April 26, 2004 - Dolphin Student Group Web Accounts
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April 26, 2004 - Dolphin Student Group Web Accounts
or xt FirstCall The Spirit of ‘84 Michael Patterson exposes the ghosts of presidencies past. Page 3 The Undergraduate Magazine Sponsored by The Wharton Journal Vol. IV, No. 19 | April 26, 2004 Going Hip Hop Overnight Last Days Andrew Pederson contemplates a summer of menial toil. Page 8 Watch as Julie squirms and explores the “other” side. Page 2 Anagram Magic Square Failure is not an option-GET TO IT. Page 6 THE MORNING-AFTER (DRINKING) PILL A N N A S T R O N G I N | A TA S T E O F M E D I C I N E THE OTHER DAY, more specifically the Sunday after Spring Fling, I was reminded of the existence of a pill designed to ward off hangovers. Inspired by the appearance of 95 percent of the student body, I opted to look into this miracle drug, and with just a few clicks of the mouse found exactly what I was seeking. Its name is RU-21, aka "KGB Pill," and its history is almost as exciting as its claimed effects. About 25 years ago, in the heat of the Cold War, Russia attempted to develop a drug that would allow its spies to maintain their sobriety while drinking with the enemies and then use that advantage to extract government and military secrets. However, the drug did not prove to have this intended effect, although those using it claimed to wake up with none of the aftermath that often results from heavy drinking. Since alleviating the suffering of the population was of no concern to the government, the pill was deemed useless and cast aside until its declassification in 1999 by Russian scientists studying the effects of alcohol on the human body. Before long, the great entrepreneurial mind of Moscow native Emil Chiaberi, CEO of Spirit Sciences, a California-based pharmaceutical company, seized upon the idea of marketing the pill for our very own hedonistic country as the anti-hangover medicine. Doing so proved to be a very lucrative decision. The instructions said to take one pill with every drink in order to get optimal effect, and with the price ranging from $6.00-$9.00 online and in drug stores, it is no wonder that as early as 2003 the company was raking in $10,000 a week. This amount takes on an even larger significance, considering the fact that it is marketed as a dietary supplement, avoiding the high costs of FDA approval. Just because it is not FDA approved does not mean that the company keeps a secret about the way it works. Rather, it clearly explains that the drug works to slow down the production of acetaldehyde, the toxic by-product of alcohol responsible for hangovers as well as other alcohol-related conditions such as liver cirrhosis, and it speeds up aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 enzyme's conversion of acetaldehyde to the non-toxic acetic acid. Granted, the company does not go into the particular details of how exactly the pill slows down and speeds up these metabolic processes, but does anyone really care? The only thing that really matters is that the product does what it claims PICTURE PERFECT POSSIBILITIES to do, features no side effects, and is easily accessible. RU-21 meets all these criteria. It is tempting to call it a miracle drug, and yet I will refrain from doing so because of the societal implications that its availability creates, not to mention the health risks. Manufacturers of RU-21 maintain the pill is not designed for binge drinkers, but rather for individuals who occasionally want to engage in some form of social drinking without suffering the consequences the next day. But that argument is as weak as the will power of a frat boy in front of a keg. How many people actually get drunk off a couple of mixed drinks or beers, which is what social drinking constitutes for most people? And the individuals who have such a low tolerance for alcohol probably shouldn’t be drinking in the first place. In all honesty, the people to whom this pill appeals and will continue to appeal the most are those who enjoy partying hard but don’t want anyone to know about it the next morning. Especially in places like Hollywood, where nights of partying are followed by days in front of the camera, a pill like that is essential for the upkeep of the self-indulgent stars we all know and love. And knowing that it exists will make partying hard all the more appealing and rampant. Continued on PAGE 5 LIQUID LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL ROB FORMAN | MY 13-INCH BOX ALRIGHT, IT’S OUR LAST ISSUE, and as such I’m gonna try to shed some light on what new programs may show up on the boob tube in the 2004-2005 season. Keep in mind that few of these shows have officially been picked up. I am basing all of my judgments on cast lists and “loglines,” or the one to two paragraph description of the show’s premise. Whether something gets picked up or not really is all about execution and presentation, but as the screeners won’t be available to me for another month or so, it’s the best I can do. In addition, the networks are beginning to stray from the typical October-May schedule. FOX, for instance, is launching several of its new shows in June and trying to pioneer a year-round schedule, the first on network TV. I will use five categories to judge the various loglines at each of the four major networks. There are about thirty pilots at each, so I’m leaving a great number out, including some that I am truly excited about seeing. Since the two minors have fewer pilots, I’ll just give two categories each. “Most Likely To Succeed” is the show that will get the highest ratings and be the biggest hit. “Biggest Critical Darling” is the show that not everyone will watch, but critics will praise. “Worst Idea Ever” is the show I feel will make it to air for whatever reason, be it a famous cast member or producer or something entirely different, but just will not work as a TV show. “Darkest Horse” is the show that will succeed, even though no one expects it to. Finally, “Quickest Ax” is the show that, if it airs, will be immediately cancelled because no one is willing to watch. ABC Most Likely to Succeed: Plan B with Caroline Rhea is a show about a single gal juggling her career, motherhood, romance and body image issues. ABC is a family network, and this show is one of those branddefining comedies that, if funny enough, has a built-in audience and will be immediately endearing. Biggest Critical Darling: Lost comes from Felicity and Alias creator JJ Abrams and thus will be loved by almost every critic in the trade papers. The show stands on its own strength, too. It is about a group of survivors stranded after a plane crash trying to build new lives. I imagine Gilliagan’s Island crossed with Swiss Family Robinson, but with prettier people, like Dominic Monaghan, Matthew Fox, Ian Somerhalder and Daniel Dae Kim. The only problem might be a lack of well-known female talent. Worst Idea Ever: The Untitled Jonathan Stamos Project is not the actual name of the show, but that information hasn’t been decided yet. It is a comedy taking place in real-time about a couple’s first date. Note to the producers: real-time builds suspense, and that just doesn’t work in comedies. As the events unfold over the course of the date, I imagContinued on PAGE 4 DANIEL NIEH THE REAL PENN PREVIEW BRIAN HERTLER | SLEIGHT OF HAND GREETINGS, MY YOUNG FRIENDS. If you’re reading this article, you’ve already missed the official Penn Preview days—but don’t worry, because I’ll be taking you on a much more informative tour. This is the last issue of First Call for the year, so it’ll be sitting around for a few weeks. Any questions before I begin? I feel bad about missing Penn Previews! Was it interesting? I went to Penn Previews when I was your age and honestly, I don’t remember a thing except the free buttons. You probably didn’t miss much. I did see the nice canvas bags that people are carrying this year—you should try to pick one up. If there are no more questions, I’ll begin the tour here on 33rd Street. You’re looking at DRL behind me, and Hutchinson Gym beyond that. This is the eastern edge of campus, and you’ll never come out here unless you care about the major sports or take engineering courses. I recommend you do neither, since it’s annoying to walk this far. Question? Speaking of sports, they say students throw toast during football games! Is that true? Apparently. I’d like you to remember that school spirit is completely optional here at Penn. Some of us are content to make toast and throw it away; some of us prefer to get nutritional value out of it. Let’s move on, across 34th Street. We’re coming up to College Green—notice the political activity on the grass here. It appears that the Ugandan Wharton Women’s Club is having some kind of rally—I’m not sure why. They’re offering free food, though; go ahead and grab some. One of the best things about Penn is that if you pretend to care about politics, then you can usually score a couple of free meals per day. That’s important, because you’ll want to avoid the dining halls as often as possible. Question in the back. It seems like a lot of students are lying on the grass, doing nothing. Doesn’t anybody have work to do? Actually, those aren’t really Penn students; neither are those guys on the couches on Locust Walk. I think they wander in from Temple and Drexel. You won’t be seeing any real Penn students on this tour since it’s finals week— Continued on PAGE 5 P AGE 2 A PRIL 26, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . IV N O . 19 FirstCall Editorial Vol. IV, No. 19 | April 26, 2004 The Undergraduate Magazine Sponsored by The Wharton Journal Managing Editor Jordan Barav Editor-in-Chief Julie Gremillion Assistant Editor Robert Forman Andrew Pederson Lauren Saul Columnists Robert Forman Julie Gremillion Brian Hertler Mickey Jou Michael Patterson Andrew Pederson Roz Plotzker Anna Strongin Writers Chan Ahn Daniel Nieh Etan Rosenbloom Lauren Saul Seth Scanlon Artists Boris Shochat Stephanie Craven Daniel Nieh THREE’S A CHARM This issue of First Call marks the culmination of our third year of existence and our second as a university-wide publication. We feel that while still relatively new, First Call is making a significant impact. From debates on politics to commentary on Penn life, from reviews of arts and entertainment to our unique Magic Anagram Square word game, First Call has set a standard of quality and stirred the opinions and interests of members of the university. As we continue, First Call is committed to its mission of providing our community with an open forum for expression that will spur thought and discussion on campus and enrich the quality of student and intellectual life at Penn. This year has seen the succession of a new editorial board, new layout staff, and the addition of new writers and columnists alongside the tried and true, all of which have come to define and redefine the paper in both its substance and aesthetic quality. The diversity of content—including edgy, humorous, creative and though-provoking writing of almost every genre; artwork; and word games—continues to lend First Call its variety and appeal. As the year winds to a close, we would like to give special thanks to those who have made this year a success. Thank you especially to our Business Manager Trey Hollingsworth and to our former layout editor Alex Bellos whose contributions to First Call invaluably advanced our organization and our paper. We would like to thank the Wharton Journal for the contribution they have made to us and the community for supporting First Call. We would also like to thank our readers and those of you who have actively engaged in First Call’s discourse—whether by formally submitting your thoughts to First Call; discussing your opinions with classmates, parents, friends and foes; or merely ruminating personally over the week’s content. We wish you good luck with finals and look forward to your readership and continued contributions next year! Layout Editor Krystal Godines Layout Staff Andrew Milanez Anna Stetsovskaya Business Manager Joseph (Trey) Hollingsworth Marketing Manager Leah Karasik Marketing Staff Lauren Saul Anna Strongin Distribution Managers Jaqueline Hayward Marissa Sapega Webmaster Luke Iseman Contact Information 330 Jon M. Huntsman Hall 3730 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19104 (215) 898-3200 [email protected] Web Site clubs.wharton.upenn.edu/fcpaper Submissions Email letters to the editors and guest submissions to [email protected]. Students, please include your school and class. Editorial Policy First Call is the undergraduate magazine of The University of Pennsylvania. It is sponsored by The Wharton Journal. First Call is published every Monday. Our mission is to provide members of the community an open forum for expressing ideas and opinions. To this end, we, the editors of First Call, are committed to a policy of not censoring opinions. Articles are provided by regular columnists and writers. They are chosen for publication based on the quality of writing and, in the case of commentaries, the quality of argumentation. Outside of the weekly editorial and other editorial content, no article represents the opinion of First Call, its editorial board, or individual members of First Call other than the author. No content in First Call unless otherwise stated represents the official position of the administration, faculty, or student body at large of the Wharton School or the University of Pennsylvania. JULIE GREMILLION | SOUND ADVICE Julie presents the old, the new and the diehard favorites. I confess I have sold my soul—not to the Facebook along with the rest of you—but to my former worst enemy: the Hip Hop devil. Many of my friends are celebrating the conversion, and I’ve had to come to terms with my addiction. I’m still an alternative girl at heart, but I’ve become just another one of the white masses experimenting with the Other Side. All I can say in my defense is that I put up a good fight…and I still have good taste in music: hip hop, alternative, pop or oldies. RETRO REWIND “Walk This Way” Run-DMC featuring Aerosmith IN STEREO “Through the Wire” Kanye West The song that started it all off for most of us. It was originally written by Aerosmith in 1975, although Steven Tyler left the first version of the lyrics in the cab on the way to the recording studio and wrote new lyrics on the wall, but the song was virtually forgotten in Aerosmith’s lack of fame. Run-DMC covered it with Steven Tyler and Joe Perry in 1986, hitting #4 on the charts and becoming Run-DMC’s first major hit. The hit simultaneously catapulted Aerosmith back into the rock spotlight with the follow-up release of Permanent Vacation. Most importantly, “Walk this Way” exposed rap to a white audience in a big way, paving the road for a future filled with crossover fans. In honor of Spectrum’s Penn Relays concert Friday night, which I was able to attend at the last minute, I present “Through the Wire”, the song written shortly after Kanye West’s near-fatal car accident. The College Dropout is West’s debut album from Roc-A-Fella Records, also home to Jay-Z and Freeway. West hails from Chicago where he dropped out of University of Chicago after one year and eventually scored a record deal with Roc-A-Fella. “Through the Wire” is a powerful song about his accident and his thankfulness to be alive. The recorded version is great, but I actually prefer former Penn grad John Legend’s background vocals. I highly recommend the album if you’re a hip hop fan, and cheers to Spectrum for bringing him to Penn. EDITORIAL ADVICE “Spaceship” Kanye West featuring GLC and Consequence Another track off The College Dropout, this one is probably my favorite from the album. Perhaps I’m biased because I heard such a great version live with John Legend at the end of the show on Friday, but the hook by GLC is awesome. A slower track off the album, perhaps it’s my virgin crossover that makes me like this song more than others on the LP, but the layered vocals form an intriguing mix that prevents it from being harsh or boring. I may pay the Alternative deities later on for being a traitor, but right now I’m hooked. And Kanye West’s album is a pretty decent start. First Call: Critically informed. Join the most stimulating club on campus A PRIL 26, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . IV N O . 19 P AGE 3 REAGAN REDUX Bush forecasts return of the 80s M I C H A E L PAT T E R S O N | O U T O F T H E F O L D NEXT YEAR WILL BE my last year at Penn. I must admit I feel a bit nervous about my looming departure from the university. I know that if I feel the inevitable end of my undergraduate career approaching, many of my friends graduating in three weeks feel far more anxious. After all, Penn provides its students with everything they could want. Unlike the real world, at Penn everything is streamlined into one simple, outrageously large bill that most here never even see. Internet, cable television, Au Bon Pain—hell, there is even on-campus video rental delivery. So as reality creeps closer and closer, many feel understandably frightened of the job market that exists just over the horizon. Many are afraid of what the “American Experience” will really hold for them. Oh, and President Bush’s idea of a “war on terrorism” cannot be a relief either. Since Bush took office after “winning” the 2000 election, the country has fallen into a sort of darkness. For many Americans, the times as they currently exist mirror those of the 1980s. During the Presidency of Ronald Reagan, the country was going through a bear-run economy with a government hostile to the welfare system and a President bent on cutting taxes in a way that benefited only the wealthiest. Furthermore, the country was still grappling with issues surrounding discrimination against people of color, which represented such a serious problem and yet received little help from Reagan. Simultaneously, the U.S. was in the midst of the last decade of the Cold War. Tensions were high, the military was kept at heightened alert and the President was making claims of “evil” this and “bad” that. But perhaps the one thing that looms most over that decade is the tragedy that was, and remains, the AIDS virus. For much of the 1980s, thousands upon thousands of homosexual men languished from this then unknown affliction under a government that seemed oblivious to their plight. At the time, the discrimination that all homosexuals endured in every level of society held no relevance for the government and no sympathy from President Reagan. It might not be a surprise that for too long those whom society shunned were left to die alone, unmentioned by Reagan until 1987. After all, “they who live in sin die in sin,” a sentiment if not voiced by Reagan, was expressed in the actions of so many in government. There is a similar situation at hand today. We the people are being led by a president who is fond of labeling things in a cut-and-dry fashion. According to President Bush, “You are either with us or against us,” there are “axes of evil” and it is good to pull Bible quotes out of the air when addressing domestic policy. This attitude, born of religious fervor and ignorant bigotry, leads the government in doing what it has often been so infamous for—ignoring the plight of the many. This attitude, born of religious fervor and ignorant bigotry, leads to the government doing what it has often been so infamous for— ignoring the plight of the many. The AIDS virus is still with us. Discrimination against people of color, women and homosexuals remains in one form or another. So what of the quintessential “American Experience” that I pondered earlier: has it changed? There is a quote that I am particularly fond of which goes to the heartbreak that the American Experience sadly represents to so many in this nation. The white cracker who wrote the national anthem knew what he was doing. He set the word ‘free’ to a note so high nobody could reach it. That was deliberate. Nothing on earth sounds like less freedom to me. The previous quote comes from the Broadway play Angels in America and is spoken by the character Belize. In this awe-inspiring play, Belize is an African-American homosexual who works as a low-paid night nurse caring for an AIDS patient. The America Belize lives in is of the repressed, ignored and discarded. For him, and so many other people, the American dream is survival of the fittest. If President Bush wins office again, will there still be any place for people like Belize in America? Bush has already made it clear homosexuals should not marry—now or ever. The President and those in Congress also express open hostility towards a woman’s right to choose, threatening to undercut reproductive freedom and return us to the days of the back-alley abortionists. Even college graduates are not out of danger. For my friends leaving Penn soon, grad school may not be in the picture as Bush wants to cut some forms of governmental aid. Already some undergraduates have been told to quit their work study jobs as the original funds have been greatly reduced, all to pay for the glorious tax cuts for businesses and people making well over $200,000 a year. The vision of America President Bush expounds is not a bad one for much of the population. Marriage gets to stay heterosexual only, women are forced into childbirth against their will and those programs that aim to raise minorities up from the underbelly of discrimination are destroyed. Indeed, this is the America I see, President Bush’s America. The millions of people who agree with this view have no problem with Bush’s plans for this country. For all our graduating seniors, you can change this. Our country can elevate above the rubble of yesteryear and become a place where everyone lives in the same vision. This is not possible with President Bush and will not happen under someone else with the same ideology as he. This ideal can only be brought about by the one thing that gives all Americans a voice—the vote. This November, if we are to give everyone the right to a positive American Experience, we all must vote for a change in leadership. After another four years of President Bush, I fear what my America will become. Michael Patterson is a junior in the College. You can write to him at mjp2@sas. A PRIL 26, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . IV N O . 19 P AGE 4 AN AFFAIR TO DISMEMBER Self-Indulgent Seniors on the Move ROZ PLOTZKER | SEX AND THE UNIVERSITY HOORAY FOR SPRING, for crowded Locust Walk, for bare shoulders and backs, for the business men eating outside Cosi at lunch, for cutting that unimportant second-to-last class to sit on College Green, and for the couple making out behind you. Hooray for the dogwood trees and for the five year-olds jumping through the Buttonholes in front of Van Pelt while their grad student parents look on. I look under the Button and wonder—is this where these children were conceived? Spring at last, spring at last, thank God Almighty, it’s spring at last! And with this time of year comes blatant hormonal debauchery. What has gotten into us? Short skirts are coming out of the woodwork. The LOVE statue looks like it got a fresh coat of paint and even the Ben Franklin statue looks like he has a boner. I dare you to look. Suddenly, all my friends are juggling two, three, or four possible hook-up partners, who are also my friends. No, no, don’t pace yourself through those dismal winters. Save up that energy for reading days when the last possible moment for a spring semester hook-up arrives. Then, finally you can let all that bottled up passion explode… I feel like it’s Pearl Harbor all over again. I still remember the melodramatic sagas of last minute Quaker ardor from Spring 2003. All names that follow are pseudonyms. Gretel Schmidt had been involved in Penn activism since her freshman year. For four semesters now, she had been voicing her anti-war pro-choice opinions alongside Civic House heartthrob Hansel, but despite the obvious tension, no affair developed among the politics—that’s a first. The two went to an end-of-the-year date party together, not intending for anything to happen and ended up sharing a tent two weeks later when a group of us went camping. Cher Schmidt, Gretel’s friend of no relation, was also a sophomore, also an activist, but a Canadian despite her interest in America’s foreign policy. Gretel had worked with Sonny on Palestinian-Israeli conflict response, and the Canadian and the Jew got together and made a hit record album, so to speak. Their coming together was not a quick process because Canadians, while very open about political opinions, can be less so about the opposite sex and Jewish boys aren’t always perceptive. Nonetheless, on the same camping trip they slept side by side. Another friend, Harry, faced a different situation. Sally and he had been friends, but since he was in a relationship at the time, nothing happened between the two of them. The last day of classes passed, finals passed, Harry and Sally both passed, and they started spending more time together over senior week. Sally was never one to appreciate limits and made advances on Harry despite his marital status. Harry responsed, “Waiter, PILOTS Continued from PAGE 1 ine ABC will be bound to show the entire run, and then never speak of it again. Darkest Horse: Countdown could very well be the 24 of the season. It is the second real-time show ABC has ordered, but on this show, every episode is about a SWAT team responding to a new emergency. With the suspense effect of real-time and an episodic format, unlike the serial format that keeps 24 from being a bonafide smash hit, this could surprise everyone. Quickest Ax: The Untitled Jessica Simpson Project. This show, about a pop-star turned TV reporter, doesn’t actually reflect real life, but it comes too damn close. Jessica is so over. I can’t imagine this being funny or even remotely original. It’s just going to be another carbon copy workplace sitcom with an unproven, failed pop-singer who turned to reality television to jumpstart her career as the lead. CBS Most Likely to Succeed: CSI: New York will succeed. I don’t even need to explain why. The franchise is huge. The show is being set up with a CSI: Miami episode this May. People haven’t tired of the CSI format yet, and just because the show is in New York instead of an exotic locale won’t change the viewer levels. Biggest Critical Darling: Sudbury is about a single mother of two and her family of witches. This is on CBS? The stars of the show are big names and tend to be gorgeous, like Kim Delaney and Jeri Ryan. I don’t see anything about witches becoming big on CBS, but no one really expected Joan of Arcadia to get an audience its size. Critics will love this because it’s an aging network giving an unconventional idea a chance. Worst Idea Ever: Clubhouse is about a New York Yankees bat-boy who grows up. Really? Because that could be interesting. Dean Cain, get yourself out of this and back into the blue tights of Superman. This could work on a TV-movie level. Not as a series. Darkest Horse: Taste, starring Jane Krakowski. I’ve loved this talented woman since becoming enraptured with her free-spirited assistant character, Elaine, on Ally McBeal. The idea, about a culinary school graduate getting her first job, could provide enough warm fuzzies to generate buzz and viewers. Quickest Ax: Dr. Vegas. Rob Lowe has seen better days. Those days were on The West Wing. As far as I see, this show doesn’t offer anything new except its main cast member, but Lowe wasn’t enough to carry The Lyon’s Den, either. A doctor in a Vegas casino? there is too much pepper on my poppikosh.” By pepper, I mean Sally and by “on my poppikosh,” I mean up in my grill. Finally my friend Batman told me he and Catwoman had always had chemistry, but nothing ever happened. Even though her skin-tight leather suit would suggest otherwise, Catwoman comes from a reserved family and it is not appropriate to fool around. Even so, the night before Catfather came to pick her up and take her home at the end of the year, she took a chance and made a move. For maybe the first time in evolutionary history, there was interspecies mating. Then Batman was rushed out the door before he could even cough up a hairball and never got an introduction to the parents. What do a fairytale, a rock duo, a pop culture couple, and DC Comic characters have in common? Hansel, Sonny, Sally, and Catwoman were all seniors in their last week of school, and their respective partners were all sophomores. It’s a graduation phenomenon: those leaving have a sordid last minute affair with someone staying. At first, my friends and I coined this as the “self indulgent senior”: a graduating student who tries a taste of a relationship that had been suppressed, but is now safe to explore because commitment is not an option. It’s a senior’s last chance for college booty, a circumstance for love without commitment, a final goodbye to the ease with which we find play in the college scene. After graduation, what social vortex are you headed towards? What kind of black hole is the workforce, where in order to We’ve already got shows about glitzy Las Vegas and shows about doctors… but the two together? It’s not going to work, and no one’s going to watch. FOX Most Likely to Succeed: The North Shore is set to premiere June 14th. It is an upstairs-downstairs look at a Hawaiian hotel with a hot, young cast. If the writers can find a way to build in some of The OC’s soapy plots without losing the premise, then this show will become the summer’s hottest destination. Biggest Critical Darling: Point Pleasant is about a girl washing ashore in a sleepy beach town, causing an uproar and changing the town forever. Grabbing its key talent straight from daytime soaps, like Amber Tamblyn and Sarah Michelle Gellar before, this show and Elisabeth Harnois provide the unique, edgy concept FOX is known for but has stopped caring about. Worst Idea Ever: Method and Red, which is a scripted show about the two famous stars moving to the ‘burbs. Uh… I don’t get it. Either be a reality show or don’t. This just seems contrived and stupid, but I’ll bet you anything these attached names will bring people in, if just for the summer when it airs (season premiere June 16th). Darkest Horse: Boondocks could make a really funny cartoon series, based on the hilarious and irreverent comic strip of the same name. It seems more like a UPN show, though. Also, the comic strip isn’t big on long-running plot. I don’t know how the show will keep its politically minded and satirical jokes up while telling a half-hour long story. I’d love to see this succeed and together with Family Guy return FOX adult animations to their former glory. Quickest Ax: Mr. Ed. I need to go puke now. The fact that anyone would bother to update this old show for the modern viewer is just too stuck in the past. Talking horses are no longer funny. If they were ever funny. Which they weren’t. NBC Most Likely to Succeed: Law and Order: Trial by Jury. Bored now. The pilot hasn’t been filmed yet, so there’s a chance this will be a mid-season show, but it’s from Dick Wolfe and bears the Law and Order franchise name, so its success is inevitable. Four hours of L&O each week? NBC has too many good ideas for its schedule to be marred by countless police/legal procedural ports. Biggest Critical Darling: The Office. After last year’s Coupling debacle, NBC let the incredibly talented British staff have a say in the translation of this quirky office comedy. The British humor may not slide well with get a date you might find yourself at happy hour saying, “How much does a polar bear weigh? Enough to break the ice! Hi, I’m...” The problem with the self indulgent senior theory is two-fold: first, as we say in my lab courses, the evidence doesn’t support the hypothesis. It’s possible the relationship might not have gotten off the ground from the begining because of the sophomores. What’s more, it could be sophomores indulging in their last chance to hook up with the senior. So, seniors are not necessarily to blame for the delay of activity. Secondly, in two of the stories, the relationship continued in some form after graduation, and so even though commitment wasn’t possible, there was a decent attempt. Not all seniors are selfindulgent and some even try to commit to something besides a graduate program for after college. For example, while Sonny and Cher and Gretel and Hansel were doing their thing at the camping trip, Annie and Matt decided to get engaged. Around this time of year, I’m always a little skeptical and so I apologize to any seniors who are getting cock-blocked by this article; it’s like bad karma. As of last Friday, I marched or stumbled my way into seniorhood and now that I am older and wiser I can see that, in retrospect, people are just self-indulgent in general and we shouldn’t pigeonhole seniors. At least not the class of 2005. Roz Plotzker is a junior in the College. You can write to her at rosalyn@sas. Americans, but you can bet that critics who love the BBC version are going to be behind this show. Worst Idea Ever: Joey. Come on, NBC. The charm of Friends does not exist without all six, and that charm has waned. Frasier succeeded as a spin-off of Cheers because Dr. Crane wasn’t the main male character. Over the last few seasons, that’s what Joey has become. A lot of people are going to watch it, but will they stay? Then again, it could be really funny with the cast of characters joining Mr. Tribiani in L.A. Darkest Horse: My 11:30 has Jeff Goldblum and Brian Stokes Mitchell. Great actors, yes. The comedy is about a financial consultant who has a stress-induced nervous breakdown and seeks therapy. A warning to many Whartonites, and a good companion piece to The Apprentice 2? Quickest Ax: Father of the Pride is an animated comedy about Siegfried and Roy’s Vegas act told through the eyes of the animals. I fail to see this as funny, rather more tragic. It certainly doesn’t have the charm of a Simpsons or a Family Guy. How many stories can there really be? UPN Most Likely to Succeed: The Untitled Andrew Secunda Project, again, will not be the real name. Charisma Carpenter in a sitcom? That sitcom is about a mismatched family where the sister is career-minded and the brother is a slacker? Not the most original, but sign me up for the talented eye candy. Worst Idea Ever: Nikki and Nora features two lesbians working together as private investigators. Sounds more like the premise for a porno flick than a TV drama. I mean, pushing the envelope is one thing… this is just bad. WB Most Likely to Succeed: The pilots really suck. They don’t even seem to be speaking to the teen audience. The show that staked Angel, John Wells’ remake of vampire goth-soap Dark Shadows has a great cast and a built-in following. But I won’t be watching. Worst Idea Ever: The Mountain. A young man inherits a mountain when his father dies. One, that doesn’t mean he has to live there. Two… I can’t even think of an appropriately snarky comment. It’s just bad and I imagine once it devolves into a soap, it’ll get worse. Rob Forman is a sophomore in Wharton. You can write to him at robertf@wharton. A PRIL 26, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . IV N O . 19 P AGE 5 BEST BETS FOR MAY SWEEPS Rob Forman’s Faves Once again, we’re gonna avoid the traditional daily format. Here are the things I deem nail-bitingly anticipatable for “May Sweeps” (which begins its four week stretch, oddly enough, Thursday, April 29th). Also a few of note events for the three days prior. Series Finales (cancelled or ending series): Thursday, May 6 : Friends (NBC, 9 P.M.), “The Last One”—hour-long finale Monday, May 10th: The Parkers (UPN, 9 P.M.), “At Last” Thursday, May 13th: Frasier (NBC, 9 P.M.), “Goodbye, Seattle”—hour-long finale Sunday, May 16th: The Practice (ABC, 10 P.M.), “Adjourned, Part Two” Wednesday, May 19th: Angel (WB, 9 P.M.), “Not Fade Away” th Undecided Finales (the networks haven’t announced all of their renewals yet): Sunday, May 9th: Survivor: All-Stars (CBS, 8 P.M.)—three-hour finale and reunion Saturday, May 15th: Saturday Night Live (NBC, 11:30 P.M.), “Mary-Kate and Ashley Olson” Friday, May 21st: Joan of Arcadia (CBS, 8 P.M.). “Silence” Monday, May 24th: Everybody Loves Raymond (CBS, 9 P.M.), “Golf For It” Tuesday, May 25th: 24 (FOX, 9 P.M.), “Day 3: 12:00 P.M. to 1:00 P.M.” Wednesday, May 26th: American Idol (FOX, 8 P.M.)—two-hour finale Thursday, April 29th: Tru Calling (FOX, 8 P.M.), “D.O.A.”/“Two Weddings and a Funeral”—two-hour finale Sunday, May 23rd: The Simpsons (FOX, 8 P.M.), “Fraudcast News”—editor’s note: due to contract disputes, next season’s order of The Simpsons may be cut back to the installments already produced and the series will then end Sunday, May 23rd: Alias (ABC, 9 P.M.), “Resurrection” Special Events: Season Finales (series will be back next season): Wednesday, April 28th: South Park (Comedy Central, 10 P.M.)—last episode until fall Sunday, May 30th: The Sopranos (HBO, 9 P.M.), “All Due Respect”—season finale Tuesday, June 15th: The Shield (FX, 10 P.M.), “On Tilt”—season finale Tuesday, June 22nd: Nip/Tuck (FX, 10 P.M.), “Erica Naughton”—season premiere Thursday, April 29 : Will & Grace (NBC, 8:30 P.M.), “Oh, No You Di-in’t”—hourlong finale Tuesday, May 4th: Scrubs (NBC, 9:30 P.M.), “My Best Friend’s Wedding” Wednesday, May 5th: The OC (FOX, 9 P.M.), “The Wedding” th Tuesday, May 11th: The Dick Van Dyke Show (CBS, 9 P.M.)—all-new episode (no joke) Tuesday, May 11th: America’s Next Top Model (UPN, 9 P.M.), “The Runway Ahead” Monday, May 17th: CSI: Miami (CBS, 10 P.M.), “MIA/NYC - NONSTOP”—pilot for CSI: New York Non-Sweeps Events: PENN PREVIEWS CHASER they’re all in their rooms, studying. I see a nearby building under construction. What’s going on? You must be referring to Williams Hall, which has been covered in scaffolding all year. Judging from other recent construction projects—High Rise North, Pottruck, Huntsman Hall—I’m guessing they’ll replace the front half of the building with a giant window. This is part of the University’s longterm “Raise Tuition” plan, which will eventually replace all surfaces with glass. Let’s continue down Locust Walk. Before you ask: yes, there are always this many groups handing out flyers. You may think it’s cute now—I did when I was your age—but they’re not so lovable when you’re running late for class. Just keep your head down and avoid eye contact, folks. Some of the less popular groups can get aggressive. Brian, what’s with those “Not Penn State” t-shirts? Isn’t it pathetic that the number-five school in the country needs to remind people that it’s not a state school? Don’t be so harsh. Ben Franklin didn’t know any better when he named this school. It’s the one mistake he made in his life. Give him a break. I see a banner that says “Spring Fling is coming.” Wasn’t Spring Fling last week? Think of all our decorations as Christmas lights. Some we eventually take down, and some—like those snowflakes—we leave up all year. Now that we’ve reached 37th Street, let’s head down to Spruce. I want to show you the best thing about Penn: the Hot Roast Beef Sandwich from Greek Lady. As I’m ordering, I’d like to direct your attention to the Quad. You’ll soon realize that the Quad exists only to impress your parents—it’ll quickly lose appeal once you’ve experienced the Sunday-morning vomit puddles in the communal bathroom. Now look at the High Rises on the horizon. Their purpose is to give upperclassmen a private bathroom. Also, notice the taxis permanently stationed on the street here. Freshmen tend to avoid the subway at first because they’re afraid of people who don’t look like them. Thanks to the University’s tireless commitment to diversity, however, you’ll eventually learn that taxis are a waste of money. We’ll continue west. I hope you don’t mind if I eat as we’re walking. If you look to your left, you’ll see the Triangle Diner—which I hope you’ll never attend under any circumstance—and the beggars outside Wawa. For God’s sake, put your wallets away; there people are trained professionals with years of panhandling experience. They earn most of their income from over-liberal youngsters like yourselves, but giving them money only causes them to multiply. They’re like cockroaches in that way. We’ve reached 38th Street and I’m scared! Can’t we take the bridge? Don’t be such a wimp. Here’s my tip for crossing streets in Philadelphia: everybody runs red lights, so you’re actually better off jaywalking. I hear that’s a crime in some places, but even the cops do it here. We’re approaching my room, so this tour is going to ending soon. If there are any more questions… What’s your opinion on Greek life? I don’t have one. Anyone else? No weaseling, Brian. What do you think of West Philadelphia? West Philadelphia and I have a business-like relationship—I go in there when I want a cheap haircut or a deli sandwich, and I haven’t gotten robbed yet. The University uses a lot of scary words like “community outreach” and “revitalization projects,” but nothing is mandatory, thank God. What’s the best thing and the worst thing about going to Penn? The girls and the classes, not necessarily in that order. Also, food carts, dorm infestations, the Daily Pennsylvanian, Philadelphia, and the Writer’s House. You can sort that out yourselves. Well, you’ve been a lovely bunch. If you’re intelligent and not annoying, I hope you come here. There isn’t anything wrong with partying so hard if things are viewed exclusively from the perspective of a hangover, but we shouldn’t forget that while the pill is effective in combating the aftermath, it does absolutely nothing for prolonging or maintaining one’s sobriety. Therefore, while you may not have to deal with next-day consequences you will most certainly have to deal with whatever stupid or dangerous antics you pull while under the influence. You may still make a fool of yourself at some party; you may still vomit; you may still get into some pointless fight; and on a more serious note, you may still get alcohol poisoning. You may still hurt yourself or others without a full awareness of your actions. If you consume more alcohol, knowing you can avoid a hangover the next day, the chance of one or a number of these things happening will increase. Plus, it is important to emphasize the fact that while the pill works to slow the production of the toxic acetaldehyde, it does not stop that production altogether. While hypothetically, the less toxic substances mean the alcohol will have less of a negative affect, no one really knows how much these metabolic processes are truly affected. The rate decrease may be significant enough to prevent a hangover, but it may not be significant enough to truly combat long-term effects such as cirrhosis and other organ damage. Even if RU-21 could truly minimize alcoholrelated health problems, that potential will probably be offset by the increased amounts of alcohol consumed for a lack of consequences. Even if we were to put all the possible health considerations aside, I find one very serious problem with this drug: its social implication. I have difficulty understanding why such a vigorous market should exist for something that eliminates the consequences of too much fun. Not to say something is inherently wrong with enjoying a good party and having fun, but everything has to have its limit. A hangover is precisely what sets it. The fact that so many people are yearning to eliminate this limiting factor is extremely disturbing to me because it emphasizes the extreme over-indulgent tendencies of the American public over the positive qualities of hard-work, dedication, and ambition usually associated with our country and its heroes. The bottom line is that partying is something that should be enjoyed, but not to an extreme, especially not with the help of a consequence-eliminating pill, because there is no such a thing as consequence-free drinking. If there are no physical consequences, there will be social and professional ones. If they don’t show face now, they will definitely emerge later on in some form or another. But hey, if you’re okay with that then just go to: http://www.ru-21hangover.com, it’s $8.99 for 20 tablets. Brian Hertler is a junior in the College. You can write to him at hertlerb@sas. Anna Strongin is a sophomore in the College. You can write to her at astrongi@sas. Continued from PAGE 5 m s i l l our dose of a c t s weekly wisdom r i f IF FEBRUARY AND MARCH HONOR BLACKS AND WOMEN, THEN ARE APRIL THROUGH JANUARY WHITE MALE MONTHS? Continued from PAGE 1 Low Cost Airport Shuttle via PATRIOT TRANSPORTATION We’ll take you to JFK, Newark, Philadelphia, and LaGuardia Airports! Before you take a cab, give us a call to get there cheaper! For info and reservations, call anytime: 800/844-2240 A PRIL 26, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . IV N O . 19 P AGE 6 ANAGRAM MAGIC SQUARE Find an anagram for the 5-letter word in each box. The anagram will answer one of the clues. Put the number of that clue into the small square and write the anagram on the dash. The numbers in each row and column will add up to 65. Write the first letter of each anagram on the correspondingly numbered dash at the bottom of the page; and, presto!, the Anagram Magic saying will appear. TROVE SHOAL SHORE DRAIN FLIER = 65 ORACH CHORE DATER TAPED RIGHT = 65 1 GIRTH BLEAT RELAY ERATO STONE BAYER = 65 ASTOR TUNES TOWEL PAINT LEASE = 65 SERVE CRATE CRANE ROUTE RUNES = 65 = 65 = 65 = 65 = 65 = 65 1. Circumference 14. Mother-of-pearl 2. Not fitting 15. Beginning 3. Stanza 16. Carbine 4. Ahead of time 17. Workbench 5. Lowest point 18. Young hooter 6. Bizarre 19. Skilled 7. Tire pattern 20. Give TLC 8. Paraguay tea 21. Harangue 9. Not concealed 22. Follow 10. Like a loose gem 23. Steed 11. Cook a turkey 24. Artist’s stand 12. Nimbi 25. Kitchen pest 13. Earth pigment G —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– —– 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 FOR SOLUTIONS GO TO OUR WEBSITE: HTTP://CLUBS.WHARTON.UPENN.EDU/FCPAPER Copyright © 2004 by Penny Publications, LLC www.pennypress.com A PRIL 26, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . IV N O . 19 P AGE 7 S CLUB 7: THE ASIAN VERSION MICKEY JOU | SITES AND SOUND W h a t do you get when you go see PennYo,, the campus Chinese a cappella, sing their pants off on a Friday night? Live before your eyes you witness the Penn version of S Club 7 without the inane antics and the oh-so-authentic friendships, or, if you prefer, the Asian American Idol minus the pain of really bad auditions with 200 percent the talent and all the eye candy. PennYo’s spring 2004 concert, aptly titled “Kaleidoscope”, was a grab bag of honest-to-goodness ear candy. Their guest performers of the evening, the Penn Six Singers, set the tone for the evening’s playful show with three very funny and lively songs. They started with their own interpretation of New Kids on the Block’s “American Girl” and followed it with a dark but animated caricature of the “Princeton Strut” with nice scatting from the lead! The Penn Six Singers closed with a spoof of Billy Joel’s “For the Longest Time.” Their light-hearted set lead naturally into the energetic and playful style of PennYo. From updated versions of old classics, “Fragrance of the Night” to the creative and daring groove of “My Anata”, PennYo delivers some of the most diverse Chinese pop a cappella out there. I was so impressed with their performance, I decided to present my five reasons why PennYo is a bona fide pop group and ought to get its own TV show. 1. They can sing! While it’s true that Penn’s campus is littered with a cappella groups, singing ensembles and choirs, I remain impossibly impressed by the range of techniques and styles this group has mas- tered. While the soloists have a tendency to become overly attached to the microphone, the group itself comes together as both original and evocative of the Asian pop sound. The proof: in “My Desired Happiness,” the group didn’t start out in unison, and there was a noticeable discrepancy between the tempo of the lead singer’s melody and the backup harmony. However, even though the lead continued to fall in and out of sync with the rest of the singers, the group itself recovered quickly, proving their musical capabilities to listen to each other and work together to form a coherent sound. The most musically exciting song of the night, “My Anata”, was packed with wonderful vocal pyrotechnics that worked well with the theatrical feel of this technotango arrangement. Jeff Wang and Yin L. Yin made a great duet with their cartoonish, sexy-sulky approach to this presentation. 2. They can pronounce English words! (And other Asian languages, too!) Anyone who has encountered Asian pop songs that attempted to incorporate English in the lyrics can appreciate my relief. What a pleasure it was to hear the singers sing in English and actually know what they were singing! As if that weren’t enough, PennYo expanded beyond English and the promised Chinese repertoire to add Japanese, Taiwanese and Korean ballads to the mix. Their solid grasp on the nuances of singing in different languages didn’t get better than the soulful Korean “I Believe”, the theme Finally, get some good food with your meal plan. Introducing the Philly Meal Plan! With tons of merchants, you can now get an off campus meal plan where you can eat, have your parents add money, and eat some more. The difference between this and on campus meal plans is that the food is yours to choose! Call us and find out the details; your stomach definitely won’t regret it. Philly Meal Plan: 866/512-DINE of the blockbuster Korean romance My Sassy Girl, a touching, emotional moment conveyed perfectly by the boy-band-within sound of Kenny Feng. I experienced the mystery of not being able to understand a word Feng was singing, while I still felt incredibly moved by the emotions pouring out of the group who sang with all their heart and soul. 3. They know their stuff! The Chinese—or as demonstrated by their diverse songs, the East Asian—pop culture has a very specific feel, attitude and connotation attached to it. “Who Else Can I Love?” exemplified their painstaking efforts to produce a genuine Asian pop sound with a seamlessly arranged duet, sung by two Singaporeans Joshua Yap and Shunloong Chua; unabashedly lavish harmonies; and two lead singers who knew how to get the audience’s attention. Chua and Yap made me feel as though I was sitting with the live audience of a Chinese variety show being serenaded. 4. The characters—I mean, singers—are adorable and relatable! As per any pop singing group, there were the individuals who stood out. Joyce Kim’s professional stage presence and solid control of her vocal skills made her stand out as one of the most talented singers of the group. Her deep, smooth voice was a perfect match for the song “Remembrance”. However, while I appreciated her attempt to emulate a particular “hesitant” style of singing favored by many Chinese pop stars, I found myself wishing I could hear what she sounds like when she lets go. Yap, on the other hand, stole the show with his achingly beautiful rendition of “East Wind Is Torn”. With his boyish voice and his earnest emotions, Yap was the perfect stand-in for Jay Chou. Another gem of the group was the sweet but commanding presence of Candice Wei. Her chance in the spotlight as the lead of “Silently Loving You” was the perfect showcase for her; she had a good ear and moved with the backup harmonies gracefully. The song fell right in her vocal range, and the boys of the group were rocking it up in the higher notes of their register, giving the audience a wonderful delivery of a real boy-band-andsongstress duet. Think Boyz II Men and Mariah Carey for “One Sweet Day”. 5. They’re entertaining! Beyond all the techniques, the songs, the arrangements and the costume changes—the ladies were lovely in their floral ensembles—this was a group that loved what they were doing. Their passion shone through the fact that each member, even while singing the harmony, was belting it out as if he or she was in the lead. “A Cappella Let’s Go” made for the perfect close: fun and energetic, with an air of farewell in the anime end-theme tradition. Even though the group must have spent hours rehearsing, the efforts didn’t show at all. The song was presented in a whimsical manner as if they were just singing it at a moment’s notice. The carefree exuberance of the final song reminded me of the end sequence to the movie Grease, when the entire senior class of Rydell High gathered to sing and dance to “We Go Together”. The song was a farewell, a valediction, a last fling, but most of all, a celebration —not from the past, not in remembrance, but of the good times, here and now. Mickey Jou is a sophomore in the College. You can write to her at myjou@sas THE UNDERGRADUATE MAGAZINE |S PONSORED BY THE W HARTON J OURNAL | A PRIL 26, 2004 VOL . IV NO .19 lastcall critically informed SUMMER DAZE OF IMPENDING DOOM ANDREW PEDERSON | BRUT FORCE NOW THAT spring has finally come and thawed out our corner of urban sprawl, pleated skirts are flying off the shelves, sunglasses the size of dinner plates are perched upon well-tanned noses, and breasts of every size and shape are blossoming out like tulips in halter top planters. The sun has finally cut through the layers of ice, and only three or four of every seven days is obscured by rain. Even the homeless are emerging from their discarded cardboard cocoons and shedding one or two layers to bask in a bit of the general joie de vivre as they take a break from their panhandling toil and stretch out on an open air bench. The river of sweat running down our backs as we trudge to ever dwindling classes further reminds us that the days where it was possible to feel clean are gone, and it’s time to toast the return of bosoms and barbeque once more. While our world may now be in its most pastoral phase, there is, as I always like to point out, a major downside. Though the sun now shines and mocks those without air conditioning, soon most of us will have to leave behind this Eden of concrete. A few short weeks will bring the day when multitudes of sweaty underclassmen pack nine months worth of accumulated living detritus into boxes and suitcases to test the cargo capacity of any number of family vehicles, all the while regaling Mom with spontaneously generated tales which do not include the terms “Beer Pong,” “Face down in my own vomit,” or “A quickie in the BioPond.” During our long and fantastic journey, there will be much time to ponder the summer ahead inbetween parentally pacifying fabrications. What awaits us in our respective areas of provenance is a cruel mixture of a social circle gone to rot, living areas annexed and sullied by uncouth siblings and, perhaps most horrifying of all, an underpaid job to finance another year of Wawa sandwiches and dime bags. To be sure, it is distressing enough to think of rebuilding the now dusty relationships from “the good ol’ days” and even more so to think there will be a line of newly-fattened girls one hasn’t seen since h i g h school squealing a b o u t how it will be soooooo m u c h fun to see everyone t o ge t h e r again. D o e s no one perhaps consider t h e possibility that one would go to college in the first place simply to get the hell away from people like that? It’s a sure fact that no one in his right mind is drawn thousands of miles across the country for crappy weather, crime, and pollution. More to the point, I left specifically so I could build myself a life completely unlike the one I had at home, but unfortunately, it has become apparent the past can only go by but never be forgotten—somewhat of the same property that characterizes prison time or sleeping with a very ugly woman. Truthfully, old acquaintances can be annoying, and most couldn’t be paid enough for your patio or dig your swimming pool. to relive the awkward four years of high As you all stand around like a deaf-mute a school. There were, in fact, some good times cappella group, I will swoop down with my and a few memorable faces mixed within the inscrutable powers of literacy and carry the brutally scarring emotional fracas which will day with a resounding “Aquì! Aquì!” Short of make going back not a complete waste. Still, heroics, I will, at the very least, learn how to a depressing reality which further mars the use a hammer and perhaps even some of the situation is the advent of a full-time job for finer points of industrial first-aid like primary the first time. Usually a full-time job would care for victims of sudden amputation by still be in the future since being young, male, jagged fragments of rebar. upper-middle class and white gives one a To a certain extent, though, my depiction unique set of perspectives, namely one that of my summer employment is a victim of looks down an unfair context. A great number of my on laying sod classmates are moving on to air-conditioned or digging suites with catered lunch breaks in exchange holes for for 40 hours a week of making coffee and c a s h ; distributing copies. Next to a lackadaisical h o w e v e r , $15 per hour internship at Indochina Shoe Penn has Whores, Inc., what job doesn’t look bad? p e r f e c t e d My job as a wheelbarrow technician looks the art of significantly more appealing next to all the f i n a n c i a l internships that are so much less than the vampirism, Fortune 500—that is, the 60 hours per week and many for $7 an hour filing corporate accounts of us are at in the cosmic euphemism of the company a point now “library.” Note as well that I am ignoring between self- the crowds of ticket rippers and masochists prostitution who will be frying bits of animal carcass and a n d cleaning bathrooms for essentially nothing. narcotics. Viewed in this way, my summer is As fate mediocre at worst, and though I will be would have facing the language barrier head-on while it, finding I mingle with those my ancestors shoved to people who want sex for free is difficult the bottom of the economic trough, I can be enough—not to mention the various chemical comforted by the guaranteed misery of others and health intricacies of methamphetamine like me in corporate “libraries” and KFCs home-brewing. So, even though I have only alike. Therefore, as we stand on the cusp 140 pounds of muscle mass and roughly of summer, let those of us preparing for a ten words of Spanish, I will be entering the sudden socio-economic descent rejoice these labor force in May as an unskilled laborer for last weeks of hopefully drunken debauchery Anderson Construction, Inc. of Carson City, and sunbathing. A few weeks from now, we Nevada. will only have the sanitized version we keep Chuckle if you must, scoff if this amuses telling Mom. you, but in the future it will be I who comes to the rescue when your migrant workers Andrew Pederson is a freshman in the College. You don’t know where the hell to put the concrete can write to him at awl@sas. RUMINATIONS OF A RISING SOPHOMORE BY LAUREN SAUL IT IS VERY HARD to believe that the last week of classes is drawing to a close. It seems like move-in and NSO were just yesterday, but two semesters have passed and I would say that the whole freshmen class is wiser, more mature, sorry to say heavier, and much more savvy. We survived eight months of Penn dining, some of us pulled our first all-nighters, figured out just how far a person can go with minimal sleep, and as the colorful, glossy Penn brochures promised, we met people who were far different from ourselves—in background, experience and points of view. Most people seemed enjoy freshman year and there really is a sense that the year has ended. After all, Spring Fling tired many of us—and our livers—out. Next year will be different. The sophomore class will be scattered in living arrangements throughout the campus and fields of study are going to become more focused than before as we begin to declare majors. In high school, most students had few academic choices and it was paramount to do as well as possible in a smattering of courses. Adolescents, as a result, lacked freedom to pursue specific interests. The College amazingly provides an opportunity to dabble in a significant number of electives simply for the sake of exploring and it encourages people to learn ideas that they never would have previously considered. Now, a year has gone by. We are all going to return home and hear our senile grandmothers tell their retirement friends that Jakey is a pre-med, and Jakey is going to say, “Actually I’m going to be a sociology major and go to grad school for as long as possible, because I never want to leave academia and go into the real world.” Just kidding. It is however fair to say that many of us are considering paths of learning that were not in the list of possibilities on move-in-day. After experimenting for a year, the thought of deciding what to take do with the next three years and with a lifelong career may perhaps feel every bit as distant and vague as before. With the end of freshman year comes a realization that the GPA, the at once ubiquitous acronym, is going to leap back into many of our mindsets. Many college students were sheltered from partying and habits like drinking when they were in high school and, as freshmen, they decided that they must compensate for previous inexperience by going completely haywire. As sophomores, we may see them revert to some of their old habits and those students who always were serious may grow even more intense. We have been told that Penn offers what may be the best combination of academic excellence and socializing in the nation and that reality will continue to make life here more fun than at some of our peer universities. We may start to complain more about campus idiosyncrasies. 9 A.M. classes are going to be as intolerable as before and 8:30 A.M. recitations will continue to make the diligent grumble bitterly as they walk to class. While older students say that campus dining improves every year, it may be wise to go off the meal plan entirely and rely solely on food carts, take-out, and dining dollars especially now that word is out about the sewage leak in Commons. The freezing temperature in the library and the uncomfortable heat in the dorms often leave us no happy medium, especially when the air conditioning in the dorm is not turned on by mid-April. For those of us who continue to live on campus, needing a Penn Card to access dorms will continue to annoy us, though after living here for a year nobody views it as an overzealous precaution. This year we heard stories about a student assaulting another student in the high rises, the stabbing of a Penn student on Locust Walk by some rural derelicts, and aggressive, intimidating West Philadelphian twelve year olds who went on Saturday night rampages. Quite a few panhandlers also consider our campus home and many of us feel that the combination of West Philadelphia and Ivy League self-pride is an odd one difficult to reconcile. The wood floors in the Quad, the Gothic architecture in the main area of campus, and the high-tech beacon of the future that is Huntsman contrasts greatly with the surrounding neighborhood. Some Penn students choose to volunteer in the local community, but otherwise very little contact exists between us and our local neighbors. The disparity between our campus and the outside is very apparent. The area two blocks north of the bookstore, Cosi, EMS, and Urban Outfitters is completely different. As J. Ro leaves, we should be grateful that she helped give Penn a more user-friendly feel. The surrounding neighborhood is not going to change anytime soon and the way to resolve the existing tensions in our community remain unclear. After a year, we may start to see more of Philadelphia. This year, there was so much to see on campus that many of us did not explore new scenes as much as we would have liked. Next year, we may see more restaurants, bars, clubs and other city venues. Sophomore year may also be the time to start participating in clubs and other types of extracurricular activities. The summer will give us a chance to do a “year in review.” So much has happened, whether it was at Fling, in the classroom, on the athletic fields, in the gym, or in dorm rooms. Most freshmen lived with a random roommate and the stories that circulated were mixed. Some of us will not even say “Hi” to that person next year and some of us may continue to be frequent sexilers. No matter what, we all have so many stories to tell our high school friends and so many censored versions of the truth to tell our families. After a year of total freedom, it may be hard to go home to parents who still consider us, in some way, high-schoolers and have not been around to see all of the changes that have taken place. None of us will be in the same place that we were last year, and home life will be considered only a memory. The most exciting thing is that this year is only the beginning of a long, unpredictable journey. When we are middle-aged, these are the college adventures we will talk and laugh about with our friends, so we must embrace the next three years with all of our available energy and continue to be open to new situations. Lauren Saul is a freshman in the College. You can write to her at lcsaul@sas.
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