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Pancake breakfast tradition returns

An old Tufts tradition will be resurrected this spring, as the post-Naked Quad Run pancake breakfast will once again be offered on the first night of reading period. The event will be held on April 30 at the Campus Center Commons from 10 p.m. to midnight. The popular tradition was cancelled in 1998 - when this year's seniors were freshmen - because it had long been plagued by unruly behavior and food fights in the cafeterias. The Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate worked to organize the event the following year, but after a single pancake was thrown in Dewick-MacPhie Dining Hall, Director of Dining Services Patti Lee Klos banned the breakfast in subsequent years. But following efforts by members of the TCU government, Lee Klos agreed to bring it back. Tufts Community Union Judiciary (TCUJ) Vice-Chair Alison Clarke presented a resolution to the Senate on Feb. 3 asking members to "ensure the existence" of the pancake breakfast, with or without the cooperation of the administration. "Tufts has few traditions, and I did not want this one to disappear," she said. Clarke has worked with Lee Klos and Dean of Students Bruce Reitman over the past two months to organize the event. The Senate agreed last Thursday to co-sponsor the pancake breakfast, and the Office of Student Activities is considering having a jazz band perform during the event. Clarke has also asked the Alumni Council to help her involve alumni in the tradition. Many students who attended the breakfast in 1999 - then held in Dewick and Carmichael - are excited to hear of its return. But while students found the event enjoyable, some realized there were negative consequences to the rowdy behavior that often occurred. "I remember feeling very bad for the volunteers [alumni who had come to work at the event] and janitors that were going to have to stay late and clean up," alumnus Joe Ramsey (LA '99) said. "The problem was that people were so drunk that it didn't take long to get out of hand." Clarke has not yet discussed with the administration the possibility of misconduct at the event. "I hope the student body will not act in a way that causes this to be a necessary conversation," she said.


The Setonian
News

Home show proves to be good stomping ground for equestrian team

The equestrian team hosted and won the opening riding show of the spring season on Saturday, demonstrating its ability to balance two huge responsibilities: competing and running a show. "The team performed really well under a lot of pressure," senior co-captain Sarah Summers said. "With eight new members we had the additional challenge of coming together in order to put on a successful show. Then to top that off, we won it." The victory was instrumental in Tufts' attempt to pass Stonehill College in the seedings. Stonehill is currently the leader in Zone One, Region Four of the Intercollegiate Horse Show Association, but the Jumbos gained five points on them with this weekend's victory. The team is now trailing by only four points with three shows to go in the season. The strong performance also served to distance them from third-ranked Boston University. "We are on Stonehill's heels," Summers said. "We had a disappointing year last year, but this year we have a stronger riding core and we are poised to take the Region from them." In addition to a great team showing, there were also strong individual performances as four Tufts riders finished first in their division. Senior, co-captain Hally Phillips won both of her races, the open fences and the open flat. She also earned the reserved high-point rider for the show. In addition, Ralph Basset won intermediate fences and two freshmen, Jessica Angerson and Valerie Wood, won the walk-trot and the advanced walk-trot-canter respectively. "It has been really fun working with a motivational coach such as Charlotte McEnroe and a good team" Wood said of her first competition at Tufts. "The competition is fun between Stonehill and ourselves since the riders from both schools are so good." In the next few weeks the race for first in the region will intensify. Though individual riders are looking to gain the necessary points to make the Regionals show, only the top team from each of the four regions can compete in the Zones Show. Tufts' Region has ten teams from the New England area, but Stonehill is its only real competition for first place. From Zones, the top two teams go on to compete at Nationals. In looking down the road toward future showdowns with Stonehill College, Phillips realizes the importance of continued contributions from younger team members. "We have a lot of freshman and new riders this semester," Phillips said. "But their previous experiences and enthusiasm has pushed the older members to perform even better. Their addition will help us down the stretch to beat Stonehill and get into the Zones competition." The team competed in four shows between October, when the season began, and winter break. During the first two shows, Tufts and Boston University traded places atop the division, but in the last two meets of the season, Stonehill made a surge, passing both schools. Impressively, Stonehill finished the fall season with a perfect score at the show at Endicott College. During this time BU slid down and Tufts maintained pace with Stonehill. Now, with Stonehill leading by only four points, the Jumbos will look to come back from spring break and take back the Region lead. They will have their final three shows over the three consecutive weeks following break. Tufts no longer has to worry about hosting a show, which can be a distraction when trying to concentrate on the actual competition. The Jumbos look to take advantage of other teams hosting the events in order to pass Stonehill College. Stonehill will not have the luxury of focusing solely on the competition as it hosts two of the three remaining shows.


The Setonian
News

Trustees not to blame

We write to support Glen Roth's Viewpoint ("Taking aim at the wrong target," 2/14) regarding the closest re-enactment of the "showdown at the OK Corral" at Tufts since the 1997 April Fool's Day snowball fight on the President's Lawn. We are referring, of course, to last week's Trustee Luncheon in Dewick. Tufts will accept the best students, regardless of where they are from, what they look like, or with whom they sleep. Students who accept the honor of attending this University should realize that by doing so, they are accepting the responsibility of becoming members of the community. That responsibility extends beyond merely "exercising students' right to free speech," as Noris Chavarria advocates, to using their formidable collective intellect to direct your efforts where they will be most effective. In explaining what makes people really effective at achieving their goals, author Stephen Covey quotes a proverb about the difference between hacking wildly at the leaves of a tree and methodically chopping at the root. It is beyond doubt that some students present at last week's luncheon deliberately asked questions and made points in a way calculated to pressure University trustees and paint them into a corner. While that may have made a few individuals feel like real "activists" - standing up to "the Man" and not backing down - it surely was not an effective way to address the real problems that students profess to care about. We don't believe that anybody can rationally suggest that the trustees and the Administration don't care about diversity. They are philanthropists that have given not only their money, but who have volunteered their time and expertise to help this University grow. It's really kind of ridiculous to think that alienating them is going to make things happen faster. The trustees have always had, and will always have YOUR best interest in mind. That said, we don't believe that Ballou Hall controls the Tufts experience, the students do. We strongly believe that herein lies a great opportunity to strike at the root of diversity issues on campus. The bottom line is that you as students have more power to improve the "quality of the undergraduate experience" than the administration could ever have. It is your University. It is your community. The best things that the administration can do are ensure that we get the BEST professors and the BEST students and then stay out of the way. It is up to those professors and those students to create the BEST community that they can. We urge the community to find a better way to address diversity concerns than whining about the administration and going after the trustees. Make the undergraduate experience one that will help make you a better person. Look past religious, cultural, and racial lines and accept each other as members of the Tufts Community. Focus on aligning peoples' interests, not publicly proving that others occupy the moral low-ground (especially if they might be able to help you do great things!). Maybe then by your example you can teach the world something that really matters.


The Setonian
News

The tape is dead

No one makes mix tapes anymore. MP3s and CD burners have taken a serious toll on the musical heritage of our generation, and it's time that we stopped ignoring it. Cassette tapes have gone from the accepted mixing format to the lowbrow, low-cost, low-class way to make custom collections. Children of the '80s, where is your outrage? Yes, the music industry has switched recording formats before, but the move from vinyl to eight-tracks - or from eight-tracks to cassettes, or from cassettes to CDs - does not compare to the shift from mix tapes to mix CDs. Tapes were the first recordable form of consumer audio; before their introduction, no one could make mixes of any kind. So now, as blank CDs push tapes out of the spotlight, we witness the replacement of something original. This is not like one medieval king succeeding another; this is something unprecedented. The first and original king has been dethroned. Of course, now there are other mixable formats around, such as MP3 players and the unfairly-overlooked Sony MiniDisc, but that only makes the change all the more dramatic. In the past ten years, we have moved from recording on tapes alone to recording on almost anything. I'm surprised that no one's tried to market a home vinyl-presser: "Mix a record! Impress your friends!" The succession was so slow that no one's commented on it much. The MiniDisc appeared, and many hailed it as the format of the future; sure, it never caught on with enough people, but the market opened up a bit. People embraced burners and bargain-priced blank CDs cautiously, especially when burners came as standalone audio components instead of as computer peripherals. And tapes still endured - their sturdiness and ubiquity gave them enough of an edge to remain viable. Now, however, MP3s have tipped the balance against cassettes, and making mixes will never be the same. Tapes used to be the simplest and easiest way to compile music. Kids used to tape songs off the radio; now, they just download the MP3 and put it on this week's 50-cent CD. If your collection resides on your computer, it's far easier to make a mix CD (click "burn") than a mix tape (patch various audio cables together, stretch them across the room to your stereo, and stop using your computer for 45 minutes at a time). Athletes helped cassettes survive for a while: no matter how good your skip protection, going running with a CD player is never convenient. MP3 players have defeated that advantage: they provide all the accessibility of CDs, play music skip-free, and allow you to make new mixes in minutes. And as the price of MP3 players has decreased, so have the advantages of a traditional Walkman. Despite all these advantages, cassette tapes deserve a little respect and a little niche in our hearts. And all nostalgia aside, whether the world agrees or not, I'm not giving up my tapes yet. Don't discount nostalgia, though. If you grew up with cassettes, you can't erase them from your life. I have too many memories associated with them - from the rock mix that my brother made for me before I even owned a CD player to my collection of concert bootlegs - to ignore their passing. Every tape brings me back to a certain era of my life, and I like my memories too much to give up on such a potent reminder of my past. Listening to a mix from two summers ago jolts me backwards in time much more than looking at photographs; if I want to preserve that experience, I damn well better hang on to my tapes. And even if you love the advantages of modern technology, CDs have less personality than tapes. Everyone has a distinctive method for making mix tapes. Do you fade out at the end of each song? Leave pauses in between? Write out detailed liner notes? Burning a CD is sterile and clinical by comparison; it offers fewer opportunities for personal style. Part of the charm of mix tapes comes from the high degree of control they give you over the listening experience. When you make a mix, you determine everything about each song, from its place on the tape to its volume; when you give such a tape to a friend, he must listen to everything the way that you dictated as you recorded it. CDs put that control in the hands of the listener, however. Don't like track two? Just skip it. It turns the mix from a personal experience to a more generic one. Rather than tailoring specialized mixes for people, you could just make one master mix and let your friends skip the tracks they didn't like. Where's the personal touch in that? Another mixed blessing: making a mix tape takes a far more delicate hand than burning a CD. On tapes, you portion the 90 minutes of music into two balanced sides of 45 minutes apiece; on CDs, you just cram in 70 or 80 minutes of material and forget about it. Structure can be useful to an artist - why else would people write sonnets instead of free verse? The rhythm and duality of tapes has no equivalent in CDs. So I won't give up on my tapes, and neither should you, dead though the format may be. I like my life, and I like remembering it through my music. And I'm not about to shell out $150 to go running while my $30 Walkman still works.


The Setonian
News

Can the Patriots repeat?

Major League Baseball players may be readying to strike, but the question on the minds of New England sports fans is whether the Patriots can win another Super Bowl. Will Tom Brady be able to continue his success from last season? Will Antowain Smith's inability to pass the team's fitness test hinder the defending Super Bowl champions? The answers to these questions and many others will emerge in the coming weeks.AFC In the AFC East, the Miami Dolphins could give everyone a run for their money. The recent addition of running back Ricky Williams should improve their running game and the appointment of Norv Turner as offensive coordinator will ensure a tailback-oriented offense built around Williams. For the Patriots, Daniel Graham will join the offensive trio of Troy Brown, David Batten, and Antowain Smith and provide more short-field options in Brady's arsenal. Repeating last year's performance will be tough, but defensively-minded Belichick showed last season that the Patriots have no problem beating expectations. Having taken a gracious sideline to Brady last season, Drew Bledsoe has moved to the Buffalo Bills, taking over a team that went 3-13 last season. Given his affinity for sacks, tackles Mike Williams and Trey Teague will have their work cut out for them as they attempt to protect their best bet for a winning season. The success of the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC North depends on whether the same team can produce better results, given that 21 of 22 starters were retained. Linebackers Jason Gilden and Joey Porter were re-signed and add clout to the defense. The question mark remains QB Kordell Stewart, who had flashes of brilliance last season but couldn't follow through in the AFC Championship game. From his days with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, coach Tim Dungy brings to the Indianapolis Colts a cover two defensive ploy in an attempt to patch up the defensive weakness that has hampered the Colts' playoff hopes in recent years. With the addition of Chad Bratzke and rookie Dwight Feeney, Dungy will have two speed rushers at his disposal. Add a healthy running back in Edgerrin James, and the Colts could make a run at the Super Bowl. Much of the success of the Denver Broncos rests on the shoulders of QB Brian Griese in the wide open AFC West, especially after Terrell Davis retired because of a nagging knee injury. Griese will have to improve on his reputation as the worst fourth-quarter QB in a sport where the fourth quarter is when games can be won or lost and during which Griese's predecessor John Elway made his name. The San Diego Chargers have a potential QB debate in their midst, pitting youth against experience as Drew Brees and Doug Flutie contend for the pocket spot. Flutie produced during the first half of last season, but during a nine-game losing streak late in the season he threw for 15 interceptions, giving Brees a chance to takeover.NFC If the Philadelphia Eagles plan to reach the NFC East title, they will have to depend upon the arm and legs of Donovan McNabb. Although using their top three picks to draft defensive backs will be a threat to pass-intensive NFC teams such as the St. Louis Rams and the San Francisco 49ers, the Eagles won't provide as much clout in their own power-running NFC East Division. The team will feel the loss of linebacker Jeremiah Trotter to division foes Washington Redskins. Coach Steve Spurrier is creating the most stir in the NFC East and throughout the NFL. Spurrier has unabashedly brought his offensively-minded game from the University of Florida to the Washington Redskins. Contending for the team's QB slot are Florida alumni Shane Matthews and Danny Wuerffel, although outsider Sage Rosenfels may be Spurrier's best bet. If his players can adjust to his obsession with perfection and he can run an effective Fun and Gun offense, Spurrier could mold a winning team outside of the collegiate arena. Green Bay Packers coach Mike Sherman took a gamble on Terry Glenn, who has the backing of QB Brett Favre, in an effort to add speed to the game's third-rated passing team. With the offense squared away, much of the Green Bay defense hinges on the performance of middle linebacker Hardy Nickerson. The ability of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to spring coach Jon Gruden from the Oakland Raiders provides the team with offensively minded clout in the NFC South. Gruden has inherited a Johnson QB debate, as the returning Brad Johnson and newcomer free-agent Rob Johnson square off, he'll need to decide soon who is best suited for the job. In an effort to ease up double coverage on Keyshawn Johnson, Keenan McCardell and Joe Jurevicius as well as tight end Ken Dilger have been added to the offensive lineup. The NFC West is home to the "greatest show on turf," the St. Louis Rams, a team that desperately wants revenge after finishing as runner-ups in the last Super Bowl. With the dynamic duo of a healthy Kurt Warner at the helm and Marshall Faulk, the pressure is on coach Mike Martz to make it back to the big game.


The Setonian
News

Boston MLK celebrations a disgrace

This is the first year that I have come back to Boston before the Martin Luther King, Jr. national holiday. Since this year's national celebration is about a week later than the usual observance of his birthday, I had to be back at Tufts for the start of classes.I live in San Antonio, Texas, where we have the largest Martin Luther King Day March in the country. This year, more than 50,000 people of all races embarked on a three-mile march that ended in a rally of speeches that addressed the legacy of Dr. King and most importantly the fact that the issues he fought for still exist in our society. The day should be about more than singing, floats, and cakes; the day should be about the spirit of the man. It was a radical spirit. People forget that in all of the watering down of the holiday and the message of Dr. King, he was, in essence, a radical. He was an organized visionary, an inspiring radical that was watched by the CIA and FBI. We do not have a parade in San Antonio. Dr. King never had a parade, he marched. You do not get the dossier that he did by going along to get along but, instead, by challenging the status quo. I suppose the question that we must ask ourselves is whether or not we really continue his dream if we do it half afraid to cause controversy or rocking the boat? The activists and founders of the Martin Luther King Celebration in San Antonio felt that if Dr. King were alive, he would much prefer that we continue voicing outrage at the very issues that he championed. We believe that he would not have wanted us to fill ourselves with cake and cookies for his birthday, but instead concentrate on feeding the homeless and helping those in need. In a figurative sense and a literal sense, that is exactly what we do; we make the holiday a day of serving others.And that leads me to the purpose of this article. In a city as large and diverse as Boston, it is sad that one of the only programs for Dr. King's Birthday was the waiving of admission charges at the Museum of Fine Arts so that people could hear music from a singer, saxophonist, and artist.San Antonio's Black population has similarities with Boston's Black population. The most important of which is that it is not very large. However, that does not prevent individuals from many walks of life in the city of San Antonio from coming together to honor the leader of the civil rights movement and pledge themselves to combat the issues that Dr. King died fighting for. In Boston, I have seen little sign of such unity on the holiday that the King Family stresses is "A day on not a day off." Last week I began asking local Bostonians, students, teachers and just about anyone I could, "what do people in Boston do on Dr. King's Day?" Unfortunately, nobody seemed to know. I then began reading the Boston Globe to look for anything sponsored by the City of Boston or a broad based coalition of groups that organized an event. I came up empty. That is not to say that I have not missed an event, but the fact that the city does not officially sponsor a major celebration is ridiculous. In fact, I learned that Mayor Menino was not even in town on King Day. Many African Americans who have lived in Boston or had relatives that have lived here label the "progressive" city as one of the most racist in the country. That probably comes as a surprise to many in my generation. I do not know if the lack of an observance has anything to do with racial tensions. However, staying segregated on a day of unity is not going to help ease the underlying racial strife. In a city that has been labeled as a bastion of liberals, however, it seems as if they decided to take this holiday off. Fostering unity in a community goes beyond symbolism. A community is considered a collective unit, in part, because that group has a future that is interconnected. We take for granted the opportunity to talk and coalesce with one another. Remember that when Dr. King was alive this was not the norm in parts of the country. Sure we can talk to each other every day of the week, and don't necessarily need a day to do that. But on a day that symbolizes the promise of conquering injustice, we do it a disservice by not speaking out for the justice that Rev. King hoped to see flow like water.I recognize that some may say that we should not just reflect on the philosophies of Dr. King one day out of the year - and I agree. However, people fought very hard to get a national holiday honoring the vision of Dr. King. It seems as if many sat at home without seizing his message of action against inequities.Vision without action is merely a dream. Action without vision just passes the time. But vision with action can change the world. Having celebrations on Dr. King day that incorporate the vision of Dr. King with actions of serving others are really what the day is all about. Next week, Tufts will celebrate Dr. King's Birthday two weeks after the actual date and one week after the national holiday observance. And, again, I believe that it is acceptable to have the celebration not confined to one particular time of the year. However, in my humble opinion, Tufts and the city of Boston really need programs on Dr. King's Day to draw attention to why we should have a day on and not a day off.It is sad to me that there was so little going on in the city. It angers me that I had to go to a class on Dr. King's national holiday because one teacher did not take into account the importance of this holiday to many. And it is rather insensitive that the TCU Senate would call a meeting, even if it is to be brief, on a day when we ought to be working with the outside community on the racial issues that affect Tufts and our larger community. If the US Congress can put their business on hold for Dr. King's holiday in the middle of a war, surely the TCU Senate and my professor can put their business off too.I do not believe that all communities have to celebrate Dr. King's birthday the same way. However, I do think in Boston the time could be better spent. And I think the city leadership, both community activist and elected officials, are to blame for the weak attempt to pay homage to a dream in which so many were tortured and died so incredibly young for.Tommy Calvert, Jr. is a senior majoring in international relations.



The Setonian
News

Hockey team snaps six game slide with win over Skidmore

After suffering its longest losing streak in a decade, the hockey team righted itself on Saturday night with a come-from-behind, 5-3 victory over the Skidmore College Thoroughbreds at home. The Jumbos entered the contest as losers of their last six games and eight of their last ten, but now stand at 4-8 overall and 3-6 in the NESCAC/ECAC East Division. "It was an important win for us," coach Brian Murphy said. "Certainly for our confidence more than anything. But the guys have been working hard, even through the losing streak."Tufts, which fell behind early 1-0 in the first period and then again 3-2 in the third, responded with three unanswered goals over the final 13 minutes of play to claim its third comeback win this winter. In fact, in the games they have won, the Jumbos have outscored opponents 13-4 in the third period, while opponents hold an 11-6 advantage in the squad's eight losses.Murphy, however, cannot definitively explain his team's knack for coming from behind. "I'm not really sure what that is," Murphy said. "It's certainly an indication that this team has a lot of heart, though, and there not just going to lay down."Freshman Brandon Hays was integral in the most recent comeback, assisting on the game-tying goal and then scoring the game winner."He's a good player," Murphy said. "He's talented, and I think his best hockey is still ahead of him, as with all the freshmen."After the Thoroughbreds' Joe Hooker tied the game at 1:48, senior co-captain Chris Dunn capitalized on Tufts goalie Ian Kell's mistake during a Jumbo power-play to put the visitors up 3-2 with 14 minutes to play. Kell misplayed the puck, resulting in a wide open net for Dunn and Skidmore's first short-handed goal of the season.But the momentum began to swing after Hays set up classmate Matt Knaiz' tap-in score at 7:29 in the final period. Seven minutes later, Hays scored what proved to be the game winner when he finished a drop pass from junior tri-captain Mike Carceo from the left face off circle. Carceo, who has recorded at least one point in ten of the team's 12 games, added an insurance goal with 13 seconds left on the clock to seal the victory.Skidmore opened the game's scoring with just under two minutes to play in the first, before goals by sophomore Timm Schatz and freshman Shawn Sullivan gave Tufts a 2-1 lead of its own heading into the final stanza. Less than six minutes later, however, the Jumbos were back in familiar territory - behind in the third period.Kell made 29 saves on the night to register his second win of the season, while his counterpart Jon Olson stopped 21 shots. Skidmore drops to 2-9-1 overall with the loss, and 2-6-1 in the ECAC East.Just one night earlier in the same venue, it was the Jumbos who had no response, as visiting Massachusetts College's three unanswered goals in the second period proved to be the difference in a 5-2 Tufts loss. The two teams traded goals in the first period, before the Mohawks erupted for three goals in seven minutes to bury the Jumbos. Chris Pettingill struck first at 7:35 before sophomore Nick Cote put home a short handed tally at 11:49. Then Cote's second goal of the period and third of the game gave Mass. College a commanding 4-1 lead with 5:14 left in the middle frame. Overall, Mass. College outshot Tufts 17-9 in the period. "We definitely didn't play well in the second period," Murphy said. "We just sort of stood around and we're out of sync."Tufts would make it a game again, though, when Jon Hurd recorded his second goal of the game at 18:26 to pull the Jumbos within two. But Cote came back to haunt the Jumbos at 14:26 with his fourth goal of the contest. "Mass. College is a pretty good team," Murphy said. "They're better than their record indicates."The previous weekend, home ice advantage proved to be meaningless as the Jumbos were losers of two straight conference match-ups in Malden. After suffering a 10-0 trouncing at the hands of the powerful Middlebury Panthers on Jan. 5, Tufts played tight with Williams before ultimately bowing to the Ephmen, 4-3, the next evening."Middlebury is just an awesome team," Murphy said. "I take a lot of responsibility for that game, though, I should have prepared them better. But we played well against Williams, and had a chance to win."After falling behind 2-0 in the second against Williams, the Jumbos knotted the score at 2-2, before a Williams goal with a minute and a half later put the Ephmen up 3-2. Tufts tied the game again with 11 minutes to play on sophomore Pat Byrne's beautiful deke goal off a feed from Carceo. Three minutes later, however, Williams would reclaim the lead for good on a rebound goal. "It really could have gone either way," Murphy said. "But those are the kind of games that in the next couple of weeks and in the next couple of years we should be able to win."On Friday, Murphy's Jumbos will have to gear up for another challenge when they travel to Brunswick, Maine to take on conference rival Bowdoin. "We're focusing on getting better every week and gelling as a team at this point," Murphy said. "When you're playing with as many young guys as we are, that's what you have to be looking at: grasping systems and gelling as a team. We're getting there."


The Setonian
News

Moe.' to headline Fling

Upstate New York-based jam band moe. will headline this year's Spring Fling on April 27. Reggae founding fathers Toots and the Maytals and rappers Mob Deep will also take the stage behind Gifford House for the yearly music fest. A yet-to-be-determined Tufts band, the winner of next Saturday's Battle of the Bands, will open the show. Though Concert Board traditionally pays about $65,000 for the three bands, this year will see a considerably smaller expenditure on performers. Moe. will receive $20,000, and Mob Deep and Toots have signed to play for $17,500 and $16,500, respectively. "We didn't spend that much," Board co-chair Aaron Wright said yesterday. "We were actually hoping to spend more," he said, alluding to musicians that may have demanded more money, but would have been more popular among the Tufts community. Though Concert Board attempted to sign a number of other bands, they either cost too much or were already scheduled to perform on that date elsewhere. "It's the best we could do with the constraints we had," Wright said, "I'm excited about moe." Bad luck and, according to Wright, poor communication between the Student Activities office, the Univeristy's agent Howie Cusack, and Concert Board may have hindered the signing process and kept Fling from featuring bigger bands. A large conference of rap artists featuring over a hundred performers is scheduled in California for the same weekend, drastically limiting Tufts' hip-hop options. Though students were initially excited that a band had been announced, many are disillusioned by the band's lack of notoriety. "I guess we got Clinton for the Fares lecture so it would soften the blow of our commencement speakers and Spring Fling band," junior Aaron Chiu said. Senior Angel Vail said she thought with all the prominent people visiting campus this year, Spring Fling could make a sacrifice, provided that the band is good. "The only problem with the other people that visited was that not every student had the opportunity to see them speak or perform." Others were more optimistic, saying that they are tired of the same old names. "I think it's a good thing to be exposed to new music," sophomore Cristina Fort said. As usual, this year's lineup offers a variety of musical styles and traditions. Originally calling themselves Five Guys Named Moe, the headliners formed in 1990 at the University of Buffalo. Over the last decade, the band has established a recognizable sound despite ever-rotating personnel. Improvisation and psychedelic-tinged guitar riffs mark the quintet's popular live shows. Toots and the Maytals first incarnation was born in 1966 by three Kingston, Jamaica natives including leader Frederick "Toots" Hibbert. Over the last three decades the band developed their gospel and soul-based tunes while riding the breaking wave of Jamaica's musical transformation and the birth of reggae music. The original artists disbanded in the early '80s, but in the '90s Hibbert recreated a new band, also named Toots and the Maytals, in the spirit of the old band. It has toured the world ever since. Mobb Deep released its first album Juvenile Hell in 1993 when its primary performers, Havoc and Prodigy, were only teenagers. Since then, it has striven to transcend the easily applied "gangsta rap" label while still acknowledging a wide array of influences. Widely acclaimed, Mobb Deep's style unites tight lyrics and melancholy tones.


The Setonian
News

Less talk, more typing

You're probably guilty of it. You wake up before your first class on Monday morning tired and unmotivated to make the trek across campus. But you don't want to seem like a slacker, so you hop out of bed and write your professor an e-mail, a few lines about how you were sick all weekend and you just don't think you're going to be able to come to class today. You hope he or she understands. Jump back into bed, comforted by the knowledge that at least the professor won't think you just skipped out on class. With e-mail becoming one of the most widely used methods of communication on college campuses, the student-professor relationship has changed, for better and for worse. On the plus side, students who don't feel comfortable speaking up in class can raise issues and ask questions from the comfort of their own rooms. On the other hand, some students flood the inboxes of their professors' accounts with questions, concerns, and excuses that border on the trivial. For one English professor, who wished to remain anonymous, e-mail is a convenient way to get in touch with students, but is no substitute for face-to-face meetings. "It's great for making appointments and getting in touch when a student has missed a class," she said. "It's much easier than using the office phone. I'm not always in my office, so I don't get phone messages all the time, but I always check my e-mail...The problem is when people try to substitute e-mails for office hours." The professor said that e-mail is also useful for keeping in contact with students who are abroad. "In the past, I'd get a postcard or nothing," she said. "With e-mail, there's a lot more correspondence and I get to hear about how my students are doing." It's also helpful, she said, in reminding advisees of important deadlines and developing a relationship with her first-year advisees. "With freshman advisees, there tends to be a lot of anxiety-type e-mails, but that's understandable. It's probably really good for them, so they have someone to talk to," she said. But she doesn't feel like e-mail has had a huge impact in terms of altering the student-professor relationship. "I don't know that it's really made a difference in the relationship. It's certainly made it easier to get in touch and I tend to get less phone calls at home now," the professor, who has been teaching at Tufts for 14 years, said. "It hasn't made me feel much closer to my students, but it also hasn't distanced us at all. I still encourage students to set up a time to come in and talk." And as for students who e-mail her to let her know that they're sick and won't be in class? "I e-mail them back and tell them to get well soon - I don't really have a problem with that. It's usually people just being overly conscientious," she said. "They feel guilty for not being in class and want the professor to know that they're not just blowing it off." She said that her inbox becomes overwhelming around the time papers are due. As far as she's concerned, the heavier e-mail traffic around that time is mostly due to anxious students who run into problems or concerns in the middle of writing a paper. "You get a number of questions that are anxiety questions, like 'should I staple or fold my paper?' Things that they'd never ask in person, but they're anxious and need reassurance, I suppose. But before e-mail, people would never think to call and ask whether they should staple or fold their paper," she said. For the most part, however, the e-mails that she receives at the last minute aren't trivial matters - on the contrary, they tend to be more complicated questions that she doesn't feel comfortable answering via e-mail. "Sometimes I can answer questions concerning paper topics, especially if I think it's a good paper topic. But for the most part, the student needs to come into my office hours and have the back and forth of a discussion," she said. "There's only so much you can say in an e-mail without a response, and you don't want to send an entire paper back to the person." Overall, the professor says she is not over-burdened with students' e-mail, and added that she is "obsessed" with answering every e-mail she receives, regardless of how trivial the matter may seem. "Sometimes I groan a little when I read my e-mail, but I'd rather have students feel free to e-mail me than not - then you run the risk of students not getting their questions answered because they feel intimidated," she said. "I wouldn't consider myself inundated - most students are reasonable." She added that sometimes students just don't think before they click. "It's the problem with all e-mail - you hit "send" and then you think 'maybe I shouldn't have sent that...'" she said. "You tend to think about it more before you call." Generally, senior Tory Foster says she would prefer meeting with professors in person, but admits that e-mail was a big help while she was abroad last year. "I don't think I would have been able to do a thesis this year if I hadn't been able to get the information and contact the professors through e-mail," she said. Now that she's back on the Hill, however, she rarely e-mails her professors. "I like the idea of talking to a professor face to face because it shows that you care enough to come in, rather than just typing up an e-mail," Foster said. "If it's a really basic thing, like I lost my syllabus and need to know what the assignment was, I'll e-mail them, but if it's anything at all substantial, I'd rather meet with them in person." In her three and a half years at Tufts, Foster has yet to call a professor with a concern. "I would never call a professor - it feels like that would be like crossing a line," she said. "[E-mail] is a really comforting option to have." Foster thinks that e-mail has brought students and professors closer together in some respects, but in other ways, it has prevented some students from meeting with their professors in person. "It's a double-edged sword," she said. As a graduate student in the English department, Christopher Craig has a different relationship with students. Whether it's in the English I and II classes he teaches, or in the upper-level classes that he TAs, Craig interacts with the undergraduate population on a daily basis. And much of that communication is via e-mail. "I have much less contact with the students for whom I TA than I do with the students for whom I fill the role of instructor," Craig said. "If I had to make a comparison, I would say that the students for whom I TA tend to send me more e-mails about topics that they would rather not bring up with the professor, such as paper extensions and things like that, than my own students." And while Craig appreciates the convenience that e-mail lends to communication, he admits that it does have problems. "Certainly, e-mail has made communication more convenient between my students and me. In that respect, I think that it has been helpful... but I don't think that it's the most effective," Craig said. "I can answer a student's question about a reading or whatever, but unless I hear back from her immediately - which usually isn't the case - I'm never quite sure whether my explanation has satisfied the student's inquiry or not. I prefer to conference with students as often as possible."


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Savitz resigns as head coach

In a private meeting with the women's basketball team on April 4, Athletic Director Bill Gehling announced that women's basketball coach Janice Savitz had resigned effective the end of this semester. The decision to resign came on the heels of disappointing season in which the team went 9-14 overall, including 1-8 in the NESCAC - good for last place in the conference. The outcome was especially surprising considering the squad went into the season with high expectations after a prosperous 2000-2001 campaign. Gehling said that Savitz resigned because "she has come to a point in her life where she wants to go in a new direction." Savitz will continue to fulfill her non-basketball obligations to the school, which include work as an weight lifting instructor, until the end of the semester. According to Gehling, Savitz provided the department with enough time with which to find a quality replacement. "I am thankful to Janice that she made this decision at a time that allows us ample time to do the search process in the proper way," he said. "If this came about in September, it would have been more difficult to find a [new] coach." Following a 1-4 start to the NESCAC season last year, the team heated up down the stretch, winning three of its last four regular season conference games to clinch the seventh seed in the playoffs. Though the squad fell in the first round to Colby, it appeared Tufts would have the manpower to come back strong this year - the team had graduated only one senior, Shira Fishman. After jumping out of the gates with a 5-2 mark to begin the 2001-2002 season, Tufts struggled from that point, culminating in a six-game NESCAC losing streak to close the season, including two close losses to Colby and Bowdoin. "It was really frustrating this year because we knew we were capable of beating all those teams, like Bowdoin and Colby. We lost by less then three in both of those games," sophomore Maritsa Christoudias said. "And those two teams ended up at the top of NESCAC and Bowdoin was nationally ranked." Players declined to comment on Savitz's resignation, and the former coach did not return repeated calls. Savitz began coaching at Tufts in 1994, when she replaced interim coach Ed Leyden. Leyden had been filling in for all-time victories leader Sharon Dawley after she departed for Dartmouth. In her first season at the helm, Savitz guided the team to an ECAC New England playoff berth. Prior to accepting the head coaching position at Tufts, she had served in the same capacity at Hamilton College from 1980-86 and at Mount Holyoke College from 1987-94. She graduated from Brockport State and earned a master's degree in physical education at Ithaca College in 1981. Though Gehling has no replacements in mind, the search for a new coach has already begun. He said the first step is to advertise, both within the NCAA newsletter and elsewhere. "My mind is wide open at this point," he said. " I'm hoping that we can find a lot of candidates. I feel that there are a lot of people out there who meet our qualifications."


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Goddard Chapel renovations among summer projects

Many renovations took place at the University over the summer, including upgrades as simple as a new coat of paint here or there and more complex endeavors such as improved security systems for some dorms. Major projects, such as a new dorm and a music building, are still in the planning stages. The most noticeable construction project is the renovation of Goddard Chapel. Scaffolding covers the historic bell tower and additional work is being done on the roof, foundation, and exterior masonry of the building. The goal of the project is to "restore the integrity of the building envelope and make structural repairs to ensure that it can continue to be of service to many more years to come," Vice-President of Operations John Roberto said. Renovations are scheduled to be completed by late October or early November. Three dorms - Bush, Hodgdon, and Blakeley (a Fletcher graduate student dorm) - were equipped with sprinkler systems, and hallway fire alarms, and updated emergency light systems. Bush was also wired for the JumboFob electronic access system implemented in South last year. Five other dorms are scheduled for sprinkler system installation in the summer of 2003. According to Roberto, adding sprinklers takes longer than simply upgrading existing safety systems because the sprinklers must be simultaneously integrated into the fire alarm system. The University used this opportunity to ensure that the alarm systems were up-to-date. Universities across the country have recently been installing sprinklers to dorms following deadly dorm fires at Seton Hall University and the University of Texas at Austin. Various classrooms were also renovated over the summer, most notably Pearson 104. The large lecture hall was redone with new seating, interior finishing, air conditioning, and added teaching technology, Roberto said. Braker 02, an instructional lab, was renovated as well. Other classrooms underwent minor renovations such as new coats of paint, updated lighting, and new furniture. Hallways and rooms of some dorms were given fresh coats of paint, and other buildings received new furniture. A patio, similar to those outside the Campus Center and Brown & Brew, will be completed within the next two weeks outside of Hodgdon Take-It-Away dining hall, Roberto said. A brick patio and wall will replace the old cement patio, and furniture for the area will arrive at the end of next week. Though Tufts spent the summer completing many smaller construction projects, plans for a new residence hall, which will contain around 150 beds in single and double rooms, continue to progress. It will be situated next to Stratton Hall along Talbot Ave., extending in an L-shape to Professors Row. The two residential homes next to Stratton will be demolished and the families relocated to make way for the building. Groundbreaking for the structure is scheduled for the spring of 2003, and its first residents will likely move in for the 2004-5 academic year. Architectural plans and drawings for the building are to be finalized by the end of the year. The music building project, however, is far behind schedule. "It hasn't advanced very much, it's a subject of raising achievement funding," Roberto said. Because of the standstill on gathering funds, he was unable to predict when building construction would begin. The music building is slated to stand on the corner of Professors Row and Packard Ave., currently home to Zeta Psi. The University is in continued negotiations with the fraternity, and plans for new fraternity housing and payments are advancing. The project is "moving along and making progress but [is] not finalized yet," Roberto said.


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McGlynn one shy of single season three point record

As the men's basketball team vies for a spot in the NESCAC Tournament this weekend, junior and leading scorer Mike McGlynn will strive to reach another milestone in his basketball career. With his fourth three pointer against Middlebury last Saturday, McGlynn edged closer to Tufts' all-time single season three-point record of 90, set by Bill Slackman during the 1990-91 season. McGlynn's hot hand from three-point land has sparked the Jumbo offense all season. He is averaging 18.2 points per game, including 24.7 points in NESCAC contests. His scoring in these conference games is particularly important for the team, as only the top seven NESCAC teams qualify for the postseason. With two games remaining this season, and 89 three pointers in the bag, it seems almost a foregone conclusion that McGlynn will surpass Slackman's record. McGlynn has a 49.6 field goal percentage, and is 89-183 for 48.6 percent for three pointers. His three-point percentage is good for second place in the NESCAC, behind Bowdoin's Greg Orlicz, who holds a slight edge, shooting 48.7 percent from downtown. McGlynn averages just over four three pointers per game, and with this weekend's two home games is in prime position to take over the all-time lead. While his three-point percentage is second in the NESCAC, McGlynn has connected on more shots from downtown this season than any other NESCAC player. The closest player to McGlynn is Colby's Damien Strahorn who is 12 behind with 77 threes on the season. McGlynn's high three-point total can be partially attributed to the loss of sophomore point guard Phil Barlow, which left McGlynn and junior Brian Shapiro as the team's top scorers. Also contributing to his performance is the Jumbo's young inside game. Though freshmen Craig Coupe and Reggie Stovell have played solidly for Tufts, they are not yet dominant forces. Consequently, much of the scoring has had to come from outside rather than down low, giving McGlynn more opportunities to shoot. McGlynn and the rest of the Jumbos will be in action tonight and Saturday afternoon, as they take on Wesleyan and Connecticut College in Cousen's Gym to close out the regular season.


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Men's squash rebounds nicely after losing three straight

For the men's squash team, this past weekend came in like a lion and went out like a lamb. Tufts struggled in its first three matches, losing to MIT, Brown and Dartmouth. But the squad recovered nicely, defeating its arch-rival Connecticut College to cap off a busy weekend. Against Conn. College in their last match of the regular season, the Jumbos were able to put together an impressive 6-3 win on the fourth leg of a remarkably difficult four-day road trip. The victory can largely be attributed to the play of the middle and lower portion of the lineup, as the third through eight seeds all defeated their opponents in a dramatic match filled with comebacks.. "We played with our heart," senior tri-captain Shayan Haque said "I was really proud." The most heroics came from sophomore Phil Beatson, the team's number eight player. Beatson won his first game rather convincingly, 9-3, only to lose the next two 5-9 and 4-9. "[My opponent] was forcing me to make mistakes," Beatson said. But Beatson was able to rebound to take the fourth game, 9-3, and capped it off with a 9-1 victory in the deciding fifth game. Beatson was quick to credit his comeback to a conversation he had before the third game with Haque, who was watching much of the match. "He told me exactly what was going on and the specific mistakes I was making," Beatson said. "At that point, it was up to me to correct my mistakes and turn it around. By the fifth game, it's a mental test, and Shayan really motivated me to give it everything I had and not to leave anything on the court." Number four Nathan Anderson continued the string of comebacks when he won in four games after losing the first 9-0. Fifth seed Jason Krugman and seventh seed Haque also won their matches after losing first games. In the first match of the weekend, the Jumbos knew they let a match get away as they fell 8-1 against a weaker MIT team last Thursday night at Harvard. "I was very disappointed," Haque said. "It was a low point of the semester." Coach Doug Eng attributed the loss to a plethora of injuries hampering the effectiveness of his lineup. "Half of the team was ill or hurt," Eng said. "It makes a big difference." The squad then took on Brown on Friday, before heading to Dartmouth on Saturday. Both these matches ended without a single individual victory for the Jumbos. Even so, the team was satisfied with its play - Dartmouth and Brown are ranked sixth and eighth in the nation, respectively. "We realized we had to put a couple of good matches together and we were happy with the results," Eng said. "They are much better teams." Haque also seemed to be in good spirits despite the defeats. "People were fired up," he said. Tufts now has two weeks to prepare for the team Nationals, which will be held in the friendly confines of Harvard: the site of many of the Jumbos' matches. For Coach Eng, these two weeks are a matter of waiting, recovering and practicing. "We have to see what our seedings are," Eng said. "We have to practice hard and we have to stay injury free." It's possible that the team will be faced with some familiar foes at Nationals. Although the seedings are still up in the air, the squad might get chances to avenge earlier losses to Wesleyan and Hobart. "We have to learn what we did wrong," Haque said. "We will practice as hard as we can without going overboard," Beatson said of the upcoming matches. "Nursing injuries while at the same time hoping we will be able to improve." Before Nationals, the team has a final tune-up Monday at Harvard against Cal-Berkeley. Tutfs will then be in Cambridge over the weekend of the Feb. 22-24 for Nationals.@s:Team gearing up for nationals


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Callahan closes out career filled with records and memories

Though Ted Williams was before senior tri-captain Dan Callahan's time, Teddy Ballgame was always a hero to Callahan. That may help to explain why Callahan wears Williams' number nine. Of course, anyone can wear a number, not everyone can shag fly balls on the same outfield as Williams did. But in high school, Callahan was selected to represent Massachusets in an All-Star game against Connecticut, held of course at Fenway Park. "It was incredible," Callahan said. "Just stretching and doing pregame warm-ups at Fenway was unbelievable." Callahan and his teammates tried to make the experience a little better, if possible, and explored the hallways from the dugouts leading to the clubhouse. "The janitor kicked us out," Callahan said. Regardless, it was a great opportunity to play with the best players in the region, including current teammate and housemate, junior shortstop Brian Shapiro. The pitcher in that All-Star game went on to be a second round draft choice of the New York Mets. Could Callahan be on the same track? He's been scouted during his Tufts career, but it is hard to gauge the senior's chances at being selected in the next draft. Callahan has filled out the appropriate forms with the Major League Bureau, and now all he can do is wait. Of course, the scouts reveal less than a championship poker player, leaving Callahan pretty much in the dark. "It would just be a bonus if I got selected," Callahan said. But would he want to spend his life riding around on buses, staying in cheap hotels, living the life glamorized by Bull Durham? "Definitely," Callahan said. "That would be a blast." If not, though, Callahan still has other abilities to rely on. He's an international relations major and would like to go into a related field if possible. "I would like to do something in politics," Callahan said. "Maybe work for the government at the state department." Like most seniors, though, Callahan prefers not to talk about his immediate future, and would rather discuss the upcoming week, the NESCAC Championships. His Jumbos lost to Williams in the championship game last year and have been looking for revenge all season. The winner of the tournament will go on to play in the NCAA's. A loss, though, and a stellar career comes to a close. "You're supposed to approach every game the same way," Callahan said. "But it will be tough walking off that field for the last time." Don't think the pressure will get to him, though. Watching him react to tense situations in a game is about as exciting as waiting for water to boil. Callahan is constantly cool on the field and in the dugout, which might help explain a swing smoother than marble. Callahan stands 6'4" and has a beautiful, fluid, left-handed swing that has produced for a long time. His achievements at the plate in college have forced the Athletic Department to buy a new record book - it was easier than rewriting the old one. The right fielder holds Tufts career marks for RBI's, hits, doubles, and triples. He's unofficially two runs behind the all-time mark, and has an outside chance at the all-time batting average mark of .410. As for home runs? He took care of that in high school, setting marks for home runs in a career, including a 14 home run season in 20 games. "He was a tremendous hitter," high school coach Doc Nickerson said. "He's a fine athlete who helped the team get to where they went." Though he enjoys the accolades, Callahan is quick to acknowledge everything that goes into setting so many marks. "First of all, I have been lucky to play so much and get so many at bats," he said. "And you can't get those records without being on real good teams with winning records." Callahan also places these numbers in their proper perspective. "Baseball is a sport that keeps track of a lot of statistics," Callahan said. "In ten years, I won't be thinking about all of that, though. I'll be thinking about the strong friendships I've had on the team. So much goes into being part of a team, we take it very seriously here, and I've built good relationships." In fact, the team is what Callahan will miss most about leaving baseball. "Being part of a company can't compare to being on a team," he said. "When I leave Tufts, I'll miss the people that I've met inside and outside of baseball." And though he'll never stop admiring Williams, the lefty has gone on to appreciate more recent left-handed sluggers including Mo Vaughn, John Olerud, and Todd Helton. Though he is not yet sure what he will be doing next year, unlike the rest of the senior class, Callahan may have a chance at playing a few leagues below his heroes.


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Teed off by Barkley's comments

In 2002, professional golfers at Augusta National Golf Club will tee off from the usual championship tees, except for Tiger Woods and other black players, who will tee off from boxes several yards behind everyone else's. At least that's what Charles Barkley would have you believe from his statement that Augusta's decision to lengthen a number of holes was blatantly racist. In an interview in Sports Illustrated last week, Barkley stated that the measures were meant only to prevent Woods from winning the Masters, as he has done twice before. In his wholly inaccurate statement, Barkley claimed that the changes unfairly hurt Woods, because they took away one of his advantages: length. He also claimed that the alterations were clearly a racist move, as Jack Nicklaus won the Masters six times in a row, and no changes were made. Barkley also criticized Woods for not speaking out about the changes, simply because he was afraid of being ridiculed. "I'm not afraid of being ridiculed," Barkley said. It's true that the PGA and Augusta have not been free from racism. Far from it, in fact. Just ask Fuzzy Zoeller what he thinks about Woods, and you're likely to get a perfect example. The recent rule changes, however, are not reflective of past racist sentiments in the PGA. Augusta did not decide to change the length of the holes for only Woods and other black players. Every golfer who steps to the tee at the next Masters will have to deal with the added length. Phil Mickelson, Ernie Els, Segio Garcia, and every other player will all have the burden of having to advance the ball an extra ten or 20 yards. How this will somehow affect Woods more than everybody else is beyond me. But let's just say, for the sake of argument, that the changes are meant to take away the advantage of length. This would mean that the new changes are unfair to all players who rely heavily on their length off the tee. John Daly is known for little else besides a large gut and the ability to absolutely obliterate a golf ball. He averages about 18 and a half more yards per drive than Woods does. Would Barkley claim that the new changes discriminate against overweight people? Davis Love III is another player renowned for a powerful driver. Maybe Augusta decided that it didn't want people with a III in their name to have an advantage at the course. Woods himself readily admits that the changes were not directed specifically towards him. He also readily admits that his length off the tee is no longer as spectacular as it once was. True, he still leads or is among the leaders in average length off of the tee, but as younger players continue to develop their games and new technology becomes available his drive will become more and more average. And how is it that adding length to an already lengthy course doesn't hurt the players who aren't known for their drives? Call me crazy, but I would think that if you already had trouble reaching a hole in two, the last thing you would want is an extra ten or 15 yards, even if it would lessen Woods' advantage. If Augusta really wanted to hurt Tiger's game, they would have made the fairways more narrow and the greens smaller. Adding a few more yards to a hole that he could already easily reach is not going to significantly hinder his abilities to score well. Unfortunately for Barkley, all his comments were successful in doing is showing a lack of knowledge of the sport. First, changes were made to the course while Jack Nicklaus was dominating the sport. Changes have been made to the course throughout its history. Every hole on the course has been changed since 1934. Additionally, one of the most significant changes came following Nicklaus' second Masters victory - a large double bunker in the landing area down the left side of the 18th fairway. Adding length is nothing out of the ordinary, nor is it even remotely uncalled for. All players are hitting the ball longer than they ever have before. To quote Tiger himself, "There are a lot of kids out there now in college golf and high school golf that hit the ball farther than I do. They're getting bigger and stronger, and the new technology is helping out." Finally, if nothing else, Barkley's statement shows a lack of respect for possibly the greatest golfer of all time. To suggest that Tiger Woods' game is so one-dimensional as to be significantly hampered by increased length is almost insulting. Woods is not Daly, and he is not Love III. He is unlike any other golfer in history. He is the winner of four consecutive major tournaments, and adding yards to a course is not going to stop him from dominating the competition. He won in the nasty rough and blustery conditions of the British Open, where a powerful drive certainly does not guarantee a victory. The changes were not meant solely for Tiger Woods, and they will not solely affect Tiger Woods. In the future, Barkley should considering thinking before making such public allegations.


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Anthropology class studies slavery in Medford

Those who associate slavery in America primarily with the South may be surprised to discover that slavery existed only a mile from Tufts during the 17th and 18th centuries. Many prominent families in the Massachusetts Bay Colony engaged in the slave trade through port cities such as Boston, though puritanism and a smaller agricultural system prevented the colony from developing a larger slave population. Though slavery in Massachusetts Bay never reached the extent that it did in the South, the number of slaves did reach nearly 5,000 during the 18th century. The town was inhabited by a number of slaves and former-slaves who fought against the tragic and unjust policy. During the past semester, Anthropology Professor Rosalind Shaw and her class have studied the history of Belinda Royall and her fellow Medford slaves in a course entitled "Memories of the Slave Trade." Students in the class say that studying slavery has allowed them to recognize the injustices that were once rampant in an area that is seldom associated with a history of slavery. "We are bringing a wealth of neglected information to light," junior Lara Saipe said. "I think it is nice to give due recognition to these past members of Medford." Shaw and her students have created an exhibit on the courage of the Royall house slaves, specifically the extraordinary Belinda Royall. The exhibit is open at the Royall house through the end of September. "In New England, there has been enormous social amnesia about the role of the slave trade and the presence of slaves," Professor Rosalind Shaw of the Anthropology department said in a recent interview with the Tufts Journal. In addition to presenting historical artifacts, the student organizers chose to create a multimedia approach to telling the stories of the residents of Royall house by including music and spoken word dialogues that feature the culture and language from which Belinda Royall was captured.Belinda was originally owned by Harvard Law School founder Isaac Royall, who moved to Medford in 1727 from Antigua and brought with him 27 slaves. According to 1754 records, Royall was the largest slave owner in Medford, owning 12 of the 34 slaves in the town. During the onset of the Revolutionary War, he abandoned both his George Street estate and slaves and fled to Nova Scotia, leaving behind the only estate in the Northeast with slave quarters still attached.That same year, Massachusetts -the first state to legalize slavery - officially outlawed it, and one of Royall's abandoned slaves took it upon herself to do something that was practically unheard of at the time: she petitioned for a pension that would be taken from Royall's wealth. Belinda Royall succeeded in receiving a pension from her former-master's funds for herself and her daughter, in possibly one of the first examples of reparations for slavery and the slave trade assigned by a government organization. According to Shaw, the request has tremendous significance. "She asks the state to acknowledge that the [owner's] wealth was derived from the slaves he owned," Shaw told the Journal. "She asks that the ideals of the Revolution, of freedom and equality, apply to all the people in the world-not only to whites." The notable petition has survived to this day, and is an important piece of historical literature. It also discusses Belinda Royall's capture in present-day Ghana. She writes: "She was ravished from the bosom of her Country, from the arms of her friends - while the advanced age of her Parents, rendering them unfit for servitude, cruelly separated her from them forever!" In addition to studying Belinda, students have focused on the story of Prince Hall, one of the most influential members of the black community at the onset of the Revolutionary War. Hall enlisted in Medford militia to fight the Loyalists as a member of the armed forces. He is remembered as one of the first American abolitionists and was a major force behind sending the petition to end slavery in the Commonwealth to the Massachusetts House of Representatives. Hall also fought the practice of kidnapping and selling free blacks into slavery. He died as a property owner with full voting rights, one of the only African-Americans to be granted these civil rights during his era.


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Tufts 'Simpsons' club mentioned in 'Maxim' Magazine

Tufts' own No Homers Club earned mention in the March issue of Maxim Magazine, after co-president and founder sophomore Richard Kalman wrote a letter to the editor pointing out a blunder in the December issue."As the president of the No Homers Club at Tufts University, I find it my duty to point out an egregious error in 'The Spin-Off Doctor,'" Kalman wrote. "You say you'd like to see a Simpsons spin-off series called The 'Nahasapeemapetilons,' where Apu parlays his lone Kwik-E-Mart into a vast convenience store empire. But if you saw episode 1F10, 'Homer and Apu,' you'd know that the Kwik-E-Mart is already a global corporation, with its first store located deep within an Indian mountain range. Check it out." The editors' response was rather blunt: "'No Homers Club?' Have you guys tried prostitutes?" Kalman said he wrote to Maxim because it was his obligation as president of the No Homers Club, and as a loyal Simpsons fan, to point out the mistake. "As self-appointed president of the second-most-powerful organization on campus - watch out LCS! - I felt it was my duty to correct an error made by the creators of an otherwise-fine publication," Kalman said. "Although the blunder was minor, any dedicated Simpsons fan would have caught it. I guess I was just the first one to speak up. But let this be a warning to all other national news organizations... the No Homers Club at Tufts University will be watching you!" Co-president Josh Belkin was also pleased to be published in the magazine, and said the blurb provided exposure for the both the club and the University. Roommates Kalman and Belkin, avid fans of the hit television show, co-founded the club last year. The No Homers Club holds meetings and events throughout the year to watch episodes of the show and discuss their connection to American society and popular culture. According to Kalman, the idea for the club came to them after chemistry Professor Christopher Morse ran a Simpsons-themed Metcalf Bridge program last year. "[The program had] such an amazing turnout that [Belkin] and I felt this campus presence needed a voice - a voice with a budget," Kalman said. How much discussion actually goes on at these meetings where television and food are provided for free? "Recently we have gotten into the routine of bringing another campus group to a meeting, watching related episodes, then discussing it afterwards," Belkin said. The Women's Union at Tufts and the Economics Society are on the list of recent guests. "We typically have discussions on a per diem basis," Kalman said. "When people want to stick around and talk, we tend to do that for about 20 minutes following the screening of two episodes." The club has been well received by those who occasionally come for a screening as well as members of the club. It was voted runner-up for "Best Club" in the Daily's 2001 Readers Poll. Belkin reports that the club has a mailing list of 300 and that around 40 to 90 people come to screenings. The next Simpsons screening is titled "Simpsons and Psychology," and will take place on March 27. The club also does a live new episode screening in Hotung once per semester. Kalman and Belkin also invite students to participate in a March 29 dodge-ball tournament co-sponsored by the No Homers Club and ZBT. Participants will get T-shirts, food and the opportunity to watch Simpsons episodes on a big screen while playing dodge-ball. Proceeds will be donated to a local shelter for homeless children. Kalman and Belkin urge Tufts students to join the club. "Its such a smart show on so many levels - oh yeah, we have free food at all meetings too." Visit the No Homers Club interactive website at ase.tufts.edu/nohomersclub to join the mailing list and find out about future events.


The Setonian
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Dear Daniel Fowler

You are incredible. It took less than a week for you to rain on the parade. You couldn't just let us have our fun and relish in our glory. You had to go and wreck it all. Well, go ahead. Because the feeling that I got last Sunday night when Adam Vinatieri's kick split that upright isn't something that I'm going to forget anytime soon. In your rambling, jealousy, and hate-filled rant last week, you made but one undeniably true statement. The Patriots' win was perfect. It was everything anybody from New England could have dreamed of. The Patriots epitomized team play and hard work, both of which paid off. We are the champions. There can be no doubters anymore. Nobody saying, "they don't have the talent", "the Rams are unbeatable", or (as you yourself so aptly put it) "teams from New England just don't win." This team from New England did win. It beat the unbeatable. It dreamed the undreamable and did the undoable. Forget David and Goliath. This was like David versus Goliath and a thousand of his cousins (all of whom can run the 40 in two seconds flat). New England won, and it kills you. You yourself were witness to the utter joy that was New England after that game. It was the release of 43 years of frustration for Patriots fans who had been waiting for that moment since 1959. This was unlike anything most New Englanders had ever experienced, and it was awesome: grown men reduced to tears; screaming fans, drunk with joy, running through the streets. So what if there were chants for other teams? This wasn't just a championship for a football team; it was a championship for a whole region. You say that we don't know how to celebrate a championship? I say that we know better than anyone. The post-game celebrations were raw, unadulterated emotion. It was pure bliss for six states that had, for the most part, never experienced anything quite like it before in their lives. You say we didn't focus our attention in the right direction, that we should have concentrated on the team that won and nothing else. See, Fowler, there's no such thing as concentrating on one team when you're in New England. When you're a New England fan, you're not just a fan of one team. You love four franchises, for better or worse. Unlike New York, there is only one team for every sport. We don't have three football teams, three hockey teams, two baseball teams, and essentially two basketball teams from which to choose. Being a Patriots fan basically implies being a Red Sox, Bruins, and Celtics fan. Four sports, four teams. When our team is down, we can't just turn around and have another one right there. We have to stick it out, through the bad times and the good. We can't be like a certain Mets fan (DANIEL FOWLER), who, when the Mets are down, suddenly becomes a Yankees fan. It doesn't work that way. So when one of our teams wins, it is a victory for all of them. It's called loyalty. I'm sorry that you have to win to enjoy sports. I really am. Because the truth is, you have never experienced the kind of joy that I have from winning a championship. You have never felt absolutely overcome and overwhelmed by the fact that you're team is unequivocally the best. As you said yourself, you've become accustomed to it. Eleven championships in your lifetime alone, and there isn't enough money in the world to make me want to trade places. There's an old saying that goes, "Success comes sweetest to those who ne'er succeed." One has to experience failure and defeat to truly appreciate victory. You don't know what this is like, because when one of your teams loses, you can just turn to another one from the same city. You aren't a fan of a team at all; you're a fan of a city and of winning. And you say we have an inferiority complex. New Yorkers are so scared of losing they make sure they have a backup for every team. Nearly every New York fan I know is a diehard supporter of one team - until that team starts losing. Mets fans are loyal to the Mets until they don't make the playoffs, at which point they become Yankees fans. It's J-E-T-S, Jets Jets Jets, unless, of course, the Giants are in the Superbowl instead. It's enough to make me sick. The entire state of New York is so high on itself that it refuses to allow anyone else to enjoy winning. If you are so secure and happy with your greatness, then why do you have to trash on New England during their one victory? It's true that a "Yankees suck" chant is out of place during a Superbowl celebration, and I will be the first to admit that the Yankees do not suck. But why should it matter to you so much? You're right in saying that a Patriots victory doesn't mean that the Bruins will win the Stanley Cup. It doesn't mean that the Celtics are going to the finals, and it doesn't mean that the Red Sox are taking the series. But for 43 years the Patriots could not win a championship, and now they are kings. Why can't we have hope for our other teams? Because you refuse to let us. You tyrannical killjoys hate to see anybody else tasting a victory. Your grip on sports dominance has slipped for just a minute, so you have to go ahead and reassure everyone in New England that we really aren't that good, so don't enjoy this too much. You sit up high on your throne, and look down on everybody else in the sporting world. "My name is New York, King of Kings. Look on my championships, ye Mighty, and despair!" Get down off of your high horse, New York. We are the champions. And we plan on enjoying it. Sincerely,Ethan Austin


The Setonian
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Walker's treason merits the death penalty

The Constitution, by design, is a broad document that does not linger long over small details. It is therefore telling that the only crime that the Constitution makes any mention of is treason. According to article three, section three: "Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort." During the Cold War, the United States saw its fair share of treasonous figures, from Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to Aldrich Ames. The crimes that these people committed - such selling out US assets or giving away top secrets - often led to many deaths and major setbacks for the United States. When the government has caught US citizens spying in the past, it has imposed harsh penalties, including death to those who have merited it. In other cases, it has suspended the death penalty, prudently, allowing the spy to exchange useful intelligence for leniency. The case of John Walker is somewhat different from recent instances of treason in the United States. Walker was not acting as a spy for any foreign power and did not have the capability to sell US secrets. Yet, he did join enemies of the United States in siding with the Taliban and receiving training from al Qaeda. In doing so, he became, in part, responsible for the actions of al Qaeda and the Taliban. He was not, as were many ordinary people in Afghanistan, forced into service, nor did he simply live amongst the Taliban. As a US citizen, he actively participated in war against the United States. Perhaps it would have been different if he had renounced his US citizenship, but he fought as an American against a democratic, freely-elected government, and he did so with no apparent qualms. Unfortunately for US prosecutors, the Constitution also specifies that proof of treason requires two witnesses to the crime or a confession in an open court. Since other Taliban and al Qaeda members are unlikely to aid the prosecution with its case, "proving" treason in a court of law will be a difficult task. That does not, however, mean that John Walker deserves the reduced sentence that he could receive. His voluntary decision to try and shoot and kill US forces, coupled with his membership or affiliation with al Qaeda, merits the most severe punishment the United States can give. Since, unlike Aldrich Ames, Mr. Walker has nothing useful to offer the United States, the government should seek the death penalty if it believes a conviction is possible. What makes John Walker's crimes so heinous is not simply the fact that he was fighting the United States, but whom he was fighting with. Not all acts of treason are equal; there is a clear difference between Aldrich Ames, who spied for the United States' greatest enemy, and Jonathan Pollard, who spied for an ally. Walker, like Ames, decided to side with an enemy whose purpose was the complete and total destruction of the United States by any means necessary. There can be no place for a man like that in society. His life should be the price he pays for his actions.Jonathan Perle is a senior majoring in political science.


The Setonian
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EPIIC alum: free markets cause social inequities

Focusing on the experiences of Third-World cities, former EPIIC student Ryan Centner (LA '98) discussed "Neoliberalism and Third World Countries: Structurally Adjusted Urbanism as a Way of Life, from Buenos Aires to Istanbul to Kuala Lumpur." Centner pointed out that 40 percent of developing countries' populations live in cities, and stressed the necessity of studying Third-World urban centers. These cities are expanding so fast that they will soon be home to over 50 percent of the Third World, ranging from medium-sized cities to mega-cities of over ten million inhabitants. The advent of neo-liberalism - which emphasizes the freedom of economic markets - is "pervasive in framing what is happening in Third-World countries today," he said. While free markets have brought prosperity to certain factions of the developing world, he added that they have also widened many of the inequities that abound in these societies. Centner discussed the traditional view of urban sociology, founded by Louis Wirth and the Chicago school of Urban Sociology. Wirth said urban cultures are distinct because they have a large, dense population and cultural heterogeneity. Wirth thought his views were uniform for all cities. However, Centner and others criticize Wirth for writing about a certain place and time - industrial Chicago. Wirth also saw no need for urban planning - a theory long ago rejected by academics and city planners alike. By placing the market first, Neoliberalism places emphasis on the economy but ignores the political and social aspects of development. Thus, planning is needed to protect those who feel the brunt of economic liberalism, Centner said. "Structural adjustment is very pervasive, even if people don't like it." Global economic policy is quickly becoming an urban social policy, but no one is sure what or who is shaping the reality of Third-World cities, Centner said. Using the diverse examples of Buenos Aires, Istanbul and Kuala Lumpur, he pointed out that all adopted structural adjustment to deal with the aftermath of loans from international economic institutions. The problem with letting the market run a society is that, in Third-World countries, it "is only a market for some... the free market is never entirely free," Centner said. He pointed out that laissez-faire markets are planned, but social planning and intervention are unexpected. The consequences of having a free market require planning, he said. With these great inequities, people in the lower classes will revert to the informal economy, by working on the black market or in illegal jobs. Buenos Aires' economy was opened up in the '90s, due to policies that removed tariffs and controls on financial flows. With economic protections gone, much of the middle class fell into poverty. Shantytowns in the city have grown at an unprecedented rate and immigrants from other parts of Latin America have flown to Buenos Aires. Many of these immigrants, from countries like Peru and Bolivia, have strong ties to their indigenous roots. Argentina, especially Buenos Aires, consists mainly of people of European descent. The city was often compared to its counterparts in Western Europe, rather than to other cities in Latin America. Centner mentioned that this transition is being called the "Latin-Americanization of Buenos Aires." Istanbul has seen a consolidation of property, especially in the European parts of the city. Centner said this reflects Turkey's push to join the European Union. This prosperity has been accompanied by large slums in the city, mainly from Kurdish internal migrants. These migrants are pushed out of their slums to "beautify the city," without any thought to the human costs, he said. Kuala Lumpur has become a "multimedia corridor" that Centner compared to a Malaysian Silicon Valley. But, the Malaysians are promoting technology at the cost of other pursuits. Also, a sort of "affirmative action" has been taking place, benefiting Malaysians at the expense of other ethnic groups, like the Chinese. While the Malaysians are making good decisions to reflect their modern Islamic capitalism, they are forgetting their social priorities. Centner also points out that it is not the government's place to make discriminatory decisions- a lot of these policies come from conditions tied to loans from international institutions. Centner said that "global economic policy is an urban social policy," and pointed out that structural adjustments can benefit societies by affecting the smallest parts of life. Centner is currently a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Berkeley. While at Tufts, he majored in International Relations and Sociology, graduating Summa cum Laude. He began researching for his undergraduate thesis by looking at Pacific Islander migration in New Zealand.