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As  the  weeks  of  steady  rainstotms  turned 
into  months,  farmland,  cities  and  towns  in 
the  Midwest  suffered  flooding  of  historic 
proportions.  The  Great  Flood  of '93  is  the 
second-costliest  natural  disaster  on  record 
in  the  U.S.,  causing  more  than  $12  billion 
in  damage. 

It  was  a  difficult  year  for  Southern 
California  residents.  In  the  fall,  brush  fires 
swept  over  200,000  acres,  causing  about 
$  1  billion  damage.  In  January,  an  earth- 
quake shook  Los  Angeles,  destroying 
thousands  of  homes,  closing  freeways,  and 
shutting  down  many  schools.  The  quake, 
measuring  6.6,  caused  57  deaths  and  an 
estimated  $30  billion  damage. 


Photo  by  Bill  Nation  /  SYGMA 


Photo  by  FOS 

Saying,  "I  have  nothing  more 
to  prove,"  Chicago  Bulls  star 
Michael  Jordan  announced  his 
retirement  from  the  NBA.  The 
announcement  ended  a  roller 
coaster  year  during  which  his 
team  captured  another  league 
championship,  he  was  accused 
of  having  a  gambling  problem, 
and  his  father  was  murdered. 


Photo  by  Kraft  /  SYGMA 


Photo  by  Ticlcmans  /  DUOMO 

Toronto  Blue  Jay  Joe  Carter 
hit  a  three-run  homer  in  the 
bottom  of  the  ninth  inning 
of  the  sixth  game  of  the 
World  Series  to  defeat  the 
Philadelphia  Phillies.  The 
come-from-behind  victory 
clinched  their  second  straight 
World  Championship,  four 
games  to  two. 


I 

i>iioiobyBr,m.  llll;^\i,M/ 
Nelson  Mandela  and  South  Africa 
President  F.  W.  de  Klerk  shared  the  1993 
Nobel  Peace  Prize  for  their  roles  in  ending 
apartheid  in  their  country. 


An  overview  of  events  and  personalities  of  the  year 


Cmshong/SIPA 


Saying  their  clients  had  been 
influenced  by  a  mob  mentaUty 
during  the  1 992  LA  riots,  lawyers 
for  Damian  Williams  and  Henry 
Watson  won  attempted  murder 
acquittals  in  the  Reginald  Denny 
beating  trial. 

Steven  Spielberg's  Jurassic  Park 
proved  to  be  popular  with 
moviegoers  as  it  became  the 
highest-grossing  movie  of  all  time 
with  $712  million  in  ticket  sales, 
eclipsing  another  of  his  films,  E.T. 


Phoio  by  Johnson  /TIME 


PLO  Chairman  Yasir  Arafat  and  Israeli 
Prime  Minister  Yitzhak  Rabin  came 
together  in  Washington,  D.C.,  and  with 
the  stroke  of  their  pens  and  a  handshake 
started  the  peace  process  in  motion. 

A  train  plunged  into  a  bayou  north  of 
Mobile,  Ala.,  shortly  after  a  runaway  barge 
struck  the  bridge  supports,  killing  47  in 
the  worst  accident  in  Amtrak's  history. 


Photo  by  Fcldman  /  Kern  /  SYGMA 


Faced  with  allegations  that  he  sexually 
abused  a  1 3-year-old  boy,  Michael  Jackson 
ended  his  world-wide  "Dangerous" 
concert  tour  and  sought  treatment  for 
drug  addiction. 


Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 

in  2010  with  funding  from 

Boston  Library  Consortium  IVIember  Libraries 


http://www.archive.org/details/stosag1994stoc 


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14 


.ndi-ew  brutalized  the  south- 
erri  tip  of  Florida  and  the  coast  of  Louisiana  with  winds  of 
up  to  164  mph,  leaving  more  than  30  dead  and  thousands 
homeless.  The  most  destructive  hurricane  in  U.S.  history 
caused  an  excess  of  $27  billion  in  damage  in  the  two 
states.  In  Florida,  citizens  and  government  officials  called 
for  an  investigation  into  shoddy  construction  practices  and 
building  code  violations  which  they  claimed  contributed  to 
the  enormous  devastation. 


gees  in  wai:-torn  Bosnia 
increased,  the  LI.N.  strug- 
gled to  end  the  decima- 
tion of  Sarajevo  and  the 
starvation  of  its  residents. 
A  war  crimes  commission 


gate  atrocities. 


course,  U.S.  military  personnel  secured 
Mogadishu,  Somalia  with  relative  ease  and  Oper- 
ation Restore  Hope  began.  Lacking  the  military 
muscle  to  end  the  turf  battles  between  warlords, 
the  Li.N.  authorized  American  intervention  to 
restore  order  to  a  country  whose  collapse  into 
anarchy  had  all  hut  halted  efforts  to  stop  the  star- 
vation of  its  people. 


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It  was  not  a  typical  presidential  election — people 
voted.  Motivated  by  concerns  about  a  weak  econ- 
omy, unemployment  and  rising  health  care  costs, 
Americans  stood  in  lines  for  hours  to  say  no  to 
President  George  Bush's  bid  for  a  second  term, 
and  halted' a  30-year  decline  in  the  voting  rate. 
Bill  Clinton,  the  governor  of  Arkansas,  and  AL 
Gore,  a  U.S.  senator  from  Tennessee,  were 
■    seiit  to  the  White  House  ori  an  electoral-vote 
landslide.  Candidates  worked  hard  to  stimu- 
late the  interest  of  the  electorate,  appearing 
on  morning-news  television  programs  arid 
late-night  talk  shows,  introducing  the  info- 
corfimercial,  and  campaigning  on  cross- 
country bus-tours.  But,  nothing  inject- 
ed more-excitement  into  presidential 
politics  than  thcbillionaire  from 
Texas,  third-party  candidate  Ross 
Perot — not  even  Murphy 
,     Brown. 


M'holo  by  Burnett,  Conlad  Press  Images. 


Photo  by  SYGMA 


It  was  difficult  to  believe,  but  Earth's 
number-one  super  hero,  Superman,  died 
He  met  his  match  during  a  battle  with 
Doomsday  in  DC  Comics'  January  issue 
of  Superman. 


Courtesy  DC  Comics 


Athletes  from  1  72  nations  traveled  to  Barcelona  to  compete  in 
the  XXV  Summer  Olympiad.  The  former  Soviet  republics  were 
represented  by  The  Unified  Team  and  went  home  with  the 
most  medals,  1  12.  The  competition  was  the  last  time  that 
members  from  the  former  Soviet  Union  would  compete  as 
a  team.  The  U.S.  won  108  medals,  including  a  gold 
medal  captured  by  The  Dream  Team,  rightly 
named  because  it  consisted  of  some  of  the  best 
players  from  the  ranks  of  the  NBA. 


After  the  Summer 
Games,  Larry  Bird, 
who  had  spent  much  of 
the  1991-92  season  side- 
ined  because  of  injuries, 
decided  that  his  body 
could  take  no  more  and 
retired  from  the  NBA.  Magic 
Johnson  announced  that  he 
would  end  his  retirement  and 
rejoin  the  LA  Lakers.  On  Nov 
2,  however,  pressures  result- 
ing from  being  HIV-positive 
forced  him  to  once  again  take 
himself  out  of  the  game. 


Photo  byjorecke,  Contact  Press  Images 


Photo  by  FOS,  Inc. 


It  was  not  a  good  year  for  the  British  royal 
family.  Princess  Anne  divorced  and  remar- 
ried. Prince  Andrew  and  the  Duchess  of 
York,  Sarah  Ferguson,  separated  after  the 
Windsor  family  tired  of  her  public  frolics. 
Prince  Charles  and  Princess  Diana  ended  the 
fairy  tale  when  it  was  announced  that  they 
had  also  separated.  To  top  it  all  off,  a  spec- 
tacular fire  in  Windsor  Castle  destroyed  the 
14th  Century  St.  George's  Hall. 

Dave  Winfield's  two-run  hit  in  the  top  of  the 
eleventh  inning  clinched  the  Toronto  Blue 
Jays'  4-3  victory  over  the  Atlanta  Braves  in 
the  sixth  and  final  game  of  the  1992  World 
Series.  Toronto's  win  was  the  first  time  that 
a  team  outside  of  the  U.S.  captured  the  title. 


17 


As  the  weeks  of  steady  rainstorms  turned 
into  months,  farmland,  cities  and  towns  in 
the  Midwest  suffered  flooding  of  historic 
proportions.  The  Great  Flood  of '93  is  the 
second-costliest  natural  disaster  on  record 
in  the  U.S.,  causing  more  than  $12  billion 
in  damage. 

It  was  a  difficult  year  for  Southern 
California  residents.  In  the  fall,  brush  fires 
swept  over  200,000  acres,  causing  about 
$1  billion  damage.  In  January,  an  earth- 
quake shook  Los  Angeles,  destroying 
thousands  of  homes,  closing  freeways,  and 
shutting  down  many  schools.  The  quake, 
measuring  6.6,  caused  57  deaths  and  an 
estimated  S30  billion  damage. 


Photo  by  Bill  Nation  /  SYGMA 


Photo  by  kratt  /  S'l  t 


Saying,  "I  have  nothing  more 
to  prove,"  Chicago  Bulls  star 
Michael  Jordan  announced  his 
retirement  from  the  NBA.  The 
announcement  ended  a  roller 
coaster  year  during  which  his 
team  captured  another  league 
championship,  he  was  accused 
of  having  a  gambling  problem, 
and  his  father  was  murdered. 


Photo  byTielcmans  /  DUOMO 

Toronto  Blue  Jay  Joe  Carter 
hit  a  three-run  homer  in  the 
bottom  of  the  ninth  inning 
of  the  sixth  game  of  the 
World  Series  to  defeat  the 
Philadelphia  Phillies.  The 
come-from-behind  victory 
clinched  their  second  straight 
World  Championship,  four 
games  to  two. 


Photo  by  Brauchh  /  SYGV 

Nelson  Mandela  and  South  Africa 
President  F.  W.  de  Klerk  shared  the  1993 
Nobel  Peace  Prize  for  their  roles  in  ending 
apartheid  in  their  country. 


An  overview  of  events  and  personalities  of  the  year 


Phnmb\  Cro^honi;  /  SIPA 


Saying  their  clients  had  been 
influenced  by  a  mob  mentality 
during  the  1992  LA  riots,  lawyers 
for  Damian  Williams  and  Henry 
Watson  won  attempted  murder 
acquittals  in  the  Reginald  Denny 
beating  trial. 

Steven  Spielberg's  Jurassic  Park 
proved  to  be  popular  with 
moviegoers  as  it  became  the 
highest-grossing  movie  of  all  time 
with  $712  million  in  ticket  sales, 
eclipsing  another  of  his  films,  E.T. 


I'horo  by  Johnson  /  TIME 

PLO  Chairman  Yasir  Arafat  and  Israeli 
Prime  Minister  Yitzhak  Rabin  came 
together  in  Washington,  D.C.,  and  with 
the  stroke  of  their  pens  and  a  handshake 
started  the  peace  process  in  motion. 

A  train  plunged  into  a  bayou  north  of 
Mobile,  Ala.,  shortly  after  a  runaway  barge 
struck  the  bridge  supports,  killing  47  in 
the  worst  accident  in  Amtrak's  history. 


Photo  bv  Feldman  /  Kern  /  SYGMA 


Faced  with  allegations  that  he  sexually 
abused  a  13-year-old  boy,  Michael  Jackson 
ended  his  world-wide  "Dangerous" 
concert  tour  and  sought  treatment  for 
drug  addiction. 


19 


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21 


JOHN  F.  AHERN 

ASSOClATIi  PROFESSOR 
LANDSCAPE  ARCHITECTURE 
AND  REGIONAL  PLANNING 


WESLEY  R.  AUTIO 

ASSOCIATE  PROI'CSSOR 
PLANT  AND  SOIL  SCIENCES 


THOMAS 
BEAUCHESNE 

GREENHOUSE  MANAGER 


DAVID  BELONIARZ 


VISITING  INSTRUCTOR 


iX^^BW 


ANTHONY  BORTON 

PROFESSOR 

VETERINARY  AND  ANIMAL 

SCIENCES 


THOMAS  BOYLE 

ASSOCIATE  PROFESSOR 
FLORICULTURE 


wnxiAM  J. 

BRAMLAGE 

PROI'ESSOR 

PLANT  AND  SOIL  SCIENCES 


DEAN  CARDASIS 

PROGRAM  COORDINATOR 
LANDSCAPE  CON  TRACTING 


\ 


ROBERT  D.  CHH^DS 

LECTURIiR  OF  ENTOMOLOGY, 
COORDINATOR  OF  URBAN 
I'ORESTRY  DIAGNOSTIC  LAB 


KATHERINE 
CONWAY 

S rOCKBRIDOE  RF.CRUriER, 
ADMISSIONS  COUNSIiLOR 


RICHARD  J.  COOPER 

ASSOCIAIli  PROFESSOR 
PLAN  r  AND  SOIL  SCIENCES 


DOUGLAS  COX 

assis'iant  profiissor 
floriculturf: 


T) 


MICHAEL 
DAVIDSOHN 

STRUCrOR 
NDSCAPE  CONTRACTING 


DUANE  GREENE 


PROrRSSOR  OF  POMOLOGY 


SUSAN  HAN 

ASSISTANT  PROFHSSOR 
FLORICULTURE 


BRIAN  HANLON 

ASSISTANT  MANAGER 
EQUINE  CENTER 


WOTl.lr 


CATHERINE  HICKEY        THOMAS  HOUSTON 


GEORGE  HOWE 


GAIL  HOYLE 


CTENSION  SPECIALIST 
,AN  r  PATHOLOGY 


LECTURER 

FORESTRY  AND  WILDLIFE 

MANAGEMENT 


ASSOCIATE  PROFESSOR 
VETERINARY  AND  ANIMAL 
SCIENCES 


MANAGER 
EQUINE  CENTER 


SIDNEY  J.  LYFORD 

lOFESSOR 

ETERINARY  AND  ANIMAL 

:iENCIiS 


WILLIAM  P. 
MacCONNELL 

PROFESSOR 

FORESTRY  AND  WILDLIFE 

MANAGEMENT 


JOSEPH  C.  MAWSON 

ASSOCIATE  PROFESSOR 
FORESTRY  AND  WILDLII'E 
MANAGEMENT 


DENNIS  P.  RYAN 

ASSISTANT  PROFESSOR 
ARBORICULTURE  AND  URUAN 
FORESTRY 


23 


Gail  Schumann 

Assisliinl  I^iolcssor 
Plant  Pallu)l()gy 


Patricia  Viltiini 

Associate  Professor 
Entomology 


Jcny  Schiiiink 

Prol'essoi' 
Plant  Pathology 


William  Torcllo 
Tinr Grass  Science 


Tcny  A.  'lattai" 

I'lolessor 
Plant  Pathology 

NA)l„PictAiix;d: 
Susan  Mulgrcw 
Koheil  Wick 
Brian  Vinchcsi 


Pclris  Vcncman 

l^rofessor 

Plant  and  Soil  Sciences 


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As  the  weeks  of  steady  rainstorms  turned 
into  months,  farmland,  cities  and  towns  in 
the  Midwest  suffered  flooding  of  historic 
proportions.  The  Great  Flood  of '93  is  the 
second-costliest  natural  disaster  on  record 
in  the  U.S.,  causing  more  than  $12  billion 
in  damage. 

It  was  a  difficult  year  for  Southern 
California  residents.  In  the  fall,  brush  fires 
swept  over  200,000  acres,  causing  about 
$1  billion  damage.  In  January,  an  earth- 
quake shook  Los  j\ngeles,  destroying 
thousands  of  homes,  closing  freeways,  and 
shutting  down  many  schools.  The  quake, 
measuring  G.G,  caused  57  deaths  and  an 
estimated  $30  billion  damage. 


Phoio  bv  Bill  Nation  /  SYGMA 


Photo  by  Kraft  /  SYGMA 


Photo  by  FOS 

Saying,  "1  have  nothing  more 
to  prove,"  Chicago  Bulls  star 
Michael  Jordan  announced  his 
retirement  from  the  NBA.  The 
announcement  ended  a  roller 
coaster  year  during  which  his 
team  captured  another  league 
championship,  he  was  accused 
of  having  a  gambling  problem, 
and  his  father  was  murdered. 


Photo  by  Tlclcmans  /  DUOMO 

Toronto  Blue  Jay  Joe  Carter 
hit  a  three-run  homer  in  the 
bottom  of  the  ninth  inning 
of  the  sixth  game  of  the 
World  Series  to  defeat  the 
Philadelphia  Phillies.  The 
come-from-behind  victory 
clinched  their  second  straight 
World  Championship,  four 
games  to  two. 


Photo  by  Btaachli  /  SYGMA 

Nelson  Mandela  and  South  Africa 
President  F.  W.  de  Klerk  shared  the  1993 
Nobel  Peace  Prize  for  their  roles  in  ending 
apartheid  in  their  country. 


'xmrv.  t)F  MASS. 

ARCHIVES 


trosDective 


AUG  3  0  im 
An  overview  of  events  and  personalities  of  the  year 


ihong/SlPA 


Saying  their  clients  had  been 
influenced  by  a  mob  mentality 
during  the  1992  LA  riots,  lawyers 
for  Damian  Williams  and  Henry 
Watson  won  attempted  murder 
acquittals  in  the  Reginald  Denny 
beating  trial. 

Steven  Spielbergs  Jurassic  Park 
proved  to  be  popular  with 
moviegoers  as  it  became  the 
highest-grossing  movie  of  all  time 
with  $712  million  in  ticket  sales, 
eclipsing  another  of  his  films,  E.T. 


Photo  byjohnson/ TIME 


PLO  Chairman  Yasir  Arafat  and  Israeli 
Prime  Minister  Yitzhak  Rabin  came 
together  in  Washington,  D.C.,  and  with 
the  stroke  of  their  pens  and  a  handshake 
started  the  peace  process  in  motion. 

A  train  plunged  into  a  bayou  north  of 
Mobile,  Ala.,  shortly  after  a  runaway  barge 
struck  the  bridge  supports,  killing  47  in 
the  worst  accident  in  Amtrak's  history. 


by  Fcldman  /  Kern  /  SYGMA 


Faced  with  allegations  that  he  sexually 
abused  a  1 3-year-old  boy,  Michael  Jackson 
ended  his  world-wide  "Dangerous" 
concert  tour  and  sought  treatment  for 
drug  addiction.