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Steven Blau


Commerce school hosts media forum

A panel of journalists and media relations staff, who participated in a forum at the Commerce School yesterday, accused finance reporters of not adequately scrutinizing the finances of the technology businesses they were covering in the late 1990s and contributing to the misperception that the companies were successful. "I don't think reporters in the late '90s and even until a couple of years ago took a good look at financial statements," said Chris Roush, editor-in-chief of SNL Financial, which publishes financial magazines.

Cardinal makes historical visit

Cardinal Avery Dulles, the first American theologian to be named a cardinal, delivered an address in Minor Hall last night on the role of theological studies in public universities. Dulles, the highest-ranking Catholic cleric ever to speak at the University, argued that a department of theology would be inappropriate for a secular university, "especially one that seeks to stand in the tradition of Thomas Jefferson." However, Dulles urged that theology should be taught as one component of a religious studies course. "Professors should be permitted and encouraged to teach from a perspective of faith, while carefully avoiding proselytization," Dulles said. Dulles said that while the terms religious studies and theology often are used interchangeably, they actually have different meanings. "Religious studies do not require a personal commitment to the truth and value of the religion being studied," Dulles said. However, to study a faith theologically, "one would normally have to share in that faith," he added. Cardinal Dulles is the second cardinal to be invited to speak at the University, but the first actually to do so, said Father Gerald Fogarty S.J., a University religious studies professor.

Students explore unionizing

Reflecting a national trend toward the unionization of graduate students, about 50 students met last night to explore the possibility of organizing University graduate students into a union with a national affiliation. "It's important to organize graduate students in all departments to fight not just in a haphazard manner, but rather to have a well-funded, well-organized foundation to fight constantly," said Ben Lee, one of the graduate students advocating unionization. The push for unionization is being led by a small, largely informal group of students known as the Graduate Labor Alliance.

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