respond with a similar but unique solo of his own, as if arguing. On DeLiso's last beat, after about 40 measures of arguing, the room went black and the crowd erupted. "I thought the jugs section was... unique," freshman Amanvir Chahal said. "The drummers made it fun to watch on top of playing an awesome beat. "That pretty much summed up the whole performance. I was enthralled by the actual beats, but I was also extremely entertained just watching them perform." If you have any questions about BEATS or are interested in auditioning for the group, e-mail Steve or Jonathon at tuftsbeats@yahoo.com.


The Setonian
News

Georgia pulls out of SEC and NCAA tournaments

The end of the college basketball season can be a very nervous time for teams on the "bubble" of making the big dance, or for teams just worried about getting a high seed. Every team believes it is worthy of a bid, but there are always a few teams left on the doorstep come Selection Sunday. With that day looming in less than a week, teams had this past weekend to make one final statement before conference tournaments begin. While many teams were fighting for their postseason lives, there were a number of match ups of potential highly seeded teams that will greatly impact the NCAA field. It has been quite a tough week for the Georgia Bulldogs. The Tony Cole scandal has been a distraction as the Bulldogs try to keep pace behind the top teams in the SEC. Cole, a disgruntled former Georgia player, accused assistant coach Jim Harrick Jr. of paying off bills, doing schoolwork, and teaching a sham class on coaching. Harrick Jr. was fired on March 5 after being suspended indefinitely a few days prior. A day earlier, Jim Harrick Sr., the Bulldog's head coach, defiantly predicted his son would be cleared and nothing more than minor violations would be uncovered. At this point, there are more and more allegations being linked to Harrick Sr. Even amidst the controversy, Georgia has been able to piece together a tournament resume worthy of a high seed. However, yesterday, school officials decided not to participate in the SEC or NCAA tournaments, and as a result of the scandal, both Harrick Sr. and Harrick Jr. have been dismissed from their coaching responsibilities at the University of Georgia. Despite these off court troubles, Georgia managed to send a blow to the Florida Gators last week, squeezing past the Gators, 82-81. After trailing late in the second half, Florida's Matt Bonner drove into the lane to hit a basket that put the Gators back on top, 81-80, with 23 seconds left. Seconds later, Georgia's Jarvis Hayes banked in a 12-footer giving the Bulldogs the win and some much needed relief from a week filled with controversy. Florida (3 AP/ 3 ESPN) had a chance at a final shot, but Matt Walsh slipped trying to penetrate and David Lee could not get the ball off before the buzzer. The Gators were tested in another marquee matchup last week in their quest to sure up a number one seed. After the loss to Georgia, Florida played the Kentucky Wildcats at home in a battle of the number two and three teams in the nation. The Wildcats won the battle 69-67 to finish the season perfect in the SEC at 16-0. The last time Kentucky ran the table in the conference was in 1996, a year in which they also won the national championship under Rick Pitino. In a matchup of two of the top teams in the Big 12, the Texas Longhorns spoiled the Oklahoma Sooners' senior day with a 76-71 victory in Norman. Texas trailed 42-34 at halftime but was able to draw even with the Sooners because of the leadership of sophomore All-American T.J. Ford. The Texas point guard, hailed by Dick Vitale as "the Roy Jones of college basketball," led the Longhorns with 18 points and 10 assists. Texas also ended Oklahoma's 37 game home winning streak and most likely locked up a number one seed with its second win of the season over the Sooners. The postseason fate of many teams is still up in the air. On Saturday, the Alabama Crimson Tide lost to the LSU Tigers 66-62, landing the Tide at 7-9 in the SEC. This is a lowly position for a team that was at one time ranked number first in national polls. On the same day, the Seton Hall Pirates lost to the Providence Friars 64-61 in overtime. The Oregon Ducks were another team that was in need of a quality win to boost their standing with the tournament selection committee. This weekend they faced the number one Arizona Wildcats. All-American Jason Gardner's 27 points lead Arizona to an 88-80 victory over a lowly Oregon team that was ranked as highly as fifth in early December. This is a crushing blow to the tournament resume of this Pac-10 hopeful. While all three teams still have a good chance of getting bids to the big dance, they have severely damaged their resumes with late season losses. In the battle for the first ticket to the Dance, the UNC Asheville Bulldogs (13-16) defeated the Radford Highlanders (10-19) 85-71 to win the Big South Conference Final. Both teams had losing records, but at this point in the season, your regular season record counts for nothing if you can get into March Madness.


The Setonian
News

Senators alone are not at fault

Adam Pulver's critical Viewpoint ("Senate needs to work on reputation and student outreach," 2/19/03) a couple of weeks ago about the TCU Senate places too much of a burden on the senators to reach out to the student body. Both students and senators need to make an effort to improve student-Senate relations; it will not work if only one side is making an attempt. I would like to address this important issue as a leader of a student organization that strives to inspire young people to pursue careers in political service and change the face of politics, United Leaders. If students and senators can improve their relations and contribute to the creation of an actively engaged community, Jumbos can apply those lessons to the real world once their time on the Hill has expired. Two things are essential in improving student-Senate relations: students need to show more of an interest in the Senate and senators need to pay more attention to students. Many students do not know who their senators are, never mind that a Senate office exists and that senators hold office hours. The blame for that lies with both students and senators. As students, instead of complaining to a roommate about the injustice of Tufts' phone and cable service, contacting your senators would be more useful because they can actually do something about it. Senators are students' advocates to the administration and know who to talk to and have access to them. However, students cannot complain to senators unless they know who they are. Senators should keep in regular contact with their constituencies. Who they are, what they do, and their contact information should be readily available. This is not shameless self-promotion _ it is necessary information for students to become more informed about the Senate. Campus publications such as the Daily play an important role in student-Senate relations. Instead of covering Senate quibbling and drama that results in turning students off to the Senate, the Daily should devote more attention to what the Senate is actually doing. Many senators are working on worthwhile projects. The Daily has done a good job in the last week reporting about projects that various senators are working on. The Daily should continue to keep students informed about Senate activities, reporting on its activities rather than it's in-fighting. A weekly column updating students on Senate activities would be a good start. In real world politics, many young people argue that they do not vote or bother to get involved because politicians do not listen to them or consider their interests. Politicians argue they do not pay attention to young people because they are apathetic. The same problem exists at Tufts between the students and the Senate, and with a little effort, both sides can end this vicious cycle. Students should vote, know who their senators are, and harass them with everything they dislike about Tufts so senators can strive to make Tufts a better place. Senators serve as advocates for students _ make them work for you! But before students can do that, senators need to reach out to them so they know who their senators are and why they are in the Senate. The Senate is already heading in the right direction by reaching out to all the student organizations. It is now up to the students to meet them halfway. Allison Goldsberry is a senior majoring in political science and the President of United Leaders.


The Setonian
News

Campus literary magazine derecognized

The literary and art magazine Queen's Head and Artichoke was derecognized last week by the Tufts Community Union Judiciary (TCUJ) because of what it called "undue overlap" with other publications. Although it was only founded in about 1990, Queen's Head was Tufts' oldest literary publication and the magazine had a $10,000 annual budget. But during the 2001-2002 academic year, Queen's Head had fewer staff and suffered from internal problems, according to former editorial board member Dan Barry, a senior. The most recent issue was published in the fall of 2001. Queen's Head first experienced problems with recognition earlier this year when members sought re-recognition for the magazine, as is standard for all TCU-sponsored organizations. Members were told by the TCUJ that since a year had passed since the magazine's last publication, it would have to essentially apply for recognition as a new organization. But when the magazine applied for recognition as a new organization -- which would have provided it with a reduced budget of $1,000 -- it was denied recognition by the TCUJ. A successful appeal allowed the publication to operate under temporary recognition, which then expired on Feb. 27. Queen's Head will now receive no funding from the TCU. But the staff of the magazine is determined to put out an issue this semester "even if it means using a photocopy machine and pumping in dimes," said Barry. The publication also plans to appeal the decision made by the TCUJ to the Committee on Student Life (CSL), according to Meena Jagannath, the magazine's executive editor. In the meantime, she said, members are considering several different ways to adapt the publication. Barry said the publication must "clear up the distinction between Queen's Head and Artichoke and the other literary magazines on campus." One option would be to publish the magazine annually, to avoid detracting from the other literary publications. Funding through art grants and outside sources is also being considered. Queen's Head will also seek support from the editors of Optimus Prime and Outbreath. Although there has been some talk of a possible merger of the magazines, it appears that all three publications are more interested in remaining independent. "I think it's good to have as many outlets for art and literature as possible," said Allison Luhr, the managing editor of Outbreath. She also said Queen's Head may be the best known of the campus' literary magazines. "If someone were to ask 'what is the literary magazine on campus?' people would say Queen's Head." The relationship between Luhr's publication and Queen's Head has not always been so friendly. In 1999, Queen's Head and Artichoke filed a complaint with the TCUJ protesting the presence of artwork in Outbreath because it overlapped with the content of Queen's Head. After appealing the case to the CSL, Outbreath eventually prevailed. Today, the concerns surrounding overlap seemed to exist only within the TCUJ, according to Jagannath, who said there is "not really a fear of the other magazines, as far as I know, that we would step on their toes." Jagannath said that lack of support from the TCUJ might be due to financial concerns, but that "the funding argument is secondary." "In appealing the issue we need to address overlap," she said. Barry also pointed out that Outbreath or OptimusPrime also had problems gaining recognition until they appealed to the CSL. A substantial number of students were said to have expressed interest at the Queen's Head recruitment meeting at the beginning of the year, and seniors planned to recruit many new members to help resurrect the magazine. A sweeping number of submissions coincided with the expiration of Queen's Head's temporary recognition on Feb 27. According to Barry, the magazine received between 60 and 70 poems, 11 prose compositions, and about 40 pieces of artwork.


The Setonian
News

Things I hate about television

Its payback time. Payback time for all the trashy entertainment, like Joe Millionaire, to which I have been subjected to this semester. For all the enjoyment I get out of watching television, there are still many things that cause me to spew invectives at the screen. So here they are_ five things I hate about TV. 1. Carrot Top Is there any other name in today's culture that evokes more fear and agony than Carrot Top? He has become the new spokesperson for 1-800-CALL-ATT, replacing David Arquette as the world's most annoying person. Carrot Top is the stupidest, loudest, and tackiest personality on television today, and that's including Chris Matthews. The saddest thing is that Carrot Top makes his living as a comedian. Of course the AT&T's marketing plan has worked, seeing how I remembered that I can "dial down the center" with 1-800-CALL-ATT and save money on my collect calls. But is it worth it to torture the television-watching public? Oh the humanity! 2. Around the Horn Max Kellerman, the host of the excruciatingly bad ESPN program, comes in a close second in the "Stupidest, Loudest, and Tackiest" competition. "Around the Horn" is the latest "talking head" show produced by ESPN Original Entertainment and it stinks to high heaven. Kellerman got his break as a boxing announcer, so his loud and abrasive personality is perfect for covering those events. But his nasal New York accent and pompous bravado remind us more of our hatred of the Yankees then wanting to listen to what this brainless doofus thinks. The format of Around the Horn is even more idiotic. Kellerman gives "points" to each of the four sports columnists from Los Angeles, Boston, Dallas, Denver, or Chicago based on their responses to his question. Then the columnists with the fewest points are eliminated in three rounds. The result is a cacophony of voices shouting over each other trying to gain points. Even worse, the same columnists win and lose every day. Have you ever seen Woody Paige win? Or Bob Ryan lose? It's even more predictable than an episode of "Boston Public." 3. Tufts Movie Channel These are the movies currently being offered on Channel 40, the Tufts Movie Channel: Taxi Driver, Clockwork Orange, Superman, The Country Bears, and Stuart Little 2. If there was ever a more eclectic selection of movies, I'd like to see one. While the first three are all interesting movies, what are two children's movies doing on a college television station? This isn't an isolated event either. Last semester, during the holiday season, the channel aired A Muppets Christmas Carol. Why the lack of quality movies? Last semester, Tufts Movie Channel aired big hits like Pearl Harbor and The Sum of All Fears. Even Men in Black II had its worthwhile moments, as opposed to TheCountry Bears, which is so shamelessly based on a Disneyland show that it's revolting. I ask for reforms to the system. TV junkies like me demand it. 4. NCAA on MTV? Yes, it is looking more and more like this travesty will occur. If the Bush administration decides to wage war on Iraq, CBS will offer continual coverage of those events instead of airing March Madness, as they have done for years. The top 65 NCAA men's basketball teams will have to duke it out on the network that spawned reality TV and unleashed Carson Daly on the world. Instead of Jim Nantz and Billy Packer, are we going to have John Mayer and Billy Idol doing the play by play? What about Nelly's "Hot in Herre" taking the place of the memorable theme song played every year. This should be reason enough to protest the war on Iraq. Save March Madness! 5. The Death of the Sitcom The rise of reality television is a result of many factors, ranging from the economic downturn to lack of original ideas. New situational comedies were failing, and the networks needed fresh ideas to compensate for the lost ad revenues. Therefore, reality television came out of the decline of the sitcom, and it's gotten worse ever since. Why has there been no great new comedy since "Will & Grace"? Great dramas like "Alias" and "CSI: Crime Scene Investigators" have become established mainstays on network television, but there is no room for comedy. NBC probably stuck with the wretched "Good Morning Miami" because they had no other sitcom to take up space. "Frasier" and "Friends" have long since passed their prime, and "Everybody Loves Raymond" has become repetitive. It has gotten so bad, that My Big Fat Greek Wedding, the indie movie darling of 2002, has been turned into a CBS sitcom, except this time the old jokes fall flat.


The Setonian
News

Garnett's effort negated in Timberwolves' OT loss

The Sacramento Kings (45-19) squared off against the Minnesota Timberwolves (41-24) last Wednesday night. Okay, so we know that Kevin Garnett can pretty much do it all -- in the month of February he led the Wolves to a 12-1 record with averages of 27.7 ppg, 13.9 rpg, 5.8 apg, and 57 percent shooting from the field. However, critics have always complained that Garnett is too unselfish in crunch time, often not receiving (or demanding) the ball with the game on the line. With the score deadlocked at 83 with 30 seconds left in the game, the ball passed through the hands of Troy Hudson and Wally Szczerbiak before Kendall Gill bricked a 21-foot jumper. KG never even touched it. Then, with time running down in regulation and the score still tied, the Kings' Mike Bibby lost control of the ball, which was snatched up by Hudson. With the seconds winding down, Hudson chose to heave up a 30-footer rather than try to hit Garnett streaking towards the hoop. As the buzzer sounded and Hudson's shot came up well short, Garnett stood frozen under the hoop with his arms still out to receive a pass that never came. He smiled, patted his teammate on the head, and trotted back to the timeout to prepare for overtime. Perhaps this is the moment when Garnett needs to show some anger, get in his teammates' faces, and bark "Gimme the damn ball next time!" The Kings went on to win 96-95 in OT. Garnett had 27 points and 24 rebounds, all for nothing. On Thursday, the Philadelphia 76ers (36-26) absolutely shredded the Portland Trailblazers (40-22) in Portland, 88-60. Not only was Allen Iverson sensational with 36 points, but the Sixers played defense reminiscent of the 2001 season when they stormed into the NBA Finals. They were fronting the post, harassing the ballhandlers, double teaming frenetically, diving onto the floor, crashing the boards, and cutting off the passing lanes in one of the most inspired defensive performances this season. On the floor for the Sixers were the 5'11" Iverson, 6'3" Eric Snow, 6'5" Aaron McKie, 6'10" Derrick Coleman, and 6'9" Brian Skinner, vs. the Blazers' 6'8" Scottie Pippen, 6'4" Derek Anderson, 6'5" Bonzi Wells, 6'11" Rasheed Wallace, and 7'3" Arvydas Sabonis. These matchups gave Portland a notable height advantage, but the Blazers simply could not score. The team put zero points on the board during a seven minute stretch in the third quarter, scored just 28 second-half points, and shot only 36 percent for the game. The Sixers won the next night at Seattle, as Iverson went off for 40, and they have now won 11 of 13 since the All-Star break, moving them only three games out of first place in the East, as of yesterday afternoon. But while the Sixers are zooming, the rest of the best in the East are sinking, and sinking fast. The Detroit Pistons (39-23) recently lost seven games in a row, but retained their precarious hold on first place due to February swoons by the Indiana Pacers (38-25) and New Jersey Nets (39-25). Indiana has lost nine of ten games, while the Nets are mired in a 2-7 slump themselves. The shoddy play of the upper echelon teams in the Eastern Conference has brought back into the focus the East vs. West debate, but unlike Tupac vs. Biggie, the West has a clear advantage here. Only three playoff-bound teams from the east (Philly, the Boston Celtics (36-27), and the New Orleans Hornets (36-28)) have winning records against the Western Conference, while the top ten teams in the West all have plus .500 records against its lesser brothers to the east.


The Setonian
News

Escaped slave tells his story

Escaped Sudanese slave Francis Bok spoke last Wednesday at Tufts about his experience in bondage and what students can do to relieve the problem of modern-day slavery. Bok was kidnapped at the age of seven while on a routine trip to the market in his hometown. Arab military forces attacked the market, killing many of the people there and kidnapping others. Bok was then enslaved from 1986 until 1996. Beaten every morning and made to sleep with animals, Bok decided by age 17 that he would rather risk his life to escape than continue his life as a slave. His first two attempts to escape failed, and he was punished by having his hands and feet tied up for ten days. Finally, a successful escape brought him to Egypt, where he sought help at the United Nations Refugee Office in Cairo before flying to the United States. The speech and subsequent discussion -- sponsored by the International Club -- were introduced and moderated by Tufts alumnus Tommy Calvert (LA '02), who is the Chief of External Operations for the American Anti-Slavery Group. Calvert began the program by showing a Dateline episode titled "Modern Day Slavery," which detailed events surrounding Sudan's current government situation. More specifically, the show detailed the religious civil war between the southern Christians and northern Muslims in Sudan, and how the conflict is being handled by the Sudanese government. According to Calvert, 27 million people are enslaved worldwide today -- more than at any other time in history. Both Calvert and Bok stressed that the slavery in Sudan today has nothing to do with race or religion. "Freedom is on the line... slavery is universal... [and] modern-day slavery has nothing to do with race," Calvert said. The audience consisted of students, an abolitionist worker from Boston, and a few local residents. Calvert detailed how he got involved with the abolitionist movement. Being able to work with Bok, Calvert said, has been "a calling from God." Bok encouraged the audience to become more educated on the issue. "Think about what you can do because we all can make a difference," he said. "I do not like talking about this story, but I think it is important to share it with you. If we all work together we can bring an end to this slavery." Bok helped launch the website www.iabolish.com, and he hopes to one day be a student at Tufts. Calvert showed video clips and pictures of Sudanese slaves -- including one of an 11-year-old boy whose nose was amputated by his master. In order to stay motivated for his job, Calvert said, he asks himself, "If I were enslaved, wouldn't I want someone to set me free?" Calvert's religious beliefs also contribute to his motivation. "We can choose to answer the call when freedom calls," he said. Calvert further stated that slavery is a continuing problem in Sudan, and that the government is actually encouraging such acts under Arab leadership. Bok was asked about the letter he wrote to singer Britney Spears about her song "I'm A Slave 4 U." In the letter, Bok explained his experience to Spears out of concern that her song was belittling slavery in general. "I didn't know her until I watched MTV," he said. "I asked myself, what did she mean? I just wanted to let her know that I was a slave and I wanted to reach out to her to get involved."


The Setonian
News

Delta Upsilon closed temporarily

Delta Upsilon (DU) was temporarily closed Friday pending investigation by the Dean of Students Office for hazing, adding to a growing list of Greek chapters that are being investigated by the University. The house was closed after Health Services reported to the Dean of Students office that DU pledges had come to them with health problems related to drinking soy sauce. Health Services did not release any names, but Dean of Students Bruce Reitman said that Health Services felt that the University should be aware of the issue. A DU pledge also recently visited the hospital, but Reitman said that that is not relevant to the current DU investigation. The other two chapters closed in the past two weeks are the fraternity Zeta Psi and the sorority Alpha Phi. The administration says that the recent turn of events is a surprise, and it is still uncertain of what its plans will be for the future of the Greek system. There was a feeling that the situation was improving this year, Reitman said, until a Zeta Psi pledge was forced to go to the hospital after attending a party at the fraternity. Soon after, Medford Police placed two Alpha Phi pledges in protective custody, and two others were treated by Tufts Emergency Medical Services (TEMS). There is already talk that the administration is looking for ways to bring down the Greek system on campus, a feeling shared by many on the Tufts campus, especially those who are members of fraternities or sororities. But it is difficult to judge just what the Greek system's leaders say on this matter since most chapters have instructed their members to not speak to the press. One fraternity member said that he feels the administration's goals are unclear to the point of being detrimental to Greek life. "There just needs to be a clearly articulated Greek policy," the fraternity member said. "If the administration is making decisions about how we're going to exist, then they need to talk to us." But the administration is not sure of where it wants Greek life on campus to go. "No one has sat down and talked [about recent events]. It's all too new," Reitman said. Reitman said that from the administration's perspective the Greek system appeared to be improving this year. Fewer calls were made to TUPD this year than previously, and fewer fraternity parties were shut down. Recent events, however, have caught the University off-guard. Reitman said that before the events of the last two weeks, he could have given a detailed response about the future of Greek Life on campus, but now he is not so sure. "I'm certainly getting both sides," from parents, administrators, faculty, and alumni, Reitman said and that he is trying to avoid under or overreacting to the issue. "I don't think I, as Dean of Students, want to overreact about the whole system because of what happened...There has to be a measured response to this." Asked whether that response would include the removal of the Greek system from Tufts campus, Reitman said that is not an issue yet. "It's not been spoken of at all," he said. "I think it will come up," if the investigations discover bad news. The University is still looking to fill the new position of Greek Life coordinator, and has had to expand the search several times to find qualified candidates. The trouble is that the position would require someone to act as an administrator and to also work with Greek leaders to "re-establish the values around which the chapters were formed, including philanthropy, community participation, academic excellence, and leadership," as stated on the University's human resources website. The combination is very difficult for most to perform successfully. The recent bad press about the Greek system has not helped in recruiting candidates either, Reitman said. In the meantime, Greek members are waiting for a clear response from the administration on what they are supposed to do next. "There are specific problems then there are specific solutions. Being told there are beer cans on frat row is not helpful," a fraternity member said. "I don't think just closing down houses indefinitely is a solution." The fate of the three chapters that are being investigated by the Dean of Students Office is still very much up in the air. The final decision on their fate rests with the Committee on Fraternities and Sororities (CFS), the Greek system's equivalent of the Committee of Student Life (CSL). The CFS consists of TUPD Captain Mark Keith, Student Activities Assistant Director Ed Cabellon, Public Safety Director David Slater, Community Relations Director Barbara Rubel, Reitman, Judicial Affairs Director Veronica Carter, Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senator David Baumwoll, Inter Greek Council President Jessica Grasso, Inter-Fraternity Council President Jason Weber, and Pan-Hellenic Council President Liz Kronick. The CFS will decide what the appropriate response should be to Zeta Psi, Alpha Phi and DU after the TUPD investigations are completed. In previous cases, chapters have had their recognition suspended for a year or more if found to contribute to hazing. Reitman was unwilling to say what the specific response might be for the individual chapters under investigation though. Chapters can also be placed on probation, which would prevent them from having "open" parties, but would still allow them to continue to operate and have guests in the house. As for what constitutes hazing, Reitman said that his own interpretation is not necessarily the same as that which is found in the Pachyderm. "You can't force, or encourage, or create any expectations that pledges should do something dangerous or demeaning," Reitman said. When asked if he would consider a drinking game which involved only pledges drinking, an allegation against Zeta Psi, as an act of hazing, Reitman said that, "if only the pledges are expected to do the drinking...yes, that's hazing."


The Setonian
News

Baseball team confident and ready to continue success

Despite chilly temperatures and late season storms adding to the already-thick blanket of snow on the field, spring is in the air for the Tufts baseball team. Coming off of a successful 2002 campaign, the Jumbos look to continue last year's winning ways with a slightly different look in the field. In 2002, the Jumbos won the NESCAC East division pennant and later the NESCAC crown. The team hosted the conference championships and won two games in the NCAA New England Regional Tournament. With a 27-10-1 overall record and a 10-1 league mark, the Jumbos were a force to be reckoned with in New England Div. III ball. However, graduation was hard on the Jumbos after their tremendous season. Star outfielder Dan Callahan was drafted by the Arizona Diamondbacks after setting school records in career hits, runs, and RBI. Fellow four year starter, first baseman Tim Ayres, and pitcher Steve Lapham also finished their careers last June. "They were significant losses," coach John Casey said. "But we're [still] fairly experienced. It's about kids stepping up and filling in." Filling the voids left by these starters will be important if the Jumbos are to repeat the success of last year. With six strong position players returning from 2002's starting lineup, the main holes will be the first base and outfield positions vacated by Callahan and Ayers. Senior Jon Herbert will move from second base to the outfield to replace Callahan. Sophomore John McBride will see much more varsity action at first than he did last year playing behind Ayers. "Herbert can chase it down in the outfield," Casey said. "Ayers was phenomenal at first, but McBride can do it." Senior tri-captain Evan Zupancic, who was an All-New England selection last season after setting Tufts' single season homerun record with 11, will play centerfield and hit third in the batting order. Three year starter, senior tri-captain and 2002 All New England honoree Brian Shapiro will hit clean-up and continue to anchor the shortstop position. Juniors Drew Blewett and Frank Gilberti are competing for the third outfield spot. Fellow third year Adam Kacamburas will begin his second season starting at third. Greg Hickey, another junior, will share catching duties with sophomore Bobby Kenny and possibly hit fifth or sixth in the order. Posting a .313 career average, Hickey will supply power to the middle of the order. Herbert will also be an important player in the offensive lineup. "Herbert is a pretty big key," Casey said. "We hope to get him to the top of the order." Sophomores Dave Bishop and Frank Dinucci along with junior Nick Palange will be competing for spots in the infield and the starting role at second base. "We're still looking to see who is going to play," Casey said. The Jumbos have four days remaining before they pack up for a spring break trip to Virginia and North Carolina. There they will play their first game of the season against Lynchburg College in Virginia on Friday and play ten games over the next eleven days against teams who have already been playing outside for weeks due to the more baseball-friendly climate of the south. "Our facilities are great," Casey said. "But it [will] be nice to the see the ball up in the air and play outside." The Jumbos come home for their first league game against Bates on Friday, March 28. They will play a three game series with the Bobcats that weekend culminating with a Saturday double header. Since beginning practices on February 15, the team has been preparing for what will be a short, but intense season. With 32 games in just over a month and a half, the Jumbos will have plenty of opportunities to work out any kinks in the lineup and strive for greatness similar to that seen in 2002. "We're in a tough league with pretty good teams," Casey said. "I just worry about us, it doesn't matter what they do. We'll just play them all and see what happens."


The Setonian
News

Vet school funding returned for this year

After several series of discussions with Governor Mitt Romney, President Bacow and other Tufts officials succeeded in restoring funds from the state of Massachusetts to the Tufts School of Veterinary Medicine during negotiations over the past week. Due to the Commonwealth's ongoing fiscal crisis, the Vet School had lost $3.6 million in funding that it was supposed to have received from the State of Massachusetts for 2003. Though it is unknown exactly when the Vet School will receive the money, Bacow hopes that the Executive Branch will release the funding soon. The University did not threaten legal action against the state in regard to the restoration of funding. "We have worked hard to get to this point through a number of discussions with legislative leaders, Governor Romney and his team," Bacow said in a March 7 press release. "As a result, I'm pleased to report that the Governor signed the supplementary budget that will restore the $3.6 million originally slated for 2003." Romney's office could not be reached for comment. Though the Vet School regained the money it had lost, the future is not so well defined, according to Bacow. "Unfortunately, as we heard this good news, we also learned that the Veterinary School was not funded in the Governor's fiscal year 2004 budget proposal," he said. "So we are continuing to work with the Massachusetts Legislature to restore funding for the Veterinary School in the fiscal year 2004 House and Senate budgets." In Fiscal Year 2001, the state supplied the Veterinary School with 15 percent of its funding, approximately $5.6 million dollars. The fiscal year 2002 appropriation of $3.6 million was only nine percent of funding. According to John McManus, the Associate Dean of Administration and Finance for the Vet School, Tufts uses the majority of its state appropriated funding for "unique workforce development needs; support of life science companies' research; providing locations for biotechnology firms to prosper; and providing over 400 veterinary hospitals with consultation and referral services." "The balance of our state appropriation is used for tuition stipends for Massachusetts residents attending our school," McManus said. "This year, half of our students were Massachusetts residents." Though the Commonwealth has provided for a 15 percent tuition subsidy for Massachusetts residents, further cuts in state funding would mean less money for tuition subsidies. According to Bacow, the Vet School has a reputation for being extremely cost-efficient and one of the most research productive schools of its kind in the nation. Yet it still must receive some state support in order to operate at a sufficient level. "I believe the legislature understood this message. This legislative leadership has always been supportive," Bacow said. Over the years, Bacow and previous administrative officials have worked to emphasize the importance of the Vet School and to educate both the State House and Senate about why it is worthy of state support as a private institution. While attending these meetings with the state legislature and members of the Administration, Bacow stressed the significance of the Vet School, particularly its meritorious reputation. "[The Vet School] is a key component of the state's research infrastructure that supports biomedical research and the biotech and pharmaceutical industries in the Commonwealth," Bacow said. The Vet School, located in North Grafton, MA, is the sole institution of higher learning for veterinary medicine in Massachusetts, where clinicians in its three hospitals are among the highest ranked in the world. Over 25,000 patients are treated each year. The Tufts' Foster Hospital for Small Animals has the nation's largest residency program in veterinary emergency and critical care. The Tufts Wildlife Clinic has been assigned by the US Fish and Wildlife Service as the official New England treatment center for rare and endangered species. Fully accredited by the American Veterinary Medical Association, the Vet School annually enrolls over 300 students (80 per class) in a four-year program that leads to the doctor of veterinary medicine degree (D.V.M.). It is also the only veterinary school in the world to offer graduate degrees (M.S.) in the field of human/animal relationships and related public policies.


The Setonian
News

A Class Act' tracks the life of Ed Kleban

The first notes of AClass Act are sung by the main character in the seats of a tiny, black theatre in the Boston Center for Arts. He jumps out and continues to dance and sing directly to the audience, the unluckiest of whom sit only four rows away. This is how the story of Ed Kleban (played by John Blackstone) begins. It does not open with the traditional dazzle that a more famous musical might use. There are no grand costumes, no elaborate dances, nor any pretentious celebrities which can make the musical experience feel like an awkward blind date everyone else said you'd enjoy. But compared to these expensive spectacles, A Class Act is a homemade candlelight dinner with an old friend. You laugh, become nostalgic, and maybe discover feelings you had forgotten about a long time ago. The musical tracks the life and career of Kleban, the neurotic lyricist of A Chorus Line, who won the Tony and the Pulitzer Prize for his work. The title is rooted in a musical-writing workshop Kleban was involved in. It was through this workshop that the co-librettist of A Class Act, Linda Kline, befriended Kleban and became his "significant other" during the last decade of his life. In the play, the workshop (or the class) gathers for Kleban's memorial. The spirit of Kleban drops by to listen to his friends' comments and is forced by their blunt reflections to evaluate his life. The Kleban character in the play has youthful and ambitious dreams of writing a Broadway musical. He experiences love affairs, and also struggles with his paranoia of failure. To tell the story, the cast sings the songs that the real Kleban wrote about the very same experiences. They sing about the anticipation they have for their workshops on "Fridays at Four," the date Kleban has "Beside the Fountain in the Garden of the Hospital," and how he realizes that what he had with his high school sweetheart was "The Next Best Thing to Love." Beautiful and true, the songs have an effect that is intimate and touching. There isn't a single false note, rhyme, or emotion in the entire work. Every syllable invites you onto the stage and into the affection Kleban had for music. Throughout the play, Kleban becomes increasingly frustrated with the lack of success he has as a composer. By the time he dies of cancer at age 48, none of his songs have been performed on Broadway. In his final will, Kleban states, "It is my wish that my friends will arrange for the songs to be performed, preferably in a large building, in a central part of town, in a dark room, as part of a play, with a lot of people listening, who have all paid a great deal to get in. But if my songs are sung for the love of them, I will probably be content." A Class Act thus becomes a kind of double love letter: the one Kline wrote to present Kleban's music, and the one Kleban sent to the audience. At times you feel as if the cast is not singing at you, but really just for you. It might make you remember the time you watched The Sound of Music, and secretly wished that it was you the blond Austrian boy was singing "Sweet Sixteen" to. Or it might make you discover that you actually do like musicals. But for sure, A Class Act will be refreshing experience and even the grumpiest and most cynical audience member will leave the theatre humming one of the tunes.


The Tufts Daily Crossword with an image of a crossword puzzle
The Print Edition
Tufts Daily front page