nancy milburn, dean of arts and jackson, to resign

12
I t - "THE FIRST WEATHER morning cloudiness CAMPUS NEws.11 I I I - c - Friday, February 19, 19821 - Volume V, Number 1 6 Please recycle this newspaper. Nancy Milburn, Dean of Arts and Jackson, to Resign BY ANTHOW EVERETT Nancy s Milburn announc- become more concerned with ed this week that she W i l l faculty development, equity be resigning from her POSi- of -opportunity and quality tion as the Dean of the Col- of one faculty.ii She now leges of Liberal Arts and feels that Tufts is Ita very Jackson, effective August good institution in'which to 31st of this year. Milburn, who was a pro- Milburn has been instru- fessor and chairwoman in mental i n working with Jack- the .Department of Biology son women in their "prepara- Prior to her appointment tion for life and careers as Dean in 1972, hopes t o (always with life coming Pursue "serious study of before career)." She now focused fields i n my own hopes to pursue studies of area." Her particular fields women's education and ~1~0s- Of interests in biology are sibly write a book on CO- insect physiology and cell education. (1 biology. Nhen asked about her SUC- In her letter of resig- - P _ P S ~ ~ , Dean Milburn could nation to President Jean not give any specifics but Mayer, Nilburn outlined what noted that she was "extreme- she felt to be Some of her ly happy and delighted with achievements during her ten theindications.11 She is con- she tried to a sin- be filled by a woman. gle coeducational' institu- Milburn, who lives in tion from what had been two tive pieces. *I moved on t o be a faculty member." Dean resign her post to pursue her Own years as Dean. Initially, fident that her post will academic interests more closely. (Photo courtesy of r,he Observer ) ONR Explains \ Research Funding rather disparate admini stra- See DEAN page 5 BY RUBY HAhMON AND DAVID HIRSCH Representaives of the 1 introduced rhe speakers and Office of Navy Research said that ths presentation (ONR) met with Tufts faculty would revolve a-ound neb' and students yesterday in programs funded by OW- Anderson Hall. The presenta- The first speaker, OSh tion and- discussion was Commander .Joseph SPigai ex- sponsored by the Tufts of- pl ined tkat O:;R was estab- fice of Government Resour- lished in 1946 as a sewent ces, a branch of the larger of the Defense Department ' Development Office. in order to Levelop funds I Tufts Office of Govern- and support f o r Navy-ba.sed ment Resources' proposal research. Acccrdinp, to Spi- to ONR comes in the wake pi, in the PRsent year, of recent cut-backs in the QNR has 282 million dollars budgt of the National alloted for research, much Science foundation, wiiich of which funds university has, up t o tile present, Seen research programs. a major funcier of scientific Spigai said that ONR sup- research on campus. ports research in basically and Sciences, and head. of electronics, life sciences, Dr. Lawrence Peebles (L) and Commander Joseph Spigai the Office of Government both of the Office of Naval Research, discussed govern- Resources Carla W. Xicci See ONR page 9 ment funding with Tufts faculty yesterday. (Photo b\ . Peter Hartzell) Associate D~~~ of Arts four fields : mathematics,

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I t - "THE FIRST WEATHER

morning c l o u d i n e s s

CAMPUS NEws.11

I I I - c -

Fr iday , February 19, 19821 - Volume V , Number 16 P l e a s e r e c y c l e t h i s newspaper.

Nancy Milburn, Dean of Arts and Jackson, to Resign

BY ANTHOW EVERETT Nancy s Milburn announc- become more concerned w i t h

ed t h i s week t h a t she W i l l f a c u l t y development, e q u i t y be r e s i g n i n g from h e r POSi- of - o p p o r t u n i t y and q u a l i t y t i o n a s t h e Dean of t h e Col- of one f a c u l t y . i i She now l e g e s of L i b e r a l Arts and f e e l s t h a t T u f t s i s Ita very Jackson, e f f e c t i v e August good i n s t i t u t i o n in 'which t o 31st of t h i s y e a r .

Milburn, who was a pro- Milburn h a s been i n s t r u - f e s s o r and chairwoman i n mental i n working with Jack- t h e .Department of Biology son women i n t h e i r "prepara- P r i o r t o h e r appointment t i o n f o r l i f e and c a r e e r s as Dean i n 1972, hopes t o (always wi th l i f e coming Pursue " s e r i o u s s tudy of before c a r e e r ) . " She now focused f i e l d s i n my own hopes t o pursue s t u d i e s of a r e a . " Her p a r t i c u l a r f i e l d s women's e d u c a t i o n and ~ 1 ~ 0 s - Of i n t e r e s t s i n b io logy a r e s i b l y write a book on CO- i n s e c t physiology and c e l l educa t ion . ( 1

bio logy . Nhen asked about h e r SUC- I n h e r l e t t e r of r e s i g - - P _ P S ~ ~ , Dean Milburn could

n a t i o n t o P r e s i d e n t J e a n n o t g i v e any s p e c i f i c s b u t Mayer, Nilburn o u t l i n e d what noted t h a t she was "extreme- she f e l t t o be Some of h e r l y happy and d e l i g h t e d wi th achievements d u r i n g h e r t e n the indica t ions .11 She i s con-

she tried to a sin- be filled by a woman. g l e c o e d u c a t i o n a l ' i n s t i t u - Milburn, who l i v e s i n t i o n from what had been two

t i v e p i e c e s . * I moved on t o

be a f a c u l t y member."

Dean resign her post to pursue her Own years as Dean. I n i t i a l l y , f i d e n t that her post will academic i n t e r e s t s more c l o s e l y . (Photo c o u r t e s y of r,he Observer )

ONR Explains \ Research Funding r a t h e r d i s p a r a t e admini stra- See DEAN page 5 BY RUBY HAhMON

AND D A V I D HIRSCH

R e p r e s e n t a i v e s of t h e 1 in t roduced rhe speakers and O f f i c e of Navy Research s a i d t h a t t h s p r e s e n t a t i o n (ONR) met wi th T u f t s f a c u l t y would revolve a-ound neb' and s t u d e n t s y e s t e r d a y i n programs funded by O W - Anderson Hall . The presenta- The f i r s t speaker , OSh t i o n a n d - d i s c u s s i o n was Commander .Joseph SPiga i ex- sponsored by t h e T u f t s of- p l i n e d t k a t O:;R was e s t a b - f i c e of Government Resour- l i s h e d i n 1946 a s a s e w e n t c e s , a branch of t h e l a r g e r of t h e Defense Department ' Development Office. i n o r d e r t o Levelop funds I

T u f t s O f f i c e of Govern- and suppor t f o r Navy-ba.sed ment Resources ' p roposa l r e s e a r c h . Acccrdinp, t o Sp i - t o ONR comes i n t h e wake p i , i n t h e P R s e n t y e a r , of r e c e n t cut-backs i n t h e QNR has 282 m i l l i o n d o l l a r s b u d g t of t h e N a t i o n a l a l l o t e d f o r r e s e a r c h , much Science foundat ion , wiiich of which funds u n i v e r s i t y has, up t o tile p r e s e n t , Seen r e s e a r c h programs. a major funcier of scientific S p i g a i s a i d t h a t ONR sup- r e s e a r c h on campus. p o r t s r e s e a r c h i n b a s i c a l l y

and S c i e n c e s , and head. of e l e c t r o n i c s , l i f e s c i e n c e s , D r . Lawrence P e e b l e s (L) and Commander Joseph S p i g a i t h e Off ice o f Government b o t h of t h e Office of Naval Research, d i s c u s s e d govern- Resources Carla W . Xicc i See ONR page 9 ment funding w i t h T u f t s f a c u l t y y e s t e r d a y . (Photo b\

. P e t e r H a r t z e l l )

Associate D~~~ of Arts four f i e l d s : mathematics ,

2 -

Tufts Daily. - , F .IN'THONY EVERETT, Editor- in-Chief

ROBERT A. KELLER, Associate Editor ' HAKRETTE , Exccut i v e Editor IS.& >I. K A L B . Editorial Assistant TINA TERRACIANO, Managing Editor

?:\RCY TARNOFF, Photography Editor KIM SIMON, Features Editor BRUCE R. COHEN, Sports Editor

JOE LUCA, Copy Editor ' ?l:l!iY I3L'CCL. G r ; l p h i c s Editor SUE LESSLER, Layout Editor

I 'ATT[ LOCKHART. Gr.iphics Editor SUE SIMON, Layout Editor .IOSEPIi 1: DI.-\Z, Business Blanagrr I WILLIAEI F. 'REGAN, Advertising Manage?

ClROLE A . COLEEIAS, A s s t . Business Manager

l h e T u f t s D a i l y is a ndn-prutit student-run n e u s p a p e r put .shed b y t h e s t u d e n t s o f T u f t s U n i r e r s i f v Printir.g b y t h e H a r v a r d C r i m s o n , Inc.. Cambridge, W . P : ? a s - a d d r e s s c c r r e s o o n d e n c e to: The T u f t s Daily, C u r t i s Hall. T u f t s University. Medford. H;, j : l55. T e i e p t o n e : ( 6 1 ' ) E28-5000, e x t s . 6130, 6131.. B u s i n e s s h o u r s 9-5 heekdays. U.S. ,

P;s:a;e paiJ i n " e d f o r d . Massachusetts.

h e e k d a y s d u r i n S . t h e a c a d e m i c y e a r .

. . . I .

How General Is G.U.?

TO The Editor:

On Wednesday night a ty- pical group from Tuft's di- verse student group gathered at Dewick Snack Bar to watch our very own soap opera, General University.

Everyone enjoyed munching out and watching the pro- gram. We laughed at the trials and tribulations of being a Tufts undergrad, from the poor hard working student being seduced by his professor to the preppy cult services.

But it's unfortunate that Tufts' own soap opera couldn't be truly repreFen- tative of the Tufts communi- ty. General University's satirical portrayal of cam- pus life did not include

To the Editor:

one Black or Asian as a sig- nificant character. I$ seems to me, at a time when cam- pus organizations are sup- posedly working adamantly for ethnic interaction, this is a grave oversight.

Maybe the .creators of G.U. are depicting Tufts life as they have experienc- ed it, but I suggest they use their Itimagination'' and create a more balanced sce- nario.

Fortunately this mistake is one the can be overcome. Hopefully the G.U. creators will rectify the situation and we will all be able to enjoy more episodes of GENE- RAL UNIVERSITY.

Madeline Schilder 5'84

I ' Backflack, Pt. 1

We, as members of Tufts' Greek & Irish ccrmxiities feel personally insulted that a Greek or Irish band was not picked to perform at the Spring Fling concert. Greek line dances are easy to learn, lots of fun, and unite all members of all ethnic groups in a dance of togetherness. Irish jigs ar'e spirited fun, sure to tire even the most boister- ous Spring-Flingers.

Of course, we are not suggesting that either of these bai?ds be booked. Ra- ther, we would like to point out to Mr. Jo,:l-sr)n that his . . .... ? _ .,.. ._.. ..

TUFTS -DAILY Friday, Febmarv 19, 1982

style rather than the artist or her race.

Mr. Johnson also, misin- terprets Mr. Friedman when hd accuses Ben of comparing Hoberta Flack to Elvin Bi- shop. Mr. Friedman was com- paring his estimate of crowd turnout and was not compar- ing the performers them- selves. Mr. Johnson seems to be taking this, too, as an insult to both himself and his race, which it ob- viously is not.

Let's just, forget a&ut trying to please all of Tufts' special interest groups, ethnic or otherwise, and concentrate on finding a band that we can all en-

-

- joy

Judy Flanagan J '84 Irene Lantzakis 5'84

Backflack, Pt. 2

To The Editor:

It appears that Thomas L. Johnson of the Afro- American Society takes per- sonal offense to the Roberta Flack issue. He's "had his share" of being insulted, and sees various students' reactions as yet another racial insult. I don't be- lieve that the views expres- sed are anywhere near being racially induced; they are

linist,was not contracted. Perlman is a "crossover ar- ti,st" as is Ms. Flack; his style is not appropriate for an annual release of tension.

In arranging the concert for Spring Fling, let's keep in mind the context and in- tent of the celebration. Only then should a decision by made.

Gary J. Merken AI85

Backflack, Pt.3

To The .Editor:

Ir response to T. J . John- son's article (2/18) on the overwhelming popularity of Roberta Flack. She may well have been "one of the most dominant artists of the se- venties, period." We are now in t h e s , if Mr. Johnson is confused. Her popularity is no longer as high and that is all Ben Friedman was trying to say. ' I also do not understand why Mr. Johnson persists in taking Mr. Friedman's criticism as a personal in- sult as a black student. I don't know Mr. Friedman's taste, but I would love to have Earth, Wind, and Fire, Stevie Wonder, the Commo- dores, George Benson, or Ronnie Laws at Tufts but I wouldn' t want Roberta

more expressions of muSical Flack. Am I then a racist preference than anything if this is my musical taste else. o r if i believe that South-

I

letter is one of the reasons why segregationsim is so widespread at Tufts. Mr. Friedman was not insulting Roberta Flack or any member of the black community in hi, letter. However, I quote Mr. Johnson: "...it is peo- ple like Mr. Friedman who continue to show ... ignorance toward our people's contri- butions toward this coun- try.'( Ben himself stated at the beginning of his let- ter that Roberta Flack is a "talented and creative artist. ' I Mr. Johnson seems to be missing Mr: Friedman's point: Namely, that h? i s criticizing the mi. sical'

* . * 1 ,

Roberta Flack is a talen- ted musician. She was a ma- jor figure in music during the 1970's, and continues to share her sbecial joy around the world. But ap- parently it's her style of music, not her color or back'ground, to which people react. Many students do not feel that Ms. Flack's style is appropriate lor Spring Fling.

Viewing. such reaction as anti-black, as Mr. John- son certainly implies, is ludicrous. Following his reasoning, I should be of- fended and cry "anti-Semi- tism!'! because Itzhak Perl- map, the world-famous vio-' . . . . . ,

side Jot;n,iy is more of what most Tu1 ts students are look- ling fo- rhan is Roberta Flack? Bepause that is all MI-. "riedman is saying. If Mr. Johnson doesn't know, Southside is from New Jersey and would then probably be popular among the many New York and New Jersey stu- dents. That Mr. Friedman, and in another editorial M r . Vincunas, want to have a good time during Spring Fling and feel that South- side Johnny 2nd the Jukes is a better group for this i s just a personal opinion and should not be so quickly

See BACK page 3 . .li

Friday, February 19, 1982 TUFTS I m L Y

Wwk-study to UldergQ '..

BY DAVID HIRSCH Tufts' work-study program

will be experiencing many changes in the next year, according to Grant Curtis , Dean of Financial Aid. The work-study program will be feeling both the effects of President Reagan's reduc- tions in college aid, and the l o s s that Tufts has in making for over-awarding work-study positions.

Part of the immediate problem, said Curtis, is that "this year Tufts over- awarded work-study scholar- ships, although typically people don't receive all of it for some reason. This year people received enough of it to cause a small l c s i , which means that no more work-study will be awarded this spring and possibly no more before July 1. We have to wait and see what the government is going to do.

The long-term problem is Reagan's two-stage reduc- tions in work-study and other government aid pro- grams. In 1982-83 there will he reduced funding for work- study awards. Reagan's bud- get plans for 1983-84 in;- clude eliminating Supplemen- tary Opportunity Grants and National Direct Loans, re- ducing Pel1 Grants, and fur- ther reducing work-study, Curtis remarked that, "there is no possibility for work- study to be eliminated. But the r-eductions will make it very difficult for some

"Are You students, especially now mand that [ there for aid]. is increased It

de- Experienced? '' At the present time,

work-study employees receive 6 20 percent of their salaries

n?eDaily needs from the non-profit organi- zation for which they work, and the remaining 80 percent , from the government. Curtis will says that probably the proportions have

to experienced typists t o type copyin their off ice.

change, stacting July 1, to 60:40, or a compromised 70: 30.

Other possible fucure Glans for the ork- study program at Tufts include: (1) committing r 3 $-mer work-study awards s . ""Ig them for the regular s hool year, or ( 2 ) allowing s m e work-study awards to be Lqed ' by over certain the summer special ~ iw groilps lllding Work-Study Only. Apply now

in the Curtis Ha11 office. (a) those who must attend summer school for a special reason, (b) those who live 6 in the area and will be wor- king on campus, and (c) gra- duate students who need a specific internship for their degree requirements.

BACK 3,continued

taken as a rac'ial insult. Mr. Johnson took this oppor- tunity to turn a question of musical preference into. one of racial slander.

Rick Mades A I 8 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iubmitted by the N.A.A.C.P. for Black History Month md printed as a public service of the Tufts Daily

TUFTS COMMUNITY

Bundle Up and join SPIRIT

for a few hours of outdoor games and fun

this Saturday Games include volleyball

(Fletcher tennis courts-l=OO pm) followed by Frisbee on the Quad and ending with an excitin game

(meet at Ballou) . U %me out and have some fun! Hope to see you there!!!

of 'Capture the Fbgg

+- , > - . ' : I

4 TUFTS DAILY Fr iday , February 19, 1982

s t o n Taylor w i l l appear so- Man,tt "Barney Millert t and

g u i t a r and pi.-no. T u f t s se- n i o r Lee Baird r e g u l a r l y Born i n New YorE, Ajaye appears i n t h e area, and, moved t d LOS Angeles as a

Lots of t h i n g s w i l l b2 Firs,$ up on id^^ n i g h t l i k e Taylor , s p e c i a l i z e s c h i l d and hence d e r i v e s his going on at T u f t s , d u r i n g is t h e TSR Winter Weekend i n s o f t rock and f o l k . Glenn comedy from t h a t West Coast t h e n e x t few days as Winter Concert , which stars Living- Kurtz l a s t y e a r won "Best setting* Ajaye gave UP a Weekend gets underway. ston Taylor, L~~ Baird and I n d i v i d u a l Performance" i n l a w career f o r comedy, and Sprinkled among t h e p a r t i e s clem Kurtz . Showtime is Newsday's N a t i o n a l Teen Ta- h i s d e c i s i o n Seems t o be and sports e v e n t s are two a t 7:30 pm and t i c k e t s c o s t l e n t Competi t ion, . and h a s Paying o f f . His show s t a r t s fnajor c o n c e r t s , one by musi- . $3.50 i n advance and $4.00 appeared on Merv G r i f f i n a t 8 : 0 0 , and t i c k e t s are c i a n s and t h e o t h e r by a a t t h e door . and w i t h Dizzy G i l l e s p i e . $3 w i t h a T u f t s I D . comedian. Both w i l l be a t ~~~t Seen in t h i s f a l l t s Current13 i n t h e T u f t s ' Con-

w i l l open t h e c o n c e r t w i t h a s e t of ' c l a s s i c a l g u i t a r music.

On Saturday , Cohen, wi th sane h e l p from t h e Afro- h e r i c a n S o c i e t y , S tudent A c t i v i t i e s and WMFO, w i l l

jaye. Most famous f o r h i s s t a r r i n g r o l e i n Car Wash, F 2/19 rn -7 Ajaye h a s a l s o appeared i n Convoy and Dandy, The A l l American G i r l .

Ajaye h a s made t h r e e , comedy albums, i n c l u d i n g 1 h i s l a t e s t t lDon' t Smoke' Dope, Fry Your Hair." t e l e v i s i o n , Ajaye h a s a i l ?eared on "Chico and t h e

winter Weekend to Present lo, p l a y i n g both a c o u s t i c "The Tonight Show," t o name j u s t a few. Varied - Agenda 'fsf Students

BY MARK J ~ R L I N D

Cohen Auditorium. O r i e n t a t i o n Concer t , Living- s e r v a t o r ~ program, Kurt2

Is Swift's too expensive? IDDUD HQUR h o s t comedian Franklyn A-

THE FIRST WORD! - - -

8 . m . m U . m . M - $3atmedoor -- - ALLYOU CAN DRINK

to President Mayer, Milburn wrote, !'I l ook I , !

Winchester, Mass., and has ward to seeing Tufts conti a daughter still in high nue to progress a long the

Celebs' to Attend Dance DEAN, continued

Marathon !Tonight BY KIM R. SIMON school; noted that she would road toward excellence-, di-

ford, Channel 4 Sportscaster the task of contacting all diate area for more than still further improvements Bob Lobel, and Tufts Pro- the sponsors will be enor- a semester.11 She reflected in equity of opportunity vast Sol Gitt;c,,,,n will ap- mous: the dancer with the favokably upon her years for Of the and pear at 8:oo tonight in most sponsors wins a triI; at Tufts but added that she men who study here as scho- ton Lounge for the Sigma for two to Jamaica. is driven by "a great desire lars, be they students or Nu Dance Marathon. When Bos- Sigma N~ member Alan Eva to explore other academic faculty members." ton area poster child Kath- is confident that all the interests*'' However, she

Tufts students will begin tance. They will receive going to be very far awaY*'' twelve hours of dancing to hourly breaks and free food. In her concluding remarks raise money for the Muscular What's more, Eva added, Ita Dystrophy Association. Chan- lot of college marathons ne1 4's 11:OO News will co- last 24 hours." For those ver the event. who can attend only in spi-

In the days that follow, rit, however, WMFC will si- the dancers will face the mulcast the event. .

money from incredulous spon- Dance Marathon raised $3000 sors ("You really went for the American Cancer So- ,

twelve hours?").verttte- ciety .

Mayor Paul Dimat0 of Med- less, most marathoners hope not "want to leave the imme- versity and best Of

leen Haley cuts the ribbon, entrants will go the dis- added that She was ''not p 44++++4+43

OH NO! HOUSING LOTTERIES

task of collecting pledged Last year's Sigma Nu

A.T.O. -Tuft8 coed fraternity. WE HAVE 10 SPOTS TO FILL-2 SINGLES AND 4 DOUBLES. APPLICATIONS AT ATO, 134 PROFESSORS ROW, DUE l l P M , mI= FEB 19- m ' L L BE A "GEX-TO4NOW AT0 COCKTAIL PARTY WED. FEB* 17, 5-7PM. FOR FURTHER INFORMATIOK,

ALBWTINE AT 776-6837. Am-IT'S NOT JUST A SPORTS

)rOUSE-IT'S AN EXPERIENCE!!! SHORTS Tufts sports 'fans owe

Eric Carson a "thank you.II The senior sprinter convinc- ed Bruce Carter to warm up for an upcoming junior var- sity basketball game by triple-jumping, in the track meet that day. After Carson convinced Coach Peter Close to allow Carter to jump, Carter proceeded to win the event with a leap of 43' 63".

Since then, Carter has been a consistent contrib- utor to the track team while posting the third best leap in New England Division I11 competition this year. Oh yes, Carter scored nine points in the J.V. basket- ball game that day and con- tinued to practice basket- ball rather than. track.

Watch out, Ohio State. For the second time this year, a Tufts 'athlete was included in an issue of Sports Illustrated. Ariane Austin was in this week's issue for her performance in a track meet last Decem-

ber against Bowdoin and Col- by. In that meet Austin won the long jump with a leap of 17 feet, the 50 yard dash (6.3) and the 220 yard run (59.9). She also anchored lthe winning- 800 yard and mile relay teams. The 22.5 points she accumulated was a' new school record.

Unfortunately, Aukin is as tireless academically as she is athletically. She currently has a 3.7 grade point average as a Child Study major, but her course load was too tough for her to run track this semester. An obvious l o s s to the track team, Austin is nevertheless an asset to the Tufts com- munity. We applaud her pri- orities.

Completing track's dom- ination of today's column, recognition goes out to Deane Dolben, a sophomore shotputter. His toss of 49'2" in the recent meet against Brandeis and Bates was the best toss in New England Division I11 com- petition this year.

The African-American Society and Goddard Chapel invjte all members of the Tufts Community to a service of worship and celebration for Black History Month. Sunday Feb. 21 at 3 pm in Goddard Chapel.

/ . . . . . .

' TUFTS DAILY \Friday, February 19, 1982 L

- -. - * - .

a

'TUFTS SPORTSm '

-- gon State is quality! Ralph Miller's Beavers, led b1 defensive dynamo Lester Con-

N C m PhYOffS: 'Battle in the Bayou4 BY JON BERGEX

I bet you didn't know fairytale season by waltzing that New Orleans is playing away with the crown? hosts to two Mardi Gras' The NCAA selection com- this year. That is, if you mittee will extend its usual were to include this month's 48 . invitations to this affair. But come March 27 year's roundball spectatcu- the party really begins, lar, placing each of the as college basketball's na- teams in one of four regions tional semifinals and fi- (East, Mideast, Midwest, nals. the Final Four. debut or West). A team may 5e in Bayou land. The largest crowd ever to witness a col- lege basketball game-:some 61,000 spectators tucked cozily into the Superdome- -will be treated to the na- tion's finest collegiate hoops, concluding with the national championship tilt on March 29. And just; who will be there for these fans to cheer? Virginia? Maybe DePaul? Perhaps Missouri? What about Oregon State? Will Indiana return to de- fend its crown? Or will a Cinderella club cap a

placed in any of the four regionals. (A club's ranking and/or drawing power may influence the selection com- mittee--just ever so slight- ly!). 'And tjeing a single- elimination tournament, it makes for some long plane flights home!

Now that we have the tourney's format, let's take a peek at the top title con- tenders from each region. We will begin oiJt West.

Not many super squads in the West? Well, it's qua- lity not quantity--and Ore-

ELECTIONS for 1983 Tufts Jumbo Yearbook POSITIONS= = Editor-in-Chief

UBusiness Manager dayout Ed 4 0 p y Ed mAd sales Photographers

4eadwmets %tcm

ner, have buzzed through a fairly tough schedule, losing only once in the Pac- 10 enroute to their current No.5 rating. They're big, strung (and all those other Herculean adjectj yes), and play the toughest 2-3 zone in the country. A fundamen- tally sound ball club with one of the 'nation's finest

coaches. O.S.U. is the top pick in the West. Other' strong tournament possibili- ties from the West include Idaho, Fresno State, and U.S.F.

In the Midwest the class act is Missouri I (although you'll .get qu. te an argument from Tulsa). Mizzou boasts three legitimate ltplayerslt ' in point guard Jon Sunvold,

3 e e H A U p a g e 8

1. season 9-1, the best in that program's history. (Photo by David Uhlir)

Women Squash Amherst, Smith in Dual Match

BY ERIC MACOON

CLASS OF '84 MEMBERS ALSONEEDED FOR

XMDRS ARE ENCOURAGED TO ATTEND

THIS M E T I N G LEAVE A MESSAGE AT NT ACTIVITIES OR CALL ERIC (776-8606) OF

ARRY (776-8530)

Wednesday was a banner day for the Tufts Women's Squash team, as they defea- ted both Amherst and Smith in a dual match held at Am- herst. Led by the strong, consistent playing of Sue Rafuse, . Margaret Durfee, Carolann Burke, and Anne Marie Cook, the squashers

I improved their record to , 6-4. Solid thinking and good conditioning was the story ,of this match.

In the first victory, Tufts edged out a surpri- singly tought Amherst squad four matches to three. Sue Rafuse, the #1 singles pla- yer, won her match in straight games 3-0 as did number two player Margaret Durfee and third-ranked Carol Ann Burke. In a tough match, #4 Beth Hochhouser

I

lost 3 games to 2, but Anne Marie Cook pulled through to win her match 3-1. Pla- ying #6 singles, Nina Cudahy lost 3-1, and Leigh Malliard also was defeated in a close match 3-2.

In their second victory of the day, Tufts beat a strong Smith team four mat- ches to three. Again, the top four players posted im- pressive victories. The win marked the second time this season that the Jumbo women- have defeated Smith. Pre- viously, Tufts had downed Smith at the Howe Cup cham- pionships. ,The women appear to be in good form as they go into the final week of the [season. The \next women ' s match is against Middlebury 2nd will be held at Tufts on Saturday at 2:OO.

form imaginary f e a t s of da- l i n e s e v e r y t h i n g h o r r i b l e r i n g wi th a t h l e t i c p r i d e . about t h a t occupa t ion , and

As t h e second se t pro- t h e show ends wi th images 3 P's "Nightclub a Liberal Dose of Reality ' g r e s s e s , however, b i t t e r - of q u i e t from t lAlbatrossl t

See NIGHTCLUB, page 8

ness becomes t h e predominant Ramble. BY NANCY YOUNG theme. A Jewish woman speaks Given no d e f i n i t e l oca -

"Cdnt,xtall - a c h o r a l cclr,- f e e l i n g s i n t i m a t e l y i n t h e of s u r v i v a l i n t h e concen- p o s i t i o n made lip of chorus- s i t u a t i o n s of each poe t i c - t r a t i o n camp. "\\'siting" out- e s . so Los a n d r e c i t a t i v e s , accompanied hy p iano . .\dd ltXjehtL-Iubtl as n uiod.ifiei . and t h c sctise of "Pen. Vaitit :: I ' l - L ~ t Z c l s " p l~oduc t ion of J i e h t c Lub. Ckntata beconies

- c l c a r : in:isical numbers in - t i ~ r s p c r s c d \<it11 iiords and ml?r 1 on .

C h a l l e n ~ i n ~ t o t h e vieL;- i, ;. 1 s i n t z L l e c t u a 1 and em- t iona l unde r s t and ing . S igh t - clut., Can ta t a . l i r i t ' t cn by E l i zabcth Skados ( composer of Four F r i e n d s ) and d i r e s - t ed 7T.v .Iohn C o l l i n s . t r a i p s - es bold ly between t h e inno- i - a t i v c and t h e ba re ly corn- p rchens ib l e . The s t a 5 e i s b a r e . e s c e p t Khen a mul t i - f u n c t i o n a l bench i s suspen- ded from t h e c e i l i n g a t va-

-

dramat ic p i ece s e t t o Swa- dos t a 1 t c m a t e I? bo i s t e rous and e e r i e s c o r e . Every num- b e r i s a continent. sometimes of a n i n t r o s p e c t i v e n a t u r e , ;is in "Thincs I D i d n ' t Knov I ' ~ c v e ~ .I! ii nO-ycnr o l d ?iar- s i s t ' s vic\ i of n a t u r e dur ing imyri sonmcnt . Other p i eces such a s " I r i s h S o l d i e r s . " a Fcl i t i c a l ;-omrnentary in a nul-sc.1.T r h p w . provide t h e cveni!~.r \ i i t h , s o c i a l com- ment.

The company . ho\ic-\-c?. . - seems niost comfor tab le i n t h e \ii I d . humorous s h o r t s . I n t h e t'i r s t set t \ io \-en- tri loqu i s t s' barga in f 01 t h e i r dummiest coopera t ion on s t a g e . .A parody of E l v i s p. and a back-up of doo-<<a

The ensemble r e v e a l s i t s , t h e Pastrami Bro the r s per-

- I

Friday, February 19, 1982 TUFTS DAILY 8 \

B-BAlJ-,~~ntiued all-conference forward Ricky Frazier, and, of course, center Steve Stipanovich. Losers of only one, Norm Stewart's No.4 ranked Tigers should be right there, PI:O- viding they're allowed to. stay in the Midwest. (The Midwest regional is in St. Loui s ) .

Stiff competition fTom the Midwest will come from Tulsa (God, if this team were disciplined they'd be unreal!), Arkansas and Kan- sas State. All are prime threats for the title.

The Mideast is loaded .. The team with the most fire- power (for the 3rd straight .season) i s DePaul. 'The No.3 Blue Demons are hoping to avoid carbon copy performan- ces of their last two post- season encounters , wh.j ch ended in upset losses to U.C.L.A. and St. Joseph's. In order to accomplish this, they'll have to get strong backcourt efforts (something they've lacked the past two years) from Skip Dillard, Raymond McCoy, and Kenny

Patterson. Also, Terry Cum- mings, their gifted forward, must get the ball. If these things occur, Ray Meyer's crew should be one Of four in New Orleans.

DePaul will not be the only threat from the Mid- east. Iowa, Kentucky, Minne- sota and Indiana all boast talented and explosive squads.

In the East we have No. 1 Virginia. The Cavaliers must get BIG games from Ralph Sampson. if they are to hold their pole position come Final Four time. Terry Holland's bunch can get by in the ACC without 'impres-- sive statistical outings from Sampson, but come the playoffs it will be a dif- ferent story. The countryl's best player must see the ball, as was not the case in last year's season-ending semifinal loss to North Ca- rolina. Virginia must also get some scoring punch from their guards, especially athell Wilson, to take de- fensive pressure off Samp- son. If these things are the rule and not the excep- tion, the people in Char- lottesville should be ye!-- ling, "Wahoo" come March

Hold on! Yes Virginia, there -is a North Carolina and they are a co-favorite. No.1 for a large portion of this season, Dean Smith's Tar Heels are tournament- tested tough. Last year's runner-up, North Carolina has some impressive people in forward James Worthy and center Sam Perkins, as well as their patented four-cor- ner offense. Unfortunately it's only effective when the Heels aFe ahead and re-

29

All Protestant Students are invited to Weekly

Worship and Fellowship every Sunday 7 pm

Goddard Chapel. All Welcome.

Fellowship Period Afterwards.

cent history shows Carolina losing games in which they were forced to play "straight up. If the guys from Chapel Hill get solid defensive play from Perkins (if he stays out of foul trouble), and if Worthy can he his usual offensive show- man, then U.N.C. might well meet up with Virginia in a repeat of last season's semifinal. And we know how those games are!

Logically, the Final Four should be DePaul, Missouri, Oregon State, and Virginia. But, if recent history tells us anything you can count on a sleeper. In any event we will have our answer on March 29. See you in New Orleans !

NIGHTCLUB,contlnued tion, property, or character types, the audience often feels disconcerted, and the performers tend to compete with the void. But the im- pact of both music and thoughts win unadorned strength without such dis- tractions.

Nightclub Cantata, which opened Thursday, will -be at the Arena tonight and Saturdav at 8~m. See Nieht-

v

club Cantata *for the poig- nancy of life's reality not for the escape of an'illu- sion! &+*****P 4

Breaking the Bad News to.Your Roomie ~

BY ANN MARIE CANNISTRARO

I The Hoasing Lottery for next year i s fast approach- ing and roommate plans are : being made. It can be a tra- 1 umatic time for some. Spar- t

ing feelings and preserving ,

friendship seems impossible i when you're faced with tell- 1

ing your roommate that you don't want to live with him ,, or her again. '

In search of solutions ' to this problem, I asked Dr. Jonathan Slavin of the 1 Tufts Counseling Center for '

his advice on the best way ! to approach one's roommate. "Directly," was his only I

reply. Obviously, there is no

easy way out and even the most tactful approach could cause bad feelings. The trick is to be honest and candid and, above all, to make sure that your roommate is the first to know.

Approach the subject dir- ectly-, and although you may have to exit directly, the tension won't last too long. Dr. Malcolm Slavin, also of the Counseling Center, said "it often happens that

'i

and the likelihood that your friendship will be better because of it.

If, however, you aren't given to being open and hon- est, or you simpqy' can't stand guilt, you could al- ways try the indirect ap- proach. This involves shift- ing the burden to your room- mate--and the possibilities are endless. Here are some suggestions from on-campus veterans : 1 ) Throw a Plasmatics Party and use your roommate's T.V. 2) Teach yourself the vio- lin. 3) Wash your red sweatshirt in with his/her whites. 4) When your roommate I s parents call, say where he/ she really is. 5) Take up primal screaming to release tension. 6) Play "Let's Get PhysicalIi over ?.PA over and over.

No matter how you do it, let your roommate know what your plans are as soon as possible so that he or she can make alternative ar- rangements. And don't be surprised if the reaction

the situation doesn't turn i is not quite what YOU ex- out to be as destructive 1 pected. to the other person as you originally thought.

It also doesn' t hurt to ************ mention the obvious benefits of a new living. experience

TUFTS DA]L'ii Fr iday , February 19, 1982 9

BOSKONE Conference : Weekend of Fantasy and Sci-Fi

BY DANA DEGENHARDT R e a l - l i f e a r t i s t s and rit,e chara.cters was a s i g h t ;

au thors mingled witk, charac- S t a r Trek o f f i c e r s c h a t t e d .tt'rs out of t h e i r own and with members of S t a r Wars' o t h e r worlds Last weekend imperial guard, and co.lonia1 a t 1306KOSE XIS. I h s t o n ' s w a r r i o r s from Bat t le s ta r n i n e t e e n t h a n t l ~ i i l Sc.ience G a l a c t i c a ; C r . Who and Za- F i c t i o n an3 Fantasy Conven- phod BeebLebrox browsed t i o n a t t h e P a r k Plaza Ho- through t h e h u c k s t e r ' s room. tc ' l . Costumes w e r e n ' t l i m i t e d

\ \hat i s a weekend l i k e t o sc ience f i c t i o n o r f a n t a - i n a h o t e l f u l l of 2,200 s y , e i t h e r ; a World War I e l v e s . Dai-th Vaders, Zaphod f l y i n g a c e , complete with t k e b l e b r o x ' s , and a s s o r t e d ' f l i g h t j a c k e t , s k i n t i g h t o t h e r c h a r a c t e r s from s c i - helmet, goggles and whitc ence f i c t i o n / f a n t a s y ? Never s c a r f , was one i n a roomful du1l . If your i n t e r e s t s of r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s from range from T o l k i e n . t o Asiinov T u f t s . o r from S t a r T r e k t o compu- The annual costume p a r t y t e r s . HOsKOl\iE i s . t h e p lace held Friday n i g h t was c rea- t o be. ture-watching a t i t s b e s t .

Science FictionI 'Fantasy A11 t h e c h a r a c t e r s from S t a r fans came from a s f a r as Uars were r e p r e s e n t e d , in - :!ri'zona t o a t t e n d t h e 'Icon . ' ( c luding Chewbacca t h e Wookie Lectures and d i s c u s s i o n s and two Darth Vaders (bad were he ld by such well-known news. e a r t h ! ) Superman and au thors and a r t i s t s a s Spi-, , t h e G r e a t e s t American Hero der Robinson, Donald N o l l - were having t h e i r p i c t u r e heim; C . J . Cherryh, and Joan taken i n one c o r n e r , while 11.i;inge. ?levies, i n c l u d i n g a very uncomfortable e l f "The Day t h e Earth Stood gazed a t everyone ( e l v e s S t i l l ! ! and t h e 1 0 2 2 vers ion a r e n ' t t e r r i b l y happy min- of IIXosferatu," ran cont in- g l i n g with humans; t h i s one uously from midafternoon looked ready t o p u l l h i s u n t i l a.m. inc luding t h e sword i f anyone g d t too a r t show, one of t h e grea- c l o s e . ) A l ack of organiza- t e s t draws f o r t h e c o n v w - t i o n and an i n e f f i c i e n t

. t i o n , f e a t u r e d works by Hos- speaker system marred t h e konc X I X Guest, Artist M i - p a r t y ; however, winners were chae l Whelan., and o t h e r pro- announced over a muddled f e s s i o n a l and amateur s c i - speakers and then taken fi /fai<tasy a r t i s t s . downstairs s o they c o u l d n ' t

The atmosphere . t h a t per- be seen. Meanwhile, good- vaded ' t h e convention was hear ted confusion re igned . thoror .hly re laxed and some- The H o c k s t e r ' s , o r D e a l e r ' s what + . lzar re . Young c h i l d - room was f u l l ; d e a l e r s so ld ren and people i n t h e i r a v a r i e t y of books, p o s t e r s , f i f t i e s dressed up a s t h e i r jewelry, f u r s , and b u t t o n s . f a v o r i t e a l i e n and haunted NESFA, t h e New England t h e h a l l s of t h e Park Plaza Science F i c t i o n Assoc ia t ion ,

H o t e l , mingl ing with o t h e r encourages anyone i n t e r e s t e d convent ioneers and t h e oc- i n t h e i r o r g a n i z a t i o n o r c a s i o n a l "mundane1' g u e s t BOSKONE t o c o n t a c t them a t : ~

who was u n f o r t u n a t e enough NESFA, I n c . t o g e t caught i n an e l e v a t o r Box G,, MllT Branch P.O. with them. A "mundame , 'I Cambridge? Mass. 02139-0910 someone who i s n ' t a f a n , i s u s u a l l y regarded with a combination of humor 'and p i t y , because thby d o n ' t know what t h e y ' r e missing.

The *ikeover of an e l e - gant h o t e l l i k e t h e Park Plaza by BUSKONE conventio- n e e r s dressed as t h e i r favo-

--

-

CLASSIFIBDS For Sale

why pay $6 for &yell WZII cas- settes i n tam? b y them on campus for only $3.50 or buy TDK SA c.goS for only $3.15 each. Call 776-0211. Also. TAPCO STERED 10 band gra*c equalizer $175, Sony Stereo Music system, am-fm, amp, turntable unit w/bookshelf spakers only $125.

WAN%! PLAY GUITAR? I must sell this f a - s i z e acoustic &-strug guitar (with hard case). It' s in very g o d coralition, good s o d , travels *E.' Please call Rozie, 628-0873. $70.

For Sale: Waxless Cross - Country sku with BuKlmgs. Excellent con- dition - used only once. $25. Call Sandy at.395-7280.

Stereo gear cheap!' Brand new wit11 mrranty! Student rep for Transales bholesaler offers values like these: Soriy W a k 1 $89,Wallarruz I I ( w / record d e ) $l@;JVC KODZ Cassette deck $139;TEAC V30 $149. We carry s p k e r s , turntables, cassette decks and receivers by Akai, Nikko,Pio- eer , Sony , JVC , TEAC , Dual & Techniques fioneer receiver SX 4 20 watts $19 SX5-30 watts $233. call 776-0211.

For M e : Stereo equipwnt . Technics SL.42 turntable with Stanton 68CE m i d g e : $70; JVC SK 600 .I1 spakers:$jS each. Call A l a r W 9471 *

ONR, continued

and environmental sc iences . I n a d d i t i o n , s p e c i a l pro- j e c t s planned f o r 1983 in- c lude r o b o t i c s , computer sc iences , and m a t e r i a l s pro- cess ing . S p i g a i a l s o expres- sed an i n t e r e s t i n i n c r e a - s ing- t h e number of Phd ' s i n e l e c t r o n i c s and a p p l i e d nhvsics .

D r . Lawrence Peebles from ONR spoke on t h e process of r e c e i v i n g ONR funds: "The competi t ion i s tliere, but t h e way t o g e t funds i s t o f i n d o u t what o f f i c e s are providing funds f o r your s p e c i f i c f i e l d of i n t e r e s t and t o go out and meet some of t h e people i n t h a t of- f i ce .

Lost and Found Lost: One gold leaf earring, a b u t 1i inches long, i n or md Eaton, or in library. If found, please call 6-91. F o d : 2 keys on the path behind Wren. Pick up in the Daily office.

Now that the snow is mltirg,has anyone f o d a silver & coral dan- gle earring w/Ehglish coin? Lost Jan. 31, pmkibly in vicinity of Camichael or ElcCoUester House. ca.u Anne, 3954%5.

F o d : 1 set of keys i n Barnurn 08. Call Jim at 77G3792.

LOST: bn' s silver Claddah ring (Irish wed- band). Lost last weekd neas the Fletcher steps (behind Houston). G r e a t sentimen- tal value. Please call 665-4848, and d e saneone veiy happy.

F o d : a red o ~ c d o p t i s t ' s retai- ner on i'rofeswr's Row. Call 623- 0333.

No Stones

But what will be appearing here will be 14k Gold Italian Chains (all styles) over 800 Diamond Cut Charms (INCLUDING THE STONE'S TRADEMARK), Earrings (Hoops, Leaves. and Diamond Studs) and Seiko Clocks and Watches (30% of f ) Lyrics by Cece, John, Paul t

Where you don I pay mall pr!ces'

140 BOSTON AVE. BALL Sa. som. 628-2745 NEXT TO US TRAVEL WORLD

V

F Personals

Regrets we sad to all om- invites; C u r plrty won ' t be Sn turday night. &rch the sixth will be the new date; .4nd we promise w e ' l l dit. it worth the hait!-K a d Ihigitn.

Doug, Nice to have you back fmii the

trenches. R a m i x r . H. is forevcr! !tour lkddies

TONY! ! I h o w you're the best rtnn

for the job! Hop. you hw next week !

-Elizakth

NIG Happy Birthday t o a S p i d

Friend - One +o kn&s of sped readmg, events i n Miller, Court, s[1ow, special dream, Xenon. de- scriptions - looking forwarci t o a great and legal celebration - M

1

P

Tony - Looks l ike I ' m not the f i r s t to wish you lW!i in the eleqion

I want you t o win ! - Trisha

M y S. of Haskell, %e Hint: RAR/vAB/GEo is of inter- est/& so are you. The Chance: Be at the kimrial steps bus stop at 7:3O Sat. night ready t o go to dinner in Boston. I'll drive up i n a blue car. liE

T h ~ y - I hope YOU still how

Servicks EWR WIFE EDITUS desp-ately d e d for a project I'm doing. If you have any tht you are p h - ning on throwing out, please can !ny a t 628-1590. 1'11 ccme and get than fmn you.

Jh Ballcorn - the perfect E i f t for all occasions. $l?,/doz, @/$ioz. Mer 3 days i n advance at T31 mwsstand i n Eaton or d l ext. 6129. Garfield

Week- ride scr?ice o f f c t d to stwe, ILRlg=lers latch area. S t e r a c ~ i p p e d car iema Fri. ni&ts. Returns Samy rughts. $17 p.p. includes everything. c a ~ t klike 77(+ 7-91 evenings. , Tnink Sn&.

Housing WERE ARE Ya! LIRvDG NMT YEAR? Ihe Italian House i n now accepting applications for the 1%2-1@3 aca- demic year. Live i n a house dedi- cated t o the exploration of Itahan art. cultlux, and language. Chll k b f . Jeanne Dillon a t ext. 6141 days, 623-3294 evenings or stop by the Italian Culture Suite, 150 E l l s i d e Apts.

DOONESBURY

If you arc intwcstd i n thc i ~ t t s . am1 woiild like to live w i t h othcrs 410 slxuv yo~ir intcrests. join thcx tVlTs HIYISII: Cmv t o ii nicetine cm Sun.. 2 1 ~ 1 at 7 : . ~ PA. in piiton 'Ti). We w i l l be discussing p r s , q m s a d activit ics for n ~ x t year, as well ; I S hading out ;rpplic;i- tions. neet.iq., pick up ai appl icxtioti at the A r t s House Ihi f l m r Itich- anlscm) or call .left ((fL%yl+) or .Jeff (t,"'%4q)Y) or extension W J I O .

If you c'iumot attend this\

lnrernitiorul Home Sclect ion: If you ;LR- intcrcstd in 1 ivirtg in the lnternit iond next year, stop by the lntcinational Office 13 Sakycr Avc. ancl pick up <an k i p

pLication. Deactline for applica- tias and intervims is Tuesda,)'. Feb. 2,;.

Applications for ram in the I'rcnch PC Spnish Cultur,il b i ses for 199- l(AS~3 are n w available in ram 312 bast tiaLL. W i n e is Tues. ./z.; a t 4 p .

i: r.u.: a coed t'rzj-emity. has 1Q spts t o fiLL for next year; 2 singles a d 4 doubles. A l l en a d mmn welcaw to apply. Please pick up applications at A.T.O. L.74 P i p fessor's Row a d the:; are due by L l p . r'ri . Feb. 19. For further info. CAI i :dxrtine at. j$<v\~<i.

CRAITS PEDPLE: r\re you crazy about crafts? Would you ?&e to l ive with a l o t of other pebple wtm love crafts? \jould you l ike to Live saneplace where i t ' s easy to do craf ts henever you w a n t ? Of, . COW= YOU do. So - c~me down to C d t s House, 114 Professors

Are you tired of hectic hall life? to M t s House (14 Professors Row) If so, two girls are wi- to and f i l l out an application and swap their latin Way double ior talk t o present manbers. ius0 - another double on campus. If in- - & this is I m M - ccme e-ted, please call Joanne and to a meeting on Smiay, Feb. 21 Kathy at: 62sW1. at 4:oO.

by Jim Davis

I @is32 United Feature Syndrale. Inc

by Garry Trudeau 1

A s i m House is now ncccpti~g appli- cations tor ncxt year. \de have singles doubles avnilable for tluse who would like t o expericnce the hsiiin culture. f r ied ly and r e h i n g atmsphere. CLI I Kerwin (1f2+Y&U) or caw t o the Asian Houw. Applications due lcb. '2&

Live in a

,ire you interested in cating h d L ,

tuving fun a d I-iving w i t h f r i e d - ly people? Then Roots Jnd Growth mi)' be the place for you! he're filling our spaces for next year in the next t.wo weeks, sn c a L l 623- 0422 a d ask for Scan. Roots i s an active vegetarian cooperative

for new ptwple! '

tousc, ard there's lots of m

HILL House, h a of the Hebrew'Cul- t u r d Society is now accepting apphcations for next year. Ccme qve in an amsphere which pro- mtds ans continues the ways of Jewish We . We have singles and doubles availible. Call Andy or Jeff at 6 2 , W l or x&W.

I

We are loolang for a house for 6- 10 people that is close t o campls for the fall of '82 a d spring '83. Please call 625-7327 or 6w.1637.

Wanted s: Tickets for J.Ceils at bs- ton Garden. Any night. If you have any for sale, please call 776-5483, my time, as scan as possible.

Lost and FoUO#O bst: One beige scarf in Pearson lo4 on, ?hum. morning, 2/18/82. I h o w i t ' s dirty and has a couple holes, but it has a "Christian Di- or" tag I stole fmn my sister on it, and she ' l l kill me if it doesn't turn up. W l Otto at 395- &70 between 4:30-6pn or after U p

IO": srrall r o d shape white mbag w i t h blue .wallet, IDS a d personal cards inside. If four.d, $-e call Winnie at 6 2 5 9 % or rem to campus police.

F o d : one house key i n M i e l d - Pearson 1ll. Claim at-aaily office.

N.Y. NEWS CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 21 Laconian 43 Overlook 10 Deserts

1 Info city 44 Dismal 11 In- 5 Tourist 29 Weight 45 Oreof lead (stuck)

haven unit 47 -Minor 12 Infant ~

10 Label 30 Extra 48 Iil.smell- 15 Chills 13 Ring 33 Small bird ing and fever

setting 34 Boutique 50 Place for 20 Speck 14 Divert 35 Born savings 21 Hoarlrost

23 USSR city 15 Exhalation 36 Between 52 Wheel 16 Hammer, viscount projection 25 "The Mys-

thesleuth and marquis 55 Asian river teryof 17 Poetry 37 Resort lake 56 Frozen Edwin -" 18 Provender 38 Money for 58 Poddy plani 26 Challenge 19 Compass the land. 59 Like a fen 27 Exhausted

point lord 60 Sports 28 - Corps 20 Horace 39 Army man building 31 Stupid

or Thomas 40 Wed 61 lnvent 32 Hinder 21 Sawed.off 41 Outmoded 62 Waterbird 34 Fine fabric 22 Early 42 Wallet 63 Meat pie 37 Domesticate 24 Swirls item 64 Williams 38 Ewes'mates

Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 41 Certain or War!%?! 40 Fashion

1 DOWN

Building

E t as - Gets lost Thirst quencher Caribbean capital Portent Reversed conditions Curved letter Confederate

44

46 48 49

51

53

54 56 57 58

.. meat Part of the weekend Delicate Renown Oriental prince *'- We Got Fun?" Like the Gobi Numerous Hiatus Epoch Edible

2 m m general tuber

0 1 9 8 2 Tribune Company Syndicale. Inc. 2/19/82 All Rights ReSeived

11

Friday Attention: Black dutreachPmgram meting Fri. 2/19, 6:*, bpen House. Ektrwely important!

PARTY ALL NIW at the W e bra- thon! Ihe S+ Nu Dance brathon is also an All NIW PARTY! Fri. Feb. 19, s*&s 8pn, Eaton h u g e , $1 at door w/Tufts ID. R e f r e h t s served. Party is sinnilcast on WMFO. Top dancer prize: t r i p to J&ca courtesy of Geppetto's Travel.

Get psyched juniors for another hawy hour! Friday, Febrrrary 19, 4-7:00 pn i n k c w e . Be there!

. Can: celebrate c a m i a l at the GmmnHouse FaschngsPartyon Efi, Feb. 19, 1 9 2 at 8 : 3 P.M.. Mmission Free. Coshmes recamen- ded.

A.S.M.E. Happy Hour at the hb! Fri. 2/19, 4-7pn. All Mech. Fngs. invited. Cane a d get your fluids for the day!

start your week& by experiencing a pmvocative and controversial film. Alain R e d s ' Last Year at brimbad : French New Wave at its best or worst? Fird out hat did (or didn't) happn last year at th-ienbad this Friday at 7 : 3 in Pearscn 104. Admission is free. sponsored by the Arts House.

'm CANrATA'Ca rmsical Gb- aret celdratim. A Pen, mt & htzels Prcducticm, Fri. a d Sat. nights, 8pn in the kern 'hater. Tickets are $3. shawat D i n n e r d Services will be held t-t, 2/19 at 6pn. Join us for gourmet food and exotic Ko- sher wines. C a l l ext.734 as soon as possible to register. Curtis tB11, 2nd floor, Hillel huge. RFLATIoNsITPs - 'here is a meeting at ll incoddard c47apel fa r peo- ple interested i n helping to plan a conference on relaticolships. w-

We need your ideas! S p k s o d by the Expennmtal College.

Saturday Sat. Feb. 20: cane gamble to win h d r d s of dollars in prizes in- dLuding a Spring Break Trip to Florida at the Bush-Tilton mC spatsored csm NIm. Refresh- nmts will be served. Tickets on sale in the dining halls. $ 3 . 9 in ' advame, $5.00 at the door. -,*anddanCingall start at 9 ad gount i l lamin&- ton. sarri-fonral.

Franklyn Ajaye, noted actor atrl canedian, will appear at cchen Aud- itorim this Sat., 2/U) as art of W i n t e r Weekend, at 8 P.M. Mr. Ajaye's credits include roles in Q r W a s h , S t i r C m y a d I h e J a z z singer. Tickets are available at theAfmhCenter . S v d b y Afro-h society.

IUNDIE UP! Tufts ccmlnmity-cane cut and have sane fun. Join SPIRIT for a few hours of outdoor p s this Sat. s t a t i n g a t Ipn with vol- leyball on the tetmis courts, fol- lowed by Frisbee on the @ and Capture the Flag (meet a t hl lou) . Hope to see you there!

JUXLN FQR BEGhNlRS. Have you ever wanted to leam to juggle? b ' s your chance. Bring 3 juggle- able i tem to Crafts House Sat. Feb.20 at lpn.

Sunday African American Society and God- d a d chapel invite everyone to a service of worship and celebration

3pIi i n Lne Wpl.

Tuft: 1x'm-z rwies - %re will be a rrceting on Sun., 2/21 at 9 P.M. in &ton 204. Anyone in- terested i n helping us plan for this sanester and next is urged tn attend.

Attention J d o r s : 193 Junbo Year- trick Electicm will be held on %. 2/21 at 8pn in Faton 233. A l l in- terested i n the book's successful e m t i o n are erwlurageed to at- ted. I f you are seriously interes- ted in a position, but absolutely can not &e this meeting, please call Eric (762326) or (m 8530) or ext.P-756.

foi- ~ l ~ k History mth, sun. 2/21,

AU students are invited to the Protestant Weekly Worship and Fel- lowship Every SLnday 7pn. Gcddad chapel. Everyone wlcane. Fellow- ship Per id Afterwards.

at Monday Asian Stujies Bag LLack kday, Febrrrary 22, 1982 in East Hdl hunge 1 1 : s 1 2 : 9 P.M.. Pmf. Tadatoshi Akiba w i l l speak on " J a p and Nuclear Anmment: F b ~ r e . Implications".

Rcflald Lee Flaning, Pres. pwnscape Institute, and author Place-kkers: Public Art %at Tells You %ere You Are, speaks on "Strategies for P l i E W B b g & Placemeaning," Feb. 22, 12pn, in Jackson Louge. ' h i s is for Dept. of U h & E h v i m m tal Policy's Grad Shdents Sen- inars. Hefreshwnts served, but bring your own lunch. For more info Chess - Eaton call x72fi wery Tuesday at 7:Oqm.

"1 Raranber Ebrtxra a film about the people wtio knew brbara Strei- 4, by a filmmker (Kevin Burns) &o didn't - but d e the film any- my. &. ~ u m s will be present for discussion. Tues. Feb.23; 7-f3pn, Zd floor Curtis.

Ave., Boston, 02115. (XAR& BY MNE: 26&3913, I+astercard, VISA, PmericanJkpress. Tickets: $5,$4, ad $2 for students/senior c i t i - zens. Bax Office open Mcadaysat., -. Pianists and other percussionists needed to acccmFany Dance classes, FarticularlY in 3,7; 5 3 ; and

.

annsday D blocks. *OW X-

CCmDaniment exuerience is not essential; but'applicants sh~uld be wi l l ing to learn,& possess a good sense of humr. bfartmg salary: $ 4 . 2 5 / t ~ - . For addition-

of be, ~ 3 ,

@ a n a Tired ot si t t ing in the library? Cune enjoy sane delicious s h d y slacks at C h i cknega 106 &of. Row on Mon. Feb.22. A l l Tufts wuwn So You Want To wolk in D.C.? Spn- are welccme to stop by betwem 9:30 aral ll:oopn.

Momtim contact: by Career Guidance & Place- e,

mt, wexi. 2/W, 3:45pn, Belles Jackson c y r m a ~ i ~ n . House.

A.S.M.E. - General meeting on Mon. Feb.22 at ll:g in A d e m l l2 . All menbers are asked to attend, $ease.

1980's'' Panel discussion with Prof. Francis Chew, Zella k i a and Bar- h a Tedlock and Gwerdolyn cxdjoe. b n 2/22, 3 : s5 :3 , Eaton 201.

Wts Shotdan K a r a t e Club will meet m., 7pn in Curtis h u g e . &ginners welcane. Join now!

JPAC, Jewish Political Action Can- nittee, will meet Mon. 8pn in H i l - lel Office, Curtis Hall. N e w i n p l t is always welcane.

-IS Week FOIW~I - ' W ~ m e n in the

&&l House, h m of the HebmYid- dish cultural society, -is sp-Jnsor- ing yet another Falafel E v e on Mon. Feb.22 a t 98 .Packad Ave. c ~ m e for an everung of great food, m i c 'and can~any...possibly the mst exciting evening of y m life.

Iatin American Society will sponsor the f i r s t of 3 films, C h p W , b n . 2/22, 7pn in ~amun 104. film is a b u t Chile d e r AUende.

Tuesday

ready done so. First time &pi-

fice, 128 Professors Row; pr'evious * recipients at the Stulent Lcan Sec-

a t s skn at the Financial Aid Of--, * * * * * * * ,, * t * * t * * * t: * * * * * The Daily's *

Production Staff f 198~1q3 miergraduate f i m n c x f aid auDlications are available at*

Junior Class Cannittee Meeting cm Mday, February 22 at 5pn in Faton m.

ATINKMNIlllcGERs It's election time again - start dunking what office you want t o hold. Meeting for all team mar$ers present or future i s M., 3/22 at 9 P.M. at 313 Boston Ave. A t least cane for refreshnents. A l l tuut attad.

Prof. Hal Miller Jacobs will dis- cuss iust hat it is that an cmineerine wcholoeist does.

2/23, 9:3@ at French House, 11 khitfield Rd. Delicious crepes, rider and French nusic! A nice s t d y break!

cRApM3IIxy: Loretta Opes, a certi- fied gqhologis t , will speak on ~i;raFholoev: 'he Science of Hard-

. BOARD: we need faculty* * " C Y BIX IN bDMAN and stdents to help choose OUT* flissy ILG

a d activities. Applicatiicpls are* available at Brown House, 38 Pro-* rmGIE fessom' Row,

MICHELLE KIRSCHSTEIN cour~e~ and develop new pro-*

* k U Y klilPHY

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I

Eaton

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