Full text of "Stosag"
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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.
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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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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
24
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Holly Jolly
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C o mmenc ement
Happy Ending to an Academic Life
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Floriculture
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Equine Industries
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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.