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Hockey falls to Worcester State for first conference loss

The hockey team's reign as the only undefeated team in the ECAC Northeast lasted for only two short days, as the Jumbos fell to conference rival Worcester State, 5-4, on Tuesday night. The loss dropped Tufts to 8-1 in the conference (10-3 overall) and puts it in a dogfight for the conference title. The loss to Worcester State, a team which is just 5-4 in conference play, followed a win over a far more talented squad, Johnson & Wales. The Jumbos had ended Johnson & Wales' undefeated record with a 6-5 victory on Sunday night. "After Sunday's big win, we weren't as prepared," sophomore center Mike Carceo said. "It's disappointing - everybody has been writing us off all year, and to lose an average team is frustrating after beating Johnson & Wales." In the Worcester game, both teams came out flat in the first period. The Lancers scored first by way of an Andy Hewitt goal with just over two minutes remaining. The Jumbos evened up the score less than two minutes later, as senior tri-captain Dan Mahoney scored on an assist by senior Justin Picone and junior Jason Boudrow. "We didn't play that well in the first period," Mahoney said. "They were really taking it to us for most of the period." The second period went in similar fashion, with Worcester State scoring first and Tufts getting the equalizer from Boudrow on an assist from sophomore Rob LaQuaglia. Though the Jumbos raised their controlled play for much of the period, they could not take the lead. "We really outplayed them, but we weren't getting any breaks," Mahoney said. But the Jumbos did go ahead in the third period, tying the score tying the score at three after an early goal by freshman Tim Havern and going ahead on Mahoney's goal with just over ten minutes remaining. In a matter of less than two minutes, though, the Jumbos would relinquish their lead and fall behind again. Worcester's Steve Prebola and Chris Susi both scored shortly after Mahoney's goal, putting the team ahead 5-4. "For the second and third period we would have the pressure on them, and they would go down and get an easy goal," Mahoney said. "They didn't sustain any offensive momentum, but they scored. It was frustrating." After going up 5-4, Worcester State never let up, fueled by some clutch saves by goalkeeper Paul Sundeen. The sophomore finished the game with 33 saves, compared to 25 by Tufts freshman Ben Crapser. Despite many scoring chances, and the overall dominant play of Tufts' offense, the Jumbos felt they should have played better and refused to make excuses for the loss."We missed a few opportunities, but we didn't play our best game," Carceo said. "[Sundeen] wasn't spectacular, but he did make some big saves. They slowed us down. It was difficult to get anything going." "They were grabbing and clutching a lot," Mahoney said. "They were cheap like that, but we had our chances, and we didn't put the puck in goal." The frustrating loss will not stay in any of the player's minds for long, and if anything, will motivate the Jumbos to take each game seriously. "It is a bit of a wake up call," Mahoney said. "We realize that we have to play our best in every single game. We're pretty frustrated, but at the same time, we control our own destiny. If we can win out in the league we will still finish first." Next on tap for the Jumbos is conference rival Lebanon Valley (7-1-1 in conference play), which holds one of the top records in the conference. Team defense will be the focus in tomorrow's game, as the Jumbos yielded just 15 goals in their first seven games, but have since given up 30 in six games. "I think we have to go out and focus on the things that made us successful in the first semester, like playing strong defense," Mahoney said. "We will go out on Friday and focus on defense and at the same time be disciplined. We had too many penalties last night." The puck will drop tomorrow at 6:00 p.m. at the Harvard ice arena, the closest to Medford the team will play for the rest of the season.


The Setonian
News

Abstinence - the alternative lifestyle

Sex appears everywhere - on television, in major magazines, and in the dorms. Despite the pervasiveness of sexual activity, some students choose to remain abstinent.The Webster's Online Medical Dictionary defines abstinence as the act of refraining from sexual intercourse. But for abstinent students, the word embodies more than casually avoiding a particular activity - for them, it is a conscious decision. "It is definitely a choice," said one abstinent senior male, but "not a choice a lot of people are making." According to a report in 1997 by the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS), 24 percent of women and 20 percent of men have not had sex by the age of 20. Whether or not these individuals made the conscious decision to abstain from sex was not determined. Around campus, some students say they don't know anyone who is not either having sex or at least looking to have sex. "I don't know that many people who are abstinent - actually, I don't think I know anyone who is abstinent... at least not by choice," said one sophomore female. But abstinent students do exist, though some believe that outside pressures can make their decision a hard one to keep. Freshman Jack Grimes, who is abstinent, believes that the media can affect a person's decision. "Abstinence is a hard commitment to make and it is not made any easier by our media," he said. Abstinent students decide to refrain from sexual activity for various reasons. One senior male, a member of the Baha'i faith, said religious concerns guided his decision, though he said that safety is a concern as well. "[Abstinence] simplifies things. You don't have to worry about pregnancy," he said. Other students, such as freshman Beth Birdsall, are influenced by their families. Birdsall's parents taught her that choosing to have sex is a serious decision, one she should consider carefully. "It's not that I think that premarital sex is wrong, but [sex] is not something to do casually. It really changes your relationship and the way people see each other and relate to one another," she said. Grimes decided to remain abstinent because he feels that sex will be more meaningful with the person he plans to spend the rest of his life with. Sex is "man's greatest gift - its potential is only fully realized when it exists within the promise between two people who share their lives together," Grimes said. Abstinence can be defined in many ways; people draw distinctions between what and what does not constitute sex. Some consider oral sex to count as sexual intercourse while others disagree. Grimes and the senior male said that their definition of abstinence includes refraining from oral sex. "Oral sex still creates that intimate bond between two people, so it still falls under sex," Grimes explained. On the other hand, recent studies show that most teenagers do not define oral sex as sexual intercourse. A USA Today article (11/16/00) addresses this discrepancy, citing an online survey by Twist magazine of over 10,000 females. The survey found that while 80 percent of the female teens who participated considered themselves virgins, 25 percent had engaged in oral sex. Aside from the technical definition of abstinence, social pressure can influence the decision to have sex. With three out of four women and four out of five men sexually active, some believe that sex is everywhere in today's world. "I sort of felt pressured to have sex in high school, and I wish hadn't done it at such a young age, but it didn't traumatize me. I wasn't necessarily ready for it, but I wouldn't say that I regret what I did," said the female sophomore. Some abstinent students don't feel any pressure, from the media or anywhere else, to engage in sexual activity. "I wouldn't say I feel pressured," Birdsall said. "There is definitely a sexualized element in the media, but I don't feel it is pressuring me specifically." The number of sex education programs focusing on abstinence has risen in past years, according to an article in The New York Times (12/15/99), which attributes this trend to legislation passed by Congress in 1996 allocating $440 million of state and federal money to abstinence-only education programs. Funding was again increased by $50 million in 1999. The article states that more than one in three districts throughout the country teach abstinence-only curriculum and over the past ten years one-third of schools districts have increased its emphasis on abstinence in sex education and health programs. Other methods of contraceptives are discussed in these programs, and often draw attention to their risks and failures. But this effort to encourage abstinence may be falling on deaf ears. The SIECUS study reported that nearly two-thirds of teenagers think that abstinence-only programs do not deter sexual activity among their peers. Birdsall believes that abstinence should be taught as one of various lifestyle choices. Birdsall is more concerned that students are educated on how to protect themselves, whether by abstaining or using contraceptives. "I would rather [students] have the knowledge on how to protect themselves," she said.


The Setonian
News

Jumbos edge Johnson & Wales in overtime

It only took 31 seconds of overtime for sophomore Mike Carceo to find net and dispose of conference rival Johnson and Wales, the only other undefeated team in the ECAC Northeast. Fueled by the energy of the lively home crowd on Sunday night, the tenacious Wildcats played a physical 60 minutes, but could not provide the answer to the Jumbos' power play unit, which ended the game in overtime with a 6-5 score. "I think there was a sense that we were going to score, and right away," coach Brian Murphy said. "It was as pretty a goal as you will see. I'd like to say that I drew it up exactly how it happened, but we have some skilled guys out there who can make those plays." Coming off of a tough loss to Babson last Tuesday, the Jumbos, now 8-0 in conference play, wasted no time getting on the scoreboard. Carceo scored twice and senior tri-captain Natan Obed added another goal within the first 13 minutes, sending a quick message to Johnson and Wales that neither a snowstorm nor a late Sunday night game with a hostile crowd could distract the Jumbos from being on the top of their game. "They have a lot of student support," Murphy said. "We knew they had played the night before, and we tried to take the crowd out of it right away." "Their fans were crazy and even rude at times," senior tri-captain Dan Mahoney said. "It made it a fun atmosphere to play in, and it made it especially sweet when we beat them." Instead of putting the Wildcats away though, the Jumbos sat back and relinquished two quick goals, making the score 3-2 after the first period of play. "Lately, we haven't been getting the lead early," Mahoney said. "We went up 3-0, but then we relaxed a bit and let them get back into it." Tufts padded its lead in the second period with goals from Obed and Mahoney, making the score 5-2. Again the Jumbos let up a bit, though, and allowed the Wildcats to gain momentum. Eventually, Johnson and Wales evened the score at five goals apiece early in the third period. "We got sloppy early in the third," Murphy said. "If there was one negative thing to take from the game, that would be it. We have to be smarter when we have the lead." In the closing minute of the game, Johnson and Wales picked up a penalty, its 17th of the game, giving Tufts a power play heading into the overtime period. The Jumbos, who lead the conference in conversion of power plays with 34.5 percent, made the Wildcats pay for that mistake almost immediately. "They are a very good team, very skilled," Murphy said. "If you look at their record, obviously they've been able to beat just about everybody. We went down on a Sunday night, it was late, and it was a really good win for us." The Wildcats' physical style of play was not enough to fluster the Jumbos, and all but one of the Tufts goals came off of a power play. Johnson and Wales leads the conference in penalty minutes, averaging 23.4 per game, compared to Tufts' 12.8. "They were physical and they were cheap," Mahoney said. "We were on the power play all day - it killed them. They are very undisciplined, and we took advantage that. It was a big win because they are one of the top teams in the league." The Jumbos, on the other hand, are currently leading the nation in fewest penalty minutes per game, and their discipline clearly has been a factor in making them the only undefeated team in conference play. "We are a pretty disciplined team," Murphy said. "You can't take a lot of penalties and expect to win." Besides being a huge confidence booster for the team, the win put the Jumbos back on track as they gear up to continue playing the top teams in the league. "I think people are gunning for us," Murphy said. "People are out to play their best games against us. We are in the difficult part of our schedule, and this is not the playoffs - we need to keep getting wins." Sunday's game also marked a milestone for junior Jason Boudrow, whose four assists gave him 101 career points, a feat accomplished in just 37 games. The US College Hockey Online Player of the Week continues to lead the nation in points, averaging just under four per game. Next up for the Jumbos is conference rival Worcester State, which is currently 7-7, on Tuesday night at 8 p.m.


The Setonian
News

The fight against anti-queer language

Let's consider the actual words that Mr. Sutherland used: "Don't ideologically molest my children with your rainbow propaganda." This was the first message painted over a fluorescent striped pattern, which had been painted to promote Kids Day. Although TTLGBC was not associated with Kids Day, and the striped pattern on the cannon was, by the coincidence of a rainbow, Mr. Sutherland apparently believed that the use of such a pattern to promote the event was threatening to children because of its association with queer pride. Instead of expressing this view via non-inflammatory language, Mr. Sutherland deliberately used the word "molest," promoting a derogatory stereotype of queer people as child molesters. The second message was even more blunt: "Imagine a campus free from queer perverts." It is worth taking notice of Mr. Sutherland's use of the word "perverts." By using this word, Mr. Sutherland distinguished his statement from a purely political view, and instead made it an explicitly derogatory remark. Mr. Sutherland's words constitute "hate speech" because they attack members of a targeted group with deliberately offensive language. In addition to his choice of words, the fact that Mr. Sutherland chose to paint his message in broad daylight leads me to believe he intended to be deliberately provocative. Some may question the decision to cover up Mr. Sutherland's first message. The TUPD made such a decision after having received phone calls from students about the offensive nature of this message. Tufts University, as a private institution, has the right to define what it considers offensive, and to respond accordingly. Since Mr. Sutherland's message attacked a specific group and used derogatory language, it fell within the boundaries of what Tufts considers offensive language, and thus facilities was justified in covering up the message. Students covered up the second message themselves. While they violated the "unofficial rules" concerning the appropriate time to paint the cannon, they justified their response in two ways. They felt that since Mr. Sutherland had already ignored the policy by painting the cannon in broad daylight, they should be allowed to do the same. Also, considering the extremely offensive and threatening nature of Mr. Sutherland's actions, they felt that it was extremely necessary to counter with a positive message of queer pride. Various people have offered the view that the queer community is being overly "sensitive" to both Mr. Sutherland's hate speech and to other events on campus during the past two weeks. I cannot and would not presume to speak for the entire queer community at Tufts, so I will instead speak just for myself. I don't think it's too much to ask to live and study in a setting where I can feel safe. Mr. Sutherland's attack was with words, but nonetheless, it was still an attack. Over the past two weeks, certain members of the queer community have engaged in activities that assert our visibility and pride. I took part in these actions, and I did it because I wanted to fight back against both the actions of individuals like Mr. Sutherland and the inactivity of select groups within the University. Maybe some would question my tactics: covering the campus with rainbow ribbons during April Open House, chalking directly in front of Bendetson, and covering up Mr. Sutherland's messages. There was a specific reason I did all of these things. Although I cannot claim to understand Mr. Sutherland's psyche, I feel that his actions were an attempt to silence me and make me think twice about being visible and active on behalf of the queer community. I have faced such pressures for as long as I can remember. Although Mr. Sutherland's actions frighten me, they do not surprise me. And while there was a time when such actions would have scared me into silence, that time has passed. As long as people like Mr. Sutherland exist, I will be standing here, with others, as living proof that his tactics are wrong. I am queer. I am not a pervert. I am not a child molester. The feelings I have are genuine and true, and they will not go away, no matter how hard people like Mr. Sutherland try. Vanessa Dillen is a junior majoring in international relations. She is an active member of Tufts' LGBT community.


The Setonian
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Committee works to choose president by end of academic year

Tufts' presidential search committee is determined to choose University President John DiBiaggio's successor before the end of the academic year, according to various committee members. But with commencement less than a month away, committee chair Trustee Irwin Heller will not provide any information about the remaining candidates. "Confidentiality is crucial in this whole process," Heller said yesterday. The committee will meet next week to discuss the finalists and could choose the new president at that time. But Heller insists the executive committee of the Board of Trustees, which will ultimately make the decision, is not pressuring his committee to replace DiBiaggio by May. "We don't feel ourselves under any pressure to conclude," he said. "If we don't find the right person we have no hesitancy in putting it off." In December, following a community-wide e-mail from the search committee, hundreds of nominations were sent to Linda Dixon, secretary to the board of trustees. Each of the approximately five finalists are high-level administrators at one of the top schools in the nation, and some participated in the presidential searches of Harvard, Princeton, and Brown universities. Although DiBiaggio insists he will remain at Tufts next year if asked by the Board of Trustees, the search committee seems intent on choosing the new president and disbanding before the summer. "We have great candidates, and it's not too far away until the trustees are going to be given the search committee's recommendation," said Catherine Squires, a professor of microbiology at Tufts' medical school. Squires is one of four faculty representatives on the 12-person search committee. "The trustees hope we will be finished by the end of academic year, so we're trying to work on that schedule," she said. Most committee members referred all questions to Heller. "People who become interested in these jobs are very protective of their privacy," said William Sellers, a trustee representative on the search committee. Sellers, a dentist in Reading, MA, would not comment on the remaining candidates. "I know some institutions are very public, and some are less so, and we tend to be less so," said George Ellmore, an associate professor in the department of experimental plant anatomy and morphology. Ellmore, who has been at Tufts since 1980, remembers the DiBiaggio search in 1991-1992, and defended the secrecy with which Tufts has conducted its newest search. "Any sort of secrecy is nothing more than discretion," he said. Committee members say that quality candidates would potentially withdraw from the search if their names were made public, since many candidates do not inform their current employers that they are seeking other jobs. "Some of these people have not yet informed their institutions," Heller said of Tufts' presidential candidates. Lee Bollinger, president of the University of Michigan, was a finalist in the Harvard search but was eventually passed over for Lawrence Summers, the former treasury secretary. Since returning to his post at Michigan, Bollinger has been at the heart of speculation concerning the presidential search at Princeton University and other schools, but has pledged not to seek the presidency of another institution. "To reveal identities in any way would jeopardize the entire process and could threaten our ability to make the best choice," Trustee Joyce Barsam wrote in an e-mail. A French professor at Northeastern University and member of the search committee, Barsam would not discuss the remaining candidates. "The final stages of a search are obviously the ones requiring the most confidentiality and sensitivity," she said. Yesterday, all Tufts' search committee members would say was that the finalists are qualified candidates. "Tufts will have a terrific president," Squires said. According to Heller, if Tufts cannot conclude its search by May, the new president would not come to Tufts mid-year, but rather begin work in the fall of 2002. "The industry norm is that you try by may to make an announcement that you're leaving by the end of the summer," he said.


The Setonian
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Trade deadline looms as teams try to score

In the National Hockey League, March Madness does not mean Dick Vitale or a 64-team tournament. The madness refers to the quickly approaching trade deadline and its effect on the tight playoff race. March 13th is right around the corner, and for many teams that date might determine if they make the playoff cut or not. About 20 teams are looking to make the 16-team draw, and in order to do so many owners believe that this is the time to steal high-priced talent from teams looking to improve their chances for next year's run and have all but given up on this year. No team can escape the trade rumors since every organization is a little banged up this time of year and wants to fortify its roster before beginning a playoff run. One of those teams, the St. Louis Blues, did not even wait for the frenzy surrounding March 13th; they already made their move, acquiring talented right winger Scott Mellanby from the Florida Panthers. The Blues are a solid team looking to beat out the Colorado Avalanche for the top seed in the Western Conference, but to do so, they felt they had to acquire a talented player to fill in for their injured key players, such as winger Pavol Demitra. The Blues are by no means done in their efforts to pad their roster, but with most teams seeking to trade for the best and wanting to give up little, few proposed trades involving key players actually reach the signing table. Star players, such as Pavel Bure of the Panthers, will most likely not be dealt away even though the Panthers could use some draft picks and Bure's scoring services could be used elsewhere. Bure, and other high caliber players on losing squads, generally prove too important to their clubs and the asking price is more than other teams can afford. Another marquee trade, which had been discussed for weeks, was finally resolved yesterday, but neither side won, as talks between the Philadelphia Flyers and the Toronto Maple Leafs ended in a stalemate over the terms of the Eric Lindros trade. Apparently Flyers general manager and coach Pat Quinn was unhappy with the prospects he would receive in turn for his concussion-ridden superstar. Because the result of March Madness in the NHL is often an abundance of smaller trades, teams end up searching through the waiver wire. In the waiver wire, a team can find a veteran who might not have played the whole year, but who has some playoff experience and can bring an emotional lift to the team. Ron Sutter is that player, and was recently signed by the Calgary Flames. At 37. Sutter has not played this year but has a wealth of experience and can add mental toughness to the team as it comes to the final stretch of the regular season and into the playoffs. By the deadline there will have be numerous trades involving lesser known players, but there will also be that one landmark trade that will define this trading season. So while all teams look to land that one big deal, the weeks to do it are narrowing down.Super Mario Slumping One player who will not be traded, and not just because he is part owner of Pittsburgh Penguins, is Mario Lemieux. The entire nation watched his comeback to the NHL under a magnifying glass and he has left us in awe with his goal scoring and general brilliance on the ice. Super Mario has reminded us of the way hockey used to be played by the greats, while leaving us wondering how, after overcoming cancer and back pains that forced him to retire in his prime, he is still so extraordinary on the ice. Unfortunately, the Lemieux resurgence appears to be hitting a lull. After coming on strong, averaging two points a game since his return, he now is feeling some of the pain that initially forced him to retire. His lower back is acting up and his performance has dropped a bit. He has even stated to reporters that he may have to sit out some games in order to perform to his full potential down the stretch. The Penguins are therefore left in a difficult position. Since their star might not be able to deliver them all the way to the Stanley Cup, will Lemieux become a burden? The Penguins will now need to adjust their game plans for when Lemieux is not active, perhaps resulting in the team returning to their struggling ways from before Mario's great comeback. The uncertainty over Lemieux's availability will, at the very least, create distractions for his team. The question for the Penguins coaches is whether these distractions will cause the Penguins to lose hold of their number-five seed for the playoffs, or if Lemieux's presence in the games he does play will prove enough for the team to excel.



The Setonian
News

To pledge or not to pledge

When I first returned home for winter break, everything seemed different. I had grown accustomed to my life here at Tufts, a life quite different from that which I had left behind in August. Sometime over the break, I was sitting in a Japanese restaurant with my best friend Phil, discussing our college experiences. The conversation inevitably changed course as we began to rationalize the decision to pledge a fraternity. I came to the conclusion that the determining factors in a student's decision to pledge vary from college to college and from person to person. Coincidentally, Phil and I virtually share the same rationale. Therefore, any discrepancies in our decisions to pledge were influenced by our diverse environments.At Phil's school (SUNY Buffalo) fraternity life is much like the life we left behind on Long Island. That is, social obligations become the brother's first priority, while academic responsibilities are essentially neglected. For my friend, a student struggling to meet the pre-med requirements at SUNY Buffalo, a decision to pledge could bring a definite end to his dream of becoming a doctor. Don't get me wrong, fraternity life seems like a lot of fun. As Phil always says, "Chicks dig the whole frat thing." But a decision to pledge will have both its benefits and its costs.Then there's Suzzie. Phil and Suzzie recently met in college and have since fallen in love. Neither one of them would intentionally risk jeopardizing their relationship, but should Phil decide to pledge a fraternity, he might very well lose his love. Phil fears that the fraternity could come between them and that he might lose sight of his first true love. Now I must decide: pledge, or live the next three years of my life much like the first. Thus far, my college experience has been a lot of fun. I balance my schedule so that I have enough time to both work and play. I've been to multiple fraternity parties, and frequently spend my evenings on Lansdowne Street. I have already developed a close group of friends here, and they will have a significant influence in my upcoming decision. Since I've been at Tufts, I have observed that fraternity life can be a significant asset to one's social life, but it is not essential. Specifically, my closest senior friend here at Tufts was in a similar position his freshman year. While his closest companions are now all brothers in the same fraternity, my friend concluded that the costs of pledging a frat exceeded its benefits. "Do you have any regrets?" I once asked him. His reply was something to the effect of, "I don't regret missing out on the whole pledging experience. I have kept the same group of friends I had my freshman year. Though I'll never be able to reminisce about 'my years at the frat,' I assure you that I will leave Tufts without regretting my decision not to pledge." As I continue rationalizing the decision to pledge a fraternity, I must take into account the influence of my Tufts peers. Though I converse with numerous acquaintances in college, I basically spend my weekends with the same group of people. The guys in this crowd are already pretty much set on pledging the same fraternity together. I think their decision became final sometime over the break. I cannot disregard the most obvious "costs" of pledging. Although fraternities are forbidden to haze their pledges, the act pledging itself will not exactly be a walk in the park. I must also account for the opportunity cost of pledging, that is, my precious time. The time I will spend pledging is time that I won't spend studying. Ultimately, my grades could suffer, and that is one risk I wish I would not have to take.So what have I decided? Well, I wish I could say I have come to a definite decision...but I haven't. I intend to wait until the week of Rush. Then I will decide whether or not I will be willing to endure the costs of pledging in order to reap the benefits of being a fraternity brother.Daniel Adam is a freshman who has not yet declared a major.


The Setonian
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TCU Senate VP, treasurer announce bids for presidency

Although the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate will not nominate presidential candidates for another month, two members of the executive board have made public their presidential aspirations. The Senate vice president, Eric Greenberg, and the treasurer, Michelle Shelton, will compete for the top student government position in the April election, if both are first reelected to the Senate by the junior class. Yesterday, Greenberg and Shelton confirmed rumors that have been floating around the Senate and campus since September. Senator Erin Ross, whose name has also been mentioned in student government circles, would not completely rule out a campaign, but downplayed rumors that she plans to run. "I'm not closing myself off at this point, but I'm probably not going to run," she said. "I'm not 100 percent on that, but that's where I'm leaning at this point." The TCU constitution requires that the Senate choose two candidates to run in a presidential election. If Ross, or a third candidate, decides to run, senators would have to chose among them. Once next year's senators are elected in April, however, any one of them could decide to compete for one of the two Senate nominations. For now, at least, Greenberg and Shelton appear to be the frontrunners. Last year's presidential race saw four people - then-juniors David Moon, Moira Poe, and Alessandro Terenzoni and sophomore Anoop Swaminath - try for the Senate nominations. When the Senate chose Moon and Poe, Terenzoni remained on the Senate and ran for vice president. Swaminath resigned. As the TCU Senate's highest ranking leaders, aside from the president, Greenberg and Shelton are natural candidates. Poe was the Senate vice president last year, and the two TCU presidential elections before that pitted a vice president against a treasurer. This year looks no different, as both Greenberg and Shelton see themselves as potential frontrunners in the race. "I intend to run.... I came to the decision at the beginning of the semester" Greenberg said. "I feel strong in my position, since the reelection process is based on people's accomplishments as well as the changing face of the Senate." Shelton said her experience as treasurer allowed her to get close to students, which will aid her in her campaign and a potential presidency. "I think the president needs to be a spokesperson of the student body," she said. "And with my treasury background, I have seen students from all different organizations. So I've gained a really good understanding of how things work and the problems that everyday students face." But, Shelton added that nothing in a campaign is ever definite. "I think any election is an uphill battle," she said. If both Greenberg and Shelton are reelected, and if the new Senate nominates them to run, the race could shape up to be a close one, with platforms, popularity, and campaign styles as deciding factors. According to Moon, two constitutional amendments that will most likely appear on the presidential ballot will also affect the race. One of the proposed amendments would give the Senate's four culture representatives full voting rights. The other amendment would add an additional clause to the Senate's nondiscrimination policy that protects self-acceptance of identity. The amendments' sponsors must secure 250 signatures before the proposals can be placed on the ballot. Issues surrounding either of these controversial measures could influence students' vote for president, Moon said. "I think the position the candidates take on those two positions will be interesting, and they may or may not play a factor depending on people's stances," he said. "But I could see it becoming an issue." He added, however, that the election could also come down to basic campaigning: "I think this election is really going to be decided on a who's going to be able to get out the vote. And I think a lot of its going to be decided on leadership styles," he said.


The Setonian
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Beelzebubs host regional a cappella quarterfinals

There always seems to be something to do on a Saturday night at Tufts, but this past Saturday night the campus played host to a different kind of entertainment. Along with the prerequisite stumbling across Professor's Row, the quarterfinals of the Varsity Vocals A Cappella Championship in Cohen Auditorium kept many people busy. Five different groups - The Simmons Sirens, the BU Treblemakers, the Maine Steiners, Rutgers' Deep Treble, and Brandeis groups Up the Octave and Company B - competed for the chance to move onto the semifinals in Connecticut. The Beelzebubs won the competition in 1993, its inaugural year, but did not compete Saturday night. However, they still got a chance to perform. The audience not only enjoyed the 15-minute sets the five competitors sang, but also relished the nine songs the Beelzebubs performed at the beginning and the end of the night. The BU Treblemakers clenched the first-place berth, and Deep Treble was runner-up. Both groups will move on to the February semifinals, with a shot at the finals in Carnegie Hall.


The Setonian
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CSL chooses Wendell Phillips finalists

Every year, one of 1,200-plus seniors is chosen to receive the prestigious Wendell Phillips award, and invited to speak at the University's commencement ceremony. That list is down to five. The Committee on Student Life (CSL), the student/faculty body vested with reviewing and selecting the award winner, chose five finalists at a meeting last Friday. The finalists are seniors Rachel Elkinson, Greg Propper, Angel Hossain, and Shou Min Tan. There were 18 applicants. Finalists give a five-minute speech members of the Tufts community on which they are judged by the CSL. The winner will be the only undergraduate to speak at May's graduation. The speech topic for the final round is due out this week, said Hossain, who found out she was a finalist this weekend. The Wendell Phillips winner also receives a monetary award of approximately $400. Anyone can run for the award, and many seniors receive nominations. The CSL reviews all applicants, who tend to be influential leaders on campus. Last year's winner was Keshia Pollack, the former president of the Society of Black Engineers. This year's group runs the gambit of involvement. Some devote all their time to campus activities, while other are reaching out into the "real world" to try and make a difference. Several of the finalists are noted activists and others also politically involved. Elkinson serves the campus as a Resident Assistant. She is also involved with the Tufts Femminist Alliance. Propper has held several posts at Tufts. He is president of the Tufts Democrats and was the coordinator of Tufts Choice 2000, the University's election coalition last semester. He is also on the student development team of the University College of Citizenship and Public Service and on directional staff of LCS. Hossain served as vice president of the Leonard Carmichael Society, an umbrella community service organization and largest on-campus group. She is also on the Ex College board and a member of Tufts Association of South Asians. Tan is the student chair of the CSL and former co-coordinator of the Tufts, Transgendered Lesbian, Gay, Bisexaul Collective. In deliberations over the Wendell Phillips winner, Tan has recused himself. In the first round, the 18 applicants were asked to give a speech elucidating the significance of an Arthur Ashe quote: "From what we get, we can make a living; what give however, makes a life." Hossain said the inspiration for her speech came from visiting her father's home village in Bangledash. "The speech that I wrote was about learning the lesson of giving back from my father's village. When I went to visit it was a huge shock to see people who have so little but are so concerned about helping others," she said. Wendell Phillips was a famed Boston orator from the late 19th century who championed the cause of abolition and women's suffrage. The award was established in his honor in 1896 by a memorial fund association. In the spirit of Wendell Phillips, award-winning students are selected based on their speaking abilities as well as their sense of public service and social activism. Harvard University shares the honor with Tufts, and each school selects one winner annually. The award is prestigious because of its selectivity and the opportunity to speak before thousands of graduation attendees. "To be able to speak at graduation is an excellent opportunity for me to express what Tufts means to me and my experiences over the past four years," Propper said.


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Inside the J

Ever wonder how things happen around campus? Decisions - about who gets recognized as a student group, how much money these groups receive, and what kind of events occur on campus - happen all the time, but the process isn't always so clear. In this new three-part series, the Daily investigates the decision-makers around campus. After last semester, most students probably believe that the Tufts Community Union Judiciary (TCUJ) exists to make controversial decisions involving rifts between religious groups and more liberal organizations. Well, it does, but it's not what the members normally do - honest. In fact, the TCUJ is not only responsible for investigating contention between individuals and groups or between groups and other groups, it is responsible for the recognition of every organization on campus. The concept of recognition is an important one: Without the TCUJ's approval, student organizations cannot receive a share of the student activities fund (which every student contributes to each year as part of the required University fees), or even poster around campus or use the Tufts name. The process of recognition, though not complicated, is nevertheless essential to ensuring that student funds are appropriated fairly. The TCUJ doesn't deal with the money issue, however, that job falls to the Allocations Board (ALBO) after a group has been formally recognized. The Judiciary is simply responsible for seeing that new organizations meet the established requirements. Sophomore Alison Clarke, one of the two re-recognition chairs on the TCUJ, summed up the steps a new organization must take before it is formally recognized. It's easy enough at the beginning: Clarke said that students simply need to go to the Office of Student Activities to receive temporary recognition, which allows them to sign up for meeting rooms for initial organizational tasks. After that, the group must create a constitution in accordance with Tufts policy. The members also need to prepare some kind of "proof of activity," such as posters for an upcoming general interest meeting. Finally, the group needs to gather the signatures of 15 interested students. Then it's ready to present itself to the TCUJ. This last point is one that Tufts likes to brag about, Clarke said. "That's what the school loves to say - you only need 15 people to start a club. I must have heard that about six million times on tours here," she said. Though Clarke maintained that the Committee on Student Life (CSL) plans on creating new guidelines for the TCUJ to consider when recognizing new campus groups, for now it's pretty simple: as long as the above requirements are met, the group only needs to demonstrate that another, similar group doesn't already exist. "You also have to be open to the entire student community," Clarke added. While this point caused controversy last semester - when the TCUJ found that Tufts Christian Fellowship (TCF) violated the school's nondiscrimination policy after it blocked bisexual member Julie Catalano from running for a leadership position - the requirement is not a difficult hurdle for most groups. Clarke estimates that there have been about ten new recognitions so far during the 2000-2001 academic year. They certainly run the gamut: from socially aware, to purely academic, to just plain fun. There's Tufts Religious Unity Cooperation Ecumenicalism (TRUCE); Human Factors and Ergonomics, formed to aid students complete Tufts' new engineering psychology major; and the No Homers Club, Tufts' official Simpsons club, just to name a few. The TCUJ won't let allow these new clubs - or any student organization for that matter - to fall by the wayside. The re-recognition part of the J is essential in making sure that current clubs are staying active and obeying the rules. Every campus group must be re-recognized every two years, and must meet the same criteria that it did when it was formed. While student groups remain a first priority of the TCUJ, junior and chair Mike Ferenczy described the other major purpose of the J - mediating conflict. This includes handling charges of violations of Tufts or TCU rules against a recognized group by an individual or another group, and it also involves any serious or criminal allegations against a student, be it theft, assault, or any number of other harmful actions. In cases such as these, the University's decision is based on the input of two TCUJ members and three faculty members. While it's not usually a group that gets much attention, the TCUJ is undoubtedly an essential organization on campus - and it takes a lot of work. "I underestimated the time commitment of the J when I started," Ferenczy said. So why would anyone want to join a committee that requires lots of work with little tangible reward? The answer seems to come from an interest in student government, along with the tight-knit feeling of belonging to something that few understand, but that all benefit from. "I heard about [the TCUJ] through the TCF thing... it really intrigued me," said Clarke, who was elected to the board last September. "Everything that followed made me grow really attached to the body." It was the case between Julie Catalano and the TCF that really put the TCUJ in the spotlight. "Before that case, students really didn't know the J was around. After, there were two sets of opinions about us: one that said we screwed up, and one that said we did okay," said Ferenczy. Clarke agrees. "Before the TCF thing, no one really knew we really existed. Now everyone does," she said. Although Ferenczy was unhappy with what he deemed negative attitudes, directed at himself and the rest of the council during the ordeal, he predicts that the TCUJ will once again be placed on the back burner of most minds on campus. "When I started, my goal was to make it four years without being in the Daily. That didn't happen, but I think we're still doing all right," he said.


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Dashboard Confessional delivers musical bliss

The Joey was filled to capacity this past Saturday as numerous Jumbos made their way to one of the first large off-campus events in the area - the WBCN Back to School concert. Held at the Hatch Shell near the Charles River, the concert featured bands such as Hot Rod Circuit and was headlined by Dashboard Confessional.Sunny and warm, the weather was favorable for the free outdoor event. Well before the two o'clock start time, the Hatch shell grounds were inhabited by teenagers and young adults longing for musical angst. The crowd was a blend of high school kids, college undergraduates, Goths, punks, concerned parents and everything else in between. The audience was fairly receptive, possibly because of the free admission. As one DJ said when he introduced Hot Rod Circuit, "The show is free so don't be stingy with the applause." Hot Rod Circuit describes their music as "the soundtrack to your next good time." Comprised of Andy Jackson (guitar /vocals), Casey Crestwood (guitar), Jay Russell (bass/back-up vocals) and Mike Poorman (drums), the Alabama quartet plays a brand of energetic punk with the potential to appeal to the masses while maintaining creative integrity. Rejecting the "emo" label, the band suffers no delusions of grandeur, seeking mainly to entertain. Their energy was tangible as they poured through their hour-long set. The bassist embodied it best, as he constantly leaped, jumped, and kneeled on the stage. The audience fully delved into the "traditional" means of rock appreciation. Both crowd surfing and moshing were attempted during the Hot Rod set (though usually ending abruptly and to the detriment of the participants). Hot Rod Circuit's fans were very much in evidence as they sang along and cheered. On the whole, the crowd was responsive to Hot Rod Circuit, especially when the band thanked headliner Dashboard Confessional. Despite the free admission, many concertgoers had several complaints. The show started more than a half-hour late, which was especially frustrating for those who arrived early to secure a good spot. Also, both the performers and the audience were puzzled and dismayed by the substantial distance between the audience and the stage. "It's weird to have you all so far away", said Dashboard Confessional's Chris Carraba, reassuring fans that the band would play closer to the audience at his next show in Worcester.Later, there was an hour-long break between Dashboard Confessional and Hot Rod Circuit, during which the audience could only stand, sweat and complain. Tempers began to flare as an increasing number of water bottles and HBO macaroni were thrown when Dashboard Confessional took the stage. (Note to advertisers: Do not give anything to rock concert goers that could conceivably be used as a projectile, because it most likely will be.)Carraba opened his set with the title song from his latest album, The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most. The concert was instantly transformed into a big sing-a-long, with the majority of the crowd knowing all the words to the tune. This was true of almost all the other songs performed during the set. At times, Carraba stopped singing and just played his guitar while the crowd sang. The band performed the "The Best Deceptions" and "Saints and Sailors," as well as "The Sharp Hint of New Tears," a song Carraba wrote while a member of another band that gave him the name for his current musical endeavor. During a new song entitled "So Beautiful" some in the audience were perplexed as to why they didn't know the lyrics. Throughout the show, Carraba quipped about his disappointment in Avril Lavigne's barely legal status and some of his song titles. He also thanked his fans for their efforts in getting him the MTV2 award at the Video Music Awards. Dashboard Confessional has a deep connection with its fans, which was in evidence at the show. Before "Screaming Infidelities," Carraba thanked those who came because of his radio success but also thanked those who "didn't need it. For those who were digging for something different and found it."After the "fake ending," Carraba left the stage and retuned to do a lengthy encore. He did an impassioned version of "This Bitter Pill" that blended into another of his songs. After the last song a very satisfied crowd made its way home or to the side of the stage to vie for set lists and autographs.


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Signing on for more info

Today's students are well acquainted with the Internet. The information superhighway makes it possible to do research, leave away messages on Instant Messenger, and communicate long-distance for free. But it has done a lot more than that - classes themselves, as well as the interactions between professors and students, are also evolving due to this rapidly changing technology. Tufts provides its professors with the option of creating Course Info websites to supplement their classes. Many professors have taken advantage of this, particularly in the science and language departments, to post grades, class notes, practice exams, and other information pertinent to class. For sophomore Rachel Messer, Course Info has been a vital part of her academic experience. "It's really helpful, especially if you want to know about an assignment or look at a class list," she said. In her freshman English course, students were required to log onto Course Info to view questions, posted by the professor, based on current readings. They would then post their answers for the rest of their classmates to read before coming to class. Sophomore Katie McGinigle uses Course Info for her organic chemistry and Italian classes. While McGinigle sees the benefits of Course Info, she is sometimes frustrated at the amount of material she has to print off of the site. "I like using Course Info, but sometimes it gets out of hand when I need to print out pages and pages of assignments," McGinigle said. Astronomy Professor Ken Lang uses Course Info to post practice midterms and finals for his Wanderers in Space course, since the site automatically grades practice exams. Lang also uses a separate website for his class. This site allows him to include more information than Course Info does, providing for overviews that highlight the main points of each lecture, supporting images, links to other websites, online access to satellites currently in space, and class notes, which are a favorite of many of Lang's students. "Students now listen instead of taking notes [in class]," Lang said, noting one advantage of posting notes. In her time at Tufts, sophomore Rachel Gutter has had very little exposure to Course Info. Her Computing on the Internet professor posted class notes on a separate website, which she said was "very helpful" but, other than that, her experience has been limited. "None of my professors have ever used Course Info," she said. "In one of my classes, we actually suggested it to the professor and she just said no." Lang pointed out that the subject of astronomy is perfect for a website because its study is highly visual, and the discipline is current and fluid in nature. "Something like astronomy is ideally suited to a website because it's rapidly changing," Lang said. With the use of the Internet in the classroom, Lang is able, for example, to bring images of the current NEAR spacecraft landing directly to the students. "Tomorrow's lecture could have images of the historic NEAR spacecraft landing on an asteroid yesterday," Lang said. Professors in several fields are beginning to use the Internet during class time to show students real-life examples or diagrams to further their understanding of the subject. However, problems may arise when technology is used in class under time constraints. In two different classes during a single week, sophomore Brian Tarmey's professors had difficulty bringing up the images they had hoped to show their students. "They don't have it set up right or something else goes wrong, and they always seem to be playing around with the thing for ten minutes before they get the image they wanted on the screen," Tarmey said of the disruption. Despite technical problems, the Internet enables students to communicate with their professors through e-mail. "It can be easier to send an e-mail than to get a hold of professors in person," Tarmey explained. "In bigger classes I can e-mail the TA's or professors, but in small classes when I know the professors, I usually feel comfortable talking to them." Professors also benefit from e-mail communication, especially in larger classes. "I have a large class of 365 students, and there is rarely face-to-face communication," Lang said. "The class time is spent in lectures, centered around the website. Students sometimes ask questions in class, but there are many more questions by e-mail." This may occur because some students may simply feel more comfortable asking questions over e-mail. Also, time limits the amount of discussion during class. "That's not the only reason - it's also because you can't answer questions to a 365-person class - there's no time," Lang said. Students say most professors are reliable at answering their e-mail. Lang, for instance, checks his e-mail at least once a day. Sophomore Alissa Schecter finds it convenient to e-mail her professors. "They only have office hours a few times a week," Schecter explained. "It's not enough. You might have other classes during those times. But they check their e-mail several times a day." Schecter said that simpler questions tend to be better suited to e-mail, while more complicated ones might require face-to-face interactions. The specific professor's preference also plays a role. "Some of my professors love arranging appointments, but some of my other professors make me feel hurried, so I prefer to e-mail them," McGinigle said.


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February madness grips NESCAC

At the beginning of each season, optimism is always at its highest point, and coaches spend the preseason convincing their players that they can in fact "win it all."Heading into the final weekend of NESCAC play, these preseason fantasies have become very much a reality for nine of the ten NESCAC teams. With the exception of Bates (1-6 in the NESCAC), every team still has a chance to make the NESCAC tournament and take the title. Atop the league standings sit the Colby White Mules and the Trinity Bantams, both sporting 5-2 league records. But their lofty position is far from safe. Eight of the nine teams still in competition for the playoffs could easily usurp both squads with big weekends. Only Middlebury, whose record stands at 3-5, has no chance to take first place in the league. Although Middlebury cannot win the league title, the Panthers leapt into the playoff hunt with a spectacular weekend that included a 92-73 trouncing of Bates on Friday and a 76-71 drubbing of Tufts on Saturday afternoon. A trio of seniors, guard Jon Cormier (14 points) and forwards Zach Bourgue (14 points) and Keith Watts (17 points), led the way. Fellow seniors Andrew Shogan and Chris Mclaughlin give the Panthers an experienced starting five who clearly are not intimidated by crunch-time pressure. Middlebury was not the only squad to sweep their weekend games, as the Williams Ephs also beat up on Tufts 86-64 on Friday night before whipping the overmatched Bates Bobcats 80-65. The Ephs two wins catapulted them into second place in the NESCAC conference with a 5-3 mark. With three teams, Tufts, Bowdoin, and Conn. College tied for the sixth position (the top seven teams make the playoffs), next weekend will undoubtedly be an explosive one. The Jumbos hit the road again to throw down with Wesleyan on Friday night before continuing their tour of Connecticut with a match-up against 3-4 Conn. College on Saturday afternoon. Trinity and Colby go head-to-head on Friday evening in Waterville, ME in what probably will determine the number one seed for the NESCAC tournament. Colby stays at home on Sunday where they play (4-3) Amherst, while Trinity travels south to Brunswick, ME where they will face Bowdoin. Going into the final weekend of NESCAC play, it appears that the White Mules are in the driver's seat. While this is the first year of the NESCAC tournament, Colby has high-pressure experience making it to the finals of last year's ECAC tournament where they fell to Tufts 74-73. While it's not quite March Madness, this weekend is about as frantic as it gets in the wild world of Div. III sports. Who will make the playoffs? Who will clinch the number one seed in the NESCAC playoffs? Will the Jumbos be participants of spectators? As the sports clich?© goes, there are far more questions than answers leading into the last weekend of NESCAC play.


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S.O.S: A distress call for Boston artists

Picture this: You're an artist living in the Fort Point Area of South Boston, the largest arts community in New England. In about a month, the lease on your studio is going to expire. You might find yourself out on the street. In place of where your cozy little apartment was will be a spacious parking lot or high-rise dot-com office. The measly income you make as a struggling musician or painter will never be enough to cover rent and bills. Does the city of Boston care? Well, only in a rather disinterested and distant manner. City officials seem to be taking this housing crisis for Boston artists perhaps a little less seriously than they should. Beacon Capital Partners, a Boston real estate development firm, unveiled a $300 million proposal last month that would include a massive office complex that would provide up to 120 loft spaces for artists. But local artists and Fort Point cultural organizations do not see the developer's plan as an adequate solution to what they feel is a greater problem. Jed Speare of Mobius, an artist-run center for experimental work in all media, said in a recent article in South Boston Online that these realtors do not quite understand the seriousness of the housing shortage that artists are currently facing."I want people to understand that this is a serious displacement issue for us, this isn't just a bunch of whiney artists causing a stir," he wrote.More than 300 artists are at risk of losing their homes. Part of the problem lies in the unfortunate fact that the Boston Wharf company owns 95 percent of the residencies in which artists and artists studios reside. The company is not terribly concerned about the fate of its 500 residents, all who run a serious danger of being evicted in the next four years, as rents quadruple and leases expire.This August, groups such as the Revolving Museum and Artists for Humanity, which advocate public art and teen projects around the city, will lose their leases. The Fort Point District could turn from being the artistic center of Boston to a tidy version of Wall Street. Seems like it's out with the artists, in with the engineers and men in suits. There is definitely something wrong with this picture. After all, this is Boston we're talking about folks. Aren't we supposed to be one of the cultural capitals of the northeast? Shouldn't we be deeply concerned about the well-being of the artists who provide the cultural vibe and energy that so defines the city of Boston?This is exactly what the Fort Point Cultural Coalition, a neighborhood artists group, thinks. They believe that the Beacon plan is only a starting point and they would like to make the project more expansive. Ideally, they would like to see not only lofts for artists, but performance, exhibit, and office spaces for a wide variety of cultural groups and nonprofit arts groups. They want to purchase four buildings from the developer, giving artists 250,000 square feet to work with. This is only part of the Coalition's plan to eventually purchase around 500,000-6000,000 square feet in the Fort Point area. But there's a slight problem. The Coalition may want to buy this space, but the developers aren't willing to sell it. Turns out that their idealistic plan to revive the Fort Point area may not be so realistic. They could even turn out to be merely a pipedream. That's thanks to the hard-line attitude of Beacon Capital developers who claim that they are doing more than enough for the arts community in Fort Point. They believe that they're making housing affordable for artists.And while one cannot deny their claim, it seems painfully obvious that more needs to be done to help struggling artists. The housing shortage is city wide, and serious. Hundreds of artists cannot find an affordable place to live. What the Beacon developers are planning to do is only a drop in the bucket compared with what needs to be done to ensure that these artists have a place to live and display their art. The Fort Point Cultural Coalition wants to ensure that the cultural community does not die. More than that, they want to create a vibrant, artistic neighborhood. Should the fate of Boston artists be in the hands of Beacon Capital developer Alan Leventhal? The city of Boston is taking too passive a role in the future of artists. Boston lags behind cities like New York, San Francisco, and Providence, where city officials take an active role in ensuring that the arts are a top priority. Perhaps Boston should look to New York for inspiration. For example, the $31 million 42nd Street Studios building that houses 14 rehearsal studios, six offices for nonprofit arts group, and a 199-seat theater, is more along the lines of what Boston should be ultimately aiming for. That is exactly the message the Fort Point Cultural Coalition is trying to get across to developers. They believe that there is no reason that Boston should lag behind these cities. It is all a matter of vision. But vision is what the city seems to be lacking.Granted, city officials took a step in the right direction when they appointed Esther Kaplan as commissioner of the Mayer's Office of Cultural Affairs after the position was vacant for two years. Hopefully, she will be able to increase the city's commitment to the artistic community. But I wonder how much impact she will really have and how seriously she'll be taken. Only time can tell.This city-wide housing crisis is not going to go away. But the artists might. And that's a serious problem. Something that Esther Kaplan, Mayor Menino, and developers in the Fort Point Area must address. We're already tearing up the landscape of Boston with the Big Dig. Let's not tear out the heart and soul of Boston by forcing these artists out onto the streets.


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Eerie occurrences befall Diamondback players

With ten home runs in his first 14 games, Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Luis Gonzalez is currently on pace to smack 114.5 dingers this season. This, of course, is impossible, because no player has ever been credited with half a home run. But Gonzalez's astounding pace takes a back seat to the true buzz in the Diamondbacks' clubhouse - the competition between Jay Bell and Randy Johnson as to who can commit the most obscure throwing miscue. Last month, in a spring training game, Johnson threw a pitch that was involuntarily intercepted by a bird 15 feet in front of the catcher's mitt. Then on Monday, Jay Bell made his bid for the title as he pursued a ground ball which was destined for centerfield until it hit the second base bag. The ball popped in the air toward shallow right, causing Bell to spin with his back to the infield. He caught the ball, spun back towards first base while making a desperate attempt to throw out the runner. Unfortunately, umpire Larry Young was standing between Bell and first base. Bell's throw nailed Young in the left eye. "It was one of those weird things where Larry happened to be in the way and I caught him pretty flush," Bell told the Associated Press. Now with seven stitches, Young is expected to return to his duties in a couple of weeks. The promising 21-year-old St. Louis Cardinals southpaw Rick Ankiel had a rough start against the Houston Astros on Saturday. Throwing only 56 of 99 pitches for strikes, Ankiel surrendered two home runs, walked five batters, struck out six, and gave up four earned runs. Ankiel also hit a batter and threw one wild pitch in five innings, and has struggled to shake his comparison to another Rick - Rick "Wild Thing" Vaughn from Major League. Control problems from last year's postseason disaster remain an issue for Ankiel, who picked up the loss to even his record at one-and-one. Barry Bonds hit his 501st career home run in the seventh inning of Wednesday's game against the Dodgers. The homer extended his streak of consecutive games with a home run to six, tying him with Greg Nettles for NL record. Ken Griffey Jr., Don Mattingly, and Dale Long jointly hold the Major League record with eight consecutive games with a home run. But Nettles, Mattingly, Long, and Griffey (as of today) are not members of baseball's premier career power-hitting club, the 500 homerun club, which Bonds joined a day earlier. On Tuesday, Bonds hit Terry Adams' 2-0 slider into McCovey Cove for his 500th career home run. He became the 17th player to accomplish such a feat, and the first since Mark McGwire slammed his 500th in 1999. Adding more excitement to the milestone shot was the fact that Bonds' two run homer came in the bottom of the eighth inning with the Giants down 2-1 to the Dodgers. This proved to be the game-winning RBI and run scored, as the Giants held on to win 3-2. Bonds has hit seven balls into McCovey Cove, which lies behind the right field wall of Pac Bell Park. Only eight balls have ever been hit into the bay.


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Tennis bounces out to strong start

After a promising trip to Phoenix, AZ during Spring Break, the men's tennis team topped local rival Brandeis, 4-1, in Tuesday's home opener at the Gantcher Center. Team members agree that the early success is a sign of things to come. "This is the best team I've been on in my four years here," senior co-captain Adam Scott said. Scott, the team's lone senior, is joined on the talent-laden squad by one of the nation's best players in sophomore David Ruttenberg. Ruttenberg finished his freshman season 26th in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association's national rankings, and is only expected to improve with more collegiate experience.Surprisingly, Ruttenberg and Scott lost their doubles match against Brandeis (8-3) on Tuesday."David's been sick all week," Scott said. "With him healthy, we wouldn't lose that match." After Tufts' second team of freshman John Bram and junior co-captain Mark Fitzgerald disposed of its opponents easily, the third doubles match took on added importance - whichever team wins two of the three doubles matches receives the lone doubles point. With their matches decided, then, the members of Tufts' first two teams gravitated toward the match between Tufts sophomores Danny Lang and Brian Brendell and Brandeis' Gary Falkowitz and Tasos Logothetis. That match went to a tiebreaker, in which Tufts took advantage of its opponents' mistakes and won 7-1. "Luckily Brandeis got tighter than us," Watson half-jokingly said. Tufts was up 1-0 going into the singles matches. Scott mustered an extremely tough victory in the Jumbos' number two spot after having lost the first set in a tiebreaker, and was down five match points in the second set. "I had kind of written it off as a loss," said Scott, describing his mindset late in the second set. "When you're down five match points you just try to fight them off, but you don't really think you have a shot." Scott fought the points off and was able to rattle his opponent enough to win the second set, 7-5, capping off his comeback with a relatively easy third set win (6-3). Simultaneously, Brendell, playing in the six spot, pulled off an equally impressive comeback. Brendell dropped the first set 2-6, before roaring back to take the second and third sets 6-1 and 6-0, respectively. "I was most proud of Brian's win," Watson said. While his teammates were able to pull off major comebacks, Lang, playing in the number four spot, couldn't overcome his early deficit and lost the match 7-5, 7-6. Taking the court after Lang, Bram was able to clinch the victory for Tufts with an easy 6-3, 6-0 win over Brandeis' Yehn da Hansman. Since the Jumbos clinched a win after just five matches, Ruttenberg and co-captain Mark Fitzgerald were able to rest themselves for Wednesday's important match against Amherst College. Prior to the opener, the Jumbos won two of three matches during their trip to Arizona. The only Division III opponent Tufts faced was Minneapolis's Hamline University. The Pipers posed no real threat for the Jumbos, who easily disposed of them 6-1. Tufts' next opponent, Glendale Community College, was ranked eighth by the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) at the end of last season. "It's loaded with guys who could play [Division] I," head coach Jim Watson said about the Glendale squad. With such an accumulation of talent, Glendale was able to edge out Tufts, 4-3. The two teams split the singles contests, but Tufts dropped all three doubles matches. In their last match of the trip, the Jumbos outmatched Scottsdale Community College, not dropping a single set in the 7-0 win. "We were optimistic after the trip," Watson said. "The guys were able to acclimate quickly to the 87-90 degree weather, and I think we are in good shape." Despite being one of the youngest teams in the NESCAC, the Jumbos are excited about their early success and are in peak physical condition. "All the returning players are playing much better, and we have a good freshman in John Bram. He's going to really help us with both singles and doubles," Scott, said. Bram is recovering from a groin injury and is playing in the fifth spot, but once healthy, Watson expects him to move him up. "Knowing how to attack and to be aggressive" is the key to success this season, according to Watson. He hopes that capitalizing on opponents' mistakes will allow the Jumbos to win the close matches that they have lost in the past. The team's goal is the same as in every season: to qualify for the NCAA tournament and take it from there. Tufts has not been able to make the tournament during the past three years, but Watson attributes this to "shortchanging ourselves" through injury and not playing to potential. Considering the Jumbos' auspicious beginning to 2001, the coach has every right to believe things will be different this season.


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Addressing the AIDS crisis

Last night at dinner in the dining halls, students donated meals, points, and cash to a hospice thousands of miles away in a province of South Africa. The African Student Organization (ASO) sponsored this semester's Cause Dinner, which allowed students to help solve the African AIDS crisis. Every semester, Dining Services and the Tufts Community Union (TCU) Senate choose an organization to sponsor the Cause Dinner. Sophomore Melinda Coolidge, the chair of the Senate's Services Committee, said that the group picked the ASO's proposal in place of other possibilities including Tufts Association of South Asians'(TASA) earthquake relief fund, VISIONS meal delivery program to Boston patients with HIV, and an engineering fraternity that hoped to support the Christopher Reeve Fund, which donates money to researching spinal cord injuries. The committee chose the AIDS in Africa cause because they felt that the issue is neglected. "Basically, all the groups that applied were incredibly well-suited to receive the Cause Dinner. I believe the reason we came to a consensus on the ASO was [that] the raging AIDS epidemic in Africa [is] so under-funded," Coolidge said. "The other causes we felt were more funded than this one." This semester, the ASO put its time and energy into the fight against AIDS in Africa because of its prominence in the news. According to the World Health Organization, over two-thirds of all people infected with HIV live in sub-Saharan Africa, which accounts for 83 percent of the world's AIDS deaths. Of children living with HIV, an estimated 87 percent live in Africa. To shed light on this growing health crisis, Time magazine ran a spread on Feb. 12, entitled "Death Stalks a Continent," which the ASO addressed in one of its first meetings of the semester. The ASO president, junior Carl Nee-Kofi Mould-Millman, said that the organization is using the Cause Dinner to spread awareness as well as raise money. "Our Cause Dinner is two-fold," he said. "We are trying, on one hand, to raise awareness of several issues to people on campus and secondly, we are trying to actually make a difference by helping to support our cause, that helps with AIDS in Africa." According to the group, the KwaZulu-Natal province in South Africa has one of the world's highest populations of people living with AIDS. "It's one of the hardest hit [areas] in the whole continent, thereby being one of the hardest hit areas in the world," said sophomore Akua Apraku, ASO's public relations officer.ASO contacted Dr. Tony Moll, who runs a 350-bed clinic in this province that was featured in the Time article. Instead of money, Moll asked the group to send supplies, including clothing, medicines, and bed-sheets.The group plans to use the money raised yesterday to purchase the requested supplies, and then ship them to Moll's clinic. In the meantime, ASO is working to find the most cost efficient way to ship the items to Africa. "That would be the most expensive cost - actually shipping the supplies there," Apraku said.In choosing this specific issue to apply for the Cause Dinner, Apraku wanted to bring publicity to the African AIDS pandemic. "It's been a rising issue in the world but I personally feel it hasn't been addressed," she said. "[ASO] feels as if even though it's an epidemic, people aren't paying attention to it."According to Mould-Millman, the statistics alone don't attract public attention. "To most people, they're just numbers, but to us, they're actual individuals," he said, adding that ASO's goal is to "bring a face to African issues on the Tufts campus."


The Setonian
News

Psychology building promises unity for dept.

Variable temperatures and cramped offices will be no more than a bad dream for the psychology department when Tufts finishes construction on a spacious, three-story building this July. The Boston Ave. structure, located behind Curtis Hall, will allow for growth in department programs and research facilities. Psychology professors and students hope that an increased number of labs and office spaces will enhance the department's research capabilities and overall cohesion. "[The department] has been suffering from a lack of space for years," said Robin Kanarek, chair of the psychology department. "This has restricted experimental opportunities and has also slowed department advances by prohibiting the faculty from teaching and researching to their fullest abilities." Most psychology classes are held in Paige and Bacon halls, which are not large enough to support classrooms, labs, and professor and graduate student offices. The new building will have three floors to alleviate spatial limitations, and allow the department to consolidate under one roof. An up-to-date computer lab will also be constructed. The department plans to utilize its modern facility to increase the caliber of its experiments, as well as make strides on collaborative experiments among faculty and students. As the program grows and attracts more students, administrators hope the building will qualify them for coveted federal research grants. "For those students that [run experiments], the new building is a worthwhile endeavor which will... allow faculty to run better programs themselves, leading towards a curriculum of a higher magnitude," junior Jonathan Tack said. None of the regularly offered psychology classes will be disrupted while construction continues, Kanarek said. Statistics and experimental lab courses, however, had to be relocated to the Tisch Library because the computer labs were unusable. The building is being constructed from the ground up, after the old building was completely demolished. The fresh start will allow for more modern facilities, a welcome addition for professors and students. "The new building will be a big improvement. The temperatures in the old buildings are so unpredictable now; it is warm on one side and freezing on the other. The extra space will also be beneficial with taking lab classes and working with graduate students on their experiments," said one psychology student. The consolidation of Paige and Bacon into one building is expected to increase interdepartmental cooperation between faculty, undergraduate, and graduate students. The facility will allow for collaborative experimental efforts as well. Until last year, professors had offices in Bacon and graduate students in Paige. Currently, due to the ongoing construction, professors took over graduate student offices in Paige, causing minor inconveniences for those dislocated by the move. The new building will remain nameless until the University receives a substantial donation. Construction is proceeding on schedule, and the building and renovations are expected to be finished by July 2001, with the facility ready next fall. "The cover is up over the building, so that's a good sign... it means they're working," Kanarek said.


The Setonian
News

A match made... legally

Students fought for the right for all people - gay and straight - to vow 'til death do us part yesterday during the Fourth Annual National Freedom to Marry Day event in the campus center. Offering speakers and flyers, along with apple cider and cake, students spread the word about the campaign to legalize same-sex marriage. "It's important because a lot of people don't realize that gay people can't get married," said junior Vanessa Dillen, one of the students tabling for the event.National Freedom to Marry Day serves as a rallying date for those who support same-sex marriage. The day began on Feb. 12, 1998; the date was chosen because of its proximity to Valentine's Day. It also serves as commemoration of Abraham Lincoln's birthday - a time to celebrate equality, according to www.lambdalegal.org, the Web site for Lambda Legal, the oldest and largest legal organization in the US working for lesbians and gay males. Currently, laws in certain cities, companies, and states offer civil unions and domestic partnerships to same-sex couples, with limited recognition and benefits.