Chi goes green - Drexel University
Transcription
Chi goes green - Drexel University
T h e Triani Vol. 70, No. 23 The Student Newspaper of Drexel University April 14,1995 Study: Campus still in dark about men’s hoops Students dont know when games are played, or that tickets are free. Research findings could affect the entire athletic department. Adam Blyweiss News Editor Even w ith four consecutive conference final appearances, two consecutive NCAA tournam ent trips, and growing media expo sure, Drexel’s increasingly suc cessful men’s basketball team gets no respect. Research conducted this past w inter by students in Drexel’s Learn by DUing program found that the campus is still underin formed about — and unsupportive of — Drexel men’s basketball. Topping the list of disappoint ments? More than half of the stu dents surveyed said they didn’t a tte n d re g u la r-se a so n gam es because they thought they had to pay for tickets. The tickets, in use for the last two seasons, have been free for Drexel students who present their ID at the Physical E d u catio n Athletic Center. Learn by DUing students Mara Landberg, Gilles Bogaert (also a center on the m en’s team), and Mike Ferry presented their find ings o n T u esd ay, M arch 11. Faculty and ad m in istra to rs in attendance took notice. “The results were stunning,” said Director of Men’s Athletics Johnson Bowie. “They shocked us aU.” Almost 41 percent of students see BASKETBALL on page 5 NOAH ADDIS/r/)e Tnangle The PEAC w as packed for the North Atlantic Conference men's basketball final. The regular se a so n was a different ballgame. Lambda I s y o u r a i d o n t h e r i s e ? Chi goes green Catherine Campbell Staff Writer In an effort to educate and link the University and Powelton Village community, the brothers o f Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity have created EarthFest *95. T h e e n v iro n m e n ta l festival will be held Tuesday, April 28 from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. The b r o th e r s are lo o k in g to raise $500 to $1,000 for the Friends of the Wissahickon to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Earth Day. A c c o rd in g to L a m b d a C h i A lp h a Vice P r e s id e n t C h ris McCarthy, who is coordinating the day’s activities, “ [we] devel oped the festival to heighten the e n v ir o n m e n ta l a w aren ess o f Drexel stu den ts and Powelton Village residents.” “W e invited the students of th e P ow ell M id d le Sch o ol in order to continue our link with them and to extend a hand into the community,” said McCarthy. Lambda Chi has participated in the Adopt-a-School program for several term s. F our to six b r o t h e r s p e r te rm go to th e school for two to four hours a week to tutor and assist in activi ties with Powell students. Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority, led by Erika Bell, will decorate the Quad for the event. D r e x e l’s D e p a r tm e n t o f Bioscience and Biotechnology will have displays in the Quad, along with the New Jersey State A quarium , GreenPeace, Longw o o d G a rd e n s , th e E n v ir o n m ental Protection Agency and Friends of the Wissahickon. D rex el p ro fe ss o r Sally Denise Inm an Staff Writer P h o n e n u m b e rs a great deal o f Drexel students may be familiar with — 895-2534, 895-2535 and 895-2536 — are ringing a lit tle less frequently these days. Enrollm ent M anagement’s new approach to fmancial aid could be the reason why. Students used to call those n um bers to voice d isg u st w ith th e a p p a r e n t “ fr o n tloading” o f financial aid for freshmen, and the corresponding drop in aid given to stu d e n ts a d v a n c in g th r o u g h th e ac a d e m ic ranks. They couldn’t understand why they would get no grants from Drexel after hav ing received the m o n ey w hen th ey were freshmen. Many aid reductions occur because stu dents’ situations change. If students or their parents earn more money, expect Drexel to give less. Indeed, the Office o f Financial Aid uses see GREEN on page 3 In This Issue E d-O p............. page 10 D atebook.................15 E ntertainm ent........16 C om ics.................... 20 Classifieds...............24 S ports...................... 32 NOAH AD DIS/r/je Triangle His future in his hands, Civil Engineering freshman Stephen Steinbrook (left) g o e s over financial aid paperwork with Pell Grant Coordinator Giles Letlough. the same formula it always has — with one exception — to calculate the expected stu dent and parent contribution. It has, however, altered some things stu dents will find essential. Drexel used to assum e stud ents could contribute up to 70 percent of their co-op earnings to their tuition bill, but now they use 55 p e rc e n t in th e ir c alcu latio n . T he c o n trib u tio n is n o t obligatory; it m erely offsets the parent contribution. Additionally, the Office o f Financial Aid has altered the way it handles seniors and how it allots money to designated classes. D o n a ld D ic k a s o n , vice p r e s i d e n t o f enrollment management, launched a study to determ ine why students felt they were n o t getting satisfoctory financial aid. By e x a m in in g th e e x p e n se s o f s tu d e n ts thro ug h ou t their stay at Drexel, he found students w ould be best helped if seniors, with their additional term o f classes, were not expected to absorb the extra cost of that term. D ickason wants to equalize the parent and stu d en t c o n trib u tio n for each o f the student’s years at Drexel, including senior year. To do this, since the money available for federal grants and loans is static, the aid m ade available by Drexel is the n u m b e r which m ust grow to m eet the need. (See graphs on page 3.) Dickason has pledged to have seniors’ fmancial needs met. Soon, financial aid in the form of Drexel grants will be available to seniors in am ounts comparable to those given to freshmen. Since increased financial aid arrives next year — and hopefully, says Dickason, con tinues until all need is met — students who will be pre-juniors in fall 1995-96 will bene fit from the increase first. The m oney is com ing from a Board of Trustees decision to increase the financial aid b udget by 10 percent in the 1995-96 academic year. The bulk of the increase has been allocated to the pre-junior, junior and senior classes. T he p referen tial allocation, explained Dickason, makes up for the exclusion of th e se s tu d e n ts fro m th e F in a n c ia l Aid Assurance Plan. It also helps phase in the senior year aid increases. S tu d en ts’ righteous indig n atio n ab ou t financial aid inequity had been so w ide s p re a d th a t tw o years ago, E n ro llm e n t M a n a g e m e n t b e g a n th e F in a n c ia l Aid Assurance Plan. The Plan aimed to guarantee one level of financial aid to students for all their years at Drexel, so long as nothing about their situ ations changed. see FINANCIAL AID on page 3 2 *The Triangle •April 14, 1995 Crime Report Elite college grads: Is m oney everything? College I’rcss Service Ever w o n d e r if it pays to invest in that expensive, elite college? That depends how you define success, says Emory sociologist John Boli. If success is m e a sured in professional status and high salaries, then an elite col lege is w orth the m oney, says Boli. But if b e in g su c c e ssfu l i n cludes the n u r turing of the “life o f the m i n d , ” th e n re s u lts a r e n ’t as p o s i tive, says the a u th o r of pants to determ ine how a col lege lib e ra l a rts e d u c a tio n affected their personal and pro fessional lives. The perception that a diplo ma from an elite university rep resents a ticket to career success seems to be confirmed by Boli’s re se a rc h : 80 p e r c e n t o f the S tanford stu d e n ts went on to obtain graduate d e g re e s and m o re th a n 90 p ercen t have em barked on professional careers. O f th e se , 27 percent w ere business execu tives, 17 percent a tto r n e y s , 11 p e r c e n t p h y s i cians, and 9 per c e n t e n g in e e rs. T h e g r a d u a te s ’ m edian incom e a decade after c o lle g e was $ 5 4 ,0 0 0 , w ith a c o m b in e d fa m ily m e d ia n income of $104,000. But when it came to identify ing what qualities were im por tant to consider in a career, few graduates were practicing what they preached, says Boli. “The educational elite choose careers virtually drip pin g with money, status and security, but 10 years ago a n d to d a y m o re Eighty percent of the Stanford students went on to obtain graduate degrees and more than 90percent have embarked on professional careers. “ C re a m o f th e C rop: The E d u c a tio n a l Elite Comes of Age.” “Cream of the C r o p ” is based on a study o f 320 college s tu d e n ts w ho g r a d u a te d fro m S ta n fo rd U n iv ersity in 1981. D u r in g th e ir fo u r years at Stanford, Boli and a colleague, S ta n fo rd dean and p ro fe sso r H e r a n t A. K a tc h a d o u r ia n , examined the factors that influ enced the stu d e n ts ’ choice o f majors and careers. In 1991, a decade after grad u atio n , the au th o rs contacted 200 of the original study partici- From April 2 to April 8, there were 627 calls to Drexel Security for assistance. Of those, the fol lowing seven incidents were clas sified as criminal complaints: than 90 percent identified intel at least based on the Stanford lectual challenges and creativity study, are n o t e n te rin g fields as the most important qualities such as public adm inistration, to consider in a career,” he says. the arts and education. “A ltho u gh g rad u ates make “O f c o u rs e , w e ’re s ta r tin g tim e for s p o rts, exercise and with the assum ption that u n i hobbies, intellectual p u rsu its versities should combine a lib a n d v o lu n t e e r a n d p o litic a l ‘ eral arts e d u c a tio n w ith solid activities receive far less atten career p re p a ra tio n ,” says Boli. tion.” “But in these days of financial The fact that the benefits of a accountability and curriculum liberal arts ed u catio n are not debates, we should ask whether easily d is c e r n ib le a m o n g its we need to be concerned if these graduates should be of concern graduates do not pursue a ‘life to universities, says Boli. of the m in d ,’ or if they do not Boli also says he is especially b oth er to read literature, visit concerned that a majority of the m u se u m s, o r c hallen ge th e ir “best and brightest” graduates, beliefs in a search for meaning.” ________ Theft________ Kelly Residence Hall MacAlister Hall (twice) Rush Building Calhoun Residence Hall Robbery Randell Hall Vandalism Van Rensselaer Hall Cat-nap in the cab TheTH anO e 3 2 i^ A ChM tnut S tfM ts • PtiUadelpMa. PA 19104 Volc«: (218) 898-2588 • Fax: (218) i9 8 -8 9 3 8 Editorial Editor-in-Chief John G ruber Managing Editor Patricia 0*Brien Ed-Op Editor Jonathan Poet Production Manager N ickD iFranco News Editor Adam Blyweiss Entertainment Editor David Smith Comics Editor Kristi Ciliano Sports Editor Tracy Marcus Layout Editor Larry Rosenzweig Photo Editor N oah Addis Business & Administration Business Manager a Gina Di Vincenzo Advertising Manager ▲ Jay Kimball Systems Administrator a Joe Campbell Distribution Manager a Ryan La Riviere Staff W riters^^BContributing Editors Catherine Campbell, Chad Gorn Denise Inman, Pete Lagana, Stacy Lutkus, Jennifer Rauktis, Andrew Ross, Joel Saunders, Steven D. Segal, Kristina Sheedy, Anthony Tamaccio, Mike Thornton Anh Dang i» J ,.Q /i7 .0 6 2 6 NOAH A00IS/T7W T r if K ^ We found this exhibit mover catching up on a few Z’s outside the Armory. Let’s just hope his supervisor didn’t find him, too. D rex el U n iv e r sity 1994/95 S tu d e n t Senj(Alce^ M u lti- S p e c ia lty G r o u p P ra c tic e P re s b y te ria n M e d ic a l C e n te r Prim ary Care C enter at 39th and P o w elto n Monday, W ednesday and Friday 8:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. 1:00,p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Saturday 9:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Columnists Michael Busier, Christopher Hatch Graphic Design Photographers Jon Colton, Melany Hunt, Julie Kang, Jared Levine, Scott Millard Kristen Olson Business Staff Jill Germano Appointments are recommended, please call Cartoonists 662-8233 Contributing Staff Sharon Gregowske, Sarah Holtz, Dave Mays, Eric Minbiole, Aaron Schantz Craig Barnitz, Kevin Connolly, Don Haring, Jr., Dennis McGlynn Copyright 01995 The Triangle. No work herein may be repro duced In any form, In whole or in part, without the written consent of the Editor-ln<;hlef. Opinions expressed within are not necessarily those of The Triangle. The Triangle is published Fridays in Philadelphia, PA, during the academic year, except during examination and vaca tion periods. The Triangle's only source of income is advertising; funding from the University is not accepted. The Triangle is free to members of the Drexel community, but distribution is limited to one copy per reader, Subscriptions may be ordered for $20 for six months; display and classified advertising may be placed at the address above. T ransportation is available from the Residence H alls to Presbyterian. Please call 895-2822 for a Security Escort. EXPANDED SERVICE: P re s b y te ria n n o w o ffe rs a d is c o u n t o n all g e n e ric d ru g s at th e U n iv e rs ity C e n te r A p o th o c a ry . W ith a D rex el ID , th e A p o th o c a ry w ill fill y o u r p r e s c rip tio n at cost + 10%. T h e h o u rs are M o n d a y - F rid ay , 8:30 a.m . - 5:00 p.m . T h e A p o th o c a ry is lo c a te d o n th e P re s b y te ria n c a m p u s at 3 9 th a n d M a r k e t S tre e ts. Member Gro^tnr Philadulphia Chniiiber of Con)iiiercc Delaware ValleyCollegiate Press Association Columbia Scholastic Press Association Associutod Collegiate Press I’liMiCrccycic- the I'ruingU' For more info rm a tio n on S tu d e n t H ealth Services, please con ta ct Teresa Jones, C oordinator o f S tu d en t H ealth Services and P rogram slD ivision^for S tu d e n t Life, 895-1520 TheTriangle»April 14, 1995»3 News in Brief A i d in c r e a s e s t a r g e t Canavan to stay at Drexel Dr. Thomas Canavan, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, has refused the post of Provost at Metropolitan State College in Denver, Colo. Courted as a finalist for the Metro State position, Canavan con sidered the college after an early March visit to the campus. Canavan opted to decline the position, saying “there are tremen dous opportunities here [at Drexel]” which he still wants to pursue. However, after 15 years at Drexel, he has not ruled out future opportunities elsewhere. “I would seek opportunities as they present themselves,” said Canavan. According to him, such chances have come up about once a year for the past four or five years. But currently, said Canavan, “there is nothing [from other uni versities] being considered, and I am not pursuing any position.” — Pete Lagana Teresa Jones submits resignation_______ Director of Health Services Teresa Jones has resigned, effective May 5, for personal reasons. She is getting married and moving to North Carolina. As Director of Health Services she is the contact source for the University’s health and counseling services, as well as head of the student health insurance program at Drexel. The position is expect ed to be filled by June 1. Jones cited the creation the Peer Education Program as one of her accomplishments during her three-and-a-half years here. The pro gram focuses on such topics as alcohol abuse and sexual assault. Jones also helped broaden the coverage of the student health insur ance policy through Presbyterian Hospital. “Because I was the first person to have this job, I feel that I was given the freedom to create a program which the students needed,” said Jones. Brew-Off a **Final Four*^ of beer____________ The Hospitality Organization for Students and the Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association, two student groups based in the Hotel and Restaurant Management program, are sponsoring the University’s first beer-brewing competition. The inaugural year of the Drexel Brew-Off pits The Triangle^ a number of campus fraternities, and other student leaders against each other in a battle for the best homebrew. Judges from local bars and clubs will determine Best Light Beer, Best Dark Beer, Best Label and Best of Show awMds. Representatives of the HRM program said they hope to open the competition to all student groups next year. Judging and a reception for the participants will take place April 21, on the sixth floor of the Academic Building. USGA spring election details announced_____ Applications for candidates in the U ndergraduate Student G overnm ent A ssociation’s spring elections will be available Monday, April 17, at the Creese Information Desk, the Office of the Dean of Students, and the USGA ofFice. • . Applications are due at the Office of the Dean of Students by 4:00 p.m. on Friday, April 28. An information session for all candidates is scheduled for Monday, May 1, from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.ni. in the USGA office. Elections will be held on Wednesday, May 11, from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., and Thursday, May 12, from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Voting is scheduled to take place in the Quad, near the Korman Center. The rain location for voting is inside the Korman Center. Students interested m running for USGA positions or volunteer ing to help during elections can also contact the USGA Elections Committee at 895-2577. Fraternity to host Earth Day event GREENfrom page 1 Solomon will feature a chemistry d em o n stra tio n in the M ain Auditorium from 11:15 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. The Philadelphia Zoo p re sents the show “Rain Forest Reality” from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. in the same location. E ntertainm ent including a velcro jump, bungee run, clowns and jugglers will be highlighted by a concert in the Quad from 1:00 to 1:30 p.m. These acts are designed to make EarthFest ’95 “contempo rary and ex citing ,” said McCarthy. Interim Dean of Greek Life and D ean of S tu dents James Fitzpatrick has helped to plan the event. Fitzpatrick said he is “p ro u d th at Lam bda Chi is doing so m eth ing so socially aware. It is nice to see that they are so co ncerned a b o u t the world around them.” M cC arthy expects guest appearances from local officials. The U niversity-w ide event was made possible with the assis tance of the Campus Activities Board, Drexel C om m un ity Service, Ciba Inc., G am m a Sigma Sigma service sorority, the Panhellenic Council, Drexel’s chapter of the Public Relations Student Society of America and The Triangle. u p p e r c la s s m e n FINANCIAL AID from page I The Plan’s guarantee for a student only holds if their par en ts’ incom e and assets have n o t chang ed , the s tu d e n t’s in com e and assets have not changed, the student has main tained the grades required for any scholarships and has not earned any additional scholar ships. I t’s difficult to keep those variables constant over a four or five-year p eriod, so som e may find nothing has changed. It won’t usually result in addi tional m oney unless a parent has becom e u nem ployed, or something equally drastic. D ire c to r o f F inancial Aid Nick Flocco said m ost of the stu d e n ts covered by the Assurance Plan who come to see him haven’t read or under sto o d w hat the Plan m eans, despite D rexel’s having “the most well-done financial aid lit era tu re available to the s tu dent.” There are still three current classes o f s tu d e n ts — p r e juniors, juniors, and seniors — w ho are n o t covered by the Assurance Plan. These students, said Dickason, are the primary beneficiaries of the 10 percent financial aid budget increase. Instead of finding substantial increases in their financial aid packages, students can expect m ore o f their peers to receive aid, said Giles Letlough, Pell Grant coordinator in the Office of Financial Aid. The 10 percent increase is balanced against a 5.95 percent annual increase in tuition since 1992. Flocco was reluctant to dis cuss th e im p act o f these changes. He ex p lain ed how increases in aid won’t necessari ly make students satisfied about th e ir p erso n a l situ a tio n , because his office cannot make aid available to every o u t stretched hand. Take the ex perience of RoseEllen Dougherty, a senior, who has never received Drexel grant money. W hen her sister e n ro lle d as a fresh m an at D rexel, h er siste r received $2,000, but Dougherty’s aid did not change. Flocco could not explain the apparent mistake, due to the individual nature of every stu dent’s situation. Dougherty, as a sen io r, is finishing Drexel before the Assurance Plan was available to her. She won’t see the inequity of parent and stu d e n t c o n trib u tio n changed either. The last change for financial aid is a m ethodological one. Projected student numbers will be divided into the am ount of aid for th a t class, and th a t am o u n t will not change. For example, if the senior class is allocated $100,000, and there are 500 seniors, each senior is a llo tte d $200. If a d d itio n a l seniors matriculate, each senior still gets $200. If more freshmen attend, their numbers will not affect money given to seniors. The deadline to file an appli cation for financial aid for the 1995-96 school year with the Office of Financial Aid is May 1. $24,000 1 $22,000 $20,000 $18,000iI $16,000 ; I 3 $14,000 -j I j $12,000 -I $10,000 $8,000 _ 6 6 $6,000 6 $4,000 $2,000 Fraslnnan $0 Sophomore Projunior Junior Senior 1994*95 FinanclaB Aid Distribution • Resources not administered by D rexel' Graphs by Jonathan Poet $24,000 -] $22,000 $20,000$18,000$16,000$14,000$12,000$10,000 $8,000 $6,000$4,000 /f $2,000 $0 /\V Freshman : Sophomore 0m Pr»junk>r Junior Senior 1995-96 nnancial Aid Distribution The chart on the top depicts the current situation for financial aid; the bottom shows the increases to Drexei aid for the pre-junior, Junior and senior years after this year’s planned allocation. Note the increase in Drexel contributed financial aid (1) and the decrease in expected parent and student contribution (5 and 6). There is a level at approximately the $14,000 mark which represents a parent/student contribution “cap" strived toward by Enrollment Management. The graphs depict the expected situation of a five-year student who lives on campus. The ratios remain the same for commuters, though the amounts are less. Four-year students are averaged Into the charts, with the depicted Junior year representing their senior year. 4»TheTriangle *April 14,1995 T h e Best W a y To Save M o n e y Q q S tu ff ( O t h e r T h a n Borrowing Your Roommate^s.) R o o m m a te s te n d to g e t h k e w e ird y o u w ith th e s e C o lle g e g e t y o u r o w n e n o u g h y o u th a t.) B e tte r to y o u A n d w h e n c o u ld b o rr o w th e ir s tu ff. g e t y o u rs e lf a M a s te rC a rd * u se it to b u y th e th in g s M a s t e r V a l u e s * c o u p o n s , y o u ’l l s a v e u p p l a c e , i t ’s t h e a s i t i s . M a s t e r C a r d . 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Thecuscount isapplicable to. andtheminimumpurchasebasedon merchandisepricesonly, andexcludestax. ^ ^ H_______ _ _ J OI99SMatltHMInlfrtiiiliimiilhutfrfvralrJ mm mam TheTriangle«April 14>1995»8 Triangle reporters asked the Drexel community the following question: How do you feel about the idea of having the next Drexel president live on campus? it’a i^ difference tiwouldrCt vn^fntion to him <*timprove or $itii$jok % m i^ouidkt ^ St'". If I;' living' Survey finds men’s hoops lacks campus support BASKETBALL from page 1 surveyed said they have never attended a game. More than half of students surveyed said they didn’t know how to get tickets for basketball games. More than a th ird d id n ’t know when the games took place. The stu d en ts’ research also found current promotion of the team ineffective. Flyers, court drops, Triangle advertising and coverage, G rillin’ & C hillin ’ events, and the Undergraduate Student G overnm ent Associa tion’s Tees for Threes did little to increase game attendance or awareness of the team and its games. “We’re delighted to know [the results],” said Vice Provost for S tudent Life Diana Hackney. “Now, we can move to correct them.” Landberg said her project team was “really shocked” by ^ e statis tics as well. “We feel that if the misconcep tion [about tickets] was clarified,” said Landberg, “attendance may increase dramatically.” Although official figures were unavailable at press time, Bowie said attendance numbers for the men’s games took “a little dip this year.” While he said the campus may be “used to winning ... [and has] kind of taken the team for grant ed,” Bowie also attributed the PHOTOGRAPHER/Tho Triangle The Drexel Dragon finds a familiar face in a rare crowd, clowning around with Mayor Ed Rendell during the North Atlantic Conference m en’s basketball championship in March. drop to a lack of promotion. “A lot of people aren’t making informed choices” about fitting sporting events into their campus schedule, said Bowie. According to Bowie, one clari fication is already planned for next season’s basketball sched ules: They will state in print that regular-season tickets are free with a Drexel ID. Drexel hopes to use the stu dents’ report as a springboard for b etter p ro m o tio n o f all the school’s athletic programs. Before consecutive years of University budget reductions, the Athletic Departm ent had staff devoted to marketing and pro m otion. The Learn by DUing study, Bowie, and Rebecca Weidensaul, academic advisor to Drexel athletics, all called for increased m arketing o f the University’s sports teams. “ [The study] is a reaffirmation th at a m arketing strategy ... needs to be in place and official,” said Rebecca Weidensaul, acade mic advisor to Drexel athletics. Landberg added that the study showed support for any type of m arketing position in the Athletic Department — from an academic independent study to a co-op administered through a marketing firm. The research also called for more diverse methods of adver tising and prom otion, ranging from large schedules and signs on cam pus to e-mail a n n o u n c e ments on game day. Quantitative methods profes sor Hazem Maragah, Learn by DUing faculty advisor, said the group would conduct sim ilar research with Drexel alumni this spring. “The report was very profes sional,” said W eidensaul. “[Landberg, Bogaert, and Ferry] should be commended for their work.” Nancy O’Leary, a Quantitative M ethods teaching assistant involved with the study, also praised the administration’s reac tion to. Learn by DUing’s find ings. “I was not as surprised by the results as I was by the administra- • tors, and how they want to turn things around,” O’Leary said. Learn by DUing was founded by graduate professor Dr. Andrew Verzilli. The class com bines analytical tools and busi ness concepts which are taught in the College of Business and Administration curriculum. 6 *^TheTriangle *April 14, 1995 M i n o r i t y c o lle g e e n r o l l m e n t g r o w s College Press Service Although more minority stu dents are earning college degrees, students of color continue to be less likely to enroll in college than whites, according to a recent report released by the American Council on Education. According to the ACE report, the number of minority students attending colleges and universi ties rose steadily during the past decade, but college participation am ong m inorities still lags behind that of whites. Only 33 percent of African-American and 36 percent of H ispanic high school graduates ages 18 to 24 attended college in 1993, com pared with nearly 42 percent of whites, according to ACE’s “T hirteenth Annual Status Report on Minorities in Higher Education.” ACE President Robert Atwell called the gap in college partic ipation between whites and minorities ‘‘cause for continuing concern.” “We have a long way to go academic diffimliies • substance abuse • stress Need assistance with personal or academic concerns or just need someone to talk to? "a 1 bo DREXEL COUNSELING SERVICES 2 Are available for you! » •: ' 925-2159 , 0 (' 24 hour hot-line appointments 6 days a week two locations SEPTA tokens available in the Dean of Students' Office S! For more information on Student Health and Counseling Services, contact the Coordinator of Student Health Services and Programs/Dtvision for Student Life, _______________________________________ 8 9 5 -1 5 2 0 __________________________________ change of major anxiety • communication issues K I M E V S P L A C E 3 4 0 1 H a m ilto n S t. P h ila d e lp h ia , P A 1 9 1 0 4 S te a k s S a lills I t a l i i r D is h e s D e li S a n d w ic iie s H o a g ie s 8 G rin d e rs M a n d a rin C liin e s e S ty le D u ffe t D in n e r P la tte r q,. B m Sa Hours Monday-Saturday 8:00a.m.~9:00p.m. Sunday 10:00a.m.-8:00p.m. 222-3929 NOW DELIVERING 5PM- 9PM M before we can claim to have achieved equality of educational opportunity and achievement,” he said. The report by ACE, which rep resents the presidents o f the nation’s major colleges and uni versities, comes at a time when the debate abou t affirm ative action, particularly in the area of university admissions, is heating up. P ro ponents of affirm ative action policies argue that when legitimate efforts are made to reflect ethnic diversity on cam pus, no one is hurt. Recently, UCLA Chancellor Charles Young told the universi ty’s academic senate that “affir mative action has benefitted the individuals and the groups to which it has been targeted, but the diversity it has created has benefitted each and every one of us.” However, Young added that no one is admitted to UCLA sole ly because of his or her race. “What’s critical to understand is that race, ethnicity and gender play absolutely no role in who is eligible to attend the University of California,” he said. “Within the eligible pool, UCLA seeks to enroll students broadly reflective of the cultural, social and eco nom ic diversity o f the state. Students never are admitted to UCLA merely t>ecause of their race, ethnicity or gender.” California’s Master Plan for Higher Education mandates that the top 12.5 percent o f each year’s C alifornia high school graduates may attend UC schools. Top graduates are identi fied through a combination of test scores, high school grades and courses com pleted. Still, m any in the state, including Regent W ard Connerly, have argued ethnicity — n o t test scores or grades — is the primary consideration when individual UC cam puses choose am ong those “eligible” students. Affirmative action policies, say opponents, admit less academ ically qualified students at the expense of others. “Often affirmative action poli cies are not merit-based. They do not reward those students who have achieved,” said M atthew Kluchenek, a stu d en t at G eorgetown U niversity Law Center. “I also believe that affir mative action is not doing much to'redress wrongs. Most minori ties who do well in school or on the job don’t need affirmative action; they would have succeed ed anyway.” Presently, the White House is reviewing affirmative action poli cies. On Thursday, March 23, President Bill Clinton told college reporters “it is in everyone’s interest to see that everybody gets the best chance to live up to their fullest abilities. On the other hand, it is in no one’s interest to see that people get positions if they’re completely unqualified to hold them.” Clinton told students that in the past 30 years, much progress has been made in opening up opportunities to minorities and used his experience working in the South to illustrate his point. “When I was your age and I began to work in political cam paigns ... there were still court houses on squares in county seats in my state that had segregated restrooms,” he said. “In my life time, when I w ^ your age, in the mid-60s, there were still older African Americans in my state who did not know th at they could vote without buying a poll tax ... I can rem em ber when there were no women in any num ber of jobs now where we take it for granted that women wdll be.” In framing the White House’s affirmative action review, Clinton said he has asked his staff to answer some questions. “I’ve said, first of all, how do these programs work, and to they have a positive effect? Secondly, even if they work, are they some times, at least, unfair to others? Could you argue that in some cases there is reverse discrimina tion, and if so, how? Thirdly, are there now others in need who are not covered by affirmative action programs?” “We all have an interest, including white males, in devel oping the capacities of all of us to relate to one another — because our economy will grow quicker, it’ll be stronger, and in a global society, our diversity is our great est asset,” he told students. Minorities students enrolled in college have been making slow, steady progress, states the ACE report, which found m ore minorities are earning degrees. Minority students earning mas ter’s degrees increased by 12.4 percent from 1991 and 1992, according to the study, while the num ber of doctoral degrees awarded to African-American men rose by 15 percent in 1993. “The growing num bers of minority students attaining their degrees is certainly encouraging new s,” said ACE P resident Atwell. “It reflects concerted efforts by colleges and universi ties to improve persistence and completion rates.” The study also found: • After declining in the 1980s, the number of African Americans earning bachelor’s degrees has risen steadily since 1990. • The num ber of faculty of color employed at colleges and universities has been rising, but gains have occurred primarily among temporary lecturers and visiting staff. In fact, the overall tenure rate among minority faculty dropped by two percentage points from 1991 to 1992, from 61 percent to 59 percent. The tenure rate of white £iculty rose by two percent age points (firom 70 percent to 72 percent) during that same period. • Since 1990, the numbers of Hispanics and Asian Americans enrolled in college each rose by 26.3 percent. The nu m ber o f Hispanics earning degrees also increased in 1992. However, Hispanic students earned less th an 4 percent o f all degrees granted that year. • College enrollment among Native Americans increased by 39 percent between 1982 and 1993; the total num ber of degrees awarded to this population rose by 46 percent between 1981 and 1992. Still, Native Am ericans account for only 0.8 percent of all college students, and only 29 per cent of American Indian fouryear college freshmen graduate withing six years of enrollment, compared with 53 percent of all four-year college students. TheTriangle»April 14,1995 *7 Classroom design leads to landmark w it h s tu d e n ts a t P e n n Melissa Prentice Jennifer Cohen College Press Service W ith $20 m illio n to sp e n d a n d a class grade on the line, e ig h t U n iv e r s ity o f A riz o n a a rch itectu re stu den ts have set o u t to d e sig n a new c a m p u s landmark. Under the instruction of p ro fessor Ellery Green, the class will spend the semester researching and designing the “technologi cally a d v a n c e d ” I n te g r a te d I n s tr u c ti o n Facility th a t will serve as the home base for about 4,500 students each year. In th e past. G re e n ’s classes have made significant contribu ti o n s to th e d e sig n o f th e H u m a n it ie s B u ild in g , th e Renew able N a tu ra l Resources Building and the new four-year campus in Pima County. H a n d s - o n in v o lv e m e n t in university projects such as these is beneficial for b o th the s tu dents and the university. Green said. "The students get the experi ence working on a real project; they get to learn to w ork with real clients — how the decision making is done and how to get information,” he said. “ A n d th e u n iv e r s ity keeps asking us back because they ben efit from fresh ideas,” he adds. “The stu d e n ts ask good q ues tions that are fresh and original. They ask questions they d o n ’t kn ow the answers to, whereas adults npay ask questions with political agendas in mind.” Green said the experience the stu d en ts will receive from the project will be compatible to an u r b a n p la n n in g p r o je c t in a sm all city, since th e s tu d e n ts have to take into account issues like population circulation and parking. M ic h a e l G o ttf r e d s o n , vice provost o f undergraduate ed u catio n, said the stu d en ts have been instrum ental in the early stages o f th e b u ild in g ’s p la n ning. “T h e y are th e b e s t c ritic s. T hey challenge every assu m p tion,” he said. The students have spent the last two months researching var ious details o f the project and the class recently spent the after noon in the second-floor archi te c tu re lab p re p a rin g to sta rt presenting the information they have gathered. The students will s t a r t w o rk in g o n th e a c tu a l d e s ig n o f th e b u ild in g a fte r spring break. K evin B a rb e r, o n e o f th e class’s four-year students, said a lth o u g h th e s tu d e n t s have w ork ed on h a n d s-o n projects before, this is by far the biggest p ro je c t in w hich he has been involved. “M ost o f the stu ff has been pretty relevant,” he said. A lthough it is unlikely that any of the students’ designs will be used as the final design for the building, the students said they are c o n fid e n t th a t m an y asp ects o f th e ir research and designs will be incorporated into the final product. Part of their research process has in c lu d e d s tu d y in g o th e r buildings across the nation to see h o w th e y i n c o r p o r a te d advanced technology and to see M a s s a g e s e r v ic e a h i t h o w o th e r s u c c e ssfu l u n d e r ground buildings were designed, said Jennifer Cady, one o f the students involved in the project. T h e re s e a rc h ra n g e s fro m detailed technical aspects, like designing an ideal lecture hall, to more broad concepts, such as how the campus will be effected by an underground building and how to in c o rp o ra te p ro p o se d core curriculum into the build ing. During a trip to Arizona State U niv ersity, th e s tu d e n ts to o k slid e s o f a p r o t o t y p e o f th e instructional commons that will be p a r t o f th e n ew b u ild in g . Green said. ASU has an effective example of how to include more th a n 100 c o m p u t e r s in o n e room “without being inhum an,” he said. B ut th e ASU lab also has technical problems that the stu dents hope to avoid, like an elec tric a l o u tle t b ox w ith o u tle ts which are n o t com patible with lap-top transmission transform ers. College Press Service Joe Penn has to write a paper for his English Class and one for his W o m e n ’s Studies sem inar, both by the end of the week. As if that wasn’t bad enough, he also has a m id te rm in Economics, plus an im p o rtan t job interview. Joe’s nerves are shot — he’s tense, fatigued and wired from too much coffee. Joe wants to feel better now. The U n iv e rsity o f P e n n sylvania Student Health therapist believes she has the answ er to Joe’s stress: massage therapy. For $20 per half hour, student H e a lth M assage T h e ra p ist Jennifer Knight works away stu dents’ tension and anxiety using Swedish Massage and soothing music. “I cannot undo in half an hour the stress students have put on their bodies for years,” Knight said. “But I can help them feel better.” According to UP senior Brett B t s .f f k 9 .la purchases o v e r$10 W in ^ n o t expensive for th e service that’s provided,” she said. K night also gives m assage w orkshops when contacted by dormitory resident advisors. But the one-on-one sessions are the most rewarding for her. “I look at myself as a resource to people,” she said. “I don’t do magic, but it’s nice to feel I really can make a difference.” Knight says she feels there is more to her job than just helping relax students’ muscles. “I believe 60 percent of my job is giving good massage, and 40 percent is how you treat people,” she said. W hen she gives a massage, Knight invites students to talk with her about anything. If they prefer to stay silent, though, she does not get offended. In fact, Knight feels most suc cessful when she can relax a stu dent so much that he or she falls asleep. “The biggest compliment to me is when someone not only falls asleep, but also drools,” she said. R O M A R I O ’S P IZ Z A 's 1 0 % Off Mehzer, who has tried Student H e a lth ’s massage service, the therapy really works. “W hen I was done [with my m assage], I felt my b od y and nerves had a heightened sense of sensitivity. “The next morning I was really limber and relaxed,” he added. Knight’s first goal is to make students feel com fortable. She explains to them what is involved in massage therapy and lets them choose how m uch or little they want to wear. Then she asks if they would like her to put on music or use massage oil, and finds out what specific areas th ey feel need soothing. “The main thing,” said Knight, “is to be comfortable. Penn is a very stressful place to be. People who come to me really want to be there and want to feel better.” Although the price may seem high, Meltzer says he feels it is worthwhile. “You are getting a direct service from a professional that you can’t get elsewhere. It’s s 3 5 1 3 L a n c a s te x * A v e n u e ( O n e b l o c k n o r t h o f A la rjk e t) B . u £ £ ^ o W S ty m ie ix k g s Sauces: M i l d H o t S U I C I D E Fries, Onion Rings, Chicken Fingers L U N C H - D I N N E R 8 o z . H a im b u r s^ e r s Open 10 :3 0 am - lam Friday, Saturday to 2 :3 0 am P liila d e lp liiA S te a k s I n c l u d i n g : P iz z a S t e a k M u s h r o o m C h e e s e S te a k C h ic k e n C h e e s e S te a k P b L ilA d e lp liiA H P iz z a Cheese o a g i e s T r y E d 's S p e c ia l H o a g ie : Capicola, Salami, Provolone & H am A ls o : C h e e s e , I t a l i a n , H a m & C h e e s e , T u n a F is h , a n d T u r k e y R o m a rio 's S p ecia l . 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Small (10") $3.95 J Romario^s P iz z a 1 Large cheese pizza 95 MUST PRESENT COUPON. CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH OTHER OFFERS. EXPIRES 4/21/95 75 MUST PRESENT COUPON. CANNOT BE COMBINED WrTH OTHER OFFERS. EXPIRES 4/21/95 1 *TheTriangle*April 14,1995 Bird rescues provide outlet H o m e w o rk Marco B u sca^ a College Press Service g o e s h ig h te c h John W. Ellis College Press S e r v i c e _ _________ S tudents who used to log hours in the library to do research are now logging onto computers. As more and more campuses are phasing into the interactive age, the way some students do their homework is changing. “It makes research for many stu d en ts m uch easier,” said Myers, a graduate history stu dent at the U niversity of California at Los Angeles. “I use a program designed by the Smithsonian to find historical visual images that I could other wise only get by flying all over the place looking for rare books and collections.” Academic work that once took hours to com plete in a library can take m inutes in a computer lab. A drienne M. Petty, an Am erican H istory stu d en t at C olum bia U niversity in New York, recently had an assignment where he had to search through old editions of the “Pennsylvania Most college students would probably agree that studying is for the birds, but few would say that about their free time. Unless, o f course, they are mem bers of Eckerd College’s Bird Rescue Program, a group of 30 student volunteers who assist endangered birds througho ut southwestern Florida. Because o f F lorida’s dense wildlife and human population, birds often get snagged by fish ing wire or injured by boats or cars. Eckerd students help res cue and rehabilitate the injured birds. “There is something very tan gible about the work that is ben eficial to the students,” said Bill Covert, director of the college’s Waterfront program. “You can hold a bird in your arms, ban dage it, give it saline, watch it heal and release it back into the wild.” Taking turns working shifts, m em bers of E ckerd’s Bird Rescue team carry beepers so they can be immediately notified when their help is needed. Area residents call a rescue center when they see a distressed bird, Gazette” on CD-ROM. “It’s a whole new way to use these old new spapers. It’s all indexed, and you can punch in a word and find 1,000 entries,” Petty said. “It’s much less time consuming than doing it manu ally. You can even dow nload information on disks. It’s totally revolutionary.” And studying for many stu dents means not only reviewing class notes, but traveling the Internet, too. Both Myers and Petty are members of various discussion groups that trade information, tips and sources via e-mail sys tems located at various universi ties connected to the Internet. If racing around the world on the information superhighway is not enough, professors are start ing to download electronic texts onto students. A computer program devel oped by McGraw-Hill lets pro fessors customize printed text books by selecting the specific chapters and articles that a class will need. and the students take it from there. Covert said that Bird Rescue seemed like a natural extension of the school’s maritime search and rescue program . *‘We fig ured that we were already teach ing and executing searches and rescues for people,” he said, “so why no t do th em for b ird s, too?” A group of 30 student volunteers helped in assisting endangered birds throughout southwestern Florida. When the rescue team arrives on the scene to help retrieve the injured birds, they attem pt to minimize injury to the bird and, at times, can release the bird immediately. If the damage is severe, they bring the bird to the Seabird S anctuary or the P innelas Seabird Rehabilitation Center, w here it is tre a te d and th en Home Of ^ J a w ^ fjc a i th e CT>tzza CaUforraa dhicken # R E S T A O ’B A N T e / 387-1213 Sandwich nZId NMOaNISdll P O W E L T O N 'S R E D P I Z Z A W I T H T H E S A U C E O N T O P O F T H E C H E E S E L a rg e $ 6 .0 0 Reg. $^kso O I 'I ' BUY A S m a ll $ 3 .6 0 Reg. $4«ro lA R G E T O P P IN G A N D I I I I I I I I OME P IZ Z A GET A 2 LITER SODA FREE Must mention coupon when ordering for delivery, cjin't b« combined with iiny other offer Must mention coupon vvhen ordering for delivery, can't be combined with any other offer I J LATE N IG H T W ITH POWELTON PIZZA 2 lARGE PIES ONIY $9.95 TOPPINGS EXTRA Must me'Cion coupon when ordsrinq for delivery. c»r be combined with jiry other offer released. Some trapped birds can be freed and rehabilitated in a mat te r o f days or even h o u rs. O th ers, how ever, are n o t as lucky. ^ Last December, junior David Burowski answered the call to help save an injured seabird. When he arrived at the b ird ’s location, he could see the bird was in serious tro u b le . “Someone had hooked the bird and ended up pulling out the lining of the throat while trying to get his hook b ac k ,” said Burowski. “We were able to help firee the bird and even repair the lining of his throat, but after a few days, the infection got so bad that he just couldn’t su r vive.” D espite the setbacks, Burow ski said the w ork is incredibly rewarding. “The fact that you’re freeing the birds is enough, but when you’re able to help release it back in to the wild, th a t’s a great feeling,” Burowski said. The pro gram is becom ing increasingly p o p u la r at the 1 ,50 0-student school, said sophomore Aaron Spytma, who becam e involved w ith Bird Rescue last year. “A lot of stu dents want to do something to get involved with the wildlife,” said Spytma, who is originally from western New York. “When I came down here, I saw all these birds, and I wanted to do every th in g I could to leaE:n a b o u t them.” ' / Aimee Luthrig/ger, also a sophom ore, s a i/f she becam e involved after/^teing a heron caught in a fishing line after class one day. After trying to save the bird herself, Luthringer learned about the Bird Rescue Program. Spytm a agrees. “You find these birds in these h o rrib le conditions, but then you get to help get them ready to go back to Aeir natural habitat,” he said. “When you let th at bird back into the wild, your heart just soars.” Students cheat with electronic underwear College Press Service Police in Bangkok halted an elaborate electronic scheme last m onth, arresting 75 students who kept radio receivers in their underwear to help them cheat on an arm y college entrance exam. After learning of the opera-* tion, police entered classrooms at Ram kam heanh University, where the exam was taking place. They found 75 students wearing the specially designed receivers in their underwear. The students said they paid a police officer 50,000 baht ($2,000) for the radio devices, who signalled in the correct answers as the exam was taking place. The officer and the students face up to two years in prison if convicted. TheTriangle *April 14,1995»9 Athletic dorms to comply with NCAA housing rule The new rule states that an athletic dormitory floor cannot have an athlete to non-athlete ratio of more than 50 percent. Chad Schexnayder College Press Service The NCAA recently passed a rule as p art o f its academ ic reform movement requiring col lege members to integrate ath letes and non-athletes in dormi tories. The rule, effective Aug. 1, 1996, states that an athletic dor m ito ry floor or wing cannot have an athlete to non-athlete ratio of more than 50 percent. “The rule is to further inte grate student athletes into the general student body popula tion,” said Dan Dutcher, NCAA director of legislative services. University o f Southwestern L ouisiana A thletics D irector N elson Schexnayder said he agreed w ith the reasoning behind the policy. “The purpose of this rule was the NCAA felt that some schools had elaborate dorm s for their athletes, and it was unfair to the rest o f the students,” he said. “Personally, I think it’s a good rule.” However, at least one USL football player disagree. “The rule is no good,” said Brian Jackson. “We (football players) have to stick together as m uch as possible. This rule would be breaking us up. We have no m ore privileges than anybody else. We’re here to do a job. Regular students living there (with athletes) is not fair because by doing that you are putting athletes in a b in d ” Some students who are non athletes expressed mixed feelings about living with athletes. “It m ight w o rk ,” said one freshman resident of Voorhies Dormitory. “It all depends on the chemistry between the two people. It’s like when you move in with som ebody you d o n ’t know to begin with — you just have to live with it.” “I wouldn’t mind living with a girl that played softball or some thing,” said one female student resident of Bancroft Hall. “As long as we know each o th er before we move in, I can get along w ith her. If we’re just thrown together, that can cause problems.” Head football coach Nelson Stokley said a concern among coaches is how to keep track of athletes when they’re scattered across campus. “I like to know where they (the football players) are,” said Stokley. “Spreading them all over campus lessens the control we have as coaches, and we are the ones when something goes wrong that gets it.” Logistically, things could be more difficult for athletes, many of whom must comply with cur few checks the night before games, said Schexnayder. “From the athletes’ point of view, especially football, it will be harder when they call team meetings because (football play ers) wiO be spread out,” he said. “It might be difficult to control noise. When there is open house in one area, and players are try ing to get rest, it will be difficult. It’s going to have to be a little of give-and-take.” Some colleges already have invoked rules requiring athletes to live with regular college stu dents. For example, all. freshmen athletes at N o tre Dame are required to live with non-athletes their first year on campus. O ther colleges such as Texas Tech allow junior- and senioryear football players .to live off campus if they maintain a grade point average of 2.5 or better. Will USL athletes have similar opportunities? “I think they’re going to have to do something like that,” said USL football player Jake Delhomme. “I think if you are in college and are here to play sports, you should have enough responsibility as a student-athlete to know you have to be hom e for curfew. I’m for the Texas Tech policy of, if you’re GPA is high enough, you can use your room-and-board check to get an apartment.” Stokley said he already is searching for solutions to prob lems concerning the housing policy. “I think there are pluses and minuses,” he said. “I’m big on keeping the guys together, b u t I see the NCAA’s view. We’re just going to have to work through it.” Although the 104th Congress may have placed tobacco regu lations on the legislative back burner, a new study from a pro fessor at Duke University may heat things up once again. Basing his monetary figures on a c o st-p e r-p a c k system , Duke economist W. Kip Viscusi has released a study that focuses on who pays for the cost of smokers in the United States. In a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, Viscusi states that each pack of cigarettes sold in the U.S. cost taxpayers a p p ro x im a te ly 55 cents in health care costs. These costs range from high er prem ium s on health insur ance to Medicare. In addition, the money lost from the extra sick days that smokers use is about a penny a pack, while the extra costs for fire dam age from sm okers is two cents a pack. V iscusi said th a t sm okers also cash in on their life insur ance policies faster than nonsm okers, ad d in g a n o th e r 14 cents per pack for life insurance policies. Together, Viscusi estimates th a t sm o kers cost taxpayers about 72 cents a pack. Considering the federal gov ernment collects 24 cents a pack in excise taxes, and states charge an average of 29 cents a pack, the government is looking at a 19 cents-per-pack shortfall in terms of eventual costs. Since, however, smokers die at an average earlier age than non-smokers, federal and state governm ents save around 23 cents a pack in costs. A d d itio n ally , since m ost smokers collect their pensions and Social Security for far fewer years than non-smokers, society saves another $1.19 a pack. V iscusi said sm okers still make up for their eventual costs to society by the a m o u n t of taxes they pay. College Press Service As if Generation X doesn’t get enough bad press as it is, now comes word that twenty-some th in g em ployee^ take m ore bogus days off work. A Gallup poll of 671 adults indicates that nearly 25 percent of employees between the ages of 18-29 abuse their sick days. The study, commissioned by A c coun tants on Call, an ac counting placement firm in New Jersey, found that Gen Xers fake illness twice as many times as employees between 30 and 49 years old, and four tim es as much as workers 50 and older. Gallup officials point out that the results may not be dramatic as they seem , since w orkers grow more loyal and responsible toward their companies as they grow older. Still, the n u m b ers a re n ’t going to stop some from shak ing their heads and saying “Kids to d ay ...” Twenty-five percent of work ers between the ages of 18 and 29 said they put on their best sore-throat voice and call in sick two times a year. Only 14 percent of the 30- to 39-year-old w orkers adm it doing the same, as did 13 per cent of those 40 to 49 years old. Proving integrity advances with age, only six percent of employees 50 and older admit to com ing down with the “blue flu.” The study also found that employees closer to the coasts took more days off work. Employees in Maine, Florida, Texas and California took nearly twice as many personal days as their flatland counterparts in the Midwest. Here’s the deal. For only $14.95, you save 18% off coach fare to anyw here A m trak travels. It’s easy' with the A m trak College Travel Card. Simply p re sen t y o u r card and student ID . and you’re on your way. W hether it’s big plans in the Big Apple, booking to Boston, o r spending capital .in DC, th e re ’s no limit to the num ber of times you can use it. So pick one up a t the Philadelphia 30th Street, Paoli or North Philadelphia Station and s ta rt saving 15% today. The A m trak College Travel Card. It’s a big deal. W hat do smokes cost taj^ayers? College Press Service Twentysomethings take more sick days OM K ill m w f V f R Y T iM e y o u jmwt AMYWHfKf iMAMfRiCA; C all 1-800-U S A -R A IL, o r f ill out and m a il th e fo rm below. G e t YOUI? CO LLCG * TRAVKL CAPt TODAVl C all 1-800-USA-RAIL o r s im p ly c o m p le te th is f o rm a n d m ail lb a lo n g w ith $ H .9 D to; Amtrak CoUege Travel Card P.O. Box 7717, Itaaca IL 60143.7717 P le a s e do nob se n d ca.'jh. ; j C h eck en clo sed p a y a b le to A m tra k 1 ■ V isa N a m e ............................................................................... .............. * J! C a rd M a s te rC a rd ...................................................... Kx[). Dato_., HlgnaLiu ‘0 ______________________________________ SU ito. Z ip . If p a y in g b y ch eck allov/ il w eek s f o r d e liv e ry . If p a y in g b y c r e d it c a r d allov/ 1 v/e«k f o r d o liv o ry . T e le p h o n e C ollege______ Student ID #. —................. ........... ..... iSx AMTRAK' ora I I'Jnrfw irtif.i'idiwis fwid bld/jkoiii p«ri:x1« appjiy. ()tl« r i?o(xl M (or iravM t»;lw«>ua Mnr«li 17, 19i)C iui>1 31. 1905. 'riis lfi'*h di«»!urit U) oif fx-ak. oxciirf.son AU f / AtxVirtJ t'ftll Oi.-k.-(niitt lit v.ilid (.>!’ uluOoriVS of l.lnlvn'i'aili' of romi«ylv«uila, 81. .Jrijsoph’s, 1a Ball#, ^ Teinpla ui‘ VUi&firiva uiily, aiul iippiieiu l/j coauh truvel oniy. Call Ariiirak or youi* Uuvcl a ^ n l foe oompU^Ut d^uila wiii Aniiran or ynur uuvKi « » aa i 10 •The Triangle •April 14,1995 E d ito ria l & O tan io n T h e lH m ^ e nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm/mmmmmm Editorial Board Editor-in-Chief Ed-Op Editor a a John Gruber Jonathan Poet Adam Blyweiss Anh Dang Nick DiFranco Gina Di Vincenzo Denise Inman Patricia O’Brien Larry Rosenzweig Andrew Ross David Smith T h e b u c k s to p s h e re F in a n c ia l a id p r o b le m s a re n o t h i n g new . T h e s e v e ry pages have b een filled tim e a n d tim e again w ith stories o f fru strated stu d en ts w ho have sim ply ru n o u t o f m oney, a n d can n o lo nger afford to a tten d school here. It s aw ful, a n d th e Office o f Financial Aid is try in g to ch an g e it. It s a b o u t tim e th a t Financial A id reco gnized th e in eq u ity in s tu d e n t aw ards. F ro n t-lo ad in g financial aid packages to a ttra c t freshm en w h o w atch th eir aid do llars d isap p ea r over tim e is n o t only im p ro p e r — it s deceptive. S eniors have as m an y expenses as fresh m en , b u t get c o n siderably fewer dollars th ro u g h financial aid. Traditionally, se n io rs w ere assu m ed to b e m o re m a tu re a n d have m o re w herew ith al to h an d le loans. B ut sen io rs sh o u ld b e re w ard ed fo r ac adem ic progress, n o t penalized. T h a t ’s w h a t th e F in a n c ia l A id A s s u r a n c e P o lic y w ill h o p efully remedy. It gives the m o n e y to th o se w h o n ee d it — ac ro ss th e b o a rd . H ow ever, w e h av e n o t y e t seen th e p la n in fu ll a c tio n . In fa ct, p r e - j u n i o r s in t h e 1 9 9 5 -9 6 sch o o l year are th e first g ro u p w h o w ill see th e benefit. L o o k in g p a s t th e h y p e It’s u n fo rtu n a te th a t everyone at Drexel can ’t b e “g ra n d fa th e re d ” in to th e p ro g r a m to e n s u re t h a t th e ir re w ard s re m a in fair a n d equitable. U n fo rtu n ately , th e m o n e y ju st isn’t there to d o that. If th a t’s th e best a m o n e y -stra p p e d university can do, so b e it. W e’ve taken w hat we c o u ld get fro m F inancial A id in th e p ast, sim p ly b e c au se w e’ve always k n o w n w e w e ren ’t g o in g to get a n y th in g m o re , n o m a tte r w h o w e ask ed o r w h a t we did. B u t th is tim e it ju s t m ig h t b e d iffe re n t. S tu d e n ts ju s t m ig h t get w hat they deserve fro m th e day th ey e n te r to the day th ey graduate. W h e n all is said a n d d o n e , we are glad to see th e financial aid d istrib u tio n system re stru c tu re d , esp e c ia lly c o n s i d e r i n g t h e c u r r e n t f i n a n c i a l s t a t e o f t h e University. A lth o u g h m o n ey is tight, we ap p la u d th e a d m in is tra tio n fo r h a v i n g e n o u g h s e n s e to l o o k p a s t t h e s h o r t - t e r m re q u ire d in crease in th e F in a n cial A id b u d g e t to see th e lo n g -te rm benefits o f having s tu d e n ts w h o are satisfied they are receiving fair a n d co n sisten t fin an cial aid. N ow, if we co u ld only get th a t co -o p m o n ey to sto p slippin g th ro u g h o u r fin g e rs... S u b m is s io n P o lic y Guest columns, letters to the editor, and artwork may be sent to the attention of the Ed-Op Editor, The Triangle, 32nd and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 1 9 1 0 4 . They may also be sent via e-mail to [email protected] or delivered in person to 3 0 1 0 MacAlister Hall. All subm issions must include a name and phone number and should include an address and appropriate affiliations such as m ajor, y e a r of g r a d u a tio n , or o r g a n iz a tio n a l p o s it io n . Anonymous subm issions will not be published; authors’ nam es will only be withheld under special circumstances. Written p ie c e s should be p r e se n te d on d isk in MacWrite fo rm a t. The d e a d lin e for s u b m i s s i o n s is 5 : 0 0 p. m. on Wednesday of the week of publication. The Triangle reserves the right to edit for space, grammar, clarity and content. Letters to the Editor Preston announces bid for presidency talking with many of you, and I am very interested in what you might have to say. Until then, if you have any concerns, please feel free to contact me by e-mail at [email protected] or by phone at 386-1351. Editor: I w ould like to take this opp o rtu n ity to announce my Aaron Preston intention to run for the office of Architectural Engineering ’96 student body president in the upcom ing U n d erg rad u ate S tudent G overnm ent A sso ciation elections. I offer m yself as the m ost qualified candidate to run for Editor: the office of president. For the It was a dreary day. The sky past year, I have served as stu dent vice president of academic , was cloudy and it looked as if it was about to rain. It was around affairs and provost. In this posi one o’clock in the afternoon and tion I am heavily involved in we were all supposed to meet at USGA and University commit tees, serving as chairperson of Creese for the National Student Campaign Against Hunger and the USGA Futures Committee Homelessness Annual Hunger and the A cadem ic Affairs Cleanup Day. Committee. On this day we w ould go Last year I served as student dean of engineering where I was around cleaning up the campus an active force in both the USGA for the sake of the needy. You may ask what homelessness and and the College of Engineering. hun ger have to do w ith and I have also been involved with cleanup. a number of student organiza The H un g er Cleanup, is a tions, so I have the experience of working with many members of w ork-a-thon that raises funds for people and organizations in the Drexel community outside need, while students and com of student government. m unity members improve the To briefly outline my general area aro u n d them . You raise goals, I intend to position stu funds by asking friends and oth dent government to act as a cata ers to sponsor you for one dollar lyst within the University gover per hour to volunteer efforts in nance stru c tu re , im prove University services by gearing your community work project. Linda Arendt, director of stu them to student needs (we are dents com m unity service and the clients, a re n ’t we?), and bridge the gap between USGA programs, met with a group of eight students who were willing and its constituents. I am committed to achieve all to take part in this effort. No, that is not a typo, I said eight three of these goals and I honest students. This is a nationwide ly believe they are attainable. In the coming weeks I will be effort and only eight out of a few Community service is lacking thousand students showed up. Drexel lacks school spirit, but I th o u g h t we were strong in com m unity spirit. Especially with all these volunteer tutoring programs, mentoring programs, recycling programs, and so on. We are located right in the heart of the city and somehow we are totally oblivious to this fact. Every time someone goes to the 7-Eleven they should be reminded about where they are, especially with the ab u n d a n t homeless people who harass and beg for change in front of the store. Instead o f giying tl^em change all the time, you could have d o n ated m oney to this event. You d id n ’t necessarily have to come out and help clean the campus, just donating some m oney w ould have helped. However, nothing can replace the actual assistance from a fel low student in an effort to better his or her community, even if it may only be yours for about five years. I would to extend my thanks to Linda A rendt for being so supportive, even in the sight of such a low turnout. The brothers and sw eethearts o f Iota Phi T heta F ratern ity, Inc., A lphonsus Braggs, Edwin M on to u te, H ank M o rriso n , Monica Baptist and Diane King, as a group, raised nearly $200 for the event. T hanks also to Tramaine Dairs, Leslye Fulwider and Michelle Brown. And finally I would like to thank the physi cal plant employees Rick Pelullo, Jerry Reed and Calvin Mack for donating money to the cause. Edwin Montoute Computer Science '96 Let kids go where they want The Prolocutor Michael Busier Currently, Americans spend about $450 billion each year on public education. This figure represents an almost 65 percent increase in per stu d e n t cost since 1970. At the same time. Scholastic Aptitude Test scores have declined and U.S. students have finished near the bottom in three out of four academic achievement tests. Why? Most seem to agree that the reasons are the lack of account ability and the lack of participa tion by parents. These problems can be solved by instituting a voucher system into public edu cation as has recently been sug gested by P ennsylvania Governor Tom Ridge. C u rre n tly , in m ost areas, p u blic schools are v irtu ally unaccountable to parents. No matter what the quality of edu cation, the parents are forced to send their children to the school that is responsible to educate all children within that geographic area. Parents have no choice. This results in a feeling of frus tration which tends to lead to apathy. A voucher system could solve these problems. How? P aren ts w ould receive a voucher for each child of school age. These vouchers could be “spent” at any school the par- see BUSIER on page 13 TheTriangle *April 14,1995 *11 Don’t let the idiots Tales of Tom and Jerry, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and a penis drag you down after World War II. My father has akitas, Japanese dogs, and therefore we have been walking them in the parade for the past Tracy 11 years with about 30 other iX'f: Marcus walkers. For each parade, my dad and One should never underesti stepmom bring at least two of m ate hum an stu p id ity . The their dogs. This year, as last year, number of ill-informed people we b rou ght Baby and Gizzie. walking the planet continues to Baby is very dog aggressive. She boggle my mind. I was amazed will fight to the death if she or at the n um ber o f exam ples I Gizzie is approached or attacked could think of at the spur of the by another dog. As a result, my moment. brother and I would warn own I have found th a t people ers to keep their dogs away. everywhere have an unwilling To keep Baby and Gizzie ness to listen, especially when away from the other dogs, we they are shopping. I work in a stood near the wagon that held record store — I should know. the sw eatshirts w orn by the If a CD or tape is not in the bin walkers in the parade. To keep where it belongs, it means that the dogs separated from other we d o n ’t have any in stock. dogs, my stepmother was going After I explain this to the cus to the owners and giving them tomers, they continue to ask if their sweatshirts. we have it somewhere else. This one lady was walking People also walk into where I over to get a sweatshirt with her work and ask if we sell film. As I dog. As she got closer, my look around all I b ro th er warned see is a plethora her to keep clear o f CDs and My 80 pound dog of Baby. movies — does it almost killed a dog The w om an look like we sell re sp o n d ed by at least twice her shrugging and film? Last time I checked, we only kept com ing size. ca rried m usic closer. I repeated the warning, say an d m ovies. While I am politely explaining ing that Baby is very aggressive and she will fight w ith o th er this to the misguided individu dogs. I guess th e lady d id n ’t als, they get this blank look on th eir face, although I am not believe me because she kept on sure if they had that same look walking closer. I repeated what I said earlier, ad d in g th a t she before they asked about the film. almost killed a dog at least twice H ow a b o u t drivers in her size (she weighs about 80 P hiladelphia? O n a Sunday pounds) and didn’t think twice m orning I was shocked to see about it. I think the lady finally someone make a right turn onto 34th Street from Walnut Street got the m essage because she backed off waiting for my step despite the no-right-turn sign. mother to come to her. The driver then proceeded to I d o n ’t u n d e rs ta n d how m ake a left h an d tu rn o n to som eo n e co u ld be th a t p ig C hestnut Street, pu ttin g him headed. Even with several warn p o in te d west tow ards U pper Darby. Unfortunately, the road ings, she didn’t listen. I figure dog owners would know better, is a one-w ay street tow ards or at least be the first to listen to Center City. Not only are there blatantly warnings. I think if somebody told me their dog were aggres stu p id people on the planet, sive, I wouldn’t come near that there are also people who are dog. able to hide their stupidity. Last weekend I went to my Be on the lo o k o u t. Stupid people are everywhere. father’s house for the Cherry Blossom parade in Washington, Tracy Marcus is a senior major D.C. The parade celebrates the ing in electrical engineering. She Japanese gift of the cherry blos liates everybody. som tree to the United States Fade To Black TRIAN G LE E D -O P M A K E S PEOPLE FA M O U S . D o you k n o w h o w m a n y fo rm e r T ria n g le c o lu m n ists are m ega-su perstars now ? N e it h e r d o we, b u t w e b e t you th e r e are a lot. So, co m e a n d jo in t h e yutzheads, so you to o c a n o p in io n a te to y o u r h e a r t ’s c o n te n t. First of all, the dog does not die. He gets up in a few seconds and says, “This shouldn’t even happen to a dog!” to end the cartoon. Secondly, how many cartoons have shown somebody actually getting shot? Shooting a cartoon character just makes it turn all black and puts ribbons in its hair. As much violence as these cartoons portrayed, the characters always got up after wards. Even if we let these destroy ers of the First Amendment get away w ith no t show ing dogs commit suicide on TV, we must draw the line at making classic sumably hiding something on the outer edge of the frame that we shouldn’t see. Maybe there’s a blade of grass that looks like a Dave • penis, which no body ever noticed before (Sorry, th a t’s Sm ith Disney). We are under attack. There is Remember Tales from Vienna a subversive force in this coun Wood, where they set the timetry and it needs to be exposed. h o n o re d story of Porky Pig “What is he talking about?” h u n tin g Bugs B unny to the you ask. I’m talking about car soundtrack of some excellent toons. classical music? To many kids, Specifically, classic cartoons including myself, these cartoons like Bugs, Daffy, Tom and Jerry. represented an introduction to Three generations of children culture. The Blue Danube, Ride have been raised on two hours o f the Valkyries, H ungarian o f Bugs and Daffy every Rhapsody. What other cartoons Saturday morning. These used such classics? shows let parents sleep in Of course you’ll never w ith o u t th e ir ch ild ren see any H anna Barbera Saturday morning cartoons robbing liquor stores for ca rto o n s g ettin g c e n let parents sleep in without sored. They made 412 dif fun. They also teach chil dren the fundamentals of ferent cartoons and they their children robbing liquor were life, such as: Dogs chase all clones of Scooby stores for fun. cats, cats chase mice, and Doo. Think about it — mice are fencing experts. Clue Club, Josie and the Personally, I spend a Pussycats. Scary, huh? lot of time watching cartoons. cartoons politically correct. I th in k som eone w ants to The th ree types o f shows I I was watching an old Tom keep America dumb by forcing watch on television are sitcoms, and Jerry cartoon, one o f the us to watch crappy cartoons like ones where Tom is owned by Popeye (one plot, five million cartoons, and The Love Boat. that Cajun lady. They redubbed episodes). The Flintstones (read And I watch a lot of television. T he p ro b lem is th a t these as “The Honeymooners”), and her voice. In the original, she cartoons, role models for more Captain Planet (Some purplehad a neat Cajun accent that than half of our nation’s popu skinned freak saving the earth added to th e h u m o r o f the lace, are being censored. show. Now, she sounds like a from th e S tyrofoam c o m p a Rem em ber the Bugs Bunny cross between June Cleaver and nies). I, for one, am not going to cartoon where he’s being chased Mary Tyler Moore. stand for it. I’ve been watching by that big, stupid dog with the I understand that they proba violent cartoons for almost 20 red hair, and they end up under bly changed it because the origi nal may have been derogatory years now and it hasn’t affected water, and the dog finally catch es him and makes him into a or stereotypical, but th at’s no me. big rabbit sandwich? They cen I’m going straight down to excuse. If you can’t broadcast sored it. When the dog thinks my congressm an’s office and the original untouched, d o n ’t dropping an anvil on his head he’s killed Bugs, he pulls out a broadcast it at all. I ’ve also n oticed on m any — Acme brand. gun and shoots himself in the occasions an unnatural zoom in head. They blacked o u t th at Dave Smith is a senior majoring certain parts of some cartoons. shot, m uch like the infamous frog scene in Beavis and They zoom in for a few seconds in computer science. He drives a car that folds up into a suitcase. and zoom back out again, pre Butthead (“Eat it! Eat it!”). The World’s Address Come to our M BA Open House and fmd out w hy K ie G oum iaii Report rated Drexel second to W lia ilo n m C -.C C ., Stop by the Mandell Theater in MacAlister Hall at 33rd & Chestnut from 9:30am to Noon and find out about our new deferred payment plan. Those who attend become eligible to win an IBM ThinkPad! To register (215) 895-2115 today 11k Dteid MBAOpenHouse. Satntday, April 22. T r ia n g le Ed'Op 10 M.u Ali^u•r DREm u N IV E Rs r i y 12 •TheTriangle *April 14,1995 D r e x e l U n iv e r s ity C A R E E R F A IR Freshman*Sophomores* Juniors •Seniors*Graduate Students APRIL 19. 199S 10:00 a.m. • 3:00 p.m. Creesa Student Center ........Meet wtth employer representatives to explore future co-op and pennanent job options........... Volunteer alumni career advisors will also be available to answer questions about a wide-range of career fields including library science, technical consulting, management infonnation science, finance, accounting and many more.....__ PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS Adam’s Marie Hotel ADP IBM ALK Associates Intelligence at Large American Express Rnandal Advisors J.C. Penney Company, Inc. American Management Systems JaneilBerte Andersen Consulting Johnson & Johnfibn Arthur Andersen Keyboiud Publishing AT&T KraftFoods Bensaiem Youth Development Center LC. Wegard Bio-Phami Clinical Services Lemmon Company Botfs Stores Lenox inc. Car-Tel Communications, Inc. McNeil Consumer Products CGI Systems Inc. CIGNA Corporation Merdt & Company Merrill Lynch Comcast Celiuiar Communications MetLiie(NJ) Computers for the Professionai MetUie(PA) Contemporaiy Staffing Motorola Deioitteft Touche Northwestern Mutual Lite Simulate Inc. Dialogic Nonwest Finandai SSS Clutch Company Inc. Dictaphone Corporation Oide Discount The Pnjdential AARP Operations Digital Equipment PA Dept of Transportation Thomas Jeftorson Universify Dopaco Peace Corps of the U.S. Tnimp Plaza Hotel and Casino DuPont Pennoni Assodatas Inc. U.S. Healthcare EMAX Solution Partners, Inc. Philadelphia Suburban Water Company U.S. Restaurants Entsrprise Rent-A-Car Price Watemouse UNISYS Fannie Mae Primavera Systems Vanstar Corporation RrstUSABanIt Radio Shack Wallace Computer Senrices Rshbein & Company P.C. Roadway Pad<age System, Inc. Flanagan Finandai Group Rodel, Inc. GBC RWD Technologies GMAC Mortgage SAiC/Signal Technology Divison Hermans Sporting Goods Select Office Systems ICON Clinical Research Co-Sponsored by The C areer Majiagejnent C en ter and The G eneral A iunni A sso cia tio n TheTriangle»April 14,1995»18 C h o ic e w ill le a d th e w a y to b e t t e r s c h o o ls B USLERfrom page 10 ents felt would provide the best education for their child. O bviously m ost -p a ren ts would prefer to have their chil dren attend the school that is closest to their home. However, if this school failed to provide the best quality education, the p aren ts could select an o th e r school. The p o o rly -ru n schools w ould th en see a declin e in enrollment, which would force them either to improve or dis miss teachers. Most would find it is in th e ir best in te re s t to improve the quality of educa tion. aid from the federal o r state reason to believe that the total Some economists have argued governm ent could be used at cost would increase. that this system may be too cost any school. Some argue we cou ld see ly to im plem ent. However, in The schools p ro v id in g the schools with enrollment so low reality, it may not cost any more best education would receive the that they w ould be forced to than the c u rre n t sys close. Fine, we would answer — if a school tem, and may in fact be VOUCheV SVStem WOUld Ctld less costly in the long t >. » « >. cannot provide a good term. the htgh-cost, low-quahty quality education, send the students elsewhere. p e r« n ? o 7 s'c V o o °L d “ If hardships were creat ing com es from local ed for some local resi governments, while the dents, provisions could rem a in in g 60 p e rc e n t com es greatest number of “free choice” be made to provide transporta from either the federal or state students and therefore the most tion. government. aid. D istricts p ro v id in g low Once parents discovered that W hile local g o v e rn m e n t quality education would see a schools would be forced to be would continue to support its decline in revenue as enrollment accountable, feelings of frustra own schools, the voucher for the dropped. There is, however, no tion would leave and they would education that has been offered to the public over the past 25 years. tend to be m ore vocal. This would also serve to encourage further participation. The voucher system would end the high-cost, low-quality education that has been offered to the public over the past 25 years. It would serve to encour age parental participation and allow for choice. The quality o f e d u c atio n would vastly improve and the cost would probably be affected very little. Virtually everyone wins. M ichael Busier is a two tim e graduate of Drexel pursuing a Ph.D. in economics. Attention student organizations: y o u r a d c o u ld b e in th e p a p e r fo r The Triangle H e re 's th e d e a l: if y o u 'r e a n o fficially r e g is te r e d s tu d e n t o rg a n iz a tio n ^ d r o p o ff y o u r c a m e r a - r e a d y a d a t T h e T ria n g le , 3 0 1 0 M a c A liste r H all, fo r e a c h F r i d a / s p a p e r b y th e W e d n e s d a y b e f o r e a t 5 p .m . In c lu d e th e n a m e o f y o u r s tu d e n t o r g a n iz a t i o n a n d a c o n ta c t n a m e a n d n u m b e r. T h e a d s m u st b e 4 . 8 in c h e s w i d e b y 3 . 5 in c h e s tall. HOT. Burn, baby, burn —disco inferno. Power Macintosh"* 7100 AV w/CD MAC. Not the burger, pal—the killer computer. 16MBRAM/700MBharddrive, CD-ROMdrive, 15" color display, keyboardand mouse. N ow $383 Cheap. Not as cheap as a taco, but hey. Color StyleWriter* 2400 Ink cartridgeand cable included. withtheApple*ComputerLoanand90-DayDeferredPaymentPlan,youcantakehomeaMac'withPAY NOTHING FOR 90 DAYS. Beingastudentishard.SoweVemadebuyingaMacintoshTeasy.Soeasy,infact,thatprices outhavingtomakeasinglepaymentforupto90days.Whichmeansyoucanalso A takehomethepowertomakeanystudentslifeeasier.Thepowertobeyourbest! xippi6 onMacintoshpersonalcomputersarenowevenlowerthantheiralreadylowstudentprices.And For further information contact the Equipment Support Group • 895-1755 Call for Store hours! *Your price might differ according to mandatory Drexel University software purchase requirements. Prices do not include 7% Pennsylvania sales tax. ’D ^ m d Apple Computer Loan # r expiresJune 2,1995. Nopaymen! ofprincipal or mterest will be requiredj pqymenJ is an estimate estimate based based on on a a toUilkan lotalloan amount amount of of t3,47030,w f3,170S0, lm indudes a sarnplepurchaseprice of t3,280 and a 6.0% loan origim ^n fie fa r the i’owerMacintosb 7100 system simm above. The monthlypaymentfor the totd loan amount mscribed above would have been $59 The interest is variable based on the commercialpaper rateplus 535%. For example, the month ( / February 1995 bad an interest rate of 1157% with an Annual I’ercentage Rate (APR) of1332% The monthly^ m e n i and theAPR shorn assuma 90-day d^erloan term m e n tq fp rin ^ and interest as described above, and no other dgermentqfprindpal and does not include slate sales tax. Productprices, ‘ ------ <----------------------- —j - i - *........ .....— f i - — 8-year o -------------------with no pr^ayment •Book, LaserWMter Select, Color penalty and is subject to credit approval. Prequatificalion expedites the loan process but does not guaranteefinal loan approval © 1995 Tblearn more (US. only), call 800-776siyleVMier and ‘Toepower to beyour best" are registered trademarks ofApple Computer, inc. PowerMacintosh and Mac are trademarks 2333 orW D 800-833-6223. r . 14* TheTriangle*April 14,1995 GoltegeLife AFewThingsTbKnow KMOIV* wH*cK •ff-campM/ w'f^l buy b i c k y e a r u/ed S ^ r t t j c H o o k s -f cir more f h ^ n i s 4 t^cM. ll^ U O W : W ^ i c k * ' 3 0 - r r » i n M + € y - o r - i t ' J - f r e t ” pizza place CilwayS Tak€5 eir^ctly m'mutcs K n o w : w h ic h ^ M a rfC r-e a tin 5 M 4 c k ih e $ 4o « v i^ la u n c lro iw d i* a v o iJ . KA/owTHf c o p e : IT A W A /X c o i n I f J f TMA<» I'# o o - C O IL K T Hc)5on cx)llege campuses those “in the know” are the ones who rule And it’s not just about being smart in the classroom, it’s about being wise with your wallet as well. So if you want a great low price on a collect call, just dal 1 800-CALL-ATE.It always costs less^Aan 1-800-COLLECT Altmys. There are lots of tricky things for ypu to learn at college, but here’s something that’s easy: KNOWTHE CODE, and save the person on the other end some serious money ^ u ’ll be glad you did. I W - L.-i- . : 'Promotions excluded l-«00-COIiBCT“ is a service mark of M a L c lia L l 1 ISlOlO Al Ll L 8M ALWAYS^ COSTS LESS THAN 1 - 8 0 0 - ! 5 0 L L E C T . * Ifo u r T h ie W c e .' ART 01995AI&T TheTriangle*^ril 14,1995«IB “Yeah, but who cares?” - Lou Costello HJWMbit “ , - ' ^ , 1 1 4 “U 'B e l f » e i u B < l* " r t V j .' theAnnenbergCent9>;86^. 4 Student tickets $12, adijt tickets $25. fM 1? ^ « ■ ' Tickets $10«$24. Call 8931145. m THE ISSUE IS H U M A N R IG H TS The Group Is < In t e m a t t o n a ] The Next Meeting Is Thursday at 7 PM /^nil 20,1995 3018 MacAlister The Resident Student Association would like to thank.all those who helped to make our YO U H A V E N T FO U N D A JO B YETI 16th Annual Monte Carlo Night a huge success. ‘ , We especially thank the Drexel University Departments, Student Organi^tions, and Local Businesses listed below for their generous donations: . Campus Activities Board (CAB). Vice Provost for Student Life Vice Provost for Enrollment Management Vice Provost for Graduate Research Drexel Athletic Department Office of Residential Living rhe Bagel Authority University of Cards My Favorite Bagel and Muffin Cafe The Franklin Institute Veem Village Pizza Saturn Club Ed's Buffalo Wings Zipperhead Romano’s Pizza Allegro Pizza Astrobike Powelton Piz7^ Sanctuary Futons McDonald's Moish's Addison Bakery Cinnabon The Philadelphia Museum of Art T h a n k y o u f o r y o u r s u p p o r t! 100 Companies $10^ that's all nothing else. Remember! Deadline: April 21, 1995 resume. We'll send Don't spend a fo ies in; PA. NY, NJ. & your resume to the t pany. PREPARE your DB for as little as 10 iwn format. Bring us a resume NOW! Choos^ Deadline: April 284995 See copy of your r^um6, and ^ Business office Rm. 108 for Sbtails, 1st. flr. Matheson. 16 •TheTriangle •April 14,1995 E n t e r t a in m e n t A n n u a l s p r i n g c l e a n in g For the third consecutive year, we present a compendium of short reviews we couldn't get to over Spring Break. vocals herald a new age for new age. With PATH, environm ental music proves it needn’t be repetitive, cheesy or relegated to elevators and soundtracks. Adam Blyweiss News Editor Massive Attack • Protection • Virgin Records America • Fitting ambient dub with u nderstated British soul, the Massives’ followup to Blue Lines echoes safe jazz (“Weather Storm”) or Gang Starr (“Eurochild”) or, most often, techno love songs. Save for “ K arm acom a” and a really not supposed to find m erit in a band that got rid of the electronic weird ness which made their first two LPs stand out. You’re not supposed to say good things about a band that’s now little more than Rage Against the Chili Peppers. Somehow, tho u g h , H o lla n d ’s U rban Dance Squad still find the occasional groove on album number three. But while ▲A A l/2 Urban Dance Squad • Persona Non Grata • Virgin Records America • You’re .«ml)ient |ourne/ from windham hill Courtesy WIndam Hill Records dreadful take on the Doors’ “Light My Fire,” Protection is one offer you v^on’t refuse — an ideal soundtrack for taking hits, pulling tokes, or jerking tears. massive a tta c k songs like “Demagogue,” “Downer” and “(Some) Chitchat” make your head nod, you wonder how much longer vocalist Rudeboy and the boys can fool everyone. AAA AAAl/2 Various Artists • PATH: An Ambient Journey from Windham Hill • Windham Coufteay Vtfgin Records Courtesy Onlon/Wht Lbls/Amerlcar) Recordings Hill • While the label’s first legit dance floor entry in recent memory won’t get many people stomping their feet, it will set aglow many a chill-out room. Bringing together borderline celebrities (M ark Isham, Global Communication) and vir tual unknowns (Uman, Tim Story), the album’s guitars, trumpets, low-end per cussion and Manhattan-Transfer-in-a-box Milk Cult • Burn or Bury • Basural/Priority • Imagine a pastiche of Beastie Boy grooves, the Boredoms’ dense wall of noise, and a few well-placed, angst laden Nine Inch Nails vocal outtakes. Such resembles Milk Cult’s Bum or Bury, and the low-end avant-noise is sometimes repetitive, often frightening. Listen if you dare. AAl/2 Courtesy Virgin Records see CLEANING on page 18 JjU Thomas Jefferson? Non, merci Jason Woemer Staff W rite r So what is Jefferson in Paris about? To answer, I must refer to Pulp Fiction. There are three ways to look at both films, and each will result in a different answer to the above question. At first glance, Jefferson in Paris seems to be about the five years our third president spent in France, serving as the American ambassador. Looked at in the same way, Pulp Fiction is about a bunch of criminals. Watching only the first and last scenes of Jefferson in Paris, the viewer would understandably come to the conclusion that the film attem pts to explain why Jefferson freed a number of his slaves shortly after his return from France. Applying the same process to Pulp Fiction, the viewer would think it is the story of how Pum pkin and Honey Bunny barely escaped a botched diner holdup. But the real story, as usual, is different. Just as Pulp Fiction is really about redemption (if you don’t believe me, ask Q uentin), Jefferson in Paris is really about rivalries. Jefferson’s tim e in France coincided with the birth of the French Revolution; the French liberals were striving to create a democracy more perfect than the Americans’. Jefferson’s oldest daughter Patsy^played brilliantly by Gwyneth pStrow, is constantly at odds with his lovers: First, the English/Italian aristo- A. BORREL/Suena Vista Pictures SETH RUBIN/Buena Vista Pictures Left: Thomas Jefferson (Nick Nolte) puts the moves on his slave girl, Sally Hemings (Thandie Newton). Right: Jefferson falls in love with Maria Cosway (Greta ScacchI) during his term as French Ambassador. crat M aria Cosway (Greta Scacchi), and later his slave and youngest daughter’s nurse, Sally Hem ings (T handie New ton). M aria Cosway m ust com pete with the memory of Jefferson’s dead wife. Jefferson and Sally’s brother, James (Seth Gilliam), also his slave, vie for Sally’s loyal ty* The conflicts are numerous, but do they mesh and weave to form a riveting, touching story? Not really. Jefferson in Paris certainly isn’t boring; but it doesn’t contain the depth and punch of previous Merchant Ivory productions like The Remains of the Day and Howards End, Nick N o lte’s portrayal of Thomas Jefferson reminded me of a nickel: It looked like him, but that’s about it. Bringing to life an American legend might be too much for anyone. Try to think of an actor who could convincingly portray George Washington or Martin Luther King, Jr. Jefferson in Paris does have its good points, though. It is beauti fully photographed by Pierre Lhomme and features wonderful perform ances by T handie Newton and Simon Callow as M aria Cosway’s ’ Hand, Richard. The score uy Kicnard Robbins is definitely worth buy ing (I wish I had gotten one of the free ones they were giving out at the theater). But I’m afraid if Samuel L. Jackson were to ask John Travolta, “what do they call Thomas Jefferson in Paris?” he w ould probably respond: “A royale with Z’s.” Film M fe n o n In Parit Nick Nolto, Grata Scacchi D irected by Jam es Ivory Touchstone Pictures The Triangle *April 14,1995 *17 ‘Priest’ hasn’t got a prayer Steven D. Segal S taff W rite r Poised to inaugurate a new wave o f controversy from an angry church th at equals the hubb ub over 1988’s The Last Temptation of Christ, Miramax’s film Priest is such a preposter ous, overblown, and ultimately underwhelming experience that most viewers are likely to suspect that the furor surrounding the film is m erely a n o th e r s tu n t cooked up by the movie’s publicity-junlde distributor solely to ignite ticket sales. Father Greg (Linus Roache) is the naive, ambitious new priest at a church in a working-class section of Liverpool. The man who previously held Father Greg’s position went berserk and rammed a big cross through the Courtesy Miramax Rims bishop’s window (if you can’t Linus Roache plays a homosexual priest in Miranfiax’s new film. contain your laughter during be a frustrated homosexual and scenes of Father Greg’s gay love these opening moments, watch affair have justifiably tu rn ed his one night stand is w ith o u t ...). How curious, this saint many a clergymen’s hair white, another man. A gay priest — ly man’s unruly behavior! Father the movie becomes a casualty of w hat an abo m in atio n ! P oor Greg’s new colleague, he soon its own provocative intentions, Father Greg, wrestling w ithin discovers, is a b o o ze -h o u n d failing to live up to its own hype. himself over his unending flight who’s also sleeping with their Scorned by his bishop, into tem ptation and his secret colored maid. How shocking shunned and disparaged by his homosexuality, and struggling that a man of the cloth would congregation, Father Greg seeks d rin k and forsake his vow o f over the matters at hand within that all-important self-anointed his parish. He’s torn between his chastity! devotion to the church and his answ er to his confusion and Later, a school girl confesses despair and eventually to Father Greg that her father is sexually abusive. Father Greg is torn between his finds himself walking on the very S hould he intervene, devotion to the church and his alone beach where he and his thereby breaking the seal of the confessional? Or self-awareness that he can never gay lover had previous ly frolicked. Aiid as the should he sit idly by and live up to its saintly principles. strains of “You’ll Never watch this poor girl suf Walk Alone” gush up, fer such indignities? Oh, the humanity! you cringe at the film’s H ow m addening, this pretentious symbolism and its self-awareness that he can never crisis of duty and conscience! overw rought em oting. Again, The plot device of whether or live up to its saintly principles. oh, the humanity! Oh, the humanity! not FaAer Greg should divulge Viewers m ore to le ra n t or Director Antonia Bird is obvi secrets revealed in confession is ously deliberately pushing a few oblivious to such snicker-induc overused, but Priest adds to this ing excessiveness are at least hot buttons here, stirring the cliche by piling on an o th e r hornet’s nest and flaring a few bound to find Priesfs im pact moral dilemma that is supposed and implications far less shatter tempers. Yet the film feels less an to be the film’s shocking core. ing than its makers — or its pro indictm ent of the church and Late one night, F ather Greg testers — think. It also doesn’t m ore an a irin g -o u t o f the rem oves his choker, p u ts on help that the plot seems to shift c h u rc h ’s d irty lau n d ry ; for civilian clothes, bikes to a local its political and m oral focus nobody in this day and age could bar and picks up what he hopes repeatedly: I was never quite convincingly argue that the film will be a one night stand. And sure if the film was about a priest this is where the makers of Priest is simply outlandish, unthink who happens to be gay, dr if it able fiction. A nd while the seem to think they’re rocking the see PRIEST on page18 m uch-ballyhoo ed “e x p licit” world: Father Greg is revealed to Site ofth« week ^ ril« tdit Ul«u» to ■oolim«rt« Optlopi Dlftloni H»l» Nattcapa: ThaCapl.Jamai T.Kir*$tna-a-lanaraga C»> »«* NM M €i\ TMtIM KlaDMamUMIlMlMMl UOlBHlI i, Advance Screening Tickets! ‘Bad Boys’ are back in town Steven D. Segal S ta ffW rite r How well you enjoy this ener gized Beverly Hills Cop and Lethal Weapon clone depends on how willingly you su rre n d e r y o u r cynicism and com m on sense at the front door. Will Sm ith and the h ereto fo re unbearably annoying M artin Lawrence pair up as two Miami narcotic cops after a stolen ship ment of dope. The cop/buddy-m ovie ro u tines are piled on with a shovel, but the repartee between Smith and Lawrence extends way beyond a simple series of con sta n t verbal snaps and p u t downs. Surprise! They’re not only very funny, but they make credible action heroes, too. W ith its ultra-gloss, sweaty photography, its razor-sharp, rapid-fire editing, its over-styl ized violence, and a heavy dose of macho male machismo and unm istakable misogyny, Bad Boys is the most entertaining JOHN FARMER/Co/umb/a Pictures Martin Lawrence and Will Smith star in Bad Boys. Tony Scott movie not actually directed by Tony Scott. Admittedly, there’s something refreshing ab out the m ovie’s anti-PC subversiveness lurking just beneath the surface. Rookie directo r M ichael Bay’s back ground is in music videos and com m ercials — if th a t’s n o t immediately obvious, find your- self another hobby. This is the sort of high-octane, er, trash that H ollyw ood thrives on. You might just enjoy it in spite of yourself. AAA% F ilm Bad Boy9 Martin Uwrmico, Will Smtth D irected by M ich ael Bay Columbia Pictures The Triangle and Twentieth Century Fox want to send you and a friend to see “Kiss of Death”, starring David Caruso, Samuel L. Jackson and Nicholas Cage. To get your tickets, come down to the Triangle office and say, “black bugs blood” five times fast. “Kiss o f D eath ” opens Friday, April 21 18 *TheTriangle *April 14, 1995 Stepfathers D u s t o f f th o s e C D s CLEANING from page 16 Various Artists • Harthouse: Axis of Vision • Onion/Wht Lbls/Amcrican Recordings • The latest in American’s Harthouse series crystallizes today’s most danceable incarnations of electronic dance music. Work by the likes of Hardfloor, Spicelab, Arpeggiators and Cybordelics aggressively pro motes the merits of techno’s hard trance and jungle subgenres. Be glad the two LPs come speciallypriced; Axis of Vision is so hot, it might just get fused to your Sony’s innards. Prick • Prick • Nothing/Interscope • Aaagh! They replaced T rent Reznor with Mott the Hoople! W ho does this Prick think he is? The Gipsy Kings • AAAl/2 Oystein Sevag • Global House • Windham Hill • The label heralds the album as pianist SevSg’s syn thesis of jazz, classical, ambient and world music. Strangely enough, the result sounds like a really bad new-age LP. SevSg and his friends swerve between frightening instrum ental mixes OF THE (check out the bon gos and gothic organ on “Song from the P la n e t”) and the peaks — or valleys — of tinkly feel-good shit. By the halfway p o in t o f Global House, SevSg’s music fades so far into the background it’s like listening to nothing at all. You’ll vdsh. ▲▲▲A A THE B E S T The Best of the Gipsy Kings • N onesuch • not before exorcising his personal demons for a nationwide listening audience. Parts of Me Against the World come down to Dr. Dre’s level of hip-hop songcraft, namely the title cut and “Lord Knows.” But the majority of the album is rife with headnoddin’ mellowness (Digable Planets, anyone?). And tracks like “If I Die 2nite” and “Old School” show, sadly, that even if 2Pac’s stories aren’t the nicest, his lyrical flow will be sorely missed. Call Shakur a runaway slave to the rhythm. Save for the absence of “No Vivir^,” from their recent Love & Liberti LP, and the presence of a brittle m e g a m ix -m e d le y , this is a fine, fierce in tro d u c tio n to today’s premier Latin fla m e n c o -p o p troupe. 1/2A AAAA H.P. ________________________ ________________________ Zinker Mountains of Madness • Energy • Once again treading that fine line between fierce and whiny, this German trio proves they are one of the tightest combos the world has never known. Structured musical epics (“Fortress of Fears,” “Stalker”) mingle with the occasional screamer (the H.P. Lovecraft-inspired title track) and other indie-rock that comes down from the hinterlands to kick the Archers’ asses. AAAA 2Pac • Me Against the World • Interscope • After getting hit with bullets and jail time, Tupac Shakur is quitting his somewhat-sordid “Thug Life,” but T h e r e a i n ’t T h e r e ’s n o je lly Courtesy Nonesuch Records John l^e Hooker • Chill Out * Pointblank • I first heard bits of Chill Out in a crowded office. As I pieced together a stark solo work, the blues guitar master seemed a Johnny Cash wannabe, hoping to shed light on some dark corner of his soul with a few well-picked notes. After a full listen, it seems Hooker’s music doesn’t do that on this album. Unfortunately, v^th recently acclaimed work with the likes of Bonnie Raitt, the cool sounds of “Too Young,” “Kiddio” and the like don’t do much of anything. Even heavy-hearted old bluesmen shouldn’t be so tired that they rest on their laurels. AAl/2 h e r e . Mudhoney found whatever they lost. The songs are rough and raw. Mudhoney is the other half, There is a slower dirge, “In My the dark side, the Cain of the Finest S u it,” rem iniscent of Seattle grunge scene. W hen Green River split up nearly a tunes from earlier Mudhoney. “Crankcase Blues” has the funky decade ago, three members went jam feel from earlier tunes like to M other Love Bone (which “H ere Com es Sickness” and later evolved into Pearl Jam and “Good E n o u g h .” “Execution its side projects) and the other Style” is loud and yelling. two, M ark Arm and Steve “Orange Ball-Peen Hammer” is Turner, formed Mudhoney. slower and telling. Since the late 80s, the fourThat last song, with its mockpiece band has released four fulllength albums and several EPs co u n try feel, also m ocks Led Zeppelin as Arm sings, “Squeeze and singles. The first EPs, Superfuzz Bigmuff and Boiled my o ra n g e/’til the juice runs Beef and Rotting Teeth, are avail down my leg.” “ 1995” is remi niscent of slower, heavier tunes able on one long play cassette or like “Dead Love,” complete with CD now, and rank as the unoffi a M udhoney signature guitar cial stepfather of grunge. solo near the end. Grunge itself was a fad, disap The second song and. first sin pearing as quickly as flannel gle, “Generation softens, and Spokesmodel,” is bands are h esi tant to be labeled Grunge was a fad, a p u t dow n o f such. The latest disappearing as pretty-boy bands. They even get releases of Pearl quickly as flannel political in Jarn, Soundgarden, and Alice in softens, and hands “F.D.K. (Fearless Doctor Killers)”: Chains defy this are hesitant to be “Save the c la s s if ic a tio n . babies/K ill the The latest release labeled such. doctor ... /I’m all from M udhoney for life/’til that bastard’s born ...” redefines it. Some of the lyrics are d is Jack Endino, the man respon tracting to the music, however, sible for creating the Seattle Sub such as A rm ’s howling in the Pop sound, returns to produce b eginnin g of “ In My Finest My Brother the Cow. Suit,”: “I d o n ’t rem em ber the Missing, sadly, is the organ day I was born/but I clearly see featured in the last two Mudhoney albums. Every Good the day I’ll die.” T here’s also Boy Deserves Fudge (1991) and something about cows milking Piece of Cake (1992), and their blood which gets in the way of latest, lousiest, EP, Five Dollar an otherw ise good song in Bob's Mock Cooter Stew EP. “Today is a Good Day.” R eturnin g, happily, is the All in all. My Brother The Cow Superfuzz Bigmuff distortion of is a worthwhile and refreshing effort from one o f the bands Arm and T u rn e r, the rolling who helped create but remains drum beats of Dan Peters and in the shadow some of today’s the bo o m in g bass o f M att m ost p o p u la r b an ds. I t ’s a Lurkin. T urner breaks out his reminder that they are the culti slide for the first notes of the vators and kings of the Seattle first song, “Judgm ent, Rage, sound. Retribution, and Thyme.” And away we go. ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ M usic Piece of Cake was a well-liked My Brother The Cow and catchy album, but I always IMudhoney felt it was missing something. Produced by Jack Endino an d M u d h o n e y . For My Brother The Cow, Reprise Records Chad Corn StaffW riter ‘Priest’ falls short of samthood o n ly PRIESTfrom page 17 J u n e 2 , 3 , 4 C AMTVfActfHtviniifv nVlTICIiOARP pmmt was about a gay man who hap pens to be a priest (thematically, there’s a difference). With regard to the film’s overt biblical sym bolism , less m ight have been m ore: In scenes o f in tended e m o tio n al crescendo. B ird’s heavy-handedness thwacks in w ith b ru te force what would have been m ore effective with merely an ounce of subtlety. A few days after seeing Priest, I came to a rather interesting conclu sion . The very same movie, played w ord-for-w ord and scene-for-scene, would have been the year’s most hilarious, over-the-top comedy had it been performed by the Monty Python troupe, and therein lies the film’s biggest problem — it’s hard to take all this stuff very seriously. Several scenes in Priest reach a level of such absurdity not wit nessed since Christopher Reeve broke every priestly vow imagin able in the laughable camp clas sic Monsignor (rem em ber that one?). I may indeed go straight to hell for saying this, but that’s the only way I can describe the inescapable feeling of schizo phrenia and pomposity that sur rounds Priest. Film The P rie ti Unus RoaciM D irected by A n ton ia Bird Miramax Rims The Triangle *April 14,1995 *19 F u g azi scolds jocks fo r m oshing Chad Gom Anthony Tamaccio StaffW riters Fugazi rolled in to the T ro cad ero for two sold o u t shows April 1 and 2. We arrived in just enough time to miss the first two bands. You see, fans waiting to see Fugazi are intoler ant of opening bands. Their rep utation precedes them , if you never saw them live. They sell out wherever they play, and they will not play for more than five dollars. T h a t’s a rule w hich they’ve enforced since their birth in 1986. “For five dollars,” says Ian MacKaye, singer and gui tarist, “we can suck.” We’ve seen them live five times now, and they have never sucked. They are still as energetic and capable as they were when Chad first saw them here at Drexel in 1991. Their recent tour has taken them through South America and North America, and eventu ally into Europe. That’s pretty good for a band w hich was rum ored to have disbanded at the begin ning o f th e year. Guitarist/vocalist Guy Picciotto had left Fugazi’s native W ashington D.C. to move to Seattle with his then girlfriend. Rumors had been passed around eased a few songs into the show hoped th ey’d do. They only th a t this was the nail in the when Guy asked, “How’s every played two songs from In On Fugazi coffin. Fortunately for us, one doing?” One woman in the The Killtaker, their latest album firont proclaimed, “The jocks are (1993) and only one fi'om Steady Picciotto’s relationship d idn’t last and we got to see this killing us!” You see, a certain Diet of Nothing {1991). They incredible band at least once group of testosterone junkies played nothing from their sec more. had been m uch m ore violent ond EP, Margin Walker. The concert started in normal than Anthony’s meager stompThe band treated us with a Fugazi fashion. That is, with a ings. Guy thanked the woman plethora of new songs along with lecture fi*om Ian MacKaye. The for p o in tin g th a t o u t and a solid muc of old favorites. The b an d has this re p u ta tio n for launched into a tirade about new tunes were a m ixture of scolding the crowd before the how Fugazi is about “a melding solid soft rh ythm s and hard o f body and m usic to form a attacks, a staple which makes first song is even played. They are extrem ely an tiFugazi so exciting. In m osh and anti-crow d one song, Guy Picciato su rf and d o n ’t have a Fugazi is about “a melding of body was playing a riff that p ro b lem expressing and music to form a cumulative sounded alm ost like l^uesy rock-and-roll. their viewpoints. This experience ofunion^ Also, the silent bass stance n o rm ally gets player Joe Lally, who m ixed reactions from cum ulative experience o f normally never leaves his post fans, but the crowd on this night union.” He continued by asking next to d ru m m er B rendan was in near unanimous support the guys in the front to ease off Canty, managed to sing a song. of the anti-surf credo. Ian also and to enjoy the show. Does His voice was barely audible, and requested that the house lights Fugazi lecture too much? We he was practically a statue next be left on for the duration of the don’t think so, they are just try to the bouncing MacKaye and show. ing to watch out for the people Picciato, but the audience gave At first, Anthony was particu who get tread on at small-venue, him its su p p o rt nonetheless. larly conscious of his jum ping G uitarists MacKaye and general attendance shows. around as the band started off They went on to play four Picciotto seem to be of the elite with “Brendan #1,” an instru more songs firom that album, as group of musicians who truly m ental from Repeater (1990). well as three from their debut understand that bodily motions A nthony asked himself, was I EP, including an extra long ver influence the guitar as much as jumping around too much? Will sion of “Suggestion,” which we plucking the strings will. Masters Ian point me out for the scofflaw have yet to see live, but always o f feedback and not afraid to th a t I am? His w orries were flaunt it, they will catch you by surprise if you are looking for the normal rock riffs. The two will jump around the stage try ing to elicit the m ost unique sounds fi'om their instruments. Fugazi can be described as punk jazz. They certainly have some hardcore sensibilities and motives, but the feel is one of unpredictable dram atic jazz. Also, they achieve what Chad calls musical polygamy. They have one of the best rhyAm sec tions in all of music; the bass and drums are happily married, but the phrasing and style of the gui tar and vocals are completely in sync with the rhythm. The parts of songs are perfect matches, and the orchestrations they provide are indicative of pure songwriting talent. Their live shows are always exciting, never a let down. With so many albums, they can never play every song you want to hear (they did not do “W aiting Room” fi-om their first release, a song which they have done every other time we saw them, and a crowd favorite), but they will always surprise you with new songs and different versions of existing tunes. P u m m e le d b y th e g o d s o f c o o l Mike Thornton S ta ff W rite r Somewhere, deep in the bow els of Jersey, lies a secret room that contains all that is cool in this dorky world. Off limits to anyone who does not pass the test of “coolness,” (Gatekeeper’s que.stion: Name the coolest band o f the early eighties. Answer: There is none.) This cham ber houses the teachings o f Bad Religion, Pantera, and pre-Sam m y Van Halen. The band. All, has visited that mountain and returned to spread the scripture of the God of Cool. Pummely All’s personal tribute to every band I ever liked, is ftilly enjoyable from the get go th ro u g h the fifteenth track. Bands such as Faith No More, Queensryche, and even Damn Yankees would be included in a list of influences, I suspect. Each style is evident, from the sappy but great Beatlesque love song “M illion B ucks” to the Ozzy-tone of “This World.” It’s alm ost as if the kings o f rock accidentally threw a sacred pri vate compilation tape out into the public dom ain. All is that good. As far as content is concerned, this record is the most lyrically blunt I have seen in years. Check o u t “Self-R ighteous,” (D o n ’t confuse so b riety w ith morality/There’s a lot o f sober murderprs/Just look at history) or the commuter’s lament “On Foot.” (Busted engine, four flat tires/When I turn the key, you catch on fire/Y ou c a n ’t be American, you must be Mexican or from Japan/You’re foreign, I say you’re foreign.) When was the last time you heard an entire song devoted to a broken-down car? Brilliant. I think I’ve figured out what explains the diversity o f this album - every song is written by a different com bination of the band members. Hmm ... what a concept, teamwork in a band. It’s almost unheard of. Plus, the. incred ible gu itar w ork by Stephen Egerton doesn’t hurt either. These riffs will have ya hummin’ in your sleep. It’s hard to say it any other way — this CD literally trom ps any other rock release so far this year. So, the next time you feel like Triangle Entertainment trying to become cool, go out and buy All. Maybe you’ll still have fuzzy dice in your car, but at least you’ll sound like you have a clue. M usic AAAAA Pummel All Produced by BUI Stevenson an d Steph en Egerton Atlantic/Interscope Records I n t e r n a t io n a l P o t lu c k D in n e r J o in y o u r frie n d s fo r a n in te r n a tio n a l p o tlu c k d in n e r w it h th e In te r n a tio n a l S tu d e n ts O ffic e , D iv is io n fo r S tu d e n t L ife . 6 p m , T h u rs d a y , M a y 1 1 , 1 9 9 5 G ra n d H a ll, C re f» e S tu d e n t C e n te r T h e In te r n a tio n a l s tu d e n ts O ffijce w ill p ro v id e ta b le s e rv ic e , ric e , p a s ta a n d b e v e ra g e s . S v e ry o n e e ls e b rin g s a d is h o r e n tr e e , s a la d o r d e s s e rt to s h a re . R S V P b y T h u rs d a y , M a y 4 , 1 9 9 5 b y csalling (2 1 5 ) 8 9 5 - 2 5 0 2 , T h e In t e r n a t io n a l S tu d e n ts O ffic e . Courtesy AUantlc/lnterscope Records 20 •The Triangle •April 14,1995 C o m ic s H oroscopes I D o v id Sm ith a n d Eric n M in b io l« | If Your Birthday is This Week: Today, 1 0 people will ask you if you gof a haircut. After the fourth or fifth one, you decide to look in a mirror. You don't notice anything w ro n g until you turn your h e a d sideways and notice the large tat too on the b o c k of you r n ec k . Tonight: G e t a good lawyer. A rie s (M a r . 2 1 -A p r. 19): Peanut butter is not a g ood substitute for Krazy G lue. You'd better get the cot dow n off the ceiling before it hurts someone. You'll need a good spatula. Taurus (Apr. 20-AAay 2 0 ): Expect a sudden disease to strike all of your friends w hose names begin with 'J.' The symptoms are cough ing, runny nose, and the tendency to soy "Semprini" at loud volumes. The only w a y to cure them is to pul them all in a room together with David Hosselhoff. G e m in i ( M a y 2 1 -Ju n e 2 1 ): You lose your sense of taste. Do not let this get you dow n. This will save you money, because you con buy Piels Light in s te a d o f M o ls e n G o ld e n . Just don't expect any of your friends to drink it. C a n c e r (June 2 2 -J u ly 2 2 ): That babysitting job you took for extra money is d angerous. W h e n you come home for the third night in a row with staples all over your face and applesauce in your pants, you might reconsider. This w e e ke n d: Retaliate. Leo (July 2 3 -A u g . 22 ): You realize that your roommate is cheating on you. He's off sleeping in other peo p le 's rooms, losing p ho ne mes sages for them, walking in on them when they're making out. Tonight: G e t even, lock someone else out of your room. V irg o (A ug . 2 3 -S e p r. 2 2 ): G o to co u rt for th a t s p e e d in g tic k e t. Claim that anyone silly enough to d o 9 0 in a 25 mph zone would not have the fashion sense that you do. It'll work. Really. L ib ra (S e p t. 2 3 - O c t . 2 3 ) : Your sense of timing is impeccable. By getting a haircut w hen you d id , you just b a re ly a v o id e d seein g your ex-girlfriend again. This is the third time this w eek you've avoided her. You should get a medal. Scorpio (Oct. 2 4 -N o v . 2 1 ): Have a p a r ty a n d in v ile a ll of y o u r friends. Paint red, green, blue and yellow circles all over the dining room floor and have the biggest Twister gam e ever. Be sure to have medical personnel on hand. S a g itta r iu s ( N o v . 2 2 -D e c . 2 1 ): M o k e a list of all of the things you always meant to soy to your mom but never found the time, and put it in the m icrow ave along with the telephone. She'll figure it out. Top Ten Places to Hide An Easter Egg grandma s coffee, (“These pills are getting too big!"). _ T h e 9 . In your father’s golf bag, T riangle (Tore!"). 8 . In the piranha tank, (“I’ll get the Bactine."). 7. In your brother’s floppy drive, (“Cannot read egg in drive a:"). 6. In the envelope with your tax returns, (“Audit!"). C a p r i c o r n ( D e c . 2 2 - J a n . 1 9 ): M o k e sure yo u c o o k the e g g s before you hide them for the egg hunt this weekend. In fact, a nice western om elette w ou ld go w ell behind the sofa. 5. Leviticus 4 :1 3 , (“And eggs did rain down upon the popu lace .. .”). 4 . In your sister’s training bra, (“It looks okay from the side .. .”). 3 . In Aunt Esther’s wig, (Why break tradition?). 2. Stick shifter knob for your car (Oeuvre drive!). 1. In a frying pan, (Why waste a good egg?)T^M A q u a riu s (Jan. 2 0 -F e b . 18): G et th a t cut lo o k e d a fte r b e fo re it begins to fester. M a y b e this will te a c h you not to p la y "butcher sh o p " w ith y o u r ro o m m a te 's friends. Unless one of them volun teers to be pork next time. Pisces (Feb . 1 9 - M a r . 2 0 ): Your new relationship may fake some getting used to. Especially when he takes you to -meet his parents. At the stdte penitentigry. If you can g e t o v e r stu m b lin g blo cks like these, you will hove.a better under standing of w ho h^.is. This week end: M onkey drour^ej. TheTriangle *April 14,1995«21 auMJ^Ora |-rH\6 v/ce\<5 T h e C r o s s w o r d P u z z le (D1995 Tribune Media Services, Inc. \jKic.wefts t v e -tw je p ^ v \o \t4 c ^ v o o R V je e w ^ y u u i ^ 9 . v » t \ \ e N e v e ^ x ^ e e u u \f t & \ t > > VjM \ue PUWiL^Ge V^OT AJLLOV/ 6et^ '0^6 *^0 D'^TCU C u M > t ) ...M O S T V .N t> CSi!&F^.\V& < a J j^ u e \R O V lN , W .., V\«SMi(^VT2., OVAb -TO<se v c x ) c c u u : ) m c . e * a T c^ v^ . | 5 e v i \ c < i ^ w / w J x s e c c j e t . KCfT eiceiAV>T '^ P R 3 A ^ N t i v i C r P l ^ ^ ^ > ^ . 6 •oO 5 a c ^ l M S r R u c ; r o R .& m ^ R S c j s J > R e i i W \ c i R S " f o T ^ k ^ V i i J A V . e . ^ ^ 1v j c w e v e R , 5 e N \ o R . p B w \ 0 5 o e C C eS N PT OnP t A v W G iW C i T J t t i . l V u a t R . SvW^'V W c K . »N T U e k s S . . M c> . ^ e ^ i^ K e o f - V t io t e ' 6 o - c m s t ? 6 e n \o ^ H o u V R I\e N io u T c > i o* o T R .U T W \ i i..." l U ( ^ ^ V 4 0 '\ t i ? K V A V K ^ T H ? u e \x - se ^ ^ ^ c P P K » v \v S o e \ 4 ,. .. . c j? A 6 A V /o R K 'tM G n 1 6 l u e ^'CsVTT O P -ieU v c S S S t o ^ K 6 VAX-W AMC> i N O O u e v ^ T -v w e v t im M V « M 'T \\K tJ5 V\V ICit^O P U 2 A i£ “. . . V R iV .iecje, ACROSS 1 R a sc a l 6 R ead quickly 1 0 Wild p a rty 1 4 Forbidden 1 5 S to ry 1 6 O u tsid e : pref. 1 7 O pera s o n g s 1 8 B order lake 1 9 Coin of Iran 2 0 G o e s in again 22 D eepen 2 4 Com p. pt. 2 5 M a k es happy 2 6 On sh ip 3 0 W inter vehicle 3 1 Rail b ird s 3 2 Things of good fo rtu n e 3 7 Rows of s e a t s 3 8 Level p ie c e s of g round 3 9 D istrib u te 4 0 R e a c tio n s to pollen 4 2 C h an g e 4 3 Pig s o u n d 4 4 Lom e of “B onanza" 4 5 Man of th e cloth 4 9 Kind of c o a t 5 0 City in C uba 5 1 Tending to c o rre c t 5 6 C e rta in p o e m s 57 59 60 -6 1 62 63 64 65 Jo u rn ey for p le a s u r e Black Ship w eights Tied Kilmer poem Aware of Rude talk G e n d e rs DOWN 1 Heavenly o b je c t 2 W atchful a tte n tio n 3 He had an Irish R o se 4 Show pain 5 P la c a rd s 6 M etric unit 7 A utom obiles 8 F am o u s boxer 9 U n n e c e s s a ry 1 0 Ky. co lleg e 1 1 Acetic an d sulfuric 1 2 W here a c to rs perform 1 3 Golf c u p s 2 1 Finish 2 9 Cincinnati te a m 2 5 E n tre a tie s 2 6 Movie dog 2 7 S e e th e 2 8 R u ss, city 2 9 S w iss river 3 0 G lossy 3 2 Salty w a te r 3 3 Loafing 3 4 S h o rt le tte r 3 5 Dell 3 6 W ithered 3 8 D isturbs 4 1 H orse color 4 2 T akes into c u sto d y 4 4 Chicle p ro d u ct 4 5 Snapshot 4 6 In ert g a s 4 7 H appening 4 8 Cowboy’s rope 4 9 F low erless p la n ts 5 1 R e g re ts 5 2 V enture 5 3 Wild g o a t 5 4 To s h e lte r 5 5 M inus 5 8 Eggs Last Issuers Solution [inr.iTirj nnr.in nr.iFim r.if.innn n iin n nnnnn nnnn r in iin □n i4 r :ik ii4 L if i iK in nnnn M L iiiiir iii [ jiK if .ir iiin r.K irirjn n f iit r iii FKirir.ui n iir in n iin n n n i i n n r .in n r .in r i n n n n i iii ii n n i in n n iik iiiii [iiK in n i.in n f in □n r in r jn n r in ii □r .n in n n n ri:n iin iin n [K in n lin d f i nrisjn N rin ifi fin n rm nr.ifin nuM nn \m nn kJiinnn ®1994 Tribune Modn SotvwM, he A l Righii RoMtvod 22 *TheTriangle *April 14,1995 E -m a il fro m th e E -B u n n y . — Jellybeans? For Easter dinner? W hatever would bHOPS AT \IN Easter i & your m other say? So tell her you're eating with m e a t the Shops a t Penn and the 3401 C afe. W e're open for lunch, dinner, and shopping on Easter Sunday. W e're tail<ing great food, a free call anywhere in the world thanks to MCI, even pictures with mo/l Bet you c a n 't wait. So com e on over. Look for me. I'm the big, furry one. Signed, . The Easter Bunny 1 M c r Shops a t Penn, 3401 W alnu t Street. (216) 222-8595. Shops a t Penn hours: M o n d a y through Friday, 10 A M -7 PM; Saturday, 10 A M -6 PM; Sunday, N o on -6 PM. 3401 C a fe Food Court hours: M o n d a y through Saturday, 10 A M -10 PM; Sunday. N o on -9 PM. Developed and managed by Kravco Company. ri JO \ 0 1 c /\FE r TheTriangle *April 14,1995«23 T h e c o u rs e o f d a y s s p e n t Dennis McGlynn Yovj kviOoJ; tjOO cS lr\oU U\«sC lO. X rw m x'^^ Q B SE^D /VEA«,/AE'TO^ X PEEL UlCF 1 X SR\AK) V^VCOtO 1 ) ^flfor Sk>e€2e. I H l tft>3r K)0^6 b l ^ Are 1^0j ^ / o a ‘M»5 V boiE *6 bw l/'f' loom : ri>DM'+ (iUdO ^Do 'tet\TVkvvj\c tw -t r r S ^ A u v OK FnMCACLY UBoitlb V^A\a&o4 K*^ cV\e^~^ T o Be TV\AV‘s H\A \Ar()'^ViM& SOrt6o*si6 uvx 3b coiol wjjooo Ar/kL?j Vlojkio... ^00 4r^^4 wo*»c . 6)i;4 \f ^o o I noU A 'bWde.ae mj your i 10 Looe WITV A 15 'feA? OcC> TELFOtSIOAJ cC»\W?ACTtl2? S^eqA \j€ M€ W lOOMfcX/lT 0#J A US'^<i^ ^SM^MELESS PLut. Foe Li ^ C/)LLHD ^gg/c/u/6tfTs <a7-co qq mto 24 •TheTriangle •April 14,1995 G a s s ifie d s Index The Trian gle Classifieds are sepa rated into 11 available classifica tions in the order below. I f you cannot find a heading, there are no ads o f that type in this week’s newspaper. Apartments Sublets Roommates For Sale W anted Text Books Services H elp W anted Lost 8c Found Announcements Personals Placing Classifieds T h e d e a d lin e fo r p la c in g a classified ad is 5:00 p.m . on the Tuesday o f the week o f the issue in w h ic h you w ant y o u r ad to appear. Forms must be com pleted in fu ll, and w ritin g should be legi ble. I f there are no copies o f the classified fo rm availab le, w rite your ad on a full sheet o f paper. Include your name, organization, p ho ne n u m b e r and address. I f you are a Drexel student, please in c lu d e y o u r stu d en t n u m b e r. Always make note o f the date the ad was placed, and the section in w h ic h you w ish th e ad to be p la c e d . Be sure to sign y o u r name. In Person O u r o ffic e is 3 0 1 0 M a c A lis te r HaU. M aU The Triangle Attn: Classifieds Manager 32nd & Chestnut Streets Philadelphia, PA 19104 Fax The T rian g le Fax num ber is (215) 895-5935. I f your ad is a paid ad, a copy o f th e check o r m o n ey o rd e r should be faxed and the o r ig in a l s h o u ld be m a ile d o r dropped o ff in person. Apartments Apartments Apartments Apartments SHARE 1>VRGE HOUSE — Rent one to three rooms, $260/room . 49th & Springfield. W /D, Deck, Convenient to #34, #13 trol lies, CC & Drexel. 8 7 M 7 7 6 . Irnmediately. 6 BEDROOM HOUSE'S — 33 & TOWELTON. Wood floors, spacious rooms available 9/9 5 . $1,200. Franklin Rentals 3 8 2 7 3 6 8 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS. New windows & appliances. Yard, basem ent. Available 9 /9 5 . $950. (Or 35th & Spring Garden 4 bedrooms for $700 with a deck AVAILABLE NOW). Franklin Rentals 382-7368 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT 36 & LANCAST ER. MODERN, WASHER/DRYER. $750 TO $ 9 0 0 . AVAIL NOW OR 7 /9 5 . FRANKLIN RENTALS 382-7368 I BEDROOM APAF^MENT 36 & BARING ST. Wood floors. YARD. $600 includes heat & hot water. Others available from $4 00. Franklin Rentals 382-7368. HOUSE TO RENT/UNIV CITY — Renov Vict/Cedar Park 5 ^ BR, 2 1 /2 bath, nrodem kitchen, wash/dryer, sm yd, deck, gar den. Convinient to Penn/Ctr City. Spet 1 occup/$1000 + utils. Call Justin (215) 879- from Penn and Drexel. Heat & hot water included. Reasonable priced. Available now. Call daytime (800) 456-3669, x5693, night (215) 222-6329.___________________ Looking for an apartment? Then look no furtherl I will give you $150 cash if you lease an apartmenti Not an owner, just a 3rd party beneficiary. If interested call Rich @ 38&8029 _________________________ Upper Darby, Apartment for rent, 1 bed room, not far from 69th Street Terminal, $350 • includes utilities, safe Upper Bart)y neighborhood, semi-fumished. Call Cathy or Fred Patton at (610) 734-2293 or (610) 734-1134. Leave nriess^e.______ ^ 318 Arch Street — i bedroom. Quiet, safe, intercom. W /D facility. No pets. Available Septemter. $600 includes heat & hot water. Call 222-2625 _____________ For rent or sublet — One bedroom apart ment with huge living room. Needed person(s) to take over lease or start a new one. Apartment five minutes from Drexel campus. For more info call Vinnie at 8607565 or Sunny 382-701 3______________ 3 4 09 Powelton Ave. Large one-bedroom apt., hardwood floors, w/d in building, park ing, intercome. Available July 1st. $350-*-. CaJIM2-6835_________ _________ House: Close to campus. 33rd Powelton Avenue. Six bedrooms. 2 1 /2 baths. W asher/Dryer. Large rooms. Available 9 /1 /9 5 . $1350.00/month. 610-565-3455 3 4 0 9 Powelton Ave. studio apt. New kitchen, tracklites, modern kitchen, new bath, w/d in building, parking. Only $300+. Available June. Call 222-6835 3409 Powelton Ave. Laige 4 bedroom apartnnent, new rennovatton, beautiful 2 baths, w /d , parking. Available 6 /1 5 /9 5 . Only 1,000+. Call 222-6835_______ Upper Darby, Apartment for rent, 1 bed room, not far from 69th Street Terminal, $350 - includes utilities, safe Upper Darby neighborhood, semi-fumished, call Cathy or Fred P a t t o n j ^ i q W 2 2 9 2 _ 3 ^ BARING- 4* BR apt, 1 1 /2 baths, h/w and carpeted firs. C/A, mod. kitch., living & dining area. All new appliances, security system, basement coin laundry. Tel. 2320328. ____________ 38xx Baling st- Lg. 2 BR apt, mod. kitch, w / all appliances. Tiled bath, w/d, c/a, security system, plus basement. $600/m o. -hutil. STUDIO APARTMENT. 434 N. 34th St. Great for one student. New tile , bath, new kitchen, dishwasher, living area, hardwood floors, internal security bars, washer/dryer. MUST SEEIII $410 includes heat. Available July 1. 38&6722 EFFICIENCY — 3 4 06 Spring Garden St. Perfect for one student. New kitchen area. Carpeted. Inexpensive gas heat. Free wash er/dryer. $320+. 38fr6722._____________ Two bedroom w / study - or - three bed rooms. 3622 Baring St. Perfect for students who want a quiet home to live and study. Owers Victorian Home. Second floor. Large rooms. Eat in kitchen; dishwasher, wash er/dryer. Beautiful block. $875 Including heat + hot water. Call 386^722. F U J 9<^ 37th + Lancaster. Large, modern 4BR. Newly painted, a /c , w /d, deck, 2 bath, beautiful garden courtyard. Must rent. Available NOW! Only $950 + util. Call Jen & 222-1207 (w) or 382^369 (h).__________ 36th & Spring Garden. Very large 7 bed room house! W/D, tall ceilings, 2 bath, gas heat, low utilities, reduced rent — MUST RENT ASAP. Only $ 1 1 9 5 + util. That's $170/personl Call now. Jen @ 222-1207 (w), or 382-0369 (h).___________________ One bdrm., 1st floor, private entrance, secure bidg. Laundry and cable services available. Please call before 7 p.m. at 3866515._____________ _________________ Come one — come all — We have several apartm ents and houses available in Powelton Village. IB R to 4BR, various prtees. Call for help (610) 279-1205 2 Bedrooms available. 32nd and Powelton. Modern. Dishwasher; garbage disposal; central air, gas heat; wall to wall carpet. $650 + Util. Must see. (610) 279-1205 _ Newly painted comfortably FURNISHED room, fresh linens provided. AM utilities uncluded. Share large refrlg. Cooking facili ties. Quiet house. Secure bIdg. 1 /2 block from Drexel donns. 34th & Race. LMR + SEC. $265. Call 386-1961______________ Apartment for rent: Must Seelll Bedroom apt, large enough for two, conviniently locat ed at 37th & Powelton Ave., minutes away I MOUNTAIN J a p a n e s e R e s t a u r a n t •!> I S 2030 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 2 1 5 -7 5 1 - 0 9 3 9 o r fax: 21 5 -7 5 1 -0 9 5 2 ♦Sushi Bar ♦ Take Out • Party Tray ♦ Cocktail Bar • • Yakitori • Japanese Deli • I n tr o d u c in g o u r M r, F u ji th e S u s h i R o b o t O p en 7 D ays a W eek LU N C H 11 :3 0 -2 :3 0 (7 days) D IN N E R Sun.-Thr.: 5 -1 0 pm Fri. & Sat.: 5-11 pm BAR 4:30 pm-midnight (7 day») I I I I L. 1 5 % OFF I I I I I Any dinner entrees ivith this coupon C h e s tn u t S t. io c a tio n o n ly J B R U N C H S P E C I A L $ 4 .9 5 S a t. - S u n .: 1 1 : 3 0 - 2 : 3 0 p m Also other location au 801 Montgomeiy Ave. / Penn Valley, PA 19072 / 610.668-9959 2320328^___ Drexei vie.- 5 BR apt, huge rooms, mod. eatin kitchen w / all appllances,central air, 2 full tiled baths, washer/dryer, large ctosets, extra storage, security system . $1200/m o-^util. You must see it. 2320328^____ 1 BR apt- 33rd & Powelton. Larga BR and liv rm. w/w, tile bath, very secure. Avail. May 1^$400 mo+. Call 386-5633. Female roomate wanted to share a 5 BR house. Roomate will have own bedroom. Great location near campus with washer/diyer. Safe locatton. Available April I ’st. Please Contact Jeanne or Rachael at 387-6525. _ For sublet/option to rent. Effteiency w/walk in closet/ own kitchen, at 46’th and pine. Excellent building security. Washer/Dryer in building. Free APT. Shuttle To/From cam pus. For Sublet: March 1 ‘st to July then option to rent. $400450. Includes heat and hor water. Telephone: 382-9053. Call Morv Thur. After 5 p.m. or weekends. 3215 Hamilton. Large, Beautiful 1 BR Apt. Available April I'st.. w/w carpeting, cable, large ckjsets, fireplace, ceramic bath, quk:k maintenance servicel Big enough for 2. Must see. $ 350.00-»■ utilities. Call Uliane at (^10) 32&496J. Leave message. 3 4 1 3 Race S t .-i BR w / Private Bath A vailable. 4 /1 - 9 /1 6 in 4 BR APT. w/Bateony close to campus. Non-Smoker. $275 Includes Heat. C^l (610) 254-1144. Part-time computer wizard to program vok:email personals. Beginning pay $ 1 6 /h r. P otential for full-tim e em ploym ent. $100,000 per annum. Write Dial Systems, P.O.Box 622, Ardmore, PA 19003. Tell us __ why you’re the right person. Spacious, 1 bedroom apartment, 3 6 3 0 Powelton Ave. Modem kitchen and modem bathroom. W/W carpet. $450, heat Included. Call (610)527-7809._____________ 5 BR house located on Summer Street, hardwood floors/carpeting, W /D, available July 1, 1995. $1150/nronth. Call 610-279- W05________ ___ ___________ 6 BR HOUSE- Very close to campus. Wood floors, spacious rooms avail. 7 /9 5 or 9 /9 5 . $1,125 to $1,450. Franklin Rentals. 3827368. THREE BEDROOM' APARTMENT.' 5 0 0 N. 34th St. at Spring Garden. Large bedrooms, large kitchen & IMng area. Tile bath, wash er, dryer, yard. Inexpensive gas heat. Avail. April 1st. $900-f 38&6722. V & o n a -t Costs & Limits D R E X E L A D V ER TIS ER S Cost: FREE. Exceptions: norm al ad rates apply for personal busi nesses and apartments. Limits: 2 classified ads per person per issue, w ith a 40 w ord m axim uin for each. Personals have a 25 w ord m axim um . Ads w ill be edited for length. O U T S ID E ADVERTISERS Cost: (p e r issue) $4.50 fo r the first 25 words and $.25 for each w ord thereafter. Tear sheets are $.25 extra. Ads must be pre-paid. Paym ent can be made by cash, money order or check. Limits: there are no ad lim its or word limits for paid classifieds. Additional Info If there is a charge for your advertisement, full payment must be received before the ad can run. Multiple ads with duplicate subjects will not be accepted unless they are paid for. No classifieds will be accepted over the telephone. Ads may be cancelled or cor rected by notifying the classifieds staff in writing or by phone by the 5:00 p.m. Tuesday deadline. No refunds will be given for can celled ads. 3 0 t h o y a g e S-t. S -ta tlo n We carrybackpacks and travelaccessories. 662-1556 FOR RENT 32 n d an d P owelton A venue Large 6 bedroom house. Available 9/1. From $250 per person . Large yard, laundry, RENOVATED. CALL 2 1 5 -3 8 7 -4 1 3 7 Eostck Sem ce Apml 16, 1 9 9 5 11:00 a.o). the Vinsr Vneshyreman ChuKch in Philadelphia 21st & WdnuT Smeers 215-567-0532 All ane welcoojel mm mm TheTriangle»April 14>1995*28 Apartments Sublets Sublets Four bednxxn house- 509 N. 35th at Sprite Garden. Inexpensive gas heat. Finished wood floors, interior security bars, two ceramic baths, w /d, yard and basement. SllOO- 38 6672 2. Available July 1st. One bedroom apt- 3406 Spring Garden St. Newly renovated. Living room, kitchen, tile bath. Washer & dryer -free, inexpensive gas heat. A v a i ls Apdl 1st. $450+ 38 6672 2. Three Bedroom bi-level, apt. 3200 HAMIL TON ST. Available 7-1-9S. Lots of windows, interior security bars, modem kitchen, firee w /d . knotty pine floors, cozy. $ 9 7 5 . includes heat, h/w & cooking gas. 3866722._______________________________ Six bedroom bi level apt. 432 N. 34th St. Not a party house. Two ceramk: baths, car pet throughout, w /d , dw, contemporary kitchen, inexpensive gas heat. Available 61-95. $1200-t-. 38 6672 2.______________ 3312 HAMILTON STREET: Efficiencies, one and two bedroonfis from $299/m o up. Heat gas and hot water incl. All apts have walk-in closets, lots of windows, walking distance to school. 349-9429.__________________ Within two blocks of Drexei Gym: clean, safe affordable apts avail. Some with w/d or deck. Small, well4}ehaved pets welcome. Call 610664-7779.____________________ For Sale backyard, furnished llvlngroom , pets aHofwed. Available summer tennn with optkxi for lease In September. Call Jim at (215) 382-3632.___________________________ Room with loft. Female roommate needed. 34th & Pearl. April - August. $200 + 1 /2 util. Call 386-7440. May be even cheaper! For rent or sublet: One bedroom apt w / huge living room. Need person(s) to take over lease or start a new one. Apwtment 5 mins from Drexe.' campus. Vinny 860-7565 or Sunny 382-7013_______ ____________ 34th & Race. Room for rent for Summer term. Gas heat/stove, A/C. $290 month + 1 /4 utilities. Right next to campus. Call Dave at 243-3775_____________________ 1 Br. Apt. at 40th & Chest. Sts to sublet April 1 to August 31 , 19 95. $ 350/m o . includes heat & hw. W illing to make an-angements for use of my own personal furniture during term of sublet. Please call me, John, at (215) 222-1460 or email me (best) st92jOwh<gdunxl.ocs.drexel.edu 2 bedrm apt. for sublet from April-August only $450 + all utilities. Great location — 32nd + Powleton. Safe and 10 mln walk to Drexei. Call Unie or Andre (8> 662-1003 Need a place to live for Spring and Summer? Female roommate needed to share 1 BR in “The Courts." $270 + utilltles. Call 387-4118____________________ Available July + August. Call 222-2625. $870/m o + or best offer. ___________ 1 bedroom apt. West Village Apt. on 33rd S t Spactous living with A/C • celling fan • track lighting • large closets - full bath • easy access • W /D. Able to leave some furniture if needed. $455.00 + electrk:. Starting Ju^ 1st. Ask for Ryan 222-6238.____________ 3631 Lancaster Avenue: Luxury 2 bedroom, central air, safe, quiet, dw, w /d, no pets, available July + August. Call 222-2625. $870/m o.+ or best offer._______________ Room to let — Beautiful Victoria house. Newly renovated. Large rooms with high ceil ings + windows. Porch. Washer/Dryer. One block away from cam pus. $ 2 5 0 .0 0 a month. 561-0572._____________________ Roommate needed (0 to sublet for SP temri in 1 BR apt. on 36th & Powelton, The Courts. Liv rm, kitchen w / dw, and w /d avail. Excellent security (2 4 hrs/day). $347.50/m o. (not incl. util.) Call 222-5251 for more Info._____________________ ROOM WITH LOFT: Female roommate need ed. 34th & Pearl. April-Aug. $200+ 1 /2 util. Call 382-5203. Leave msg. For Sale $100.00 (cash only ) takes K. Price is flnn. Call 382-6409._______________________ Planning to buy hard drive or want archive of COAOM. For $49 I can put 540MB on one disc. Data Integrtty at Its best. CaH Rk4i O 3868029.___________________________ Roommates Room w / toft: 1,2 Females needed for sum mer. Share townhouse w / 2 Drexei stu dents. W /D , AC, Carpeting, Garage, Security S^tem . DW. 33rd & Pearl, $280 + Utilities. Call 387-8304 and leave mes sage^_____________________________ Female roommate needed ASAP — The Courts — to share 1 BR -h study . Large w/ln closet, W/D, W/W, cable, 24 hr securi ty, A/C, heat, dishwasher, $350 + security — Serious calls only. 222-9420._________ Roommate needed ASAP from April to August. $200 1 /2 utilities. Great location — 32nd & Powelton. Safe and close to Center City and Drexei. Call Andre or Unie @ 662-1003____________________________ Roommates needed for house on 36th & Hamilton Sts. 3-story house contains wash er, dryer, full kitchen, sundeck. $240/m o. + uWiti^. For more Info., call 387-2432 W ant out of the dorms for Spring & Summer? Female roommate needed to share 1 BR in “The Courts.’ $270 + utllities. Call 387-4118____________________ $ 2 2 5 / mo. -i-util.: Large room w / 2 large windows in renov. house w / beautiful pol ished wood fir. Excerclse/ weight room, rear yd w / wood fence, free w /d , near C.C. (across Schuylkill River) and U. Campus. Pis. call George 985-9734. Mature, nonsmokers preferred.____________________ 2 ROOMMATES (NON-SMOKERS) to share 4 BR apt, mod kitch. w / all appliances, iiv/din area, c/a, security system, coin laundry in basem ent. $ 2 5 0 /m o + 1 /4 util. 39xx Baring-Tom 232-0328._________________ Roommate wanted for 5 BR house on Winter St. Great locatton. Near Drexei Pizza, Myers Hall, and Psychology Center. W /D. $250+ 1 /5 util. Leave msg. 386-2596. Female roommate needed ASAP - The Courts - To share 1 BR + study • large w/in closet, W /D, W /W, Cable, 24hr Security, A/C, heat, dishwasher, $ 3 5 0 ,+ security serious calls only. 222-9420. _______ Room In a beautiful, very quiet Victorian house. Walking distance from school, safe, wood floor, sky lights. Great place! Large bedroom. $250+util. Available NOWI Call Anna 215-977-7319(moming and night) or 215-8986037 (late aftemoon). Leave message. Sublets Bedroom with walkin closet STILL available (as of 4 /1 4 ) in large 5 bedroom house. Large kitchen with dishwasher and large liv ing room. Washer/Dryer on premises. Only $240/m oll Contact Dan at 387-6829 Sublease & or option to rent. 38th & Lancaster, 1 Bedroom in spacious 5 bed room house. Easy walking distance to cam pus. Just $165/month. Call Craig at (302) 6 5 1 -5 7 5 9 daytime, or (2 1 5 ) 38 2-5 7 5 9 evening._____________________________ Female roommate needed ASAP to sublet until July 31, 1995. Have own room in 3 story house. 10 minutes from Drexel's cam pus. w /d , d /w and backyard. Rent is $230/monthly plus 1 /4 util. Call Marla at 735-9811_______________ __ _________ 3308 Race Street. 1 BR of 2 BR apt for sublet. $300/m o. + Elec., w/d, cable TV, ALTERNATIVE TELEDATNG GUVScall LIFESTYLES cdi97M311 9 7 6 ^ 1 1 1 only65$aminute GAY MEN GALScall FREE: 645-0630 0^1976-1221 DREAMGIRLS forMATUREMen! 85Vmln.for2above 99*/lnin.976*1000 CANCUNmiBEAN $ 1 5 0 Round Trip CALL A IR -T E C H (2 1 5 ) 2 1 9 -7 0 0 0 or [email protected] One studio available from April 1st, around 36th & Lancaster area. Apartment has two clo sets, bathroom , kitchen and washer/dryer on premises. $425/m on + utilities. Contact Y.P. at (215) 222-7758 or leave message___________ 4 bedroom apartment for sublet near Drexei starting end of June. 2 bath, deck, a/c , yard, aiann. Option to renew lease in Sept. Total 1100/month. Cali 382-5409________ 3631 Lancaster Avenue: Luxury 2 Bedroom, central air, safe, quiet, dw, w/d, no pets. For Sale 1985 Volkswgen Golf. 5 speed, air, AM/FM cassette. Like new in/out. Runs great. $1695. (610)449-8731________________ FURNITURE plus — Dark Colonial Pine: 6 drawer long bureau — $55, desk — $50, 2 door cabinet w / 2 level hutch — $80; 2 octagonal wood storage — coach ends black marble top w / 2 swing open doors — $35 each; lamp, fans, Sears carpet cleaner — good condition — works greatl Full-size bed w / dark pine head board. 386-6634 MOUTAIN BIKE — Huffy mountain bike for sale. Has been used three, yes THREE TIMESI Bike is in excellent condition. Black frame with neon front fork and neon handle bars. Front fork has oversized tubing. Rrst URGENT! MOVING TO EUROPE — MUST SELL COMPUTER BY THE END OF APRIL. 486 DX 2 /6 6 multimedia. $1,200 (new in January 95). 420 MB HD. 8 MB RAM. 3 1 /2 and 5 1 /4 disk drives. Double speed CDROM. Soundcard, speakers, SVGA w / 1 MB video RAM. Software. Cali (215) 5 6 9027 3 URGENT — MUST SELL CAR — MOVING TO EUROPEI 84 Ford Crown Vtetorla. $1,700. Automatic. A/C. 4 speaker radio. Electric windows. Runs greatlll Call (215) 569 0 2 7 3 1987 MAZDA 626, 40oor, 4 cyl.-5 S p ^ Trans., AC, Sony Puilout Stereo Cassette, Great Cond. - Hi Mile., $2,000 or best offer. Cali Patricia at (215) 5 9 0 8 681 For sale. Desk w / five drawers, brown color and woodenKTiade. Matress. Bet you will be satisfied with it If you take a look. Cali Ming at 2 2 2 -3 6 8 1 .__ ______ CAR — 1 9 8 0 Pontiac Bonneville, a /c , power steering, power brakes, 64,000 origi nal miles, good reliable transportation, $l,300/neg. Call/leave a message @ 2226053._____________________________ _ a /d /s amplifier, Rockford speakers 4 " and much more In car audio. Cali Paul 6809225. Leave message. (^nasonic cordless phone, new with box. Originally $90.00. Selling at $60.00. Tenchannel phone w / multiple features. Mac Classic with software, boxes, manuals, disks. Paul 680-9225. Leave message. MACINTOSH COftilPUTER & PRINTER. Complete system only $499. Call Chris at 1-800-289^5685 Sony XR-73(5b 30wX4 & Sony CDX 10 Disc changer cable 25 '. $125 — Call 57148 10 leave message. Alpine 6X9 3 way _ $50 — After 5 pm please.______ Left-handed Gibson Les Paul Custom, eaily ‘70's. Natural finish. Recent overhaul. A classte. $700. John 247-1722, leave mes- s a ^ ___________ _____ ______ Mac Quadra 610 6 8 b 4 0 & 2 5 m (' proces sor. 8 meg. RAM, 2 3 0 meg. CO. Sony Trinitron monitor. 2 4 0 0 baud modem. $1700. John 247-1722, leave message. Macintosh classic iF — All Drexei software included+. $800.00. Chris 386-5971 G O T O O F F IC E R T R A IN IN G SCHOOL Put your college degree to work in the Air Force Officer Training School. Then, after graduating from Officer Training School, becom e a com m issioned Air Force officer with great starting pay, com plete medical and dental care, 30 days of vacation with pay per year and m anagem ent opportunities. Learn if you qualify for higher education in the Air Force. Call tilsite Call (215) 545-6994 To m eet local libertarians and promote individual liberty and responsibility. W ild S ex Party Apple Power Macintosh 61 0 0 /6 0 complete system w / spreadsheets, word processors, color monitor, modem, keyboard and mouse. $2,000. (215) 2 2 6 6 9 2 8 ________ 1 983 Subaru GL SW, Automatic, 4WD, AM/FM cassette, 86K, Needs transmlssk>n. Best Offw, Call Ratnakar, (610) 2775990 evening, or (215) 8 9 5660 8 day MOVING SALE furniture and accessories. IKEA desk w / light and computer stand, 6 drawer and nightstand. Dining table and 4 chairs. Coffemakers (2), lamps (3). 2153868658 Andre AIR FORCE OPPORTUNITIES TOLL FREE 1-800-423-USAF A m a te u r L o c a l L a d ie s 3 0 H o r n y C a t e g o r ie s’ ■ 2 G2 0 H o t C a t e g o r ie s D o m in a n t , F e t is h e s - A n ything S u b m is s iv e , & GOES- COUPLESO t h e r s - F u ll OYS- S & M - B & D S e r v ic e P h o n e S ex I" 99 CENTS PER MIN. 75 CENTS PER MIN. 9 7 6 -6 0 0 0 ]f 9 7 6 -5 0 0 0 JOIN THE FUN OF1JUST LISTEN IN! D r e x e l 's B e s t O n -C a m p u s H o u s in g LERNER COURT APARTMENTS 1 2 0 N 34T H S T / 3 4 0 9 -1 5 R A C E S T 1 BR - L arge B edroom , N ice A partment 2 BR - D ream P lace (S afe ... N o N ightmares !) 3 BR - L arge , 13' L iving R oom (G ood for 4 people ) 4 BR - B ig as a house (M aid S ervice E xtra !) S erv in g D re x ei S tuden ts need s fo r 50 years - W h a t can y o u do a t CCP th is sum m er? These apartm ents featu re: C e n t r a l A ir & G as H e a t , L a u n d r y F a c il it ie s o n P r e m is e s , E x c e l l e n t S e c u r it y V er y R esonable Rates Don't Worry, Be Happy and Safe,Live in Lerner Court Place! 8 8 6 - 9 9 9 9 (© 2 2 2 - 5 4 0 6 Apartments to rent at 3 6 t h a n d P o w e lto n A ve. W a lk in g d is ta n c e to U n iv . o f D re x ei a n d tra n s p o r ta tio n Rent includes: gascooking, heat andwater •LargeApartments *03816ready E fficiencies sta rtin g a t $ 3 5 9 .0 0 O n e B e d ro o m s ta rtin g a t $ 4 6 3 .0 0 For 1 iippUlllLlllCllL ap pointm en t call Cctll R on at 387-9960 R ^ A lty B r u s h u p o n y o u r s k ills G ra b a d d itio n a l c re d its to w a rd y o u r d e g re e G et a q u a lity e d u c a tio n f o r th e lo w e s t p ric e in th e c ity In o u r tw o s u m m e r sessio n s, y o u c a n m ak e u p a class o r g et a h e a d s ta rt o n n e x t year. CCP c re d its a re tra n s fe ra b le a n d affordable. Call 215-751-8010. C o m m u n ity C o lle g e o f P h ila d e lp h ia 1700 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, PA 19130 uca TMANGLE STAFFERS ARE AU MIUIONAIRES O ro tjp B ut th e y d o g et th e satisfa c tio n o f seein g th e ir h a rd w ork pay off every Friday w h e n a n e w issue o f T h e T ria n g le h its th e stan d s. If you w a n t to g et t h a t fe el ing to o , c o m e to o u r n e x t staff m e e tin g , M o n d a y a t 6:00p. If you c a n ’t m ake it, ju st give us a ca ll a n d tell us w h a t you w a n t to do. 3 0 1 0 MACALISTER • 8 9 5 - 2 5 8 5 2M*TheTriangle»April 14,1995 Art by Dean Timt Ma 11400 m\> Wkm 6 (X4IM IIT( m \. mu^urn^ i m m im 11400 QUAD iimuidiiiim %m jofflp.i\im J)UH.mim ^oxihc, mOOHfiOUHa 1I:1E-12:00 M m (WiTJlUUlOWfiViAUVIOLlOinOH I24E-14!; Q04t> mjuccLuaowm U0-2:^0 m m HIOWfiVNIIlMlNIUlZOO at mm m w njiuiuTv ^POH^OMDIHPMTm T h e T ria n g le M o re sid e s to th e sto ry . Drexid Comminiity Service i) lit C H B H Cammi* Acnvmi* Io a r p o P a n -c ^ l c i b a i n c . tPublicRslations IStudentSociety IofAmerica LAMBDA CHI ALPHA TheTriangle«April 14,1995»27 For Sale Wanted Announcements Books for sale (graduate students) Human Resource Management (Perspective and Issues), Fundam entals of Financial M anagem ent, M athem atics (with Applications for the Management Life and Social Science), Production and Operations Management, intermediate Accounting, Principles of Information Systems. Call and tall< atx>ut the price reasonally. Call Nancy at (215) 222-3681________ _____ ______ Computer for sale — New and used com puters 386, 486, Pentium. Customized to your needs, iaeats competition price. 1 year part, 2 year service warranty free. Call Demi. Day (610)-239«855. Evening (610) 352-7618.___________________________ 1 Kenwood KAC-662 80 watt car amp $65. 2 Kenwood 4X6 2-way door panel speal<ers $45. Call 571-4810 leave message.______ For Sale • Super clean Casio CZ-3000 pro fessional synth with sound data storage car tridge. Original manuals as well as third party sound manuals. Great starter tward at professional quality. Willing to deal on price. If Interested contact Matt at 387-4852 1985 Volkswagon Golf 5 speed air AMFM cassette. Like new in /o u t. Runs Great $1695 (610) 449-8731________________ Uniden Cellular Phone. Metrophone cover age, approx. 15 mon. $75. Call Dirk 3865971._______________________________ Mac Classic II w / all software needed for Drexel plus. $ 8 0 0 obo. Call Chris 3865971._______________________________ GUITAR/ AMP: Black Yamaha RGX 31 0 electric guitar, $175. Peavey Classic VTX series, 65 watt amp, $250. Both for $375 (obo). Mark at 222-3125._______________ MAC SOFTWARE- Claris Im pact, Excel, MacWrite, etc. Cheap. Make offer. Gene 387-5638.___________________________ 1989 Mercury Topaz. Automatic. Air condi tioning. AMFM stereo. Power windows/door locks/steering cruise control. Mint condition in /o u t. 1 2 /9 5 inspection. M ust seel $2595.00. Call 895-5874.______________ LEARNING VIDEOS- Leaming videos are for you! If you are looking for info, on a particu lar subject, we have instruction tapes on practically everything. Over 50 0 subjects are available, from business to computers to career information. To receive a FREE catalog, please call 215-22S4640 TODAYI DREXEL UNIVERSITY GAME HATS- Popular bar style. Blue and yellow or white hat. Only $ 1 2 .9 9 . Cali Doug at 38 2-3231. I have many. LEGAL & CONRDENTIAL. CAN HELP WITH MEDICAL EXPENSES. RICHARD AND SUSAN l- 8 0 0 - 5 7 9 ^ 3 8 .___________________ ADOPTION. Loving couple seel< a baby. CONSIDERING adoption? Please let us be part of it. Expenses paid. Call Kate and Dave 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 2 2 - 9 8 4 6 .____________ Announcements Do not forget to purchase your copy of the 1994-1995 LEXERD. It Is $20 in the bookstore. _________ ______ ____ Get a Jump on Earth Day. Help the Falnmount Park Ranger Corps Improve the area at Belmont and Montgoniery Drive by doing general landscaping. Call Carlton Williams at 581-5111 for more Information or to register to help out on April 22 from Mlscellaneous Let us help. Call Student Rnanclal Servtoes: 1-800-263-6495 ext. F52801. ness. Healthy women- ages 21-35, are needed to donate eggs for Infertile couples. Compensation privided. Completely Anonymous. Cal]^(215J 829-5095. Used bike for a lady. Light-weight $ inexpen sive (-40-50$). Call (215) 24 3023 2. Leave a message. 10-2. __________________ If you purchased a 1993-1994 LEXERD yearbook and did not receive it, please call The LEXERD at 895-2574 ___________ Services EARN $ 5 0 0 or more weekly stuffing envelopes at home. Send long SASE to: Country Living Shoppers, Dept. C24, P.O. Box 1779, Denham Springs, LA 70727 MOVING??? NEED A VAN ??? I’m your man. Call Lenny Handman- Reasonable. Beeper 452-4213 Volcebox 871-9707.__________ Seniors ... Start looking for a date! ^ n io r Formal — Friday June 9, 8pm - lam . Penn Tower Hotel.__________________________ Help local children celebrate Earth Day. Taggert Elementary School at 4th and Porter needs your help for a big Earth Day cieannjp and fix up with their pupils. Call Lois Bruckno at 952-8511 for more information. FREE RNANCIAL AIDI Over $6 Billion in pri vate sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regard less of grades, income, or parent's income. Announcements USGA ELECTIONS ARE COMING! Wednesday, May 10 and Thursday, May 11. Call 895-2577 for details. The Place Where Fresh is the Taste.™ D rexel University 34th & Lancaster 387-9990 (across from 7-11) N ow ^ Carlton H ouse 18th & JFK Blvd. 246-0055 Close to 7-11 State Road & Lansdowne Ave. Tel. 623-9296 Inside of the EXXON PROVEN JOB SEARCH TEC^n Tq u ES. Stepby-step guide to doing a thorough job search, inludes “Resumes That C om m unicate.” Send name, m ailing address and $15.00 check/money order to: Practical Answers, Inc., 614 South 8th St.. Suite 305<;, Phlla., PA 1 9 1 4 7 ______ ____ Do not forget to purchase your copy of the 1994-1995 LEXERD. It is $20 in the book store^._______ ______________ If you purchased a 1993-1994 LEXERD yeart)ook and did not receive it, please call The LEXERD at 895-2574________ ______ A PRICELESS GIFT: Make a unique and per sonal contribution to another family's happi- -gA A r I GET W E I FOOTIONGSUB I ^'SANDWICH | ANYFOOnONGSUB OR S t u d e n t C o m m u n ity 50<t. : . . 4^ 3 « o ■ ANY6” SUB ! ■ S e r v ic e s an d P ro g ra m s ^ (v Q Q t f i s s t ill a c c e p t in g a p p lic a tio n s f o r t h e W e s t P h ila d e lp h ia ■ aiidKeloiieofcqua wltb purohMaof T u to r in g P r o g r a m . With purobMeof Montain type bike, good condition, reason able price. Prefer “hybrid" size tires (medi um). E-mail [email protected] or tel (215) 587-9392. Pedro.________________ D.C. area student searching for downtown summer sublet during June 1 - end of August. Please call 467-4519.___________ Wanted — Centris or Quadtra 6 1 0 or Quatra 660AV. Call 609-654-1052________ LOOKING TO ADOP't I HAPPILY MARRIED, PROFESSIONAL COUPLE UNABLE TO HAVE BABY. HOPING TO ADOPT NEWBORN. $100 OFF ANYFOOTIONGSUB OR 50<: ANY6" SUB with pureh u e of I ANYREGULAR I ANYREGULAR I FOOTIONGSUB J 6”SANDWICH I™ i43®o I fo r 9 n ............. I I %vlth purohiM of Personals DAVE ^ misread your signs. You're evil. Seniors ... Start looking for a datel Senior Formal — Friday June 9, 8pm - lam . Penn Tower Hotel. ___ Lancelot: how are you? If you need a lau ^, call my house and ask f o ^ ^ r ^ e . 5 ^ __ Irene - No matter ^ a t . I'm always here for you. And thanks for going with me...soinehow, you alwa^re niake me sniile. Nick Kiska: You need sleep like Bigfoot n e ^ s a ktek In the teeth. 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For more Information call 610-8256730 or send $20.00 to: K&Y Ventures, 2 0 7 6 Country Line Road, Suite 2 2 1 , Huntington Valley, PA 19006__ wlU) purcbaMof O n e h o u r p e r w e e k fo r th e ter m . any fooUong lub ( Buy and get one of equal I or lesser value tor P l e a s e c o n t a c t A p r il F o r t e L C r e e s e 2 2 2 o r c a ll 8 9 5 - 1 5 2 2 . ueaderehw anca AtP rexe xce p re s e n ts A C a m p u e Th e o f D if f e r e n c e S p r in g L E A D R e t r e a t S a t u r d a y , A p r il 2 2 , 1 9 9 5 , 9 A . M . t o 5 P . M . •A d a y o f in te ra c tiv e w o rk sh o p s a n d d is c u s s io n s •H e ld "A CAMPUS OF DIFFERENCE w orkshop touched a lo t o f people, even t h o s e I t h o u g h t wouU n o t g e t a, lo t o u t o f it, with i t s roleplaying, problem -solving ex e re c ise s, a n d j u s t plain inform ation." " J i m F erguson , Vice P re s id e n t, A rk a n s a s Tech University o ff-c a m p u s in P h i l a d e l p h i a • C a te r e d b y P o w e lto n P iz z a F or m ore inform ation, c o n t a c t Todd T a te 124 C ree s^ S t u d e n t C e n te r 1 S 9 5 -2 5 1 0 28»TheTriangle«April 14,1995 i.i /' T. GILBERT NEVER TOLD THE GUYS HE DIALED HIS GIRL 1-800-C0LLECT FOR FEAR THEY’D ACCUSE HIM OF BEING THE SENSITIVE TYPE. -800-C0LLECT SaveThe PeopleYou Call UpTo 4 4 % . iM TheTriangle«April 14,1995«2> Women’s lax lose two at home Despite only having two backups on the bench, the Dragons have managed to remain competitive. Tracy Marcus Sports Editor Despite strong performances from attacks Peggy Breslin and Erin Grant, the women’s lacrosse team d ro p p ed b o th its hom e gam es this w eekend against Tow son State on April 6 and Cornell University on April 9. C ornell started their attack early, powered by a pair of goals from both Cari Hills and Abigail Friedland, as the Big Red scored eight tim es in th e Hrst half. Drexel’s Erin Grant provided the only Drexel goal of die half. Drexel’s Peggy Breslin started the second half with an imassisted goal for her first of two in the game. M id-H elder Ana Perez and Grant pick up two goals within the next two minutes off assists from Breslin. Grant then returned the favor, assisting Breslin on her second goal in D rexel’s 15-6 losing effort. Cornell outshot Drexel 38 to 16, w ith Drexel g o altender Bobbie Zalewski picking up 20 saves to Cornell’s eight. T hree days earlier, the Dragons lost a close contest to the Tigers o f Tow son State. Drexel put in a great team effort in the first half, with five players scoring a total of six goals. Attack Jessica Fieo picked up two goals w ithin a m inute o f each o th e r and helped the Dragons take a 6-3 lead into the second half. However, the Tigers scored seven straight goals to start the second half and take the lead, 10-6. Breslin started Drexel scoring again with an unassisted goal, and two more goals by Breslin and Grant brought the team to within two. But ^ a t was as close as it would get, as the Dragons lost 11-9. Peggy Breslin continues to lead Drexel in scoring, leading the team with 10 goals and 11 assists this season. **[She’s a ] strong, unselfish player,” said head coach Sue Groff. “[She’s the] key person on the attack. She brings stren g th on the attack.” “We’re 1-6 right now [but] we’re a young team,” said Groff. “W e’re doing better than last season. [There’s] a lot of poten tial on the team. We only have 14 players. With 12 on the field, that leaves two back-ups.” A T T E N T IO N ALL VO LUNTEERS W E W A N T T O R E C O G N IZ E Y O U R EFFO RTS! V O L U N T E E R R E C O G N IT IO N R E C E P T IO N , T U E S D A Y A P R IL 2 5 ( N A T IO N A L Y O U T H S E R V IC E D A Y !) 6 -7 GREAT C O U R T PLEASE help us id e n tify those w ho deserve to be RECOGNIZED by le ttin g us know about yo ur volunteer experience, th a t o f your organization members, friends, etc. PLEASE R.S.V.P. FOR THE RECEPTION BY APRIL 20TH, AT CREESE 223OR C A LL 895-2158,1522. TH AN KS! VywilmgeiMhiptt^li^ W om en’s Lacrosse Cornell U. 15. QDrexel 6 Towson 11. gPrexei 9 Towson Drexel 3 6 8 3 Cornell Drexel — 11 — 9 8 7 1 5 — 15 — 6_____ Goalkeepers: Goalkaepers; min ga Tovifson Hicks 60 9 Drexel Zalewski 60 11 Shots on eoal:___________________ Towson 15 18 — 33 Drexel 16 13 — 29 mln s 12 17 ga s Cornell Graham 60 6 8 Drexel ' Zalewski 60 15 20 Shots on goal:_________________________ Cornell Drexel 20 5 18 — 38 -11- .^=__16_ ^ jm lm g a it d h a p e s a iim in a s lM ff ^ ^ yofwtfecidjat/mm^kdigUkformimSgdoni mktohdppievai^t^dism C a p u to e a rn s r o o k ie - o f - t h e - w e e k MEATS LAXfrom page 32 G reg Sabo re c a p tu re d th e ir th ree goal advantage shortly after. However, the game was tied at four after Drexel’s Diener, Brock Riffel and Brandon Bates scored within 4 minutes and 47 seconds. Drexel was down 5-4 at halftime. The D ra g o n ’s surpassed UMBC by scoring six out of the first eight goals in the th ird quarter, going into the fourth quarter with a 10-8 lead. UMBC kept the game inter estin g when they tied the D ra g o n ’s at 10 w ith 2:52 remaining in the fourth quarter. However, m idfielder Dave C oldw ell along w ith D iener each con n ected to b ring the Dragon’s ahead 12-10. UMBC’s Greg Sabo scored at 12:29 for his hat-trick, but the Retriever’s could not score on several attempts in the closing minutes. Drexel took the victory 12-11. F resh m an a tta c k C raig Caputo led the Dragon’s attack, sco rin g fo u r goals, th ree o f which were unassisted, against St. Joe’s and two against UMBC. C ap u to ’s perform ance this past week earned him his sec ond consecutive North Atlantic C on feren ce R o o k ie-o f-th eWeek honors. Drejjcel’s two victories have increased th eir record to 3-5 overall and 0-3 in the NAC. The Dragon’s will have two consecu tive home games on Saturday, April 15, at 1:00 p.m. against Lafayette, and Wednesday, April 19, at 4:00 p.m. versus Fairfield. M e n ’s L a c r o s s e Drexel 17, d St. Joe*8 8 Drexel 4 St. Joe’s 0 7 3 2 2 4 3 mln 51 9 60 ga 7 1 17 — 17 — 8 toftus IIUJW Ranagan SLJoe'9 Shnta on toal; a, cr Wmen'iHeaUi A lliJs«il»lit|ito iii6ilen liB l. THE TRIANGLE dDrexel 12. UMBC 11 UMBC Drexel 3 0 2 4 3 6 3 2 mln 58 2 60 ga 10 1 12 — 11 -1 2 Goalkeepera: Qpalkeepera: Orexal (215)S2346ffieitffll6 A|X«8 AorUS Drexel R ttinSalsnn 5 ------ 3— 11 11 9 s 12 0 8 11 — 38 9 - 99 O nM UMBC UMBC Loftus fiuyw Brown 12 6 s 11 0 0 10 8 -9 8 CaatL........3. _U_ 19 4-99 Y O U 'U READ IT A N D Y O U 'U U K E IT 30 *TheTriangle«April 14,1995 Baseball B a s e b a ll e s c a p e s L a S a lle 3 - 2 April S Drexel 18j yniverej^ of Pennsyl^^^ Penn Drexel 1 — X — 7 18 11 16 Pitchers: IP BB 3 5 3 ER SO 3 2 2% 6 1 2 1 O.Shannon 4 Moore 3 2 Kapp W: Moore (4^); L: Simonlan (1-3). 3 3 0 1 1 1 IP 5 3 1 ER 3 BB 2 0 1 1 0 Neyland 4% 4Vi Dunne W; Dunne (3-2); L; Sperling (2-2). 1 0 6 0 1 2 BB 6 1 SO 6 0 Penn Simonlan Greenwood Hayden Hoffman 4 4 I'A Drexel 0 0 1 1 5 __3, Ap«iie Vnianova 5, Drexel 1 Drexel Villanova 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 Pitchers; Drexel Sperling Riuo Kapp Villanova SO 4 4 1 Aprils Drexel Hofstra 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 0 9 0 0 — — 3 X 9 11 10 10 2 2 Pitchers; IP 4M V4 H 6 4 Romano 6 ____ 1, Morris W: Romano; L; Moore; S: Morris 10 0 Drexel Doiron Moore Hofstra R 6 5 ER 5 5 9 0 _ 8 6 _____ P____ ____ 1 _____ 5 3 NOAH ADDIS/T^e Triangle April 10 Drexel’s Kris Doiron tries to pick-off Penn’s Sean Turner. He drove in four RBIs In the Dragons 18-7 win against Penn and holds the Drexel record for career RBIs with 97. dDrexel 3, La Salle 2 La Salle Drexel 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 '^ 0 0^ 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 — — 2 3 8 11 0 0 Pitchers; IP 8Vi H 11 R 3 ER 3 BB 4 SO 1 Welkel 9 O nxeL W: Putnano (3-1); L: Ranleri (0-3). 8 ' 2 2 1 6 La Salle Ranleri BASEBALL from page 32 Liberty Bell Classic on April 6, Drexel lost to V illanova at Veteran’s Stadium. Pitcher/des ignated hitter Matt Sperling was tagged with the loss, pitching five innings and allowing two earned runs off six hits while striking out four batters. Shannon accounted for the Dragons’ only run of the game, a solo hom e run in the fo u rth in n in g . Drexel d id n ’t take advantage o f six walks by Villanova pitchers. W ith the loss to H ofstra, Drexel lost its share of first place with the University of Delaware and moved into sole possession of second place. “ [It’s going to be! Delaware and us all the way down the stretch. [Delaware] is a good team,” said Maines. They hope to hand the Blue Hens th eir first NAG loss on Friday, April 14, at 12:00 p.m. at Drexel Field. A r e you tire d o f B O R IN G yu tzh e ad s ta k in g u p y o u r v a lu b le tim e SPEW M G th e ir en d le ss IN A N E GARBAGE There m ust be some way to avoid doing the sam e thing for the next forty years. You’ll be getting your degree from a top school. And you're ready to find a great job. The question is: which job? And can it interest you for your whole career? a t y o u like you are so m e s o rt o f M O R O N ? o S to p re a d in g E d 'O p . S ta r t w ritin g it. At Andersen Consulting, it's our job to help clients do what they do. Only better. For you, that means opportunity and challenge. Part of our business is anticipating the future. So come talk to us about yours. Rnd out more about a career with Andersen Consulting. Andersen Consulting Is an equal opoortuntty employee A n d ersen C O N S U IT IN G AlOHUR ANDERSEN 4 CCX&C 8 t f B* ? I t ’s t h a t easy. N o resum e. N o jo b a p p h c a tio n . Ju st a n o p in io n a n d a spell ch e c k e r. B rin g y o u r m a ste rw o rk to 3 0 1 0 M a c A lis te r a n d dazzle us. Where we go from here. Triangle Attention Juniors and First-Year IVIBA Students... Come talk to us about your future with Andersen Consulting at Drexel’s Career Fair, April 19th. E d -O p )0 10 M.k Alisicr m The Triangle «April 14, 1995»31 Softball C o lb i le a d s D r e x e l p a s t P e n n Drexel 4 . ©University of Pennsylvania 1 ______ Drexel Penn 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 — — 4 1 3 5 0 4 SOFTBALL fr o m page 32 Pitchers; Drexel ER BB 1 0 Colby Penn_____ . __________ 7_ W: Colby: L; Kulp. SO 0 __3_ Drexel 2 . ©University of Pennsylvania 0 Drexel Penn 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 5 2 3 Pitchers; IP Chobot 10 Penn______Mppre _ W: Chobot; L: Moore. 10 Drexel ER BB 0 0 SO 0 April 7 University of IVIaryland-Baltimore County 6 . © Drexel 4 UMBC 0 0 0 Drexel____p_ 0 0 0 1_. P 3 2 _0 . 2 P 0 2 0 __ 0 — — 6 4 9 1 9 2 Pitchers: UMBC IP 9 Reynolds H 9 R 4 1 0 0 0 1 0 BB 0 SO 2 6 Chobot_________^9 W: Reynolds; L: Chobot. Drexei__ UMBC Drexel ER 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 — — 5 1 12 3 2 3 Pitchers: UMBC IP 7 Synowskl ___ 7 ____ Drexel Colby W: Synowskl; L; Colby. H 3 R 1 ER 1 BB 1 SO 1 12 5 3 1 1 April a ■ @Drexel 6, Lafayette 0 Lafayette Drexel 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 x — — 0 6 3 10 3 0 Pitchers; Lafayette Couglin Drexel Coibv W: Colby; L; Couglin. IP 7 H 10 R 6 ER 5 BB 1 SO 0 7 3 0 0 0 2 @Drexel 8, Lafayette 0 Lafayette Drexel 0 5 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 x — — 0 8 3 12 4 3 Pitchers; Lafayette McDonald Chobot Richer W: Chobot; U McDonald. Drexel IP H R 5 12 8 ER 4 BB 0 SO 0 4 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 . April 10 dLehl^ 2. Drexel 1 Drexel Lehieh 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 X — — 1 2 6 4 3 3 Pitchers; IP H Chobot 6 4 R 2 ER 1 BB 0 so Drexel Lehieh Lewis 7 6 1 0 2 1 0 W: Lewis; L: Chobot at one. C hobot only gave up one earned run in the 2-1 loss. Lehigh shut out Drexel in the second game 3-0, getting two unearned runs off of Colby. The Dragons breathed fire on the Leopards during the dou bleheader on April 8, scoring six runs in the opener and eight runs in the nigh tcap . Colby pitched a th ree-h it com plete game in the opener, getting help defensively from the rest of the team. Offensively, she was one of three batters to get multiple hits in the game. First baseman Jess Mattie picked up two RBIs on her only hit of the ball game. The Leopards continued to burn in the second game, giving up eight runs in five innings. Lafayette was plagued by errors, giving up four unearned runs. Winning pitcher Chobot threw four innings, allowing three hits and no runs. Catcher H eather Pandullo, who was hot with the bat, led Drexel with three hits and two RBIs, while scoring two-runs of her own. The game was called after five innings because of the eight run rule, which the coach es agreed to before the begin ning of the game. Drexel gave up a four run lead in the first game o f the double header with UMBC on April 7. After six innings, the D ragons were enjoying a 4-2 lead, b u t a com eback by the Retrievers tied the score at four. Unable to score in the bo t tom o f the seventh, D rexel forced th e gam e in to ex tra innings, only to give up two runs in the top of the n inth. C h o b o t was h an d e d th e 6-4 loss. Shortstop Jaime Long was a force behind the bat, garnering three hits, one RBI and one run scored at four at-bats. NOAH ADDIS/T/ie Triangle Drexel’s Bekki Pfeiffer sUdes in ahead of the tag in the Dragons contest against Lafayette on April 8. Drexel dominated Lafayette in the double-header, winning both games. Colby led the Dragons offen sively in the nightcap as she scored the only Drexel run and picked up two o f the th ree D rexel hits, b o th doubles. Unfortunately, she didn’t do so well on the defensive side of the plate. “This is [a whole] new season ...w e are better than last. [We just] have to prove that on the fie W ^ — Patti 0*Neill While pitching, she gave up 12 hits, walked one and struck ou t one. Three Drexel errors d id n ’t help m atters. UMBC scored two unearned runs in their 5-1 victory. Drexel walked the couple of blocks to Penn*s softball field on April 5 for a doubleheader. Wendi Colby went the distance allowing only one run off of five hits. A two run second inning was the clin ch er since Penn could only muster a single run. Quaker errors contributed to two runs in the 4-1 Dragon vic tory. In the second game, it was the tenth inning before some one scored a run in what was supposed to be a seven inning game, as the D ragons finally broke onto the scoreboard with two u n ea rn ed run s. C h o b o t pitched the 2-0 five-hit shutout for her sixth victory of the sea son. “This is our first crack at the conference,” said O’Neill on the upcoming North Atlantic open er again st the U niv ersity o f Maine on April 15. “This is [a whole] new season. What you do in the conference dictates the seedings for the to u rn a ment.” A preseason pick to tie for last place, O’NeiU feels that “we are better than last. [We just] have to prove that on the field.” dLehigh 3. Drexel 0 Drexel Lehigh 0 2 0 0 “ 0 ^0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 X — — 0 3 2 9 2 0 M id la n tic B a n k p re s e n ts th e Pitchers; Drexel Colby IP 6 Lehlsh Rems 7 H 9 R 3 ER 1 BB 2 SO 3 2 0 0 0 1 W: Rems; L: Colby. loist P E N N April U dTowson 5. Drexel 3 Drexel Towson 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 X — — 3 5 7 5 2 2 Pitchers; Drexel Colby Towson Spampinato IP 6 H 5 R 5 ER 3 BB 1 SO 2 7 7 3 1 2 2 relays W: Spamplnato; L: Colby. @Towson 12, Drexel 1 Drexel Towson 0 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 4 0 3 0 X — — 1 12 7* 12 A p r il 2 7 -2 8 -2 9 ,1 9 9 5 1 2 Franklin Fidd, University o f Pennsylvania • Philadelphia, PA • 33rd & South Streets Pitchers; Drexel Chobot Richer Weaver W: Weaver; L: Chobot. Towson IP 4 2 H 10 2 R 7 5 ER 7 1 BB 7 2 SO 2 2 7 7 I 1 1 0 Tickets available in advance at the Franklm Field Ticket Office Fbrmoie information, call: 1-215-898-6151 Come and support the Drexel Dragons and their coach, Dub Wear ISports Schedule Saturday, ADril I S 12:00 p.m., Baseball vs. Delaware (2) 1 2 :0 0 p.m., Softball vs. Boston (2) 1:0 0 p.m.. Men’s Lacrosse vs. Lafayette 2:0 0 p.m.. Crew ©Drexel Invitational Men’s Track ©West Chester Men’s Tennla ©Hofetra Thursday. April 2 0 3:3 0 p.m.. Baseball vs. Villanova 3:3 0 p.m.. Softball vs. Lehigh 3:3 0 p.m., Women's Lacrosse vs. V Lehigh Tuesday. April.18 ^turday,_Apr|l 22______ ____ ___ . ___________ 4 :0 0 p.m.. Women’s Lacrosse vs. , Bucknell .' . ; Baseball ©Monmouth Softball @DeraWare;t2i M en’s Tennis ©St. Joseph’s Wednesday, April 19 ____ ^ _ 3:30 p.m.-, SoftUai!YsVMorimouth (2) 4:0 0 p.m., Men's Lacrosse vs. Fairfield Friday. April 21 __ Softball ©Temple (2) Crew ©Murphy Cup Baseball ©Delaware Men's Track ©James Madison Invit. Softball ©St. Joseph’s (2) $ 1.00 o«f. G e n e ra l A d ro is a p n ^\^th This Ad i^^iiplANTIC Midlantic Bank, N.A. 'I'his oircr not to be wnibined with any other discount offer. Limit I discount per person, per day. .•=47a?r f ■'! Page 32 StKMiS The Triangle AprU 14,1995 Maines gets 100th victo ry Baseball head coach Don Maines earned his 100th victory at Drexel with the 3-2 victory over the La Salle Explorers. Tracy Marcus Sports Editor It was bound to happen. It is hard to stay undefeated in any sport. And it finally happened to the baseball team. Hofstra hand ed Drexel its first North Atlantic Conference loss of the season, putting their record at 6-1. This was their second straight loss, as they lost to non-confer ence o p p o n en t V illanova on April 6 in the second game of the Liberty Bell Classic. Head coach Don M aines earned his 100th Drexel victory with a come from behind win over La Salle on April 10. “We got a (good] pitching perform ance from [Rob] Putnam,” said Maines. Putnam picked up his th ird win and pitched a complete game despite a few close calls. Several times the Explorers had men in scoring position, threatening to pull ahead, but they were unable to do so. W ith the score tied at one apiece for four innings, La Salle broke it open in the top of the seventh with a two-out run. Explorer shortstop Bob Ball tried to add to the Explorer lead but got tagged at home plate by catcher lohn Shannon. Left fielder Ryan started the eighth inning with a double and tied the score after an RBI single by second basem an D ennis Helkowski. Shannon kept his seven game h ittin g streak alive with a ground rule double to lead off the ninth inning. With the out field shallow, cen ter fielder Kevin Fahy roped one over their heads to score Shannon and put the Dragons ahead for good, 32. “The kids [showed] a lot of guts. [They were able] to come back a couple of times,” com mented Maines. In the past th ree seasons, Drexel has become a force in the NAC thanks to Maines. He has turned the program around with his tireless w ork ethic and tougher schedule. Instead o f having a su b -p a r season, his teams are enjoying winning sea sons. Since joining the NAC, they have been among the lead ers of the pack. In Drexel’s only NAC loss of this season, Hofstra overcame a six-run deficit to defeat Drexel 11 -9. Drexel started their attack early, scoring two quick runs in the top of the first. They kept going, pulling to a 6-0 lead after a four-run fourth inning. Hofstra answered with two runs in the bottom of the fourth and a n in e -ru n fifth in ning , in clu d in g a g ran d slam by H o fstra ’s Jeff V allillo off Drexel’s starting pitcher Kris Doiron. “They chipped away at us,” said Maines. “We didn’t make key plays. [At the same time], we battled back.” Down by five runs, Drexel tried to make a comeback in the top of the seventh. The Dragon’s three runs were not enough to overcom e the eig hth-place Flying Dutchmen. In the semi-final game of the see BASEBALL on page 30 NOAH AODIS/TTie Triangle Drexel midfielder Jake Bunting scored the Dragon’s first goal in their 12-11 victory over UMBC. He has six goals and two assists for Drexel this season. M en’s lacrosse beats St. Joe’s, U M B C The Dragons improved their overall record to 3-5 with back-to-back victories over St, Joseph's and UMBC. Kristi Ciliano Comics Editor Despite the 1-5 start for the m e n ’s lacrosse team , the D ragons have com e alive, crushing St. Joseph’s 17-8 on April 5 and squeezing past University of M aryland Balti more County with a 12-11 vic tory on April 8. Drexel’s domination over St. Joseph’s began with six straight goals in the first and second quarters. Brian Diener led the Dragon attack, scoring two goals and assisting on a n o th e r in the timespan. It wasn’t until 5:05 into the second quarter, when St. Josep h’s C hris C apozzoli scored an unassisted goal, that Drexel’s streak ended. T hree m ore D rexel goals, in clu d in g two by freshm an attack Craig C aputo , set the pace for the rem ainder of the game, leaving Drexel with an easy win over St. Joe’s. The D ragon’s victory over UMBC had a different feel to it than the blowout of St. Joe’s. Although UMBC came out with an early 3-0 lead, sopho more midfielder Jake Bunting was able to score at 2:24 into the second p erio d to b rin g the Dragons within two. UMBC’s see MEN^S LAX on page 29 Softball falls to 12-16 NOAH ADDIS/7?te Triangle Mike Harris tries to complete a double play in Drexel's game versus Penn. The Dragons won the game 18-7. Tracy Marcus Sports Editor The softball team fell to 1216 after d efeating Lafayette University and the University of P ennsylvania and falling to Towson State, Lehigh Univer sity and U n iv ersity of Maryland-Baltimore County. “Overall I am pleased with the progress [we’ve made] as a team ,” said head coach Patti O’Neill. “ [I have] seen a lot of growth.” The team grew a little more against Towson State on April 11. Down by four runs in the first game of the doubleheader, the Dragons started to make a comeback at the top of the fifth and sixth innings, pulling to within one run. However, that was as close as they would get as they lost 5-3. Pitcher Wendi Colby pitched a complete game, giving up three earned runs off five hits. The seco nd gam e w asn ’t much better as a Drexel error led to four unearned runs in the fifth inning. Shanda Richer kept the Dragons from being shut o u t w ith a RBI single in the fourth, bringing home Colby. Pitcher Jeannette C hobot was tagged with the 12-1 loss. The E ngineers o f Lehigh sw ept the d o u b le h e a d e r on April 10, holding Drexel to just a single run. Left fielder Colby accounted for the D ra g o n ’s only ru n , unearned, in the fourth inning of the first game to tie the game see SOFTBALL on page 31