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J 0 1997 Iniltx Ed-Op 12 D atebook 15 Sports 16 Comics 21 Classifieds 22 hitchhikes Entertainment 28 home for the hoHdays. HEIRUNGU See page 28

Volume 72,Numb« 12 Philjd»lphij, Penniylvinij January 10,1997 The Student Newspaper at Drexel University CopyTighI C1997 The Triangle B o o k 32nd Street dosure is offidal Patricia O'Brien and Administrative Services section between Market and of 32nd Street. tr u c k EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Tony Caneris. Chestnut Streets last summer, Caneris said there are no defi­ The usual crowd of lunch “We want to create a dining when it approached the City of nite plans for the food court yet, trucks will still line 32nd Street space that is attractive ... [and] for approval. The but it will be modeled similarly, c o n tin u e s on Monday, Jan. 13, but the road provide our students, faculty and University will not be required to but “better” than the outdoor will be closed to other m otor staff with a spacious and com­ leave the road accessible for food court at . vehicles. The U niversity will fortable place to eat outdoors,” emergency access. Both 30th and Temple’s food court features an o p e r a t i o n eventually convert the area into a said Caneris. 34th Streets will serve as alternate outdoor eating are;^. In addition, food court, according to Senior The administration first pro­ routes for those who currently each lunch truck has designated Nick DIFranco Vice President for Student Life posed closing the 32nd Street use the southbound only stretch See 32nd Street on page 2 TRIANGLE STAFF WRITER Dynamic Student Services, a West Chester-based textboolc vendor, returned to Drexel this term to compete with the January Snow University Bookstore for stu­ dents’ textbook dollars. The booksellers, working out of a rental truck at 33rd and Chestnut Streets, have again gotten the attention of Drexel’s administra­ tion. According to Dan Lieberman, owner of Dynamic Student Services, his business has been encountering “a lot of resistance” from University academic departments. Lieberman told The Triangle that University departments he contacted would not provide him with information about required textbooks for courses. The departments cited a memo from the University administra­ tion advising them not to release the lists of required textbooks to DSS, said Lieberman. The memo, sent by Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Richard Astro and Senior Vice President for Student Life and Administrative Services Tony Caneris urged all faculty members “not to assist this [representative from DSS] or any other individual represent­ ing this organization for the good of Drexel University stu­ dents.” Noah Addis The Triangle Senior Associate Vice The corner of 33rd and Chestnut Streets was covered with snow Jan. 9 as the first winter storm of the season arrived in Philadelphia. President and Dean of Students \ Dianna Dale said, “using the University bookstore ... is an asset for everyone.” She added See Books on page 2 Rose returns to Phllly as a pro

Jonathan Poet “I get him off the bench and MANAGING EDITOR he always makes something hap­ In the end, it was a typical pen right away,” said Cowens game for Malik Rose. Rose, a for­ following the game. “He gets a mer center for Drexel’s men’s possession. He takes a charge. team, made his return He squirrels in and ... squirms to Philadelphia as a Charlotte up those shots. Most of all he’s Hornet to take on the 76ers on just an active, live body and he Dec. 17. The Hornets won the makes things happen and gives game, 93-84. us a lot of energy.” “(I was a] little nervous, but Rose gave a lot of energy for you know it was all OK once I the past four seasons at Drexel. got on the court ... I could have His number retired, Rose fin­ played a little bit better. When I ished as the number two career got back in at the end I missed a rebounder in NCAA history and dunk. It’s OK though, I played led Drexel to three straight hard,” said Rose. NCAA tournament appearances Rose entered the game averag­ and a stunning upset over the ing about 10 minutes a contest, University of Memphis in last with 3.3 PPG and 3.6 rebounds a year’s tournament. Rose said the game. He finished the Sixers tournament win is his fondest game with nine minutes, two memory of his Philadelphia bas­ points and two rebounds. ketball roots. Michael Lawless The Triangle Rose is happy with his perfor­ While Rose’s stats will not Noah Addis The Triangle Students lined up to buy textbooks lead to an All-Star selection, mance so far as a pro. “Overall, Former Drexel basketball star Malik Rose, now with the NBA's Charlotte from the book vendor on 33rd Street Hornets coach Dave Cowens is I’ve been playing pretty well. I’ve ..Hornets, made his first Philadielphja. appearance as a pro on Dea 17. /.- . , during the first week of classes. happy with Rose’s efforts so far..- . j . .. 6eeRoseonpage3 Un ri'J

Booksellers compete for business THE TRIANGLE dents’ best interests.” what is best for the University Books from page 1 The University bookstore Established 1926 allows returns during the first Lieberman said he serves the and its students.” She warned that the University Bookstore, three weeks of classes each term. students’ best interests by saving students that by patronizing the which is run by Barnes and Last term, the DSS book truck them money. ' book truck, “there are risks that Noble, profits the University, was on campus for the first two His textbooks are sold at you take.” Editorial which indirectly helps students. weeks of classes and offered to prices that average 10 percent Lieberman said they have sold Editor-In-Chief Patricia O'Brien Nine percent of the bookstore’s return to campus for returns lower than the prices set by less textbooks this term than last Managing Editor Jonathan Poet News Editor Anh Dang gross sales are earmarked for the after that date. Barnes and Noble. Lieberman last term because of their limited Entertainment Editor BradWible University, Astro and Caneris said they told The Triangle, "I think most textbook selection. Employees at Sports Editor Larry Rosenzweig The memo from Astro and believed “a competitive market people would like to see savings the book truck said that sales Photo Editor Noah Addis Caneris also touted the book­ can be good in most instances; go directly into their pockets ver­ were brisk for the materials in Eminence Grise John Gruber store’s hours, payment options however, the competitive book­ sus the pockets of Barnes and stock, but that many students and return policies as superior to seller parked on Chestnut Street Noble.” requested books which DSS did DSS’s. is not looking out for the stu­ Dale said that she “[wants] not have in stock. Administration Business Manager Jay Kimball Classifieds Manager Jonathan Mullen Distribution Manager Ryan La Riviere

Staff Writers Nick DiFranco, Gina Di Vincenzo, Stacy Lutkus, Sean Murphy

Columnists Michael Busier

Photographers Christine Fitts, Michael Lawless

Graphic Designers Jason Jensen

Cartoonists Don Haring, Jr., Milbourne T. Monkey, Ian Rickert

Business Staff Sachin Shah, John Wackes, Venu Gaddamldi

Contributing Editors Gene McMurray (Comics)

Contributing Staff Carlo Santoni (Distribution), Ashish Talati (Another Angle)

Michael Lawless The Triangle The Barnes and Noble University bookstore faces competition from a truck which sells textbooks at lower prices. Contact Information Mail: The Triangle 32nd & Chestnut Streets Philadelphia, PA 19104 3 2 n d S t P/)one; (215) 895-2585 f e (215) 895-5935 In one night Arkansas E-mail: st92jgem@dunx1 .ocs.drexel.edu t o b e Copyright ©1997 The Triangle. No work herein may be reproduced in any form, in executes three killers whole or in part, without the written con­ c lo s e d t o sent of the Editor-in-Chief. Edith Paal statement. efficient.” Opinions expressed within are not neces­ ASSOCIATED PRESS sarily those of The Triangle. The Triangle is Denton winced, coughed and Correction Department published Fridays during the academic tr a f f ic VARNER, Ark. — Arkansas jerked his head when his execu­ spokeswoman Dina Tyler also year except during examination and vaca­ 32nd Street from page 1 executed three killers Wed­ tion started. Ruiz coughed tion periods. The Triangle Is published said: “By doing these together, biweekly in the summer. nesday night, the third after wait­ repeatedly, then raised his right you only have to make that climb The Triangle's only source of income is areas for storage and trash dis­ ing on a gurney with needles in arm, lifting the board to which it once to get mentally prepared to advertising; funding from the University Is posal. his arms while the U.S. Supreme was strapped. do this. not accepted. “We have to sit down with the Court considered his last-minute Gov. Mike Huckabee delayed “I think everybody gets a little The Triangle is free to members of the vendors ... as part of a team,” appeal. the execution of Wainwright Drexel community, but distribution is limit­ tense. It gets a little quiet. You ed to one copy per reader. said Caneris, in order to deter­ Kirt W ainwright waited 40 until the'high court ruled on see a lot of set jaws as people steel Subscriptions may be ordered for $20 for mine what will work best for the minutes until the high court Wainwright’s appeal on whether themselves for what they’re one year; display and classified advertising food court. Caneris said he defi­ refused to hear his final plea in clemency should be in the hands about to do.” inquiries may be placed at the addresses or nitely wants to see more green the 1988 killing of a convenience of someone who knew the killer’s Denton and Ruiz have been phone numbers above. space. store clerk. Before the drugs were victim. on Arkansas’ death row longer The University plans to hire administered, he read a poem Huckabee knew Barbara than any other inmates — since an Architectural firm by March 1 saying, “I fear only one and he is Smith, the convenience store 1978. Their convictions and sen­ to create a new master plan for my God.” clerk Wainwright killed. tences have been reversed and the University. Caneris said he Earlier, Earl Van Denton and A federal judge ruled Tuesday reinstated three times. hopes that the firm hired to do Paul Ruiz, both of whom spent that Wainright had no right to an The two men escaped from an the master plan will provide 18 years on death row, were exe­ unbiased decision maker on his Oklahoma prison in 1977 and Colophon insight on development of 32nd cuted for the murder of a town clemency request. The Supreme went on a two-week crime spree Hardware Street as a food court. marshal and a park ranger in The Triangle is produced using Apple Court agreed, and Wainwright’s during which they were suspect­ Macintosh and Power Macintosh comput­ The firm would study the 1977. execution proceeded. ed of killing seven people in ers. Images are digitized with a Nikon campus as a whole and suggest Only once before had three Members of the American Oklahoma, Louisiana and Coolscan negative scanner and an Apple logical uses of campus space and Color OneScanner. Proofs are printed to a convicts been put to death on the Civil Liberties Union and the Arkansas. Hewlett-Packard LaserJet 4sl MX; final possible improvements. Caneris same night since the U.S. Arkansas Coalition to Abolish They eventually were convict­ boards are printed to a Hewlett-Packard said he wants in a firm “someone Supreme Court allowed states to the Death Penalty held a noon ed of killing Magazine town mar­ LaserJet 4MV. who has proven himself [and] resume use of capital punish­ demonstration at the state shal Marvin Richie and park Software • who really understands universi­ Page layout is designed using QuarkXPress. ment in 1976. Arkansas executed Capitol in Little Rock. ranger Opal James of Havana. Images are prepared for reproduction ties." three killers 2 years ago. “There is no reason for a civi­ They had been serving life terms using Adobe Photoshop and Qfoto. Text is Another proposed change on The men were executed on the lized society to kill its own citi­ in Oklahoma, Denton for mur­ set in Adobe Minion and Myriad typefaces. this stretch of roadway is renova­ same night to reduce overtime zens and call it justice,” said der and Ruiz for armed robbery. tion of the Furness building, costs and stress on prison Freddie Nixon, chairman of the In addition to being sentenced which has been closed since employees. coalition. to death for killing Ms. Smith, 1994. The University announced Denton, 47, was chosen first When Huckabee scheduled Wainwright was sentenced to life this summer that the building, because his prisoner identifica­ the triple execution, spokesman in prison for killing another con­ located at 32nd and Market tion number was the lowest. Rex Nelson said killing three venience store clerk, Karen Ross, Evtry lime you recycle The Triangle, you're one $iep funher from hell; Streets, will be eventually Ruiz, 49, was executed an hour men in one night would be “sub­ the day before Ms. Smith was reopened as an alumni center. later. Neither man made a final stantially less costly and more slain. Huckabee also knew Ross. The Triangle • January 10,1997 University/National Rose returns to city as a Hornet Rusted Rose from page 1 Root been doing the things the coach asked me to do and I’ve been get­ ting better. I grade myself well on that,” he said. tickets Cowens would agree. “He’s a great guy, you know. He’s just a joy to be around. He works so on sale hard. He’s a little bit undersized for the position we’re playing Anh Dang him at, but he’s such a quick NEWS EDITOR jumper and he’s got a big body. Nearly 800 tickets for the He’s not afraid to use it,” said Campus Activities Board’s Cowens. Rusted Root concert have been Rose knows his role as a sold in four days, according to reserve, and is happy to perform. CAB president Chris McCarthy. “It’s not like I’m asked to score The remaining 2,200 tickets against Dennis Rodman or for the Jan. 23 concert in the something. I’m just asked to Physical Education Athletic make something happen. So Center are still on sale in CAB’s that’s what I do,” said Rose. office. CAB vice president Irene When asked if he felt like his Betelman said many tickets “will story was a little bit like the fic­ be sold to local schools such as tional Rocky Balboa’s, Rose said Villanova, Temple, Penn, and “Just the typical underdog I possibly West Chester and St. guess. No one really expected me Joseph’s.” to play the way I played at col­ “The chances of ticket sales at lege. No one expected me to the door are slim to none,” said make it here. Now that I’m here, McCarthy. doing what I do best, it’s great. It The Rusted Root concert will feels good.” be held at 9:00 p.m. on Jan. 23. Rose hasn’t seen any Drexel The group will bring opening act games with his busy schedule, Geggy Tah, which starts at 8:00 but he keeps in touch with his p.m. former teammates, Jeff Myers in Tickets went on sale Jan. 6. particular. Rose got a chance to The general admission is $10 for watch the Dragons practice just a undergraduate students and $12 few hours before the game with for the rest of the Drexel com­ the Sixers. “[The team’s] OK. munity, including alumni. The They’re playing hard. Still play­ tickets are not available to the ing typical Drexel basketball. general public. Things haven’t gone their way. The Rusted Root concert is They’ve had a tough schedule at the centerpiece of CAB’s Jan. 22- the beginning. It’ll even out. 26 homecoming festivities. Other They’ll have a real successful sea­ events include the Crystal Ball son. I’m confident of that,” said semiformal, campus spirit com­ Rose. petitions, and a Superbowl party. Cowens, with the help of the CAB is offering a $15 pass which Hornets’ starting wide body, will allow the holder to attend all Anthony Mason, continues to homecoming events. help Rose develop his game. “In a way [Rose is] kind of a people mover. “But there are certain matchups that are really tough T e s tic le for him because of his size. Anthony Mason has sort of taken him under his wing and the two of them just like to hit each other l o s t t o every practice. And both of them seem to enjoy it,” said Cowens. In the end, Rose just tried to w e d g i e keep the Sixers game in perspec­ tive. “[The game] felt like a true homecoming ... my family and everybody was there. I was look­ in T e x a s ing forward to this and I’m glad it came, but I’m just glad we got a COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE win to take back to Charlotte COLLEGE STATION, Texas with us.” — A Texas A&M University fra­ As for his time in the NBA: ternity has been indicted on “It’s a dream come true to make criminal hazing charges after a it in the NBA and play against pledge lost a testicle because of a these guys . . . It’s an exciting Noah Addis The Triangle “wedgie.” lifestyle and I’m just happy to be Malik Rose (31) goes for a basket against Derrick Coleman (44) of the Sixers. Rose, a former Drexel center, was chosen in In October, the Kappa Alpha apart of it.” last year's NBA draft and now plays for the Charlotte Hornets. fraternity pledge was lifted off his feet by the waistband of his underwear, which caused dam­ age to his testicle, said Jean Zdziarski, assistant director of student life at Texas A&M. Deadly mushrooms hit California “Because of that, doctors had to remove his testicle,” he said. Richard Cole Amanita phalloides, which can some of its growth stages, can be flourished on the West Coast in The fraternity was charged ASSOCIATED PRESS destroy the liver. confused with edible mush­ recent years, extending its range with organizational hazing, and SAN FRANCISCO — An out­ One victim was Sam rooms, Freedman said. Many from Fresno to Washington could be fined up to $10,000. break of wild mushroom poison­ Sebastiani Jr., 31, a member of poisoning victims have been state, and appearing in far A fraternity member was ings has sickened at least nine the Sebastiani wine family. immigrants, accustomed to pick­ greater numbers. But they don’t charged with individual hazing people in Northern California, “It is our strong recommenda­ ing mushrooms in their home­ know why. and could face up to a year in jail with three victims in intensive tion that people not pick and eat land. “They are coming up this year and a $5,000 fine. care Wednesday facing possible wild mushrooms,” said Rose Last year, 13 people were poi­ in places they never did before,” The student withdrew for the liver transplants. Ann Soloway of the American soned by wild mushrooms in the Dr. William Freedman, head of remainder of the fall semester for The most seriously ill were Association of Poison Control region, including a farm worker the toxicology committee of the medical reasons but plans to felled by the “death cap” mush­ Centers. who died. San Francisco Mycological return in the spring, the universi­ room, known technically as The death cap, especially in Experts say the death cap has Society, said Wednesday. ty said. The Trian^e • January 10,1997

WECAfTTMAKE YOU COME

but wouldn't it be nice if you did?

Triangle Monkey knows you want to come. He knows that you will feel better if you do. So why don't you? Every Monday at 5:30p The Triangle holds a staff meeting at Triangle HQ in 3010 MacAlister Hall. Triangle Monkey always comes. If you're interested in joining our staff, you should too. We eagerly welcome anyone interested in writing, editing or touching Triangle Monkey. It's that easy. Just come. Tell us what you're interested in doing. And we'll even feed you with free pizza (plain, white, pepperoni and monkey dung).

THE TRIANGLE 3010 MacAlistcr Hall 895-2585 The Triangle • January 10,1997 Local Shooting victim faces problems witli INS

Heidi Russell eral law that takes effect April 1, Rick Santorum, R-Pa., a prime him work in his vocation was Kwak’s wife, Nam Son, will ASSOCIATED PRESS he could become ineligible for advocate of the new law. “It’s plentiful and educational oppor­ soon lose her job at a seafood HARRISBURG —' Chong Ho welfare services that legal immi­ healthy for us as a community to tunities for his children bounti­ packing plant because the com­ Kwak was only four months grants have received for years. rally to the person’s need as ful, said son Yong. pany is moving to Virginia, Yong away from becoming a U.S. citi­ The Immigration and opposed to looking to the gov­ But because of his broken said. Kwak’s medical bills are zen when a robber’s bullet left Naturalization Service says the ernment. It brings us closer English, plumbing work was close to the $250,000 cap for him virtually comatose. Now the citizenship law is clear: Kwak together as a community, and if hard to find, and Kwak ended up Nam Son’s health insurance, he new welfare law threatens to must be cognizant before he can government benefits be a little taking odd jobs instead. He final­ added. leave his family penniless. take the oath. less, so be it.” ly saved enough to open his Although the three have “This is not a better life,” the “I know (the INS is) not trying Even if Kwak qualifies for small market, Sun Brothers, in a applied for U.S. citizenship, they Korean grocer’s 20-year-old son, to be mean or anything,” said Medicaid, Ms. Mark said, his drug-infested neighborhood. fear their father will be turned Yong Kwak, said. “It was a big son Yong, a Penn State Univ­ family still will be left impover­ Yong and his brother Hyon, into the street once his medical mistake. If there was a time ersity accounting student. “But ished. 18, feared the crime in the neigh­ benefits are used up. And Nam machine and we could go back, I this wasn’t his fault. He wanted About 500,000 immigrants are borhood and tried to talk their Son’s limited knowledge of would persuade my parents not to be a citizen of this country like expected to lose assistance, sav­ parents out of the venture. Ten English may prevent her from to come.” any other person, and this is ing taxpayers $13 billion, accord­ months later, their father was becoming a citizen, Yong said. In February 1996, police say, caused by criminals.” . ing to the Congressional Budget shot through the head as their Santorum said he has contact­ Kwak was shot in a fit of anger by Kwak may have one loophole. Office. The National Immigra­ mother pleaded for his life. He ed Harrisburg-area employers to one of three teen-age assailants Pennsylvania has opted to con­ tion Law Center estimates that now lies in a nursing home, able help find a job for Nam Son, and because he had only $80 in the tinue offering Medicaid and food 1.2 million people will be pushed only to open his eyes occasional­ if she can get insurance, inter­ cash register of his grocery. stamp assistance to eligible legal into poverty by immigrant and ly- vening with the INS would not Because the 52-year-old Kwak immigrants but not welfare pay­ welfare provisions. Three local youths — Ronald be necessary. was never able to fulfill his goal ments. A plumber, Kwak brought his Briley and Enaire, both 15, and “We’d look at (granting him of citizenship, he remains a legal “You also have also the com­ family to the United States six Lee Smith Jr., now 20 — face citizenship) if we need to do so,” immigrant. Because of a new fed­ munity response,” said U.S. Sen. years ago because relatives told trial in the spring. Santorum said.

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@ B oston U niversity, Sun. Jan 12th @ 1:00 PM —^Live on Sportschannel Philadelphia— Local/National The Triangle • Jaiiuary lOi 1997 Diplomat kills teen in crash Electoral college Prosecutors w ant the Republic o f Georgia a telephone call seeking com ­ ment. envoy's diplom atic im m unity waived so they Ge^orgia President Eduard elects Clirtton Shevardnadze has promised that can press crim inal charges against him . Makharadze will be held respon­ Laura Myers man Kevin Ohlson. “We believe sible, but he did not specifically The antiquated m ethod o f electing Presidents ASSOCIATED PRESS there is ample evidence to believe say he would agree to waive his has com e under scrutiny again. A bill has . WASHINGTON — A govern­ criminal conduct occurred in diplomatic immunity to face ment attorney asked Wednesday this case.” possible criminal or civil charges. been proposed to elim inate the college. for a waiver of diplomatic immu­ State Department spokesman It’s highly unusual for govern­ nity so that the United States can Nicholas Burns previously had ments to waive such immunity, Jim Abrams state capitals on Dec. 16 to cast prosecute a Republic of Georgia said the U.S. government wanted which protects diplomats around ASSOCIATED PRESS their votes. The number of elec­ envoy for the death of a 16-year- the driver of the car, Gueorgui *the. world from prosecution WASHINGTON — There was tors for each state equals the old girl in a car crash. Makharadze, to face trial in the under possibly unfair laws. no drum roll and no one was state’s representation in “It’s a virtual certainty we will United States. A car driven by Makharadze, holding his breath Thursday as Congress. try to get his (the envoy’s) diplo­ However, Burns also said that 35, was involved in a multi-vehi- Congress opened the envelopes, An outgrowth of the matic immunity lifted,” a State he suspected that the Georgian cle crash in Washington on counted the votes and made it Founding Fathers’ distrust of Department spokesman Glyn government would not agree to Friday night that killed 16-year- official: Bill Clinton was re-elect- direct popular elections, the Davies said. waive diplomatic immunity and old Jovianne Waltrick of nearby ed president. Electoral College is regarded by In requesting the waiver in a would opt instead to send the Kensington, Md. In fact, several lawmakers many as arcane and unnecessary. letter to the State Department, diplomat home. Makharadze was At the time, police indicated introduced a bill to abolish the “It’s an antiquated, outdated U.S. Attorney Eric Holder Jr. the second highest official in the speed and alcohol may have been Electoral College. system” said Rep. Ray LaHood, said evidence points to a high Georgian embassy. a factor, but Makharadze was not Vice President A1 Gore, in his R-Ill., who with Rep. Robert rate of speed and possible alco­ The embassy said Wednesday given breath or blood-alcohol role as president of the Senate, Wise, D-W.Va, sponsored the hol use in the downtown night it would have no comment tests because of his diplomatic declared Clinton and Gore the bill to abolish it. “It makes good Washington accident last Friday on the prosecutor’s reque^. status. Skid marks and witness winners of the Nov. 5 election sense that we change the way we night. Attorney Robert Bennett, wRicr accounts indicated his car had after members of the House and elect the president and vice presi­ “The U.S. attorney views this represents the Georgian govern­ been traveling up to 80 mph, Senate, carrying out their consti­ dent and make the popular vote as prosecutable,” said spokes­ ment, didn’t immediately return police said. tutional duties, tallied the count,” he said. Electoral College votes, The Electoral College has had Clinton, who carried 31 states a profound effect on American and the District of Columbia, got presidential politics, strengthen­ 379 electoral votes. Republican ing the two-party system and nominee Bob Dole captured 19 putting the emphasis on the big Exciting Co-op Positions states and 159 electoral votes states. Under the winner-take-all while third-party candidate Ross system, a narrow victory in a big Perot won no states and no elec­ state can translate into a crucial at LG Sem icon, Korea toral votes. margin in the electoral count. Four lawmakers — Sens. John Three times in the past a can­ Warner, R-Va., and Wendell didate who trailed in the popular Ford, D-Ky., and Reps. Bill vote ended up winning through Thomas, R-Calif., and Sam the electoral count, although that DRAM Gejdenson, D-^Conn..— alter­ hasn’t occurred'(since 1888., nately stood'btefore- avsparsely Elootoxs may defyrtheir;party? attended joint session and, say­ mandate and vote for someone_ ing thiat the certificates were else, but that has rarely hap- “regular iq, form.?ind authentic,’’ , peosd,,...... announced the winning ticket In the November election,^ from each state. Clinton won 49.2 percent of the^' Gore, flanked by House popular vote but about 70 per-* Speaker Newt Gingrich, read out;; cent of the electoral vote. Dole^ the totals,an^ stated that it was “a;^^» WQO;only 30 percent of the elec- sufficieht declaration of the per-V'^pr^j vote despite getting more sons elected president and vice"3mM' 40 ppercent of the popular president of the United States.’’ ^^i Kvote. LG Semicon Co. Ltd., one of the world's major manufacturers of computer chips and The electors, chosen by th^ri^^r^ Perot was shut out despite political parties to represent thejr ^ winning 8.5 percent of the popu-, semiconductors, is looidng for capable and global-minded Drexetco-op students: tickets in the election, met in larVote. 1. Qualifications: - Drexel undergraduate/graduate students. - Preferable majors are business or engineering. - Must be a highly motivated self starter and native English speaker equipped with excellent verbal and written communication skills. - i in - Previous Co-op employment required. - Co-op students and CIE students (co-op program for Drexel MBA students) may be considered. - No language requirement snowmobiling 2. Brief job description: - Up to FIVE positions available: Engineering major 2, Business major 3 - Work in various departments of LG Semicon including Production & Design, Sales & Marketing, Education & Training, located in the cities of Seoul, Cheongju or Gumi in S. Korea. Three-time Indy500 w inner was lost for tw o - Work with LG managers/engineers in various functions - Help LG Semicon managers in communicating with English-speaking business persons. nights in the frozen N ew M exico wilderness.

3. Compensation: ASSOCIATED PRESS South San Juan Wilderness. - A competitive salary, depending upon qualification and experience DENVER — Three-time The two left Unser’s ranch - Housing, round trip air-ticket, and health insurance provided Indianapolis 500 winner Bobby home at Chama, N.M., about six Unser, who survived two nights miles south of the Colorado line, of a blizzard in the wilderness, on Dec. 20. They spent two 4. Employment Duration now must face the legal fallout. nights in the wilderness and were - Six (6) months starting April 1997. A U.S. Forest Service official rescued after hiking through said Thursday that Unser was deep snow to a barn and using a 5. Please contact IVIr. Heath E. Parrish at 215*895>2198 or stop in The Career iVlgmt. cited for violating the federal phone there. Center- Room 222 (iVlain Building) iVlon-Fri 9:00am to 5:00pm. Wilderness Act by driving a If convicted, Unser could face snowmobile into a wilderness up to six months in jail and a area. $5,000 fine. The act prohibits motorized Ron Jablonski, public affairs vehicles in wilderness areas, officer for the Rio Grande L G S e m i c o n which are public lands. National Forest, said he did not Unser, 63, and friend Robert know whether Gayton also had Gayton, 36, were stranded in the been cited. mountains on the New Mexico- “ I d o n ’t know that Mr. Colorado border after their Gayton was involved at all,” snowmobiles broke down in the Jablonski said. The Triangle • January 10,1997 National Mother suspected of killmg Child repossessed In her two young children lie u o f c a r p a y m e n ts Repo m an never noticed child in back seat. ASSOCIATED PRESS two sons lay dying. days after the slayings. KERRVILLE, Texas — A doc­ “Darin, I don’t know who it One of the bruises went from ASSOCIATED PRESS Oliver hopped into the car tor who examined Darlie Routier was. We got to find out who it her wrist to her armpit and LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A repo when Tesch, of Salem, Ind., after her sons were stabbed to was,” Mrs. Routier was heard appeared to be a “blunt trauma” man brought back a car with a stopped at the gas station where death testified Wednesday that saying to her husband on the wound, as though she had been brand-new addition. his wife works as a manager. her own stab wounds were recording. hit with an object, he said. Don Oliver drove off from the “He took my son. We thought superficial and that she did not Mrs. Routier also talked about Such bruises usually appear Big Foot gas station in he had been kidnapped. This seem emotional over the boys’ picking up the murder knife. within 24 hours of the injury, the Clarksville, Ind., with Andrew kind of thing isn’t right,” Mrs. deaths. “His knife was lying over there doctor said, bu't he didn’t believe and Gail Tesch’s red Honda — Tesch said. • Dr. Alex Santos, a trauma and I already picked it up,” she they happened the day of the and their 16-month-old son, Oliver took the toddler to physician at Baylor University said. “God ... I bet if we could killings. Kristopher, in the back seat. Louisville police once he noticed Medical Center, also said bruises have gotten the prints, maybe ... Mrs. Routier was discharged “He didn’t make a whimper or him. on Mrs. Routier’s arms visible in Maybe...” from the hospital June 8. anything. I didn’t even see him,” “I flagged a police officer photographs four days after the Mrs. Routier earlier this week Under cross-examination, said Oliver, who repossessed the down and said, ‘There’s a kid in slayings were not evident when revealed in court the scars from Santos agreed the bruises could car for Carl’s Cars in Louisville. the back seat. I just repossessed she was in the hospital. slash wounds to her neck, shoul­ have been caused the day of the “I just jumped in and took off the car.’” Mrs. Routier, 27, is accused of der and forearm. killings. real quick like any good repo No charges will be filed in the murdering five-year-old Damon Santos said most of the blood A blood test on Mrs. Routier man would and just flew. I didn’t case. and six-year-old Devon Routier Mrs. Routier lost came from a in the hospital revealed ampheta­ see the baby.” No civil suit is pending. on June 6. If convicted, the small vein in the neck and said mines from diet pills present in Rowlett homemaker could face her wounds were “superficial.” her bloodstream, Santos testified. the death penalty. But under cross-examination Santos said that when he Prosecutors contend she was by defense attorney Preston spoke with Mrs. Routier at the angry over financial problems Douglass, Santos acknowledged hospital, her was monotone Potential stockbrokers and the burdens of motherhood her wounds would have been when she spoke about her sons* and that she slashed herself to painful and that her neck wound deaths. Mothers tend to cry and cover the crime at the family’s was within 2 millimeters of her become emotional when their caught cheating suburban home near Dallas. carotid artery. children have been killed, he Mrs. Routier insists that an Santos testified that the slash said. ASSOCIATED PfiESS them. intruder killed the boys and on her arm did not appear to be a Santos acknowledged in NEW YORK — As hundreds The test-takers and a middle­ wounded her. “defensive wound” from fighting cross-examination that he visited of hopefuls filed in to take their man in the alleged scheme also Also in cou^t Wednesday, off a knife-wielding intruder. with Mrs. Routier a total of only stockbroker licensing exams, an face criminal charges. prosecutors played a tape of Mrs. The doctor also said he had no about 15 minutes and that her alert monitor noticed something The scandal, disclosed Routier’s 911 emergency call. opinion on whether Mrs. demeanor could have been unusual: the same person was Wednesday, involves the Authorities had a technician Routier’s wounds were self- affected by grief or deep depres- coming in again and ag^in under National Association of enhance the audio before it was inflicted. sion. different names. Securities Dealers exams cover­ played in court. Prosecutor Toby Shook asked Douglass also cited nurses’ That tip 1^ to the indictment ing securities transactionsmnd Prosecutors contend Mrs. Santos about bruises on Mrs. notes described Mrs. Routier as of 50 stockbrokers on charges state regulations given in the Routier was overly concerned Routier’s arms^ which appeared “tearful and frightened” when they- paid $2^000 to $5,000 for New York area from 1993 to about the crime scene while her in police photographs taken four she was admitted to the hospital. two ringers to take the tests for 1995.

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m icro-robotic baclcpack, which is surgically Raphael Holzer, part of the an inch-wide path. Instead, the electronic pulses over time — a Tokyo University team. “They roach races off the edge of a table big problem if the bugs are to be ■ im planted into the roach, is able to control can lift 20 times their own into Holzer’s outstretched hands. used on longer missions. i the m ovem ent o f the insect. weight.” “The placement of the elec­ Holzer is optimistic. “The The controls, however, still trodes is still very inexact,” he technology isn’t so difficult,” he Eric Talmadge ter in central Japan. have a few serious bugs of their ; ASSOCIATED PRESS admits, setting the bug back on said. “The difficulty is to really Money from the five-year own. track. understand what is happening in j TOKYO — A big brown cock­ grant started coming in this Holzer jolts a roach with an While a backpack-fitted roach the nervous system.” roach crawls across the table in month, and young researchers electric pulse to'.make it move can survive for several months, it And technology aside, Robo- j the laboratory of Japan’s most are lining up for a slot on slightly to the right arid keep to becomes less sensitive to the roach is still, after all, a roach. I prestigious university. The Shimoyama’s team. ' researcher eyes it nervously, but The team breeds its own sup­ he doesn’t go for the bug spray. ply of several hundred cock­ He grabs the remote. roaches in plastic bins. Not just This is no ordinary under-the- any roach will do. refrigerator-type bug. This roach Researchers use only the has been surgically implanted American cockroach (Perplaneta with a micro-robotic backpack americana) because it is bigger that allows researchers to control and hardier than most other its movements. species. THE CLASS OF '97 This is Robo-rbach. From that supply, they select “Insects can do many things roaches to equip with hi-tech that people can’t,” said Assistant “backpacks” — tiny micro­ Professor Isao Shimoyama, head processor and electrode sets. MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED of the bio-robot research team at Before surgery, researchers Tokyo University. “The potential gas the roach with carbon diox­ applications of this work for ide. Wings and antennae are mankind could be immense.” removed. Where the antennae Within a few years, used to be, researchers fit pulse- Shimoyama says, electronically emitting electrodes. controlled insects carrying mini­ With a remote, researchers cameras or other sensory devices send signals to the backpacks, could be used for a variety of which stimulate the electrodes. sensitive missions — like crawl­ The pulsing electrodes make the \ ing through earthquake rubble to roach to turn left, turn right, Madeleine Peyroux Soul Coughing Better Than Ezra search for victims, or slipping scamper forward or spring back­ Dreamland Irresistible Bliss Friction, Baby $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS under doors on espionage sur­ ward. veillance. Over the past three years, Farfetched as that might seem, researchers have reduced the the Japanese government has weight of the backpacks to one- deemed the research credible tenth of an ounce, or about twice enough to award $5 million to the weight of the roaches them- Shimoyam.a’s micro-robotics selyes. team and biologists at Tsukuba “Cockroaches are very University, a leading science cen­ strong,” said Swiss researcher

Beck The Roots The Wallflowers Odelay llladelph Halflife Bringing Down The Horse $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS Armored truck Spin Mggoiine '96 dbum of the year crash spills cash on poor people Various Artists Leah Andreone Republica Katherine Hutt Toni, who stood and watched the Dance Party '97 Veiled Republica ASSOCIATED PRESS scene unfold. $13.99 CD $8.99 CASS $9.99 CD $6.99 CASS $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS MIAMI — A cash-grabbing “God sent a truck,” Toni said. frenzy erupted Wednesday after Police initially reported the an armored truck overturned on truck carried $3.7 million, but an elevated highway, raining later said Brinks had not provid­ J a m i r o q u a i hundreds of thousands of dollars ed an exact figure. A company what*« Following me? in coins, bills and food stamps spokesman declined to com­ on one of the city’s poorest ment, but it was clear there was a neighborhoods. lot of rnoney on the street. “People have been climbing “The streets were like silver,” over fences, climbing over each said a man who returned late ■r2T 2 S S ® ~ other, doing whatever they can Wednesday with a flashlight to to get at the money,” said police look for more. He refused to give Sweetback Eleanor McEvoy Jamiroquai Lt. Bill Schwartz after the rush- ' his name. Sweetback What's Following Me? Traveling Without Moving hour wreck on a ramp between People began to scatter as $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS $12.99 CD $8.99 CASS Interstates 395 and 95. police officers, firefighters and The Brinks driver and two Brinks workers converged on the guards got only bumps and scene and scrambled to recover bruises. But the truck’s rear as much money as they could. doors burst open and rained One firefighter found a bag con­ wealth on Overtown, which is taining $300,000. GREAT NEW mostly black, mostly poor and As nightfall arrived, a few was the scene of five bitter riots dozen people remained while in the 1980s. Wednesday’s mood police, treating the area like a HMV MUSIC was festive, not furious. People crime scene, increased patrols. REOORD stuffed currency into bags, boxes Meanwhile, some people tried to STORIES Fun Lovin' Criminals and pockets. Some, including prey on their neighbors. Come Find Yourself women, took off their shirts to “We’ve had at least two inci­ ON SALE S9.99 CD S6.99 CASS fill them with cash. Police esti­ dents where people are claiming sale ends 1/26/97 mated the group got away with their doors have been kicked in about $400,000. and houses ransacked because “They deserve it. These hard­ people think there’s money in working people, they don’t make their houses,” said police 1510 Walnut Street 87S-5100 enough money,” said James spokesman Delrish Moss.

-M. 10 National The Triangle • January 10,1997 Gypsy moth researcher Halogen lights targets male sex drive blamed for fires

Research is currently underw ay to find a way every two weeks, looking for clues as to how they can spawn Eric R. Quinones month will toughen standards to prevent the m ale m oth from reproducing. hundreds of offspring in the few ASSOCIATED PRESS before giving halogen bulbs the weeks that they survive as adults. NEW YORK — Halogen U-L seal of approval. ASSOCIATED PRESS system. “They’re really very promis­ lamps offer powerful light and Exploding bulbs and torched BELTSVILLE, Md. — A fed­ “There’s been very little work cuous,” she said. sleek looks at a relatively inex­ drapes are among the dangers eral researcher intent on control­ on males, and yet it’s obvious The pests have been trouble pensive cost. Their sizzling bulbs associated with popular models ling the destructive gypsy moth that it takes two to tango,” said ever since they were shipped to — that approach 1,000 degrees known as torchiere lamps — is looking for a way to prevent Loeb, a research physiologist at M edford, Mass., in 1869 by a — can also start fires. floor lamps that wash a room the male of the species from the Agriculture Department’s French scientist hoping to cross­ Since 1992, the lamps have with light from an exposed tubu­ reproducing. Beltsville Agricultural Research breed them for silk production. been tied to 100 fires and 10 lar bulb atop a 6- or 7-foot pole. Marcia Loeb has spent 18 Center. “All they do is grow, eat In 1981, gypsy moths defoliat­ deaths, »according to the U.S. U.S. consumers own about 35 years cutting open moths in a and reproduce.” ed 13 million acres of trees in the Consumer Product Safety million to 40 million of them, the search for a way to kill the pests Under the glare of her micro­ United States. Commission. One was blamed commission said. without harming other insects. scope light, the gypsy moth gives “The problem is that they for a blaze Tuesday that Khalid Elawad bought one Loeb is credited with helping off a silvery sheen that makes it don’t really have natural preda­ destroyed jazz great Lionel because he was attracted to the to discover that male gypsy look like the metallic band of a tors in the U.S.,” said Mark Hampton’s Manhattan apart­ look and price. In November, moths, like human males, have a woman’s wristwatch. Taylor of the Maryland Agricul­ ment and injured 27 people in while his daughter and pregnant protein in their brains that turns “They really are kind of an ture Department. his high-rise building. wife slept, the bulb overheated on the production of steroids, attractive animal,” Loeb said as The identity of the predator Underwriters Laboratories has and exploded. The lamp fell over which trigger the growth and she peered through the eyepiece. that keeps them in check in grown so concerned about the onto a sofa bed, igniting a fire development of the reproductive She dissects moths about Europe is unknown. lamps that the testing group next that gutted his Toronto apart­ ment. “They managed to get out, but we’ve lost everything,” said Elawad, a building superinten­ dent who estimated his losses at $15,000. Elawad said he had kept his lamp on for more than a week before the fire — there was no warning telling him not to do so. The torchiere lamps range from around $13 to $40. Some specialty lighting stores charge upwards of $1,000 for a range of halogen lights including desk Ju^t in CsL&e lamps, work lights or ceiling lights. % The 300-watt bulbs used in torchiere lamps can biirn as hot as 970 degrees'in'd Qther hategerta bulbs can rtath 1,200 degrees/ilri '’ y o u d e c iH e to b u y contrast, a 150-watt incandes­ cent bulb reaches about 340 degrees. The new-style bulbs produce brighter light with less energy thanks to what is known as halo­ th e b o o k s gen technology, which uses a more expensive krypton gas inside the bulb instead of the argon gas used in standard bulbs. General Electric Co., which makes a range of halogen this semester. replacement bulbs, said all of its bulbs come with appropriate warnings. But as the number of fires blamed on the bulbs has grown, safety watchdogs have warned people not to leave the lamps near any combustible materials like drapes or bedding and not to keep the lamps on unattended. Underwriters Laboratories will add a new test to the dozens it runs on halogen bulbs. The lamps will have to be able to run for seven hours without burning a double layer of cheesecloth VISA draped across the top. “If any charring should occur ... it’s an automatic failure,” said spokeswoman Sandy Bedzis. To protect students, some col­ leges have banned the torchiere lamps from dorm rooms. offered students $10 to turn in their barred lamps. So far, there have been 75 takers. Kevin Cargill said it was only minutes after he sent his two I t ' s sons upstairs to bed last month y o u to ber that he saw black smoke pouring down the stairwell of their rented Chesapeake, Va., townhouse. A blaze that firefighters said was ignited by a torchiere lamp trapped his sons and caused

(D V is a U .S .A . I n c , W 9 7 $25,000 to $75,000 in damage, Cargill said. The boys were res­ cued by firefighters, emerging only with smoke inhalation. The Triangle • January 10,1997 National 11 FCC clears w ay for G tadel official s a y s 11 cadets now face new wireless devices discipline In hazing puter, only one machine would The FCC has set aside radio frequencies for need to be hooked into the Bruce Smith are called knobs because of their free and unlicensed high-speed use. Internet via phone line. ASSOCIATED PRESS short haircuts. Some businesses could use the CHARLESTON, S.C. — He did not identify which wireless links to tap into a private Eleven Citadel cadets face disci­ women were involved in which Jeannine Aversa Kellogg said that company also is version of the Internet’s World plinary action stemming from incidents. , ASSOCIATED PRESS developing products but Wide Web called an Intra-Net. the hazing of two female cadets The state and FBI are investi­ WASHINGTON — The gov­ wouldn’t discuss their availabili­ The FCC says other possible last year, the commandant of the gating reports that cadets Kim ernment cleared the way ty or price. uses for the wireless links would state military college said Messer of Clover and Mentavlos Thursday for the creation of a Since the frequencies are unli­ be to exchange e-mail, faxes and Wednesday. of Charlotte, N.C., were targets new breed of wireless devices censed, users would not have to computer files among nearby An upperclassman, one of two of the hazing. Two other women that could allow people to tap pay for service, as users of cellu­ buildings on a college campus. already suspended, allegedly told have not reported problems but into the Internet and exchange e- lar phones do. Instead, the fre­ Hospitals could link computers a female cadet "if I ever see you corroborated some details of the mail, faxes and computer files. quencies would be treated like in different rooms or nearby off campus, I will cut your heart incidents, Trez said. The Federal Communications those used for cordless tele­ buildings to exchange patient out,” Col. Joseph Trez told U.S. Five cadets originally were Commission set aside a large phones. data. X-rays and medical charts. District Judge C. Weston Houck. suspended from military duties chunk of radio frequencies for The FCC says its action could Under the closed captioning Houck, who is overseeing the and two others were suspended free and unlicensed high-speed offer schools, hospitals and busi­ item, the FCC proposed giving admission last fall of four women from school. The four others communication over short dis­ nesses a potentially cheaper way TV stations and cable networks to the formerly all-male school, who face pending disciplinary tances. to connect computers and tap eight years to caption all new called a hearing Tuesday on action all remain in their bar­ Now it’s up to companies to into the Internet. programs. school security. Trez, a retired racks, Trez said. develop wireless equipment to “Wireless local area network It also proposed making them Army colonel, is in charge of The Houck, who ruled the work on the frequencies. They and other equipment can now be caption around 75 percent of Citadel’s students. Citadel’s all-male policy uncon­ would have at most a three-mile developed to connect our com­ their libraries of old programs In addition to the upperclass­ stitutional in 1994, told the col­ range. puters, laptops and personal dig­ like reruns of “I Love Lucy,” an man’s threat, cadets allegedly lege on Tuesday to consider the Separately, the FCC, carrying ital assistants to each other, to idea criticized by some stations twice poured nail polish remover “worst scenario” and tighten out a congressional mandate, the Internet of today and to the for its potentially large expense. on two of the women’s clothes security as a result of the allega­ proposed a plan to require cable global information infrastructure The FCC said between 50 and and set them afire, and a rifle tions. Since the hazing reports. networks and broadcasters to air of tomorrow,” said FCC 60 million U.S. homes now allegedly was pushed into a The Citadel put panic buttons in programs with “closed captions” Commissioner Susan Ness. “In receive closed captioning intend­ woman’s face, Trez said. the women’s rooms and posted — similar to on-screen subtitles. many buildings, including ed to help the hard-of-hearing According to Trez, the two adults to sleep in all barracks. The commission expects to schools, a wireless connection people enjoy television shows. women said cadet officers led The college also plans to adopt final rules by Aug. 8. will be a cost-effective alternative Most broadcast network them to believe they should not investigate the school’s Fourth The FCC made the new fre­ to pulling wire through walls and shows are captioned, while about complain. However, Jeanie Class system, in which^reshmen quencies available at the request ceilings.” 30 percent of prime time shows Mentavlos’ brother, a senior cadet must take orders from of equipment makers Apple The FCC says schools could on the top 20 cable networks is cadet, reported the incidents to a upperclassmen. The college Computer Inc. and WinForum, a use the wireless links to connect captioned. member of the college governing dropped its all-male admissions giroup. comprising Lucent classroom computers to each Depending on the type of pro-* board. policy last summer after the U.S. Technologies Inc., Motorola Inc. other. gram, the cost of captioning can Trez said the women told him: Supreme Court ruled that a simi­ and Northern Telecom Inc. Rather than having a tele­ run as high as $2,500 an hour, “A knob is a knob and just takes lar policy at Virginia Military Motorola spokesman Tim phone line hooked to each com­ the FCC said. what happens.” First-year cadets Institute was unconstitutional.

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Editorial Board Noah Addis Photo Editor Anh Dang News Editor Nick DiFranco Staff Writer JohnGaiber EmirienceGrise Larry Rosenzweig Sports Editor BradWible Er)tertair)ment Editor M ichael B usier: The Prolocutor Balanced budget am endm ent Buy the Book question facing 105th Congress The Dynamic Student Service’s book truck appeals N ow that the 105th Congress ever pay this debt back. Annual With this provision, if there is to the strongest force known to a capitalist society — has convened, apparently deficits are financed mostly widespread agreement, a deficit with a fiscally conservative through the selling of govern­ could occur. the bottom line. The book truck offers both new and majority, a question arises con­ ment bonds. Other opponents say that used text books at prices that are 10 percent lower than cerning the passage of an amend­ When these bonds mature, deficit spending is necessary to the University’s bookstore. ment requiring a balanced federal there are no funds available to avoid having a slight recession The University’s response was to send a memo to all budget. Is this a good idea? repay, so that new bonds are sold become more severe. faculty advising them not to help Dynamic Student The amendment almost to pay back existing debt. This They cite that balancing the passed several years ago when rolling over of the deficits results budget in the early 1930s con­ Services “for the good of Drexel University Students.” ■former Republican Senator Mark in an ever-increasing public debt, tributed to a worldwide econom­ The administration cites several reasons for students to Hatfield of Oregon cast the now in excess if of $5 trillion dol­ ic depression. Had deficit spend­ use the University bookstore, including a longer book deciding vote that defeated the lars and growing. ing occurred at that time, the return period, and the fact that nine percent of the measure. Why are so many The annual interest charge depression could have been bookstore’s gross sales are returned to the University. opposed to a balanced budget? alone is over $200 billion, which avoided. This is a case of simple economics. Students will The truth is that few are represents 14 cents of ever dollar Today, however, things are opposed to a balanced budget, at that the federal government different. The federal govern­ decide on their own if the bookstore’s extended hours least in concept. Most legislators spends. ment’s policy makers know that a and better return policy are worth the higher prices. seem to reflect the view of most The real problem, of course, is balanced budget with changes in Students who decide that cost is the most important Americans that everyone, includ­ that our young people will even­ monetary policy can avoid severe factor will go to the Dynamic truck. ing the federal government, tually f^ice this huge crisis. And recessions. But students seeking book titles that the Dynamic should live within their means. they will do so at a time when During the last recession, for The problem is: Should they be Social Security payments may instance, changes in the money truck doesn’t carry have no choice — and as a result of required by law to do so? almost bankrupt them. supply and interest rates ended the memo to faculty, the truck has fewer titles than The answer should be yes. Unless we require Congress to the recession without long term usual this term. Unless we set guidelines, as most live within its means, the reality is negative effects. The University has a right to protect its interest in states do with their budget. that they won’t. Those who The truth is that all of us must the success of the bookstore. But don’t tell us it’s for our Congress will continue to abuse oppose this action have unfound­ live within our means. No one, own good. It’s not. Limiting Dynamic Student Service’s their power and spend money to ed fears. They claim there are not even the federal government, satisfy special interests. We sim­ times, particularly during reces­ can continue to spend money it access to book lists benefits only the University book­ ply can no longer afford to spend sions, when revenues fall but doesn’t have. Our hope is that store, and therefore the University as well. Because more money than we have. How spending “must” be maintained. our legislature can muster bookstore prices are about ten percent higher than the bad is it? Even if this view is accepted, the enough courage to do the right Dynamic truck’s, and nine percent of the bookstore’s In 32 of the last 33 years proposed amendment will allow thing. gross sales go straight back to the University, the price Congress has spent more money a deficit as long as it’s approved difference between the bookstore and the truck is that it received in revenue. Worse by a 60 percent majority rather Michael Busier teaches economics in yet, there is no plan in place to than a simple majority. the MBA program at Drexel. mostly money that goes to the University’s Student Life coffers. Students are quite capable of deciding what serves them better — contributing ten percent of the price of their books to Student Life, or keeping that extra money in their pockets.

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Written pieces should be presented on disk in MacWrite format. The deadline for submissions is 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday of the week of publication. The Triangle reserves the right to edit for space ■'mmar, OMNU conn srKioof''*' 11 * * * t < < ‘ ‘ • C » t ^ \ < The Triangle • January 10,1997 Opinion 13

Ni€k DiFraneo: A Thumbnail Sketch TV journalism: dumb news for dumb people ver my winter three-year-old girl from Duluth so desper­ More Americans don’t get their news name of viewer concern. Caring about O break, I spent ately wanted one. from ABC News — they get it from Dave, viewer concern, by the way, just means some time think­ Soon, everyone’s kid wanted an Elmo, Jay and the wackos who pick the stories on worrying about advertising revenue. ing about the state of and their parents were only too happy to A Current Affair. There is no possible way But everybody watches the news, the world we live in. oblige. Only there was a problem; Not to keep completely informed of anything nobody reads the paper or magazines — Mostly, I thought enough dolls. that goes on in the world by watching the not enough time is the usually excuse — about this while I was at So, in order to bring the true meaning nightly news. and the result is an uninformed populace. work. Temporary of Christmas home to their precious little Of course, if you want to make sure that Now, I’m not claiming that the print employment gives you kids, mom and dad resorted to ripping there were at least two murders, a fire, an media is a haven for moral purists and time for that kind of stuff, you know. them off from local charity drop-offs, overturned tractor-trailer and some sort of journalistic choir-boys. But it’s a hell of a What I realized is that we’re headed for grabbing them from other shopper’s carts, weather system approaching from the lot better than the talking heads and hell in a handbasket. Not that I’m at all and generally making fools of themselves west, TV news is the place for you. toupees that spew tripe right before shocked by that. Still, it’s disconcerting to in the name of the holiday spirit of giving. Here’s a case in point. A friend of mine Jeopardy!. know that a culture responsible for wire­ A whole underground economy sprung recently said that until he got back to We don’t know what’s best for us, as a less communication, air travel and ESPN is up to capitalize on the Elmo fad. Scalpers Philadelphia and his subscription to society, because we’re too wrapped up in also responsible for pro hockey in were asking upwards of $500. People glad­ Newsweek, he had no idea what the our lazy lives to even think about it. We Phoenix, a Kiss reunion tour and the inane ly paid the price, just to resell our little red Ebonics debate was all about. East coast have time to camp out at Kiddie City for a popularity of the Richard Bey Show. Antichrist to the next highest bidder. newspapers offered little coverage of the doll that’ll break in a few years, but we We have gotten so adept at misplacing And somewhere, in a nice corner office, issue after the initial school board deci­ can’t stop and give critical thought to the our priorities that it’s almost natural to a CEO was doing the following math: One sions in Oakland. issues of the day? accept some ridiculous notions as stan­ million Elmos, at $26 per Elmo, minus the The television news and news maga­ If we had any sort of collective sense of dard operating procedure. $10 it cost to make and ship each doll, zines, however, offered near-nightly recaps awareness, we’d easily see that the net­ For instance, take the “Tickle Me Elmo” equals a boatload of money. Merry of the story. Not that they could say any­ works treat us like mindless consumers, craze. What the hell were those parents Christmas. thing substantial in the three-minute time not intelligent human beings. And by feed­ thinking? And who’s responsible for all of this block of the piece, but who cared? Hard ing us a constant stream of “news,” they’ve What is so special about this red, epilep­ mass hysteria? Television news, of course. Copy had the latest super-exclusive on the tricked us into believing we are informed tic Muppet, that it drove grown men to How else could something this inane, this national Ebonics debate, and that’s all that and up-to-date. But we’re not. We’re fistfights in aisle five? To me it looked wholly stupid, spread so quickly across the mattered. dumb. worse than a fad — it w s a media-driven country? Television news, plain and simple, is craze. Every night on Hard Copy was Television journalism, in this journal­ entertainment. It’s eye candy. It runs the Nick DiFranco is a senior majoring in nnechanical another piece on how stores were running ist’s opinion, is an oxymoron of the high­ stories that get ratings, and It plays fast and engineering. He wears Cabbage Patch Kids as out of the dolls, and how much some est order. loose with journalistic integrity in the fashion accessories.

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day go«« by that "about t||W olmnc* X The t 3^ know thlDfifc could hpyi 3; no one\.. but myself to blame. 14 The Triangle • Janoai^ 10," 1997 DREXEL UNIVERSITY Campus Activities Board presents F o o +

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$10 DU fulltime students $12 DU other The Triangle • January 10,1997 15

'Since new developments are the products of a creative mind, we must there­ fore stimulate and encourage that type of mind in every way possible” D atebodc George Washington Carver Friday 10 I Saturday 11 Sunday

▲ The Women's Basketball The • The Philadelphia Museum of AThe Women's Basketball A Flick: Bullet Proof. 8p in Team takes on the Boston versus the Washington Art presents The Cadwalader Team takes on the North­ Nesbitt Hall's Stein Audi­ University Terriers in an Capitals at the CoreStates Family: Art and Style in Early eastern University Huskies in torium. Admission $2. America East game. 7p at the Center. 7:30p. Call 465-4500 Philadelphia, an exhibit on an America East game. Ip at PEAC. Admission free. for ticket information. , the Cadwalader family Exhibit the PEAC. Admission free. runs through January 31. Call A Flick: Bullet Proof. 7p, 9:30p The Annenberg Center A Live on SportsChannel: The 684-7598 for more info­ and 12m in Nesbitt Hall's Stein presents TharpI, a dance men's basketball team takes rmation. Auditorium. Admission $2. performance choreographed on the by Twyla Tharp. 3680 Walnut Terriers at Boston. Ip. Street. Runs through January * The Philadelphia Orchestra 12. Call 898-6791 for ticket performs in a chamber music information. concert at the Academy of Music Ballroom, 1420 Locust Street. 3p. Tickets $18 (general admission). To order tickets call(215) 893-1999.

Monday 13 I Tuesday 14 ■ Wednesday 15 ■ Thursday 16 ■ Friday

A Chain Reaction at the CAB A The Stupids at the CAB Video A Island of Dr. Moreau at the AAbove the Rim at the CAB A T h e Abyss at the CAB Video Video Lounge. Show times Lounge. Show times 10a, Ip CAB Video Lounge: Show Video Lounge. Show times Lounge. Show times 10a, Ip 10a, Ip and 4p. Admission and 4p. Admission free. times 10a, Ip and 4p. 10a, Ip and 4p. Admission and 4p. Admission free. free. Admission free. free. A Resident assistant and resi­ A Flick: Long Kiss G oodnight. • The Philadelphia Orchestra dent tutor applications are A Get ready for the men's bas­ • The Esther M . Klein presents 7p, 9:30p and 12m in Nesbitt presents its seventh annual Dr. due today. For more informa­ ketball match against Penn Contemporary Art from Hall's Stein Auditorium. Martin Luther King, Jr. tion call the Residential Living with Grillin'-n- Chillin' in front Israel: Nine Women Artists, Admission $2. Tribute Concert at the Office at 590-8707. ofthePEAC5-7p. an exhibit sponsored by the • The University of the Arts Academy of Music, 1420 Philadelphia/Tel Aviv Sister * January Square Dance. The AThe Men's Basketball Team presents Alterations, the Locust Street. 8p. Tickets start Cities Program. Gallery is Tuesday Night Square Dance takes on the Penn Quakers at work of photographer Tatana at $10. To order tickets call located at 3600 Market Street. Guild features music by the Palestra. 7p. Tickets for sale Kellner. Gallery is located at (215)893-1999. Exhibit runs through January Wissahickon Drive. 7:30-10:15p afthe PEAC. 333 9 Broad Street. Admission 31. • Interact Theatre Company at St. Mary's Parish Hall, 3916 is free. Call 875-1020 for more presents a reading of Little Locust Walk. Admission $5. information. Men by Erin Sanders. 6p at the Philadelphia Art Alliance,'251 South 18th Street.

Datebook submissions may be dropped off at The Triangle, 3010 MacAlister Hall.

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Page 16 THE TRIANGLE January 10,1997 Men overpower Towson State

Five D rexel players scored in double figures. M yers led the t e a m w i t h 2 1 p o i n t s .

D re x e l 102 Towson State 72

Nick OiFranco TRIANGLE STAFF WRITER Back at the start of the season, head coach Bill Herrion touted this year’s squad as the most tal­ ented he has had at Drexel. On Tuesday night, those guys showed up at the PEAC and gave the Dragon faithful something to jump and shout about in a 102- 72 victory over the Towson State Tigers. Towson started the game on fire, knocking down four three- pointers and staying ahead of the Dragons for the first ten minutes of the half. Drexel hung tough, however, and with 3:40 to go in the half took the lead for good. Jeff Myers led the Dragons in scoring with 21 points, followed by Chuck Guittar and joe Linderman with 14 and 13, respectively. The Dragon bench was responsible for 34 points, led by Greg Gaffney with a career- high 11 and Tom Dearborn with 9. The Dragons now stand atop America East with a 5-0 record, 8-4 overall. Christine Fitts The Triangle Offensive play of the game Sophomore Mike DeRocckis looks to pass the ball inside during Drexel's game against Towson State on Jan. 7. DeRocckis had 11 points, including two three- Ross Neisler’s pump-fake pointers, in the Dragons' 102-72 win. Drexel is now 5-0 in America East, 8-4 overall. baseline layup in the second half was the sure sign that Drexel bas­ ketball was alive and kicking. Neisler spoke for his benchmates Drexel loud and clear as he fearlessly D ragons b ea t Hawks took the down-low approach, juked Tiger center DaVonn The victory was the sixth in a row over the Coursey was 6-for-8 and Mike “Coolio” Harp and calmly hit the stifles DeRocckis was 5-for-6. reverse lay-in. Hawks, who had been undefeated in the conference this season. Offensive series of the gam e Work It work it Up by only two points with Coach Herrion has been Vermont ting their final four from the line 8:30 remaining in the game, D re x e l 86 emphasizing the transition game, to win 86-79. Drexel ran off nine points. D re x e l 74 cautioning that “we can’t be H a r t f o r d 79 Jeff Myers led all scorers with First, Mike DeRocckis drilled V e r m o n t 49 grinding it out on every posses­ 27 points. Mike DeRocckis and a three pointer from the top of sion, like we have.” And while Jonathan Poet Joe Linderman also finished in the key. Following a Hartford Jonathan Poet shooters like Bryant Coursey and MANAGING EDITOR double figures with 17 and 13 turnover and subsequent time­ MANAGING EDITOR Mike DeRocckis are gaining their Hartford had the men’s bas­ points respectively. Myers and out, Jeff Myers nailed a trey from Vermont tried its hardest to touch in transition, the team is ketball team shocked at halftime Chuck Guittar both finished with the left wing. Chuck Guittar fed keep it respectable, but this game also showing that it can find the in their contest on Jan. 2. 10 rebounds each. Myers in the corner on Drexel’s was over a few mom ents after open man and work patiently for Hartford went into the locker David Frey led the bench with next trip down the floor, where tipoff. Drexel blew out Vermont, the good shot. The Dragon pass­ room with a five point lead in six points in 17 minutes. Rodney Myers hit another three. 74-49, in the early game of a ing game is opening up, and the hand after leading by as much 13 Rodgers appeared in his first doubleheader at the CoreStates result against Towson State was points. game, finishing with three min­ Technicalities Spectrum on Jan. 4. LaSalle 102 points and 58 percent shoot­ After several minutes of back- utes and two points. The refs assessed two techni­ defeated Holy Cross in the sec­ ing from the field. and-forth basketball, Drexel was The loss was Hartford’s first in cal fouls in the game, which the ond game. spurred on by a technical foul on the conference. The Hawks are Dragons converted into three Drexel opened up an 8-2 lead Nice to see you, too Hartford head coach Paul now 3-1 in the conference, good points. to start the game and extended it The emergence of the Dragon Brazeau and took a 47-46 lead on for third place. Head coach Paul Brazeau to 30-15 before Vermont mount­ bench was the brightest spot of a Rodney Rodgers jumper in the earned a technical for mouthing ed a comeback to pull within the game. “I’m real happy with lane. Drexel jumped ahead 69-60 Free throws galore off to the ref in the second half. seven points at 30-23. That’s as the contributions,” saicl coach on three point baskets by Mike Drexel earned 35 of its 86 Hartford guard Justin Bailey close as it would get. The Herrion. “W e’ve obviously got DeRocckis and Jeff Myers points from the foul line. The threw his arms up in disgust after Dragons led 36-28 at the half and some guys that can shoot the The Dragons never looked team shot 35-for-44 from the line receiving a hand check foul and opened up the second half with a basketball.” Herrion got those back, though Hartford pulled (79.4 percent). earned himself a technical foul. 13-4 run. guys on the floor, giving his within three with 14 seconds left Individually from the line, Jeff In total, Drexel earned five Jeff Myers led all scorers with bench 66 total minutes, and got in the game. Drexel finished Myers was lO-for-10, Joe points off the foul shots and 22 points and pulled in 10 See Towson State on page 19 them off at the foul line by hit­ Linderman was 7-for-12, Brj^ant ensuing possessions. ^ ^ ' * ' J ISeeVermontonpageW J i lit-. , I , The Triangle • January 10,1997 Sports 17 Women edge Towson State 80-74

Noah Addis The Triangle Sophomore guard Jenna Vebrosky drives the lane in Drexel's game against Maine on Dec. 7. Vebrosky had two points and two rebounds in the 55-45 loss. Vebrosky had six points and nine rebounds in the Dragons' first America East victory over Towson State on Jan. 7. Drexel is now 1-4 in the conference, 2-9 overall.

in Other games The Dragons lost their previous tw o gam es to rebounds. The Dragons shot .500 ond in three-point field goal per­ from the field for the game and centage, shooting 16-for-46 (34.8 Over the break, the Dragons H artford65-50and Verm ont 80-51. They now got 20 points off the bench. percent). As a team, the Dragons played four games, going 3-1. “What we’ve done in the last few are sbcth in scoring offense with stand a t 1-4 in the conference. They fell to Maine 55-45 on Dec. games is expand our rotation 60.2 points per game. 7, Navy 68-57 on Dec. 20, and and we’ve got some players who Morgan State 67-56 on Dec. 30. Larry Rosenzweig Rice led the team with 12 points. have stepped up,” said Murphy. Injury update Their lone victory was a 69-66 SPORTS EDfTOR Sophomore Kathleen Feeney fol­ “It may not show up on the stat Senior Jen MacNeill is still out win against Long Island on Dec. The women’s basketball team lowed with nine. line, but there are some players with a stress fracture in her right 21. came back from consecutive The Dragons next traveled to who are bringing some nice fibula. She is out indefinitely. The Dragons next host con­ conference defeats — against Towson State to take on the things to the table.” Tiffany Davis is still suffering ference opponents Boston Hartford 65-50 and Vermont 80- Tigers who were undefeated in The win upped their record to from a separated left shoulder. University on Jan. 10 at 7:00 p.m. 51 — to beat America East rival the conference. Just as in the pre­ 2-9 overall, 1-4 in America East. She has been getting playing time and Northeastern on Jan. 12 at Towson State 80-74 on Jan. 7. vious two games, Drexel’s oppo­ “The one thing we’re going to and is listed as day-to-day. 1:00 p.m. The victory was the first confer­ nent jumped out to an early 12-6 build upon is that we have a ence win for the Dragons this lead just 4:52 into the contest. good work ethic on the floor,” season. Towson State maintained the added Murphy. “A lot of our Drexel got the new year off to lead for most of the half, until young players have [been consis­ a rough start against Hartford on Drexel took a 30-29 lead with tent] night in and night out. And Jan. 2. The Hawks quickly 5:17 left. The Dragons ended the our older players have really jumped out to a 12-5 lead 7:18 half up 41-37. mixed it up. That’s a plus.” into the game, but the Dragons Drexel held onto the lead until did battle back and pulled to Towson State took it back 58-57 P la y e r o f th e w e e k within two at 20-18 with 7:34 left with only 6:06 left to play. Kim Koschineg’s amazing 28 in the half. The teams battled But the Dragons refused to point performance could have back and forth, with Hartford up give in and took the lead right earned her this right alone. But 39-34 at intermission. back on the next drive on a she also combined for 22 points In the second half the Dragons three-pointer by freshman against Hartford and Vermont. stepped up their defense, holding Stephanie Mix. Drexel never She contributed 10 assists and six the Hawks to just 26 points. looked looked back and took the steals for the week. However, Drexel itself could 80-74 victory. only muster 16 of their own and Koschineg led the Dragons Unsung hero fell to Hartford 65-50. with 28 points on 9-for-l 1 shoot­ Tri-captain LaTasha Rice has Sophomore Kim Koschineg ing. She hit all five three-point­ been the epitome of consistency led the Dragons with 14 points. ers, had five rebounds, three for Drexel. She posted up 44 Senior La’i'asha Rice followed assists and three steals. She also points and 15 rebounds during with 13 and aKo had seven got it done on the defensive end, the week. rebounds. huiaing the Tigerti ihree-point She scored in double figures in Drexel next laced Vermont on threat Sonia Keiner to just two all three games and compiled ]an. 4. The Catamounts jumped points. one double-double against out to an early 11-1 lead and the “Every game and every day in Towson State. Dragons never recovered. Down practice she’s becoming a better 34-19 at the half, the Drexel defensive player,” said head in the ranks offense did improve, as it scored coach Kevin Murphy. “Kim was LaTasha Rice currently ranks 32 points. But as a result, the right there and Keiner didn’t get eighth in both scoring and Noah Addis The fri.niylf defense suffered, giving up 46. a good look at the basket.” rebounding in America East with The 80-51 loss dropped the Rice also had a monster game, 15.5 points and 7.8 rebounds per Senior Latasha Rice goes for a rebound in the Dragons game against Maine on Dragons to 0-4 in the conference. collecting 19 points and 10 game. Kim Koschineg ranks sec­ Dec. 7. Drexel lost the contest 55-45. Rice had 13 points and seven rebounds. 18 Sports The Triangle • January 10,1997

Men's Previews Men's basketball standings Drexel downs Vermont upd«ed 1/7 Men vs. Amtrica East Overall W L Pet. JL L Pet. Northeastern 7449 at the Spectrum Drexel 5 0 1.000 8 4 .667 Fri., 7:00 p.m. a t NU Boston University 4 0 1.000 9 3 .750 Hartford 3 1 .750 8 4 .667 Where to catch the game: 1310 AM Vermont from page J6 defended itself pretty well. The Delaware 2 2 .500 8 6 .571 WSSJ. ^ team shot itself in the foot on Maine 2 3 .400 4 10 .286 rebounds. Chuck Guittar added offense, with its 18 percent Last meeting: January 28,1996. Drexel Hofstra 2 i .400 5 8 .385 shooting in the second half. spanked the Huskies, 84-47. Northeastern 16 points and Joe Linderman New Hannpshire 2 3 .400 3 9 .250 shot 28.8 percent from the floor, and poured in 10. However, Vermont center Erik Vernnont 1 3 .250 7 4 .636 scored only 19 points in the first half. Jeff Vermont struggled from the Nelson did have an impressive Northeastern 1 3 .250 2 10 .167 Myers scored 25 points in the win. field, shooting 25 percent from five blocks. Too bad the Dragons Towson State 0 4 .000 3 8 .273 the floor. The Catamounts made still won by 25. All-time: Drexel leads the series 15-6. only seven field goals in the sec­ Schedule/Results This season: Northeastern is currently 2- Penalty Stripe ond half. Erik Nelson was a mon­ Date 10 overall, 1-3 in America East. They have Qpffofmn TifW ster inside the paint for Vermont Drexel shot 63 percent from Nov. 20 Pre^Season NIT @ Evansville L 65-61 a three game losing streak. with 11 points, 11 rebounds and the frefe throw line, inc;luding a Dec. 3 Monmouth W 77-66 Northeastern players to watdi: five blocks. five-for-seven performance from Dec. 6 @ New Hampshire * W 8-55 Sylvester McIntosh (So.) G, 6-4 Jeff Myers and a five-for-sbt per­ Dec. 8 @ Maine * W 71-57 Rah-Shun Roberts (Jr.) F, 6-7 Offensive play of the game formance from Bryant Coursey. Dec. 12 @ UMass L 69-48 Analysis: Northeastern Is looking to Six minutes into the second Drexel also sent Vermont to the Dec. 14 @ LaSalle (Spectrum) L63-58 improve over its four wins of last year. half, Drexel was taking its time line only eight times, all in the Dec. 21 Lehigh W 92-73 They should be able to do it, but this moving the ball around the second half. Dec. 28-29 @ 1996 Franklin Life Classic, Charleston, S.C. Dec. 28 vs. College of Charleston L 75-65 game against the Dragons could be ugly. perimeter. With the shot clock Dec. 29 vs. UNC-Greensboro W 69-61 Their sole win in the conference came winding down, Chuck Guittar Behind the arc against Towson State. Jan. 2 Hartford * W 86-79 fired a pass into Joe Linderman. Drexel shot an impressive 42 Jan. 4 Vermont * (Spectrum) W 74-49 Sagarin computer prediction: Drexel Linderman spun, left his defend­ percent from behind the three Jan. 7 Towson State * W 102-72 by 15. er behind, and jammed home a point arc. Jan. 10 @ Northeastern * 7:00 p.m. dunk.^ Jeff Myers led the way with Jan. 12 • @ Boston University * # 1:00 p.m. three baskets from downtown. Jan. 15 @ Pennsylvania (Palestra) 7:00 p.m. Men vs. Defensive player of the game Chuck Guittar was two-for-two Jan. 18 @ Hofstra * I 3:15 p.m. Boston U. The whole Vermont team from three point land. Jan. 21 @ Delaware * 1 8:15 p.m. Sun., 1:00 p.m .at BU W here to catch the game: Sports- Channel and 1310 AM WSSJ. Men's Basi-a m-a ot a pf pw min m-a m-a o-t a pf pts min m-a m-a o-t a pf pts min m-a m-a o-t a pf pts and Lehigh, 100-58, this season, two Hander han 25 4-10 2-4 4-5 0 1 10 Guittar 33 2-9 0-0 1-5 2 5 5 Javit 22 4-7 2-3 0-3 2 2 14 Howse 39 8-17 3-4 1-5 1 3 19 teams Drexel also beat. McGill 19 2-4 0-1 0-3 0 3 4 Myers 33 7-18 3-4 5-12 4 3 19 Cherry 25 3-5 1-2 1-5 0 5 7 Bethune 15 3-10 1-2 1-2 1 5 7 Sidorov 29 3-7 6-7 0-9 2 5 12 Linderman 37 9-13 2-8 5-12 1 5 20 Gilbert 28 3-13 3-3 2-4 0 4 9 Eames 29 6-9 4-9 5-10 0 4 16 Penn players to watch: Eppehirnet 37 4-12 7-8 1-2 1 1 16 Coursey 24 2-3 0-1 1-1 6 2 4 Nix 35 5-12 OK) 0-2 4 2 13 Gtiffin 32 8-16 3-4 1-4 3 3 22 Paul Romanczuk (So.) F, 6-6 Dean 19 3-7 4-5 0-1 3 5 10 DeRocckis 36 5-16 2-2 1-4 0 3 16 Doughtey 31 0-4 4-4 1-3 1 3 4 Bike 29 2-5 1-2 4-8 4 4 6 Fry 23 2-9 0-1 2-5 1 4 4 Neisler 15 0-1 1-2 3-6 0 1 1 Ttevisan 26 3-7 1-2 2^ 1 4 7 Bailey 24 0-2 OK) 0-1 2 5 0 Garrett Kreitz (Jr.) G, 6-1 Hess 15 3-4 0-0 0-1 1 3 7 Frey 7 0-1 0-0 OK) 0 3 0 Davis 24 3-8 1-1 3-4 1 1 7 Jackson 16 4-7 0-0 1-2 1 4 9 Fort 9 2-2 2-2 0-4 0 3 6 Dearborn 6 0-2 OK) OK) 0 1 0 McCurdy 7 OK) OK) OK) 0 1 0 BfoVKn 7 0-1 OK) OK) 2 1 0 Analysis: In a lot of ways, Penn and Tuohey 12 1-3 1-2 0-1 2 2 3 Gaffney 9 0-0 OK) OK) 2 3 0 Cunninqham 2 0-0 0-0 OK) 0 0 0 Landiith 2 0-0 OK) 0-0 0 1 0 Drexel are in similar situations. Last year's McCaffrey 3 OK) 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Totals 200 25-63 8-17 18-4515 26 65 Totals 200 21-56 12-15 9-27 9 22 61 Younq 7 0-1 0-1 1-2 0 2 0 Ayiswortti 7 0-4 1-2 0-2 0 0 1 Totals 200 31-68 12-22 16-36 14 32 79 teams were stronger for both, though Clark 2 O-t 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Ptrctntagts; FG 397; FT 471; 3pt 7-28, .250 (Guittar 1, Ptrctnugts: FG .375; FT ,800; 3pt 7-15, .467 (Javit 4, Nix everyone knows Drexel would have Totals 200 24-63 23-32 13-41 10 27 73 Myeis 2, DeRocckis 4).Ttim Rtbounds: 5. Blotkid Shots: 3). Ttam Rtbounds: 2. Blocktd Shots: S. (Gilbert 4, Ptrctntagts: FG .456; FT .545; 3pt 5-15, .333 (Griffin 3, 3 (Myers 1, Linderman 2). Turatvtn: 18 Sttali:4. (Myers Tievlsan I) Tumovtrs; 10. Sttals: 4. (Javit I, Gilbert 2, Bike 1, Jackson 1). Ttam Rtbounds: 2. Blocked Shots: 4. floored the Quakers last year. Still, three Ptrnntagts: FG .381; fT ,719; 3pi 2-16, .125 (Eppeliiiiier 2. Liniitjiiniin i.Neislei 1) Davis 1). (Howse 1, Bethuiie 1, Eames 2).Tumovtrs: It. Sttals: 7. of Penn's losses came to Villanova, I. Hess 1) Ti«m Rtbounds: 8. Blockid Shots: 2. (Mcgiii I, (Howse 1, Bethune 1, Ejmes I, Griffin 2, Bailey 1, Jackson Temple and Arizona. This is a good 3-4 Ma.iffitey I). Tumovcn; 9 Sttals: 10. (McGill 2, Sidoiov I. COUGARS (75) DRAGONS (69) 1). Deiin 1, Fry Hess 2, Tuoliey 2). (g ft fel) fg It teb team. min rn-a m-a 0*1 a pf pts min m-a m-a 0-1 a pf pts DRAGONS (86) JHAG.JN^ (92) A3 A-9 3-y i-S 2 3 13 Myers 40 i-to 8-9 1-8 5 1 15 'q ft rei) Sagarin computer prediction: Drexel 1.) tl teb onner :7 V12 2*5 1 1 12 Gulllar 51 4-12 0-0 3-10 2 11 mm m-a iiva 0-1 a pf pis by 4, n MKi in-.t •-1 . pf pis .'.’UOiV a ’.1,1 .-6 ->-9 -1 3 . iiiaeim.iri 24 .5 bb 2-.' 0 4 Myers 39 U: II- i 1 .’ 27 ‘Uff- i.' f; 1-s ’ ■-7 M ' . ursey s-s 0-- 4 ir ^ 1 5 ■ H to ■ ) ^ 1 ■M-.- tl / -1 .-i Mei-.er 11 1-1 ^-0 :i-l 2 ...y J1 ■ i i -8 ;-i .; 8 ■ i '..i .I'v ,M A 0 A i -ifborr) 3 U-0 '■ 0 y'. OeH;--.;kr ■hi 1 17 ... ■ . I-.. •-’i M'.' ■ ; t IrV '3 ok; r»-' . 2 i 6 1 v,<- ■■o_ nfnev ■■■ : z 0 • -t ' . ■ A .' MI. k. ■ v) Mtr.’, ■ ' U' -.0 14 : .)t?,irbO(n ^ 1 2 ' 0 i-i 0 ■I'M'. !. : ihe; ' Ptrctntagts: : o .‘1 -j : ’ ■ ,My. !■ 1 iinutr" •vi.iiiv! Team Rtbounds; Blocked ; ho iVii /ii.; ■ > w.i - Shots: Tumovtrs; Steals; - tiif hi'l.' Ptrccntages: >••. Fitfy i. Ptritntages; ; • - .-'Wv. 1- Jimii.itei! SIX iHLx'UivJh in Team Rtbounds: Blocktd Shots; 4 Team Rebounds; Blocked Shots; ti.- 101 Ptrc«nt : Tumovtrs; Steals: '*,i; Turnovers; Steals:-t '■ im Rebounds; Blocked Minutes Per riame: Shots: :r - i-. Turnovers; ' ■ Steals; Points Per Game: Rebounds Per Oame; ■ The Triangle • January 10,1997 Sports 19

Women's Basketball Wrestling wins 0 « 7 Maine 55, @ Prexel 45 @Navy68,Drexel 57 Prexel 69, Long Island 66 Maine 25 30 — 55 Drexel 22 35 — 57 Long Island 23 •43 — 66 Drexel 18 27 45 Navy 36 32 68 Drexel 37 32 69 BLACK BEARS (55) DRAGONS (57) LONG ISLAND (66) fg ft reb fg ft reb fg ft reb mln m-a m-a o-t a pf pts min m-a m-a o-t a pf pts min m-a m-a o-t a pf pts three in a row K Clark 16 3-6 0-0 0-1 0 0 6 Feerwy 17 1-3 0-0 0-0 4 3 3 J. Florello 36 1-3 2-4 4-6 5 1 5 Danes 15 0-0 0-0 2-4 2 0 0 Rice 37 4-11 3-4 6-10 2 4 11 D. Florello 38 3-11 2-3 2-2 4 1 9 Porrini 32 5-10 0-3 5-15 6 3 10 Mix 14 3-7 0-0 4-4 0 4 6 Coleman 27 6-13 5-8 2-6 3 2 19 Blodgett 35 6-16 2-2 1-5 2 2 17 Miller 21 0-7 0-0 2-5 0 4 0 Wubnig 20 2-7 0-0 3-4 1 2 4 Anh Dang award for all competition this Can«r 27 4-6 4-4 1-5 0 1 12 Koschlneg 30 1-12 9-11 0-5 2 2 11 Butler 37 5-8 1-5 3-9 0 2 11 NEWS EDITOR season prior to Dec. 16. Vachon 30 0-3 0-0 1-3 4 1 0 Lyons 5 0-1 0-0 M 1 1 0 Townsend 20 5-7 2-5 3-10 0 4 12 Cassidy 18 3-5 0-0 0-2 0 3 6 McGovern 3 2-4 0-0 1-1 1 0 4 Ingersoli 4 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 2 0 The men’s wrestling team While the early success of McCormick 11 2-4 0^ 0-1 0 0 4 Vebrosky 33 1-6 0-1 2-6 0 5 2 Campo 9 1-2 0-0 OK) 0 0 2 upped its record to 5-2 for the Bowman 12 0-2 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 Bielli 3 0^) 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Peiach 3 1-1 0-0 1-1 0 1 2 prized recruit Craighton was A. Clark 4 0-1 00 OO 0 0 0 Michaels 37 6-12 4-4 3-6 2 2 20 Cooke 6 1-3 0-0 0-1 0 1 2 season, winning all three predicted, Stofko’s hot streak Totals 200 23-53 6-9 10-39 15 10 55 Totals 200 18-63 16-21 2M2 12 25 57 Totals 200 25-56 12-25 20-43 13 16 66 wrestling matches at the Jan. 4 came as a surprise, said head Ptrctnta«t«: FG .434; FT .667; 3pt 3-13, J31 (Blodgett 3). Ptrctntagts: FG .286; FT .762; 3pt 5-15, .333 (Feeney 1, Ptrctntagts: FG .446; FT .480; 3pt 4-15, .267 (J. Florelk) 1, Old Dominion dual meet. Coach coach Childs. One of Stofko’s Ttam Rtbounds: 3. Blocktd ShoU: 2. (Porrlnl 1, Cassidy Michaels 4). Ttam Rabounds: 4. Blocktd Shots: 1. 0. Florello 1, Coleman 2). Ttam Rtbounds: 4. Blocktd 1). Tumovtn: 21. Sttals: 12. (K. Clark 1, Danes 2, Blodgett (Vebrosky 1). Turnovtrs: 21. Sttals: 7. (Feeney 3, ShoU: 0. Tumovtrs; 21. Sttals: 8. (0. Florello 2, Wubnig 2, Jack Childs said he is “pleased wins was a pin against against 2, Vachon 3, Cassidy 1, McCormick 1, Bowman 2). Koschlneg 1, Vebrosky 3). Butler 3, Cooke 1). with the record” because he had Old Dominion in 4:30 minutes. » DRAGONS (45) NAVY (68) DRAGONS (69) projected a 3-4 record after seven Junior Bill Brown (150 fg ft reb fg ft reb fg ft reb duaJ meets. mln m-a m-a o-t a pf pts min nva m-a o-t pf pts mln m-a nr>-a o-t a pf pts pounds) and senior hea\7 weight Vebrosky 34 1-11 0-1 1-2 1 3 2 Dowling . 26 4-9 2-3 4-8 3 11 Feeney 38 1-3 0-0 0-2 5 4 2 Freshman Ray Stofko (142 Jamie Huntington each won two Rice 31 4-9 5-5 2-7 2 3 13 Schneck 36 10-15 3-5 4-10 Vebrosky 22 1-6 OK) 0-0 0 3 2 Miller 26 4-11 00 2-7 2 2 8 Coffey 23 4-7 OK) 2-3 Michaels 30 4-12 3-3 0-3 0 2 11 pounds), junior Josh Stanley matches. Brown missed all prac­ Michaels 26 3-5 0-0 0-2 3 4 8 Melofchik 39 2-6 3-6 1-3 Rice 25 8-9 2-2 1-5 0 4 18 058 pounds), sophomore Eric tice this week due to a knee Koschlneg 23 2-9 0-0 OK) 2 1 5 Groth 27 2-8 7-10 2-3 Miller 25 2-S 0-0 3-5 1 3 4 Feeney 32 0-3 0-0 0-2 3 0 0 Delmau 23 2-2 OK) 0-2 Lyons 5 0-1 0-0 1-2 0 0 0 McGrath (177 pounds) and injury and he is doubtful for the Mix 25 3-6 OK) 0-3 1 2 7 Hayes 6 0-1 OK) OK) McGovern 2 OK) OK) 0-0 0 1 0 freshman Damian Craighton Jan. 11 meet at Army against McGovern 2 1-1 OK) 1-1 0 0 2 Seguin 2 OK) 0-1 0-1 Bielli 3 1-2 OK) 0-1 0 0 2 Blelll 1 0-0 OK) OK) 0 0 0 Fryburger 3 0-3 OK) 0-0 Mix 27 5-8 2-4 2-4 0 2 12 (190 pounds) continued their Army, Boston College and Totals 18-55 5-6 9-31 14 15 4S Graham 7 0-1 OK) 0-1 Koschlneq 23 5-12 7-8 0-1 0 3 18 Regoli 2 1-1 OK) 1-2 Totals 200 27-58 14-17 9-28 6 22 69 strong start by sweeping all three . Ptrcmtagts: FG .327; FT .833; 3pt 4-21, .190 (Michaels 2, Smith 4 OK) OK) 0-0 matches each. A pin gives the winning team Koschlneg I, Mix I). Ttam Rtbounds: 7. Blodwd Shots:0. Marino 2 OK) OK) OK) Ptrctntagts: FG .466; FT .824; 3pt 1-10, .100 (Koschlneg Turnovtrs: 21. SUab: 11. (Vebrosky 3, Rice 3, Miller I, Totals 200 25-53 lS-25 19-43 1). Ttam Rtbounds; S. Blocktd Shots: 3. (Michaels 1, Stanley and McGrath are con­ six points. A major decisioh, or Koschlneg 3, Mix 1). Millet 1, Mix 1). Tumovtrs: 26. Sttals: 4. (Vebrosky 1, tinuing their collegiate success, scoring ten-point or better mar­ A: 200 PtrcMrtagts: FG .472; FT .600; 3pt 3-11, .273 (Dowling 1, Michaels 1, Mix 1, Koschlneg 1). Delmau 2). Ttam Rtbounds: 10. Blocktd Shots; 6. A:112 registering overall records of 14- gin in an individual bout, gives (Dowling 1, Coffey 1, Groth 2, Seguin 1, Graham 1). Tumovtn: 21. Sttals: 7. (Schneck 1, Metefchik 1, Groth 4, 3 and 15-4, respectively. Stanley the winning team five points. Delmau 1). shared the East Coast Wrestling Other decisions score three A; 259 Association wrestier-of-the-week points.

@ Morgan State 67, Prexel 56 @ Hartford 65, Prexel 50 @ Vermont 80,— f Prexel • 51 Drexel 23 33 — 56 Drexel 34 16 - 50 Drexel 19 32 - 51 Morqan State 37 30 67 Hartford 39 26 65 Vermont 34 46 80 DRAGONS (56) DRAGONS (50) DRAGONS (51) fg ft reb fg ft reb fg ft reb Dragons min m-a nva o-t a pf pts min m-a m-a o-t a pf pts mln m-a m-a o-t a pf pts Feeney 7 OK) 0-0 0-1 2 0 0 Lyons 14 1-4 0-0 0-1 0 0 2 Rice 36 5-11 2-2 3-8 1 3 12 Vebrosky 23 1-5 3-4 1-2 0 5 5 McGovern 22 0-1 OK) 0-1 0 1 0 Koschlneg 36 3-8 2-4 0-4 4 2 8 Michaels 38 2-6 2-4 1-2 0 3 6 Vebrosky 19 1-5 OK) 0-2 1 0 2 Mix 20 0-3 0-1 1-8 0 4 0 Rice 27 9-13 2-3 2-8 0 4 20 Rice 25 5-13 3-3 2-7 1 3 13 Vebrosky 20 1-3 2-4 0-3 3 4 5 crush Tigers Koschlneg 25 2-4 355 0-4 3 5 8 Mix 23 2-6 0-0 3-5 0 3 4 Feeney 21 4-5 OK) 0-0 0 2 9 Lyons 10 0-5 5-7 4-4 1 0 5 Feeney 19 OK) 2-2 OK) 5 0 2 McGovern 6 0-1 OK) 1-1 1 0 0 McGovern 12 OK) 0-2 1-3 0 0 0 Blelll 3 OK) OK) OK) 0 0 0 Lyons 11 0-2 2-2 0-1 3 1 2 Knight 1 OK) OK) 0-0 0 4 0 Michaels 22 2-9 2-4 1-3 0 7 Michaels 23 1-2 2-3 0-1 2 1 4 102-72 Blelll 1 OK) OK) 1-1 0 1 0 Miller 7 1-1 OK) 3-4 1 T 2 Davis 9 1-3 1-2 OK) 0 1 3 Mix 32 4-11 1-2 3-4 0 1 9 Davis 17 2-4 OK) 0-4 0 2 4 Blelll 2 0-1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 Miller 7 OK) OK) 1-2 0 2 0 Koschineo 29 4-10 4-5 OK) 2 3 14 Miller 16 4-7 OK) 6-9 0 5 8 Tomon State from page 16 Davis 17 0-3 3-4 1-4 0 0 3 Totals 200 18-53 11-14 12-31 10 14 50 Totals 200 19-46 11-19 12-37 14 23 51 Totals 200 18-47 19-3) 19-42 6 25 56, Ptrctntagts: FG .340; FT .786; 3pt 3-12, J50 (Michaels I, Ptrctntagts: FG .413; FT .579; 3pt 2-7, .286 (Vebrosky 1, contributions in the form of 34 Ptrcantagts: FG 383; FT .613; 3pt 1-4, J50 (Koschlneg 1). Koschlneg 2). Ttam Rtbounds: 4. Blodwd ShoU; 1. (Davis Feeney 1). Ttam Rtbounds: 2. Blodttd ShoU; 1. (Lyons Ttam Rtbounds: 7. Blocktd ShoU: 3. (Rice 1, Mix 2). 1). Turnovtrs; 20. Sttals; 6. (Rice 1, Mix 2, Miller 2, 1). Tumovtrs: 37. Sttals; 10. (Rice 1, Koschlneg 2, Mix 2, points, seven boards and only Tumovtrs: 28. SttalK 12. (Feeney 2, Vebrosky 3. Rice 1, Koschlneg 1). Vebrosky 2. Feeney 1, Michaels 1, Miller 1). two turnovers. Lyons 1, Mix Z Miller), Davis 2). HAWKS (65) CATAMOUNTS (80) MORGAN STATE (67) fg • ft reb fg ft reb And the game ball goes to.... t fg ft reb mln m-a m-a o-t a pf pts mln m-a m-a o-t a pf pts mln nf)-a rTha o-t a pf pts Gronbeck 23 1-4 0-0 1-1 0 1 3 Burke 22 4-6 2-4 2-8 3 2 11 Joe Linderman and Greg Clark 11 0-1 1-2 2-2 0 3 1 Randa - 24 3-7 1-2 0-1 7 1 9 Church 22 3-S 8-9 3-4 3 3 14 Karla Warfield 31 4-6 0-2 4-5 3 1 8 DiJulla 26 1-? 0-0 0-2 5 3 2 Lawson 16 7-9 2-3 1-2 4 3 16 Gaffney share the honors. Hamilton 29 4-10 2-2 1-3 1 4 10 Houston 7 1-3 0-0 1-1 1 3 2 Cronin 18 4-11 1-1 2-3 0 2 10 Linderman came out of his shell Kaira Warfield 33 7-18 0-1 2-6 4 3 14 Ivnik 20 3-6 OK) 2-9 1 0 7 Taylor 25 2-5 0-0 3-5 4 1 5 McGriff 16 2-5 0-0 0-0 2 3 4 Murphy 29 3-10 4-6 7-12 1 3 10 Kin/In 25 3-6 3-6 2-4 3 3 9 and established an inside pres­ Cherry 4 0-1 OK) 1-1 0 0 0 Stolle 34 8-13 1-1 2-3 0 3 IB Dodge 16 1-4 2-2 0-1 2 2 4 ence, pulling down eight boards C. Warfield 13 OK) 0-1 0-1 1 0 0 Humbert 2 OK) OK) 0-0 0 1 0 Zornow 19 2-6 4-6 1-3 1 2 8 Patrick 3 0-1 OK) OK) 0 0 0 Welndorfer 35 6-15 2-4 4-14 0 2 14 Harris 17 1-6 1-2 0-2 2 1 3 and dropping 12 points from the Womack 20 3-5 7-10 1-1 0 4 14 Totals 200 26-60 8-13 17-43 15 17 65 Monday 15 0-1 0-2 OK) 0 2 0 floor. Dugan 6 OK) 1-2 0-0 0 3 1 Conrad 5 0-1 OK) 0-0 0 1 0 Saffold 7 0-1 OK) 0-1 1 2 0 Ptrctntagts: FG .433; FT .615; 3pt 5-15, .333 (Gronbeck 1, Totals 200 27-60 23-35 16-36 22 22 80 Gaffney, meanwhile, was per­ Beckles 1 OK) 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 Liddell 26 4-7 7-9 3-5 0 3 15 Shots; 2. (Ivnik 1, Stolle 1). Turnovtrs; 17. Sttals; 9. Ptrctntagas; FG .450; FT .657; 3pt 3-6, .500 (Burke 1, fect from the arc at 3-3, drove the Totals 200 24-55 18-29 16-35 12 26 67 (Gronbeck 2, Randa 1, DiJulia 1, Ivnik 2, Stolle 2, Cronin 1, Taylor 1). Taam Rtbounds; 4. Blocktd ShoU; 6. lane for a layup and pulled down Christine Fitts The Triangle Welndorfer 1). (Burke 1, Church 2, Dodge 1. Zornow 2). Tumovtn: 28. Ptrcantagts: FG .436; n .621; 3pt 1-3, 333 (Womack I). A: 155 Sttab; 24. (Burke 2. Church 2, Lawson 6, Cronin 3, Taylor a defensive board. All that, and Freshman Joe Linderman lays the ball Ttam Rtbounds: 9. Blocktd Shots: 4. (Clark 4). 1, Kirvin 1, Dodge 3, Zornow 3, Harris 1, Monday 1, Conrad he’s only 5-foot-8-inches. Tumovtrs: 19. Sttals: 10. (Karla Warfield 4, Kaira Warfield 1). in for two. 3. McGrlff 1, Wonnack t, Liddell 1). A: 1,230 A; 100 Men's Basketball

Jia7 Prexel 80, @ Towson State 74 Vi’ vrvA ci /*f, vcriiiuiii-t7 'S’ t/icA ci ivA, IUW9UII Women's basketball standings Drexel 41 39 — 80 Vermont 28 21 — 49 Towson State 37 35 — 72 Towson State 37 37 74 Drexel 36 38 74 Drexel 45 57 — 102 updated 1/7 DRAGONS (80) Amcrica East Overall CATAMOUNTS (49) TIGERS (72) ft reb ft reb ft reb fg fg fg mln m-a m-a o-t a pf pts o-t a pf pts mln m-a m-a a W L Pet. W L Pet. mln m-a m-a o-t pf pts Vebrosky 23 3-11 OK) 2-9 1 6 0-0 3-7 0 2 0 Biggs 30 11-16 4-4 2 Peper 24 0-12 3-7 1 4 28 Mix 23 3-5 0-1 1-3 0 4 7 New Hampsliire 5 0 1.000 7 5 .583 3-8 3-5 2 2 8 Nevrton 35 8-14 5-6 1-3 ChotkowskI 25 2-2 2 2 21 Rice 32 7-8 5-7 3-10 3 4 19 26 4-10 3-4 4-H 1 1 11 Harp 25 2-3 0-0 0^ 1 2 4 Maine 5 0 1.000 7 6 .538 Nelson Feeney 20 0-1 0-2 0-1 5 4 0 0-5 0-2 2 2 1 de Pablo 25 1-5 0-1 3 0 4 Roach 32 1-2 1-2 Koschlneg 35 9-11 5-7 1-5 4 2 28 Vermont 3 1 .750 8 4 .667 3-8 0-0 0^) 1 1 8 Keyes 31 4-6 0-0 0-1 6 1 Elsenmenger 25 11 Lyons 8 1-2 2-2 0-0 0 2 4 Towson State 3 1 .750 7 5 .583 18 2-10 0-0 1-3 1 2 S Schneider 10 0-2 ChO 0-2 1 1 0 Carberry McGovern 21 1-5 OK) 1-3 0 2 3 0-0 • 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Cason 15 0-3 0-0 0-3 2 1 0 Hartford 2 2 .500 5 7 .417 Rainey 2 Michaels 17 1-2 2-2 1-5 2 1 4 0-0 12 Lexer IS 2-5 1 4 Murphy 26 5-8 1-3 2 2 0-0 2-2 2 Miller 14 1-6 5-6 3-6 0 4 7 Delaware 1 3 .250 3 9 .250 0-0 1-2 0 0 2 Wise 6 0-1 0-2 0-1 1 4 0 Grey 3 1-2 Davis 7 1-3 0-0 0-1 0 1 2 1-7 0-0 2-5 0 2 2 Hairston 5 0-2 0^) 0-1 1 1 0 Northeastern 1 3 .250 3 9 .250 Steele 13 Totals 200 27-54 19-27 12-49 15 26 80 Bruce 1 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Grev 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 Hofstra 1 4 .200 5 8 .385 0-1 1 0 0 Totals 10-14 deJona 5 0-4 0-0 200 28-57 6-26 19 18 72 Ptrctntagts: FG .500; FT .704; 3pt 7-9, .778 (Mix 1, 19-75 6-8 15-41 10 14 49 Drexel 1 4 .200 2 9 .182 Totals 200 Koschlneg 5, McGovern 1). Ttam Rtbounds: 6. Blocktd PtmnUgts: FG .491; FT .714; 3pi 6-20. .300 (BIggs 2, de ShoU: 1. (Rice 1). Tumovtrs: 31. (Vebrosky 2, Mix 2, Rice 2, Boston University 0 4 .000 4 7 .364 5-20, .250 Ptrctntagts; FG .253; FT .750; 3pt Pablo 1, Keyes 3). T«am Rtbounds: t. Blocktd ShoU: 2. Feeney 8, Koschlneg 2. Lyons 3, McGovern 7, Michaels 2, (Hatp 1, Hairston I). Tumovart: IS. Staals: 8. (Biggs 2, Miller 2, Davis 1). Sttals: 12. (Vebrosky 1, Mix I, Rice 3, 2. Blo

Thursday. January 23. 1997 Purchase a Homecoming Pass 12:45am-2:45am *^Late S k a te ” for $15.00 Class of ’23 Ice Rink (savings of $9.00) $ 2 .0 0 and receive access to 8 :0 0 P M ^^Rusted Root” Uve in the PEAC, All Homecoming with special guest “Geggy Tah”. Events and the chance $ 1 0 .0 0 for a scholarship. Tickets go on sale Friday. January 24. 1997 1/6/97 at 6:00pm 1:00PM-1:30PIV| Pep Rally in the Main Building at the CAB office. Great Court.

5:30PIVI-7:00PIVI Grillin’ n’ Chillin’, Tailgate Party in front of the PEAC.

7:00PM-9:00PIV| The Homecoming Game. The vs. Maine Black Bears. With the Student Organization Spirit Award and Halftime announcing of the King and Queen Court.

1 0 :0 0 P M

H o m e c o m i n g

Sponsored by Campus Activities Board The Triangle • January 10,1997 Comics 21

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ACROSS 68 If not 26 Not at all tipsy 69 Cook in juices 27 Zola 1 Sedaka or Simon 70 Dried out 28 Sponsorship 5 Long story 30 Sign 9 Agile DOWN 31 Operatic songs 13 Palindromic name 1 Ark builder 32 Wash slightly 14 Beach resort 2 Lab burner 33 Joined 15 "Exodus" author 3 "Go Tell — the 35 Stratford-upon— 16 Shortly Mountain" 39 Green gems 17 Mature 4 Desire 40 Escape 18 Yield 5 Best part 43 Genuine in feeling 19 Favorite place 6 Spot on a card 46 Brings out 21 Go unsteadily 7 — of March 48 Deer 23 Aits 8 Holds 49 Young canines 25 Fruity drink 9 Bring to mind 52 Out of line 26 Medium's specialty 10 Holier— than— 53 Cipher 29 Agent thou one 54 Greek coin “Amusing, learned, 34 Last Greek letter 11 Split 55 Refusals 35 Chester — Arthur 12 River in Belgium 56 Boorish one 36 Musical group 17 Govern 58 Shredded 37 Sizable 20 Entertainment 59 Pitcher and prickling with 38 Gearshift position award 60 Item for a gardener 41 Writing fluid 22 Classified items 63" — if by land..." 42 Whitney and 24 Chooses intelligence.” Wallach 44 Deride LASTISSUE'S SOLUTION - Kirkiis Reviews * 45 Certain contract □□□□ □□□□□ □□□□ 47 Dweller □□aa □□□□□ □□□□ 49 Throbbed □□□□ □□□□□ □□□□ □□□□□□□ □□□□□□□ 50 Where Oslo is: abbr. □ □ □ □ □ □ □ 51 — Arabia □□□□□□ □□□□□□□□ TRIANGLE 53 Hide □□□□□ □□□□□ □□□ 57 Ghost □□□a □□□□□ □□□□ 61 Orchestra member □□□ □□□□□ □□□□□ 62 Appearance □□□□□□□a □□□□□□ □ Q Q □ □ □ □ 64 Hawkeye State □□□□□□□ □□□□□□□ COMICS 65 Busy one □□□□ □□□□□ aaau 66 Sand hill aaaa uaaaa aaaa 67 Arduous journey □□□□ □□□□□ □□□□ ’ ill nifnniiict) to Noil Postman's ‘Techncpoly’' Skip the dni|ti — ttkk lo Ihc crouword Page 22 THE i nANGLE January 10,1997

A p a r t m e n t s A p a r t m e n t s A p a r t m e n t s S u b l e t s Index 3620 Baring, Large 1 bedroom. Enclosed porch, with utilities included. Low security deposit!! Call One bedroom apartment. Heat, gas, and water Sublet available for immediate occupancy at 3437 yard. All utilities included S560/1, $610/2. No 382-4108______included. Walk-in closets and lots of windows. Lancaster Ave. Rent $260 month + utilities for The Triangle offers listings in the smoUng/drinking. 3 nrwnths advance (neg) (215)- 35th and Race. 2 person, 1 bedroom, clean and Available’April 1st. S325/month + electric. your own large room in 5 bedroom house If inter­ following categories. 662-1132 Of (215)-222-6060.______secure apt. S530/month. For details, call 382- Contact Victor 386-3685.______ested, call 676-4868 and ask for Joe or leave mes­ 1 Bedroont in lovely renovated building at 33rd & 7208. Available immediately. Must move situa­ ROOM FOR RENT. Big bedrooms, large living sage^______Baring; Very Large and bright. New kit with DW, tion. room, laundry and more. Close to Drexel and Sublet available for immediate occupancy at 3437 Apartmtnts tile bath, big closets, Indry facs, $525 incl heat, UPenn. $32S/month. Utilities included. Low secu­ Drexel Students and Faculty -Looking for an Lancaster Ave. Rent $260 a nfwnth + utilities for Grad/Staff/Faculty Only. 387-7808. rity deposit!! CaU 382-4108. SuMtts affordable apartment in Center City? We offer stu­ your own large room in 5 bedroom house. Call Roommatts GOVT FORECLOSED homes for pennies on $1. dios , 1&2 bedroom>apartments located 1 block Studio apartment 38th + Powelton vicinity bright, 676-4868 and ask for Joe or leave a message. Delinquent Tax, REPO'S, RED’S, Your Area. Toll Free from Broad St. and the Avenue of the Arts. Health clean, secure, w/w carpeting, nice kitchen, big For Sale 1-800-218-9000 EXT H-7685 for current listing. Club membership and student discounts avail- bathroom, washer/dryer, private yard. $350 per Roommates ~ month. Call Robert 387-2736.______Wanted 3807 Hamilton St. 3- bedroom rms. Rug's -deck, able. Call for appt. 735-9808.______One bedroom with own bath. Korean students dishwasher, garbage disposal, central A.C. Alarm 1 bdrm apt. located on 32nd and Powelton Ave. Text Books Drexel Students & Faculty — Looking for an welcome. $280 includes utilities. Very quiet area. system, in house washer & dryer, spiral stair case. Modern kitchen + Bath. 450 + util. Call 382-3314 747-5083 (Mr. Kim)______Services $800 month. Ist-last security. Avail 12-1-96,610- affordable apartment in Center City? We offer stu­ or 382-0290 dios, 1-2 b ^ro o m apartments located 1 block Roommate wanted to share one- bedroom start­ Help Wanted 328-7034 Mike 3609 Baring Street. 1 bedroom, sunny, nice build­ from Broad and the Avenue of the Arts. Health ing Jan 1st. 24hr security guard, cable/ washerft Within two blocks of Orexel Gym; clean, safe ing, $455 + electricity. Available now. 222-4540. Lost & Found Club membership and student discounts avail- dryer. Furnished, spacious room. Rent only $305 + affordable apts avail. Some with w /d or deck. able. Call for appt. at 735-9808.______3 bdrm bi-level at 36th and Powelton. Ideal for 3- 1/2 of utilities. Please call Allen 662-5203. Announcements Small, well-braved pets welcome. Call 610-664- 4 people. Large kitchen, living room, 2.5 baths, 32nd & Hamilton - Tired of the same boring apart­ Personals 7779. backyard, W/D, intercom, garbage disposal. $925 Roommate needed to share four bedroom apart­ ment style? Check thii out - Dark hardwood 3300 Spring Garden. Recently renovated, bright 2 + utilities, (except water) Must see! Call 382-6814. ment with three friendly Drexel students plus cat. floors, exposed brick throughout, HUGE 1BR, 1 BR apt witii sunken living room, central air, gas Immediate move-in available. Four bedrooms, Placing Classifieds heat, tile bath, lots of extras. A must see. bath, $425. (215) 552-8137.______S u b l e t s kitchen, living room, 2baths, washer and dryer. Convenient to bus route into city. $525 + util. Call 3409 Powelton, studio, nice, clean, separate $310.00 per month plus utilities. Inquire & 243- 3417 Race St. Furnished room with huge walk-in 3440. The deadline for placing a classified Chris 222-8466. kitchen area, w/d in building, intercom, off street closet. Share kitchen and bath. Dishwasher/wash­ parking, available January 15th. Only $300+. Call ad is 5:00 p.m. on the Tuesday 3312 HAA4ILT0N STREET; Efficiencies, one and er/dryer/cable. $350/month. Including utilities. HELP! Male/Female roommate needed ASAP for 6 two bedrooms from $299/mo up. Heat gas and 222-6835. Available from DEGJAN Call 222-3855 Richard month sublet. 2 bedroom apartment at 33rd + before the ad's publication date. Powelton. Please call 662-1776. hot water incl. All apts have walk-in closets, lots of 2 Bedroom w/ 2 bath, Ir, dr, kitchen. Drexel area. One efficiency S350/month, 35th and Race St. windows, walking distance to school. 349-9429. Recently rehabbed. Washer/Dryer. Small private Water, heat electricity included. Please contact Roommate wanted for 3 bdrm house $300. Large Forms are available outside The Starting Jan 1st. 24 hr security guard. Cable/ yard. Parking available. $500. Owner pays utilities. 222-6959 leave a message or email living room and balcony. Call Bavish Soni 877- Triangle office at 3010 MacAlister washer & dryer. Furnished spacious room. Rent Call Joe 467-0776.______aeohJsfeearthKnkjiet______5970______Hall, they must be completed in full $305 and 1/2 of util. Please call Allen 662-5203. One Bedroom - 3406 Spring Garden St. Third Help!! Roommate needed ASAP for 6 month sub­ Roommate wanted for 2 bdrm apt in Hilkrest, and writing should be legible. Big bedrooms, large living room, laundry and floor, privacy, carpeted, tile bath, newly painted, let. 2 bedroom apartment at 33rd and Powelton. 34th and Race St. S360per month plus utilities. more. Close to Drexei and UPenn. S32S/tTK>nth gas heat, free washer/dryer. $425+. 386-6722. Please call 662-1776 Gas heat/ water/cooking, large living room, bai- 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 Orexel student, include your studmt number. Always noake nqte of the dat6 the ad was placed, Welconrie New International Students! and the section in which you wish the ad to appear. Be sure to sign We, In the Irtenwtlofial Studerits Offloe. wish you thebest

Costs & lim its W lnt*roductlon«! As a new international student, you must have lots of questions. Who best DnxdAd¥€rtis€rs to answer them than current Drexel international students? Experienced intemational student leaders will Cost: Free. Normal ad rates apply for share their adventures as a Drexel University student, giving you suggestk>ns on how to get the the most personal businesses and apart­ out of your studies. Join them for a warm winter’s evening of introductions to student life. ments. Limits: 2 classified ads per person per issue, with a 40 word maximum Saturday, January 18th for each. Personals have a 25 word 4 pm until 8 pm maximum. Ads may be edited. The Drexel Newman Center 32 and Chestnut Streets 0utsld9Ad¥trtlMn Cost: (per issue) $4.50 for the first 25 If you attend, you’ll: Meet new and continuing Intemational students. Receh^e a special words and $.25 for each word thereafter. Tear sheets are $.25 commemorative T-shirt. Discuss campus and city life. Play “Human Bingo" and v\dn tenific prizes. Enjoy a extra. Ads must be pre-paid. Pay­ sumptuous banquet prepared by some of the world’s greatest chefs-your intemational classmates! ment can be made by cash, money (Dinner will be served after sunset out of respect for those observing Ramadan. Our meal will Include order or check. ample vegetarian and non-pork selections.) $3.00 registration fee required no later than 12 Limits: There are no ad limits or noon, Thursday, January 16th. word limits for paid classifieds. Other Information For iUlore information No classifieds will be accepted over If you would like to know more at)out services and programs for Drexel’s Intemational students the telephone. Multiple ads with duplicate subjects will not be and scholars o r would like to volunteer your time and energies, please contact: accepted unless they are paid for. Ads may be cancelled, corrected or Douglas Gill, D ir^or continued by notifying the Intemational Students Office classif'' is staff by the 5:00 p.m. 210 Creese Student Center Tues \?adline. You must include you ine number with your (215) 895-2502 coil dence. The Triangle • January 10,1997 Classifieds 23 R o o m m a t e s F o r S a l e f o K S a l e F o r S a h r F o r S a l e cony. Call Dan McVeigh at 222-3428 or 610-495- at 725-5894 or emai? at st89qsgh@dunxl. st95htw9. Adcf another $100 for the printer. Might MAC SE/30, 10 meg RAM,-80 m eg HO, EXT. Moving Sales: TV( sharp 21') $80, IKEA study 1090. ocs.drexel.edu. also include 100W speakers! modem and floppy drive. Mac Suitcase, plenty of desks $20 & $40, Sony sterio system $180, lamps PowerMac 7500/100Mhz. 40 Mb RAM. 1 Gig 91' Baldwin Piano for sale. Cheerywood, good software. $1000 obo. Felix 332-2809 $10, shelf $10, twin bed with lx)x $35, two futons F o r S a l e Drive. 4X-CD Rom. 2Mb Vram. S-Video and RCA condition, easy .to move. Price $1,500 (nego­ '84 VW Rabbit GTI-5 speed, FI, black with blue $50, and other furniture stuffs, everything must Ford Tempo '84 4door auto AC Low mileage 79k Audio in/ out (CD quality, stereo). Software, key­ tiable). Beep Cotihie for detail (215)-%0-3277. interior. Lowered, 15’ Chrome 12 spoke rims, Good body Recently inspected Runs great. Asking board and mouse includ^. $2100. l>riGe Is nego­ go. Call Joe (215)508-1802. alarm, just inspected. 126K miles, runs good! $1400, negotiable. Call Youmin at 215-895-2068 tiable. Email if interested, Include phone # please. Keyboard- Ensoniq 'KS-32' Weighted Action Midi 86 Honda Civic, SI, 2dr, ac, moon roof, 5spd, 12 Studio, 76 Keys, T6 Track built-in sequencer, Midi great winter car. $3000 obo. Call Dennis- (day) or 215-243-1874 (evening).______st9563s76>dunxl.ocs.drexeLedu valves engine, new brakes, tires, inspected , 38 in/out/thru, 180 sounds, 168 waves, 32 voice (215)222-0685 or email.-'''5l956ytx#post. Seized Cars from $175. Porches, Cadillacs, Chevys, Surfboard- Proline 6*3 B/0. Call 382-7533 miles/gallon, runs excellent, well maintained. Call polyphony, less than 1 year old. New $1995 Sell drexel.edu BMW's and Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your Seadoo 94 Sp, 2 seater, 2 life vest, cover, flushkit. (215) 244-6732. Area. Toll Area 1-800-898-9778 Ext A-7685 for cur­ S.S. Impeller, by pass system, heavy duty engine for $1350 with Hard Case. Call Mark 571-4355 or Selling Michelin Metric tires and rims: TRX 220/55 rent listings. mounts. Well maintained, runs strong, will deliver e-mail st96f894@ post.drexel.edu R390. Fits mid 80's Mustang and Mercury Cougar Copy of EIT Exam review tajies. Includes 24 hours Sega Genesis core system with two control pad­ to SJ or Philly. $2800 or best offer. $3100 w/ trail- Futon Bed (seat and bed) $265. Brand new and (4 lug pin wheels). Asking $400 o.b.o. Call (215) of tape and 1200-^ pages of notes. THe ASME dles.. Also included are Mortal Kombat II, er.215-232-1714,609-344-8175.______unopened software; Microsoft Excel $90. Minitab 382-7208 Immed. offers these for $350, askittg $150 Call 609-691- Earthworm Jim, and Robocop Vs. Terminator. He-Ne Laser w / power supply $75. Mac II w / 8 $47, Norton Utilities $45. Plastic chair (white) (4) Macintosh Centris 650 w CDROM. Only two years 8067 after 6p or email [email protected] Asking for $80 or best offer. Please contact Trung megs. lOOMg HD ke)^board, mouse. $130. Apple $20. For more info call 387-3930 Decky old and loaded with software'+ game^. Monitor, el.edu @243-2282.______Mac Monitor 13' color $90. Mac Plus w/ 4 megs, Unopened packages of Mac Excel and AutoCad. keyboard + modem included. $1100 obo. Car for Sale. 1984 Olds Firenza Automatic, Clean For sale, planned vacation. 5 days,4 nights in Ft. keyboard, mouse $95. Imagewriter II printer $95. Absolutely new. Call for price. 222-6959 or email Contact Rwela @ 564-3775 or email interior, 76K miles, $699 obo must sell. Call 382- Laude'rdale,Cruise trip with 2 days/2 nights on the Panasonic KXP1124 PC compatible printer $95. [email protected] st93kxnk@dunx1 Grand Bahama Island Hotels/cruise paid for. Flight Apple'style writer printer $110. External Mac HD 1403 leave message. not included. Askjng $400/or B.O, Need money. 120 Mg $8^ollerball mouse for a Mac $20. Call 222-8704 222-2227 \ KENWOOD KDC^5005 In Dash CD Player, only 1986 Buick V6, AT, PS, PI, PW, and new tire. No months old. Anti Theft Removable______Rust! Looks and runs excellent. You must see! 610-352-1319 Andre after 5pm.______Face, 25W X 4 High Power, 2 Sets of RCA Outputs, w/Box & Manual, MUST SELL! ORIG $319, Yours for 1996 Honda Civic LX, 4 door, 5 spd, am/fm cas­ $175 E-MAIL st90jjrm or.c^ll 386-0765 ask for sette, air, 10K miles. Excellent condition, must JOSH sell!! Asking $14,100 obo. Call 222-6894 or leave do yo^ want to be message. 680XX MACINTOSH CARD UPGRADE 24-BIT Radius Color Card, Supports-Pivot display, VIPER C60 CAR ALARM, GTQ206 JBL amp (new), Software/Manuals ORIG. $479, NOW SI 50! 16-BIT Kenwood 6.5 (new), Polk Tweeters MM1200 / Risi MIDI Media Vision Sound interface Card, Stereo (new), 6042 Kenwood EQ (new). Asking $750 In/out, Original Packaging/ Software/Manuals (negotiable) Serious inquiries only. Call 472-5013. or ORIG. 5249 NOW $99 E-MAIL/ call Josh st90jjrm / Ski equipment for sale.160cm Spalding downhill 386-0765 skis. Look bindings, and Raichle boots (men's size 1959 Volkswagen Beetle. 54k miles. Very nice. No 12). Everything is in good condition and the skis Rust. Original 36hp engine riins great. $2700. are sharpened and waxed. Everything for $80 (215)895-5825 or E-maij kwasnjcl@post. obo. Call 215-222-2286. drexel.edu 5215CD PowerMac, 24 MBRam, 1 GBHD, CDROM Radius 8100, 100% Mac compatible. Superfast Drive, Ethernet and 14.4 modem/fax. Laser print­ 1 lOMhz PowerPC, 8MB Ram, 730MB hard drive, er, Flightstick Pro Joystick, Claris’Works, keyboard & mouse. Like brand new In original box Mathmatica, Ram Doubler (up to 48 mb), and still under warranty. Tons of software Mathmatica, CD games and more Asking $1800 included. $1250. SuperMac Graphics Card $200, Walt at 215-483-9674 16MB Ram upgrade $200, Prometheus 28.8+ Performa 6214 for sale! 24Meg RAM.1GIG fax/modem/speakerphone $200, Panasonic HD(Original Softwares included!),4X CD can you handlt H7 ) external speakers $75. Buy all for $1800 Call Sam ROM.Asking for $1600 or best offerlE-mail

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Eat-In, Take-Out, D elivery You Do Have Time! 3513 Lancaster Avenue 222-7135 1 1/2 hour a week is all it takes to make a difference ED'S S in a young child's life.....and "-"H to help yourself get a job r5 (jw N G s r 40 \ ^ ™ g [j LARGE Pplain p i z z a } or get into graduate school. 1 $11.75 II II $14.95 I MUST PRESENT COUPON. I • MUST PRESENT COUPON. | Tutor in W est I CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH OTHER I I CAHNOTBECOMBTOED WITH OTHER . ■ /\i2DODCOFFERS. ■ ” OrrEKS* ■ I EXPIRES 1/13/97 II EXPIRES 1/13/97 I Philadelphia L JL J Any time - Day or Evening ; Rbm ario's \ Romario^s \ Pizza Pizza All Ages V iLargepizza^ cheese Transportation 2«'Ti6.75 Provided MUST PRESENT COUPON. MUST PRESENT COUPON. CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH OTHER CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH OFFERS. OTHER OFFERS. EXPIRES 1/13/97 EXPIRES 1/13/97 Call - 2158 or 1522 for information M 24 The triangle’- January 10,1997

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Was $7.35 Was $4.20 Now $6.35

■ ' r l i . ' '/■; iiii i ■ II. : • \

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. • • • ■ • i January Specials January Specials " vl ' . .! 1 , One Free Topping | with the purchase (fany | '»‘v $2 Off Any Large: Large Pizza Pizza I I ■ I ' Must mmtkm coupon what onkring Must mmtkm evwaon «hm onltring fardetivry jard^oery Can't br combtwti mth any other offn Can’t be combmed with any oUitri^ ^ , m 1^ offers expires 1/31/97 j 1^ offers expiries 1/31/97 j The Triangle • January 10,1997 Classifieds 25 ‘f ^ F o r S a l e Help W anted Apple 1705 monitor still in box, never opened, Earn extra money stuffing envelopes. Send $1 falling to sacrifice at S600 (firm). Call (609) 232- and SASE to Image Co. PO Box 38757 Phila PA. 4684 or e-mail j1 [email protected]. 19104-8757 Check and money orders welcome. SEIZED CARS from SI 75. Porsches, Cadillacs, Visual Basic Programmers(s) Wanted. Part-Time chevys, BMW’s Corvettes, Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your and flexible hours. Beginners and intermed.’s A^ea. Toll Free 1 (800) 218-9000 Ext A-7685 for should call too. Tel. (215) 368-9331. current listings. Earn EXTRA MONEY stuffing envelopes. Send CAR FOR SALE. 1984 Olds Firenza. Automatic. $ 1.00 and self-address stam p^ envebp to Image Clean Interior. 76K miles. S699 obo. Must Sell. Call Co, PO Box 38757, Philadelphia, PA 19104-8757. 382-1403. Leave message. Check & money orders wekome. MAC SE/30,10 meg. ram, 80 meg hard drive, ext. SlOOO's POSSIBLE TYPING. Part Time. At Home. modem, floppy drive, Mac Suitcase, plenty of soft­ Toll Free 1 (800) 218-9000 Ext. T-7685 for listings. ware, $1000 obo. Felix (215) 332-2809. Part time help needed - Assist multiple property International Phone Card, LOWEST RATES. U.K. 28 owner with maintainance duties include sweep­ cent/min., Japan 39c, France 40c, Germany 45c, ing sidewalks, setting out trash, weeding, cutting China 69c, Greece 55c, India 59c, Brazil 51c, USA grass, and general chores. Need approx. 15 hours 24c. Cain-800-624-1632. weekly. S7.00 per hour. 386-6722 MAC SE30,4MD RAM, 120 meg hd, fpu. Software: Investigator- part time, will train. Must have reli­ Excel, Word, MatLab, Graph, MacWrlte, able auto. Send resume to CIB, POBox 2284 etc., etc. Asking S600 o.b.o. Call Dave at (610) 378- HaddonfieldNJ 08033. 0131 ext. 3292. Mac Performa 550 for sale. 3 years old, 33Mhz 8 Lost & Found meg RAM, 160 meg HD. Software , Grolier Ency, Found- A silver engraved Spiegel bracelet. Found Titrre Almanac, several applications. $900 OBO. on November 8 on C hestnut St. in front of 548-2493. Ask for Pankaj, email st96v265 MacAllister. E-mail st95t84v@ dunxi.ocs. Tired of walking long distance to class and paying drexel.edu for parking violations ? Don't fret! I have a Parking CD faceplate and several female artist CDs. Call Garage Sticker for the Winter Term available for Tom 662-0641 sale at a price of $75. Call Stephanie at 233-9199 for details. Found Gray Stripped Cat/Kitten, very friendly. Please call to ID and retrieve. Tom 662-0641 Pentium 586DX-133 Intel, 1 GB HD, 8X CDROM, 28.8 Fax modem, 15'monitor, 160W speakers, Announcements Sound & VGA card, mouse keyboard, 95 win and 96 office, HP680 Inkjet (just ask $2200) without Free T-shirt + $1000 Credit Card fundraisers for There must be some way to avoid doing printer (only $1900) almost new (two mo, used). fratemities, sororities & groups. Any campus orga­ Please Call Allen 662-5203. nizations can raise up to $1000 by earning a whopping $5.00/ VISA application. Call 1-800- the same thing for the n«ct forty years. Compaq, 486DX 20MB RAM, 250 Meg HO, 932-0528 ext. 65. Qualified callers receive Free T- modem, software w/ Win95 -hMS Office. Ph:662- shirt. Vbi/ll be getting your dagree from a top school AndyoUYe raady to 9639.eman:sg95a5h7______Spring Break Trips. Cancun, Bahamas, Jamaica & find a great Jokx The question is: which Job? And can it Interest you for Radius 8100,100% Mac compatible. Superfast Florida. Best Prices. Best Parties. Group Discounts. 1 lOMhz PowerPC. SMB Ram, 730MB hard drive, Space is limited. For free brochure. Call Today 1- your whole career? keyboard & mouse. Like brand new in original box 800-959-4SUN.______and still under warranty. Tons of software included. $1250. SuperMac Graphics Card $200, Biglit Around the Comer! Community Education At Andersen Consulting, itfs our Job to help clients do what they d a 16MB Ram upgrade $200, Prometheus 28.8-1- Center at 3500 Lancaster (diagonally opposite 7- Only bettfc Fbryou, that m eans opportunity and chaiiengs. fax/modem/speakerphone $200, Panasonic 11) needs your help! Work with media, after­ external speakers $75. Buy all for $1800 Call Sam school program, ushers & attend performances. at 725-5894 or email at [email protected]. CEC works to bring the community together Part oTour business is anticipating drexel.edu. through the arts. Call MarHyn at 387-1911. the future. So come talk to us about A ndersen Interested in psychology? The Wellness W a n t e d Community at 4610 City Line Avenue provides yours. Find out more about a career with Gonsuiting Wanted: Hot Wheels, Matchbox, Johnny free psychological and emotional support for can­ Andersen Consulting. «RMUMirata«Nett.ac Lightning, Tomica diecast toys. I will pay cash for cer patients and their families. They need volun­ any size collection. (215) 895-5825 or E-mail: teers for community outreach, administrative Where we ge frpni iMWdC kwasnjclg post.drexel.edu______help, etc. Free training available. Call Susan AM^WMAOemMngiaaiK Wallack or Debbie Wojno at 879-7733 for info. Tutor needed Winter term in Fundamentals of Systems 2 (ECE-S512) - Graduate level. Will pay • • ‘SEKALUNG TAHNIAH* * • good. Email [email protected] with Introduaion. MALAYSIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION (MSA) AT Information Session: I l l Hasbitt Hali (Stein Auditorium) DREXEL UNIVERSITY, PHILADELPHIA WOULD LIKE I NEED SOFTWARE! I will buy most software pack­ TO CONGRATULATE THE FOUOWING GRADUAT­ Tliursday, January 16,1997 Casuai Attire ages that come with original disks and manuals. ING SENIORS :- * Abdul Wahab Abdul Latif * This Includes Maple VR3, Excel 5.0, AutoCAD, Ahmad Yuzri Zainul • Adny Jeffedon Ahmad • 4:90 p.m. to 6:09 p.m. Visit us at iittp://Www.ac.com SoftWindows 3.0/95, Adobe products, and other Arman Marzu • W. Shahira Razmin W. Abd. Razak programs and utilities. Will pay a reasonable price * Nur Izawati Idris * Norsuhaili Said TAHNIAH & for them. E-mail uledelm a^a.drexel.edu or call SELAMAT MENEMPUH CABARAN HIDUP I! Lori at 571-4824.______Do your part to help out in the community. There Nike Air Max *95 Used, Yellow, grey, grad, We will are a number of positions in community service give good prfce. Call 731 -1094______available both on and off campus for those stu­ Visual Basic Programmers Wanted. Part-time and dents who are work-study eligible. For more fl^b le hours. B^inners and Inter should call too. information, contact Linda Arendt at 895-23158 Tel: 215-368-9331.______■ or in Creese 223. Also, volunteers are always Need holiday cash? I’m looking for a Power Mac WaCOME!______We’ll give you 7500 or better. All the trimmings needed. Call New coat or jacket for Christmas/Hanukah/ 527-9292 or email [email protected]. Kwanzaa? Please consider donating your old one drexel.edu to Philadelphia Cares’ Coat Collection. They will distribute them to economically disadvantaged ____ I T e x t B o o k s indivWuals throughout the city to help them get Books for sale. Mostly INSYS, but I also have a few through the winter!. Bring your donation to l5"dbplqji^keyboani for LIT, SOC, etc. MUCH cheaper than the book­ Creese 223 by 1/16 or call 2158 for more info. Now $ 2^79 store. E-mail me at [email protected] for GOVT FORECLOSED HOMES FROM PENNIES ON titles, prkres, and other details $1. Delinquent Tax, Repo's, REO's. Your Area. 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2 6 Entertainment The Trian^ • January 10,1997 Cannibalizing the fine young pome bush

Turn the stereo UP! from page 28 Catchy? You bet your wax god­ At any rate, what Outlandos to WYSP 24 hours a day like you Start Fires.” A would-be pyro- head. D ’amour will teach you is that do, “Five Long Years” and “Too maniac might want to start by to do with Mother Love Bone’s The rest of the stuff is drivel, "Roxanne” is not everything Broke to Spend the Night” are gathering copies of every Bush tune by the same name, and it by the way. Spitbail’s “Stab City” VHl would have you believe, way better. album ever sold and lighting completely drags the album is cool, until lead singer Yvan .and that "So Lonely” and “Born There’s a lot more blues than them up. down. Take it out, and you have Fitch starts singing. And Philco in the 50’s” were recorded when rock in these tunes, but don’t we Just don’t breathe the manure a concise rock ‘n’ roll experience Bendyx will be fine once they Sting knew how to rock. all like being sad? Boo hoo. fumes. without much innovation. Leave learn how to play in tune. Speaking of which, what the hell They’ll kill you. it on, and you are in a living hell. This whole album, though, it was with that Dune movie? At least that’s what my therapist linked to some sort of web-based says. soap opera. I checked it out (http://www.eastvillage.com). It makes “Friends” look hip. /A FYC Bush Razorblade Suitcase Buddy Guy Damn Right I Got The Blues

Various Artists AAAAA I didn’t like Bush’s first album Fine Young Cannibals The East Village Speaking of wimping out, the called We Are a Waste of Record The Finest AA The Police same could not be said for Buddy Company Dollars, or any of their AA Outlandos D'amour Guy. Regarded as one of the best singles off it, such as “We Suck,” Two songs make this compila­ AAAAA guitarists ever, Guy plays the “We Sound Like Dung” or “We I didn’t know Fine Young tion CD worth the plastic it’s blues better than you, me and Wish We Had Real Talent.” Bush Cannibals had enough material made out of. The first is I always knew Sting was once Eric Clapton combined. He proves to me that anyone can to call any album The Finest. You Mommy’s “Not Phair.” It starts cool. One could make a case that wails. He grinds. He grunts. He sound good if they can play the really have no reason to buy this out kind of hokey, talking about The Soul Cages is one of the slashes. He even makes a nifty guitar loud. album, except the fact that it “workin’ for the man” or some finest lyrical achievements ever apple tort, but that’s not impor­ But that doesn’t mean that any does have “She Drives Me such nonsense. The "Phair” in put to tape, but let’s face it, he tant. of their songs are worth any­ Crazy” and “Don’t Look Back” the song’s title is Liz Phair. Lead has been wimping out a bit lately. Sure he’s misogynistic, but so thing, by any stretch of the imag­ on it. singer Andy Boose puts it well in Outlandos D’amour, however, is my Uncle Bert. He’s an unem­ ination. The most irritating thing a Weezer dork-pop kind of way: is Sting circa 1978. ployed alcoholic who can’t play Razorblade Suitcase is 61 min­ about this “Greatest Hits” album It’s not fair that I’m half as much Ah 1978. I was a mere toddler the guitar. So, the lesson here is utes long. I have this theory that is that it doesn’t have any sort of a man as Liz Phair. I don’t care wading through 38 feet of snow, it’s OK to hate women if you can the length of an album should be retrospective writing in the liner that to Juliana Hatfield I can’t which God dropped on New play the guitar. dictated by the quality of music notes to give you any sort of his­ compare. In the end, it’s so refer­ England in February of that fine You couldn’t convince me therein. Bush, for starters, should tory or influence. ential that I can’t help but like it. year. We were snowed in for otherwise, either. Guy is pure have made this one about 35 Then again, maybe FYC won’t “Not Phair” is followed up by months. We ate snow, dirt, fur­ gold on Damn Right I Got The minutes long with less crappy really influence anyone in the “Lies & Promises,” by Bite the niture and each other, but we Blues, his 1991 breakthrough. filler. future. Wax Godhead. It grooves in with were happy. We’re all fine now, While you probably know Bush sings a song on this Hey, at least it isn’t Bush. elegant ’80s synth coolness. though. “Mustang Sally” from listening album entitled “A Tendency to See Stinkin'Green Cardan next page

W ith so m uch stuff, a m a n n e e d s s e d a t i o n These are all a part of a larger bounty which I won’t bore you with. If you like what you’ve heard so far, you’re more than welcome to stop by and play. Be warned, though, that you’ll hate me and everything that I stand for after a few minutes. Then you’ll be faced with the age-old dilemma of deciding whether it’s worth the hassle to play with the asshole kid just because he has neato toys.

Little Green Man from page 28

Kool Moe Dee. My LL Cool J (before he got lame) was glad to see his old crew. Now 1 can’t stop listening to this stuff. It’s not even based on the effects of nos­ talgia. I actually think the music sounds better now. Anyone who disagrees should take up their case with Jam Master Jay’s Adidas, circa 1987.

In case you were wondering It's not the heat. R I ’S w S - . . m H n n ' wau(lkiig«jt

Quickies

Cinderblock Paradise telephone pole. In reality, it represents to be able to claim responsibility for ▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ a communist attempt to spew art pro­ single-handedly saving Superman's Kelly Hall paganda to mindless student drones. life. Granted, all he did was change just might kill you Be it ever so moistened, Watch out for the laser-sighted state- some green Kryptonite into some rela­ there's no place like home. sponsored socialist machinery and tively harmless red Kryptonite, at least Stinkin'Green Card from previous page Jones CD. No longer dangerous don't dare stare at it too long. You’ll he didn't drop the ball on the one This is Cash as a cool cus­ have the rebels on your steps in the occasion where his power to change tomer, though. morning if you're not careful. Viva the the color of any object would actually He doesn’t sing hillbilly coun­ revolution, or whatever. be useful. Color Lad, what a hero. try crap. Jonathan “K car" Poet Pete "Texture Chap" Buckley He covers Soundgarden, Beck and Tom Petty. (Petty and the Heartbreakers play all the music on Unchained). He writes in the liner notes O ld e T y m e G o v e r n m e n t D o n u t H o le T r e a t s about how he told Roy Orbison AAA AAA to change his name and lower his The Feudal System Munchkins voice when he sings. Fun for the whole fiefdom Dunkin'Donuts He sings about gritty stuff. 1 never thought that living anywhere Not currently employed A mouthful of fun and fat He wears black all the time. on planet Earth could ever compare to And he broods with a voice living at my parents' house. At least Just when I think 1 hate politics, 1 unlike anyone in the world. that was until some pipes went always try my best to remember the A great voice singing great kablooey in the Kelly Hall basement good ol' days — a time when people tunes is a rarity these days. and the flood waters came a-ragin'. got to use words like fief, vassal, and Johnny Cash And Cash has one of those Everything from carrying wet-vacs up serf on a daily basis. Unchained voices. and down stairs to walking cautiously Pete "Grog Me" Buckley AAAA It’s so deep that it’ll reverber­ though puddles to avoid electrocution ate in your head for a couple reminded me of life back at Casa It’s a lot harder to buy a days if you listen to it too loud. Buckley. Things even got downright Johnny Cash CD than you might Cash puts it best: “I love songs surreal when Jim Manley showed up. Forgotten Heroes "Donut Hole Treats" my ass. 1 knbw for think. about horses, railroads, land, He is just too much like my dad. AAAAA a fact that there is no such thing as First, you have to go to the judgment day, family, hard Pete "Son of Jim“Buckley Color Lad "donut holes." Don't believe me? Try to Country section of the record times, whiskey, courtship, mar­ D.C.'s forgotten legend stick one of them back into a donut — store. riage, adultery, separation, mur­ Not entirely useless it won't work. So if they're not "donut Then, you have to go to the der, war, prison, rambling, holes," what the fuck are these things? same area as Cyrus (as in Billy damnation, home, salvation, Street Art And why are they so damn tasty? Ray) in the bins. death, pride, humor, piety, rebel­ ▲ John "Dope Fiend" Gruber Then, you have to sift past the lion, patriotism, larceny, deter­ Smashed up car old Johnny Cash stuff until you mination, tragedy, rowdiness, 100 Block of N. 33rd St find his latest album, Unchained. heartbreak and love.” Feel free (0 steal it It’s an experience rivaled only Unchained is all that and The Scale when trying to purchase a Tom more. All triangle Entertainment reviews are subject to the world-famous Triangle rating scale. AAAAA Golden Rings Mouth-watering delicacies AAAA Calling Birds Some people may have just passed AAA French Hens this guy off completely, but he's des­ This might look like a late model tined to at least be a footnote in comic AA Turtle Doves Nissan that met an early death with a book history. After all, it's no small feat A Socks

Everyone's favorite CoodFella takes to the sky January 10th in this high altitude cousin o f 'Speed.'For m id-January m ovie freebies, stop by Triangle HQ, 3010 M acAlister, and tell us your favorite Valu-Jetjoke. f

nteitaimnent Page 28 THETRIAHGLE January 10,1997 CD ga rb a g e, CD gold , CD new , CD old

Jonathan Poet use this knowledge to pick up stores last summer. Porno For is established, point made and Do this little test for fun. Take KNEELING DRUNKARD anyone at parties, so you should Pyros’ self-titled first album was closed up nicely without being this CD and play the first two Did you know that a CD is really stop reading now. terrible. Farrell proved on Porno heavy-handed. seconds of every tune. Seven exactly 120 millimeters wide? In for Pyros that his songwriting Of course, none of it is as songs will start with feedback, my free time I figured out that skills went right down the shitter. good as Jane’s Addiction, but I three with drums and one with a those 120 m illim eters equal The songs were downright stu­ make a habit of living in the past. genuine guitar riff. That might be exactly 4.7244 inches, 0.3937 feet pid, and I felt like the Pyros were an accurate description of Social and a lot less than a furlong. I wasting my time. Distortion anyway — 70 percent also figured out that the area All is better with the world in feedback, 30 percent drums and taken up by a compact disc is less 1997. Good God’s Urge is the occasional original guitar riff. than half a square foot. smoother, more textured, and, Social D doesn’t break new Clearly, I had too much free well, more like Jane’s. But that ground with White Light White time over Christmas break. isn’t the only thing that makes it Heat White Trash. (Do they However, you can use my free great. Farrell has come through ever?) The riffs are pretty much time research at the next party with top-notch lyricism. the same from song to song and you attend. Feel free to pick up It comes part of the total the lyrics are still regretful, members of the opposite sex (or package too. Because, everything world-hater and self-torturous, your own sex if you are so Porno for Pyros fits well in Good God’s Urge. It all at the same time. It also rocks. inclined) with my compact disc Good God's Urge doesn’t sound rushed or out-of­ I will give you some advice, size factoids. ▲ A A A control. The music is more com­ though. If you own this or buy Oh, and here’s a whole bunch plex — acoustic in some parts, Social Distortion this, skip track nine, “Crown of of albums I recently bought, stole I was very reluctant to buy heavy-on guitars in others. And White Light White Heat White Trash Thorns.” The song has nothing or received as ransom. You can’t Good God’s Urge when it hit the it’s not at all verbose. The mood AAA See Turn the stereo UP! on page 26 Web Site-O-Rama Confessions of a capitalist leech

B e h o l d t h e s p o i l s o f a h o l i d a y g o n e i n s a n e .

Brad Wible believer after all these years, with CONSUMER ADVOCATE a companion who can walk into As I’m sure many of you real­ books and split himself up into ized over the past few weeks, multiple tiny replicas of himself. capitalism is still one of the most A year ago, I got a little book popular American pastimes, a for my brother to assist him in close second to complaining his religious studies. You see, he about things, just ahead of tele­ would someday like to be Pope to vised civil trials. I was fortunate the Stars. Well, this Christmas, a enough to play a minor part in friend gave me the very same our great nations’ recent material book. The Two Kings: Jesus - binge. Elvis. Between its covers lie some A necessary by-product of of the most profound arguments such successful capitalism is an supporting the theory that Elvis excessive amount of stuff. is in fact Ae second coming of During such a glorious glut of Christ. For example, the book stuff, the enormous quantity shows: “Jesus was Jewish. Elvis involved results in a lessening of played racquetball at the the quality of the stuff. Thus, it Jewish Community Center in becomes necessary to segregate Memphis.” If that doesn’t the stuff, creating varied tiers of make a believer of you, stuffness. Some stuff you want there are plenty more badly, other stuff is simply bad. I where that came from. secured for myself a little pocket While trying to do a ‘ of stuff, out of which I will cut off little last minute shopping for tiny bits to feed my stuff addic­ my mama, my rainy Christmas are around their tank, tion, a disease formed by over Eve was brightened by the gift of blossoming into a healthy water- exposure to breasts. A girl based society. I’ve noticed social Matchbox cars THE TWO KINGS in a brown pick dynamics from a perspective I’ve in my youth. up truck in the never seen before. Sadly, instead The fact still parking spot of the cute, three-horned mon­ remains that it is ahead of my car keys on the box, mine are more still better to give yelled out her like little dots which could be than to receive, window, “Merry confused with hard water. so allow me to Christmas!” She One of the greatest surprises give you the low- http://www.m aui.net/~m cculc/b-cross.htm then whipped of my holiday was found In a lit­ down on swell up her shirt and tle plastic bag. No, it wasn’t Poor Barbie. I thought that I had subjected her to a lot of pain when I things that I bra and let the cocaine. It was something far was a child: bad haircuts, endless sex marathons with Ken, and several received. JESUS-ELVIS pasty pinkish better than any drug. It was a bad accidents In her pink Corvette. Still, my Barbie did not have to die He was once a fleshies fly. Bon ticket back to the days of seventh for the sins of other Barbie dolls. Most people would never guess that little green slab of clay, but you appetit. grade, when the old school hip- Ctiristlanity is Important in the world of the Plastic Princess, but it turns should see what Gumby can do The fate of an entire civiliza­ hop was king of my shitty litde out that Barble-land resembles our world a great deal. This site shows today. Yes, I now need to make tion was placed in my hands. I tape player. I found a lot, but not the real truth about Barbie, including Terrorist Barbie, Ground Zero more room in my home, for was given the tools and responsi­ all, of my old tapes: Run DMC, Barbie (not for those with weak stomachs), and of course. Pope Barbie. Gumby has.come to live with me. bility to create a colony of Sea Schoolly D, The Fat Boys, even . M. . . MandyTddoKen^Gohn. -Santa .Claus rewarded me, still a ' Monkeys. Asi I write this, ,they. • I - See Little Green Man on page 26