(JfieXEl UNIVERSITV . ■ V- MJ 0 e 1997 Indffx Ed-Op 1 4 Datebook 17 Comics 1 9 Classifieds 21 1HE1RIANGIE Entertainment 28 Vi^lvime 7 Nunibw t Philadptphid Pf*nnsylvdnid October 3,1997 The Student Newspaper at Drexel University Copytighl C\^7 Thp Tttanqle Fraternities cancel parties over PVCA gripe Anh Dang Student Life and Administrative ternity members not to comment EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Services Tony Caneris told The on the issue. Sigma Alpha Mu and Tau Triangle he will meet with PVCA “We’re not against parties per Kappa Epsilon fraternities can­ representatives to come up with se,” PVCA’s’ Cook told The celed their planned parties fea­ a mutual agreement. Until Triangle. He added that residents turing live bands last week in Drexel and the PVCA work out — who have children or who response to pressure from the issues, Caneris said Drexel have to wake up for work early Powelton Village residents. won’t allow fraternity houses to — are not fond of the noise pro­ The executive board of the host parties with live music. No duced by live bands. Powelton Village Civic date has been set for the meeting, In the past. Cook said a Drexel Association (PVCA) voted on Caneris said. administrator in charge of Greek Sept. 24 to file an injunction Director of Greek Life Shane Life would call the campus com­ against “Drexel, certain fraterni­ McGoey said the Interfraternal munity chairman of the PVCA to ties, and WKDU,” according to Association has drafted a revised inform of an upcoming party PVCA President Vaughn Cook. policy on parties, which will be featuring live music. “That [ini­ The injunction was not filed in submitted to the PVCA for tiative] hasn’t happened for a court, though, because Drexel approval. McGoey refused to while,” he said. contacted PVCA’s lawyer saying discuss the proposed changes. Powelton Village residents Eve NIkolova The T riangie the parties were canceled. He said the Drexel senior man­ knew of the planned parties Parties were canceled at two fraternity houses last weekend. Neighbors Senior Vice President for agement instructed him and fra­ See Parties on page 2 expressed concern over noise fronfi live bands. Fifth COE Latino student dean society celebrates candidate heritage month named Anh Dang within Drexel and showed that TRIANGLE NEWS DESK EDITOR-IN-CHIEF L a tin o students want to get Dr. Makram Suidan, professor Latino students gathered in involved in campus activities. of environmental engineering Grand Hall Sept. 29 during the The Philadelphia-based Puer­ and head of the civil and envi­ inaugural Annual Latin Amer­ to Rican dance troop Phillareyto Atabey performed traditional ronmental engineering depart­ ican Heritage Month Cele­ ment at the University of bration. dances and explained the histori­ Cincinnati, has been named the Over 70 attendees saw a live cal significance of the dances and instruments. The attendees par­ fifth candidate for the College of performance of a Puerto Rican ticipated in some of the dances. Engineering dean position. dance, sampled Latino food, and Currently, SHPE is the only Suidan will visit Drexel on Oct. formed a sense of community in Drexel student organization 16 for meetings with faculty, the an evening sponsored by geared toward Latino students. administration, and students. Drexel’s student chapter of the Despite its name, its 27 members Suidan joins the four previ­ Society of Hispanic Professional come from many other academic ously named candidates: Wor­ Engineers. majors besides engineering. cester Polytechnic Institute asso­ SHPE President Cynthia SHPE members Wendy Cas­ ciate provost for academic affairs Santiago-Pagan said the event tro and Alendiz Ortiz spoke dur­ Dr. William Durgin, University showcased the positive influence ing the event to gather support of Delaware chemical engineer­ of the Drexel Latino community. for a Latino fraternity and sorori­ ing professor Michael T. Klein, “If you have a voice, you can get ty at Drexel. “We want to bring University of South Carolina things done,” Santiago-Pagan [Latino organizations] on cam­ professor and chair of the chemi­ said. cal engineering department SHPE advisor Dr. Steven pus to open up more opportuni­ ties in regarding to the Latino Ralph E. White, and University Jones spoke to challenge the stu­ culture,” Castro told The of Pennsylvania professor of bio­ dents to be role models while engineering Paul Ducheyne. working to achieve their dreams. Triangle. Suidan, who performed his SHPE members Marie Daniel, The Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers is a undergraduate studies at the Moises Young, and Melvin Rojas national non-profit organization University of Beirut, received his said being a part of SHPE has established in 1974 to assist and Master’s and Ph.D. in environ­ helped them to interact with encouriige people of Hispanic mental engineering from the other Latino students and to net­ descend to pursue careers in sci­ University of Illinois. He taught work with potential employers. Eve NIkolova TIip Tri.intjle ence, engineering, and mathe­ at both Illinois and Georgia Tech Jones told The Triangle the matics. The Drexel studeiil chap- before becoming a professor at Dancers perform a traditional Puerto Rican dance during the Society of Sept. 29 event was successful in See Hispanic celebration on page 2 Cincinnati in 1990. He has been Hispanic Professional Engineers' celebration of Latin American Heritage Month. incorporating Latino groups head of the civil and environ­ mental engineering department there since 1995. Suidan has amassed over $26 Drexel to liost conference on death penalty million in grants and contracts in TRIANGLE NEWS DESK delphia courts, as well as the 85 percent of eligible cases, three his 20 years as a researcher. er leading figures from the legal, Drexel plays host to "The medical, and religious communi­ demographic profile of its Death and a half times the national Like the previous dean candi­ average. He says Philadelphia’s dates, Suidan will participate in a Death Penalty in Philadelphia,” a ties to discuss Philadelphia’s Row population. conference sponsored by The death penalty policies. In a press release, Zaller states rate of capital sentencing is 14 two-hour open meeting with times that of Allegheny County, COE faculty, students, alumni, Pennsylvania Coalition to The conference, which runs that Philadelphia has the second largest number of death row the state’s second most populous and Faculty Senate representa­ Abolish the Death Penalty, on from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., will feature a keynote address by inmates per capita in the coun­ county. tives. Saturday, Oct. 25 in Mandell try, behind Houston. Philadel­ The American Civil Liberties The forum will be held from Theater. Steve Hawkins, executive direc­ phia currently has 115 death row Union, Amnesty International, 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. on Drexel history professor Dr. tor of the National Coalition to inmates, according to Zaller. and the Philadelphia Bar Thursday, Oct. 16 in the LeBow Robert Zaller is coordinating the Abolish the Death Penalty. Zaller also notes that the Association are among the other Engineering Center, Room 240. event. Conference topics will include Philadelphia District Attorney’s groups that are sponsoring the The engineering dean position Zaller told The Triangle that the policies of the the District office seeks the death penalty in conference. See Engineering dean qn page 2 the conference will bring togeth­ Attorney’s office and Phila­ Uiiiversity/Local The Triangle • October 3,1997

Parties canceled after complaints THE TRIANGLE Parties from page 1 Drexel’s radio station WKDU Cook said, “We’re not picking Cook, who owns seven prop­ Established 1926 had a “Band Bash” featuring four on fraternities. I hope they don’t erties in Powelton Village, said through flyers posted on tele­ live bands at Buckley Field on feel that we are. ... Off-campus he hopes to arrange a monthly or phone poles in the area. Cook Sept. 25. parties at apartments can be loud bimonthly formal meeting with said the residents were con­ Cook said he sent a letter to too. It just so happened to be a Drexel to discuss community Editorial cerned about the potential loud University President Constantine fraternity throwing the party in relations issues and to keep com­ Editor-in-Chief Anh Dang noise caused by the parties, Papadakis on Aug. 19 to request this case.” munication lines open. Eminence Grise Patricia O'Brien Editor-at-Large Jonathan Poet which could run from “early a meeting on how the Uni­ Powelton Village residents The PVCA holds general Photo Editor Noah Addis afternoon until the early morn­ versity’s increased enrollment predict that increased enrollment meetings the third Monday of Comics Editor AshishTalati ing hours of the next day.” would affect area residents. at Drexel would lead to more every month. Wire Services Editor Bob Rudderow Sigma Alpha Mu used flyers to Cook said he was referred to parties sponsored by fraternities McGoey attends the meetings advertise a party featuring live Vice President for Government or off-campus students. “The last regularly. bands on Thursday, Oct. 2. Tau Relations Joe Cascerceri, who couple years there hasn’t been Kappa Epsilon planned a similar Cook said didn’t return his call; much of a problem” probably Editor's Note: Triangle staff member event the next day. Both were He finally spoke to Cascerceri on because of lower enrollment. Jonathan Poet contributed to this Administration canceled on Oct. 1. Sept. 26. Cook said. article. Business Manager Sachin Shah Advertising Manager Venu Gaddamidi Classifieds Manager Jonathan Mullen Datebook Manager Nitin Khanna Two teens, child wounded in gun fight Distribution Manager Ryan La Riviere ASSOCIATED PRESS victims and had not listed condi­ arguing with several men stand­ stoop of an abandoned building, PHILADELPHIA — Three tions for them. ing on the street corner, Capt. Quinn said. A 15-year-old, who Staff Writers youths were wounded when they Three hours after the incident, Thomas Quinn said. was shot in the leg, walked two Warren Abbay, Joe Kopanic, Bablta Kuruvllla, Kardia Williams were caught in a burst of gunfire police found one suspect in a The men traded gunfire, and blocks to get help; his role in the around noon Wednesday in house several blocks from the the car sped away. The vehicle shooting was unclear. Columnists returned about 20 minutes later Daniel Bahar, Michael Busier, West Philadelphia. crime scene. Witnesses said they saw a Chris Puzak The boys, believed to be 8, 14 The arrest capped hours of and three men jumped out firing black car with three occupants and 15 years old, were taken to searching in houses, alleys, their guns. speeding away after the shots Photographan Children’s Hospital of Phila­ rooftops, even a nearby school “These definitely weren’t fire­ were fired. Eve Nlkolova delphia. buUding. crackers,” Brian Thompson, 31, Authorities believe the Advaitlsing Dasif nars One was shot in the leg, one in Police also found two a neighbor who was getting into shootout was drug related, Desplna Raggousis the back and the third in the weapons in a house about a his car as the gunfire began, said. Quinn said. He said about 30 Cartoonists stomach, according to police. block away from the crime scene. “They were automatic weapons.” rpunds were fired. YoussefElbahtlmy Later Wednesday afternoon, The shooting started after The 8-year-old and 14-year- "It’s sad,” Thompson said. (Contributing Staff doctors still were evaluating the three occupants in a car started old boys were sitting on the “It’s little chUdren.” Cyril Addison, Larry Rosenzweig Hispanic Researchers say hyperbaric group oxygen therapy is mainly hype

Steve Farr Scottish soccer team in 1993 delphia Flyers. Contact Information ASSOCIATED PRESS claimed the therapy reduced The NFL’s New York Giants celebrates Mail: The Triangle PHILADELPHIA — Profes­ recovery time for injured players used a loaned chamber until last 32nd and Chestnut Streets sional sports teams that use by two-thirds. year, team spokesman Pat Han­ Philadelphia, PA 19104 heritage hyperbaric oxygen chambers to Since then, anecdotal reports lon said. “Whether it helped or P/ione. (215)895-2585 treat bumps and bruises might have made similar claims, and not is certainly open to debate,” to . (215)895-5935 be better off sticking with more $90,000 chambers have shown Hanlon said. E-mail: [email protected] traditional therapies, a recent up in locker rooms of — among Russell Peterson, Hyox’s month study concludes. others — the NBA’s Seattle Su- North American sales represen­ Temple University researchers perSonics, the NFL’s Jacksonville tative, said the company believes Copyright ©1997 The Triangle. No work Hispank celebration, from page 1 found that athletes who climbed Jaguars and the NHL’s Van­ the technique speeds healing of herein may be reproduced In any form. In into the contraptions and in­ couver Canucks, St. Louis Blues, damaged tissue by raising the whole or in part, without the written con­ ter is four years old. haled oxygen did not heal any Phoenix Coyotes and Phila­ amount of oxygen in the blood. sent of the Editor-In-Chief. SHPE meets 6:30 p.m. every faster than subjects who breathed Opinions expressed within are not neces­ sarily those of The Triangle. The Triangle Is other Wednesday at 5051 regular air. published Fridays during the academic MacAlister Hall. Its next meeting “There wasn’t any significant year except during examination and vaca­ is on Oct. 15. difference that anybody could tion periods. The Triangle is published hang their hat on,” said Dr. biweekly In the summer. The Triangle's only source of income is Alfred Bove, co-author of the advertising; funding from the University Is study and a physician for the not accepted. Philadelphia 76ers. The Triangle Is free to members of the The first controlled study of Drexel community, but distribution Is limit­ Committee hyperbaric oxygen therapy, pub­ ed to one copy per reader. Neiman Marcus is coming to town! Subscriptions may be ordered for $40 for lished in the Sept. 15 issue of the one year; display and classified advertising American Journal of Sports Inquiries may be placed at the addresses or continues Medicine, examined 32 patients phone numbers above. ages 15 to 55 who were treated We are interested in seeing for ankle sprains at Temple’s Decem ber *97 graduates from search for Center for Sports Medicine in Marlton, N.J. Business/Liberal Arts/Retail majors. Researchers graded each Come to our information session to learn COE dean patient’s injury by severity, with swelling measured in a bucket of more about Buyer/Sales Management C olophon Engineering dean from page I water. opportunities. Hardwara Patients spent three 90- The Triangle is produced using Apple Macintosh and Power Macintosh comput­ at Drexel has been vacant since minute sessions breathing ers. Images are digitized w ith a Nikon July 1 when Dean Y.T. Shah left through a mask in the pressur­ To be pre-selected for an interview, Coolscan negative scanner and an Apple to become senior vice provost for ized chamber, which resembles a Color OneScanner. Proofs are printed to a attend the MAM)ATORY Hewlett-Packard LaserJet 4si MX; final research and graduate studies jet cockpit. Half breathed pure boards are printed to a Hewlett-Packard and chief research officer at oxygen and half inhaled normal infomiation session/analytical exercise. LaserJet 4MV. Clemson University. air. Neither participants nor Softwara Until a permanent dean is Bring resume, calculator & Page layout is designed using QuarkXPress. trainers knew which patient Images are prepared for reproduction found, chemical engineering received which treatment. scratch paper. using Adobe Photoshop and Ofoto. Text is professor Raj Mutharasan is act­ “We were hoping it would set in Adobe Minion and Myriad typefaces. ing as the interim engineering work,” said co-author and ortho­ dean. pedic surgeon Dr. Paul Looking forward to seeing you tlaere!! Electrical and computer engi­ Marchetto. Instead, all of the neering professor Nihat Bilgutay patients took about two weeks to October 8th 6:00pm heads the engineering dean heal. MacAlister Hall Room 5051 o search committee, which is com­ The chamber was loaned to Recycle The Triangle. posed of seven faculty members, the researchers by Hyox Systems two alumni and one student. Ltd. of Aberdeen, Scotland. A The Triangle • October 3,1997 National Student accused of killing three, wounding six Gina Holland had been wronged,” the chief ently shot at random. Mary T. Woodham, 50, at her tree and crossing a neighbor’s ASSOCIATED PRESS said. “He was shooting anybody he home, about a mile from the yard as he drove away. PEARL, Miss. — A teenager Woodham was arrested as he could find. He shot at me and hit school. In his yearbook photo, a seri- stabbed his mother to death, drove away in his dead mother’s the staircase,” said Mark The names of the victims, ous-looking Woodham has then went to school Wednesday car and was charged with murder Wilkerson, a freshman. "I saw including Woodham’s former shoulder-length brown hair and with a rifle under his trench coat and aggravated assault. fragments going everywhere.” girlfriend, were not released. wire-rimmed glasses. and opened fire, killing his for­ The shootings at Pearl High Students ran screaming into Three of the wounded stu­ “He always seemed polite, like mer girlfriend and another stu­ School began about 8:10 a.m. as classrooms and dived for cover. dents were hospitalized. One, an a nice guy,” said Courtni dent and wounding six others, buses arrived. “People were laying every­ 18-year-old, was in serious con­ Thomas, a senior. “It doesn’t police said. An expressionless Woodham, where bleeding,” said freshman dition. seem real that anyone like him Luke Woodham, 16, was dis­ a sophomore, entered the large Nathan Henry. “I didn’t hear Slade said Mary Woodham, would do this.” traught over a breakup with his commons area just inside the cries. Everybody looked dead.” who apparently had divorced her The school has no armed girlfriend. Police Chief Bill Slade front door of the imposing Casey King, a ninth-grader, husband about a year ago, was guards or weapons searches of said, choking back tears as he school and immediately walked said Woodham talked to at least believed to have died about three students. talked about the rampage in this up to his former girlfriend, wit­ one of the wounded. “He apolo­ hours before the shootings. “We had no idea that anything town of 22,000 people just out­ nesses said. gized, said he was sorry and was Neighbors said the teenager’s like this would ever take place at side Jackson. Police said she was the first to not shooting anybody in particu­ mother usually took him to any of our schools,” school “He gave us a statement, and fall, followed by three young men lar,” King said. school, but on Wednesday he got board attorney Arthur Jernigan his manifesto was that he felt he and four young women appar­ Police later found the body of into the car by himself, hitting a Jr. said. Transplanting testicle cells to brain may ease Parkinson's Malcolm Ritter causing such difficulties as plants in rats, he and colleagues made the treated rats turn about Sertoli cells pump out a lot of ASSOCIATED PRESS slowed movement, rigidity and injected the animals with a toxin 50 times per half-hour, less than substances, and it’s not clear NEW YORK — D octors tremors. It is caused by lack of a that damaged dopamine-con­ a quarter of their rate before which one, or which combina­ might be able to treat Parkin­ chemical messenger called taining brain cells on one side of surgery. The placebo-treated rats tion, was helping the rats, son’s disease someday by trans­ dopamine in part of Ae brain. the brain. showed no reduction in turning Sandberg said. planting cells from pig testicles It can be treated with drugs, That left the rats impaired on rates. Serge Przedborski, a neurolo­ into a patient’s brain. but scientists are looking for one side of their bodies: When And when rats were dangled gist who does animal studies of In a study reported in the something better. Some are rats were given a drug called apo- by their tails, the treated animals Parkinson’s at the Columbia October issue of the journal studying transplants of fetal cells morphine, they tended to move twisted to the right about 60 per­ University College of Physicians Nature Medicine, rats with a into the brain to produce dopa­ in circles. And when they were cent of the time rather than and Surgeons in New York, said Parkinson’s-like condition mine, but that raises questions of dangled by the tail, they tended about 80 percent before surgery. the paper makes a strong case showed a marked easing of ethics and limited supply. The to twist more to the right than A normal rate would would be that Sertoli cells might be useful symptoms after they got trans­ new work focused on Sertoli the left. about 50 percent. No significant in treating Parkinson’s. plants of testicular cells from cells, which normally nourish the Then the researchers trans­ change appeared in the other Scientists will have to be con­ other rats. Pigs would be the cells that will grow into sperm. planted rat Sertoli cells to some animals. vinced that boosting a patient’s leading candidate to supply cells The cells also pump out a sub­ of the animals and gave placebo When researchers examined own dopamine cells, raUier than for people, said one of the stance that keeps the immune transplants to others. The Sertoli the brains of treated rats, they transplanting new ones, will pro­ researchers, Paul R. Sandberg of system at bay, which would be an cells sharply reduced the abnor­ found the transplants had made vide a durable solution, he said. the University of South Florida advantage if they were trans­ mal behavior caused by the brain nerve cells sprout fibers contain­ That’s because the disease College of Medicine in Tampa. planted from animals to people, damage. ing a key ingredient for making process might eventually extin­ Parkinson’s affects some Sandberg said. By eight weeks after the dopamine. That was apparently guish dopamine cells that benefit 500,000 to 1 million Americans, To test the effect of trans­ surgery, the apomorphine test easing the shortfall of dopamine. from the Sertoli cells, he said.

The Triangle is currently looking for staff piiotographers to shoot, develop, and digitize pictures. Photo assignments are nfiade weekly at The Triangle's staff meeting in 3010 MacAlister Hall. In addition to shooting assignments for news, entertainment, and sports, photographers are welcome to work on special piioto features. Bring your own camera or use one of ours. The Triangle has its own darkroom to develop film and equipment to digitally scan the photographs. If you are interested in taking pictures for The Triangle, come to the weekly meeting held every Monday at 5:30 p.m., or send e-mail to [email protected]. It's easy to join the staff, so stop by The Triangle office.

Our next staff meeting: Monday, October 6 3010 MacAlister Hall 5:30 p.m. IHE TRIANGLE As always, free pizza and drinks will be available. Old and new members are welcome. National The Triangle • October 3,1997 CIA on recruiting trail at campuses Tony Mecia “You have to be a certain kind COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE of person (for covert operations) CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — a person who can, say, live in Joshua Barnhardt, a computer Saudi Arabia for four or five science major at UNC Chapel years,” Burton said. “It’s not just Hill, attended a career fair this a 40-hour-a-week job. You basi­ week hoping to find an intern­ cally have to live a cover,” ship in the computer industry. Burton said the CIA receives Instead, he found the Central 250,000 resumes a year. Burton Intelligence Agency. would not say how many people “I was sort of surprised to see work for the CIA or how many them recruiting here,” said he hopes to hire this year. Barnhardt, a freshman from Headquartered outside Wash­ Spencer. “It’s probably on the ington, the CIA collects and ana­ top of my list,” he said after pick­ lyzes information from foreign ing up information and chatting countries and disseminates it to with a CIA representative. U.S. policy-makers. Under direc­ After a several-year hiring tion of Congress and the presi­ freeze, the nation’s premier spy­ dent, it also undertakes covert ing agency is looking for experts action, though CIA literature in computer science, electrical says that side of the agency is not engineering and foreign lan­ as glamorous as movies and tele­ guages. To find them, representa­ vision portray. tive are going where the intelli­ Flora Riley, the director of gence is: top universities. placement and employer rela­ Years ago, the CIA primarily tions at Clemson, said the CIA sought students with economics began recruiting there two or or political science backgrounds. three years ago following a long But 50 years into Ae spying busi­ hiatus. ness, the agency is redefining Since then, student interest itself in world where the has risen. Communist bloc is no longer the “They’ve watched all the spy No, 1 menace. mysteries, and I guess it’s intrigu­ Students such as Barnhardt ing to some of them,” Riley said. top the CIA’s recruiting hit list. William Currin, director of “Anything having to do with Wake Forest’s office of career APPEARING AT: technology, we’ve got our finger services, said that the CIA inter­ on the pulse,” said Clay Burton, a viewed 26 students at his univer­ THEATER OF THE LIVING ARTS 10/4 CIA personnel representative. sity last year and that students Still, there’s room for a few had a “strong interest” in the spies. organization. Entertainment CQB Connection

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For more information visit our Internet Site at http://cab.student-org.drexel.edu The Triangle • October 3,1997 Regional Pittsburgh mayor sues to block electric merger GeofBecker save $1 billion over 10 years by suit, Murphy invoked the image Murphy, and his reason for redevelopment projects in ASSOCIATED PRESS combining staffs and reducing of President Theodore Roosevelt, suing, was his allegation that the Pittsburgh — 344 acres in all of PITTSBURGH — Mayor the need to build more electric- who won his trust-busting repu­ two companies conspired to keep commercial, residential and Tom Murphy wants to pull the power plants. The merger awaits tation by breaking up coal, rail­ electric rates high at two redevel­ industrial development — and to plug on the proposed merger of the approval of the state Public road and meatpacking combines opment projects in his city. contribute $2.5 million to pay for two electric companies. Utility Commission and the in the early 1900s. Allegheny Power agreed to lines and other power infrastruc­ The mayor announced that Federal Energy Regulatory Particularly irksome to supply low-cost electricity to two ture at the sites, Murphy said. city attorneys filed a lawsuit Commission. Monday in U.S. District Court to Allegheny Power said in a block the pending merger of statement that Murphy’s actions Allegheny Power System Inc. were “unjustified” and said it was and DQE Inc., the respective “committed to a pro-competitive parent companies of West Penn merger,” but declined to com­ Power Co. and Duquesne Light ment on the details of the law­ Co. suit. If the two companies merged, In a separate statement, DQE Murphy said, the resulting com­ also said the merger “will have pany would monopolize electric significant benefits and will be service in violation of federal pro-competitive,” but did not antitrust laws and hinder the elaborate. city’s ability to attract new jobs. The city has already formally “In my mind, this is very objected to the merger to state important for Pittsburgh and all and federal agencies. of western Pennsylvania because “What this suit will do is put I think utility costs is a major the same issue not just in front of part of us being competitive,” the state commission, but also Murphy said. before the federal courts,” said The parent companies Irving Popowsky, Pennsylvania’s announced April 7 they plan to consumer advocate. merge, which they said would In announcing the city’s law-

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Sponsored by the Drexel University Career Management Center The Triangle • October 3,1997 Regional Delp talks to media, declines to discuss charges Peter Durantine eight months. And everybody law, which unfortunately is where Senate implications. in Harrisburg. ASSOCIATED PRESS I’m sure goes through tough it’s going to be played out.” According to grand jury docu­ One of the women, Alisha HARRISBURG — A state times in their life. Right now is Senate Leader Robert Jube- ments, on Aug. 31, 1996, Delp Walstrum, said Delp supplied senator charged with hiring a one of those times for me.” lirer, R-Blair, and Republican and an aide hired two Platinum beer on the boat and later flashed teenage prostitute and buying A 19-year-old prostitute who Leader F. Joseph Loeper of Escorts women for an afternoon his Senate identification when her liquor with $50 of taxpayers’ worked for Platinum Escorts told Delaware County, have said it is boat trip on the Susquehanna they arrived at a bar and the money pledged Monday to keep the grand jury Delp paid her to premature to discuss potential River and a night of bar-hopping doorman questioned her age. working as a legislator while his have sex with him and bought case is carried through the her “Alabama Slammers,” a courts. drink of gin, S6uthern Comfort, A sweating and nervous Sen. amaretto and orange juice. TRANSPORTATION Dan Delp made a brief statement Delp, who has denied any to a bank of television news cam­ wrongdoing, faces up to four eras and reporters in the Capitol years in prison and $10,000 in & BUSINESS rotunda, then walked back inside fines if convicted. With the the Senate chamber without rotunda balconies filled with answering any questions. curious staff members and lob­ MAJORS Pennsylvania Attorney Gen­ byists, Delp called the news cov­ eral Mike Fisher last week erage of the accusations inaccu­ charged Delp with three misde­ rate but declined to offer any MANAGEMENT TRAINEES meanors after a six-month grand specifics. jury investigation into prostitu­ “Things are certainly not the tion at an escort service that way they’ve been reported and It not only looks good on your resume, it will get your management operated in the York County purported,” said Delp, a first Republican’s district. time officeholder who faces re- career started with a nu^or transportation company. “Without a doubt, the last election next year. “I would hope couple of months have been very that people that elected me and RPS, Inc., a $1.5 billion International market leader in the small package tough for me,” the 32-year-old placed their trust in me would shipping industry, has opportunities for Part-Time supervisors in our Phila­ legislator said. “I have had some continue to trust me as this issue problems over the last seven or now plays itself out in a court of delphia terminal. We view this as entry-level management, therefore we prefer candidates who do not have second jobs. We do require an indi­ vidual to be currently attending a college or university to obtain their BA/ BS or Master's degree if they have not akeady done so. This is an excellent way to finance your education, provide yourself and possible family with benefits, as well as prepare you for full-time management and sales posi­ tions after graduation. If you are qualified and have an interest in our excit­ ing company, please send a letter and resume to our local manager.

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Ttie following positions must be held by students with the corresponding class rank: Senior class Representative Pre-Junior Class Representative Freshman Class President Freshman Legislative Representative Feel the full-throttle atmosphere of an aggressive starU-up company that is a little different. (O.K.. a lot different.) Our corporation has 5.000 employees and over $600 million in The following positions must be held current sales. You'll leverage a history of communication break­ be students from the corresponding colleges: throughs that began with the original Victrola machine (ask your College of Infor. Science & Technology Representative parents), and now spans the latest developments in space and fo r you. ground-based intelligent communications technologies for com­ College of Design Arts Dean Physical Education & Athletic Center mercial and public sector markets. Our division’s location is also • Wed., Oct. 0th, 10:00am - 3:00pm College of Engineering Dean very smart, on the waterfront acrose from Philadelphia's historic Penn's Landing. The remaining two pp$ltion$; Residential Life Rep. (M ust live in a residence hall) WWW. careermosaic. com/cm/L3/ Commuter Representative (Must be a commuter) m tr y level for new graduates. or contact... Patricia A. Spruill. 1 Federal Street, Election applications will be available starting Monday Oct. 6 at the • Computer Engineering Camden, NJ 06103 • voice [609] 333-4-203 USGA meeting at 7:00pm in MacAlister room 2020. Applications • Computer Science •fax[609]333-3720 • e-mailpatriciaii.spruill®lmco.com may picked up in the USGA office or Student activities office after • Electrical Engineering 3 Lntry level positions exist with both direct assignments Oct. 6. All applications are due Oct. 14 by 4:30pm in the Student IP th e g- or two-year rotational opportunities. All candidates activities office or under the USGA office door. All applicants must for the right fit. must be US citizens. Equal Opportunity Employer attend the information session on Oct. 8 at 5:00 in the USGA office. • Software g. C or C++ programming experience and a comfort level with UNIX would be cool. o • Systems -C! Elections will be held You're ideal with experience in recjuirements analysis, ( ® plus integration and test. on Oct. 23 8 24 • Hardware s communications For more information, stop by the USGA office in the Creese center, If you have digital electronics experience—perfect. Communication Systems-East or E-mail James Ryan, Student Provost [email protected] 8 National The Triangle • October 3,1997 Bishops say gay kids need love In a surprising announcement. Catholic no way abandons Catholic doc­ trine. It states clearly that genital bishops place love over church doctrine. sexual activity between same-sex partners is immoral and that the David Briggs moral theology at Catholic letter is not to be understood “as ASSOCIATED PRESS University in Washington, D.C. an endorsement of what some NEW YORK — United States Curran had said homosexual acts would call a ‘homosexual Catholic bishops are advising are sometimes morally accept­ lifestyle.’” It draws a distinction, parents of gay children to put able. however, between homosexual love and support for their sons But the mounting turmoil and orientation and sexual activity. and daughters before church pain felt by Catholics torn In the letter, the bishops urge doctrine that condemns homo­ between church teaching and parents to encourage their chil­ sexual activity. love for their gay children dren to lead a chaste life and, at In a groundbreaking pastoral prompted several bishops to times, to challenge aspects of letter, the bishops say homosex­ request guidance from the bish­ their children’s lives they find ual orientation is not freely cho­ ops’ Committee on Marriage and objectionable. sen and parents must not reject Family. The committee began But the bishops also tell par­ their gay children in a society full studying the conflict in 1992. ents that church rules should not of rejection and discrimination. Five years later, the bishops in be enforced at the expense of “All in ail, it is essential to their letter describe parents who their child. recall one basic truth. God loves suffer guih, shame and loneliness “First, don’t break off contact; every person as a unique individ­ because their children are gay don’t reject your child,” the bish­ ual. Sexual identity helps to and report that “a shocking ops say. Instead, they say, create define the unique person we number” of homosexual youth an atmosphere in which a child are,” the bishops say. “God does are rejected by their families and would be willing to discuss his or not love someone any less simply end up on the streets. her sexual orientation because he or she is homosexu­ The parental rejection, along “This child, who has always al.” with the other pressures faced by been God’s gift to you, may now The document, titled “Always young gays and lesbians, place be the cause of another gift: your Our Children,” was approved by them at greater risk of drug family becoming more honest, the Administrative Board of the abuse and suicide, the bishops respectful and supportive,” the National Conference of Catholic said. bishops said. Bishops early in September and Why the form of a pastoral Among their recommenda­ released Tuesday, with an early letter from the church’s spiritual tions, the bishops urge parents to copy provided to The Associated leaders? “do everything possible to con­ Press. “Primarily to get them to tinue demonstrating love for In the last two decades, with accept the fact that their son or your child.” That includes almost every other church strug­ daughter is gay or lesbian, and remaining open to the possibility gling over gay ordination or that their child was not damned that even after counseling, a efforts to ease condemnatory forever,” Bishop Joseph Imesch child may still be “struggling to church doctrine, the Roman of Joliet, in., chairman of the ... accept a basic homosexual Catholic Church has stood firm, Committee on Pastoral Practices, orientation.” teaching that homosexual activi­ said in an interview. The document also encour­ ty is morally wrong. The Vatican, in the new ages priests to welcome homo­ In two high profile cases in the Catholic Catechism and in the sexuals into parishes, to help 1980s, the Vatican disciplined pronouncements of Pope John establish or promote support Seattle Archbishop Raymond Paul II, has staunchly held that groups for parents of gay chil­ Hunthausen for allowing a group sex is morally acceptable only dren and to let people know of gay Catholics to meet at St. within the bounds of heterosexu­ from the pulpit and elsewhere James Cathedral and revoked al marriage. that they are willing to talk about Charles Curran’s license to teach And the U.S. bishops’ letter in homosexual issues.

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ATSiT The Triangle • October 3,1997 National 11 Study: condom giveaways don't raise sexual activity Frank Eitman an excerpt of the study that principal investigator of the 60.8 percent of New York stu­ jointly by the Academy for Edu­ ASSOCIA-^D PRESS appears in Tuesday’s editions of study. “It’s true that while there dents said they used a condom cational Development, the NEW YORK — Students the American Journal of Public is only a modest effect, we have during their most recent sexual Hunter ("ollege ('enter on AIDS, given access to free condoms in Health. found that making condoms intercourse, compared with 55.5 Drugs and Community Health high school were no more likely New York City’s schools in available doesn’t do harm and percent of the Chicago students and the NYU School of Educa­ to engage in sex than counter­ 1991 became the first in the does some good.” who answered. tion’s Department of Health parts who did not have free con­ nation to hand out condoms. A total of 7,119 students from The study was conducted Studies. traceptives avainable, according Since then, many other cities 12 randomly selected New York to a study of nearly 13,000 stu­ have followed suit. In 1994, the high schools were questioned, as dents in New York and Chicago, Board of Education amended its were 5,738 students from 10 high The study also found that the policy, allowing parents to notify schools in Chicago, which does free distribution had a modest the school if they did not want not have a free condom giveaway but significant increase on stu­ their children to receive con­ program. dents’ condom use. doms. It found that free condoms or “The fear that making con­ “This is a very low cost AIDS not, the numbers of students in doms available will increase sex­ prevention program,” said Sally both cities admitting to sexual ual activity, a primary political Guttmacher, an associate profes­ activity were virtually equal: 59.7 obstacle to making condoms sor at New York University percent in New York and 60.1 available to high school students, School of Education’s Depart­ percent in Chicago. appears to be unfounded,” says ment of Health Studies and the But researchers noted that Fertility drugs approved STA Travel offers student Lauran Neergaard needle that went deep into a made from human urine. 215-382-2928 ASSOCIATED PRESS discounts on woman’s muscles, therapy the Neither Serono nor Organon domestic 3730 Walnut St.. Philadelphia. PA 19104 WASHINGTON — Infertile woman couldn’t administer her­ announced a price for the women trying to become preg­ self. Last year, Serono introduced recombinant FSH. Follistim will travel, too www.sta-travel.com nant got new help Tuesday, as a skin-deep FSH version that be on pharmacy shelves next the FDA approved two brands of allowed women to give them­ week; Serono’s Gonal-F will STA Travel... the first genetically engineered the world’s largest selves the injections, with a much reach pharmacies by mid- STA TRAVEL fertility hormone. smaller needle — but it still was October. student travel organization. We've been there. Serono Laboratories’ Gonal-F and Organon Inc.’s Follistim are bioengineered versions of “folli- cle-stimulating hormone” or FSH, a hormone that stimulates the ovaries to produce an egg every month. FA LL 1997 Until now, FSH has been List of Courses for which Diagnostic Coaching is available.. made from the urine of post­ menopausal women. Serono College of Arts & Science alone processes over 300 million Anthropology Chemistry ENG AS Mathematics Mathematics Physics liters of urine annually, to meet ANTH 101 CHEM 230 ENG MCS 110 MCS 131 MCS 200 PHYS 112 the demand for infertility treat­ ANTH 110 CHEM 241 ENG MCS 221 MCS 161 MCS 210 PHYS 185 ment, said company spokes­ Biology CHEM 242 ENG PHY 111 MCS 170 MCS 261 PHYS 186 woman Gina Celia. BIO 102 CHEM 243 ENG PHY 201 MCS 171 MCS 262 PHYS 187 But as the amount of donated BIO 480 CHEM 244 CHM ENG 120 MCS 172 MCS 270 PHYS 188 C hem istry CHEM 245 urine fluctuated year to year, the H istory MCS 181 MCS 279 PHYS 211 CHEM 101 CHEM 251 All courses MCS 182 supply of the infertility drug MCS 311 PHYS 281 CHEM102 CHEM 252 Mathematics MCS 183 MCS 384 PHYS 282 couldn’t always keep up with CHEM 103 CHEM 352 MCS 001 MCS 184 MCS 390 (All sections) demand, said Dr. Paul Gindoff, CHEM 111 CHEM 353 MCS 003 MCS 185 Philosophy Psychology director of George Washington CHEM 113 CHEM 430 MCS 101 MCS 186 PHIL 101 PSYCH 101 University’s reproductive CHEM 151 ENG AS MCS 121 MCS 187 Physics Sociology endocrinology clinic. CHEM 161 ENG AS 199 MCS 122 MCS 188 PHY103 SOC 101 The new recombinant, or CHEM 162 ENG AS 211 MCS 123 MCS 189 PHYS 111 SOC 250 genetically engineered, version ends that problem while also ensuring better purity and that College of Business and Administration every dose will be equally potent, Accounting Quant methods Economics Finance Prod. & Oper. mgmt. Gindoff said. ACCTG 111 BSTAT 201 ECON 201 FIN 321 POM 300 “That’s why I’m excited about ACCTG 115 BSTAT 202 ECON 202 Management POM E 311 it,” he said. “It’s going to be ACCTG 116 BSTAT 205 ECON 211 MGMT 330 POM 321 manufactured in a reliable fash­ ACCTG 321 BSTAT 211 ECON E 211 M arketing ion so there’ll always be a supply ACCTG 341 BSTAT 261 ECON 212 MKTG 301 on hand.” Law BSTAT 311 ECON E 212 MKTG 311 Agreed Serono’s Celia: “With BLAW 201 BSTAT E-313 Finance the recombinant products, we BLAW 311 BSTAT 601 FIN 301 can manufacture these drugs BSTAT 602 FIN 311 without being dependent on the natural substance, that being College of Engineering human urine.” C hem ical Civil Electrical M echanical M echanical The two new brands of CHE 201 CIV 200 ECE E 321 MEM 111 MEM 335 recombinant FSH are indistin­ CHE 202 CIV 201 ECE P 411 MEM 202 MEM 340 guishable, experts said. CHE 301 E lectrical ECE S 211 MEM 210 MEM 361 The American Society for CHE 307 ECE 211 ECE S 212 MEM 220 Reproductive ledicine esti­ CHE 319 ECE 212 ECE S 213 MEM 230 mates that 5 . llion couples CHE 320 ECE C 211 ECE S 421 MEM 310 experience infertility each year. CHE 424 ECE C 221 ECE S 441 MEM 320 FSH is a main treatment, both CHE 426 ECE C 311 ECE S 490 MEM 330 for women who need ovulation induced and for women with other types of infertility who L anguages must produce eggs for in-vitro German Italian Japanese Spanish fertilization. GER 101 ITAL 101 JAPN 102 SPAN 101 The average woman gets daily GER 102 ITAL 102 JAPN 103 SPAN 102 FSH injections for 10 d a p , GER 103 ITAL 103 JAPN 201 SPAN 103 although treatment varies with JAPN 202 SPAN 201 the degree of infertility, Gindoff said. UPDATE NEXT WEEK Each ampule of hormone used — a number that varies from 12 M ORE TO C O M E ... to more than 20 — costs between $35 and $70, he said. Older FSH treatment required painful injections with a long 12 National/World The Triangle • October 3,1997 Drinking major cause of Russian deaths U. of Calif, Mitchtll Landsberg or France nearly 9 out of 10 men standards turned into a free fall Russian man could expect to live ASSOCIATED PRESS aged 20 will be expected to sur­ in the early 1990s, in the first only to age 58. considers MOSCOW — Russians are vive to 60 years,” he added. years after the breakup of the The figures for women, who drinlcing themselves to death at a Leon and his British col­ Soviet Union and the chaos that drink and smoke much less, were rate rarely seen in any society, a leagues teamed up with Russia’s resulted from the transition from far better but still well below cutting SAT team of Russian, British and Center of Demography and a command economy to a free American and Western Euro­ French researchers said Tuesday. Human Ecology and France’s market. pean standards. Their findings, released at a National Institute for Demo­ Leon and other researchers A Russian researcher, Sergei admissions conference here, were the latest graphic Studies to issue a sheaf of said the sharp decline in the Zakharov of the Center for in a sobering series of scientific reports at the conference on 1990s can only be explained by Demography and Human Ecol­ and medical findings about Tuesday. an increase in alcohol consump­ ogy, provided the one bright criteria Russian mortality to be issued There is nothing new in the tion, especially in heavy, binge note of the conference, reporting this year. But researchers said notion that a love of alcohol is at drinking. that preliminary data show a they also found some signs of the root of many social problems Although studies elsewhere sharp upswing in Russian life COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE hope in recent data showing a in Russia, and drinking has obvi­ have shown the health benefits of expectancy between 1995 and BERKELEY, Calif.— A new sharp rise in Russian life ously played a significant role in moderate drinking, Leon said the this year. report from University of expectancy. public health. Russian experience is far differ­ Still unreleased data for 1996 California faculty and adminis­ The latest reports differed The reports issued Tuesday ent, characterized by such heavy will show that life expectancy for trators says UC’s affirmative from previous findings in the differed from some previous drinking that many people die of men grew by two years, to 60, action ban could reduce His­ emphasis they put on alcohol as ones in the distinction they drew alcohol poisoning or alcohol- and that women gained one year, panic enrollment by as much as the primary cause of a shocking between the crisis of the past few induced heart attacks. bringing their average life span 70 percent by the 1998 fall decline in life expectancy in years and a broader decline in The researchers said they to 73, he said. semester. Russia in the early 1990s. Russian health over the past 30 found that deaths from heart dis­ He added that the very same The task force presented its That decline, particularly years, and in the emphasis they ease in Russia are higher on trend appears to be continuing in report to UC Board of Regents among men, “is the steepest and placed on binge drinking as the Saturdays, Sundays and Mon­ 1997. today, and said the UC system most severe ever documented most serious cause of the prob­ days an on other days of the The reasons for the upturn should reassess its policies and anywhere in the world,” said lems. week, suggesting that people are remain uncertain, he said, but possibly cut out Scholastic researcher David Leon of the Russian health has been grad­ dropping dead after weekend one theory offers an appropriate­ Aptitude Test scores as criteria London School of Hygiene and ually declining since the mid- binges. ly grim coda to the crisis: It is for admission. Tropical Medicine. 1960s, and researchers have laid The researchers pointed to a possible, Zakharov said, that The report says, “Numerous “Taking Russian mortality blame on a web of factors, sharp increase in life expectancy Russians are living longer be­ studies have questioned the rates as they are today, a man including alcohol and tobacco during a Soviet anti-drinking cause the heaviest drinkers and SAT’s ability to predict college aged 20 has only just above a 1 in consumption and a declining campaign in the mid-1980s. smokers have already killed success for minority students. It 2 chance of surviving to age 60, health care system. Since then, life expectancy has themselves, leaving behind those seems to have been a barrier for while in countries such as Britain That gradual decline in health plum m eted until, in 1995, a who are more moderate. eligibility in UC for disadvan­ taged students since it was incor­ porated into admission require­ ments in 1968.” Instead, the task force says high school grade point averages should be coupled with alterna­ tive exams to determine “acade­ mic prowess,” and a simulation showed it would also raise Hispanics’ UC eligibility by 59 percent. The report showed overall eli­ gibility for other high school graduates also increased, from 12.3 percent to 16.9 percent. FALCONS SOCCER

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F R I D A l ^ COVER ALL NIGHT 5PIVk9PM PENNY DRINKS 5PM-9PM 1143 N. Delaware Ave. • 423.8116 CCKV ALI oF tHe: ^ W L E S S ^ AOS ANP A?ncL£S APoUT S E X f AMP PEFc^e ditorial 1 L tT H 'M l O c K AT iT.... / pim on ------Page 14 Octobers, 1997

Anh Dang Editor-in-Chief THETMANGU Editorial Board Noah Addis Photo Editor Patricia O'Brien Eminence Grise Jonathan Poet Editor-at-Large Letters to the Editor which addressed the situation. I all involved to develop a perma­ PVCA president suggested a meeting concerning nent solution to this recurring explains position the increased enrollment at problem. We, the community, Drexel and how that might affect feel that we are entitled to enjoy Editor: the relationship between the stu­ our homes without disruption by Civil Solutions Recently you may have heard dents and the community, espe­ noise or any other disturbance rumors that the Powelton Village cially in relation to both on- and and should be able to sleep at Civic Association (PVCA) was The Powelton Village Civic Association has off-campus parties and other dis­ night without being disturbed. suing Drexel University. That is turbances. A month later there If there is a need for live bands again displayed its power over Drexel by seeking not true. was no response to my letter. at parties, why can’t these func­ a court injunction to force fraternities to elim- You may also have heard that I called Drexel and left a mes­ tions be held on campus? There intate parties with live bands. It is not necessarily PVCA was suing certain fraterni­ sage asking if my letter had been are areas where almost any level a bad thing that the Powelton Village is seeking a ties and Drexel radio station received, but once again, no one of noise would not bother any­ WKDU. This also is not true. responded. Feeling that we were quieter neighborhood for its residents. But at the one, such as in the Quad. We are The truth is that upon discov­ being totally ignored, I contacted not anti-student. We are not same time, it is unfortunate for the fraternities ering that certain fraternities our attorney and asked what he anti-fraternity. Many of our that they must sacrifice live bands at their par­ were planning parties — with live would suggest as a method to neighbors are students and par­ ties. bands — for the weekend of Sept. insure peace and quiet in our ents of students and we have a 25-27, neighbors who reside near homes. As for Drexel’s involvement, the University has good relationship with them. these fraternities called me and He said that since we did not Many are employees of Drexel. no choice but to respond quickly and fairly to all asked what could be done to pre­ receive a response to our letter or Many are landlords who are correspondence from the PVCA. It is unavoid­ vent loud noise coming from phone calls, that we could take a happy to rent to Drexel students. able that the University is at the mercy of a small these fraternities that would dis­ vote of the Executive Board of This particular situation turb the neighbors’ peace and PVCA to approve filing for an civic group. But since the PVCA is one of the involved fraternities only because quiet. Many neighbors, at various injunction against Drexel, certain they were the people planning city’s most powerful civic associations, and any locations, have had to endure fraternities, and WKDU. We met parties at this given time. It could plans the University makes to change the face of similar events for many years. and voted to do so. WKDU had very well have been a party the campus — projects such as the proposed This is not peculiar to fraternities planned a live band event at advertised in a private home — noise also occurs in housing “33rd and Arch;” no specific building of a new dorm — will be fail under rented by students. The action located off campus directly in the location was noted. would have been the same as long their scrutiny. The PVCA wants to see that community. History has proven Our attorney contacted as neighbors would disturbed. Drexel is a concerned neighbor. And so far, with that some of these parties have Drexel’s attorney and at some We look forward to a continu­ gone from early afternoon until its delayed response to the fraternity party issue, point someone decided that these ing relationship with the students the early morning hours of the particular parties with live bands Drexel has not shown it cares. at Drexel. next day. should be canceled. Vaughn Cook I had sent a letter to Drexel The injunction was put aside President, Powelton Village University dated Aug. 19, 1997 in hopes that we may meet with Civic Association

Chris P uzak: D istorting the M edium Annoying people can be found all over Philly I am not one to com­ ever been a more incompetent sales force, Crack Street” special who would do those And what about the homeless people of plain, but quite hon­ I don’t know of one. I wish narcotics were subtle handoffs of cocaine in broad day­ Philadelphia? You’d think that people who estly I think half the legal, if only so I could complain to the light? You didn’t see them yapping up a ostensibly have nothing to do all day could population of Philadel­ Better Business Bureau about the people storm. And who is it that suffers because of think of something else to say besides “Got phia should be thrown who are hired to run drugs in this city. these talkative drug dealers? The junkies, any change. Mister?” The shrieking and head first into a wood A few weeks ago I was down at the that’s who. Why should some pathetic babbling is a nice touch sometimes, but it chipper. Blame it on my Trocadero, and while 1 was waiting in line, loser sell internal organs for some heroin gets old really fast. old age, blame it on my some guy came over and tried to sell drugs and be forced to listen to some dealer who 1 mean, sometimes I’m tempted to give bad hair days, but I just to me and everyone near me. Of course, wants to talk philosophy first. It’s an out­ people money for the train ride home, but seem to be really annoyed with a lot of the guy couldn’t just ask us if we wanted to rage, I tell you. it seems they forget their change every day, people lately. buy drugs. And speaking of pathetic losers, what so obviously I can’t afford to do that. First up on my list of people to be exe­ He had to go into some half-hour spiel about those people on South Street? Every They’ve actually given me dirty looks cuted is that guy from Alpha Pi Lambda about whether we believe today’s music time I go down there to buy CDs, I have to when I said I didn’t have any money on who sent out a mass e-mail to the entire has any sort of spiritual vibe to it. He also wade through a horde of freaks. I know 1 me. Well, I don’t care if they don’t believe Drexel community. If there’s anything I told us his life story and talked about the sound like somebody’s parent, but when I me, because I don’t believe that they’re hate, it’s junk e-mail. And I especially hate weather as well. see a bunch of malnourished, body going to buy anything with the money I it when the e-mail is nothing more than an By the time he actually got around to pierced, tattooed, bad poetry writing give them besides a big bottle of Jack attempt to get me to go to some lame web asking us if we wanted to buy drugs, I fig­ teenagers with a fake world-weary look on Daniels. page, and in the case of Alpha Pi Lambda, ure I could have grown my own marijua­ their faces, what am I supposed to say? • The list of people who annoy me goes really lame. I’m not sure if the whole na, smoked it all, and kicked the habit in “Hey, n Marilyn Manson T-shirt! Wow, on and on, but alas, I do not have the time theme of their rush events this year is the entire time it took for his little speech. you and the 50 million other people who to cover them all. That will have to wait for “Apple Pi: We have no friends,” but both-, Whatever happened to those drug deal­ have those T-shirts are really breaking another day. ering people like me over e-mail is no way ers in the After School Specials who said with society’s norms. Why don’t you go to find them. things like “Hey kid, want to buy some play some Rage Against The Machine Chris Puzak is a pre-junior majoring in information I also have a big problem with drugs? They’ll make you feel good,” or songs in your dad’s car to top off your act systems. He and his wood chipper should watch out Philadelphia’s drug dealers. If there has those guys on Dan Rather’s “Return to of rebellion?” for pregnant cops. The Triangle • October 3,1997 Opinion IS

D aniel Bahar: Com m entary Recent events highlight underlying issues O n Sept. 19, an unacceptable classi­ The issue certainly got the attention of racially-similar student groups in the sanje Triangle is the only independent paper on fied advertisement in The Triangle top decision-makers through the local areas. The plan was scrapped because of the campus, and it serves as a key check- generated a great deal of anger on news coverage and through several letters the controversy. According to several stu­ and-balance for student organizations and campus. Student groups, administrators that were faxe'd to the President’s office. dents close to USGA, Student Life officials the administration. Yes, it is a liberal paper and faculty members protested, meetings Official statements and leadership from then approached USGA to see if they that occasionally crosses the line and were held to voice students’ concerns, and the Vice President for University would take responsibility for the contro­ offends its readers. local news stations covered the controver­ Relations, the Senior Vice President for versial division of office space (it But, The Triangle is also the only orga­ sy. Triangle Editor-in-Chief Anh Dang Student Life and Administrative Services, wouldn’t). nization during the past two years that has issued an apology, promising to revise and the President were notably absent last Students also reacted negatively when effectively challenged the administration procedures for publication of classified week. Carol Smith, Senior Associate Dean of and the students. Students and adminis­ advertisements. Students and head of the Office of trators should recognize the value of The The controversy certainly represents Racial tension Diversity and Minority Affairs, was forced Triangle on a campus with very few inde­ students’ frustration with a specific adver­ Students’ reaction highlights the ongo­ to resign in July. Students questioned both pendent voices. When last did DrexeLink tisement and the people who allowed its ing concern that our campus is out-of- the action itself and the abrupt nature of challenge anybody? publication. touch on racial issues. Last spring, stu­ the move. These questions remain unan­ The events in recent weeks point to But beyond this immediate frustration, dents from many ethnic and minority stu­ swered. larger issues which our campus must there exist certain underlying tensions at dent organizations formed the Majority address. Student organizations and the Drexel. The roots and potential conse­ Leadership Council for this very reason — Censorship and retribution administration should cooperate in an quences of those tensions reach much far­ they viewed the Division for Student Life, It is distressing, however, that members open discussion and should take active ther than any specific incident. the Undergraduate Student Government of the administration are now threatening steps to improve the value that our campus Association, the Campus Activities Board, to censor The Triangle. The statement places on diversity. But in doing so, cam­ University response and the Student Activity Fee Allocation from the Division for Student Life last pus leaders should avoid actions that The Division for Student Life deserves Committee as insensitive to their needs week that “the University is reviewing its decrease the diversity of opinion and the credit for “feeling students’ pain” and for and not representative of their interests. relationship with The Triangle,” along number of legitimate student voices on providing the only sensitive response to Last year, racial tensions flared when with pressure from, various students and campus. the issue. It is surprising, however, that the Division for Student Life released a administrators to take away the newspa­ higher level officials in the University did plan for reallocating student organization per’s office space in MacAlister Hall indi­ Daniel Bahar is a senior majoring in International not take a position. offices in a manner that seemed to clump cates an overreaction to recent events. The area studies.

M ichael B usier: The Prolocutor Think the economy is good? It could be better i f we asked an economist to close his growth with rising unemployment). By the that not only must the demand side of the be even better?” Fortunately the answer is eyes and dream about ideal economic late 1970s, the term used to describe this equation be considered but also the supply yes. By continuing to reduce regulations conditibns, what do you suppose he was called stagflation. How did it end? side. Government began to deregulate prohibiting firms from entering new mar­ would say? He would probably answer that In the mid 1970s a small number of industries and allow new firms to enter kets, total supply will increase. This will he wished for very low inflation, very low economists began to realize that simply markets. In every case the result was vast continue to put downward pressure on unemployment, and strong economic controlling aggregate demand would not improvements in the quality of the prod­ prices (to hold dowi) inflation) and growth. Those are the exact conditions we reach the economic goals. Specifically, uct, large increases in the quantity avail­ upward pressure on output (to add growth have today. Are we dreaming? How did supply would not always respond to able, and lower prices. The increased com­ and new jobs). this happen? changes in demand unless incentives to do petition seemed to benefit almost every­ The other part would be to encourage Beginning in the early 1960s economists so existed. They further argued that long­ one. the creation of more investment capital. became convinced that they could reach term, permanent incentives that helped In 1981, Congress also heard the voice This would happen by fairly taxing all ideal economic conditions simply by con­ create capital for expansion would allow of the supply-siders. Tax rates were individuals in proportion to their income. trolling the total amount of goods and ser­ business to increase output in response to reduced significantly, particularly for those That means changing the progressive vices that each sector of the economy increased demand. They also said busi­ in the upper income brackets who create income tax system to a proportional (flat wished to purchase. They controlled nesses must be free from regulation when the investment capital for business. What rate) tax system. Politically, however, this “aggregate demand” by changing the they determined that entry into new mar­ happened? is probably impossible. amount the federal government purchased kets was apprppriate. The economy began to grow signifi­ The best alternative then is to reduce and by changing consumers’ purchases by The solution to the stagflation problem cantly. Inflation, which had peaked at over the number of tax brackets and make the varying the amount consumers paid in was to reduqe the tax burden on individu­ 13 percent in 1980, fell to under two per­ highest bracket (currently about 40 per­ taxes. Economists assumed that total out­ als who have sufficient income to more cent by 1984. Unemployment which cent) as low as possible. In 1981 the top put (aggregate supply) would always than provide for their immediate needs. reached about 10 percent in 1981, fell to bracket was 31 percent. While some may adjust to meet the changing demand. Did These are the people who earn far more about six percent. And then it got better. argue this is just another example of it work? than iLey spend and therefore save large Even though the highest tax rates “trickle down” economics, the facts indi­ No, it failed miserably. As the federal sums, which creates capital for expansion. increased in 1990 and again in 1993, the cate that when higher income individuals government changed demand, supply did Additionally, it was argued, government trend continued. Today with more indus­ have the ability to create investment capi­ not respond. Rather, the increased must remove the regulatory barriers that tries being deregulated and tax rates below tal, the economy will expand, business will demand resulted simply in rising prices. prohibit new firms from entering markets. historical highs, our economy continues to grow, inflation will be reduced and new This put upward pressure on wages which In other words, stop over-taxing the high operate in this dream-like environment of jobs will be created. That’s the dream we in turn discouraged firms from hiring income earners, and get the government low inflation, very low unemployment and all want. more people and increasing output. The off the back of business. strong sustainable growth, Thank you sup­ net result was rising prices (high inflation) By the Ijite 1970’s the voice of these ply-siders. Michael Busier teaches economics in the MBA pro­ and a stagnant economy (little or no economists began to be heard. They said The next question is, “Could conditions gram at Drexel.

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“Moderation in temper is always a virtue; but moderation in principle, is a species of vice.” D a teb o o k Thomas Paine Saturday

A Flick: Men In Black. 7p, 9;30p ▲ Cycling Trip to Valley Forge. Philadelphia Orchestra with ▲ Cheerleading Tryouts. 6:30- The Clay Studio presents an and 12m in Nesbitt Hall's Stein Meet at the Hagerty Library at conductor Walfgang Sawal- 9p at the PEAC. For more infor­ exhibition by John and Auditorium, Admission $2. 10a. Call Dr. Larson at (610) lisch and Erez Ofer on Violin. mation call 895-2033. Andrea Gill from the New York 543-8007 for more informa­ ▲ Basketball. Meet at courts 8p at the the Academy of * America's Walk for Diabetes College of Ceramics at the tion. Music, 1420 Locust Street. Call behind Calhoun Hall at 5p. held on Kelly Drive. Call 1-800- Alfred University. 5-9p. Runs 893-1955 for ticket infor­ Sponsored by Alpha Phi • Exhibition at the Tyler School DIABETES to participate. through Oct.26. 139 North mation. Omega. Call 895-2570 or of Arts. Runs through Oct 11, Admission free. Second Street. For more e-mail [email protected]. Tue-Sat, 10a-5p. Temple information call 925-3453. East Side Story. A documen­ * Bela Fleck, Edgar Meyer, and edu. Gallery, 45 North 2nd Street. tary on the history of film Mike Marshall will perform at Indiscretion at the William Call 782-2776 for more infor­ • The Clay Studio presents an making. International House at Keswick Theatre. 7:30p. Tickets Theater. 2p. Broad and Spruce mation. 3701 Chestnut Street. Admis­ exhibition by John and are $22.50. Call 572-7650. Streets. Call 546-STAGE for Andrea Gill from the New York • Indiscretion at the William sion $5.50. Call 895-6542 for more information. * Living Word Poetry Series. College of Ceramics at the Theater. 2p and 8p. Broad and more information. Sharon Olds and Major 21st Annual Russian Festival Alfred University. 5-9p. Runs Spruce Streets. Call 546-STAGE Jackson. 3p. Painted Bride Art at St. Michael's Russian Ortho­ through Oct.26. 139 North for more information. Center, 230 Vine Street. Admis­ dox Church at 4th Street and Second Street. For more sion $6, members $3. Fairmount Avenue. Call 627- information call 925-3453. 6148 for more information. Monday IBesda Wednesday 8 I Thursday Friday ▲ Drexel University Sailing ▲ Convocation '97. 11a. Main ▲ Drexel University Annual Job ▲ Commuter Student Meeting. ▲ Flick: Chasing Amy. 7p, 9:30p Team meets at 6:30p in 3024 Auditorium. All classes begin­ Fair, 10a-3p in the PEAC. Ip. 5051 MacAlister. and 12m in Nesbitt Hall's Stein MacAlister Hall. ning at 1 la and 12n will be Auditorium. Admission $2. ▲ Hillel Deli Lunch. 12:30p in * Photography after Photo­ canceled. ▲ Undergraduate Student Gov­ 232 Creese Student Center. graphy, Memory, and Rep­ • The Clay Studio presents an ernment Association meets at ▲ Kick-off meeting and pizza resentation in the Digital Age exhibition by John and • Voice of Faith. Free public lec­ 7p in 2020 MacAlister Hall. party sponsored by the exhibited by the Institute of Andrea Gill from the New York ture series at the Quaker meet­ Society of Human Resource Contemporary Art at the College of Ceramics at the * Howard Britz and Company. inghouse at 15th and Cherry Management at 4:30p in the University of Pennsylvania. Alfred University. 5-9p. Runs Performing at Ortliebs Jazz Streets. 7:30p. Academic Building, room 302. Runs through Oct 26. 10a-5p. through Oct. 26. 139 North Haus 847 North 3rd Street. * Centennial Celebration. Admission $3. Call 898-7180 Second Street. For more Shows at 9p and lip. * The Tuesday Night Square Opening reception, 5-7p. This for more information. information call 925-3453. Admission $6. Call 922-1035 Dance Guild presents Lane m ulti-m edia exibition runs for more information. Neubauer calling squares. through November 5 at the 7:30-10:15p. St. Mary's Parish Klein Art Gallery, 3600 Market Hall, 3916 Locust Walk. Admis­ Street. sion $5.

Datebook submissions may be dropped off at The Triangle, 3010 MacAlister Hall. LEADING DREXEL KARATE GET INTO SHAPE TO LEARN SELF DEFENSE SERVE SHARPEN YOUR BODY AND YOUR MIND NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY SPECIAL BEGINNERS CLASSES Creese Student Center WOMEN’S SELF-OEFENSE 32nd and Chesnut Streets Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 6:00pm Telephone (215) 895-2577 In the Gym Lower Level Oance Studio USGA Fax (215) 895-2175 Fax (215) 895-2500 Undergraduate Student Government Association Need More Info? Contact Jared Squires 571-3949

THE P R ia FOR MAKE YOUR HEART FEEL GOOD W ITHOUT GOING THIS SPA« WILL TO THE HEALTH CLUB. KNOCK YOU OUT Getting a free ad is as easy as following these directions; Volunteer at The Philadelphia We need volunteers to cook, clean and assist with everyday • Make the ad 4.8 inches wide Ronald McDonald House and by 3.S inches tall. (Don't you’ll feel the satisfaction activities. Call (215) 387-8406. include any Idnd of border on deep down inside of helping Your heart and ouf families will the ad). ■ Drop off the camera-ready ad seriously ill children and their feel so much better. at The Triangle, 3010 MacAlister Hall, by Tuesday at families. 5 p.m. for Friday publication. • Include the name of your student organization and a contact name and phone number.

The Triangle wiH not guarantee Philadelphia • The First Ronald McDonald House placement of submitted ads, but we 3921-3925 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. PA 19104 THE TRIANGLE promise we'll never throw a punch bdowthebdt 18 The Triangle • October 3,1997

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Studeni Advanta>;e ofier valid fof AI iil KeMdential I on^ Distance custoniers 1*^^? AI t'il Octobers, 1997 THE TRIANGLE Page 21 Apartments Apartments Apartments Apartments Index 3310 Race St H uge 1st floor apt. in historic 3312 HAMILTON STREET: Efficiencies, one and 36 th and Lancaster Renovated 6 Iwiroorn apart­ Washer/dryer Tire place {x()os(>() Btinth t ulils 33rd and Powelton. 2 bedroom apartment with deck. $550 per m onth plus utilities. Avail 10/1. call Apartments Jay @382-4240. Sublets Six B edroom H ouse, 4XX N. 38th at Barmg. Roommates Fabulous contemporary house. Fireplace, cent air W/D, 2.5 baths, Avail now. $1,555 plus utils. For Sale Franklin Investment Realty. 215-382-7368 Wanted Roommate needed for huge 5BR house near Art Text Books Museum beginning 9/1 Male/female - doesn't matter. Great neighborhood, great street, plenty Services of parking. ***ROOF DECK*** with beautiful view Help Wanted of city. 5min from school. Call 978-6222 or email Lost & Found st94st53. $300+utils. 501N 35th St.(Spring garden), 2nd FI. Efficiency Announcements 12'x14', Kitchenette, private bathroom. Laundry Personals on 1st FI., $350, Heat & hot water included. No smoking/drinking, (215)222-6060, (215)662-1132 4410 Sansom St., large room 12'x18', 3rd front, Placing Classifieds share large kitchen & 2 bathrooms with 4 other persons, $280, All utilities included. No The deadline for placing a classified smoking/drinking, 222-6060, (215)662-1132 ad is 5:00 p.m. on the Tuesday Art Area/ 22nd and Spring Garden- Studios, newly renovated, includes all utilities, courtyard, from before the ad's publication date. 450-S525/ month. Call 215-413-0300. Powelton, lovely 3 story Townhouse, 3+ bed­ Forms are available outside The rooms, one large with cathedral ceiling, 2.5 b, Triangle office at 3010 MacAlister basement, backyard, m od kitchen, DW,WD, 900-f Hall. They must be completed in full 610-399-0698 and writing should be legible. To be filled ASAP! 34th St., btwn Race & Powelton St., 1 large BR for 1 to 2 FEMALES ONLY. Full If there are no copies of the Kitchen, full bath, completely furnished. $1750 per term, utilities!! Call Lori @662-1203 classified form available, write your ad on a full sheet of paper. You must include your name, organi­ zation, phone number and address. If you are a Drexel student, include your student number. Always make note of the date the ad was placed, and the section in which you wish ^ J o w ^ tc a i 387-12 1 3 the ad to appear. Be sure to sign your name. cf> izza In Person Place forms in the slot outside The STAVRANT Triangle office. 3 8 7 -1 2 6 0 Mall The Triangle Attn: Classifieds Manager 32nd & Chestnut Streets o f t h e m o n th : Philadelphia, PA 19104

Fax (215)895-5935 If your ad is a paid ad, a copy of the check or money order should be faxed and the original should be mailed or dropped off in person. Barbeque Chicken E-mail If you are a Drexel student, you can E-mail your ad to the classifieds manager at st95za4y@dunx1 .ocs. drexel.edu. Include the information P i z z a outlined above. Costs & Limits Large SmaU Drexel Advertisers Cost: Free. Normal ad rates apply for personal businesses and apart­ W as$^<^ Was ments. Limits: 2 classified ads per person per issue, with a 40 word maximum Now $8.00 Now $4.20 for each. Personals have a 25 word maximum. Ads may be edited. jghout year

Outside Advertisers October Specials October Specials Cost: (per issue) $4.50 for the first 25 »me painting words and $.25 for each word thereafter. Tear sheets are $.25 rk One I Two extra. Ads must be pre-paid. Pay­ ment can be made by cash, money order or check. partment Limits: There are no ad limits or Free jLarge word limits for paid classifieds. I Pizza for Other Information Topping le No classifieds will be accepted over' with the purchase of any $10.95 the telephone. Multiple ads with duplicate subjects will not be Small Pizza I Good only accepted unless they are paid for. I after 8:00 p.m. Ads may be cancelled, corrected or Must mention coupon when onlcnnf; Must mention coupon when orJmn\> n g far Murry I for delivery continued by notifying the Can't hi’ ivinbineJ with any other offer Can't he coniltineii with any other offer classifieds staff by the 5:00 p.m. e n s e I Tuesday deadline. You must include sp e a k e r ^ Offer expires 10/30/97 J Offer expires 10/30/97 j your phone number with your correspondence. '8 0 8 Open M \ 2 2 Classifieds The Triangle • October 3,1997 Apartments Apartments Sublets Roommates Roommates washpf/dryer on premises, quiet street (S340 to 2 Br, 3708 Hamilton, 1st floor unit with deck and Rooms- Beautiful Victorian home. Newly renovat­ Baring street apt B Call 243-0374, evenings or Roommate w anted for awesom e condo in great move in) 3216 Summer Street Please contact yard. Washer/dryer on premise. Avail now! $675+ ed. Large rooms with high ceilings and windows. leave a message part of town. One block away from Franklin Institute, 10 min walk to campus, 3br, 2,5 ba, w/d, Elijah or James at 382-2262 or 387-7071 leave util. Franklin Investnwnt Reality 387-7368. Porch. Wash/ dryer. One block from campus. $250 Roommates to share 4 bedroom apt w/3 fun and per m onth plus utils, 561 -0572 central air, off street parking, $383 + utils... Call m essage 38th and Pow elton Vicinity Studio Apartm ent. friendly females located at 3308 Arch St.. includes Karl or Don 981-0485, or leave message.______34th and Spring Garden St one tx)r Apt w/eat in Ideal for single person nice kitchen, large bath­ One room avail, @ 34th and Powelton Ave. $275 w/d, dw, c/a 2 baths, large living area and lot of kitchen family room, bath, close to drexel 386- room, Carpeting, Onsite Laundry. Good security, + 1/3 utility (Heat included) Call 222-1951 or tim­ privacy, available now Call Liz, Jen, Holly @ 222- 4th male needed to share spacious 2 bedroom/bath apartment located at 3318 Arch 6722______No smoking or pets. $380 Call Robert 387-2736. ber 76@ hotmailcom 7164 St. (across from New Towers). Features include Large one bedroom apartments, Wynnefield, 10 Powelton, lovely 3 story townhouse, 3+ bedroom, ROOMMATE needed for October, tw o bedroom Two Bedroom, economy special! 38th and spiral staircase, cathedral ceilings, very large Hamilton, skylight, fenced yard, alarm system, m inute drive from campus. Bus route # 40, near one large with cathedral ceiling. 2.5 Baths, base­ apartm ent @ 33rd and Powelton, $275 plus utili­ ment, backyard, m od kitchen, DW. WD 900-t- 610- rooms, and plenty of privacy. $315/month, avail­ w/ash/ dryer in prem ise Avail now, $450 plus train. Quiet, secure building. Large Yard, Cable, ties. Call jay, 382-4240 leave message. 399-0698 able immediately. Call Brian, Jeff, Aatosh @215- utils. Franklin Investment Reality 215-382-7369 Laundry $420,477-2188 A spacious beautiful room, in a ver big apartment, 387-2024. Two Bedroom, economy special!! 38th and Clean, affordable apartments located close to a private t>athroom. kitchen. Center City location, Hamilton, skylight, fenced yard, alarm system, Drexel dorms. Heat and Hot water paid, small Roommates walking distance from campus. Safe, doorman. Roommate wanted, female to share beautiful 4 For Sale washer/dryer on prem ise Avail now! $450 plus pets welcome. Call 610-664-7779 or fax 610-664- Hard w ood floors, washer/dryer. $400 (utils are bedroom apt with 3 other female students, great COf^PAQ, Pentium l66MHz, 2.5 GB HDD, 56 MB utils. Franklin Investment Reality 3538______inclu) Call Anna 215-977-7319 leave msg. location 34th and powelton, only $300 + per RAM, 2 Modems 28.8/33.6 Voice/Fax modems. 501N 35th St.(Spring garden), 2nd FI. Efficiency, 501N 35th St.(Spring garden), 1st FI. Efficiency, m onth, available immediately. Call 215-222-6835. Roommate wanted to share spacious 3 bedroom 8xCD-R0M, 15' monitor SVGA, tons of software, Kitchenette, Laundry on 1st FI,, $330, Heat & hot Kitchenette, Laundry on 1st FI., $320, Heat & hot apt. 44th & pine close to transportation 15 min speaker-mic, 4 year on site warranty (asking Looking for roommates for 4 bedroom s place, 2 water included. No smoking/drinking, (215)222- water included. Available Dec I.No walk/ 5 min drive from University. $250 per/m o + $1500). Contact Yudi (215) 662-5474. email: bath, central air, gas heat, dishwasher, microwave, smoking/drinking, (215)222-6060. (215)662-1132 1/3 utilities. Ask for Sue or Venus. Available [email protected] 6060.(215)662-1132______new washer and dryer. Newly remodeled, new 4410 Sansoin st, room U'xIO', 3rd middle, share One bedroom apartment • 3406 Spring Garden w/w carpet, intercom, security system, new immediately. 1984 Monte Carlo- Mag wheel, $500 pull out large kitchen & 2 bathrooms with 5 other persons, St. Third floor, privacy, carpeted, tile bath, new kitchen. One block from police station and hospi­ Roommates wanted, females Interested in shar­ stereo, complete new exhoust system ( headers to tail pipe), new radiator, almost new tires, many $220, All utilities included. No smoking/drinking, painted, gas heat, free washer/dryer $440+UTILS. tal. Smin bike ride to Drexel. Price range $145- ing center city apt, $350-5400 monthly, CALL Stef extras. Car has engine problems, but is great for 222-6060,(215) 662-1132 Call 386-6722. 175/month +security deposit-h utilities. 3901 at 215-355-7577 and leave message. parts. Asking $500. Call 382-9262______Connectic Color Quick Cam I for Macintosh. New, 3721 Baring St. Big studio, sq>arate kitcken. Hardwood floor. never been used - still in original package $375. Heat included. Avail Now. (bought by m isunderstanding). Sell only $150, ASTOR APARTMENTS from full price $229. Call (215) 243-0232 (after 3312HamiltgnSt. Several studio and one bedrooms. $325-$449. 6pm) or email; sg94ep84@ post.drexel.edu Lrg. Apartments, Near Drexel. Avail Now. 123 SOUTH 39TH STREET Kenwood Dolby Pro-logic 100W Receiver; m atch­ Call our Rental Department at 222-4800 about this and ing Kenwood 5 disc changer; Optimus 10 Band KBAN & B YE other available apartments and houses in University City / Graphic EQ; Yamaha Bookshelf Speakers; Powered is your Budget Busted? REALTOH Powelton Village. Antenna; 1.5 years old, $500 OBO, Call (215) 386- 6019______Consider the Astor. Gateway 2000 Laptop 2100 Series S5-1333, 11.0" SVGA Dual Scan, 133MHz Pentium, expandable 16MB EDO RAM IGBflDE hard drive, 1.44 MB 3.5', Just down the street from Superblock A fm r ia m d B 6X CD ROM. Brand N ew , Two m onth old. $1,900 3600-06 Spring Garden Negotiable. Please call 382 4535. Nissan Sentra -1987 model with a/c, sunroof, and Efficiencies from $304 Close to Drexei stereo. New brakes, tyres and exhaust. Requires little engine work. $1000. Contact/leave msg - One Bedrooms from $398 Efficiencies $325-340 386-0873 Two Bedrooms from $586 Studio $350-375 Volkswagon Cabriolet (convertible) with a/c and stereo. 113 k miles. New tyres and in mint condi­ Laundry Facilities on Site 1 Bedroom $425 tion Contact/leave msg- 222-4333 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance 2 Bedroom $525 BEAUTIFUL BLACK AND GOLD twin size day-bed!! Drexel Shuttle service every 15 minutes on corner outside of building. Cheap!! Only $30!! Mattress and support board Cable Ready Security Guard on premise 24 hours a day. Intercom Security. included. Catch: from about 20 nails, 2 are miss­ Heat & Hot wafer included. Laundry facilities on premises. ing from the entire bed. Very easy to replace Gall 386-3350 nails! Call and I'll tell you how. Contact before I CALL 5 5 1 -9 1 0 0 move out: 222-1727 Must go! Couch with pullout bed(Sears) $40, Wooden dining chairs(crafted) with mat - 4 for $30, Aluminum Office Desk with 4 drawers - $25, All in good condition. Email: tuang@ writeme,com or Call 222-1189 FOR SALE: KENWOOD - Portable Com pact Disc Player $60, w/AC adapter, NI-CAD batteries, New ■ •••. ■ ■■ Headphones, Output/Input Wire. For questions call Chris at (215) 662-0394, A roommate wanted, Powelton Ave. and 35th st. 212 per month. All utility included, 5 minutes walk to school. Must be quite and clean. Send mail to: sg95679q@ dunxl .ocs.drexel.edu Macintosh Performa 5200, 16MB RAM, loaded with software. Price negotiable. Send email to portia@ spock.ece.drexel.edu or call 609- 802- 9107.______Computer for sale. Like new condition. Performa 6214,16mb Ram, 15' monitor, 1.0 gig HD, 33.6 US Robotics fax/m odem , Stylewriter 2 printer, CD- rom, Loaded w / software!! Perfect for dorm or apt. $1300, obo. Leave message for Dave 382,9168 or st9565j7@ dunxl .ocs.drexel.edu Paintball gun Vm68 six m onths old includes bot­ tom line and remote, jt mask, dot sight and sight rail, new 16’ smart parts barrel, 200 round hopper, asking round h o pp er asking350 OBO, contact Frank; st93kfqn@dunxl .ocs.drexel.edu. Mtb suspension fork m ag 21 air/oil long travel kt installed 2.5' of travel. 1" steerer tube. 2 years old $40 obo. Rollerblade Spirit Blades Mens 10.5 one year old includes used 76 mm wheels with ABEC 3 bearings $20 contact Frank Durso st93kfgn@dunx 1 .ocs.drexel.edu or 610-23 7-9941 Cignal 19', 21spd, mtn, bike. Aluminum frame, front suspension, red, $300. Miles 382-7535 Pentium 200Mhz with MMX tech, 32meg EDO memory, 2.0 Gig HD, 512k L2 cache, 24X CD-rom, 15in Monitor. 80 Watts speakers and more. $1300. Page 215-830-2479 Macintosh Centris 610. Free Software Upgrades Available CD-ROM and M odem included. Call Alice 215-508-2658 for more info 1985 Buick Sk^ark, only 48,130 miles, 4 door, stick in good condition, drives really well Sell for $900 or best offer. 1990 White Geo Storm. Looks and runs great, new tires, $3250. Weight bench and weight set, $100. Sharp Air Conditioner $225. Mac Compatible 28.8 modem, $75, Mac Compatible Visioneer Paperport $45; this peripheral acts as a copy machine. Call 222-9545 after 6pm Dell 200mmx, 32 megabytes Dell 200mmx, 32 megabytes, 5dram, 512cache, 12x toshiba cd-rom, 3.2 gig hd, 17', 28 Dell Monitor diam ond stealth, $2700 or best offer. Ask for Harry 610-521-4793

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215-829-5095 or 610-834-1140 ext. 352. The Triangle • October 3,1997 Classifieds 23 F o r S a le F o r S a le F o r S a le W a n te d T e x t B o o k s Beautiful and spacious desk; 425 (with a surprise looks and m ns great. Asking SI 700 obo. Call 387- Software. Price negotiable. Call 677-2402 or email SUPERSTAR STUDENTS NEEDED! Earn S signing Production and Operations MGMT 7th ed. bonus!!!) Coffeemaker. $8, Good CDs; each S5. 1763 or [email protected] up friends and classmates for our credit cards. Chase/Aquiland; Cost Accounting A rfianagerial Don't Delay. Call today! 222-7256 Ms. Liu______1990 isuzu impulse,88k, excellent condition, SEIZED CARS from S I 75. Porches, Cadillacs, Opportunity to advance to campus manager emphasis- Student Guide and Review Manual- MOVING SALE; All kind of c o n ip u te r books tagged till 99, a/c, stereo, cruise,sporty, looks & Chevys, BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your involving hiring and training other students. No 9th ed. Excell cond, Call Rich 215-299-8281 (Access e tc .) , Zip Drive, Keyboard (PC), m ouse runs great. $3300, Call 387-1763______Area. Toll Free 1-800-218-9000 Ext. A-7685 for car required. Must be outgoing and aggressive! Text Book for sale. 'Engineering Mechanics: (PQ $5, Fax Machine (Brother IntelliFax Me) $150, Honda prelude 87, 5 speed, well maintains current listings. Flexible hours and great income! Call Lori at 800- Statics', 2nd Edition, Riley & Sturges. Brand New Color scanner. Camera $100, Laser Printer (records kept), high mileage, sun roof, new tires & Students are needed to serve as Hearing Panel 592-2121 xl30 Condition, Asking S45 or best offer. Call (610) 701- (Okidata 01 810), Impact Dot Matrix Printer belting & battery & brakes, detachable blaupunkt, Members on the University Judicial and Appellate (Panasonic KX-P1123). Please e-mail CHENAM@ stereo. $1700 Obo. Call 387-1763 or 222-7038 Boards. Applications are available in the O ^ e of Workstudy students to work in the Counseling 6464 or e-mail jrepp@uscom,com or duvm.ocs.drexel.edu Center, 201, Creese. Duties incjud^people and st92jOwh@dunx 1 ocsdrexeledu. School and dorm supplies; Small fridge, set of the Dean (215 Creese) Application Deadline; 5pm Must Sell! One single bed $40, good condition sheets for dorm bed(burgundy). Design I & II sup­ on Wednesday Oct 8.1997. Applicants must have phone contact, and general clerical duties. T extbooks for MBA for sale: BSTAT 602, call Arzu at 215-382-8465______plies; paint cement, color-aid, etc. email no standing judicial sanction and must be Knowledge of graphics helpful. Flexible hours. MGMT602( SEC001), ACCTG620, ACCTG621, MAZDA626LX'89,116k, 5spd, cruise, sun roof, all [email protected] approved by USGA. For m ore info, contact the Contact xl415 ACCTG623, BSTAT604, ECON630, pis contact: 382- power. New^ tire, excellent condition, $3100 tel: Office of Judicial Affairs at 895-1650 Furniture for sale. Call 222-1951 or timber76@hot- Earn lots of cash and travel free Students Reps 4803( Jessica) and 222-3545 Sophia______215-895-1214or 609-482-6735______If you are planning on moving and your living mail.com Wanted. Call now to get an early start and earn a Text book Sale! Chang, chem istry fifth edition; The ultimate prepaid phone card extremely low room sofa/couch is clean and decent looking,, K2 Sze Rollerblades (Womens size 8) Excellent fat check before Christmas 1 -800-657-4048 contact 222-1727! solutions manual. University Physics; applications rate for a free card send a self addressed stam ped cond. Only used Twice. Asking $125 (from $180) envelope to: Joseph 0. Gibbs, CDI Corporation, including elbow, wrist, and knee pads. Please 1717 Arch Street 35th Floor Philadelphia Pa 19103 email [email protected] 1984 Monte Carlo-Mag wheels, $500 pullout Looking to buy a PowerMAc for school. 7500 or stereo, complete new exhaust (headers to better preferred. Email [email protected] ready to join the... tailpipe), new radiator, tires almost new many VIDEO CARD - ATI Graphics Pro Turbo PCI, 2MB, extras. Car has engine problem s but is great for Works with any PC. Asking only $30, call 386- parts. Asking $500 Call 382-9262 3971. COMPUTER FOR SALE: Power Macintosh 7100/66 Dynamic Industry Leader That Has 7 9 Camaro, V8 350, Reliable $750, Call Will 22^- includes Apple 15in. monitor, Apple StyleWriter 3812______' Printer, 6X CD-Rom, 32 MD RAM, 1.3 MB of Hard Disk space, 14.4 US Robotics Modem, and Mac 1 Isi for sale, 80 Mg hard drive, 16Mg RAM, 12’ apple color monitor,,Apple extended key­ Openings For Full-Timers And Part-Timers Ethernet Adapter. Asking $1500 for the whole package OBO. Call 222-0787 or e-mail board, mouse, 2400..eKternal modem. $500 Call [email protected] Lisa (215) 389:288§‘______Onkyo stereo receiver 100 watts. 2 yrs. extended In Horsham & Ft. Washington, PAl COMPUTER: Dell OmniPlex 486/66, 32 MB RAM, IGB^Hard Drive, 12X CD-ROM, built in SCSI service. Less than 1 yr. old. Must sell $235 or B.O. adapter, Sound Blaster Sound Card, 3C0M^ ■ 215-362-0714. Network Adapter. Perfect computer for program­ Tsunami 170MB external hard drive. Small fast The Prudential Insurance Company of America ming classes. Asking $1000 for the whple'pack- drive in good condition, with SCSI cable. $40 is one of the largest, diversified financial age OBO. Call 222-0787 e-mail o.b.o. Respond to the following address: tobi- [email protected]. y " [email protected]. services institutions in the world and, based 1991, black Mitsubishi §clipse, stick shift gear, Brand New never used 1997 Kasea Motor Scooter. on total assets, the largest insurance company brand new tires,.AM/FM cassette stereo, Won in radio contest. Red, 50cc, great for in the in North America. Prudential has positions A/C,excellent cpn^ition, runs great, leave m es­ city. Park it anyw here. Must sell, asking $900 sage at 823-2627- or email srinivasan@ negotiable. Call/leave message (609) 374-3745 or available in Finance, Administration, simulate.tom e-mail [email protected] Information Systems, Healthcare, Mefhory * Memory * Memory * Offering: two SMB Two Thule bike rack attachments. 529xt pro Underwriting and Customer Service. 72 PIN EDO RAM SIMM's and one 8MB 168 PIN 5V series fork mount trays. Brand New Never Been EDO RAM DIMM. All units are function perfectly Opened! $60.00 a piece or 120.00 for both. Call If you would like to be and offer a good upgrade for any machine! Price: Ken Richards @ 609-231-9055; e-mail $30.00 ea. or willing to sell any two for $55.00 or [email protected] considered for any of these positions, send all three for $80.00 Email or call: Troy st92gvol@ Com puter games for PC CD-rom. Command and a scannable (clean, clear, no graphics and post.drexel.edu / 222-7064 Conquer: Red Alert $35 and Com m anche 2 $15. Pnidi'iitial ol'fVrs a preferably unfolded) resume with salary Dorm size Sanyo refrigerator, approximately 2.5 x E-mail; sg96jk9c@dunxl .ocs.drexel.edu 1.5 feet. Clean and in good condition. $50. Call at requirements and Job Code: PAR0578COL COMPUTER FOR SALE:Power Macintosh 7100/66 g'roat b('n('nis package 215-222-8132, and leave a message. includes Apple 1 Sin. monitor, 6x CD-ROM, 32mb for entiy in our central resume database: 1987 Honda prelude,well maintains, 5 speed, sun RAM, 1.3MB h ard drive, E th ern et A dapter, which includes f)()'o Prudential Regional Employment Center, roof, new tires & belting & battery, high mileage. 100 Mulberry St., 2 Gateway Center Four, liiilioii r('inil)urs(Miu'iU Newark, NJ 07102. Positions located in Fort for high('i‘ k'M'l Washington and Horsham, PA. Only those we are interested in interviewing vdll be contacted. education. Bilingual individuals are encouraged to apply. HTML We are an equal opportunity/affirmative action Programmer (P/T) wanted to help maintain and employer and are committed to diversity in our update a growing small business website. workforce. 5-10 hours per week. Must have car. Job and Directions Hotline: W rite To: Jeffrey Miller 215-956-3980 1530 Locust St. http://www.prudenffial.com Philadelphia, PA 19102

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WANTED F U N F O O D featuring Nortk Side Pies, Cliestnut CKiclcen Xpress anJ PliilaJelpliia Burger Company Drexel Student as GREAT new GAM ES Part-Time Handiman throughout year for TKe Latest Laser Networic A4USIC V ID E O S minor repairs, cleaning, some painting w e welcome yourvDrexel Dining Dragon Dollars and grounds work at Meridian Associates' apartment buildings in ^1.00 OFF Powelton Village CHESTNUT CHICHy XPMSS Hours Flexible $8.00/hr. Starting CtjlCMN DEAL Must have driver's license rcgularlv S N O W only for a liniilctl lime and be a native engllsh speaker dt (?ruu OthUt C a ll Now 387-7808 Cuupun nut necessai'y tu receive discuunt. Open Monday-Friday: ll:00am-7:30pm Ollep good at Drayon s Den Creese Sludenl Centei’. Ollet’ expires October 10, 199/. ______ft------24 The Triangle • October 3,1997

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90-«lay ^nod wm b« added to t^he principal and will bear Interest, which will be Included In the repayment schedule. For example, Ui» month of May 5, 1997, had an Interest rate of I 6% loan orl|inatlon Fee. Interest is variable based on i* W* L stat« and jocal sates taxes and a changt In the monthty variable Interest rate. ^997 Appla Computer, Inc, All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple loioi Mac, Maclnto$h, PowrBook. Power Macintosh and StvleWriter are rMlstsr^d tr*H*ii2rV« Vj The Triangle • October 3,1997 Classifieds 25 T e x tb o o k H e lp W a n te d Announcements Announcements Announcements and resource book, study guide very cheap call software (SAS, Statistics) helpful. Pay varies with Florida, Barbados, Padre Free Parties, Eats, Drink Saturday, Quarry St. Cafe, 3rd & Quarry Sts., at 8:00 experience. Call Rev. Tim for details at x2522 or 382-1282 experience, (S12-$16)Call Tope 665-9411 Sunsplash 1-800-426-7710/ www,sunsplash- P.M tickets $8, $6 for students with ID, Call (215) email at thomhaht@ post drexel.edu tourscom 922-0501 for info,______Need Cash or a Free Lunch?? Become a Tour I need textbooks for the following classes: Eng- S e r v ic e s Guide or Lunch Host for Drexel's Admissions ••Earn Free Trips and C ash" Class Travel needs Gays Lesbians and Bisexuals at Drexel Call 895- MCS 210, ECE-C211, CHEM 424 and CHE 400.'if FREEDOM TELECOM SERVICES *8.9C/minute/24 Office, For more info call 895-1015. Ask for Zeth or students to prom ote Spring Break 1998' Sell 15 2063 for meeting information. Confidentiality is you got any of these please call 571-4447 hours. Long Distance flat rates 6 second billing No Jocelyn, Student Deans of Student Ambassadors trips and travel free! 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"Gitcher in the that there's got to be another way. I don't Recording artist other Philly sports teams (i.e. Phillies, ▲A A want to cry, and have to make it happen. Sixers), and had to lose a few games to MariahGirey So much for her declaration of indepen­ catch up? I guess that he would know. B utte rfly dence after a very public breakup with Venu “Bitter Old Kook" Gaddamicfi Rye' for Columbia Records her boss/husband, the new song are tired retread of the old formula. Carey's trade­ mark high octave human dog whistle I S m e ll Sonny and Gunner from page 28 quick-cut, angry music videos love is barely present. 8uffe/% continues AAA like Pearl Jam’s “Jeremy.” He her move toward a hipper R&B sound. The album Is not as enjoyable as I had Cedar guys don’t sleep together. That uses this trick only in dream Straight from the tree has been done too many times. sequences; everything else is hoped. It doesn't suck, but it fails to be a music box. Many grandparents smell like it They are not gay, even the homo­ more restrained to fit a period erotic tension is inevitable from film. Anh "Up Service’ Dartg It's kind of amazing. You take this chip from a cedar tree, stick it in your closet their first glances. Nevertheless, Coming-of-age tales are com­ and the stench keeps the moths away. this is a love story between two mon. What sets this apart is the And, if you leave it in your pockets, you straight men. Their friendship is original telling of the story. The Professional athlete A can keep people away too. Just don't use the force that keeps them alive in complex script is developed by it to 'spice up" your dinner. Trust me. a turbulent time. TyOetmer the author, and the director sets Jonathan "Woolly Mannmoth" Poet The guys do have sex — lots Like any law-abiding gay citizen, I collect A walking speech impediment out to be true to the book as Takes losing well of sex — with a handful of volup­ much as he can. The script is all of Mariah Carey's album. Her fifth, Butterfly, sent me day dreaming. My fan­ tuous girls. The movie uses sex as heart-felt and funny. My eyes Watching an Eagles defeat is upsetting tasy can be summed up by the pop-diva's enough, but what what is even more an overwhelming plot device, and ears were glued to the screen. song titles. It goes something like this: The Scale and there’s a laugh-out-loud Who would have thought that a annoying is the post-game interview with Eagles quarterback Ty Detmer. masturbation sequence I won’t period movie would be so rele­ On one sweet day, I have a vision of love All Triangle Entertainment reviews are when I find my dream lover who fills me dare to discuss. vant? While most people use the phrase 'you subject to the world-famous Triangle up with emotions. My hero promises to know* as an occasional substitute for rating scale. The acting is first rate. The always be my baby. When he vanishes lead actors are no strangers to sex information in a sentence, Detmer uses away like a butterfly, I am alone in love. I the damn phrase hundred times in a two AAAAA Eye comedy: Jeremy Davies starred Film can't let go. Love takes time, I tell myself. I minute interview, as if he had a speech AAAA Corn in Spanking the Monkey and Ben remember my love when I listen to my ▲ A AAA impediment. No, Ty we do not know how AAA Side Affleck was in Chasing Amy. music box and hope that someday I am you lost a sure-win game. How the hell no longer a prisoner of love. After AA Culture The cinematic direction is , Jeremy Davies did he lose to the Vikings? Did he feel that indulging myself with honey, I realize superb. Director Pellington is Directed by Mark Peilingtpn he was performing abovethe capacity of A Quiz known in Hollywood for many Grammercy Piaures

Engineering/CS Majors

"Going All The /V o t to strain your high-tech senses, W a/ soundtrack but som e things do have m ore im pact. also succeeds

There’s a simple truth about influence we think you should know. The odds that your ideas will be heard at GEC-Marconi Hazeltine are among the best in any industry, anywhere. Which means you’ll never have to just sit back and listen to someone else’s point of view. You’ll have hands-on involvement in developing innovations for Identification Friend or Foe Systems (IFF), Satellite Communications (SATCOM), JTIDS, DAMA and PLSR. But more than that, you’ll discover what some of the finest engineers in the industry already know. That GEC-Marconi Hazeltine will give you the training, resources and support you deserve. All in a fast-paced environment that offers summer hours, tuition reimbursement, and a casual dress code. Anh Dang and “A Sunday Kind of Love.” HORN BLOWER The catchy songs not only set So put your revolutionary engineering concepts ahead Going All The Way introduces the mood for the movie, they of the rest at GEC-Marconi Hazeltine. Because we’ll the sounds of the ’50s to a new advance the plot. As I listened to generation. America back then the soundtrack after viewing the never ask you to turn down the volume on a great idea. was just learning to love rock ’n’ movie, I could relive the theatri­ roll. The sound of the music the cal experience. To find out more about career opportunities in Wayne, kids danced to still had a jazzy, And that is exactly what NJ or Greenlawn (Long Island), New York see us on campus: big-band influence. soundtracks are supposed to do, Director Mark Pellington, but only a few live up to that who has won an MTV Video expectation. Octobers, 1997 Music Award, is a master of his Most of the critical parts of the Physical Ed Si Athletic Center art when it comes to selecting movie contain a song. At times songs for his movie. the music replaces the dialogue 10:00am - 3:00pm In the liner notes, he writes, to express the emotions. It “the emotional truth and soul works. Or visit us on-line at www.gecm.hazehine.com inspiration lie in the music. ... It effective October 1997 is fascinating how the selection Music of a piece of music can ‘make’ a scene.” AAAA GEC-Marconi The disc features original hits Various Artists (I’m told) such as “A White Going A ll The Way Original Hazeltine Sport Coat (And a Pink Car­ Motion Picture Soundtrad( othing even comes close. An equal opportunity employer, m /f/d /v . nation,” “Mighty, Mighty Man,” Verve Records htertainrnent Octobers, 1997 Page 28 THE TRIANGLE Male Bonding Janeane Garofalo gets stuck with a bunch of Irish guys Garofalo can't save this fall's 'date movie' from its own pathetic stupor.

Anh Dang celluloid again. LOVEY-DOVEY The romantic angle is ridicu­ The Irish people are one herd lously forced. I’m a romantic at of cheap, ugly, hostile, and sex- heart, and I don’t buy any love starved human beings — so The angles blooming, even with the Matchmaker te\[s me. luck of the Irish. Like I, Marcy The oddball movie opening does not give a damn about the Oct. 3 is set during a messy polit­ town folks, end of story. ical Senatorial election cam­ The only redeeming quality is paign. the talented Garofalo. She is Comedian Janeane Garofalo, charming during her screen hot off the surprise smash of The time, which is obscenely not long Truth About Cats and Dogs, plays enough for an above-the-title Marcy, a dedicated yet jaded star. political aided who is sent to Garofalo does not have much

Grammercy Pictures Ireland to exploit the ancestral to work with, however. Her star- making, acid-tongued cynicism In this scene from 'Forrest Gump II: The Next Generation/ a now-grown up Forrest Jr. explains how his job at Hardee's is a roots of her boss. Predictably, everything goes is barely present. What the hell is lot like a box of chocolates. awry once she sets foot on the going on? the Korean War. god-forsaken Irish town. The With the material she’s given, A new flick by MTV fave Mark Pellington The shy, repressed photogra­ premise is no more than a fish- you might be reminded of the depicts life's great debate: Is there more to pher Sonny (Jeremy Davies) is out-of-water cliche complete cheesy Sandra Bullock. shocked to realize that the confi­ with weird people doing all sort Considering this is the only being a man than sex and cars? dent, super-jock Gunner (Ben of weird things — except being “date movie” around, save your Anh Dang movie I have seen this year. Affleck) prefers his companion bearable. relationship by staying home. CHORUS BOY The comedy/drama is based over bar-hopping frat boys. As The movie is neither romantic Garofalo fans who are expecting Marketing something as “the on the 1970 Dan Wakefield best­ their friendship develops. Sonny or comic. It’s so bad, it’s the Gen-X humor found in Midwestern Catcher in the Rye” selling novel of the same name. painfully realizes that the real appalling to see that it got made. Reality Bites and Cats and Dogs is a shameful ploy in most cases. Wakefield also wrote the screen­ isolation he experiences is living Director Mark Joffe focuses too can only find it on videotapes. Going All The Way, opening on play for the movie. It is a com- with his kind parents who only much on the one-dimensional Oct. 10, is an exception. The J.D. ing-of-age tale of two unlikely ask him to pretend. town folks, all of whom trying to Salinger novel is one of my all- male buddies set in the summer Together, Sonny and Gunner find a love match for Marcy. Film time favorites, while the Mark of 1954, right after they returned rebel with a cause. No, the two What he forgets is to make these ▲ Pellington movie is the best to after service in See Sonny and Gunner on page 27 people a Uttle interesting. I have The Matchmaker nothing against the Irish, but Janeant Garofalo that may change if someone Directed by Mark Joffe Fall style: How to look hip forces me to watch this lame-ass Grammercy Pictures Kardia Williams look is great for evenings. Iman FASHION POLICE Cosmetics has produced the best Fall is slowly enveloping us, line for this season’s exotic looks. and so are its trends. There is a return to glamour for this sea­ Clothes son, so let’s start from the top: Fabrics and colors for this year are softer, thicker and deep- Hair er. Thick and fluffy acrylic One of the hottest trends for sweaters, crushed velvet blouses, hair is the shag cut, which is my and tweed suits will be filling the personal favorite. The cut, which shelves of department stores. was started in the ’60s, features They will be featured in colors short, layered sides and a longer such as eggplant, burnt orange, length in the back. Also going milk chocolate and other sump­ strong are Hips, twists, and sleek tuous shades. Bootleg-style pants ponytails. Hair accessories are are still very popular and are a also important. Must-haves are big feature in Lerner’s and hair clips and headbands in tor­ Express stores. Also very popular toise shell and suede. Highlights and new are short to mid-length are a way to permanently acces­ skirts featuring a high front split. sorize your hair. They can liven Stiletto heels are making a big up drab-coloted hair or enhance comeback this season. After a already beautiful hair. year of clunky thick heels, ele­ gance has returned with a pencil Makeup thin high heel. Makeup this season is richer A hot new trend out in and darker. You will be seeing a footwear are boots made of span- lot of wine, plums, chocolates dex. The last time I checked at and deep mocha on the shelves Bakers they are so popular that this season. My favorite look for they were having a hard time this season is smoky eyes. It cre­ keeping themselves on the Your well-chosen summer wardrobe ates a dramatic look when worn shelves. So ladies go and grab Grammercy Pictures may not carry you through fall. with barely-t|i^re lipstick .and the theip while you still can. It's wedgietime on the wacky set of'The Matchmaker.'