Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.

Archives

The Setonian
News

Former Boeing engineer speaks on evolution of military equipment

Graduates from Tufts' college of engineering will soon have a new application for their skills, former Boeing engineer Ron Carter told students assembled in Barnum 008 on Tuesday night. As the US develops elements of what Carter calls "wartime engineering" in the post-Sept. 11 era, engineers will be called upon to develop the next generation of military hardware.Carter spent much of his speech emphasizing the contributions that Boeing has made to the USAF's superiority in recent air wars, including the continuing conflict in Afghanistan. He said that engineers are designing technology that makes fighting wars more efficient and cost-effective, not to mention reducing the number of casualties. "Two hundred airplanes required for one mission in the Gulf War is now limited to 20 or 30," he said. "That is an awesome ability we did not have five years ago."The US has also been forced to adapt Cold War technology to handle today's anti-anti-terrorist missions. The B-2 Stealth Bomber, originally designed to carry nuclear payloads into the USSR, has now been modified to serve as a frontline bomber in Afghanistan."Make no mistake, America and her allies are at war with terrorism," Carter said of the US's current conflict. Reiterating the significance of the war, he pointed out that unlike any conflict in history, American civilians have been more directly affected than the nation's armed forces."Engineers are being called up daily," Carter said.Carter added that the army is actually sending Boeing engineers to Afghanistan to fix equipment, rather than recalling equipment to the US for repairs.Students in the College of Engineering say that the job outlook for Tufts' engineers is very strong. "It's going to play an important part in the future of our country," freshman Jeff Martin said.The difficulty of sending new technology into the field was also discussed. According to Carter, it takes an average 20 or 30 years for the average plane to go from technical drawing to the field. He cited the now-famous Stealth bomber, which was created in 1970 but did not take to the skies until the late '80s, as an example Carter received his Bachelor degree in Aeronautical Engineering from Parks College in 1996, and from there went on to work for Boeing until January 1999. He then worked with the United States Air Force (USAF) and the Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) before returning to Boeing to work as a liaison between the company and the USAF.Boeing is one of the largest contractors for the USAF, designing and building the newest B-2 Stealth Bomber and the F-22 Stealth Fighter. The company has recently moved its head office from Seattle to Chicago.After Boeing aircraft were used in the Sept. 11 attacks, Boeing stock collapsed by nearly 50 percent. However, since the war on Afghanistan began, the stock has steadily regained ground.


The Setonian
News

Tufts among few Universities to experience positive returns to endowment

The University's endowment - the large sum of invested money that provides Tufts with interest payments - was one of the few of its kind to see positive returns in the 2001 fiscal year. A survey of 50 colleges conducted by The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that 37 of the institutions had negative returns for that year. Half of the schools in the study were those with the largest endowments, and the other half had endowments ranging between $25 million and $1 billion. According to Tufts officials, this trend-breaking growth is due to intelligent investing and a substantial amount of "gifts and other additions" received in the 2001 fiscal year. The investments' positive returns ensured that no departments would be denied their usual stream of funds from the endowment. They have also guarded against the erosion of the principle. Vice President of Finance and Treasurer Thomas McGurty said the endowment's objective - successful "asset allocation" - is to "maintain the purchasing power of the endowment so that the income distribution will have as much impact on future budgets as it does today." In other words, to invest endowment funds in a manner that safeguards future cash flows against unpredictable fluctuations. Administrators aim for a total return that accounts for both inflation and future spending. It is difficult to predict what sort of returns Tufts' investments will have this year. While the returns from July to January were modest, the stock market itself has fallen during that period, McGurty said. Bond-rating agencies, such as Moody's Investor Services, offer differing predictions for the near future of college endowments. Moody's believes that the full effects of the recession have yet to be felt. The recession has yet to catch up with parents, they say, and enrollment in the most expensive - albeit not necessarily the most prestigious - schools is likely to drop. Fitch, a smaller agency, has a more positive outlook for higher education. They point out that enrollment is often counter-cyclical, meaning that as the economy worsens, more people enroll, whether to earn degrees or wait out the storm while enhancing their r?©sum?©s. Tufts maintains a long-term investment policy that cushions it from year-to-year market fluctuations. McGurty said that Tufts' endowment policy is relatively conservative and is not tied to investment performance. "The payout and investment policies are designed to provide for a steadily increasing stream of payments to the operating budget." While other institutions, such as Dartmouth, have announced tuition hikes, Tufts is unlikely to follow suit - at least not because of endowment problems, McGurty said. This is because Tufts relies less than other Universities on its endowment, which is much smaller per-capita than benchmark schools. As a result, fluctuations in the endowment have less impact on tuition. Dartmouth announced recently that its tuition will rise by 4.5 percent next year. According to the University, this is roughly average in other Ivy League schools, although it is a higher rate of increase than it has had for at least four years.


The Setonian
News

Amherst topples Trinity for NESCAC title

The Amherst Lord Jeffs pulled off an 85-78 upset win over the number one seeded Trinity Bantams on Sunday afternoon in Hartford, Connecticut, to win the NESCAC tournament. With the win, the fourth-seeded Lord Jeffs earned their second consecutive conference title and advanced to the NCAA Div. III Tournament for the third year in a row. Trinity was the favorite going into the NESCAC Tournament after finishing the regular season with a glittering 8-1 conference record and in possession of home court advantage throughout the playoffs. Amherst, on the other hand, had an up and down season, finishing in fourth place (5-4) in the NESCAC. In their one prior matchup this season, on Feb. 2, the Bantams defeated the Jeffs in a 110-107 triple overtime thriller. The Bantams began Sunday's game strong, bolting out of the gates with a 13-4 run in the first 6:20 of action. Senior tri-captain Colin Tabb highlighted Trinity's early run by drilling three three-pointers to help give his team a nine-point lead. In fact, Tabb was so scalding to begin the game that he actually scored 11 of his team's first 13 points. Incidentally, it was Tabb's three pointer on Feb. 2 that gave the Bantams their triple over time victory. But after the fast start, the tides quickly turned for the Bantams, as Amherst responded with a scoring spurt of its own, a 15-6 outburst to tie the game at 19 with nine minutes to go in the half. The Lord Jeffs' hot shooting continued for the remainder of the half as junior Steven Zieja scored 21 of his game-high 32 points during the opening frame to give Amherst a 50-40 advantage going into halftime. Both teams shot exceptionally well for the half; Amherst connected on 15-32 shots for a 46.9 clip, while the Bantams were just slightly better, hitting on 16-33 for a 48.5 percentage. Despite the ten-point disadvantage entering the second half, Trinity refused to give in and cut the deficit to 76-72 with 3:30 left in the contest. Unfortunately for the Bantams, ball control became an issue down the stretch as they turned the basketball over on consecutive trips down the court after pulling within four points. Amherst extended its lead to eight points with one minute left in regulation before Trinity's freshman guard, John Halas, drained a three pointer to slice the Jeffs' lead to five with 41 seconds to go. The Bantams had a few opportunities to get even closer to Amherst in the waning seconds but missed on several three-point attempts. While the Bantams were haunted by key turnovers in the second half, the Lord Jeffs played a fundamentally sound second frame. Not only did Amherst hit seven of eight free throws down the stretch to clinch the win, but it also committed a mere four turnovers in the second half and a season-low seven for the game. Despite the defeat, all was not lost for the Bantams - they received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, along with Williams. The Lord Jeffs are one of 16 teams who will have a first round bye in the NCAA tourney, while Trinity and Williams will host first round matchups on Thursday against Colby-Sawyer and Cazenovia, respectively. The winner of the Trinity/Colby-Sawyer game will play at Brockport State on Saturday and the victor in the showdown between Williams and Cazenovia will face off against Rochester on Saturday. Meanwhile, the Lord Jeffs await the winner of Thursday's Salem State/Western Connecticut matchup. Amherst will host the winner of that game on Saturday. Last season in the NCAA Tournament, the Jeffs advanced to the second round after defeating St. John Fisher College, 89-76, in the opening round before falling to Clark University, 89-76.


The Setonian
News

The Greenhouse Effect

Disclaimer: The best way to describe Ian Greenhouse is enigmatic. It may be difficult to gauge when he is kidding and when he is serious. That said, I can now proceed - caveat lector. Ian Greenhouse gives the story of his life: "My parents did 'that,' then my mom's egg was fertilized and then the cell split and - I think it's called a zygote - formed. And that's the story of my life - at least the origin," he explained. "Then a lot of stuff happened and I came to Tufts," he added. Hailing from Connecticut, this sophomore and tentative English major was brought up in a musical family. He began studying music at the age of five, and soon wrote his first song. He found a copy of the sheet music to this song over winter break and jokes that he might sell it on eBay. Greenhouse then picked up various instruments including guitar, bass, synthesizer, and piano - "...anything I could get my hands on," he said. As for his favorite thing to play, Greenhouse explains that "It's a toss-up between guitar and violin...and also cribbage. Cribbage is a fun game." With his song "What Is It?" featured as the first track on the newly released Jumbo Audio Project, Greenhouse has made a musical comeback of sorts. This comeback is so far only in its second week, following an eight-year musical hiatus. Greenhouse studied music from age three until he was 12, and stopped because he was fed up with the overly commercial nature of the business. "People started approaching me with ad campaigns," he explained. Another contributing factor, he alleged, was a brief drug problem. While in high school, however, Greenhouse did have a band. His favorite cover was "Material Girl," because a friend would get onstage and strip during the song. As a result of his band's popularity, high school was fairly easy for Greenhouse: "I had a cult following; I had kids that did my papers for me." Greenhouse decided to submit to Jumbo Audio Project after receiving threatening letters from friends. He said that they intended to harm his beloved pet gerbil if he did not to contribute to the music compilation. For his solo endeavors, Greenhouse does vocals and plays guitar. His songwriting process is admittedly simple: "I'll sit down with my guitar, write a song, and record it." Greenhouse has a great affinity for all his original work, rendering him unable to choose a favorite of his own songs to perform live. Unique in his musical tastes, Greenhouse cites a composer of music for pornographic film, Buster Gonads, as his primary influence. Female rock group Heart, best known for the song "These Dreams," has also been a major driving force. As for his thoughts about becoming a professional musician, Greenhouse says, "I've thought about it but I wouldn't want to end up dead, on the street, because that 's what happens to a lot of hip-hop artists like myself." Outside of music, Greenhouse writes many of papers- this semester he is studying 17th century British literature. He also enjoys coloring.With regard to the Boston music scene he said, "There's a lot of good music in Boston, at least a lot that goes through Boston." He was also appreciative of the Applejam concerts held on campus. Concerning the music at Tufts itself, he feels that the facilities need improvement but there is a wealth of talent on campus. Greenhouse leaves with one final thought - well, really more of a statement - derived from a friend's fortune cookie. "Wish you good health!"


The Setonian
News

Take me to the city

The most satisfying discoveries are the ones that you least expect.It happened one Sunday nearly four years ago. I lay sprawled on the couch, aimlessly flipping from one television channel to the next in hopes of finding something at least moderately entertaining. It wasn't until I landed on HBO that I found what I was looking for; something that greatly exceeded my expectations for the evening. That something was the now infamous, wildly popular HBO original series Sex and the City.Now, I'm not much of a television person. As a kid, I wasn't allowed to watch The Simpsons, and I never jumped on the Seinfeld bandwagon. But despite my lack of television exposure, I like to think that I know a good show when I see one. After all, there are plenty of programs on television that I don't like. Had there been anything else entertaining on television that fateful Sunday night, I may have never come across Sex and the City at all. But luckily I did, and in it I found one of the few programs on television worth getting addicted to. Who would have thought that a program following the sexual misadventures of four women in Manhattan would garner such attention and build a truly fanatical fan base amongst women across the country and even across the border? The folks at HBO must have when, in 1997, they ordered 13 episodes of the comedy that is based on novelist Candace Bushnell's exploration of what it means to be a single female in the city that never sleeps. Four seasons, several Emmys, and countless boyfriends later, Sex and the City is one of the hottest tickets on television. The only question is: "Why?"It isn't just about the sex -at least not anymore. It may have been what caught our attention back in 1998 when the show premiered, but it didn't take long for anyone with a discerning enough eye to realize that the series is about more than just getting laid. It's about getting laid and laughing about it, or crying about it, or throwing your hands up in the air and giving up on it. Ask any fan why she watches, and you can rest assured that you'll never get the same answer twice. Granted, women find a certain appeal to the series' frank and comic approach to the female dating experience. Yet each devotee has her own reasons for tuning in Sunday after Sunday that go beyond simply appreciating the program's overall style. The remarkable characteristic of Sex and the City is that while it has succeeded in catching the eye of female audiences as a whole, it has also tapped into individual emotions and experiences through four remarkably unique women who each encapsulate different lifestyles and dating styles. Whether it's Carrie the columnist (Sarah Jessica Parker), Samantha the publicist (Kim Catrall), Miranda the attorney (Cynthia Nixon), or Charlotte the art dealer (Kristin Davis), anyone who watches the show has their favorite Sex and the City woman. From who they date to how they date to all the sex in between, no two Sex and the City women are the same. While they may appear to comprise an unlikely group of friends (after all, you wouldn't exactly expect Samantha the sexaholic and Charlotte the inhibited traditionalist to be bosom buddies), they pull it off. Whether they're getting together for brunch, shopping for shoes, or crying over the most recent tangle in an obviously doomed relationship, women buy it because there's something about their own lives that they recognize in these women and their friendship.Sure, not everything about Sex and the City is true to life. The lifestyle may seem a little too glamorous (how many New York journalists can afford to live it up like Carrie does?) and the women may seem to bounce back a little too easily from heartbreak and failure. But would the show really be as much fun to watch if they were plagued by financial difficulties or wallowed in sex-less misery? Probably not. The show redeems itself when it can, reminding us how fallible and honest these characters can be (think Carrie giving Big a second chance and Charlotte putting up with her husband's Oedipus complex). As amazed as the series' loyal fan base may be to hear this, not everyone loves Sex and the City as much as they do. The series has often been accused of being crass and unrealistic -usually by men. What the men fail to recognize, however, is that women talk about sex as much as they do. The male population also must not tune in that often, because if they did they would realize that the show isn't just about sex. Ok, it's mostly about sex. But the series gets away with it because it deals with so many different kinds of sex, from one-night-stand sex to meaningful sex. The show is comic and entertaining without ignoring or trivializing the baggage that often goes hand in hand with love, sex, and relationships. Even monogamy-impaired Samantha has her moments of getting emotionally involved and having to deal with the consequences. The Sex and the City women get their hearts broken, too - it happens to the best of us. But even when the show gets sentimental, it manages to deliver some of the best one-liners on television.It's been four seasons, and the show is still going strong. It's matured as a series without losing those elements which made it a hit in the first place, and people can't seem to get enough. I know that all good things must come to an end, but until that happens, I'll be tuning in faithfully every Sunday night to see what the Sex and the City women get themselves into next.


The Setonian
News

A tale of two presidents

Though students, faculty, and administrators play a large role in defining campus life, it is often the president of a university who sets the tone for the institution. With academic backgrounds in fields ranging from nutrition and dentistry to economics, Tufts presidents over the last 50 years have brought diverse visions to the University, achieving phenomenal change and international expansion. Students who graduate today have had the luxury of attending Tufts under the leadership of two presidents, John DiBiaggio and Lawrence Bacow. This year marks DiBiaggio's last on the hill, but his presidency, characterized by a commitment to public service and an open leadership style, has left an indelible mark on the University. At the close of Bacow's first year as part of the Tufts family, it is still too early to predict his impact. But many say that the steps he has taken, thus far, to get to know the University signal great things to come. Bacow's first year has been characterized by minor student unrest but few major controversies. He has spent much of his time familiarizing himself with the Tufts community, and his major accomplishment was the administrative reshuffling which resulted in the elimination of the vice president position. "I have tried to be myself as President," Bacow said. "It was a good freshman year. I feel like Adele and I really got to know the Tufts community." In his first term, Bacow has been praised for his visionary outlook on the future at Tufts. He launched a comprehensive examination of student life with the creation of the Task Force on the Undergraduate Experience, which he hopes to be his signature effort. He has also talked much about unifying the separate schools within Tufts. Many say that Bacow's goals are what distinguish him from DiBiaggio. "I think of [DiBiaggio] as a consolidating community-building figure who followed after Mayer, who was more a visionary person. So I think Bacow is again maybe more [of a] visionary person," said Dean of the Colleges Charles Inouye, describing a cyclical flow of presidential leadership styles. "President DiBiaggio was wonderful with fundraising, development, and the endowment," University Chaplain David O'Leary said. "And Bacow with his look at undergraduate life - both have their minds on their future." Alluding to the new president's love of jogging, O'Leary said he thinks the University is in for a great "run" with Bacow. Bacow, however, has large shoes to fill. DiBiaggio's presidency marked a time of increased change on the hill. The former President has received much praise for his ability to realize his visions through one of Tufts' most successful capital campaigns. In his nine years at Tufts, he oversaw the tripling of the University's endowment, from $180 million to nearly $600 million. The capital campaign that he began exceeded its expectation by almost $200 million - money which has given the University the ability to construct new buildings, fund new initiatives, and improve in a number of other ways. "The greatest changes have been in the institutions financial health... and in a growth of the University's sense of community," DiBiaggio said. "What has not changed, I'm happy to say, is the commitment of the faculty to teaching students." The president emeritus' improvements on the hill have also helped to attract some of the best students and faculty in the country. Applications to the University grew by more than 70 percent during his presidency. DiBiaggio also placed a strong emphasis on the value of active citizenship. One of the hallmarks of his tenure was the founding of the University College for Citizenship and Public Service, a University-wide initiative to encourage civic engagement. Known for walking his terriers around campus, participating in various campus events, and often leaving his door open for students, DiBiaggio was well-liked and was keen on enjoying Tufts' close-knit community. "I always found him to be very straight shooting, sincere and approachable person," Inouye said. Students and faculty praised DiBiaggio for his accessibility and dedication to the student body. DiBiaggio often expressed a desire to be open to all who visited him, and many have commended him for the deep contacts he developed within the community. "I've been very touched by President DiBiaggio's concern for individual students," drama department chair Barbara Grossman said, citing DiBiaggio's recent speech at a memorial service for Tufts' student David Medeiros. While Bacow has not yet forged the bonds with students that DiBiaggio has, he has impressed administrators with the work he has done in his first year. "I have a lot of confidence in his ability to seize the moment. He's very good at understanding, quickly, the complex issues and representing the vital interests of the University to various constituencies, including trustees, faculty, and students," Inouye said. "There's been some criticism of his ability to speak with students, but I'm not sure it is a problem." The two presidents differ in the backgrounds they brought to Tufts, factors which may have affected their styles of leadership. DiBiaggio was the president of two universities before he came to Tufts: Michigan State from 1985 to 1992, and the University of Connecticut from 1979 to 1985. Prior to that, he held several administrative positions and professorships. Over the years, he has garnered three full degrees - one in dentistry - and ten honorary degrees. Bacow also has ties to Michigan, where he grew up. Academically, however, Bacow made a name for himself just across town at neighboring MIT, where he served as Chancellor from 1998-2001. Though there have been differences in the goals set by each president, many say their leadership styles have melded together well. DiBiaggio was successful in showing Tufts what kind of potential the institution has, Grossman said, and Bacow will help the University realize that potential. "I've been very impressed with [Bacow's] active, energetic leadership style." Grossman said. "With his accessibility, responsiveness to concerns and crises... the sense I have of him is [that he has a] vision for this University and where he'd like to see it be both long term and short term." Bacow came to Tufts at just the right time and has just the right qualities to continue Tufts' progress, according to Inouye. "He's the kind of guy who sees Tufts where it is now - which is to say we're really on the cusp of where we've been and where we're going to be. We're at a time where we have to make important decisions about our future," the Dean said. As for DiBiaggio's plans, he says next year he will be "on the sidelines." He hopes to pursue another career with a foundation, think tank, or as a consultant. But DiBiaggio is optimistic about Tufts' future. "I think Larry Bacow will be a great president and will work to maintain our wonderful traditions while striving to further enhance the overall quality of the University," DiBiaggio said. "Tufts is a marvelous place that will only get better."



The Setonian
News

Playoffs:The real season begins now

The NBA regular season has come to a close, but playoff fever is just beginning. If the regular season was any indication, the Eastern Conference playoffs will prove little more than a technicality - the East is battling for a chance to be drubbed by the West in what could be a laugher of a Finals. Nevertheless, in the postseason, anything is possible.Eastern Conference#1 New Jersey vs #8 Indiana: In the late '90s, Indiana grew accustomed to holding a top seed in the playoffs, but for the second straight year it has to play the league's most dominant team in the first round. Regardless of ranks, though, the Nets should not overlook this Pacers squad. On paper, the teams are very similar - their points, rebounds, and assists per game are nearly identical. While the Nets claimed three out of four regular season matchups, those victories came before the Pacers strengthened their defense by acquiring Brad Miller and Ron Artest. If the Pacers' defense can frustrate the Nets' volatile Kenyon Martin, the experience of Reggie Miller and the coaching of Isiah Thomas may be enough to procure a first-round upset.#2 Detroit vs #7 Toronto: Vince Carter is injured, but that doesn't mean that the Raptors will roll over. Toronto won 12 of its final 14 contests to climb back into the playoff picture after Carter announced he was having season-ending surgery. The Raptors are clearly playing with a passion that was absent early in the season. While that newfound emotion and a nothing-to-lose attitude will be essential against the Pistons, it might not be sufficient to overcome Detroit's home-court advantage, the dominating presence of Pistons center Ben Wallace, and the balanced scoring attack Detroit has employed all season long.#3 Boston vs #6 Philadelphia: Philadelphia managed to retain a spot in the playoffs despite being without an injured Allen Iverson for the past 14 games. Iverson, always known for his toughness, will most likely play against the Celtics, but his injured hand may impact his shooting. A healthy Boston team will also benefit from injuries to the 76ers' Derrick Coleman and Aaron McKie; both are questionable for the playoffs. Unfortunately for Boston, the image of an undersized Vitaly Potapenko or Tony Battie trying to guard Dikembe Mutumbo in the paint was humorous to begin with - but now, with Potapenko lost for the series with a knee injury, the duties fall solely on Battie. If the Celtics wants to survive the first round, they will need their role players to take some of the pressure off Paul Pierce and Antoine Walker.#4 Charlotte vs #5 Orlando: Charlotte has perennially been one of the most difficult places for visiting teams to win, but the Hornets' home-court advantage may not be all that advantageous this year - the team was just 21-20 at the Hive this season. Nonetheless, visiting Orlando has a sub-par 17-24 record on the road this season. In addition, the Magic have struggled lately, losing four of its last five regular season games. Overcoming the offensive firepower of Charlotte does not look promising for a Magic squad that will be hampered by the bad back of Tracy McGrady and the bum ankle of Mike Miller. Western Conference #1 Sacramento vs #8 Utah: This series has all the makings of an absolute pummeling. The Kings own the league's best record at 61-21, lost only five games at home the entire season, swept the Jazz during the regular season, and have seven players who score in double-figures. The only good news for Utah is that two of those players, Chris Webber and Hidayet Terkoglu, are bothered by hand injuries, and that one of those players, Bobby Jackson, is currently on the injured list. The experience of veterans Karl Malone and John Stockton may help the Jazz salvage a single game, but Utah fans should not expect more than that. #2 San Antonio vs #7 Seattle: If David Robinson is healthy, San Antonio has the most dominant frontcourt in all of basketball, one that could lead the Spurs to the finals. The Twin Towers, accompanied by the capable guard play of Tony Parker, Steve Smith, and Antonio Daniels, will be an extremely difficult match-up for Seattle. But Seattle, led by a newly-optimistic Gary Payton, is loaded with scrappy defensive players who could wreak havoc with the Spurs' offensive game plan. If the Sonics' agility and vitality can generate easy scoring opportunities, this series may be more troublesome than San Antonio anticipates. #3 Los Angeles vs #6 Portland: In four out of the past five playoffs, the Lakers have faced the Trailblazers. Los Angeles has been victorious all four times, with three of those victories coming in first-round play. Although the two-time defending champion Lakers have looked relatively vulnerable this season, beating them in a playoff series is improbable - they won 15 out of 16 postseason games a year ago. The Trailblazers have been impressive during the season's second-half, amassing a 24-10 record. As always, they have incredible depth, with seven players scoring 10 or more points per game. However, neither their winning surge nor their offensive threats will be any match for Shaq and Kobe's desire to create a new Laker dynasty in LA. #4 Dallas vs #5 Minnesota: This is Minnesota's sixth trip to the NBA playoffs; its previous five resulted in first-round losses. If the Timberwolves want to advance to the second round this year, they will have to outshoot a Mavericks team that averages a league-high 105 points per game. While this will be a difficult task, both Kevin Garnett and Wally Sczcerbiak are capable of posting huge offensive numbers on a nightly basis. But without Terrell Brandon, who has been sidelined since February, a T-Wolves victory is as unlikely as a Steve Nash haircut. Dirk Nowitzki, Nash, Michael Finley and crew bring more offense than Minnesota can handle.


The Setonian
News

"Shalom, Brother"

Students from a variety of backgrounds came together for the last in a series of Black/Jewish campus events on Wednesday night. Civil rights activist, writer, and educator Michael Thelwell spoke about the histories of Blacks and Jews in a lecture titled "Shalom, Brother... What It Be? Blacks and Jews in Struggle."


The Setonian
News

Please don't do it again

The generous critic would try to interpret Britney Spears' movie debut in Crossroads as a young girl's journey into womanhood or, better yet, as a pseudo-intellectual Kerouac-esque road narrative. I, however, refuse to even associate such sophisticated explanations with this mockery of a movie.Crossroads attempts to tackle hard-hitting issues like parental abandonment, teenage pregnancy, rape, obesity, and, above all, the true meaning of love. While the film fails miserably, potential moviegoers will be pleased to know that it successfully degrades and stereotypes women. The movie may induce a hearty dose of laughter amongst more critical audience members, but it has the potential to scar the younger people in the crowd. While I hope no one expected much from this female pop icon, Spears has quite simply crashed and burned with this one. Under the brilliant direction of Tamra Davis, Britney Spears takes on the incredibly challenging role of Lucy, an 18-year-old high school valedictorian (emphasis courtesy of Spears' southern twang and some large-print cue cards) from a small-town in Georgia. Dan Aykroyd tries to appease nostalgic fans flocking to see his latest and greatest by masterfully pinning together his previous, ingenious character sketches from Coneheads as he plays Lucy's doting father, who pops up every now and again to offer Lucy some life direction. The story really starts rolling when Britney, shedding a tear, articulately declares: "All this stuff just isn't enough." The "stuff" that she so eloquently refers to are her accomplishments and predestined future as a doctor. Looking for solutions to small-town-life problems, Britney makes some cursory moves to ameliorate her situation. After parading around in pink lacy underwear and almost losing her virginity, she makes a more serious decision - to hit the road with two childhood friends, Mimi (Taryn Manning) and Kit (Zoe Saldana). Lucky for the girls, there is a strong, virile, mildly attractive, masculine bad-ass named Ben (Anson Mount) behind the wheel of a baby yellow '76 Buick convertible who offers to drive the girls cross-country in search of their respective dreams. Under the watchful eye of Mount - who clearly took the part as Ben so he could be that dude who got to kiss Britney Spears - the girls reveal their personal traumas and eventually comfort other's pain through friendship and true love. After harboring the suspicion that Ben was a killer -a rumor that the girls believe for most of the movie -the girls learn that this is not the case. In what may be the only good line in the entire movie, Ben more or less calls the girls idiotic for going on a road trip with someone they thought was a convicted murderer. Honestly, he's right! How stupid can they get? And, how stupid can the brilliant writers of this movie make girls look? In the end, Lucy falls in love with Ben and goes on to be a singer. Imagine that. She presumably makes it big with the Britney Spears original "Not a Girl, Not Yet A Woman," a touching work that really encompasses the coming-of-age crossroad, if you will, of Britney and Lucy. The most fundamental problem with the film is arguably its characters, which are hard to relate to and serve as terrible role models for young girls. While all three girls have different life stories, they all suffer from incredible insecurities that make them take a backseat to men. In fact, in the movie, all of the young ladies are - at one point or another - physically seated in the back seat of the baby yellow convertible while their male friend drives. Also, save one short occurrence when Lucy drives, not one of the women is actually allowed to drive the car across the country. This could be symbolically interpreted as a missed opportunity to take control of their lives and move on or perhaps, from a more feminist perspective, as a permanent inferior position to men. Additionally, the girls' individual characters, while different, perpetuate stereotypes about women. Spears always wears soft pinks and yellows by day and hooker-like get-ups by night. She speaks softly and is never too confrontational. Ben, on the other hand, can get mad and takes the lead in all sexual endeavors. Additionally, Lucy can't defend herself from men. On one occasion, Ben, her knight in shining armor, saves her when another man tries to groove with her at a club. Kit is the archetypal high-maintenance chick who struts around with curlers in her hair and a bad attitude, much like that of Eva Rodriquez, Saldana's famed character in the classic ballet flick, Center Stage. Mimi is the girl with no direction - the trailer trash, as she is referred to in the movie, who is pregnant and thinks she can be a mother at the tender age of 18. With no money in her pocket, she seems like an absolute fool, especially since her only aspiration is to be a singer, though she has no talent. The girls do grow, however, as evidenced by their willingness to rough it one evening, sleeping outdoors in the forest instead of in a hotel room. Of course, the pitching of a tent in the forest was originally Ben's idea... one that Kit objected to. Another major flaw in the film is the emphasis on love and how it will heal all that is wrong. My biggest beef here is not with the importance of ultimate significance of true love. Rather, the fact that young Britney aficionados will leave this movie thinking that if they have sex - which Britney ultimately does - and marry, then everything will be grand. The importance of education is cast aside. The importance of self and self-confidence is also pushed by the wayside. The only positive message is that you must follow your dream, though this should inevitably include a man to drive you down the correct road, as was the case with Lucy. A critique of Spears herself is also important here. Spears the actress is the same as Spears the interviewee or Spears the performer, as some of the movie does involve her singing and dancing. She has no real finesse. She has no real charm. She is your classic Britney: the airheaded girl-next-door. Thus, her playing an intelligent teen is laughable. And, sadly, her playing an aspiring singer is also loudly amusing, especially when she first performs the musical version of the poem her character Lucy writes: "I'm Not A Girl, Not Yet A Woman." Just imagine Britney at a piano with her man-friend Ben playing the music he has written for her poem. She takes one look at her poem, then the music, and while methodically stroking the large white piano, she starts to hum, introducing a slight bravado while closing her eyes. Slowly but surely, she enters into her extremely heart-warming rendition of the song. While you may hope, for her sake, that this is the only time she employs this embarrassing singing routine, you're sorely mistaken. In fact, she does this during one of the first road trip scenes when *NSYNC's "Bye, Bye, Bye" came on the radio. *NSYNC star Justin Timberlake may like Britney a whole lot, but he probably didn't want her messing with his lyrical genius. Good thing she was using his pivotal song to signify her passage from one part of her life into another. How romantic! While Crossroads clearly contains nothing redeeming content-wise, it's unbelievably funny if you watch it with a critical eye. It's almost like reading a good edition of Cosmopolitan and making fun of it. After talking with some ten-year-old die hard Britney fans before the movie began, however, I fear for the impressionable audience members and sincerely hope that they have some strong role models in their lives before and after wasting money on this movie.


The Setonian
News

Refusing to remain quiet

Four years ago, in early September, the captain of the state champion football team in Lewiston, Maine was found missing. There were no notes; there were no explanations. His friends had seen him the night before at a party. There were speculations that he had had a car accident. Others thought he may have lost his way somewhere in the woods, broken down, and was still walking home. After three days, an official report was filed, and the police began investigating his disappearance. After nearly a month of searching by both the local and state police, interviews with friends and witnesses from across the state, research into his academics and social life, and numerous attempts to give clue to his location, he was found. He was the perfect son: handsome, sportive, captain of the football team, heading to college, good academic standing, friendly, attractive girlfriend. He was finally found, not by the police, but by one of his closest friends, and surprisingly, not far from home. His friend discovered him, shot and hanged, in the woods, his own backyard. Along with the body a note was found; it explained everything: the reasons for the disappearance, the reasons for the suicide, the reason for his recent aloofness. Scott was gay. Sexual disparity marks our culture. It marks the differences in pay for women in comparison to males; it marks the treatment of students according to their gender; it marks the way parents treat their sons and their daughters; it marks the way society treats those who do not fit the stereotypical "norm." It scars our children, our communication, and our collection as a people. It is an impediment, a destructive element of fear, hate, misunderstanding, and prejudice. It is a bullet in our heads, a rope from which we hang ourselves and from which we can easily and unintentionally hang others. Friday night, after attending an excellent Beelzebub's performance, two friends and I were verbally assaulted walking back from Goddard chapel. Three males in a dark car shouted a word I have never liked, and further, have never been called. After overtly calling me a "fag" in front of my two friends as well as others walking by, the three males proceeded to drive away while yelling and telling me to give it them in less than mentionable areas. My friends and I continued past, walked home, and thought nothing more of it. It was a simple passing, a simple hatred; they were simple-minded people. The implication was not as much a prejudiced statement on a sexuality which the three males had no knowledge of as it was a thoughtless action that could have had dire consequences. I could blow it off, but the prejudice cannot be let pass. Father Martin Niemoller, a German pastor, forcefully implicates what happens when intolerance is not confronted: "First they came for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time there was no one left to speak up for me." (1945)I refuse to stand unspoken. Speaking out is not a question; it is a lesson learned in time. If I, if we, do not speak out, nothing will ever change. There is no rebuttal in this argument; too many people are affected by simple-minded, thoughtless actions. I choose to speak, and I hope in writing this those who fearfully and unjustly vandalized the sanctity we all desire will give consideration to their actions. I do not search repentance in this Viewpoint. I seek a justice for Scott and those who have been hanged by others, by the cruel words and actions of others. If inconsiderate, bigoted words and actions are let passed, no justice can come of this world. If I remain quiet, if I blind myself from the world of hate that surrounds me, surrounds us, I am equally guilty of the actions I chose to ignore. The next time you encounter hatred, discrimination, or injustice, be sure to vocalize the simplest concept we share as humans: brotherhood. We can only survive together.John Dulac is freshman who has not yet declared a major.


The Setonian
News

Grossman gives students an earful

When Steve Grossman was asked on television what from the last millennium he'd take with him and what he'd leave behind, he responded with democracy and intolerance, respectively. It's one of several questions the Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate turned on Tufts students in a visit to the Hill on Wednesday. Grossman, whose wife Barbara chairs the drama and dance department at Tufts, may have surprised the small audience that had expected a campaign speech. Instead, they were treated to an interactive presentation on voting, civil involvement, and the issues facing college students. "How can we get more people voting?" Grossman asked. "[Changing the status quo] is about removing roadblocks and making civic engagement more accessible." Grossman, who helped start the Coalition for a Democratic Future to get younger voters more involved in government, said that voting was an inaccessible opportunity. He suggested Internet voting options, weekend voting, mail balloting, and same-day registration as possible solutions to low voter turnout. Beyond addressing voter turnout, Grossman's presentation to students called attention to injustices he said he's dedicated to combating - anti-Semitism, bigotry, racism, racial stereotyping, and homophobia. Recalling a visit to Tufts Hillel as the president of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) on the eve of the Oklahoma City bombing, Grossman discussed the prevalence of racial stereotyping in the US. Participants largely came from President Emeritus John DiBiaggio's Leadership for Active Citizenship class, and were eager to discuss the moral implications of political decisions. Junior Alison Clarke asked Grossman about his position on the death penalty. An opponent to capital punishment in all forms and situations, Grossman cited the questionable Sacco and Vanzetti executions as motivations behind his opposition. Afterwards, students were impressed with Grossman's emotionally-charged speech.Junior Greg Binstock said Grossman was a great speaker. "I agreed with almost all of his platforms. He's very interested in involving the people and engaging them to vote." Senior Alain Chaglassian said "it was really good how he emphasized civic participation, but started off with an example of exactly what democracy is and cited further examples later on in his speech." After the presentation, Grossman spoke further with DiBiaggio's class. Sophomore Phil Berenbroick said that in both cases, he didn't feel like he was listening to your typical politician. "I thought it was different than when you hear most candidates for office speak, because most only speak about their programs," Berenbroick said. "They don't necessarily want to hear what others have to say." Grossman has visited campus on several prevision occasions, and said he would continue to do so after the election. He quipped that he would be happy to achieve even half of the popularity his wife has as a department chair. Grossman says that if elected, he intends to make higher education a priority. Having served as Chairman of the Board of Trustees at Brandeis, he said that he maintains a strong connection with the colleges and universities of Massachusetts. As evidence of his commitment, Grossman cited his record of being the first employer to sign on to Employer Assisted Housing. Under this program, employers receive a tax credit that then allows them to subsidize housing costs for younger employees, like college students, to keep them in Massachusetts despite the rising cost of housing. "Massachusetts will rise and fall on the success of innovation," he said, adding that he plans to provide high school students with grants to continue their education in fields such as science, math, engineering, and technology. And unlike incumbent Jane Swift, Grossman does not see a need for drastic budget cuts. According to Grossman, his commitment to smarter monetary allocations and buying products like prescription drugs in bulk could save Massachusetts upwards of $150 million. "Jane Swift and her predecessors have not been good stewards of precious goods," Grossman said. He hopes to change that precedent. "Massachusetts needs accountability and decisive leadership. You can impact the most lives as governor," he said. "We create change through politics."


The Setonian
News

Where are you going to park?

Last Friday, the Daily ran an editorial which supported building a new dormitory across the street from Aidekman Arts Center, rather than in the parking lot behind Hill Hall. The editorial made a strong case, citing the proximity to dining halls, other dorms, and classrooms in the area around Aidekman, while pointing out that the area behind Hill Hall was far removed from most of the campus. It also noted that the dorm would include apartments for juniors and seniors, as well as for faculty members so as to create a "residential community." Here's the problem: Many of those juniors and seniors will likely have cars with them, as would any faculty living in this proposed dorm. And these cars need to be parked somewhere. Have you ever tried finding a parking space around Aidekman during the day? They don't really exist. If you ever go through the Aidekman parking lot between the hours of nine and five during the week, you are guaranteed to find lots of cars parked illegally next to where the parking spaces end, simply because there's no room anywhere in the lot. Be it a student with a class in Aidekman or a professor teaching there, they just didn't have time to drive all the way to the parking lot next to Cousens and sprint all the way back downhill before they miss their class. This, unfortunately, is no consolation when you return to your car to find a friendly little note on your windshield telling you to pay 15 bucks, as I did on a couple of occasions last year. If the proposed new dorm is built across from Aidekman without addressing this problem, the situation will become unbearable. Any dorm residents who drive home from classes or jobs during the day will never find a parking space, forcing them to drive all the way back uphill to the garage or to the Cousens parking lot. There usually is not any room around Aidekman until around 5 or 6 p.m., when many classes end and faculty members begin to go home. However, the downhill site is still a much better location than the site behind Hill Hall, and it would be a shame if this problem prevented the dorm from being built there. I believe the University should explore ways to expand the parking lot by Aidekman to create more spaces and thus relieve this problem if they decide to build downhill. I also think that sophomores should not be allowed to park around Aidekman, which was the old policy until last year. Before last year, sophomores were only allowed to park their cars by Cousens gym, which allowed for more parking space downhill. The current parking problem around Aidekman was exacerbated when sophomores were given permission to park there after Dowling Hall was built. John King, the director of the Department of Public & Environmental Safety, figured that the new parking garage would open up enough spaces around Aidekman for the sophomores. The problem with this idea is that Dowling Hall is uphill, and thus does not relieve any of the demand for parking around Aidekman. I realize that this solution would be a major inconvenience for sophomores with cars living downhill, but it does not make sense to allow them to park there if space is needed for upperclassmen and faculty living across the street. I sincerely hope that the trustees choose to build the new dorm in the superior location across from Aidekman, and that the University will take the appropriate steps to prevent a parking crisis even worse than the one that exists now.Alex Alexiou is a senior majoring in music.


The Setonian
News

Women's basketball fights to victory over Scots

The women's basketball team matched its highest score of the season last night after a torrid second half of shooting, en route to an 84-76 victory over Gordon College in Cousens Gym. Tufts has now won two straight in the wake of its three-game losing streak last week, pushing its record back above the .500 mark. "This team beat Clark, which is a team that we lost to," junior forward Emily Goodman said. "So this was a good win. And we've got to play two very good teams this weekend: Colby on Friday, and Bowdoin, which is undefeated, on Saturday. So it's a good win for our heads more than anything else." The Jumbos, who currently stand at 9-8 overall and 1-2 in NESCAC play, shot a blistering 57.7 percent from the field in the second half to overcome a 39-37 halftime deficit. Junior forward Erin Harrington pumped in 14 second-half points to finish with a team-high 22 for the night, while senior co-captain and forward Jayme Busnengo scored 12 of her 16 points after the break. Aside from their hot shooting, though, the Jumbos also benefited from a defensive change after a tight first half. Tufts came out in an aggressive full court press, leading to three straight steals and a 19-7 Jumbo run that put them up 55-45 with 12 minutes left to play. "In the second half, we came out and pressed, which was really effective," junior co-captain and point guard Hillary Dunn said. "That really gave us the momentum we needed for the rest of the game." But despite the Jumbos' relentless pressure, the Fighting Scots refused to go down easily, staying within striking distance for the rest of the game. Gordon first responded to the hosts' hot shooting with an 8-2 run of its own, cutting the lead to 58-53 with 9:49 to go. Tufts then bumped the margin up to 11 three times over the next four minutes; highlighted first by Dunn's driving lay-up at 7:24 and then by sophomore Kate Gluckman's redirection of a rebound to Busnengo for an easy bucket, making it 73-62 with just under six minutes on the clock. Once again, however, Gordon clawed its way back. After Busnengo's basket, back-to-back threes from sophomore guard Caitlin Reardon and freshman forward Sarah DeLuca pulled the Fighting Scots to within five at 5:11. Harrington promptly answered with a three of her own and Busnengo scored in the paint off a feed from Gluckman to give Tufts another double digit lead at 3:59, 78-68. But DeLuca then reeled off six straight points and the Jumbos found themselves clinging to a four-point lead at the two-minute mark. "She was an inside player, and it had been their inside people that were hurting us all night," Goodman said. "Then, when they started hitting from the outside, we just seemed to forget about the inside game for a bit there and focus on their outside shooters." That was as close as Gordon would get, however. After a short delay due to technical difficulties with the scoreboard, Dunn, Busnengo, and junior forward Emily Goodman combined to make six of eight free throws before time expired. Gordon could only muster a lay-up from DeLuca, who finished with 21 points. "That's happened in a few games now: we've had to stop when something happened with the clock," Goodman said. "So we're used to it. It might have taken them out of their momentum, though." In the first half, things were a bit different, as Gordon capitalized on an impressive shooting touch of its own and led by as many as six. Junior forward Barbara Goodwin poured in 13 points for Gordon on 6-7 shooting, while DeLuca had eight - the majority of them coming in the paint. "Our main focus during halftime was that we had to get back on defense," Busnengo said. "I mean, it was obvious: transition defense was killing us. They had so many lay-ups and back door cuts and things [in the first half]. And the Jumbos did just that, as their defense produced nine second-half steals and, according to Goodman, set the stage for the team's strong shooting,. "When we came out in that press, got a few quick steals, and then went up in the first two minutes, that gave us a confidence boost and accounted for the high shooting percentage," she said. Goodman finished with 10 points and eight rebounds, while senior forward Katie Kehrberger added ten points and seven assists. Harrington and Busnengo pulled down six boards apiece, and Dunn had six assists. This weekend, Tufts will host Bowdoin on Friday at 7 p.m., and then Colby beginning at 3 p.m. on Saturday.


The Setonian
News

Drive has had lackluster turnout, despite high need for blood

Student response to the Leonard Carmichael Society's second blood drive has been lackluster, despite a continuing need by the American Red Cross for more blood supplies. As of Sunday evening, 175 people had signed up to donate and organizers are hopeful more will apply before Wednesday. "What concerns me is that people don't really understand that donating blood is an ongoing thing, and that it should be done on a regular basis," LCS blood drive organizer Dan Keesing said. "It is not something done once in a lifetime and never considered again." The turnout on Monday was much less than the coordinators had hoped. "After the blood drive held for the Sept. 11 event, the urge to give blood has decreased. For example there was a shortage of blood in December," coordinator Matthew Alford said. "There is a big need for blood, but there is not much interest this time." Those who did decide to donate blood found it to be a rewarding experience. "I might as well do something for others, and donating blood is a good way to do it," sophomore donor Gabrielle Eklund said. "There is a need for blood right now, and it is the least we can do for people." Junior Alex Foster, a donor who had just given blood and was eating snacks said that "it's pretty easy to do and for a good cause." This year's donating procedure is different from previous years. Students register for the drive online through Tuftslife.com, allowing coordinators to organize donors according to their sign-up times and their names. Donors receive reminder e-mails prior to their donation day. "It is more organized this way, and also it is easier for students to decide whether they want to donate or not since they don't have to sign their names right away in the dining halls," Keesing said. "Signing up online gives them more time to think about it without rushing." The blood drive organization hosts the American Red Cross, and trained staff from the Red Cross take blood from donors. There will be a raffle each day, and the Red Cross will give away one gift certificate of $25 for Border Caf?© in Harvard Square, and three pairs of tickets to Comedy Connection in Boston. This year, LCS wants to make the drive more exciting by having a Valentine's Day theme, with the motto "Bring a date to the blood drive." LCS is also trying to make the drive more fun than past blood drives by playing romantic music on Wednesday. The blood drive began yesterday, and will continue until Wednesday. Hodgdon Hall hosted yesterday's drive, which will move to Carmichael Hall on Tuesday and Wednesday. Dan Keesing, Matt Alford and Marlon Thomas are the LCS coordinators in charge of the event.


The Setonian
News

So you wanna see a movie?

Welcome to Tufts. While it may seem like you won't have time to see many movies during these first few months of school, don't worry - September and October are dumping grounds for most movie studios anyway. But should you desire to brave the streets of Boston for the latest Tom Green masterpiece, here is a handy guide of local movie theaters:SOMERVILLE THEATER55 Davis SquareA second-run movie theater, in easy walking distance of campus.What's good about it? If you miss a major movie or the occasional art-house hit on first release, you can see it here for less then you would elsewhere in the city.What's not so good about it? This is as close to a "dollar" theater as you're going to get. However, by "dollar" theater I mean a "five dollar" theater. And the seats, sound equipment and prints have all seen better days.Directions: In the heart of Davis Square.KENDALL SQUARE THEATER1 Kendall SquareThe one-stop-shop for independent cinema in the Cambridge area.What's good about it? However small the release, chances are this theater will get that obscure independent or foreign flick and run it for more than a week. The theater's in good condition too, with nice screens and seats.What's not so good about it? You can't find the damn place. It's well hidden and you can get easily lost in the MIT area, which, last I checked, is not exactly the nicest place to be. The theater is also just as expensive as its bigger, better Boston counterparts.Directions: Kendall Stop on the Red Line.FRESH POND ALEWIEFE THEATER168 Alewife Brook ParkwayThe closest movie theater to Tufts that plays current films.What's good about it? See above.What's not so good about it? This place is a dump, and even though you can reach it by MBTA, it's still a hike over the bridge and down into past the strip mall. Also, if you see a late showing, good luck catching the T back. Only for the desperate.Directions: Alewife stop on the Red Line.BOSTON COMMON175 Tremont StreetThe newest and the second biggest theater in the Boston Area.What's good about it? This place is nice. The building is lined wall to wall with famous movie quotes and classic movie posters (Batman, Dances With Wolves, Aladdin, etc.) The place has tons of cashiers, concession stands, the screens are huge and there are lots of them. The seats are also of the stadium seating quality.What's not so good? You pay for that quality. A non-matinee will run you about nine or ten dollars.Directions: Red Line to Park Street.COPLEY100 Huntington Avenue Box 17Very chic theater inside Copley Place.What's good about it? It's a nice theater.What's not so good about it? It's a nice theater that doesn't have the size, scope or choices of Fenway or Boston Common, but is just as expensive, and is about as far away. There's nothing really wrong with it, but there's no reason to go to it unless you're in the area.Directions: Green Line to CopleyFENWAY201 Brookline AvenueA huge General Cinema theater right by the Green Monster.What's good about it? It has more screens than any other theater, it has the biggest screen in Boston, and it has a dipping dots machine. This is more important than you might think.What's not so good about it? The Common's theater is nicer, closer and about the same price. And as long as the screen is big, does it matter if it's a few feet more?Directions: Green line to Kenmore.LOEWS THEATER HARVARD10 Church StreetA small theater right in the heart of Harvard square.What's good about it? Plays independent movies, cheaper than Kendall.What's not so good about it? It's easy to get distracted mid-route to the theater and the theater has seen better days.Directions: Red Line to Harvard.OMNI THEATERScience ParkThe Imax-Clone movie at the Museum of Science.What's good about it? The screens are HUGE and often the films are interesting. You can also buy tickets online.What's not so good about it? Keep in mind it's not an actual IMAX, just their own version of a huge screen cinema. The theater is constructed in such a way that you can also get sick watching it. The films are also pretty short.Directions: Green Line to Lechmere or 80 bus.@keywords:theaters#cinemas#


The Setonian
News

If you're not recycling, you're throwing it all away

Over five million acres of virgin forest are logged for paper production in the US every year. That's almost one New Hampshire, in terms of land area - annually. One-sixth of this abused land is old growth forest, and more than three quarters of it is in ecologically diverse and sensitive parts of the southeast US. This is why I joined the Stop Staples Campaign. There aren't that many New Hampshires worth of forest left in our country. In fact, 95 percent of our original, old growth forests have been logged already. Staples, Inc. is far and away the largest and fastest growing office supply company in the US and in the world - they open, on average, one new store every 48 hours. And they sell woefully little recycled paper. Less than 12 percent of their products have recycled content, and those that do are typically from pre-consumer sources. While this does mean fewer thousands of tons of paper get landfilled, it doesn't mean fewer trees are chopped. I spent many hours in the last month trying to get Staples to recycle more. I never considered myself an "activist" before, but I dressed up in a suit and tie and chanted "Pine, spruce, redwoods, maples-Sell recycled paper Staples!" for hours in Harvard Square. I helped run a call-in day from the campus center - you might remember our table, covered with cell phones, and you might have made one of the 140 phone calls that Staples, Inc. received from Tufts University that day. They really noticed that one. We filled one executive's voicemail box in twenty minutes, and as soon as he checked his messages, we did it again. I've talked to radio reporters and Staples PR men together, pointing out gaps between their eco-friendly rhetoric and the truth. Our requests are simple. We want Staples to immediately phase out all products made from old growth fiber, and from trees harvested from public lands. It's simply not necessary to drain these resources, and the cost to Staples of such an act is minimal. Staples should commit to 50 percent post consumer content for all their paper products within two years, and phase out non-recycled products. As one of the leading buyers of paper in the world, Staples could drive the cost of recycled paper (which is inherently more energy and cost-effective than logging) down to or below non-recycled types. Our final demand is that Staples offer some 100 percent tree-free products-made from alternative sources such as hemp and agricultural byproducts. Since I joined the campaign, they agreed to this, and are starting to stock it on their shelves. This astounded me. I did this. If I did the math, I could probably give you a number of trees I have personally saved. Right now, I'll guess one. One big tree that, because of me, won't be cut. I'm a believer. I spent some time with some friends, cajoled the establishment, learned a thing or two, and saved a tree. The first of many.Nick Novelli is a senior majoring in mechanical engineering.


The Setonian
News

Mr. Twinkie: The tale of a track star

Yesterday when I sat down to write my column a terrible thing happened to me: I couldn't think of anything to write about, and I was already in a bad mood. I needed a victim to take my wrath out on. I talked to a few people, including a member of the women's basketball team who wanted me to write about her. I was going to take her advice, but then it occurred to me that she might not like my sense of humor, and I don't want her to hate me. So I had no choice but to turn my attention to another school, "Cornell" and one of its athletes, my friend, "Joey Smith." (I have changed Joey's name and school in order to protect his identity.) When I told Joey I had nothing to write about he said, and I quote, "Talk about your friend [me] who used to be fat and now runs for [Cornell], but embellish a little and call [me] Mr. Twinkie." Well you asked for it Mr. Twinkie. The following is a partially true, mostly made up story about Joey Smith.On Saturday night Cornell's Joseph Smith made track history. After being amongst the slowest runners in White Plains high school history, recording a 12-minute mile in his first high school race, Smith completed the transformation from high school butterball to college All-American by clocking in at 4:15 in the Ivy Championships.Even more remarkable than the 4:15 mile is the fact that Smith completed this transformation in a mere year and a half. After being a pitiful excuse for a runner in ninth, tenth and eleventh grades, Smith finally began to make strides during his senior year of high school. By his freshman year at college he was an All-American."Before 12th grade, we never really practiced," Smith said. "Instead of going on distance runs, we would jog across the street from school to my friend Obey Fusco's house and smoke some grass and drink a few beers. Then in 12th grade Fusco and all the other potheads quit or graduated, so I had nothing to do at practice except to run. It wasn't like I would smoke alone at practice. Besides, my mom stopped giving me money to support my drug habit anyway."So after not completing a mile faster than eight minutes prior to his senior season, Smith's newfound dedication to practice completely transformed him to the point where he consistently completed the mile in under five and a half minutes. "I became dedicated to my training," Smith said. "Instead of smoking when I was supposed to be running I would run three blocks to my friend Steven Thompson's house, chug a few beers, play an hour of track and field video games on his old Sega, and then sprint back to school."His former high school coach, Ed Donahue, had nothing but fond memories of Smith. "Joey was such a great kid," Donahue said. "His first couple years he practiced hard to no avail but everything seemed to come together for him during his senior season. I will never forget how he always came back from a hard practice with his face flushed and his eyes bloodshot. Wow, he really gave it his all during practice. I wish all our runners cared half as much as Joey did."Six months into his college career when Joey ran a 4:15 mile, the metamorphosis was complete, although one couldn't really notice any physical difference between the 14-year old version of Smith or the "toned, athletic" 18-year old edition."I still have 18 percent body fat even though I run 60 miles a week in between drinking Guinness and smoking with my frat brothers," Smith said. "While this is a fairly normal percentage of body fat for a non-athlete, most Cornell runners have percentages around ten, maybe less."Still, Smith had trouble pinpointing what led to his emergence as a great runner. "I'm not sure how I got good," he said. "In 12th grade I stopped smoking for a year and I got a little faster. But in college I got hooked again. I do drink a higher quality of beer with my frat brothers than I did in White Plains - that could be it. But to be honest, I'm not really sure how I got to be so fast. I guess maybe I run a few more blocks during practice than I used to but I dunno."While it may have been running those extra "blocks" that caused Smith to become faster, it may also have been his natural talents finally beginning to poke through his chubby exterior. Although Smith may not look exactly like a stereotypical athlete, there is no doubt that he does have athletic genes. His father is a scratch golfer and his mother is the best tennis player at the family's snooty country club. In fact, it was Mrs. Martha Smith who inspired her son to start running track."When I had just finished up eighth grade and couldn't keep up with her on the tennis courts, we both realized there was a problem," Smith said. "I would walk onto the court with her and then would have to stop for a water break and a quick nap. Mom's personal trainer wouldn't even look me in the eye. My mother was very impatient with me but she inspired me.""I love my son," Mrs. Smith said. "I didn't want him turning out like his father. All my husband does is drink whisky, smoke cheap cigars, play golf, play poker and hang out at Smith and Wolensky's Steakhouse with his buddies. He doesn't even go to work anymore. Three or four times a week, he goes to the race track and wastes the money that he should be spending on my masseuse. I wanted a better life for my boy."With her eldest son a success on the track and in the midst of getting an Ivy League education, Mrs. Smith has turned her attention to her middle child Petey, an eighth grader who looks and acts eerily similar to his older brother."Back in eighth grade I was a sucker for ice cream Sundays, apple pies, beer, and marijuana, cigarettes too," Smith said. "I wanted to be a pro golfer like my dad, at least that's what I think he does. Or maybe he rides horses. I'm not sure. Oh well. But the point is that my mother made me join the track team in ninth grade and that changed my life. I know she will do the same for my brother."


The Setonian
News

Peer education program to combat hate crimes

In response to recent incidents of graffiti at Capen House, Associate Dean of Students Marisel Perez has accelerated her plan to create a Peer Education Program in an attempt to prevent further incidents and to promote educated, open dialogue. Perez has submitted her proposal for the program to Tufts' Diversity Fund and hopes to begin professionally training about ten sophomores and juniors in the spring. The program aims to take a more formal approach to training than in the past, and its members will serve year-round on an established panel focused on conflict resolution and diversity education, especially in residential areas. Perez said she hopes that resident assistants (RAs) will facilitate the program, which would serve as a catalyst for residential discussion. Perez says she hopes the RAs will provide the "leadership it takes to get a conversation going," she said. While reception for the program is generally positive, some students are skeptical that it could effectively combat hate crimes. "I don't think that will work because the people who [will participate] aren't the ones who need education," freshman Vy Nguyen said. She said she is doubtful that hate crime offenders will heed the program's teachings. "All the workshops and lectures won't be absorbed by the people who need it. It's all in one person's mind and personal beliefs and unless it's one-on-one, which there isn't enough resources to do, it won't help." Senior Tommy Calvert said the makeup of the program's audience would likely depend on the topic of particular forums. "It depends on what the nature of the forums are," Calvert said. "A forum talking about penalties of hate crimes [detailing] the federal statutes and laws or state laws" is more likely to attract perpetrators of hate crimes than a "general racial unity type of event," he said.Perez says she wants to "try to get involved in a more educational role" in the responses to such incidents. If the perpetrator of a hate crime is identified, action taken by the program and the Dean of Students Office will be specific to the case.Applications for the program will be available in the spring.


The Setonian
News

Montesano representing women's squash nationals

When Anne Montesano became a member of the women's squash team as a freshman nearly four years ago, she could not have conceived being the chosen representative at singles nationals. After attending a few practices as a novice player, she knew from the beginning she had a long way to go."I was pretty bad," Montesano said. "So I stopped going to practices. But then one of the captains called me and reminded me of when our practice times were, so I started going back."Montesano, who heads to New Jersey for nationals this weekend, didn't start out near the top of the team. As a freshman, she played at the ninth and tenth position. Since only the scores of the first nine players count, she often played without contributing to the team's final score.Coach Doug Eng acknowledged one of his top player's humble beginnings. "She needed a big head start at first," he said. "She had a lot of learning to do. She was a little claustrophobic, like some players who think they might get hit on the court."But Montesano would prove that hard work and determination could take her far in squash. Her transition from freshman to sophomore year brought about vast improvements in her game, as she moved up to the fourth spot in the lineup. "That's a tough jump to make," Eng said. "She kept a good head on her shoulders and had a strong year."As a junior, Montesano moved up again, playing in the second and third positions. At this point, she was playing against top-notch schools and found that she could hold her own. Now in her senior year, she holds the number two position.Montesano said her progress over the last five years has included stronger drives and improved digging out of the corner in her back-court game. But Eng and Montesano agree that most important is her overall court awareness and ability to read her opponents' moves."This is the hardest thing to do in squash," Eng said of court awareness. "It's easy to hit the ball - it's hard to know where your opponent will move next."Montesano said that each year, she's been able to accent her improvements, resulting in steady development as a player. "We all want to peak at nationals, and I think that's something I've been able to do every year," she said.Eng attributes much of Montesano's improvements to her overall athletic ability. He said her willingness to run and train has helped the strength of her drive shots. She also possesses a work ethic second to none."She's not an easily frustrated person," Eng said. "She's always in a good mood. Even when the team loses, she congratulates everyone on a job well done. A player who does that is really able to develop."Furthermore, he said she's not afraid to test new strategies. "She's like a sponge. She's very open to new ideas on how to play better."Montesano said she reached her peak this season during her match against William Smith College at the Howe Cup Tournament hosted at Yale last weekend. After playing her opponent through five matches, she came back strong in the last couple of matches to win the contest. "I just played really well,"she said. "[Coach Eng] told me it was the best squash he has ever seen me play."Montesano feels that her experience as a Tufts squash player has been a challenge well worth her while. Devoting as many as 30 hours a week to the team at certain points during the season, she's felt both the physical repercussions as well as the struggle of managing her schedule around squash. More importantly, though, has been her personal growth."I realized how important athletics are to me," she said. "In terms of my own health, it's important to run around and take care of my body. Also, sports help you build your own confidence and help you determine who you are as a person."Montesano tries to share what she's learned over the years, and said she sees coaching as a possibility in the future. Positive attitude has been an important part of her role as team co-captain this year. She said one of her main goals as a captain is to motivate the team before matches. "I want to make everyone feel comfortable, and make everyone feel like they have a role on the team," she said.But perhaps Montesano's greatest achievement was being chosen to represent the women's squash team at the Singles Nationals competition, hosted by Princeton University this weekend, March 1-3. As the only women's team member in attendance, Montesano's attitude towards this weekend's competition is focused and levelheaded. "I'll have some challenging matches against some good players. I just want to play well and work on what [Eng] has been working on with me. I'd like to end my squash experience on a good note."For Eng, Montesano's achievements this weekend won't be measured by her final scores; instead, the focus will be on her overall game. "With some players, I look at them and say, wow, that was a great match," Eng said. "For her it's not about that. It's about looking at how far she has come."


The Setonian
News

Bacow after six months: straight talk and tough decisions

"I'm not here to be loved, I'm here to be respected," President Larry Bacow told faculty members at their first meeting during his tenure. And six months after taking office, Tufts' 12th president has convinced many he's keeping his word. Taking major issues head on, Bacow has made straight talk and tough decisions the hallmark of his young administration. In his first semester at Tufts, Bacow maneuvered through two of the University's most delicate challenges and carefully skirted a third. He brings a technocrat's eye to problems, thinking out his responses and focusing on detailed solutions. When Bacow took office last summer, he inherited a top-heavy administrative structure that sprawled back through two Tufts presidencies. By the time former Vice President of Arts, Sciences, and Engineering Mel Bernstein resigned last year, a number of faculty and administrators criticized the system as having grown bloated and inefficient. Unpopular among many faculty members for its inaccessibility and detachment from their departments, many at Tufts were calling for Bacow to eliminate the office of the vice president. But instead of making a decision in September, Bacow announced he would wait until October to decide whether to replace Bernstein, or abolish the post entirely. Before making his decision, Bacow studied other schools' administrative structures. He eventually opted for a massive, University-wide restructuring that he said would save money and decrease bureaucracy. He consolidated work in the offices of fewer administrators and committees, and expanded the President's Council to include Dean of Engineering Ioannis Miaoulis and newly appointed Dean of Arts and Sciences Susan Ernst. These interests were previously represented by only one seat on the Council, reserved for the vice president. Bacow said the money saved by these changes would be spent on faculty development, one of his top priorities. "Taking away a layer of administration is always a good thing," Provost Sol Gittleman said, calling the decision one of the most important Bacow has made so far.But some professors say that Bacow's decision was motivated by other, more subtle concerns. Prior to the reshuffling, administrators were whispering that if the office survived, Miaoulis was the top candidate for the vice presidency. This alarmed some Arts and Sciences professors, who had long grumbled that Bernstein - like Miaoulis, an engineer by training - did not fully address their concerns. By promoting Enrst and Miaoulis before eliminating the vice presidency, Bacow was able to appease both sides. Whatever his motivations, the end result sits well with most professors. "Bernstein seemed kind of remote from the department level," math professor Boris Hasselblatt said, adding that the new structure is more department-focused than its predecessor. "To the faculty, it will be the difference between night and day." Even before the academic year began, Bacow faced an equally serious challenge from students. Immediately upon arrival on campus for the fall semester, students attacked the University's labor practices, calling for a "living wage," and sparking a debate with the potential to grow into a years-long controversy like the one that is currently raging at Harvard. In a series of protests, the recently formed Student Labor Action Movement joined with Tufts custodians and their union to demand better pay and benefits. Soon, they had turned an old concern into a fresh debate with a new sense of urgency. "Trustees want to save money while many faculty and students want to pay all employees of Tufts a good salary," history professor Steven Marrone said, adding that students, faculty, and janitors have pushed for better wages and working conditions for most of the last decade with little result. Although negotiations were technically between the custodians' union and OneSource - Tufts outside janitorial company - Bacow faced intense pressure from students and faculty to intervene in favor of the custodians. While Harvard's "living wage" debate dragged its new President Lawrence Summers into the fray, Bacow is widely credited with helping resolve the situation quickly, and preventing the media spotlight from turning on Tufts. "He got involved in the discussion, which was a new thing," said physics professor Gary Goldstein, who supported the movement. "In the past, the administration had avoided talking about the issues." While Bacow made tough decisions and averted crises in both the administrative restructuring and "living wage" campaigns, he has been largely silent on issues relating to his predecessor's greatest legacy: former President DiBiaggio's University College of Citizenship and Public Service (UCCPS). The UCCPS attracted local suspicion from the start. But DiBiaggio's national prestige in the public service arena and the high-profile donors he attracted kept it safe from harsh campus criticism. Upon arriving at Tufts, Bacow faced a precarious situation: he could embrace the UCCPS fully, as DiBiaggio had done, or cast a more critical eye on the infant institution. Outwardly, it appears Bacow chose the middle path. He made an important calculus and offered UCCPS moderate support. Bacow has made appearances at UCCPS events and spoken highly of its goals, but has not named it as one of his top priorities for the University's development. "He makes his decisions very carefully," DiBiaggio said of Bacow. "What I respect and admire about him is that he recognizes that there have been many achievements here over the years and he's not going to tear the University apart." While it appears that Bacow will not dismantle DiBiaggio's legacy, some see Bacow as a strong force for change in other areas of the University. "I personally think he'll be very good for Tufts, and will bring us back to the dynamism characteristic of the University in the 1980s and began to fade a bit toward the end of the 1990s," Marrone said. The 1980s saw great change for Tufts, as then-President Jean Mayer elevated the University to Research I status, creating the vet school and building a world-renowned nutrition school. DiBiaggio's tenure was more moderate, characterized by fiscal responsibility and an era of unprecedented fundraising. Now, some see a return to the aggressive growth Tufts saw under Mayer. Marrone, who serves on the prestigious tenure and promotions committee, sees new hope in Bacow. He believes the new president will draw out pent-up energies that have resided at the University for years. "A reservoir of good will and energy lay ready to be tapped," Marrone said. And with another confrontation on his doorstep as graduate students attempt to unionize, Bacow's political capital at the University remains strong. In December, Tufts' teaching and research assistants filed a petition with the federal government requesting union representation. Though campus opinions on the initiative vary widely, Bacow moved to the forefront of the debate and strongly opposed a unionization attempt. Even his detractors concede that Bacow's decision was carefully formed. Despite his disagreement with the president's decision, Electrical engineering professor Robert Gonsalves said the choice is an example of Bacow's strong leadership. Students and faculty alike were also impressed with Bacow's handling of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The president decided not to cancel classes, but worked hard to create time for community discussion. He was seen walking around campus all morning, talking with students who had gathered in front of televisions to watch the events unfold. Looking to the future, many believe that Bacow's search for a provost to replace Gittleman, who steps down in June, will be among the most important decisions of the semester. Gittleman has been one of Bacow's biggest supporters since his arrival in August. "I love him. He's my best dream come true," Gittleman said of the president. Bacow has chosen to make the provost search a closed process, maintaining that he alone will make the final decision.Hasselblatt recognizes the importance of choosing a second-in-command, and said he is confident the president will make a prudent selection. "The record that Bacow has so far is cause for optimism," he said. Some say Bacow's greatest asset may be his attention to detail. He started at Tufts by making a concerted effort to learn learning everything he could about the University, listening to what people had to say and studying it as though he were a student. Even before beginning his tenure, Bacow's grasp of the school's history and achievements impressed seasoned faculty and alumni at the sesquicentennial flag raising ceremony in August. "What impressed me about Bacow is that he's a fast learner," Hasselblatt said. "He really embraced the institution from day one."Gil Metcalf, who served on the committee that hired Bacow, has not been disappointed. "We expected a really energetic president, and we got one," Metcalf said.


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