Foley, unopposed, wins USGA presidency

Transcription

Foley, unopposed, wins USGA presidency
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Mays, 1998
Page 2
The Student Newspaper at Drexel University
Index
Ed-Op
Datebook
Comics
Classifieds
Entertainment
8
10
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16
Voiurne 73. Number 27
PhtUdflphiA. Pennsyivan^
Copynqht Cl997The fiungle
Foley, unopposed, wins USGApresidency Violent
In contested races, the winners were Andrew
Yeh, Leslie Shea, and Ryan Bailey. A total of
75 students were elected.
Ross Snyder
TRIANGLE STAFF WRITER
The Undergraduate Student
Government Association elec­
tions were held on May 5 to 7.
Only three positions were con­
tested on the ballot, but some
last-minute write-in campaigns
were staged.
This year’s elections featured
the highest voter turnout in
years, with 542 people, or 9.4
percent of the full-time undergraduate student body, casting
their votes. “We are quite happy
that there were a lot of people
who came out to vote,” USGA
elections committee member
Tara Jurasek said.
Current USGA Vice President
for Student Life and Adm in­
istrative Services Taryn Foley,
who was initial­
ly running un­
opposed for the
position
of
USGA presi­
dent, won the
race with 274
votes, despite a
late challenge by
Foley
junior
Paul
Bloom. Bloom received 25 writein votes under the alias of “Jersey
Trash,” and 2 votes for “Paul
Bloom,” for a total of 27.
In the contested races, Ryan
M. Bailey won the position of
dean of the college of business by
getting 43 votes. His opponent
Daryn Myers got 33 votes.
Leslie Ann Shea won the race
for senior class president with 41
votes. Her fellow candidates
Zoya Raynes, Lydia D. Spruill,
and Paula Bielski got 15, three,
and two votes respectively.
In the closest race, Andrew
Yeh won the position of comp­
troller with 126 votes. Sam John,
Yeh’s opponent and Triangle
See Elections on page 2
University City 5K Run
Femmesto
headline
SpringJam
Ross Snyder
TRIANGLE STAFF WRITER
The Campus Activities
Board’s annual Spring Jam will
be held May 28 to 31, with the
theme “Four Daze of Craze.”
Besides the usual diverse line-up
of live bands, this year’s event
will feature some new additions.
Violent Femmes will headline
the concert, with their show
beginning at 10 p.m. on May 30.
“It’s difficult to get a decent band
for a show this time of year,
because of the tours and radio
station shows,” said CAB
Director of Special Events Jim
Maloney. “But we got Violent
Femmes, and they put on a hell
of a show.” Violent Femmes
SeeSpring Jam on page 3
World
House
unites
students
Elizabeth To
TRIANGLE STAFF WRITER
G«or9 « Papayannis The Triangle
Runners take the street in the sixth annual University City 5K Run to honor the memory of former Drexel student Nicholas P. Pipino. The event is sponsored by
Cavanaugh's Bar where Nick, who was a Sigma Pi fraternity brother, used to bartend. The run provides two $2500 scholarships to Greek members at Drexel.
Phillies discuss baseball, and life off the field
George Papayannis
Ross Snyder
TRIANGLE STAFF
Now that the Philadelphia
Flyers have been eliminated from
the playoffs, the only game in
town is Phillies baseball. The
Triangle had the opportunity to
chat with several Phillies person­
nel on May 4 before their game at
the Veterans Stadium as part of
College Media Night at the Vet.
The Phillies have a young
team this year, and were largely
unsure of their abilities at the
beginning of the year. The team
got off to a fast start this season
and briefly held the lead in the
National League East, but have
since slowed down. The Phillies
are now hovering just below
.500, behind the Atlanta Braves
and the New York Mets.
The star
Phillies franchise player and
pitching ace Curt Schilling is the
current National League leader
in strikeouts. When asked about
that, his response was, simply, “I
love striking people out, and if I
could get 27 outs on 27 strike­
outs every game, you bet I’d go
for it.”
Schilling, one of the few
Phillies players to make
Philadelphia his family’s perma­
nent residence, cited the quality
of the Phillies organization as his
SeePhillksonpageS
Gtorgc Papayannis The Triangle
Members of the media view the Phillies game from the press boxes’ of Veterans
Stadium on May 4.
Located across from Kelly
Hall, at 204 North 34th Street, is
the Drexel World House, which
opened in September 1997. The
house is home to 12 undergradu­
ates from countries around the
world.
House director Maggie
Olszewska, Drexel’s coordinator
of community services and com­
muter student programs, said,
“The [housing plan] was
designed with the thought in
mind to have international stu­
dents living together with
American students so both sides
can benefit from the multicultur­
al experience.”
Moreover, the housing short­
age makes it a valuable resource,
according to Olszewska. The
house was previously an aban­
doned University property that
had been boarded for 10 years.
The policies in the house are
basically the same as living in the
residence halls. Quiet hours are
enforced and no alcohol or drugs
are allowed. House residents do
not have organized socials often,
although the residents get
together for a movie or a pizza
party once in a while.
Olszewska, who is a native of
Poland, explained, “The [house]
atmosphere is more intimatie so
students interact with each other
See World Mouse on page 3
The Triangle • May 8,1998
Univenitf
Baseball lackluster, still moves to 5th place
TyChow
TRIANGLE STAFF WRITER
The Drexel baseball team had
its two-week hot streak snapped
in a disappointing week. After
winning seven games in the last
two weeks and moving into sixth
place out of eight teams in the
America East Conference, the
Dragons have lost four out of five
games since April 29. Drexel lost
three key divisional games
against Maine and one game
against Fairleigh Dickinson.
On April 29, Drexel lost a
non-divisional game to Fairleigh
Dickinson, 9-8. Both teams had
great offensive games - 25 hits
combined.
Although the Dragons jumped
out to a two run lead in the sec­
ond inning, Fairleigh Dickinson
scored eight runs in the fourth
and fifth innings to take the lead
for good. Drexel gave a gallant
effort, scoring four runs in their
half of the fourth inning and two
runs in the last three innings, but
their comeback attempt fell one
run short. Fairleigh Dickinson
pitcher, Chris Potenzone went
eight innings giving up five
earned runs on nine hits for the
win; Drfexel losing pitcher Gregg
M ellott pitched four and two
thirds innings yielding nine hits
and five earned runs. Diego
Granados of Fairleigh Dickinson
pitched the last out to pick up the
save.
On May 3, Drexel played their
first of two doubleheaders in two
days against division rival Maine.
In game one, the Dragons lost in
extra innings, 15-14. Drexel
again participated in an offensive
shoot-out. The two teams com­
bined for 29 runs, 31 hits, and six
pitchers. Although the Dragons
fell behind six runs in the first
three innings, Drexel was able to
take the lead with eight runs in
the sixth inning. But in the end,
the Dragons again lost by one
run. In the eleventh inning,
Drexel gave up two runs and
only scored one run.
Drexel starting pitcher and
two-time reigning America East
R ookie-of-the-W eek, Bruce
Boehm had his first sub-par out­
ing in two weeks. Boehm pitched
six innings giving up ten runs,
eight earned runs, and 12 hits.
Maine pitcher, Jared Cochran
pitched the last inning to pick up
the win. Notable hitters include
Matt Neiber and Jose Jimenez of
Drexel and Rex Turner and
Kregg Jarvis of Maine. All four
sluggers had home runs in the
game.
In game two, Drexel won their
only game of the week. In anoth­
er offensive game, the Dragons
won 9-5. Drexel took a 5-2 lead
in the second inning and never
trailed in the game. Drexel start­
ing pitcher, Michael Sheehan
pitched five innings giving up
only three earned runs on six hits
for the win.
Maine losing pitcher, Eric
O’Brien threw only two innings
giving up six hits and five runs.
Dragons’ pitcher, Joel Beaton
pitched the last third inning to
pick up the save. Drexel’s offense
was lead by shortstop, Dennis
Helkowski, who went 2-for-3 in
the game.
On May 4, Drexel played their
second doubleheader o f two
against Maine. The Dragons
were swept in this twin set.
Drexel lost game one 6-3 and
game two 5-3. In both games,
Drexel gave up late inning leads
in the bottom of the sixth inning.
I
i
East coast karate tourney held at Drexel
TRIANGLE NEWS DESK
The Drexel Karate Club host­
ed the 35kth Annual East Coast
Shotokan Karate Association
Championship at the Physical
Education Athletic Center on
May 2 and 3.
Over i50 adults and 250 chil­
dren from Maine to Virginia
competed in the two-day event.
The groups competed as individ­
uals and teams in both kata and
kumite competitions.
Kata is a systematically orga­
nized series of defensive and
.
After three straight offensive
toned games, these two games
were competitively pitched. In
game one, both pitchers threw
complete games. Drexel starting
pitcher, Mike Zwanch, who
recently broke a Drexel pitching
record for strikeouts in a season,
went six innings giving up five
earned runs on 10 hits in a losing
effort. Maine winning pitcher,
John Dickinson pitched seven
innings with six hits and only
two earned runs.
In game two, Maine pitcher,
Jim Bailin pitched a complete
game for the win. Bailin gave up
seven hits and two earned runs.
Drexel starting pitcher, Dari
Nelson pitched five and two
thu-ds innings in a losing effort.
Although Drexel did not have
a successful week, the Dragons
did manage to slip into a fifth
place and final tournament entry
tie with Towson. Drexel’s confer­
ence record is 9-15 with an over­
all record of 17-32-1. The
Dragons will end their regular
season with a pair of doubleheaders at home against America
East leading Delaware on May 9
and 10.
THETRIANGLE
Established 1926
Editorial
Editor-in-Chief Anh Dang
M anaging Editor Venu Gaddamidi
Ed-Op Editor Chris Pu2ak
Photo Editor Patrick Boyle
Photo Editor George Papayannis
Assistant News Editor Michael Thurow
Wire Services Editor Bob Rudderow
Datebook Editor Jessica Fuhrer
Comics Editor Ashishlalati
Contributing Editor Daniel Bahar
Eminence Grise Patricia O'Brien
Editor-at-Large Jonathan Poet
A d m in is tra tio n
Business M anager Sam John
Distribution Manager Ryan La Riviere
Classifieds Manager Cyril Addison
S ta ffW rittrs
TyChow, Matt DiFrarKo,
Ross Snyder, Elizabeth To
Entw tainm M it W rftan
John Pitale
Columnists
Michael Busier
Advtrtising DcsigiMrs
Despina Raggousis
Cartoonists
Chris Cashdollar,
James Point Du Jour
Production Staff
Heather Bellew
Business sta ff
Eve Nikolova, Lauren Rudderow
offensive techniques that is per­
formed with imaginary oppo­
nents. Kumite is a sparring com­
petition between two practition­
ers.
The Drexel men’s team took
second place in team kumite and
third place in team kata. Harvey
Coon, a 1989 Drexel graduate,
took second place in individual
kumite.
Rita LaRue, Drexel’s director
of administrative services, fin­
ished in eighth place in individ­
ual women’s kata.
Contact Inform ation
Mail: The Triangle
32nd and Chestnut Streets
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Phone: (215)895-2585
to : (215)895-5935
E-mail: [email protected]
Copyright ©1998 The Triangle. No work
herein may be reproduced in any form, in
whole or in part, without the written con­
sent of the Editor-in-Chief.
Opinions expressed within are not neces­
sarily those of The Triangle. The Triangle is
published Fridays during the academic
year except during examination and vaca­
tion periods. The Triangle is published
biweekly in the summer.
The Triangle's only source o f incom e is
advertising; funding from the University is
not accepted.
The Triangle is free to members o f the
Drexel community, but distribution is lim it­
ed to one copy per reader.
George Papayinnis The Tnangle
Dinilo Occidental, performing his individual kata at the PEAC, won first place in
the Junior Advanced Division, ages 15 to 17.
George Papayannis The Triangle
Team ISKAof Northern Virginia performs in the team kata at the 35th Annual
East Coast Shotokan Karate Association Championship held on May 3.
Nearly 10 percent vote in USGA elections
Eleaions from page J
business manager, got 123 votes.
Brian Anderson received the
most votes of anyone running in
this year’s elections, receiving
275 votes. Anderson won the
position of vice president for
academic affairs and provost. He
was running unopposed.
The confirmed winners will be
sworn in at the end of this term,
and will take office at the begin­
ning of summer term.
Another election will be held
in the fall to fill freshman posi­
tions, as well as any still unfilled
positions.
No write-in candidate infor­
mation was available at press
time, as the USGA must review
the qualifications of the write-in
candidates before any of them
are awarded positions.
“We had a landmark year, as
far as improving USGA’s image
on campus goes,” Foley told The
Triangle. “The growth the
University is experiencing is pro­
ducing a negative view on cam­
pus, and now we heed to turn
that around.**
When asked about her view of
the current Drexel administra­
Subscriptions may be ordered for $40 for
one year; display and classified advertising
Inquiries may be placed at the addresses or
phone numbers above.
tion, Foley said, “They have a lot
of things to think about right
now - USGA’s job is to make
sure that students’ needs are on
top of that list.”
Regarding improving studentadministration relations, Foley
said, “I think what we really need
to do is have a more open form
of communication between fac­
ulty and students.” Foley men­
tioned her desire to improve
school spirit throughout the
interview.
She also identified the houtii^
crisis and liftiiig the ban on court
drops in the Main Building at
issues which her administration
will need to focus on.
Addressing the biggest obsta­
cles she might face in her capaci­
ty as president, Foley said,
“Every student government has
obstacles. Until we get in there
with the new officers and see
what things are like, I really can’t
say (what obstacles might exist].”
Foley, a pre-junior triple
major in international business',
marketing, and finance, served as
USGA speaker in 1995-96. She is
also a member of the Delta Zeta
aorority and treasurer of the
PanheUenic Society.
Colophon
Hardwaro
The Triangle Is produced using A pple
Macintosh and Power Macintosh comput­
ers. Images are d ig itized w ith a Nikon
Coolscan negative scanner and an Apple
Color OneScanner. Proofs are printed to a
Hewlett-Packard LaserJet 4si MX; final
boards are printed to a Hewlett-Packard
LaserJet 4MV.
Softw art
Page layout Is designed using QuarkXPress.
Images are prepared for re production
using Adobe Photoshop and Ofoto, Text is
set In Adobe Minion and Myriad typefaces.
o
b c fd c T h c T iii^
The Triangle • May 8,1998
University/City
CAB plans movie, musiQ Vet trip for Jam RLO
sponsors
World
House
Spring Jmn from page /
debuted in 1982 with their self­
titled album that contained quin­
tessential '80s song "Blister in
the Sun.” The three-man group’s
unique brand of quirky party
rock has been going ever since,
in the same vein as groups
Talking Heads and They Might
Be Giants.
Drexel bands Forever 27 and
Seven will play earlier in the day,
as will local bands Green Eggs
and Spam, Sneaky Rats, and Flip
Like
Wilson.
Yolk,
a
Binghamton, NY quintet, will
open for Violent Femmes.
Another headline act is being
pursued — most likely a rap or
hip-hop act — but nothing was
confirmed at press time.
Spring Jam will kick off on
Thursday, May 28, when 97.5
FM WPST will be in the Quad
from 12 to 2 p.m. The radio sta­
tion’s big attraction will be a pro­
motional game they are currently
playing. The player must roll
eight dice with letters on them,
and if the word “explorer” is
rolled, the player wins a Ford
Explorer. Chances of winning are
approximately one in 1,679,616.
Austin Powers, International
Man of Mystery will be shown
later that night at 9 p.m. in the
Quad. The annual outdoor
movie showing was moved from
Buckley Green to the Quad this
year, in order to take advantage
of the Quad’s better visual and
audio effects, according to
Maloney. Free snacks will also be
available.
A “South Park Sleepover” had
been planned for Friday, May 29,
but it was cancelled when CAB
could not receive permission
from Comedy Central to show
the cult hit and sometimes offen­
sive show. Instead, CAB will be
sponsoring a trip to Veterans
Stadium for a Phillies game, call­
ing it “A Trip to a Park in South
Philly.” Transportation to and
from the game will also be pro­
vided. Information on how to
obtain a ticket will be forthcom­
ing, for what Spring Jam com­
mittee member Steve Carle called
“some kick-ass seats.” The seats
Carle is referring to are in section
203 on the left-field line, and 100
tickets are available. The game is
against the New York Mets.
The music will begin at 3 p.m.
on Saturday, May 30, when
Green Eggs and Spam takes the
stage on Buckley Field. Two
stages will be set up on the turf
field at 33rd and Arch Street; the
main stage will be at the south­
east corner of the field, while the
main stage (which is being spon­
sored by Music and More) will
be set up on the northwest cor­
ner. The Drexel bands and
Sneaky Rats will perform on the
side stage, while Ae other bands
W orld House from page
Elektra
CAB'S headliner, Violent Femmes, features Gordon Gano, Brian Ritchie, and Guy
Hoffman. The concert is set for May 30 at 10 p.m.
will play on the main stage.
Music and More will also have a
table set up on Buckley Field to
sell CDs and other items.
The Spring Jam Festival also
gets kicked off at 3 p.m. on May
30 and will feature such activities
as Laser Tag, a giant joust, and
make-your-own candles. Free Tshirts and frisbees will be given
out, and free barbecue dinners
will be available for all takers.
On Sunday, May 31 at noon,
W K D U will be putting on an
afternoon of electronic music on
Buckley Field. This event is not
sponsored by CAB.
Later on Sunday, at 6 p.m., the
first-ever
Drexel
Talent
Showcase will take place in the
Armory. Applications to enter
the talent show will be available
Monday, May 11 at the CAB
Office at 1025 MacAlister Hall.
Information sessions regarding
the show will be held on May 13
in 226 Creese and May 14 in
2020 MacAlister, and attendance
at one of the sessions is manda­
tory for students wishing to
enter. “Students can do music,
acting, whatever they want,” said
Spring Jam committee member
Greg Mattox.
Students will be judged on
their originality, creativity, and
level of difficulty. The judges will
be a panel of members of various
student organizations. The big
draw for the show is the prize —
a $300 shopping spree at Circuit
City.
1
on their own — daily. Besides
hanging out with each other and
having fun, they can also learn
things from each other’s cul­
tures.”
For the purposes of creating a
multicultural experience, at least
one of the 12 undergraduates will
always be American. Currently,
there are two Americans living in
the house. The other students
living in the house now are from
Brazil, England, Israel, Jordan,
Korea, Mexico, Peru, Poland,
Spain, Taiwan, and the United
Arab Emirates.
Most of the students in the
house are students from Drexel’s
English Language Center. There
is no formal application process
to live there.
The student is simply inter­
viewed to see if he would be able
to contribute to the program as
well as benefit from it.
“I think the house is function­
ing very well. The students
respect each other and interact
with each other very well. It’s a
fun place to be,” Olszewska said.
Phillies Curt Schilling, Terry Francona, and
Chris Wheeler discuss life in the big league
Phillies from page 1
reason for not leaving the team a
year or two ago, when he could
have gotten more money else­
where.
Schilling fielded questions on
all sorts of topics, everything
from his opinion of umpires
(“We as players have to be nice
to the umpires publicly, because
like it or not, sometimes they do
carry grudges.”) to his tobacco
problem (“I ’ve been tobacco-free
for seven weeks, and it was by far
the hardest thing I ’ve ever had to
do in my life, but I ’ve kicked
it.”).
The manager
The next famous person who
spoke to the press was 38-yearold Terry Francona, the Phillies
manager. Francona registered a
68-94 record in his first season
with the Phillies last year, includ­
ing a 44-33 run after the All-Star
break.
Francona took some ques­
tions from the audience, on top­
ics ranging from Scott Rolen’s
current slump (“He’s only 23
years old, he’ll come around.”)
to his thoughts on inter-league
play (“If the fans like it, if it’s
good for baseball, then we can
handle it.”).
Francona also made it clear
that the team’s youth was a big
factor in his expectations for the
team. “Since we don’t know how
good we are, we don’t really set
concrete goals,” Francona said.
“As cliche as it sounds, we just
send them out there and tell
them to do their best every
game.”
The announcer
Chris Wheeler, the Phillies’
T V announcer, came out and
talked for a bit. Wheeler exuded
optimism the entire time and
showcased his love for the game
of baseball.
He also related his personal
success story to the audience, all
the way from being a kid grow­
ing up in Delaware County and
listening to the Phillies on the
radio to getting his big break in
the broadcasting booth one
charmed night in Montreal in the
1970s.
Having achieved his lifelong
dream, Wheeler told the crowd,
“Don’t ever let someone tell you
that you can’t do something.”
Additionally, Wheeler shared
some anecdotes from his years of
working the broadcast booth
with Harry Kalas and the late
Richie Ashburn.
Wheeler mentioned that he
loved his job so much that he got
divorced over it.
George Papiyannis The Triangle
Phillies Mark Lewis went O-for-3
against the Rockies on May 4.
George Papayannis The Triangle
George PapayitMiis The Triangle
The Phanatic entertains the crowd between innings.
Phillies pitcher Garrett Stephenson lasted only 31/3 innings on May 4 In a losing effort.
The Triangle • May 8,1998
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v U l t O M r I n tc r N c t A itc a t k tf p ://c o b « A tM d « N t- o r 9 s d r c x c l* c d M
The Triangle‘May 8,1998
National News
Woman sues over coma
caused by parade float
N E W Y O R K (A P ) — A spec­
ta to r w h o w as in ju r e d w h e n a
g ia n t b a llo o n a t th e M a c y ’ s
T h a n k s g iv in g D a y Parade w en t
o u t o f c o n tro l sued the d e p a rt­
m ent store M o n d a y fo r $395 m il­
lio n .
K athleen C aronna, 34, was in
a coma fo r alm ost a m o n th after
a h u n k o f metal struck her in the
head w hen fie rce w in d sent the
Cat in the H at b a llo o n careening
in to a la m p p o s t as she w atched
the parade.
The state Supreme C o u rt law ­
suit, w h ich also names the c ity as
a defendant, claim s M a c y ’s was
careless, reckless and negligent in
its o p e r a tio n o f th e N o v . 27
parade and disregarded the dan­
gers to the public.
D e b r is
ra in e d o n M rs .
C a ro n n a an d o th e r s p e c ta to rs
ju s t m o m en ts a fte r she h a nded
her baby son to her husband. A t
lea st th re e o th e r p e o p le w ere
in ju re d b u t n o t as s e rio u s ly as
M rs . C a ro n n a , w h o s u ffe re d a
fra c tu re d s k u ll, b ra in dam age
and im paired vision.
M rs , C a ro n n a , a b ro k e ra g e
house c o m p lia n c e o ffic e r , has
returned hom e fro m the Kessler
In stitu te , a re h a b ilita tio n fa c ility
in East O ra n g e , N .J ., a n d has
c o n tin u e d to u n d e rg o a lm o s t
d a ily therapy.
In c lu d e d as p la in tiffs in the
law suit are M rs. C aro n n a ’s hus­
band, Ignazio M assim o Caronna,
and th e ir son, A lessandro, n o w
13 m onths old. The suit asks $95
m illio n in c o m p e n s a to ry d a m ­
ages fro m a ll o f th e defendants
a n d $30 0 m i ll io n in p u n it iv e
damages fro m M a cy’s.
T h e la w s u it a ls o n a m e s as
defendants M a c y ’s p a re n t c o m ­
p a n y , F e d e ra te d D e p a r tm e n t
S to re s , th e c i t y ’ s p o lic e a n d
tra n sp o rta tio n departm ents, and
others, in c lu d in g companies that
b u ilt and w ired the lam ppost.
R o n n ie T a ffe t, M a c y ’ s v ic e
p re s id e n t fo r p u b lic re la tio n s ,
and D a v id G o ld in , a la w ye r fo r
the city, w o u ld n ’t com m ent.
National
Battle brewingover plannedvisitsto Utanic
Sonja Barisic
ASSOCIATED PRESS
N O R F O L K , Va. — The co m ­
p a n y th a t d ove m o re th a n tw o
m ile s to re c o v e r a rtifa c ts fro m
the T ita n ic w aded in to fe d e ra l
c o u rt M o n d a y to tr y to prevent
tourists fro m getting an up-close
lo o k at the wreck.
RMS T ita n ic Inc. o f New Y o rk
C ity asked a federal co u rt to bar
D eep O cean E x p e d itio n s fro m
c h a rg in g 60 p e o p le $ 3 2 ,5 0 0
apiece to v is it the shipw reck in a
subm ersible vessel. Deep Ocean
E xpeditions says it already has 45
c u sto m e rs h o p in g to m ake the
2 {-m ile t r ip beneath the N o rth
A tlantic.
The com pany is seeking a pre­
lim in a r y in ju n c t io n k e e p in g
Deep Ocean Expeditions at least
10 nautical miles fro m the w reck
“ fo r any purpose” o r inte rfe rin g
w ith a salvage e x p e d itio n RMS
plans in A ugust and September.
The c o m p a n y also w ants a ban
on all photo g ra ph y o f the w reck
b y Deep Ocean Expeditions.
RMS T ita n ic is especially con­
c e rn e d because its c u s to m e rs
w ou ld videotape and photograph
the wreckage.
“ T hat dim inishes the value o f
the p h o to g ra p h y rig h ts th a t we
have,” said M a rk Davis, a lawyer
fo r RMS T ita n ic in N o rfo lk . “ It
c o u ld e n d a n g e r o u r a b ilit y to
continue to savage the w reck in
a h isto rica lly and archaeologicaliy responsible m anner.”
R M S T it a n ic w o n salvage
rights to the ship after recovering
c h in a and g o ld c o in s fr o m its
wreckage in 1987. I t also h olds
photography rights to the wreck.
M ik e M c D o w e ll, w h o set up
Deep Ocean Expeditions, said he
w ill fight the legal challenge.
Deep Ocean E xpeditions and
RMS T ita n ic b o th plan e xp e d i­
tio n s in A u g u s t u s in g s u b m e rs ib le s , p re s s u re -re s is ta n t
c ra fts la u n c h e d fr o m s h ip s .
Submersibles typically hold three
p e o p le — a p ilo t a n d tw o
observers. RMS T ita n ic is m a k­
ing the trip to hunt fo r artifacts.
T he T ita n ic sank a b o u t 400
miles south o f New foundland on
A p ril 15, 1912, after s trik in g an
ic e b e rg o n its m a id e n voyage
f r o m E n g la n d to N e w Y o rk .
M o re th a n 1,500 p e o p le d ie d .
T h e w re c k was d is c o v e re d in
1985.
In 1995, “ T it a n ic ” d ir e c to r
James C am e ro n v is ite d the site
u s in g R ussian su bm ersibles to
film the ship fo r his m ovie. The
subm ersibles le ft de b ris o n the
T ita n ic ’s deck.
S 'c h o o
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School official guilty of
tax embezzlement
H U N T IN G D O N , Pa. (A P ) —
A fo rm e r school o ffic ia l pleaded
g u ilt y in H u n t in g d o n C o u n ty
C o m m o n Pleas C o u rt M o n d a y
to em bezzling up to $108,000 in
cou nty, school d is tric t and local
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T h o m a s M a tth e w s , fo r m e r
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of
th e
Tussey
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in g f u l l r e s p o n s ib ilit y f o r th e
crim e, even th o u g h b o th he and
his w ife, C a ro lyn , were charged
w ith theft and conspiracy.
M rs . M a tth e w s , a fo r m e r
W o o d T o w n s h ip ta x c o lle c to r,
has heart problem s. H e r tria l was
p o s tp o n e d in d e f in it e ly o n
M onday, w hen ju r y selection in a
jo in t tria l had been scheduled to
begin.
A u th o ritie s said that fo r seven
m onths ending in A p ril 1997, the
couple failed to tu rn over p ro p ­
e rty ta x revenues th e y had c o l­
lected.
T h o m a s M a tth e w s ’ la w y e r,
R o n a ld M c G la u g h lin o f S tate
College, said his c lie n t was p e r­
fo rm in g M rs. M atthew s’ tax-col-«
lector duties w hile she w orked.
“ H e’s taking re sp o n sib ility fo r
the w hole th in g because he d id
the w hole th in g ,” M c G la u g h lin
said.
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The Triangle • May 8,1998
National
Studentsturn to good luckchamisfor helpwithexams
Jennifer Jones
some heavy-duty overtim e.
“ I have an in s p ira tio n a l p ic ­
ture on m y desk (and) wear dark
g reen sweat p a n ts a n d a n im a l
slippers,” said K athryn M arcotte,
a 19 year-old student at Glendale
C o m m u n ity College in Arizona.
T h e n th e r e ’ s S ara L a n g , a
fre s h m a n at th e U n iv e r s ity o f
P itts b u rg h at J o h n s to w n , w h o
needs an e x tra b a g to h a u l
a ro u n d h e r g o o d -lu c k charm s.
Lang feels lu c k y w he n she has
h e r s ta tu e o f B u d d h a , a g o ld
cross, crystals, a special p e n n y
and a fa v o rite perfum e h a n d y trin k e ts she o fte n doles o u t to
classm ates w h o have fo g o tte n
COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE
Even though the coffee flowed
u n til the wee hours o f the m o rn ­
in g and y o u p o u re d o v e r b o r ­
rowed notes and old tests, that 7
a.m. alarm sets y o u r heart racing.
Y o u r p a lm s are sw ea ty and
breath heavy — n o t because the
test is scheduled to begin in mere
m inutes, b u t because you ca n ’t
find your lucky pencil.
Students re ly on a v a rie ty o f
good-luck charms and ritu a ls to
h e lp th e m m ake i t th r o u g h
exams. W ith finals week h ittin g
campuses across the n a tio n , talismen everywhere are p u ttin g in
T
C
h e
M
B
a ir b
u t t in g
th e ir own.
Lang said she also makes it a
p o in t to wear a “ k ille r o u tfit” on
test days.
“ I f you fa il, at least yo u lo o k
good,” she said
Ben N io le t, a j u n i o r a t th e
U n iv e rs ity o f A labam a, said his
s tu d y in g r itu a ls in c lu d e n o t
studying at all.
“ I f y o u ’ re g o in g to fa il a n y ­
way, th e re ’s no p o in t to i t , ” he
said. “ A fte r (com ing to that co n ­
clusion), I just pray.”
Psychologists say th a t fo r the
most part, charms and rituals are
harmless.
T h e y ty p ic a lly d e v e lo p a fte r
E
d g e
r b n n a n
P e r fe c t
T im e
people associate the presence o f
tw o o r more objects w ith a happy
outcom e - a special p a ir o f boxer
s h o rts a n d a th le tic success
(M ichael Jordan reporte dly dons
u n d e rw e a r
b e a r in g
th e
U n iv e rs ity o f N o r th C a ro lin a ’s
lo g o b e fo re e v e ry gam e he
plays.), o r a favorite pen that ty p ­
ic a lly b rings hom e goo d grades
in English.
“ I f we lo o k a t s o c ie ty at a
b ro a d e r level, w e’ll see charm s
a nd r itu a ls e v e ry w h e re ,” said
Gary H arper, an assistant profes­
s o r o f p s y c h o lo g y a t D e P a u l
U n ive rsity in Chicago. “ I f a bell
rings, we do one thing. I f it rings
L ast C a ll
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“ C ha rm s and ritu a ls h e lp us
m a in ta in a fe e lin g o f o rd e r and
c o n t r o l, ” he a d d e d . “ T h e y ’ re
e s p e c ia lly im p o r t a n t d u r in g
times o f high stress - and tests are
usually those h ig h -a n x ie ty times
w hen students feel m o st o u t o f
co n tro l.”
B u t as w it h m a n y th in g s in
life, the use o f charm s and rituals
can be ta k e n to u n h e a lth y
extremes. H arpe r said.
“ P h y s io lo g ic a l responses —
sweaty palm s and ra cin g hearts
— can be signs that psychologi­
cal p ro b le m s have d e v e lo p e d ,”
he said. “ W h e n a p e rso n has a
pan ic attack o r misses an exam
because th e y b e lie v e th e y
co u ld n ’t pass w ith o u t having that
lu c k y pencil, they are at a p o in t
that requires psychological in te r­
vention.
“ A lo t o f peo ple w ith obsess iv e - c o m p u ls iv e d is o r d e r say
th e y d o n ’ t even re a lize th e y ’ re
d o in g th e th in g s th e y d o ,” he
con tinu ed. “ T hey ofte n say they
can’t stop themselves.”
T h a t is fo r tu n a t e ly n o t the
case fo r most college students, he
q u ic k ly added.
“ I d o n ’ t have a n y ritu a ls o r
s u p e r s t it io n s ,” s a id A m a n d a
C low er, a 19-year-old student at
G len d a le C o m m u n ity C ollege,
“ b u t I s h o u ld p r o b a b ly get
some.”
C am pus
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Major K«ltli l | . Clanfraitl
The Triangle • May 8,1998
National
^
- r
»
Merriam-Websterwill not rearrangedefinitions ofsjurs
Trudy Tynan
ASSOCIATED PRESS
S P R IN G F IE L D , M a s s . —
U n d e r pressure to clean up the
d e f in it io n o f ra c ia l s lu r s a n d
o b scenities, M e rria m -W e b s te r
sa id M o n d a y i t w il l r e fo r m a t
entries fo r about 200 obscenities
a n d “ o ffe n s iv e ” w o r d s in its
Collegiate D ictio na ry.
H owever the com pany refused
to rew rite the w ords’ d e fin itio n s.
“ As long as the w o rd is in use
it is o u r re sp o n sib ility as d ic tio ­
nary publishers to p u t the w o rd
in t o th e d ic t io n a r y , ” s a id
Deborah Burns, m a rketin g d ire c­
t o r f o r M e r r ia m - W e b s te r . “ A
d ic tio n a r y is a s c h o la rly re fe r­
ence, n o t a pohtical to o l.”
In response to h u n d re d s o f
c o m p la in ts , M e rria m -W e b s te r
set up a task fo rc e to c o n s id e r
offensive d efinitio n s and w hether
to change the p ractice o f lis tin g
d e fin itio n s h is to ric a lly , w ith the
o ld e s t — a n d o fte n th e m o s t
o b je c tio n a b le — uses c o m in g
first.
M erria m -W e bste r w ill c o n tin ­
ue to list d e finitions th a t way, b u t
w ill move notes c a u tio n in g w hen
c e rta in usage# are c o n s id e re d
offensive to th e fro n t o f the e n try
f o r th a t usage, r a t h e r th a n
b e h in d i t as th e c o m p a n y c u r ­
re n tly does. A n d such notes w ill
be p rin te d in ita lic s , M s. B u rn s
said. The changes w ill begin w ith
next year’s dictiona ry.
T he c o m p a n y n e v e r c o n s id ­
ered the rem oval o f offensive and
d e r o g a to r y w o r d s , in c lu d in g
‘‘ nigger,’^ “ queer,” " k ik e ,” “ re d ­
neck” and “ w hite trash,” fro m its
a d ult dictionaries.
A M ic h ig a n w o m a n w h o
th re a te n e d a b o y c o tt o v e r th e
w ay d e fin itio n s were o rg a n ize d
was unhappy w ith the changes.
“ They d id n ’t change a n ) ^ in g .
T h e y ju s t s w itc h e d th in g s
a r o u n d ,”
s a id
D e lp h in e
A braham o f Y psilanti, M ic h . She
w ill co n tin u e her p e titio n d riv e
th a t has already co lle cte d m o re
than 10,000 signatures.
M s. A b ra h a m , w h o re c e n tly
expanded her protest to inclu d e
th e O x fo r d U n iv e r s it y P ress,
wants the publishers to d ro p ref­
e ren ce s to b la c k s a n d o th e r
g ro u p s ta rg e te d b y s lu rs . F o r
exam ple, a fte r n o tin g th a t i t is
u s u a lly o ffe n s iv e , M e r r ia m W ebster w ill contin u e to lis t the
first and earliest use o f “ nigger,”
w hich came in to A m e rica n w r it­
ing around 1700, as “ a bla ck per­
son.”
“ B la c k p e o p le s h o u ld n ’ t be
labeled niggers a n y m o re th a n
w h ite p e o p le s h o u ld be ca lle d
h o n k ie s o r Jews ca lle d k ik e s ,”
M s. A b ra h a m said, re fe rrin g to
the published d e fin itio n s o f other
slurs, “ It p ro m o te s b ig o try and
racism.
K athryn W illia m s, the curator
o f th e M u s e u m o f A fr ik a n
A m e ric a n H is t o r y in F lin t,
M ic h ., la u n c iie d a se p a ra te
p ro te s t d riv e u rg in g M e rria m W e b s te r to re m o v e “ n ig g e r”
fro m the dictionary. She d id not
im m e d ia te ly re tu rn te le p h o n e
calls le ft fo r her at the m useum
M onday.
Since Ms. A b ra h a m and Ms.
W illia m s f ir s t p ro te s te d la s t
O ctober, M e rria m -W e b s te r has
received m ore than 2,000 co m ­
plaints about its handling o f slurs
and obscenities, Ms. Burns said.
She said some wanted the words
removed fro m the d ictio n a ry and
others objected to parts o f a defi­
n itio n.
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j
ditorial
pinion
M ays, 1998
Pages
Anh Dang Editor-in-Chief
Chris Puzak Ed-Op Editor
THETRUNGLE
Editorial Board
Daniel Bahar
Patrick Boyle
Venu Gaddamidi
Patricia O'Brien
Jonathan Poet
Contributing Editor
Photo Editor
Managing Editor
Eminence Grise
Editor-at-Large
Letters to the Editor
Future of Greek
system looks
bright
C ris is fo r th e B o a rd
Drexel’s housing crisis indicates poor management of
the University’s growth and threatens the credibUity of
University President Constantine Papadakis. Reports
vary, citing between 59 and 500 students for whom the
University does not yet have any housing, Hundreds
more will live in hotels, tripled dorm rooms, and apart­
ments far from campus.
The crisis extends beyond basic management to an
issue of oversight and strategic planning, which should
involve the Board o f Trustees. Drexel’s housing crisis
should therefore be a major topic of discussion at the
meeting of the Board of Trustees on May 13.
E ditor:
I w ou ld lik e to com m end and
th a n k the s o r o r ity w o m e n and
fr a t e r n it y m e n h e re a t D re x e l
U nive rsity fo r th e ir great attitude
and u n d y in g patience. O ver the
past couple o f m onths, the Greek
system here at D rexel, its policies,
its actions, and its m is s io n as a
c o m m u n ity were a ll u nder scruti­
ny. In the b e g in n in g o f a ll th is
mayhem m a n y people re a lly d id
n o t u n d e rs ta n d th e re a s o n in g
behind the decisions being made
b y the U niversity, the Panhelenic
C o u n c il, o r th e In te r fr a te r n a l
A sso cia tio n , yet th e y s till stood
be hind us k n o w in g th a t beyond
the un certainty there had to be a
b rig h te r fu tu re — and they were
right.
A lthou gh it is unfortuna te that
some situations arise w hich h in ­
d e r the liv in g c o m m itm e n t and
m issio n o f the G reek m em bers,
we have been able to stand strong
and p u t fo r th o u r best e ffo rt to
overcome any and all stereotypes.
N o w m o st o f the tape has been
ta k e n d o w n , an d we have been
d o ing what we do best — sharing
th e c o m m o n b o n d o f b r o th e r­
h o o d and sisterhood. Last week
was G re e k W eek, w h ic h in fact
was even u n d e r s c ru tin y , and it
was a g re a t tim e f o r e v e ry o n e
w h o d id a n y l i t t l e p a r t fr o m
w atch ing o r even participating.
C o n g ra tu la tio n s to T heta C hi
and Phi Sigma Sigma fo r w in n in g
the G re e k W e e k c u p and c o n ­
g ra tu la tio n s to everyone else fo r
to p -n o tc h sportsm anship.
I lo o k fo rw a rd to new and bet­
te r th in g s fo r the Greeks in the
v e ry n e a r fu tu r e a gain. T h a n k
yo u to the 800 plus Greeks here
th a t have sh o w n me th a t b e in g
G reek is a great p riv ile g e . I am
glad I d id n o t miss o u t o n it.
Brian Connett
Interfraternal Association President
Information Systems '99
Chris Puzak: Distorting the Medium
O u t o f a Ja m
Earlier this term , the Campus A ctivities Board
promised students a '"South Park Sleepover” as an event
for Spring Jam. The idea was good, because — let’s face
it — college kids seem to love the sick-humored show
on Comedy Central. Of course, it seems that no one at
CAB contacted Comedy Central to see if it was OK.
After CAB began advertising the event, Com edy
Central told CAB that it could not show the programs.
Give CAB credit, though. It may have botched the
South Park marathon, but CAB was able to turn a mis­
take into a real event, a trip to a Phillies game at
Veterans Stadium. It is a funny play on words — “A Trip
to a Park in South Philly” — and a good way to enter­
tain people.
Submission Policy
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.
19104. They may also be sent via e-mail to triangi«-cdKor^rexel.edu or
delivered in person to 3010 MacAlister Hall.
All submissions must include a name and phone number and should include an
address and appropriate affiliations such as major, year of graduation, or
organizational position. Anonymous submissions will not be published;
authors' names will only be withheld under special circumstances.
Written pieces should be presented on disk in MacWrite format The deadline
for submissions is 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday of the week of publication. The
Triangle reserves the right to edit for space, grammar, clarity and content.
Taco Bell, Lucent and drug
dealing birds are stupid
have w ritte n about advertising
m any tim es. M y firs t co lu m n
fo r The T ria n g le was about a
Drexel ad. In this special “ w rite r’s
b lo c k ” e d itio n o f D is t o r t in g the
M e d iu m advertising is once again
th e s u b je c t. A n y o n e w h o is
unhappy w ith this is advised to go
shoot homeless people o r whatev­
er it is you people do when you are n o t reading m y
colum n.
O n ly an id io t could dream up som ething like the
Lucent T echnologies com m ercials. I f you haven’t
seen them, they consist o f some unseen guy typ in g
the ad on a c o m p u te r screen. I d o n ’t kn o w a bout
you, b u t Td feel a littie uncom fortable b u ying any­
th in g fro m some g u y w ho refuses to be seen and
o n ly com m unicates th ro u g h the co m p u te r. W h a t
does this guy do in his spare tim e, stalk teen-aged
g irls in A O L chatroom s? I guess we w ill k n o w fo r
c e rta in i f th e c o m p a n y changes th e ir m o tto to
“ L u c e n t T e c h n o lo g ie s : A re Y o u W e a rin g
Underwear?”
A n o th e r stupid ad is the one 1 saw in the subway
fo r M o to ro la cellular phones. I f you haven' seen it,
it consists o f a p a rro t dressed lik e a d ru g dealer
a d ve rtisin g the new c e llu la r phone. In m y m in d ,
there are tw o types o f d ru g dealers:
A : Scarface. T h is d ru g dealer takes the tim e to
inve n t cool catch-phrases like “ D o n ’t get h ig h o ff
y o u r ow n supply” and when the chips are dow n, he
gives the people w hat they w ant b y snorting a k ilo o f
cocaine and d yin g in a hail o f bullets.
B; Slappy, The Incom petent Dope Pusher. T his is
the guy w ho sells M etam ucil as “ something that w ill
make you hig h e r than a kite. A n d regular to o .” I f
Congress ever gets around to authorizing a needleexchange p ro g ra m , th is g u y is g o in g to be selling
them to people \ ^ o need a fix o f K o o l-A id o r w ant
■
to f ilm an e p is o d e o f K id s I n j e c t the D a r n d e s t
T h in g s ! T h is g u y gives dealers everyw here a bad
name.
A n yw a y, lam e slogans lik e “ G et on the p o in t
w ith the pre-pay jo in t” and “ W o rd ! Take it fro m the
b ird !” surround this b ird .
T his is obviou sly n o t a d ru g dealer w ith any sense
o f style, and therefore cannot be trusted. A n d i f you
can’t tru st y o u r local d ru g - dealing fo w l fo r a steady
supply o f cocaine, yo u ce rta in ly can’t tru st them to
sell cellular phones.
Speaking o f anim als, I can’t stand that dog Taco
Bell has haw king th e ir fo o d these days. 1 d o n ’t care
h o w cute an an im a l is, I am n o t goin g to b u y the
s w ill served at T aco B ell and passed o f f as fo o d .
U n fo rtu n a te ly, people seem to be easily swayed by
this ad cam paign, and are b u y in g p le n ty o f M e x im elts and M ad C ow Disease Surprise. I ju s t w o rry
th a t the Drexel cafeteria is g oing to catch on to this
tactic:
A n n o u n c e r: W e ’ve a ske d o u r spokesm an H a r r y
the H a p p y R a t to speak on b e h a lf o f the D re x e l cafe­
teria:
H a r r y : A t Drexel, we d o n 't ju s t p ro v id e y o u w ith
sub standard food. We place a p re m iu m on f ill in g y o u
f u l l o f t h a t y u m m y E. C o li v iru s . G e t r i d o f t h a t
a n n o y in g digestive tra c t b y e a tin g a t D r e x .. . A h h h ! ”
(sou nd ^ H a r r y ' s th r o a t be in g cut)
A n n o u n c e r : S o rry f o lk s , H a r r y 's needed a t the
entree bar:
H a r ry : V iv a . .. G o rjita s !" ( H a r r y dies)
I personally fin d advertising annoying because it
treats the audience lik e id io ts and it seems ineffec­
tive.
A n d I am especially bothered b y the fact that the
Lucent Technologies gu y keeps leaving d ir ty mes­
sages on m y answering m achine.
Chris Punk isa pre-junior majoring in information systems.
Opinion
The Triangle • May 8,1998
Daniel Bahar: The Truth About Cats and Dogs
Future alumni should consider donating to Drexel
had th e c h a n c e to
attend a lun ch e o n at
D r e x e l’ s
a lu m n i
weekend, “ Blue and Gold
D a y s ,”
on
M ay
2.
A p p r o x im a te ly
350
a lu m n i a tte n d e d th e
weekend’s biggest event,
the P re s id e n t’ s d in n e r,
a c c o rd in g to th e O ffic e o f A lu m n i
Relations.
A t th e lu n c h e o n , A s s o c ia te V ic e
P re s id e n t f o r A lu m n i R e la tio n s C a ro l
Fitzgerald to ld students that the U nive rsity
looks fo rw a rd to w elco m in g all o f us in to
the D rexel a lu m n i fa m ily after we g ra d u ­
ate. D rexel has a p p ro x im a te ly 71,000 liv ­
ing alum ni.
M a n y s e n io rs id e n t if y “ j o i n in g th e
a lu m n i f a m ily ” w it h th e o n s la u g h t o f
requests fo r m oney fro m the O ffice o f the
A n n u a l F u n d . D u r in g th e lu n c h e o n , I
talked w ith several seniors about w hether
o r n o t th e y p la n to c o n trib u te m o n e y to
Drexel,
These se n io rs said “ n o .” T h e y m ig h t
g iv e m o n e y to s p e c ific p ro g ra m s a n d
scholarships, they to ld me, b u t they do n o t
■
in te n d to give m oney to D rexel’ s general
funds because they do not feel that Drexel,
as a whole, has treated them well.
T h e ir com m ents are echoed b y m any
students. Students often feel a strong con­
n e ctio n w ith th e ir fra te rn ity , s o ro rity , o r
student organization, b u t do not feel co m ­
m itte d to the U n iv e rs ity itse lf. Students
and adm inistrators often attribute this dis­
sociation to the fragm entation o f student
life , w hich is due in great part to the onagain, off-again calendar fo r students who
participate in the co-op program . Students
and faculty continue to discuss the “ Drexel
shaft,” an abstract term th a t is used gener­
a lly to describe students’ fru s tra tio n w ith
U n ive rsity bureaucracy.
I feel differently. I f I ever make enough
m oney to contribute to anyone, I probably
w ill c o n trib u te to D rexel. Perhaps this is
s u rp ris in g , since I have o b v io u s ly spent
m a n y h o u rs w r it in g c o lu m n s th a t are
somewhat c ritic a l o f the D rexel establish­
m ent.
There is, o f course, an a rb itra ry nature
to being an alum nus o f a p a rticu la r school.
M a n y D re xe l students c o u ld ju s t as w ell
have attended Lehigh, Carnegie M ellon, o r
even the U niversity o f C incinnati. So, w hy
give m o n e y o n ly to Drexel? F or me, m y
c o m m itm e n t is not because Drexel is the
place where I was educated. It is because
Drexel is the place where I grew up.
I have been lucky at Drexel to have the
chance to be involved in m any a ctivitie s
that deal w ith the entire campus, like the
U n d e rg ra d u a te S tu d e n t G o v e rn m e n t
Association, the Campus A ctivities Board,
and T he T ria n g le . I have also had the
o p p o r t u n it y to m eet som e o f D re x e l’ s
m ost dedicated alum ni, like George Ross,
fo r m e r c h a irm a n o f D re x e l’s B o a rd o f
T ru s te e s , a nd C h u c k P e n n o n i, fo r m e r
Drexel CEO and cu rren t chairm an o f the
Board o f Trustees.
These people and these student orga ni­
zations have given me the chance to devel­
op an interest in D rexel th a t I w o u ld n o t
have h a d i f m y o n ly k n o w le d g e o f th e
a d m in istra tio n was m y contact w ith OSIR,
financial aid, and the co m p tro lle r’s office.
T h e y have show n me D re xe l at its v e ry
best.
But I also have seen Drexel at its worst. I
have seen friends in the a d m in istration get
fired. I have seen fo rm e r President Breslin
G e t in s id e th e :
attacked p u b lic ly and then forced to resign
by people he used to count as his friends. I
have had fo u r adm inistrators yell at me in
th e ir office fo r an h o u r because they did
not like m y newspaper colum n. A nd I have
seen student life at D rexel deemphasized
significantly over the past three years.
I recognize, however, that p olitics and
b u re a u cra cy exist in a il large o rg a n iza ­
tio n s , and I d o n o t h o ld these events
against the U niversity itself. Every univer­
sity w ill always have problems.
Every university w ill always have people
w ho create problems. But every university
also w ill have people to fix them.
So, I w ill c o n trib u te to D rexel fo r the
very same reason that m any other students
w ill n o t c o n tr ib u te — because D re x e l
U niversity is n o t perfect. Because students’
e x p e rie n c e h e re can be b e tte r. A n d
because s u p p o rtin g the school — w hile
staying invo lve d — seems to be the best
w ay to ensure th a t stud ents w ho attend
Drexel in the fu tu re w ill have the very best
experience possible.
Daniel Bahar is a senior majoring in International
area studies.
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A
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i
The Triangle • May 8,1998
10
Datebook
“ I am not the e d ito r o f a newspaper, and shall always try to do rig h t and
be good, so that God w ill n o t make me one.”
Mark Twain
Sunday
Friday
Saturday
A Flick: Good Will Hunting. 7p,
9:30p, and 12m in N esbitt
Hail's Stein Auditorium. Admis­
sion $2.
• The Pennsylvania Academy of
the Fine Arts' Annual Gradu­
• Dance Celebration presents
ate Thesis and Student Exhib­
itions opens at the Museum of
▲ Into The Woods presented by
Am erican Art, Broad and
Cherry Streets. Runs through
May 31. Museum hours 10a5p. Admission $4.95 with stu­
de n t ID. Call 972-7600 for
information.
3 and 8p at the Annenberg
Center, 3680 W alnut Street.
Tickets from $18. Call 898-6791
for information.
the Drexel Players. 8p in Mandell Theater, Tickets $6 for
Drexel Students. Call 895ARTS for information.
• The Chapel Choir of Men and
Boys presents its Annual
Spring Conctrt. Washington
Memorial Chapel, Route 23 in
Valley Forge National Historic
Park. Call (610) 783-0120 for
times and admission fees.
Monday
9
▲ Drexel Crew competes in the
Dad Vail Regatta on the
Schuylkill River. 12n-5p.
A Drexel Baseball vs. Delaware,
double-header. 12n at Drexel
Athletic Field, 43rd Street and
Powelton Avenue.
I l l Tuesday
▲ Drexel University Sailing
Team meeting. 6;30p in 3024
MacAlister Hall.
ernment Association meet­
ing. 7p in 2021 MacAlister Hall.
A The 2nd Annual African
Awareness Gala fe a tu rin g
African music, dance, a fashion
show, food and more, spon­
sored by the Drexel African
Students Association. Admis­
sion $7.
A Into The Woods presented by
the Drexel Players. 8p in Mandell Theater. Tickets $6 for
Drexel students. Call 895-ARTS
for information.
12 I Wednesday
AHiilel Deli Lunch. 12n-2p in
The Psychic Life of Savages.
232 Creese Student Center.
Cost $3. All meals kosher.
* Student Show Discussion.
12:15p at th e M useum o f
Am erican A rt, Broad and
Cherry Streets. Student admis­
sion $4.95.
• The Tuesday Night Square
Dance Guild's monthly dance,
• Lingua Americana: Two
American Masters of Diaiogue in Dialogue, a conversa­
with the Run of the Mill String
Band and caller Pete LeBerge.
7:30-10:15p. St. Mary's Parish
Hall, 3916 Locust Walk. Admis­
sion $5.
tion with Suzan-Lorl Parks and
Am y Freed. 7p at the Wilma
T heater, Broad and Spruce
Streets. Admission free, reser­
vations recom m ended. Call
546-7824 for resen/ations.
• Mother's Day
A Drexel Baseball vs. Delaware,
double-header. 12n at Drexel
Athletic Field, 43rd Street and
Powelton Avenue.
• The Philadelphia Phillies vs.
the Arizona Diamondbacks.
l:3 5 p at Veteran's Stadium
Broad Street and Pattison
Avenue. Call 463-1000 for tick­
et information.
• W alnut Street Theater pre­
views Blood Brothers. 2p and
7p at 9th and Walnut Streets.
Tickets from $8. Call 574-3550
extension 4 for ticket informa­
tion.
13 I Thursday
• The Wilma Theater Presents
7:30p at Broad and Spruce
Streets. Tickets from $20. Call
546-7824 for tickets.
A Undergraduate Student Gov­
The Dance Theater of Harlem.
A Graphic Design Alumni Show
Reception. 5-7p in the Design
Arts Gallery, Nesbitt Hall.
* Nothin' But Dance Night. 58:45p at the Philadelphia Mu­
seum of Art, Benjamin Franklin
Parkway and 26th Street. Free
after museum admission. Call
763-8100 for information.
14 I
• The Free Library o f Philadel­
phia presents Writer Edna
O'Brien in an interview w ith
WHYY's Marty Moss-Coane. 8p
in the M ontgom ery A uditor­
ium at th e C entral Library,
1901 Vine Street. Tickets $9.
Call 596-9700 for tickets.
• Karen Bamonte Dance Works
presents Red/Blue: Shift and
Landscape of Love. 8p in the
Packard B uilding, 15th and
Chestnut Streets (southeast
corner). Tickets $10 for stu­
dents. Call 243-0260 for reser­
vations and information.
• Theater Rumpus previews the
lesbian comedy The Well of
Horniness. 7p in the Adrienne
Theater's second stage, 2030
Sansom Street, second floor.
Tickets $8 for students. Call
563-4330 for reservations.
A Flick: Good Will Hunting. 8p
in N esbitt Hall's Stein Audi­
torium. Admission $2.
A Into The Woods presented by
the Drexel Players. 8p in Mandel! Theater. Tickets $6 for
Orexel S tudents. Call 895ARTS for information.
Friday
A Flick: Sphere. 7p, 9:30p, and
12m in N esbitt Hall's Stein
Auditorium. Admission $2.
* The International Business
Communicators presents a
breakfast panel. 8:30a at the
D iam ond Club, 1913 N orth
Broad Street. Admission $20
fo r non-m em bers, includes
buffet. Call (609) 424-5342 for
reservations, 627-4222 for
information.
* Independent Theater. 8p at
the Brick Playhouse, 623 South
Street. Tickets are $10 minus
the roll o f a die and include
dessert. Call 592-1 183 for
information.
DMebook subm issions may b e d ro p p e d off at The Triangle, 3010 MacAlister Hall.
W
G O
T O
I T H
I .Y
e t h c s , ; -5(00
E V E R E S T
.E .
O P E N E E ^
anS the m v h o n m b n t -
F riday,
SATURDAY
MAY 16^11 1
10 AM
BUCKLEY GREEN
m
1 5 1 ± l
; a t
a
vD LLnsm
MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
SOCIETY
REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE. . . ONCE I S N O T ENOUGH.
$10 PER PERSON
MINIMUM 3 MAN
TO ENTER CALL
222-8694
M e e t W i ll D e G r o u t:
G ov* T u rn R idge*s
e a m p a ig n d ire c to r
hofited by
T h e D r e x e l R c B n b llc a iis
m m m
n i l #
6 :0 0 P M M o n d ay, Feb.
Pr«i(ideiit*'ji O f fle e . M a in B u ild in g
[email protected] for more infonnation
Class of 1998
Senior inFormal CockTail Party
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
WHEN: Thursday, May 28th, 6pm - 10pm
WHERE: At, Baja Beach Club, Delaware Avenue.
COST: $30 per person
DRESS: Dressy casual attire
/JVCLC/Dm* Food & drink
TICKETS: LAST DAY to buy tickets. May 14th, Pick up tickets from
Sylvia in the alumni office (3rd floor n ^ ) OR contact Tom Murphy
(243-2223 and [email protected]) for the next ticket sale location
EXTRAS: Bus service provided from campus at 5:30 & gratuity not in­
cluded
NEXT TICKET SALES: Mon & Thurs (May 11 & 14) at Quad, l-2pm
Gtmics
The Triangle • May8,1998
11
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b y Jam es P o in t D u J o u r
ACROSS
1 Droops
5 Walked worriedly
10 Put away
14 Chicken quarters
15 Revere
16 Finish line
17 Dancer Pavlova
18 Painter of ballet
dancers
19 Oklahoma city
20 Green years
22 Stored fodder
quantities
24 Meir of Israel
28 Plant secretion
29 Inhabitants
32 Queasiness
36 Cures
37 Splendiferous
38 Ihdividual
39 Humorist
41 Plaything
42 Rock debris at cliff
bases
46 Lather
50 Superlatively timid
51 Tugboat
attachments
52 Shaft ofliqht
53 Hold the tiller
54 Courtyards
58 Mischievous trick
62 Brogue or wingtip,
e.g.
63 Minute amounts
67 School on the
Thames
68 Buddies
69 Muse of lyric poetry
70 Capital on the
“ F a s t,
o u t
Gulf of Guinea
71 Delta deposit
72 Spread here and
there
73 Pour out
DOWN
1 Beat it!
2 Top-drawer
3 Departed
4 Tiny, shiny disk
5 Cushion
6 Fruit beverage
7 Gear tooth
8 Historic times
9 Fashion creations
lOGetfogged
11 Zesty bite
12 Sheriff Andy Taylor's
kid
13 Ties the knot
21 Auctioneer's last
word
23 Hawaiian feast
25 Hawaiian garland
26 Sketched
27 Lends a hand
29 Trivial stuff
30 Peasant girl
31 Fine-grained
corundum
33 Preliminary work
34 Create a chasm
35 Unfathomable
chasm
40 Whistle blast
43 Most macabre
44 Son of Isaac
45 Thwarts
47 Overwhelm
48 Private sch.
49 Brownishorange horses
54 Small vipers
55 Siamese, today
56 Gain momentum
57 Alphabetize
59 On
60 Alaska town
61 Recognized
64 Black goo
65 Supped
66 Pen dame
LAST ISSUE'S SOLUTION
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T R IA N G L E
COMICS
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Page 12
Index
The Triangle offers listings in the
following categories.
Apartments
Sublets
Roommates
For Sale
Wanted
Text Books
Services
Help Wanted
Lost & Found
Announcements
Personals
Placing Classifieds
The deadline for placing a classified
ad is 5:00 p.m. on the Tuesday
before the ad's publication date.
Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
Sublets
Powelton Ave, 3 BDR, 2 bath, bi-level apt, W/D, In
private house, $925+ utils. Call 387-7278.
34th & Baring, 1, 2 and 3 BDR apts. Beautifully
maintained building. Lovely street. Excellent secu­
rity. Laundry, All will be repainted for new ten­
ants. All have AC units, mini blinds, w/w carpet­
ing, $465/1 bdr, S695/2 bdr, $995/3 bdr. Rent
includes heat. 2 garages avail @$70. One year
leases beginning Sept 1,1998.215-947-9380.
39th and Baring. 4 BDR house, 2 car garages, 2
baths. All appliances, deck, atrium parking.
$1000/mon + utils. 662-1000
38th and Hamilton Ave., 3 BDR, 2 bath, central air,
sunny & bright, all appliances, deck, storage, new
renovations. $930/mon + utils. 662-1000
3200 Hamilton Ave., One BDR bi-level. First level:
dining, living area, inlaid wood floor, fire place,
D/W, kitchenette. Second level: bedroom + tile
bath. W/D avail. $675 includes heat. 3866722.3841
Hamilton Ave., one BDR, 1st fir rear, $400+utils.
Avail now. 2nd fl, $435+ utils. Avail June 1st. W/D
on premises. Franklin Investment Realty 215-3827368.
3408 Spring Garden St. 1 BDR, living room,
kitchen, bath. Renovated 1997. Carpeted, New
appliances, 3rd floor. Security Avail Sept. $525 Call
386-6722.
Lrg two BDR apt, close to campus. Sunny, hard­
wood floors, Laundry facilities. $1000 includes all
utils. Call 610-527-7809_____________________
3509 Baring St., spacious one BDR, plus den, laun­
dry facilities, sunny, H/W floors. $630 includes
heat and hot water. 610-527-7809x3717
Lancaster Ave., 1st fir, yard, fireplace, bi-level, W/D
on premises, 1 1/2 bath. $840+ utils. Avail Sept
1st. Franklin Investment Realty 215-382-7368.
434 N 34th St. Studio apt -2nd floor front.
Beautiful studio. Built in armor, vp grad kitchen
tile bath. Free W/D. Avail Sept 15th. $430.
includes heat. 386-6722.
3408 Spring Garden St., Two BDR apartmentHuge apt w /larg e kitchen, living room,
bath+powder room. Inexpensive gas, heat. W/D
avail free. Yard privileges. Avail June or later.
$625+. Also another 2 BDR same, newly rehabbed
building. Avail Sept 1. Bi-level. $595. Call 386-6722
3622 Baring St.,Studio apt.- In owners quiet home.
Perfect for one person. Heat included. Large bath
room. Upgraded cooking area. Avail July 1st. $440
includes heat. Call 386-6722.
3406 Spring Garden St., Two BDR apt- First floor
rear. Inexpensive gas, heat. W/D free. Yard privi­
leges, Avail July 1st or later. $575+ Call 386-6722.
Very large two BDR apt. Close to campus. Sunny,
hardwood floors. Laundry facilites $1,000 includes
all utils. Call (610)527-7809.__________________
3509 Baring St, Spacious one BDR, plus den, laun­
dry facilities, sunny, hardw ood floors. $630
includes heat & hot water. Call (610)527-7809.
3312 Hamilton St., Efficiencies, one and two
Bedrooms from $299/mo and up. Heat, gas, hot
water incl. All apts have walk-in closets, lots of
windows, walking distacce to Drexel. 349-9429
34th and Powelton. Clean & affordable. 1st fir, 1
BDR in a 3-bedroom apt, walk-in closet. $260/mo.
Utilities share with 2 other persons. Available 6/15
or earlier, email [email protected].
410 N 32nd St, sublet summer term, 1-4 BDRS.
W/D, 2 full baths, kitchen, dining rm, TV rm. Call
Mike@ 387-1875___________________________
33rd and Powelton, 2 BDRS avail for summer.
Partially furnished, W/W carpet, central air, W/D,
DW, fridge. Avail June 15 to Sept 15. Rent is
$745+ utils. Contact Aniket or Vijay at 215-3873678 or email [email protected]
Sublet near Upper Darby, near bus station and
shopping center. From 7/1 to 9/30. $400/mon +
elec. Contact 610-499-3601(day) or 610-2845632(eve).
36th and Powelton Ave, Lrg, sunny, 1 Irg. BDR apt.
Living room, kit,, tile bath .. Clean, excellent secu­
rity, on site laundry. Heat, hot water included,
S475+, Avail imm,CalU 13-2004
3717 Lancaster, 2 SDRS. 2nd fl. nice bi-level with
W/D on prennises, deck. Very sunny. $650+ utils.
Avail Sept 1st, Franklin Investment Realty 215382-7368.________________________________
35th and Pearl. Large studio avail in private home.
Cable & on sight laundry. Avail immediately. Call
Lindy at 386-2848, Email [email protected]
EXTRA INCOME FOR ‘98
EarnSSOO-S1000vwelilystutlingenvelopes. For
(Mails-RUSH)1.00withSASEto:
Group Fin
6547 Acadtmy Blvd., Dtpl.N
ColoradoSprings COS091S
Forms are available outside The
Triangle office at 3010 MacAlister
Hall. They must be completed in full
and writing should be legible.
If there are no copies of the
classified form available, write your
ad on a full sheet of paper. You
must include your name, organi­
zation, phone number and address.
If you are a Drexel student, include
your student number. Always make
note of the date the ad was placed,
and the section in which you wish
the ad to appear. Be sure to sign
your name.
In Person
Place forms in the slot outside The
Triangle office.
Mall
The Triangle
Attn: Classifieds Manager
32nd & Chestnut Streets
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Fax
(215) 895-5935
If your ad is a paid ad, a copy of the
check or money order should be
faxed and the original should be
mailed or dropped off in person.
Mays, 1998
L o n d o n .......................... $ 4 9 6
I V l a a r t d .......................... $ 8 9 3
Attefls.............*.*$800
P a r i s ................................ $ 5 8 4
C 0 p e n h a g e n * .™ * $ 2 l8
F r a n k f u r t ..................... $ 5 5 4
HL^l
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.
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Indude tax
...... .SUatettft dWitt, some lesWctlons apply:
.
STATRAVEL...
THE WORLD’S
LARGEST STUDENT
(2 1 5 ) 3 S 2 -2 9 2 8
STA TRAVEL
3730 Walnut Street
TRAVa ORGANIZATION.
BOOK YOUR
w w w . s
Clean, affordable apts located close to Drexel
campus. Heat and Hot water paid, small pets wel­
come, Call 610-664-7779 or fax 610-664-3538
We’ve been there.
TI CKET
T
R
A
ONLI NE
V
E
L
.
AT
C O M
Sublets
3517 Lancaster Ave. RM needed to share 2 BDR
apt. Nice, clean, large. W/W, carpeting, washing
machine, A/C. Avail immediately $375 + 1/2 utili­
ties (about $30-summer, $45 (in winter).
The Courts studio, apt. w/w carpet, w/d in apt.,
central air/heat, walk in closet, sep. kitchen, avail.
July 1-end Sept. $585/mo. call becke 387-3806
3312 Arch Street 1st floor (Across from Calhoun
Hall) 3 BDRS, 2 Baths, Dishwasher, W/D on
premises. $1200/month, includes water. Avail July
1St or Mid June. Call 387-2554 and leave mssg.
36th and Lancaster, 1 bedroom apt available June
15th,$423/month includes heat, hot water.Call
Stephanie at 215-222-5158, leavea messg.
1 BR in a newly rehabbed building at 3408 Spring
Garden. Available June 15. $460/month. Call
386-2439 or email [email protected]
3613 Baring. Large two room studio available
beginning summer term. $415/month, heat and
hot water incl. Good neighborhood, beautiful
building. Please call (215)222-2654.
U .C .A . R e a lt y G r o u p - Great Places at Great Prices
E-mail
If you are a Drexel student, you can
E-mail your ad to the classifieds
manager at triangle-classifieds@
drexel.edu. Include the information
outlined above.
Costs & Limits
D n x e l Advertisers
Cost: Free. Normal ad rates apply for
personal businesses and apart­
ments.
Limits: 2 classified ads per person
per issue, with a 40 word maximum
for each. Personals have a 25 word
maximum. Ads may be edited.
CHESTNUT HALL APARTMENTS
ASTOR APARTMENTS
3900 Chestnut Street
39th and Sansom
The Premiere A p a rtm en t Building
In U niversity City
The A ffordable off C am pus
A lternative
All Utilities Included
Air Conditioning
24 Hour Front Desk
Laundry Facilities
Variety of Floor Plans
Many with Scenic Views
Efficiencies from $316
One Bedroom from $420
Two Bedrooms from $627
Cable Ready
Laundry Facilities
Secure Entrance
Roommates
3901 Baring, Central air, gas heat, dishwasher,
W/D, w/w carpet, intercom, security system. Block
from police station and hospital. 5 min bike ride
to Drexel, $185/mon + deposit of $225, Call 2430374____________________________________
Great opportunity to practice your English with a
high school teacher and an American family.
Private h o m e on Drexel cam pus, 34th and
Powelton, 4 blocks to Penn, furnished, access to
kitchen, patio, washer, dyer, semi-private bath
$300. includes all utilities. Avail imme. 386-4293,
23rd & Parish Sts, Drexel student to share apt
near Art Museum, Drexel, and Center City. Own
large bedroom. Fully furnished apt. Washer &
dryer. Deck. Friendly neighborhood Street park­
ing available. $250/month + utilities. Available
June 1st, 823-2568 or st%e75d@drexel,edu
For Sale
Motorcycle FA. 1990 Suzuki Katana 750, bik/silver,
14K miles, many extras, mint cond., asking $3000,
negotiable. Helmet & jacket also available. Please
leave your # on Dan's pager @ (215) 415-0795, or
email [email protected]. Must Sell,
Intel 233MMX System w/32MB SDRAM, 4,3GB HD,
4MB SVGA (2 months) Without modem/moni. Ask
for $750, Email st96el00@drexel ,edu
7300/180 PC Compatible Power Macintosh. Six
months old, mint condition. 15' AV monitor, PC
card, 2GB HD, 12x CD-ROM, US Robotics x2 56k
modem, Kinsington Orbit trackball. Software;
Norton, Office pro 97, and more. Email at
[email protected] or [email protected]
MUST SALE!_______________________________
Loft for sale, twin bed. 4' or 7' above floor. Easy
to assemble - Great space saver! SlOO/obo. Call
382-2962 or 403-0181.
Fridge for sale for only $49. Medium sized, per­
fect cond., suitable for dorm rooms and apts. Call
215-222-4490 or e-mail: [email protected]
Sony PlayStation modchips installed for $30.
takes 15 minutes, allows you to play imports and
CDR copies. Steve 222-5728.
Sofa, recliner, rug, AC unit, kitchen tables, speaker,
stereo, receiver all prices reasonable, call Steve at
222-5728.________________________________
Ford Tempo ‘88. Silver, Auto, 4 cyl. two dr sedan.
P/L, P/S. New battery w/guar. Brakes w/lifetime
guar. Drives well. 100K+, Hwy miles. Relocating,
so must sell. Call Mark at 215-243-6275.
PowerMac 5400/120mhz/l 6 MB RAM/8X CDROM/1.6 Gig HD/built in monitor/etc. MINT!
$1000, neg. Call Chris @ (215)386-0672 after 6pm.
Power Macintosh 5400 Practically new with soft­
ware. Call Jess @ 382-5208 for details.
'RBAN & B v t :
• REALTOR
Studios, 1 BRs.
Close to campus.
$349-499.
Heat included.
Available now.
Call our Rental Department at 2224800 about available apartments
and houses in University City /
Powelton Village.
Outside Advertisers
Cost: (per issue) $4.50 for tlie first 25
words and $.25 foi each word
thereafter. Tear sheets are $1.00
extra. Ads must be pie-paid. Pay­
ment can be made by cash, money
order or check.
Limits: There are no ad limits or
word limits for paid classifieds.
Other Information
No classifieds will be accepted over
the telephone. Multiple ads with
duplicate subjects w ill not be
accepted unless they are paid for.
Ads may be cancelled, corrected or
continued by n o tifyin g the
classifieds staff by the 5:00 p.m.
Tuesday deadline. You must include
your phone number w ith your
correspondence.
7 BEDROOM HOUSE
39xx Chestnut Street
You w/7/ n ever b e lonely
Individual locking bedrooms
Gated Entrance
Laundry Facilities
Remodeled
Security Alarm
Limited off street parking
GET THE RIGHT
JO B NOW
DART ASSOCIATES LTD.
The College Grad placement
specialists have been locating
career entry positions since 1985.
Free image advice, interview
training, resume review, career
consulting and job placement.
Current positions in:
Finance, Management
Sales/Marketing, Technical
Restaurant & More
Professionally M anaged and We Make Repairs!
Any BA/BS lets us get you In front
of employers that
('all tor an a p p o in tm en t 3 8 6 -3 3 S 0 or Visit our W E B site at
WANT TO HIRE YOU!
Iittp ://W W W . u c a r e a l t y .c o m
610-668-7800
fax 610-668-1746
WWW.DART-JOBS.COM
The Triangle-May 8,1998
Classifieds
13
For Sale
For Sale
For Sale
Help Wanted
Announcements
Dos on MAC card for Performa 52XX,53XX, 62XX,
63XX. 133Mhz AMD5x86, 16MB Ram, GamePort.
Fits PPC Performa's with LC Slot. If unsure email
me. Asking $400.00 but taking bids. Must sell.
Email: st89hwdp@drexel,edu
City bike, 10 spd. Good for campus and city. $30.
Email st%[email protected] or call 215-879-2182
after 1OOO PM ask for Hong
Porch Sale: 3 households. Kitchen stuff, jewelry,
sporting equip, clothes (some even with tags stil;!
on) Sun, May 3rd, 9-5.3329 Powelton Ave.
Power Mac5400, 120 MHz Power PC, 1G, 16MB,
8X CD-ROM. Ethernet card Incl. 14' monitor. Lots
of SW installed! Must sell. $1750, neg. Please call
993-7418 or e-mail mihir.shah@unisys. com
Seven foot oak bar. Call for details. 610-566-7615
training, extra money for driving. Call or email
Taner at 610-622-2536 or [email protected]
$1500 weekly potential mailing our circulars. No
experience required. Free information packet. Call
410-783-8273.____________________________
Earn $750 $ 1500/week. Raise all the money your
student groups needs by sponsoring a VISA
Fundraisre on your campus. No investment A very
little time needed. Theres no obligation, so why
not call for information today. Call 1-800-3238454 X95
PM Adrienne theatre, 2030 Sansom St, 2nd flooftickets $!!, $6 for students with ID. Call 215-9220501.
Mexico/Careibbean or Central America $200r/t.
Europe $179o/w, Other world wide destinations
cheap. Only terrorists get you there cheaper! AirTech (212)219-7000 wwwalrtKhcom
Miami only $79 o/w Mexico/Caribbean or San
Juan $200 r/t. Europe $179 o/w. (.)ther worldwide
destinations chea(). Only Terrorists get you there
cheaper! Ait Lech (212)219-7000 or (800)575TECH WWWalrtah.com
'92 Eclipse GS, 59K, INtrax Spriiigs, Exhaust, limit­
ed edition 17” rims and lots more. $8000. Call
545-9379.
Aiwa LCX-70M 7 disc changer system. $8017'RCA
TV $60, Halogen lamp $10, bookshelf $20. 5459379
Dorm size Sanyo refrigerator, in good condition
and clean. Perfect for dorm. Call 215-222-8132.
Paintball kit. Spider Gun w / remote C02 tank,
looder, mask, too much to ,list. $100 545-9379
Power Mac 7100/80,48 MB RAM, monitor, mouse,
HQ sound package, 56K fax-modem-spkr phone,
MS Office, many games and software. Mac OS.
Call Keith 302-456-0458, Pager 215-702-5853
'92 Honda Civic, Sdn, 4cyl., auto, air, am/fm cass.
Like new. $5,900 obo. '88 Olds Cutlass, Cpe,
loaded, perfect cond., new trans, $3500 obo. Call
Mike at 610-352-9947 or e-mail [email protected].
Mac Performa. CD drive, modem, monitor(14’),
sound card, style writer 1200 B/W printer Free
w/computer. Free Software too: Quicken, Code
warrior etc. Call 482-4941 after 6 PM. B/0.
3 6 0 0 - 0 6 S p rin g G a r d e n
'81 Yamaha XS 400 special only $4940mi. Perfect
first bike. Shoe, helmet & leather jacket included
Excellent condition. $625 OBO Call 590-8711.
Services
Practice English with a high school teacher with
lots of experience. Will work intensively with you.
386-0782. evenings.
Help Wanted
Part-Time Catering jobs. Waiters, bartenders, party
supervisors, flexible hours, perfect for college stu­
dents, sign up to work when convenient to you.
mostly weekends, no experience necessary, paid
Announcements
Phone card business for sale with new store rack,
licence to buy cards wholesale, currently one
store as client Can grow. Call Dave 215-735-0156.
Weekdays 215-590-8622
Improv comedyll.The next line comedy theatre,
Philly's premier professional improvisational com­
edy troupe, performs every Friday night at 10:30
Personals
Little Joe; You are always busy I just hope you
are as happy as I am. Best of luck I hofx? to bump
into you sometimes when I come back to the city.
Scotty: You recognized my voice, I couldn't
believe it. Well, I'll be around next year to get the
Disney freebies from you..
F E E L IN G S E C U R E ?
C lose to D rexel
E ff ic ie n c ie s $ 3 2 5 - 3 4 0
S tu d io $ 3 5 0 - 3 7 5
1 B e d ro o m $ 4 2 5
2 B e d ro o m $ 5 2 5
Drexel Shuttle service every 15 minutes on corner outside of building.
Security G u a rd on premise 2 4 hours o d a y . Intercom Security.
H e a t & H ot w a te r inclu d ed . Laundry facilities o n p rem ises.
The USGA has completed an
CALL 5 5 1 - 9 1 0 0
evaluation of Drexel Security.
Find out how safe you roaUy are.
'Come to the USGA meeting,
Monday, May 11th at 7:00pm for
the results of the evaluation.
U SG A
U ndergraduate Student
Government Assoriatlon
S e n io r s ,
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FILM
c o r p o r a tio n s a s p o lic y a n a ly s ts ,
OPEN HOUSE
, MAY14. from
PM, in ROOMC-34 of the
of Pennsylvania,
School of Education
Building, 3700 Walnut Street,
leet faculty, speak with current
dents, sample a class, learn
this program can help you
with your “next move.”
for further infor'reglster for this
al open house.
g ra n t w riters, re s e a rc h e rs ,
p ro g ra m e v a lu a to rs ?
O u r o n e - y e a r M . S . E d . p r o g r a m s in
P S Y C H O L O G IC A L S E R V IC E S a n d
P R E M (P o lic y R e s e a r c h , E v a lu a tio n ,
a n d M e a s u r e m e n t ) In t h e G r a d u a t e
S c h o o l o f E d u c a tio n c a n g iv e y o u
t h e h e a d ’s u p a d v a n t a g e .
W o rk
w ith o u r n a tio n a lly -re c o g n iz e d
fa c u lty g a in in g b o th c o n c e p tu a l a n d
a l n i n g t h a t w ill
r t In l d e n t l f y l n (
p r o f e s s i o n a l Cc
’
The Triangle'May 8,1998
Entertainment
14
Same old fbmnuia In
latest diaster flick
Term papers due?
Kinko's is here to make your life easier.
Let us help you add impact to your project with color
or access the Internet for research.
I------------------------------------1
Paramount Pictures/DreamWorks Pictures
Buy one, get one FREE i
selfservke color copies j
"Maybe when Bruce Willis gets done rescuing the world in 'Arnnageddon/ he
can rescue us fronn this lousy nnovie."
Stardust from page 16
tra g e d y, and an o ld a s tro n a u t
Tanner (R obert D u v a ll), w ho is
on the spaceship “ M essiah” that
travels to the co m e t, gains the
tru s t and respect o f the y o u n g
astronaut team.
E x e c u tiv e p ro d u c e r S teven
S p ie lb e rg a n d d ir e c t o r M im i
Leder gave the film some re a lly
awesome special effects, b u t they
d o n ’t keep the audience o n the
edge o f th e ir seats.
Less hum an m elodram as and
m ore scenes like Nevr Y o rk c ity ’s
tw in towers getting washed away
b y a 1,000 feet tid a l wave w o u ld
have been re a lly a p preciated b y
R«c«K« on* FREE
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fans. M organ Freeman suits his
c h a ra c te r v e ry w e ll as the
P resident o f the U n ite d States,
but aside fro m a couple o f press
conferences, his character does
n o t get to do m uch.
The m ovie is reasonably well
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reaction and em otions in the face
o f a tra g e d y th a n th e a c tu a l
destruction caused b y the comet.
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KinUo's n»()uir« written peraiiuion f»m the copyright holder in order to nproduc* any copyrighted worit
Deep Impact
Robert Duvall, TeaLeoni
Directed by Mimi Leder
DreamWorks Pictures/Paramount Pictures
re x e l A fric a n
S tu d e n ts A sso c .
P re s e n ts
T h e A fric a n
A w a re n e s s G a la
O n
9 th
T h e
o f M a y , 1 9 9 8
“ S a tu rd a y ”
L o c a tio n
M a in
A u d ito riu m , 3 2
T im e : D o o rs O p e n
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6 :3 0 p m , S ^ w
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s ta rts
The Triangle • May 8,1998
15
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ntertainment
Page 16
Mays, 1998
THE TRIANGLE
Listento some real punk rockfor a change
Sick of it all? Try the flavorings of some oldschool artists, rather than their decendants.
Chris Puzak
th a t P o iso n Idea can get th e ir
p o in t across w ith o u t b o m b a rd ­
ing the listen e r w ith a 200 m ile
per h o u r b u rs t o f speed. Some
lis te n e rs m a y re c o g n iz e the
e x c e lle n t s o n g “ T h e B a d g e ,”
w hich was covered by Pantera on
The C row soundtrack.
STREETWALKIN'CHEETAH
I f you are like me, you fin d it
e xtre m e ly a n n o y in g th a t bands
like Green Day and O ffsp rin g are
passed o ff as punk, w hile some o f
the true classics o f the genre are
ignored. W hile it is not m y area
o f expertise, I th o u g h t it w o u ld
n ice to o ffe r som e o f m y o w n
p u n k rock recom m endations, i f
o n ly to serve as respite fro m the
s w ill th a t M T V trie s to shove
dow n o ur throats.
D.R.I
Dirty Rotten Imbeciles
P o is o n I d e a
Agnostic Front
Cause For Alarm/Victim In Pain
Poison Idea
F ttI The Darkness
Poison Idea album s are hard
to c o m e b y. So I was p r e t ty
h appy to fin d this classic album
b y one th e best ban d s to ever
emerge fro m the West Coast.
T h is a lbum is a d e fin ite p ro ­
gression fr o m th e ir e a rly days,
w ith the songs being longer than
the short, speedy tunes fo u n d on
th e ir debut Pick Y o u r K in g .
S t ill, songs lik e “ P la s tic
B o m b ” and "D e a th o f an Id io t
B lues” prove th a t even th o u g h
th e b a n d has b e c p m e a l i t t l e
m o re a d e p t at w r it in g m u s ic ,
th e y have lo s t n o n e o f th e ir
intensity o r conviction.
A ltho ugh a lo t o f the alb u m is
fille d w ith extrem ely fast songs,
slow er num bers lik e “ A la n ’s on
F ire ” and the title tra c k p ro v e
O f all the h a rd co re bands to
come o u t o f New Y o rk, I w ou ld
have to say that Agnostic F ront is
probably m y favorite. T his com ­
p ila tio n o f th e ir first tw o albums
is especially nice, as it co n ta in s
m o s t o f t h e ir cla s s ic s in o n e
place.
T h e fir s t a lb u m o n th e d isc
Cause f o r A la r m is chock fu ll o f
speedy m e ta llic riffs courtesy o f
g u ita ris t V in n ie Stigm a and the
d is tin c tiv e s h o u tin g o f v o c a lis t
R o g e r M ir e t . A g n o s tic F r o n t
classics lik e "T h e E lim in a t o r ”
and “ T o x ic Shock” are evidence
o f w h y th is b a n d is so h ig h ly
regarded.
T he second a lb u m V ic t im in
P a in is n o t quite as polished, b u t
n o less intense. S ta n d o u t songs
o n th is a lb u m in c lu d e th e title
track, “ U n ite d and S trong” and
“ Power.” I f you are a fan o f hard­
core, then you owe it to yourself
to bu y this album .
W hile I personally th in k their
latest album F u ll Speed A h e a d is
the best w o rk they’ve ever done,
that doesn’t mean D .R .I.’s excel­
le n t d e b u t a lb u m is n ’ t w o r th
buying.
The band manages to cram 28
songs o n to a 26 m in u te album ,
an d n o t a s e c o n d is w a s te d .
A lthough the theme o f the music
is lim ite d to tw o to p ic s : “ life
s u c k s ” and “ th e g o v e rn m e n t
sucks,” D.R.I. manages to create
m em orable songs, despite th e ir
brevity.
Songs lik e “ I D o n ’ t N eed
Society” and “ Couch Slouch” are
su re to m a ke a n y p u n k fa n
happy.
The Exploited
Oeatfr Before Dishonour
I picked this album up in the
bargain b in fo r five bucks. I was
e xp e ctin g a lo u s y a lb u m , b u t I
was delighted to fin d that this is
Discharge
Advertising campaign
▲ ▲▲▲A
Godzilla: The Movie
You can't escape the ads, even if you try
Once in a while, I find nnyself among the
majority. Even when that means being
tricked into believing the hype, I won't
complain. Godzilla returns on May 20, as
the ads have bombarded us since New
Year's Eve. I was hesitant to embrace the
giant beast, but the hype has gotten to
me. The teasing theatrical trailers, the
excessive billboards on public transit, and
the incredibly tacky punch line, "Size
Does Matter," add up to a "must-see"
event for my summer. The movie itself
probably sucks, but it should make a
good topic of conversation, which is
worth the price of admission.
Anh "Size Queen"Dang
Hear Nothing, See Nothing, Say
Nothing
R ig h t o f f the b a t, le t me say
these g uys are n o t th e m o s t
accom p lished m u sicia n s in the
w o rld . T he songs a ll co n sist o f
sloppy three chord melodies w ith
a couple o f ly rics repeated over
and over.
S till, D is c h a rg e m anages to
overcom e th e ir m u sica l lim ita ­
tions and create some incre d ib ly
pow erful p u n k songs.
D it tie s lik e “ P ro te s t an d
Survive” and “ The P ossibility o f
L ife ’s D e s tru c tio n ” p u m m e l the
listener w ith th e ir a n ti-w a r and
a n ti-g o v e rn m e n t message. A ll
the songs are v e ry fast, heavy,
and sincere.
A lth o u g h th is b a n d has
sp a w n e d c o u n tle s s im it a to r s ,
none o f them manage to do i t as
w ell as the originals.
Food
▲▲▲A A
Pita
Your food won't fall out
Pita bread rocks! It has a convenient
pocket that people can stuff with
whatever things please their sick little
minds. Even small items such as olives,
onions, or hot peppers snugly fit and
won't fall out. It is so strong it can hold
up to the five-inch thickness of turkey
slices or other edible objects inside. I'm
not talking about the Taco Bell type of
pitas but the real ones that have
substance and include an actual pocket.
One can toast them for a warm and
crunchy effect, or microwave them
along with your favorite filling. People
can even make a dessert: try fudge. It is
an easy treat that people can make for
themselves. If you don't have the
change, you at least have the pocket!
Despina “Wonder Bread"Raggousis
'Deep Impact' another ina long
lineofHollywooddisasterflicks
Web Site-O-Rama
JCP
Ashish Talati
S3"
SHOOTING STAR
buy prmlMcls
RED MEAT
from Uio secret ttl«s at
one o f the strongest album s The
E x p lo ite d have e v e r d o n e .
C onsidering this is the band that
b r o u g h t us such classics as
T ro o p s o f T o m o r r o w and L e t ’s
S ta rt a W ar, that is saying a lot.
The album is fu ll o f fast, angry
songs like “ Police In fo rm e r” and
“ Scaling The D e rry W a ll.” Even
the slow songs, like “ A n ti U .K .”
are no less intense. The Exploited
have crafted yet a n o th e r excel­
lent showcase fo r th e ir anarchist
p o litic s and th e ir love o f p u n k
rock.
Quickies
I
lU CA l
C C jn n O H
http://www.redmeat.com
Ever since Gary Larson stopped doing r/?eFar Side, I have been looking for a
suitable replacement for Mr. Larson's wonderful works of art. I believe I have
found it in Max Cannon's Red Meat comics. Now, I can just go to www.redmeat.
com for my weekly dosage of alcoholic milkmen, dead kittens, burn victims,
and psychotic lunatics. If they could somehow put South Street on the Web, I
would never have to leave my room to look at freaks again.
Chris l/\/ellDoneyuzak
Im a g in e this* a m ile - w id e
asteroid is on the verge o f co llid ­
in g w ith E a rth in a m a tte r o f
days. The asteroid w o u ld w ipe
o u t all life on Earth.
W h a t w o u ld y o u do in th a t
s itu a tio n . Stop a tte n d in g y o u r
8:30 economics class? Q u it your
b u r g e r - f lip p in g jo b at M c ­
D o n a ld ’ s? Steal so m e o n e ’ s car
an d ru n o f f to C a lifo riT ia ? O r
w o u ld y o u ju s t p re te n d e ve ry­
th in g is n o rm a l a nd c o n tin u e
y o u r d a ily routine?
• A p a rt fro m being just another
“ a s te ro id h it t in g th e e a r th ”
movie. Deep Im p a ct tests hum an
nature and em otions — as each
ind ivid u a l struggles in the face o f
e x tin c tio n to fin d w hat m atters
most to h im o r her.
A com et is on course to c o l­
lide w ith Earth, and people must
cope w ith the fact th a t they w ill
d ie . T h e P re s id e n t (M o rg a n
Freeman) has devised a plan to
keep as m a n y h u m a n s a live as
possible.
S c ie n tis ts h a ve b u il t g ia n t
caves big enough to h o ld a m il­
lio n people, and the governm ent
is going to have a lo tte ry to p ick
800,000 p e o p le to liv e in th e
caves along w ith 200,000 scien­
tists, artists, and doctors.
The film basically shows three
characters w ho m u st deal w ith
the news th a t a c o m e t is o n a
deadly co llisio n course w ith the
E a rth . Leo B e id e rm a n ( E lija h
W o o d ) w h o c o -d is c o v e rs th e
comet, discovers that his love fo r
a y o u n g g ir l in th e face o f the
tragedy is a force stronge r than
the w inds o f tim e. Jenny Lerner
(Tea Leoni) comes closer to her
dad as a result o f this im pend ing
See Stardust on page 14
Paramount Pictures/DreamWorks Pictures
Philadelphia Weekly — Your number
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