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Page 10 text:
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fc ■ NOVEMBER The Office of Minority Affairs welcomed a new vice president, Robert Pozos, after the former vice president. Herman Lujan, was promoted to vice provost. Pozos came from the University of Minnesota at Duluth, where he had served as chairman of the Department of Physiology since 1971. The Hispanic American advocated an ethnic studies course for all students as a requirement for graduation. He said the course would expose white students to minority cultures and minorities to other cultures, helping to strengthen race relations. According to Pozos, At a university with cultural understanding, there can be an active. dynamic and respectful exchange of ideas.” Vice President George Bush of Texas defeated Governor Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts in the 1988 Presidential election with 53 percent of the popular vote. Sixty-four-year-old Bush drove tractors, recited the Pledge of Allegiance, visited a flag factory and performed countless sound bites after the campaign began in October 1987. Chief Republican rivals of Bush included Senator Robert Dole of Kansas and former television evangelist Pat Robertson. Defeated by Dole in the Iowa caucuses in February, Bush quickly recaptured momentum with a string of primary victories leading up to the Republican National Convention in August. A major campaign issue was Bush's involvement in the Iran-Contra affair in which the G.S. government secretly sold weapons to Iran and then used the profits to assist the contras in Nicaragua. Bush claimed he did not know anything about the deal and got upset when people kept asking about it. Bush promised the voters, read my lips: no new taxes. and also promised not to increase present taxes. Aides later confessed that probably wouldn't be possible. A controversy erupted when Bush chose Senator Dan Quayle of Indiana as his running mate. The media alleged that Quayle used his family's influence to avoid the draft by serving in the National Guard during the Vietnam war. Condom machines like these could be appearing in residence halls if the ASCJW has its way. 8 November
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Page 9 text:
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Terry resident Jan Chaloupka enjoys the privacy of a single room while he pays the lower price for a double. Vice President George Bush appeared at Seattle University and experienced a mixed response from the audience of 500 during his speech on business ethics. Amid cheers and standing ovations, 200 protestors cried out against his policies and waved anti-Bush signs at his supporters. Speaking for the homeless. Jesuit Priest Bill Bischel was removed from the premises when his questions and angry remarks disrupted Bush's speech. Who is this guy? Bush retorted. After Bischel was removed. Bush continued his talk about strengthening the government's position against illegal business practices. Tim Washburn, director of admissions and records, reported that autumn enrollment for the (JW totalled 33.640 — 101 more than in 1987. Freshmen comprised 3,492 of the enrollments: 48.1 percent were female. with a mean high school GPA of 3.54. while males averaged a GPA of 3.49. The remaining total included 6,359 seniors. 7,576 graduates, and 1,314 professional students. • •••••••••• Num Me Vexo? Local newspapers such as The Seattle Times and The Seattle Post Intelligencer, as well as reporters for local radio and television stations, publicized the true meaning of the motto underneath the stained glass window design at South Campus Center. A picture of Washington's bust bears the Latin phrase meaning What, me worry? — the phrase associated with Mad magazine's Alfred E. Neuman. The architect. David Wright, explained that the window reflected the public's doubts about our nation’s monetary system. From a total of 64 applicants, the GW Royalty judges selected Ashok Kumar as Homecoming King and Kelly Irene Sheridan as Homecoming Queen. Each applicant received a $200 scholarship from the GW Alumni Association. Runners-up included Michael Jon Egan, Jerry Turner, Sharon Kay. and Lisa Lee. October 7
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Page 11 text:
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Cougar Mark Ledbetter celebrates WSCJ's Apple Cup victory as Husky Aaron Jenkins grimaces in pain. Acquisition fever hit the (J.S. food industry when Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Company bought RJR Nabisco. The investment firm paid $25 billion for the food and tobacco company, making it the largest corporate buyout in G.S. history. RJR stockholders also benefitted from the purchase as RJR stock rose $32. Just weeks earlier. Philip Morris Company, another food and tobacco firm, bought Kraft Incorporated for $13.1 billion. This purchase followed an agreement by Pillsbury Company to be acquired for $5.75 billion by Grand Metropolitan PLC, a British food and liquor company. The Huskies lost the Apple Cup game to the Washington State Cougars 32-31 la Pullman. Although the Huskies had a halftime lead, the Cougars rallied in the fourth quarter to top the Huskies by one point. WSG clinched their first bowl bid in seven years while the Huskies' string of nine consecutive bowl game appearances was snapped. It was a really frustrating season because every game came down to the last minute and we lost most of them. said Husky free safety Eugene Burk-halser. The Huskies finished with a disappointing 6 and 5 overall record. GW sophomore Kelly Caviezel and junior Stacey ‘Jones represented the Huskies during College Week on the game show. “Win, Lose or Draw.” They competed against students from Southern Methodist. Georgia Tech and Northwestern Gniversities. “It was a lot of fun, said Caviezel. “The people we met from the other colleges made it fun, added Jones. The pair won $1,000 for the GW's general scholarship fund. Luckily, a computer hacker was unable to obtain classified G.S. Navy information from the GW Applied Physics Laboratory when an account was opened on the GW main frame system. The break-in followed a computer virus incident two weeks earlier which affected more than 6.000 computers nationwide. The virus, created by a Cornell Gniversity graduate student, triggered a rash of copy-cat incidents on the East coast. Neither the break-in nor the virus caused any major damage to the GW computer system. Some GW students ate a single scoop of rice with their hands while others enjoyed ham. potatoes and dessert at the Overseas Development Network's Third World Dinner held at the HGB West Ballroom. For the $3 ticket price. 90 students were seated in either the third world section (on the floor) or the first world” section (at a dining table). The dinner raised more than $300 for a water purification project in San Pablo. Ecuador. Students were encouraged to step out of their comfort zone and volunteer to help needy people, said Zoe Ann Olson, head of the Overseas Development Network. The ASGW Board of Control unanimously approved a resolution calling for the installation of condom machines in residence hall bathrooms. The resolution called the machines Necessary for the discreet protection from disease 24 hours a day, seven days week at little or no cost to the Gniversity. The ASGW Student Assembly cited the efficacy of condoms in guarding against dangerous sexually transmitted diseases and an increasing rate of campus sexual activity as reasons why the machines were necessary.
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