After a year and a half, U*s the climactic ending to ZwebWL.page 14

Volume 68 • Number 21 The Student Newspaper of Drexel University March 19,1993 Form er employee files lawsuit Whistle-blower alleges that his civil rights were violated M ic h a e l J. Lebiedzinski longer employed at Drexel. His rior, stated that he is “not wor­ Ed-Op Editor position was eliminated as a ried about the outcome of the A former Drexel employee result of the recent reduction in case. During my time at Drexel, filM a civil action complaint on force program mandated by the I always conducted myself in a Dec. 15, 1992, against Drexel in Strategic Plan. Schneider is cur­ professional manner.” Freddie federal court. According to the rently the president of Norwich Gallo, University treasurer and complaint, Michael A. Uhl, for­ University in NorthHeld, Ver­ Doelp* s supervisor at the time, mer assistant director of printing mont. stated that he did not “want to and mailing services, claims that, At the time of the incident, jeopardize the case by conunent- among other charges, his civil both the plaintiff and two of the ing at this time.” Schneider said rights were violated. He is seek­ defendants in the case were that “no evidence was ever pre­ ing at least $100,000 in punitive employees of the printing and sented to [hun].” and compensatory damages. mailing department, which is The complaint filed with dis­ The case stems from an inci­ scheduled to be outsourced with­ trict court describes Uhl’s ver­ dent which Uhl characterizes as in the next 30 days. sion of the case. He states that he whistle-blowing. Ehrexel Presid­ The defendants in the case noticed that Carol Crossley and ent Richard Breslin, former £uid their legal counsel were other employees were falsifying Senior Vice President for unwilling to comment on the timecards and claiming large Administration Richard specifics of the case because it is amounts of overtime, and that Schneider, former Business still pending in court. However, Kerrane knew of the fraud. He Manager Peter Doelp, and Breslin stated that there is “no also reported that Kerrane and Director of Printing and Mailing merit” to the charges contained Crossley masterminded a con­ Services John Kerrane are ni Uhl’s complaint. Doelp, who tract rigging scheme, which Snow frmn last weekend** itorm blanketed the DoucLksSMiiiifl-wIittMMfi named in the suit. Doelp is no was Keranne’s immediate supe­ See CIVIL RIGHTS on page 2 tri^state areaf covering DrexeVs caucus and closing school on Monday. Trustees meet, discuss Towers resident accused of sexual harassment by roommate...... financial considerations M ic h a e l J. Lebiedzinski the accused student because he A similar incident occurred a TATfbO A 0*Bbiem__ _ Image immis incomparable------to wbat Ed-O p E onvR feared he was in danger. Upon week ago, and the final incident News Viftom the basketball team accom­ Hie girlfriend of a Ehexel sm- arrival, the officers separated die happened last Sunday night, Tlie Cottsftltifig plished Their, success prompt* dent has filed a sexual harass- roommates and took two reports. March 14. The latter two inci­ tfSiMKomt- ed ^ 'j ^ t page .article in^aW ..^anent-xomplaint agaiauHer Them^wasKiiOr physical altexcar dents involved aiccnsed lyze:^,ied(»iomic impact of tibe Philade^hia l^uiTer as well as boyfiiend's roonmate as a result tion between the two roommates, attempting to displace the wom­ fomkl that it covet^eonESFN. of three separate incidents which according to police. Tbey advis­ an’s clothing while she slept fin a n ^ lly feasible^ as was Don Dickason, vice provost occurred in the students’ room. ed the woman of her options: an The woman's boyfriend has announced at the Board o f for enrollment management Hie two students are roommates immediate arrest, a temporary filed an incident report with the Thistees quarterly meeting on announced for the Enrollment in the New Towers dormitory at restraining order, or a ccHnplaint Residential Living Office and a Wednesday; Mar(^ I7v Management Committee that 101N. 34th Street filed with the Sex Crimes Unit. formal complaint with the judi­ The consulting group was Drexel now has more under­ The woman, who requested The alleged victim gave the cial board. His girlfriend attempted to file a complaint hired by the request of th'e graduate and graduate applica­ she not be identified, said that following account in an inter­ Board of Trustees to analyze tions than it did last year at this her boyfriend’s roommate had view with The Triangle: she and with the Sex Crimes Unit on the time, Dickason said that accu­ sexually harassed her three sepa­ her boyfriend were asleep in his advice of the 16th district offi­ the Strategic Flan accoiding to cers. However, an unidentified assumptions that include the rate acceptance numbers will rate times within the last four bed approximately four weeks official at the Sex Crimes Unit following: the cost of tuition ik>t be available until after May weeks. She said that the sexual ago when she awoke to find the said that her complaint **was not will increase by 5,95 percent 1 because that is when the fed­ harassment was of a physical roommate looming over her, try­ eral student aid application is nature. ing to pull her sweatpants down. unportant enough.” She plans to each year, the University will foUow through with the judicial allocate $1 million a year for due. Dickason also noted that According to 16th district She pulled the covers back over board process. deferred maintenance, reserves because the way in whicb fed^ pUpolice, ilM , theyUIVJ were w vtv summoned9UUUI1VF11V\» byWJ her A JW * body, and went back to sleep. ------K------will be k ^ t at no less than 9 eral money is allocated has percent of operatog,costs. been changed from last year, Local publishing magnate speaks 1Y:itstee David KnoU s ^ e the program is behind sch^le on b0half of the Stud^t Life by seven weeks, so th ^ may Distinguished Drexelcdumm^ CGnmut&ee, aoaooncing ttiat a be frvtber delays. d^dbioii be loatie Robert Kiikwood announced M k h a e l j . Lebiedzinski the next montii on whicb of tlie for tJle Academic Affairs Ed-Op Editor Oiree or four bids by ootside Committee that tenure i^)point> Robert J. Hall, Drexel graduate firms will be asxxpttA to over­ ment proposals have been and publisher and chairman of take the Qounseliiig center, delayed due to the fact that it is The Philadelphia Inquirer and tCnoll was that the not yet certain how many posi­ Daily News, spoke at Connect­ cancellation of classes > at tions y/m be availeBenedictis, CEO of Philadel­ been filled. The head of the reconunend a list of candidates candidates for the ... position.” Breslin on Nov. 17, 1992. phia Suburban Corporation; Dascher will be assuming the Professor Margaret Devinney of position as dean of the School the communications depart­ Hall is first in alumni speaker series of Business and Administration ment; James Hagen, CEO of Continued from page 1 dents, whom Hall characterized One student asked what quali­ at Stetson University in Florida. Conrail; Professor Magid as “flexible, interpersonal ties are locked fw in potential job The search committee has Igbaria; Professor Tina Larsen; “During co-op, Drexel stu­ thinkers,” should see the future as ^licants. Hall drew on personal been working during weekly Professor Bert Rosenbloom; dents learn in a direct way, they “a challenge, not an obstacle.” experience, saying that grade meetings to find a replacement Professor Joan Weiner; and learn peq)le skills and gain nec­ After his lecture. Hall opened point average receives the lowest for Dascher before his position Professor Jeffrey Greenhaus, essary expaience ... Drexel stu­ the session to questions. The emphasis. “The GPA must be is vacated on July 1, 1993. A conmiittee chair. dents are most suited for the question session turned into a reasonable, but I lo(^ f(X‘ what a new dean is expected to have The committee has placed future,” he added. personal advice session. In student has done in and out of been announced before that ads in the Wall Street Journal, Hall emphasized that in the response to a question about the school and how that person works date, but the starting date for the The Philadelphia Inquirer, the future “the focus will be on the tough job market facing graduat­ with others.” Other ext^nal fac­ customer.” He encouraged stu­ ing seniors. Hall advised seniors tors, such as a self-finaiKed edu­ dents to embrace the future, that they need to be tenacious, cation, volunteer woric, hobbies where they w ill find a more follow up on every lead, examine that show extroversion and signs Crime report from diverse workforce and multina­ personal backgrounds, and mar­ of good interpo^nal skills also 16th District Police tional companies. Drexel stu­ ket tb0 O[iselves. ate important acconling to Hall. The following is a Hsting of Part One^ IVustees hear from Senate and Congress District for ifa&period March 8,1993 to March 14,1993: Continued from page 1 ing under the current retirement that in the spring, after the con­ incentive program. struction of barbecue pits has for maintenance projects. Robyn Gershenoff, student been completed in Buckley 300 N. 35th St 1:50 pjn. Wednesday 3/10/93 Faculty Senate Chair Jack Kay congress president, announced Green, there will be a barbecue 40th & PoweltOT Avie. 7:30 a.m. Friday 3/12/93 announced that the senate’s rec­ that the student congress sup­ in honor of the basketball team. 40th & Reno St 11:55 p.m. S a t u r ^ y 3/13/93 ommendation to restore the ports the elimination of the Gershenoff also announced 42nd & Fainnount Ave. 2:55 ajn. Sunday 3/14/93 grants-in-aid program has been grants-in-aid program which pro­ that the senior class gift will be a given to the president vides money for the children of clock fcM- the quad tiiat will have A88raY.»tesl,Asg«Blfc Kay also said that the senate is faculty to attend college. Student an enlarged “3” and “9” in honor Prest(Hi & Lancaster Ave. 12:55 ajn. Monday 3/8/93 exploring the feasibility of pro­ congress feels that the program of the class of 1993. It will either 300BuddSL 1:15 a.m. Monday 3/8/93 viding expert financial advice for should be phased out be placed on the roof of Konnan 700 Union St 10:03 a.m. Monday 3/8/93 those who are considering retir­ Gershenoff also announced or on a brick pedestal. 43rd & Westminster Ave.9:15 a.m. Mcmday 3/8/93 700 N. 38th St 8:27 a.m. Tuesday 3/9/93 35th & F£uxmount Ave. 9:22 p.m. Thursday 3/11/93 Breslin named in civil rights suit Continued from page 1 elimination” of his position pre­ whistleblowing. Bffrstery; vent him from “engaging in pro­ •Fraudulent misrepresenta­ 200 N. 36th St 12:26 ajn. Tuesday 3/9/93 resulted in the awarding of print­ tected speech in the future, ... tion. Uhl charges that statements 3700 Baring St 8:07 p.m. Thursday 3/11/93 ing contracts to relatives and which would [be] embarrassing made to him by Schneider and 4100 Girard Ave. 9:19 pjn. TTiursday 3/11/93 firiends of Kerarme. He says that to Dr. Breslin, IDr. Schneider, Doelp commending him for either forged competitive bids Mr. Doelp, and Mr. Kerarme.” reporting acts of wrongdoing L f tr « ;y n y : were sutoiitted or other vendws’ •Civil conspiracy. Uhl is were “intentioned to mislead.” 3800 Powellon Ave. 8:49 pjn. Monday 3/8/93 bids were sent to a previously alleging that the defendants con­ •Punitive damages. Uhl sug­ 100 N. 34th St 1 2 :2 0 a.m. Tuesday 3/9/93 chosen bidder, practices that are spired “to wrongfully discharge gests the award of punitive dam­ 100 N. 33rd St 4:31 p jit Tuesday 3/9/93 unlawful under federal and [the] plaintiff for his efforts to ages to deter Drexel and other 3000 JFK Blvd. 1:30 pjn. Tuesday 3/9/93 Pennsylvania law. Keranne also expose fraud, waste, and crime universities from wrongfully 600 N. 39th St 1 1 :0 0 a-m. Wednesday 3/10/93 ordered Uhl to falsify purchase within Drexel University.” removing employees for whistle- 34th & Lancaster Ave. 5:25 a.m. Wednesday 3/10/93 ordCTs, Uhl said. •Wrongful discharge in viola­ Uowing. 3300 Market St 1:56 a.m. Thursday 3/11/93 After retaliation from Keranne tion of public policy. Uhl alleges Uhl stated that he was unable 41st & Girard Ave. 1 : 0 0 a.m. Thursday 3/11/93 and Crossley and several threat­ that the defendants violated the to afford the services of an attor­ 3400 Baring St 1:50 pjn. Thursday 3/11/93 ening phone calls, Uhl said that First Amendment and the “pub­ ney to represent him. Therefore, 4100 Lancaster Ave. 1 :0 0 pjn. Thursday 3/11/93 he requested a leave of absence, lic policy mandate of the laws be sought legal help from Project 3000 Market St 2 : 0 0 ajn. Friday 3/12/93 which was later denied. Uhl’s and regulations of the Common­ Giraffe, a group which provides 4200 Market St 1 1 :0 0 am. Riday 3/12/93 complaint states that “on Nov. wealth of Pennsylvania” by legal help and advice for 3000 Market St 7:20 pjn. Friday 3/12/93 13, 1990 [he] received a letter wrongfully discharging him. employee whistle-blowers. 3000 Market St 4:00 pjn. Friday 3/12/93 from Mr. Keranne dated Nov. 7, •Breach of contract. Uhl is Drexel and the other def^idants 3800PtearlSt 9:25 pjn. Friday 3/12/93 1990, stating that his employ­ alleging that his discharge was in are being represented by Kathryn 40th & Market St 2 : 0 0 ajn. Friday 3/12/93 ment was terminated.” Uhl was contradiction to an oral agree­ L e v ^ g of Drinker, Biddle and unable to provide a cc^y of this ment of job security that be had Reath, Drexel’s attorney. Stelfn Atttpy letter to The Triangle. received, and that Drexel The case is scheduled to be 1100 N. 40th St 5:48 ajn. Monday 3/8/93 The complaint submitted to promised only to fire for “just heard by Judge Louis C. Bechtle 4000FilbertSt 4:25 pjn. Monday 3/8/93 the court by Uhl outlines seven cause.” in May 1993 in the United States 400BuddSt 9:50 pjn. Monday specific counts. •Intentional infliction of emo- District Court for the Eastern 3600 Lancaster Ave. 1:05 ajn. Thursday 3/11/93 •Civil rights and the First ti(xial distress. Uhl characterized District of Pennsylvania, which 32iid & Market St 2 : 2 2 a.m. Thursday 3/11/93 Amendment. Uhl is charging the defendants’ firing him as is located in Philadelphia. Uhl 32nd & Poweiton Ave. 8:40 ajn. Thursday 3/11/93 that his whistle-blowing activi­ “outrageous conduct,” saying commented that “if [he] had to 1100N.41St 1 1 : 0 0 a.m. Friday 3/12/93 ties are protected by the First that he was emotionally dis­ go back, [he] would have kept Amendment and that the “bogus tressed because he was fired for his mouth shut.”

D ouglas Sm ith...... EorroR-iN-CHiEF Brian D. Y ates...... System s A dministoator B u ^ E g S t a f f The Triangle Scott W U llains...... M anaging E ditor Michael Karam David Sm ith ...... JBusiness M anager A s s i s t a n t E o r r o R S ______Copyright ©1993 The Triangle. No work herein Stacy Lutkus, Kevin Eliasen C a r t o o n i s t s ______may be reproduced in any form, in whole or in Denise Inm an ...... PRODUcnoN M anager Craig Barnitz, Kevin Eliasen, Greg Galcik, Don ^without the written consent of the Editor-in- Robert Blast...... N ew s E dftor N e w s W m t e r s ______Haring, Ivan Ong, luwis Pache M khael Lebicdzinski...... E d -O p E ditor Angela Duckett, Mark Gaudiosi. David Moore, Patricia O'Brien C o l u m n i s t s Opinions expressed within are not necessarily Catherine Campbell....C ampus P a ge EDrroR those of The Triangle. The Triangle is published Ida Chi, ^teve £scott, John Gruber, Christopher atebook Fridays in Philadelphia, PA, during the academic Anthony Burokas ...... D EorroR C a m p u s W R r r E R s ______Hatch, l^ c Zander year, except during examinations and vacation Denise Inm an ...... F eatures E ditor Kathleen Kiulikowski, Jonathan PoS periods. G r a p h i c D e s i g n ______Adam Blywelss...... Entertainment E dftor Mary Storm The Triangle's only source of income is advertis­ E ntertainment W r f f e r s ______ing: funding from the University is not accepted. T racy M arcu s...... C om ics E ditor Steve Bojanowski, Brandon Cheek, Nick DeFranco, Kelly Papke ...... C lassifieds M anager Mark Gardner, Chad Gom, Anita j. Michel, Jack S t a f f ______Subscriptions may be ordered for $20 for six Mike Tirenin months; display and classified advertising may be Rick Vallieres ...... C lassifieds M anager Persico, Steve Segal, Aaron Z Schantz placed at the address below. Scott W illiam s...... S ports E ditor S p o r t s W r i t e r s ______Member of: D av id M a y s ...... C hief C opy E ditor Larry Rosenzweig, Andrew Ross The Triangle Philadelphia CoUegiaie Press Association Christian Deroba .....A dvertising M anager 32nd & Chcstmt Streets • PUladdpWa, PA 19104 Columbia Scholastic Press Association Karen Darress....G raphic D esign M anager P h o t o g r a p h y ______Bwiiiess: (215) 895-2569 • News (215) 895-2585 Joe Campbell Associated Collegiate Press Fax (215) 895-5935 R achel Mestetsky ...Photography M anager The Triangle • M arch 19,1993 • 3

N e w s f r o m a r o u n d t h e n a t i o n Secondhand smoke report affects U.S. campuses K a r e n N e u s t a d t deaths annually among adults University of California sys­ while smoking and non-smok­ After 18 months of intense College Press Service in the United States, and is tem, which aren’t covered by ing rooms have been designat­ discussion and debate, the A grim report on second­ associated with an increase in the order, to do the same thing. ed in residence halls. University of Wisconsin- hand smoke by the ailments of the lower respira­ “Colleges should be in the At Iowa State University, in Green Bay decided to go com­ Environmental Protection tory tract, such as bronchitis lead, because smoking is low­ Ames, Iowa, beginning July 1, pletely smoke-free last year. Agency has armed non-smok- and pneumonia; from 15,000 est in areas where education is smoking will be banned in all There is no smoking allowed ing students^ faculty and to 30,000 cases of respiratory highest,” said John Banzhaf, university buildings with only in any building anywhere on administrators with new infor­ ailments in infants and young executive director of the a few exceptions. the campus. mation to flght for smoke-free children up to 18 months can Washington-based Action on Private rooms at the univer­ Had the change not been campuses, a growing trend at be attributed to secondhand Smoking and Health and a sity will not be covered in the mandated last year, the EPA U.S. colleges and universities. smoke; secondhand smoke professor of law at George ban, although residence halls report would have decided the The EPA report, titled “The causes an increased severity of Washington University in will try to phase out smoking issue this year, a school offi­ Respiratory Health Effects of symptoms in children with Washington, D.C. completely over the next five cial said. Passive Smoking: Lung asthma. “People form attitudes at years. “Of course, there are those Cancer and Other Diseases,” The report estimates that the college level,” he said. But smoking will not be who are not happy with that has confirmed what the med­ 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 to 1 million children “Ten or 15 years ago, they allowed in the Iowa State decision,” said Ron ical profession has long sus­ annually get sicker because of picked up the habit of smoking Center at university-sponsored Ronnenberg, financial aid pected — that breathing sec­ exposure to secondhand in college; now they are pick­ events, including basketball director. ondhand smoke can be as smoke. ing up the habit of not smok­ games. According to the U.S. deadly as lighting up. “Only about 25 percent of ing.” At the University of North Department of Health and “It ’ s very alarming,” said Americans are smokers, so it Banzhaf counsels campus Alabama in Florence, Ala., as Human Services, a recent sur­ Timothy Hensley, spokesman is the majority of Americans anti-smoking activists to go all a result of the EPA report, a vey showed that 31.1 percent for the Office on Smoking and who are victims of passive the way to the president of the resolution was passed by the of men and 28.1 percent of Health at the Centers for Dis­ smoke,” Hensley noted. college or university with their faculty senate on Jan. 21 call­ women ages 20-24 smoke. ease Control and Prevention in Since the EPA report, first demands. ing for a campus-wide ban on There has been an overall Atlanta, Georgia. lady Hillary Rodham Clinton “Tell him, ‘You wouldn’ t tobacco in university facilities, decline, however, in smoking “The report provides has declared the White House put us in a building with and the elimination of its sale among people with some col­ ammunition for students and smoke-free for the first time in asbestos,’” he said. “Tell him anywhere on the campus. lege education from 42 percent for administrators to strive for history, and corporations such we now know that passive At George Washington to 26 percent between 1965 smoke-free regulations in edu­ as McDonalds and Chuck E. smoke is a class A carcino­ University in Washington, and 1987, according to the cational settings to protect the Cheese are experimenting with gen.” D.C., a large area in the cafe­ American Lung Association. non-smoker from hazardous smoke-free restaurants. While many campuses have teria that was designated The National Center for exposure to secondhand Smoking was banned March been cracking down on smok­ smoking was just made Health Statistics data says that smoke, which can lead to lung 1 in nearly all California state ing for the past several years, smoke-free, and smoking on smoking is the single largest cancer.” buildings under an order administrators say the EPA campus has been severely preventable cause of prema­ Among the EPA’s flndings: signed by Gov. Pete Wilson, report w ill most likely expe­ restricted to designated areas. ture death and disability in the secondhand smoke is responsi­ who urged the judicial and leg­ dite even stricter policies than A restriction on smoking in United States and kills more ble for 3,000 lung cancer islative branches and the had existed before. lobbies was recently mandated Americans each year than Many colleges ban smoking because people at information cocaine, heroin, alcohol abuse, entirely in classroom and desks would be exposed to drugs, auto accidents, homi­ Condoms rated administration buildings. passive smoke. cide and suicide combined. College Press Service “We have cut the chlamydia Northern Illinois Uni­ rate on this campus in half / 4 h h c c i s U versity’s health center distrib­ since 1989, and increased con­ uted 35,000 condoms to be dom use by three times. Con­ judged by students for “aiq>ear- dom use has gone frcMn 15 per­ ance, sensualness/comfort, cent to 42 percent, so we ^ve smell, taste, lubrication and some solid data that says usage sense of security,” but not and availability is associated career Fa ir everyone was pleased by The with controlling transmittable Great Condom Rating Contest disease,” Haines said. Health officials said the Not everyone agrees with the event was supposed to promote idea of handing out free con­ DllSIf 1 safe sex and AIDS awareness. doms. TUESPffT. APRIl 13,1993 But critics said it simply pro­ “STDs and AIDS are behav- moted behavior that spreads iorally transmitted diseases, disease and charged that the and this contest does nothing to «RW «ffE iW » MOKSSIONM SeWKHS contest literature may have discourage the behavior that misrepresented the condom spreads them,” said Scott MMt MMriM A il6 Mck IK failure rate among college-age Stocking, director of the users. Christian Campus Ministry, The free condom packages who asked students to boycott I w distributed by the Health the contest. Services Department included Stocking said he was con­ seven different brands and cerned that literature enclosed types packed with a question­ with the condoms underesti­ naire and a folder on the proper mated the rate of condom fail­ use of condoms. ure in the 20-24 age group. “We copied the idea directly “In the Planned Parenthood from Stanford,” said contest literature I read, condom failure ninr 2 coordinate Michael Haines of rate among 20- to 24-year-olds WEPNESO/W; APRIL 14.1993 Health Services. “The contest is between 19 to 36 percent. provides feedback so we can The industry says with perfect find out student preferences, use, condoms in that age group o m m m H m Mmum ad mWwmMi while we give them educational only fail at a rate of 1-2 per­ ew*h| esiw k wrlew fliUi materials discussing risks.” cent,” Stocking said. The Stanford project has had “I think students have a false a return of 5-10 percent over sense of security about con­ the past four years. “But we are doms. Abstinence is the only hoping for more than that,” safety from STDs and AIDS.” Haines said. Haines said abstinence is one eROOGMT 10 YOy iY CAREER SERVICES Haines said that free con­ of the choices recommended to doms, paid for by student students who enlist the services mu im COOI>ERMIVE EOyCMlON CENHER health fees, have been available of the Health Services De­ for the past five years. Students partment. can find them in fishbowls at The contest was financed in Correction: health centers, Greek houses part by a grant fir(xn an Illinois and residence halls. HIV awareness project funded In last week’s column “Grants-in-aid is a waste of valuable student money,” “The contest helps us find by the Centers for Disease on page 5 in the Editorial & Opinion section by Catherine Campbell, Vicki McKee, out which condoms students Control and Prevention in office services coordinatior in the comptroller’s office, was incorrectly identified as prefer, which helps ensure Atlanta. The results of the con­ N^cki McBride. greater usage,” Haines said. test have not been tabulated. P a g e 4 The Triangle • M arch 19,1993 E d it o r ia l & O p i n i o n

A student-run newspaper serving the campus and the community since 1926

Editor-in-Chief Douglas Smith

Ed-Op Editor Michael J. Lebiedzinski

s w e see it... • L e t t e r s t o t h e E d it o r A • The stockholders should foreclose Editor: University is beginning to wear an architecture program. I do not Paper... not a newspaper I am again disturbed to read thin. As an evening college stu­ use the gym. I do not attend We would like to thank the City Paper for trying to tell the rest of that the bureaucracy at Drexel is dent of many years, I am not able school sponsored activities, par­ Philadelphia what readers of The Triangle have known for months, if again attempting to resolve a to avail myself of the various tially due to lack of notice or not years. Hiis week, the City Paper published a “special investiga­ problem encountered by the day­ “services” provided by the information. tion” cm the “mediocrity” at Drexel. Unfortunately, they did not take time student with the wallets of University. This is due to working In conclusion, I felt that it was the time to interview the most important peq)le at Drexel - the stu­ the Evening College students. a full-time job, having a three time to stop quietly complaining dents. It is easy to publish a one-sided stoiy when you only interview In tli^ article which appeared in hour round-trip commute and to myself or to follow cl^smates ex-employees let go due to a recent reduction in force program and a the Feb. 26 issue of The Triangle desiring to have a life in general. and tell the Drexel community union boss whose members just lost $6,500 each in a 22-week strike. concerning unauthorized use of But I still pay the student services that there is at least one evening At The Triangle, we deal with sensitive issues like rape, cutbacks, office phones in the Student fee each quarter. student that is tired of paying to layoffs, union strikes and shady politics too. Our policy is to include Congress office, it stated that Mr. But I receive nothing in return. bail out Drexel Savings and Loan. the author aa the byline of the news story. The City P£q3er did not Grazioso wanted to obtain fund­ I use a larger, more sqphisticated It is time for the stockholders to even byline their two page “special investigation,” and their editor ing from the evening college and library that is 45 minutes from foreclose. does an inadequate job, to say the least, of explaining why. The only the graduate college congresses. home. The reason that I do not go Thomas F. Eichier byline they did include was wrong, giving their i^otogrE^her credit This type of treatment by the there is because they do not offer Architecture *95 for a photo that was taken by the Editor-in-Chief of The Triangle. Guilty, innocent or,,, no comment Creese display not inappropriate The civil rights court case against Drexel presented an interesting Editor: now you and otho'S who feel the 5,000 years ago, in Mesopotamia, situation. Drexel was unable to defend themselves against some This is in response to Christine way you do can know how every Egypt, not Europe, where writing nasty allegations. We will have to wait until May for a verdict. Gorgone’s comments on the black woman felt when we saw was first developed. We will Guilty or innocent, E>rexel and Michael Uhl will experience our Women in History display in Elizabeth Taylor portray Cleo­ probably never learn in “Europe judicial system in its purest form. The Triangle was warned that Creese. Christine, I believe you patra, who was a black African and the Modem World I and I f ’ publishing a news story about this case would hurt many people. now know how African Amer­ queen, not a blue-eyed white that it was actually black people News stories do not hurt people; people and their actions hurt peo­ icans feel when we can never find woman, on screen. who created such a beautiful and ple. But we feel that students and the community have a right to any of our role models in history So I must ask you not to make important invention. know what is going on. Students go to college to learn. Let them books, except for maybe a half too much of a fuss over such a Please look at the world learn about life and the world in general. page of our ancestors being small display in the student union. through the eyes of the black peo­ Students speak ... and are commended brought over from Africa on ships Please let the black women — ple and all other ethnic groups and as slaves in a capitalistic society. who have acquired by birth two you too w ill begin to wonder Student Congress President Robyn Gershenoff spoke at the You will not read in many his­ strikes against them — have a lit­ when Walt Disney will make a Board of Trustees meeting this Wednesday. She spoke at the end of tory books of how it was an tle acknowledgement of the fairy tale called little Nubian mer­ the meeting, and several trustees who left early really missed out African American who invented achievements of some of their maid or, maybe African Beauty For IS minutes, she captivated the collective trustee mind. the first pair of shoes and the traf­ own. and the Beast Obviously nervous at first, she told the captains what is going on fic light. It was Charles Drew, not Don’t worry, we won’t forget Can’ t the black people live with the passengers of their ship, mentioning academic honesty, a white man, who invented blood about what all of the Susan B. happily ever after too? senior class happenings, and the Buckley barbeque pit gift. Breslin, tranfusion and died from being Anthonys have done for human­ Glynda Shanae Brown grin in full bloom throughout the presentation, commented that Robyn was the best Student Congess President he had ever woiked too black to receive the treatment kind. How can we? ITiey made a President, NASA he invented. Christine, maybe coin after her. Do not forget it was Financial Management *94 with. Unfortunately, the fact may be all too true. In the past, the administration has not worked well with the stu­ dents. We endorse continued and expanded communication and Ed-O p Policy cooperation between students and the administration. > The Editorial &, Opinicm pages are intended to be a forum for all membeni of the Drexel ccHnmunity to express An end and a beginning: change continues their opinions on issues related to E>rexel University^ Philadelphia and the world at large. Letters and columns As winter tenn closes, it is appropriate to look back on the past express only the views of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Triangle or Drexel term, which has seen lots of changes - an end to the strike, UniversiQr. increased school spirit, a revitalized cafeteria, outsourcing, a new ' The Triangle welcomes letters to the Editor and guest columns as an opportunity to better express personal views. financial aid policy, an alleged rape, a fraternity fire, strategic plan To be published, letters to the Editor and columns must be signed and include a phone number. Names will be implementations, and lots of snow and a day off. withheld upon request Next term will continue the trend of change - a new bookstore, ’ Submissions from students must include major, year of graduation and applicable affiliations; University employr printing and mailing services outsourced, a new Dean of Business ees must include position at tbe University. Letters to the Editor must be ^pcd, double-spaced, and no longer than and Administration, a new Senior Vice President for one-and-a-balf pages. Guest columns must be no more than three pages, double-spaced. Submissions should be Administration, a new recreational facility and retail complex. But turned in as MacWrite II documents on floppy disk. these are all things that the University is doing to improve life at ' Writers who submit guest columns may detennine, in conjunction with the Editorrin-Chief and the Ed-Op Editor, Drexel and keep the ship afloat. the feasibility of becoming a regular staff columnist Regular staff columnists should submit a column for every Students must pitch in even more. President Clinton is pioneer­ other issue. Failure to do so may result in a contributor’s staff columnist status being revoked. ing a national volunteer campaign. Drexel has responded by adding ' The deadline for letters to the Editor and guest columns is the Wednesday before publication at 5:00 p.m. Mail two government-funded graduate students to coordinate volunteer submissions to the attention of the Ed’Op Editor, The Triangle, 32ad and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia, PA programs at Drexel. 19104. Submissions may also be dropped off in person at our office in room 3010 MacAlister Hall, 33rd and We must realize that even though we pay a great deal of tuition Chestnut Sureets. All submissions will be consider^, but 77i« Trtan^^ does not guarantee that a submission will money for our education, it’s not the same as K-mart. Students be printed. The Triangle reserves the right to edit for space, granunar, and clarity. mold the image of their university. We are confident that students » Profanity in columns, guest columns and letters to the Editor is not encouraged and may be editted to conform will continue to become more involved in Drexel's future. with the journalistic standards of The Triangle, The Triangle • M arch 19,1993 • 5 School spirit has free reign a t D rexel This is only my second year lost, the amount of school spirit ever felt before. teams not invited to the NCAA team names in the hopes of win­ at Drexel, but I feel safe in that was shown was unbeliev­ I stood watching E)elaware’s tournament. Allowing such pow­ ning an office pool. People who able. Tve been playing and players celebrate their victory, erhouses as Niagara and James know nothing about college bas­ watching basketball for a long watching them dance on our Madison to enter, the folks in ketball pay their dollar and pick time, and I never before saw a rims and cut down our nets; and charge of the NIT decided that their teams. game where the fans stood up to I felt as though they were winning the regular season in its They don’t know the differ­ watch the entire game. puUmg out my heart. They were conference wasn’t good enough ence between Duke University I like Drexel University, but all laughing, and it felt as though for Drexel. and Duke Ellington, but they like most students, 1 never really they were laughing at me. I can • • • pick them to win because felt proud to be here. That has only imagine how much worse The NCAA Tournament is Ellington played a good trum­ claiming that last week’s NAC now changed. I ’ve been a sore our players felt. turning into a great American pet. championship game was the best k)ser my entire life, but the feel­ Ilien to add insult to injury, tradition. It is now every They think Ball State is a thing to h a p ^ to this school in ing I was left with after that our team failed to get an invita­ American’s civil duty to fill out venereal disease, but pick them a long time. Even though we game was unlike anything I ’d tion to the NIT, a tournament for a sheet labeled with brackets and to upset Kansas anyway. “Those Kansas boys won’t be able to stop scratching themselves!” They overheard that So much for giving Clinton a chance “Carolina is going all the way,” First, in response to Jonathan not even the Democratic Party the Democrats can’t even agree right along party lines. but don’t know if it’s Coastal Poet’s rebuttal {The Triangle, can agrce that Clinton’s ecoa(»n- on something as small as a $16 Translation: the Democrats Carolina, East Carolina, or Mar. 12), I would like to simply ic stimulus package is for the billion program (small when didn’t even want to hear about it. North Carolina. So they pick state that the source for my num­ best. compared to the $300 billion Bill’s administration said that it East Carolina and Coastal bers for my March 12 column Billy proposes a $16.3 billion spent on Medicare), how long wants to hear ideas, but when Carolina to go to the Final Four. came from the March 1 “News­ stimulus package that, according will they tie up Clinton’s entire they’re presented, it doesn't want They think Coppin State is a week.” They arc not to his numbers (which have package? to hear ideas. Which one is it? police academy, so they pick almost always been off), will cre­ Speaking of Clinton’ s tax Once again, we see that what them to lose because “The guys ate 500,000 jobs by throwing pacl^ge, is anyone aware that an they say isn’t what they mean. in those Police Academy money into public works, urban alternate economic package was Finally, I ’d like to respond to movies never got anything aid, and summer jobs for teens. proposed? Is anyone aware that it the onslaught of “Give ’em a right” However, Rep. Charles Sten- involved no tax increases? Rep. chance” statements I ’ve received The funny part is, one of holm, D-Texas, a leader of demo­ John Kasich, R-Ohio, presented lately. All I can say is that it’s these people will probably win cratic deficit-cutting “hawks,” exactly what Clinton and his now been 60 days, and the only your pool. That’s the beauty of said he hopes to stop ahnost 60 cronies wanted: a specific, com­ thing that I know for sure about the tournament, some of the However, I must also correct percent of the package. If he prehensive package that cut Bill and his plan is that taxes will favorites always lose. myself by saying that the spend­ knows what he’s talking about, spending. In fact, Kasich’s plan go up, and the nation will go If Drexel had beaten ing and cuts mentioned were in then that means that Mr. Bill will cut $429 billion without raismg a deeper in debt by about $1.5 tril­ Delaware, I ’d have picked the one specific area, not over the be wasting $9 billion on unneces­ dime of taxes. lion (as reported in the March 17, Dragons to win their first game, entire budget. sary projects. So, I ’m sure you’ d like to 1993, USA Today ). How much simply because I ’m a fan. But Well, I opened up my March Of course, I shan’t speculate know what h^pened. The House more of a chance should I give they didn’t, so I’m picking 17 USA Today, and found this that this means that a similar per­ of Representatives voted against him? I already donated a pint of Delaware to lose — and I hope headline: “Dems split over stimu­ centage of his entire tax plan is even allowing it on the floor fcM* a blood last week, so I guess I can’t they lose bad — simply because lus package.” Grunt It seems that also unneeded. I will ask that if simple discussion. The vote went afford to give him anything else. I ’m a sore loser. Administration, professors are ripping students off Ed. Note: This article was this what students and parents their professors. Approximately the brightest young men and level of finandal aid to graduate written by Martin Anderson. It is pay tens of thousands of dollars 44 percent of all financial aid to women in this country, is 50 per­ students, with no strings distributed by the Collegiate for? Is this why students studied graduate students comes in the cent, with most of them dropping attached, if only they required Network, a program of the so hard — to be taught and coun­ form of teaching assistantships; out after spending five, six, their professors to teach more Madison Center. seled and graded by men and an additional 38 percent is avail­ seven, or more years in pursuit of than a few hours a week. As for Today’s university students women who have not yet earned able for research assistantships. thePhX). teaching “practice,” less than seem to be a forbearing, forgiv­ their degrees, who are not yet When economic coercion fails, There is a way to stop the half of all doctoral recipients ing lot. Subject to callous qualified enough to be hired by an increasing number of univer­ cheating of undergraduates and ever go on to become professors. exploitation and victims of one the university as professors? sities resort to making a certain the exploitation of graduate stu­ Furthermore, the time to practice of the biggest ripoffs in America, The consequences are serious. number of semesters or quarters dents: simply prohibit the use of should come after receiving the they are remarkably silent. And Undergraduates are cheated of of teaching a requirement for the students as professors. “Impos­ degree, not while pursuing it. Do perhaps for good reason, for if the quality education they have doctoral degree. The problem sible,” the universities will say, medical students practice they speak out and protest, they bought and paid for. Grades lose with all this is that teaching, even “we couldn’ t afford it, and surgery? Do law students prac­ are all too vulnerable to retalia­ much of their meaning, for no badly done, takes much prepara­ besides, the graduate students tice in court with real clients? tion by faculty and administra­ one cares very much for one stu­ tion and time, and the time a need teaching practice for the Some politicians have called tors. dent’s view of another, and this graduate student spends teaching day when they become profes­ for putting God back in the class­ The victims of the rip-off are may be one factor a professor’s sors.” room. Think how much we could the undergraduates, especially in the rampant classes or doing a But the universities could accomplish if we just put the freshmen or sophomores, the grade inflation that Think how professor’s re­ afford it, by providing the same professors back in the classroom. ones who are often taught and makes a mockery search is time graded by other students — of everyone’s much we could stolen from the teaching assistants as they are grades. The bottom pursuit of the euphemistically called. In a vari­ line is a cheapened accomplish if PhX). Dragon's Brew ation of the old bait-and-switch degree. As long as The results are game, the universities entice few people catch we just put the predictable, U^gic potential students and their par­ on to the fact that and little spoken ents with tales of exceptional university students professors of. The normal, teaching by erudite and some­ are taught and accepted time to times world-renowned profes­ graded to a signifi­ back in the earn the Ph.D. is sors. But when the checks are cant extent by three to four written for $5,000, $10,000 or other students, and classroom. years. Today, after sometimes over $20,000 for a that high grades one has received year’s education, and the stu­ are conunonplace, the value of the bachelor’s degree, the medi­ dents are safely enrolled, the the degree will hold up. But as an time it takes to earn a doctoral reality they find in the classroom the word spreads, and it will, the degree is 10.5 years. For women is not exactly what the catalog value of many college and uni­ the time is 12.5 years. For describes. versity degrees w ill become African-Americans it is 14.9 These hopeful, expectant more and mere suspect years. The typical student is mid- young men and women all too Perhaps the worst news is that dle-aged before completion of often find not a professor stand­ it now takes the typical under­ the requirements for the doctoral ing in front of them, but a gradu­ graduate close to six years to degree. ate student (sometimes an under­ earn this quasi-bogus degree. In one sense, these statistics graduate student). While these The four-year bachelor’s degree are the good news. Half the men B r e w h o u s E pseudo professors rarely lecture has become a relic of the past, and women who struggle in the large halls, they often lead largely due to the unavailability through the Ph.D. gauntlet take Friday 3/19-KINDRED SPIRIT the smaller class discussions of courses when needed and longer and some of them are old Country, & Classic Rock where the real teaching should inept counseling and guidance. when they finally receive their occur. They grade examinations Graduate students may not be degree. It gets wwse. We worry Saturday 3/20 KABUDI PROJECT and courses; they even counsel cheated, but they are exploited about dropout rates of 12 or 15 & African Pop students about some of the most ruthlessly. Many of them are percent in our high schools. The 1516 Sansom Street * 2nd Floor * 563-2326 dropout rate today for our doc­ important choices in their lives. coerced into either teaching or FREE PARKING AFTER 5 PM Is this a university education? Is performing research tasks for toral degree candidates, many of 6 • The IHangle • M arch 19,1 9 9 3 Anti-Semitism is unfounded I was sitting in my seat in math Germany; even in America boats unfounded fear? Why is anyone D w Miss Stags, resize that she is hurting yoiir lecture attempting not to fall oi Jews woe turned away during prejudicial for any reason? Are ] have a Ug probleisu a^d 1 feelings. Sometimes people asleep, when something on my World War n. And you Nazis out you so insecure about yourself as need your hel]). aiCih*l quite aware of wiiat desk caueht my attention. there saying that’s a good thing an individual that you need s c ^ - I becaoie are doing untirit is ... go stick it Enough of the his­ goats to blame your fears on? close to this girl at too late. Talk to tory lesson. The real reason I am Back to tiie scrawling on my the beginning o f her and ten iier writing this article is because I desk that was signed with a this year. We*(e in lk)w you feel. One have a research p^po* to do, and I swastika. It said America is for the same major, OKHe thing; if they am doing it on anti-Semitism in Americans. Really? Well tiiank so it was really are always making America. During my research I you Mr. Nazi pig for that third easy for us to out in public just stumbled upon some frightening grade lesson. But what is an become friends. tell them to get a information. That is, even tixNigh American? Are we not descen­ We had most o f room. Now, I had noticed this bit of anti-Semitism is on tiie decline dants of all other nations? What outclasses togeth­ vandalism, having sat in this nationwide, it is on the rise on about Amoica as “the great melt­ er, we ate togeth­ Dear Miss Stags, same seat for the last few classes. college campuses. Also, violent ing pot”? Unless y(Hi are 100 per­ er, we partied lamafiesbmaii I have even rebutted to it. But I crimes, as opposed to vandalism. cent native American Indian, together, we did here» and ever didn’t really take it to heart which I strongly doubt then homework together^ and we since 1 got here Tve gained Of course neariy evoy desk you are a descendant of ibokeci for guys togedi^. weight, I know what the anywhere has someUiing or ... can*tpeople at least some other nation. Your A little while ago, I ihtrp* "^Freshman Fifteen” feels like anoth^ scribbled on it; from grandfathers, or great­ duced her to one o f my guy and I donU like it None of the fraternity letters to “math make an effort to get to grandfathers, or what ever, friends, and they immediately boys look at me anymore, and sux” statements. But this came to this nation to hit it off. TheyVe been seehig my self confidence Is diminish­ particular item was notiiing know someone first escape the injustice of each other ever smoe. ing. The problem is the cafeteria as care free. It was a very wherever they were. They The problejtn is that Tm start­ is **all you can eat*^ and that is racist comment about for­ before condemning came to America to escs^ ing to get ignored. They ate exactly what 1 do. 1 tiy to moni­ eigners, signed with a the same thing you are ral­ both my fnends separately, but tor my eating but I have no self- swastika. That is what lying now. Explain that collectively they are driving me control. I just eat until I am fiilL caught my attention initially. them for their ethnicity? please. crazyt They’re always hugging Miss Stags ten me what to do. Lately, letters and I would sqjpreciate some and kissing, and I basically ^Stuffed columns in die Ed-Op section of is up. After reading that I real­ response to this column for my can't stand it ^ymore. 1 have a The Triangle have been heated ized thjit during my time in high own personal interest What moti­ boyfriend too, but we are DearSuififed» discussions of race and discrimi­ school I hadn’t seen any signifi­ vates a person to hate so strongly nowhere nearly as sickening as What you need is self-disci­ nation of every type. Except anti- cant anti-Semitism. But since I ’ve and rationalize such silly fears? I those two. pline. Without self-discipline Semitism. Why was tiiis left out? been here I ’ve met a few Nazis know prejudice will never die as I want to stay inends wth^ you can let yourself be a slave Do people not consider anti- and I’ve even read a New Order long as there is ignorance, but them, but please tell me how to to almost anything, whether it Semitism to be a legitimate form newsletter. can’t people at least make an better deal with their being a be beer, drugs, food, masturba­ of prejudice? Well I w(»i’t go into I want to know why; what effort to get to know someone couple. tion, etc. Control your life and the dynamics of that so breathe a inspires anti-Semitism? Anyone first before condemning them for ^Used to be Friends stop letting it be run by food. sigh of relief and read (». who has an ounce of common tiieir ethnicity? I read this quote a Limit yourself to one serving Anti-Semitism is possibly the sense can dispel all the myths. while ago and it isn’t the wisest Dear Used to be Friends, per meat Don^t eat after 8 pan., world’s oldest prejudice. Jews Jews are taking over the banks, of sayings, but it does have a ring If you are close to this girl, and the most important thing have been expelled from nearly Jews killed , Jews are evil. of truth to it: “Why be prejudice? she ^ouldnU be ignoring you. you can do is exercise. Once every country at some point in Come on, weren’ t the Salem There are so many reasons to hate Any Mend Uiat chooses her you start exercising, you will history; England, France, Russia, witch trials based on similar a person (xi an in^vidual basis.” )0 )^priend ov^ her firiend is no feel good about yourself, you f r i ^ at all. Relationships don*t w ill have more energy, guys always work out the way we will start looldng at your butt, want them to, but friend^ps and most importantly, you will W hat-about-those-hyphens? last for ever. Hopefully she will behan>y. Last name-hyphenators, now for instance an individual gets brave, take the plunge, escape there is a joke. If there is one married and they do not want to from this identity limbo and Send your questions for Miss Stags to T^e Tnanjffe Ed^Op Edi group of individuals I would lose contact with their clients. pick a name. like to avoid it is the name- There are other reasons similar It seems these people create hyphenators. to this which are perfectly more of an identity crisis for acceptable, and necessary, but themselves by choosing both tiie problem arises when some­ names rather than one. Who are one chooses to hyphenate you if you have two names? because tiiey do not want to lose Does this give you special privi­ tiieir identity. What a crock. leges when you apply for a loan If you do not want to lose or file a tax return? Maybe I am LUVE SCHOOlIII your identity then why change missing some financial loop­ your name at all? How does hole. What better way to add to the hyphenation save your identity? Imagine this, you are having when Its time to eat confusion of life than to I do not care which name eitilier so much trouble finding your hyi^enate your last name? What spouse assumes after marriage. identity that you are not even purpose does it serve? If there You can both take the same sure which name to put Hrst! A surprising was ever a signal of a person name, switch names, or not What a pitiful tragedy. dining alterna- ■SfeSMARTALEX^ locked in an identity crisis this change them at all. The point is, Come on people, get a clue, is it just pick one name. What could there is little substance in a tiw thaKs easy AN EATING AND DRINKING EMPORIUM. 36th & Chestnut Streets at the Sheraton University City, There exist some exceptions be that important in a name? I name and, if you base your on your wallet. Phone 386-5556. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. to my rule of abolishing hyphen­ know there are more important entire identity on your last ated last names. The most com­ decisions to make in life than name, then to say you have a mon is for professional reasons. name choice. Go ahead be problem is being polite. O G vog hair salon for men and women n^The Triangle peers

Attention: Holders ofF^llJ^l Visas You must file an Incomelax return and Federal Tax Staternent whether or not you have earned income in 1992. If you do not owe taxes, the deadline for this r a i required tax return and tax statements is June 15. If you do not owe taxes, the deadline is April 15. Income Tax Workshop Brilliant hair designs from the W ednesday, April 7 ,1993 most popular salon in Europe 3:30 - 5:30 PM Htir,mnicurt&ptdicun Stein Auditorium Room 111 Nesbitt Hall 135 South 19Th St. • 215.564.2560 Questions? Call International Affairs Center Student Prices with ID - $22 Men - $33 Women 895-2502 Ask for Gai The Triangh Paris, France • Brussels, Belgium • Philadelphia, USA 3010 MociMister m ||gj|i;gL j|^laulc»jM definition of a cult without sense of alienation is begging where to live or what to eat. The that so many people have seriously. examining what followers and for a leader to slowly take con­ cult leader becomes reg^ed as believed in him, and even more leaders in cults are actually like. trol. a type of God. unfortunate that people have A cult, and therefore its follow­ Often cult leaders and the lliis, too, can be seen in the been killed in attempting to free ers and leaders, is not a group cults as a whole capitalize on case of David Koresh and his up their stockpiles of weapons. of individuals which differ on members of society who seem followers. The followers have And don’t accept what I have to religious beliefs from a certain to be lonely. At primary meet­ listened to Koresh’s every say, just because I have am say­ religious perspective. For ings, sensations of acceptance demand and are lifting him up ing it. Find out for yourself. example, would not consider Buddhism to be a cult. It does not agree with the basic tenets of Buddhism philosophy, but that does not make it a cult The typical cult leader is someone who has believed to have had special revelation from God. This becomes an extremely powerful, and conve­ nient, part of argument. From the cult leader’s perspective, a person who disagrees is not dis- agreejmg with.the cultist, but is ^disagreeing with that special revelation, and, hence, with God. This becomes a point of departure for others who believe to hold revelations with God or beliefs about God, because only this cult leader has the proper revelation from God. Another characteristic of a cult leader is a persecution complex. The cultist believes Check out these that the entire world is out to get him or her. This fear results Great Deals! in a tight protection. Cult lead­ Students-set a FREE Domino^ Pina ers tell their cult followers that Mug mrith your order-just ask when they are not allowed to talk to pkicins your order! those who do not belong to the cult, except for opportunities of (While quantities last) conversion, and ties to family members who do not believe m the point of view of the cult leader are encouraged, and often demanded, to be severed. The ruling of the followers’ lives does not usually stop with these basic parts of life. Often, the cult leader gives the sole direction for which jobs to take, where to live, and how to deal with the various difficulties that arise in life. Because of this special revelation or belief, the Servins: Drexel University 3801-17 Chestnut Street cult leader slowly begins to 386-2600 T control the lives of the follow­ ers. TOPPINBS DEEP DISH DEAL PIZZA & TWISTY BREAD This behavior seems quite \K M ' . m evident in the case of David Koresh, who believes that he is the incarnate being of Jesus $999 Christ. This would be the spe­ FREE cial revelation part of a cult ORDER A LARGE ORIGINAL PIZZA NEW DOMINO'S DEEP DISH MEDIUM ORIGINAL & AN ORDER leader. Also, the fact that he has AT REGULAR PRICE & GET UP TO &AGARDEN FRESH SALAD^ OF NEW TWISTY BREAD”* been able to convince his many THREE TOPPINGS FREE! OUR DOMINO’S DEEP DISH IS A DELICIOUS ADD yOUR FAVORITE TOPPINGS followers that he is Christ ZzESTY BLEND Of GARLIC, ONIONS, SPO HERBS, FOR JUST $1.29 EACH. demonstrates his powers of AND PARMESAN CHEESE, ALL BAKED INTO A DEEP GOLDEN CRUST Campus Coupon Necessary H Campus Coupon Necessary control, as well as his ability to Campus Coupon Necessary convince them to follow him Coupon Expires M»ch 14,1993 Coupon Expires March 14,1993 VaM at participating siani only. Not valid wiiti any ottwr otftr. Piicts may vaiy. Coupon Expires March 14,1993 VaM at participating sums only. Not vaW with any other oflar. Priccs may vary. into his Texas stronghold. The Cvstonw pays talM tax «rtiM«appiical)le.Oaiiv«(yaf«Mliint«d to ensurt safe Vatd at participaling stom only. Not vatd with any othtr oflar. PricM may vary. Cuatomer pays sales tax wtere apptcable. Delivery areas limited to ensure sale driving. Our dnvwtcariylMatlian $20.00. Out driven art n«l p«nab«d tor bit Customai payi sales tax wlwreapplicabla.Delivttyaraaslifliitid to ansuresah driving. Our drivm carry lata tlwi $20.00. Out driven are not penNztd (or Me stockpiling of weapons is an detvaries. 01993 Domino't Pizza, Inc. driving. Our dtivtrs cany less ttian $20.00. OurdrivarsarenatpMalindforlalt L delivanet. 0 1993 Domino's Pizza, inc. extreme example of the perse­ delivwita. 0 1993 Oonno'a Pizza. Inc. Page 8 The Triangle M arch 19,1993

Service: alive in Drexel community *Monte Carlo* C a t h e r in e C a m pb e ll “come up here and find out how University and also be an advo­ Campus Page E d ito r they can get involVSed with ser­ cate for everything wonderful Rooms 222 and 223 of the vice activities. We also can help that is going on in service on Creese Student Center will be students create new projects to campus,” said Manlin. She also the centralized location for vol­ become involved in.” emphasized the West Phila­ unteer opportunities at Drexel Last month, Pennsylvania delphia tutmng program and the University. applied for a grant to become Southwest Philadelphia mentor­ Under the direction of Ronnie one of eight national models for ing program. Manlin, this location will pro­ a national service corps. Manlin Organizations such as the vide material about courses explained that Drexel ^plied to Interfaith Council, EYE which are service opportunities, be one of the Pennsylvania sites. Openers, Habitat for Humanity such as Dr. Andrew Verzilli’s With the University’s support, and the service organizations Learning By DUing course, aa starting March 22, Drexel will Gamma Sigma Sigma and Alpha well as Deviant Behavior, and have two full-time employees, Phi Omega, have been active Criminology; it will have infor­ funded by the state, as members participants in community ser­ mation on community partner­ of the Pennsylvania Service vice in the past. “The Office of ships like the Powelton Village Corps. Computing Services has an Civic Association (PVCA), and After a meeting in Harrisburg incredible literacy program,” the Philadelphia Higher Edu­ last week, Manlin said that said Manlin. She also noted the cation Network for Neigh­ Drexel and Penn State’s group Share Our Strength’s pro­ borhood Develq)ment and “how Allentown campus are the only gram, Harvest for Hunger, which to interface with them,” said original Pennsylvania Service takes leftover food from area Manlin, as well as any oth^ type Corps sites located on college businesses and restaurants and Students iit M o/Ue CaHo N ight partie^HUe in a CovnKsrorTmljaaM D of volunteer c^portunities. campuses. donates it to the homeless. gam e o f btaek jack. Manlin explained that any “I want to be able to increase Other ongoing community C a t h e r in e C a m p b e l l member of the University can community service for the service programs include the 100 Campus Page Editor trees project, which was started Between 300 and 400 Drexel students attended the 14th annual two years ago when 100 trees Resident Student Association’s Monte Carip Night. “Taj Mahal” were planted in the community was the theme fcM* the evening, which began at 8:30 p.m. on the ROTC announces garden located at 33rd and Race second floor of the New Tower dormitory, and lasted until 11:30 Su:eets. The trees will be trans­ ■:,pjn.:-- ■ . . ... , planted throughout West Students were provided with $1^000 of free money with \^ich fall/winter awards Philadelphia. “We would like to they could “gamble.” Students played black jack, roulette, p(4cer M a r k G a u d io si won the American Legion uncover people who do incredi­ and the -big six wheel/’ According to Faith Zaback, assistant News Writer Award, Benjamin Franklin Post ble stuff,” said an enthusiastic direaor for resid^tial living, t-shirts and prizes were awarded to ROTC concluded its fall/win­ 405. The daughters of the Manlin. participants for their winnings. ter school year with an awards American Revolution ROTC Service Week will be held the ‘Everyone had lots of fun,” said Zaback. A DJ provided enter­ ceremony in Nesbitt Hall’s Stein medal, independence Hall chap­ week of April 19 to April 25. tainment and the Campus Activities Board’s CABaret, featuring Auditorium on Tuesday, March ter and the National Society of The week, in conjunction with guitarist Susan Wem^, followed. 16. The ceremony markis the end Scabbard and Blade Silver Greek Week, will include a ben­ **We had many positive comments from students that they of the ROTC school year and medal awards both went to efit gallery exhibit of Latino art; would like to see other things like the Monte Carlo Night in the the begimiing of the co-op ses­ Cadet Paul Nicolosi. Cadet the ribbon project, in which future,” said Zaback. sion for a msyoiity of the cadets. Philip Cotter and Cadet Stacey members of residential living go Several Drexel students are rec­ Urich won the General Society out into the community to ask for ognized for outstanding military of the War of 1812 award and donations for AIDS research in and scholastic achievement dur­ the National Society of exchange for a red ribbon; a ser­ WKDU hosts students ing the past year. Scabbard and Blade, Bronze vice fair; and a presentation in C a t h e r in e C a m p b e l l Senior award winners includ­ medal, respectively. The Mandell Theater on national, Campus Page Editor ed Cadet Jeffrey Miller who Reserve Officers Association state, local, and campus service. On Wednesday, March 10, members of Drexel’s radio station won the George C. Marshall medal went to Cadet Eli Closing up the week, on WKDU hosted a party complete with a DJ and pizza fof a group award and the Distinguished Renshaw. The Sons of the Saturday April 25, PVCA will of students from the Ewelyn Institute of West I%iladelphia. military student award. The dis­ American Revolution award hold its Spring Clean-up. The 21 special education students, ranging in age from 16 to tinguished military student and went to Cadet Scott Schettinger. 2 2 , gathered for several hours that afternoon in the basement of America Defense Preparedness The Military Order of the World ^F ollies * a t the Creese Student Center. Association award went to Wars award went to Cadet Carl The event was arranged by WKDU’s Local Bands Director Cadet Terrence Sommers. Burris. Cadet Nicholas Zikas Jennifer Armes as an 18th birthday party fw her brother John, Department of the Army won the National Sojourners M a n d e l l who is a student at Ewelyn. Superior Cadet Decoration ROTC medal. M a r k G a u d io s i Armes and her mother Clare explained that, thanks to Mike award and the Lieutenant Albert Sophomore awards were won N ews Writer Faherty and the members of the Creese Student Union, they were M. Finn Memorial Trophy by Cadet Ernest Freund for the “The Parisienne Follies” is able to rent out the bowling alley and play the video games in the award went to Cadet Andrew Military Order of the World making a return to Drexel arcade. Scheerer. Cadet Jason Mucklow Wars award. The International University. The reviews were so WKDU’s Scott Whitehead set up the DJ equipment so that the won the Ajax Electric Company Society of the Daughters of good for last year’s show, held students could dance. “They were really excit^ to be treated like Cup. Founders and Patriots of December 4, that theater directs any other student. Everyone had a great time,” said Clare Armes. The American Legion award, American medal went to Cadet Waiien Fairbanks asked the per­ She said that several parents and Drexel students volunteered Benjamin Franklin Post 405 Thomas Nugent. The Depart­ formers to come back. their time to join the students to make it a special afternoon. went to Cadet John Benson. ment of the Army Superior The show will be held March American Veterans of W W II, Cadet Decoration award went to 19 and 20, in Drexel’s Mandell Korea, and Vietnam ROTC Cadet Russel Meredith. Cadet Theater. The show is a produc­ medal award went to Cadet Jessica Miller won the Reserve tion of Moulin Rouge Inc., and Patrick Donovan. Cadet Jeffrey Officers Association medal. The is run by Wanda Mason. Mason _ Kline won the Lieutenant Society of American Military is a designer, as well as a mentor Richard W. Brooks III, Vietnam Engineers, Philadelphia ch^ter, for Drexel student fashion Veterans Memorial award. The went to Cadet John Pavlocak, designers. Reserve Officers Association and the Veterans of Foreign The proceeds from the show Medal, and the Society of Wars of the United States ROTC go to the Drexel University American Military Engineers, medal was won by Cadet Philip Black Alumni Association f(»- a New Yoric Post Cfai^ter went to Hennessy. scholarship fund. Cadet Andrew DeJesse and Freshman awards were Prices for the show are $10 Cadet Michael Camivale respec­ achieved by Cadet Jay Williams f(x* Drexel suidents with ID and tively. who won the Military Order of $15 for everyone else. Moulin Junior and Pre-Junior award Foreign Wars of the United Rouge Production Inc. plans to winners were Cadet Jennifer States medal. Cadet Jennifer stage a variety of different Wabals for the Department of Finnimore won the Drexel shows in the future. the Army Superior Cadet University M ilitary Science Decoration award. The Armed Liberty Bell award. ‘Hie Campus ^age. Forces Communication and The Colonel Jack A. Electronics Association Honor Cunningham Memorial Cup and tiM 6e bacfi award was won by Cadet David the Department of the Army Chang. The Association of the Superior Cadet E)ecoration went spring terml United States Army ROTC to Cadet Kenneth Graham and medal went to Cadet Donald Cadet William Shipp, respec­ ^DeadUmunCCBe on Scoggin. Cadet Haiddie Jugueta tively. M embers o f WKDU hosted a party for students o f the C o u tm Y o r WKDU liusdayj ApriC 6 at 5:00 p.m. Ewelyn Institute in the basem ent o f the Creese Student Union, The Triangle • M arch 19,1 9 9 3 • 9

LAST\VEEK> r rHe " made theJourney (Hfficutt.. March 19.1893 T H IS W E E K : The CunsHnger f>t.4 T he d e a d um e is 5 p . th e T u e s d a y PRECEOitiG p o b u c a t io m .

^F riday 20 t SWDAY 21 I Mo t pa y 22_#lyB D A Y : I • "King David": Will be • Free Computer Festival: LS • FREEly Marching Away: Exams Week: As if you didn't JOKE ISSUE: It’s the closest I performed by the Drexel Drexel and the Philadelphia Area *c Enjoy the works of John Phillip know. we could get to April Fools ^ Chorus and Orchestra at 8p in Computer Society (PACKS) will Sousa, Sergei Rachmaninoff, and I • Creese Video Lounge: I don’t Day so check out The *. the Main Auditorium, 32nd & hold its 16th annual computer others at 2p in Mandell Theater, think there is anything Triangle stands for some "2* Chestnut Sts. Tickets are $2 festival. Over 40 presentations M 33rd & Chestnut Sts. Featured programmed for the video levity in brevity during exam ^ for students and senior by top vendors will be presented. ^ guest conductor is Mr. Herbert lounge during exam week. If you week. You may just be ^ citizens, $3 general admissicxi. 9a - 4p. Main Bldg. Info 951- I, N. Johnson, writer, leading want entertainment this week, surprised by what we can 1 • Creese Video Lounge: Raw 1255 » music authorit>, composer, you probably have to go and rent come up with. c Deal, 10a, Ip, 4p. Gala Auction: University City "Z arranger and performer. This vour own video. Tuesday Night Square § • CAB Friday Night Fliclis: Arts League will hold its 11th • 5 concert is free. Northern Exposure, which is very Dance: Calling by Jeanne "g This week: Jennifer 8. Stein annual auction, at 8p in St. "S Film Screenings: Manhattan likely to be on tonight, has a fan Drake with the music Auditorium, 4:30p, 7p, 9:30p, Frances De Sales Auditorium 1979, 96 min, b/w. Directed by club based right here in provided by an open band 'S and Midnight, S2. Thjs movie located at 47th & Springfield § Woody Allen. Allen joins Diane Philadelphia. They pwoduce an coordinated by Fritzi Wistlom. ^ ends the "numerical" saga that Aves. Info- 382-7811. § Keaton, Meryl Streep and Mariel almost monthly newsletter, a free 60 page Guide to Northern 7;30p - 10:3(^. Sl Mary’s § started with 1492 & Flower Show at the Zoo: 11a- ^ Hemingway in a search for the Parish Hall on the U. of P. 2 Passenger 57. 2p. The Zoo’s 42 acres of Exposure, free jjrizes for trivia ■S ideal relationship. Also sliowing: contests and on and on. For more campus. 3916 Locust Walk. := • 86 long days to go. Enjoy botanical gardens with emphasis Sf Manhatta 1921, 9min., silent 3p. S5. Refreshments will be » Brealc. info, write to An Oasis, P.O. Box on "Solitude." Gardening ■f Academy of Fine Art, Broad & 42433, Phila., PA 19101. served. S • 20K Run: ROTC will be (temonstrations and tours will be o Cherry St. Films are free with 3 sponsoring a 20K nm. 5:45a, offered. Info- 243-1100, exL 237 c Museum admission of S2. ® Drexel Gym. Info- 590-8708. IT'S THE WORLD OF $10 Adults. More than 300 exotic appearances of Ian Ziering, WHEELS, WHEELS, W HEELS, cars and custom vehicles, like cars Antonio Sabato, More! M orel Morel Show at the Civic Center!!!! from Batman, Batman, Batman. Plus Info- (717) 394-8365. IWIedhesday 2i V T hursday 25 ^ F riday 26 I S aturday 27 I S umday 28 ^ • Stacy A. Lutkus* Birthday: i • RELACHE: Performance in RELACHE: Performance in What do they do at the Zoo? . Roses are red, £ Mandell Theater, 4p, 8p. (From Mandell Theater, 4p, 8p. (From 2p - 4p. Here’s a chance to see o The streets were white, « the "Looking Ahead" calendar.) the "Looking Ahead" calendar.) what working at the zoo might s Exams are ending, really be like. Roll up your .•2* So party tonight! sleeves and be prepared to see all sides of the zoo world. Advance registration required. 3> Info- 243-1100, e x L 305. I Film Screenings: Boyz N the Hood 1991,107 mins., color. This space Directed by John Singleton. A intentionally left realistic urban drama with a blank. powerful antiviolence message. The movie explores the trag^y I of black youths caught up in the t 3 brutal violence of the 'hood. 3p. Academy of Fine Art, Broad & Cherry S l Films are free with £ S Museum admission of $2. 4 1 §* Mummers Show of Shows: New Year's parade comes $15, $12, & $7. The pagentry and indoors at the Civic Center. 5>litter of Philadelphia''^ famous Info- (215^ 336-3050 % Finals W eek Specials Free Soda, Free Toppings

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m m Page 10 The Triangle E ntertainment M arch 19,1993

one find brains in this jazz-cum- of Scott compositions, Willner ists. • Rating: 6 As w e w ere trying to hardcore outfit from Baltimore. shows o ff the source of the spruce up our offices Everything about Mercury Rev soundtracks for America’ s Various Artists • Deep for the spring term is an understated type of weird favorite cartoon characters, from Blues: Original Motion Picture — the titles, the hidden songs, Bugs Bunny to Ren and Stimpy. Soundtrack • Atlantic/Anxious • w e c a m e the liner notes, the recording Both disc and Imer notes portray The final part of journalist a c r o s s a methods, the sheer thought of technical brilliance, twisted Robert Palmer’s Deep Blues n u m b e r o f laying a consistent flute melody humor, killer instinct. A product triple whammy. The 1981 book

a l b u m s over guitar feedback. Pink Floyd of pure genius. • Rating: 10 entered Mississippi’s backroads far the shoegazer set • Rating: 7 j u s t Bone Club • Beautiflu • Imago • Nothing special about this Minneapolis fivesome. Two semi-Japanese brothers fronting on vocals and guitar, another '-I d y i n g guitarist, a bassist, a drummer. One very minor-label LP and juke joints and blues clubs. The fofo now, this new six-song EP Moth Macabre • Interscope • fihn that gained prominence last review or \ '' which marks their major-label At least the art on the compact year paid visual tribute to the three. So w e bow. That’s it. Of course, for disc is cool. Otherwise, Moth inspiring musicians who played went ahead and some reason they can produce Macabre’s song writing is so stu­ down there. Now this sound­ pid, the playing and so track captures their music in all obliged them . Are lyrics and non-stop playing power urgent enough to knock amazingly t^entless, it’s a won­ its glory. A few listens to they bound for the you into next week. The break der they ever got signed. Trying unknown pros like Big Jack heap or the hom e stereo? of 1993, hands down. • Rating: 9 to sound all smart and cool by Johnson and Jessie Mae writing lyrics about surf music Hemphill, and you’ll wonder Happyhead • Give Happy- and fossil fuels (“Two Days”) what’s so exciting about this head • EastWest • At first and a book-reader love affair Clapton kid. • Rating: 9 glance, this is just a slick, light- (“Amazing”) and slamming gui­ dance set. But the opening tracks tar strings like bad Sonic Youth, Robyn Hitchcock and the slam commercialism and materi­ they regularly come off as bland, Egyptians • Respect • A&M • alism. “Hurt, Dirt and Desire” contrived, noisy. A disgrace to Robyn himself claims this is his and “Love Kills” describe weird, the Minneapolis scene from most straightforward album to obsessive relationships. “Fat which they sprung. • Rating: 1 date. Coulda fooled me. The Kid Rock • The Polyfuze Moodswings • Arista • Five City” portrays the hectic pace of writer of songs like “Queen of Method • Continuum • This years in the making, the duo’s the urban jungle. Tracks like The Brand New Heavies • Eyes” and “Dark (}reen Energy” absolutely white white boy from concept album (it’s one piece of “Digital Love Thing” and “Baby Heavy Rhyme Experience: Vol. certainly toned down his band Detroit talks so much truly nasty music with 12 thematic tiracks, USA” employ aggressive per­ 1 • Delicious Vinyl • While they for this album, but Hitchcock trash, you’d think you lived near or “moods”) is a mesmerizing cussion, dense samples, superb didn’t invent the idea, the trio still has a penchant for the Fresh Kills. Scratches and more collection of rock- and soul- bass solos. Then you recall that that are BNH sure go out of their obtuse, even if his themes are than a few ripoff samples from tmged ambient house and more Happyhead’s head, Carl Marsh, way to make it look like they put more apparent. The Bobby Lenny Kravitz, the Doors, Bugs — the Orb with a time limit! hung out in Shriekback. Eureka! hip-hop and a live band together McFerrin-esque “Wafflehead.” Bunny and the Smiths, com­ Also features guests with bigger A superb set, one of last year’s and got four; A who’s who of Lines like “I believe in surgery” bined with mostly pedestrian names than that outfit can most underrated efforts. • rap and ragga stars support the from ‘The Yip Song.“ And only , has the Kid coming off as muster: Chrissie Hynde on the Rating: 10 Heavies; lame stuff with Ed he could get away with a hit sin­ a low-class Beastie. Or worse — hit single “Spiritual High (State O.G., Tiger and Gang Starr can­ gle entitled “Driving Aloud a Beastly. • Rating: 2 of Independence),” as well as Cop Shoot Cop • Suck City • cels out good tracks with Black (Radio Storm).” Go figure, Jeff Beck and Brand New Interscope • With this four-song Sheep, Grand Puba and Masta again. • Rating: 6 The Stairs • Mexican R'n' B Heavies vocalist Linda Muriel. • set as their major-label debut, Ace. Even the Heavies acknowl­ * Go! Discs/London • Imagine Rating: 9 the indie darlings/sales no­ edge this was a diversion from The Pharcyde • Bizarre Ride the Beatles with Mick Jagger as shows/suspected terrorists in their real sophomore project. At II the Pharcyde • Delicious lead vocalist, and you’ve got this John Gorka • Temporary Cop Shoot Cop are out to prove 35 fun but unnecessary minutes, Vinyl • This troupe goes the band down to a science. There’s Road • High Street • In these that there’s nowhere to go but it shows. • Rating: 4 Brand New Heavies one better a nod to the Sgt. Pepper era in kinder, gentler times, even “new up. Their two-bass-plus-sampler — they play the instruments and “Mr. Window Pane,” yummy jack swing” is succumbing to method of industrial music The Nuclear Whales Sax- they rap the rhymes. Bizarre Stones-like riffs in “When it All Goes Wrong,” waltz-time breaks in “Laughter in Their Eyes” — heck, the band’s even from Liverpool! Songs come in hard, fast and so derivative, they’re good. • Rating: 8

Tubalcain • 25 Assorted “new folk swing.” New Jersey won’t kick you in the head until ophone Orchestra • Thar They Ride chronicles the trials and Needles • Verdugo • This quintet native (and Bethlehem, Pa., “We Shall Be Changed,” but Blow • Whaleco • A cute but not tribulations of black youth, but it hails from the Philly dance- transplant) Gorka’s third album that and the title track — a not- overly thrilling sextet, they spe­ ain’t gangsta shit or drug horrors music troupe Executive Slacks keeps producing stories with so-rosy view of their future — cialize in all-sax arrangements (except for the weird “Pack the (R.LP.), an acknowledged influ­ wild and wonderful topics — the are worth the price of admission. of popular, traditional and Pipe”). Instead, it’s parking tick­ ence on Ministry. But the Slacks theft of his guitar, an oveitaeard All they need now is the new orchestral pieces, as well as ets (“Officer,” a great Public and this effort are worlds £4 >art; conversation, fascism — and album they promised... • original work. Sliding from Enemy spoof), trading insults short segments have industrial displays his penchant for humor­ Rating: 6 “Fanfare for the Common Man” (“Ya Mama”), girlies (“Otha beats, while most long songs ous twists of language. Func­ to Duke Ellington to ‘Take Me Fish”) and other unpleasant sur­ have a hard-rock feel. The result tional instrumentation, but The Music of Raymond Out to the Ballgame,” the prises (“Oh Shit”). Hilarious. • is, well, only OK — the smaller John’s voice makes up for it. • Scott • Reckless Nights and Whales obviously come across Rating: 7 compositions like “Kristalnacht” Rating: 7 Turkish Twilights • Columbia • as tongue-in-cheek. They tread show the band’s strengths. The Tribute-album king Hal Willi^r dangerously close to boring at The Samples • No Room • rockers get a bit repetitive, Mercury Rev • Yerself is — builder of musical monu­ times, though. I mean, there are What Are Records? Ltd. • I except for “God on the Tongue” Steam • Columbia • The first ments to Thelonius Monk, only so many ways you can dunno which I like better, the and their “2000 Light Years time you hear the single “Chas­ Disney animated film music, and blow your own horn. • Rating: 5 record company or the bands from Home” cover. • Rating: 5 ing a Bee,” you’ll get pretty ill. Charles Mingus — has quietly they turn out. Just as the Only after listening to it in the done it again. Overseeing this Hammerbox • Numb • A&M Between The Lines orgasm Sand Rubies • Atlas • They context of the whole album can collection of original recordings • Lady Stetson, Lady Speed winds down (see page 11), we are Arizona’s Qavid Slutes and Stick, Lady Godiva — Lady find last year’s debut from the Rich Hopkins. Their career start­ Helmet"! A fine effort that proves Samples to take to bed. This ed in 1985. Their songs were great women aren’ t always Colorado quartet refuses to be I written in 1991. This is their behind great men. Vocalist boycotted, sounding both jaunty 1993 debut. That’s as exciting as Carrie Akre spans a wide range and urgent in defense of rela­ it gets. Country-tinged angst- of emotions and is the highlight tionships (“When It’s Raining”), rock so finely crafted it’s just of tracks like “Hed” and “When the earth (the Philly fave this side of Valium, and with 3 is 2.” She also lets the three “Another Disaster”) or children every song going on fco" four to guys who back her up run (“Seany Boy (Drop Out)”). eight minutes, you might wish it through some high-powered Another superb effort from were. Not a twitch of excitement noodling. Their sound is a lot W.A.R.? makes it a leading can­ on the album. • Rating: 0 wider and less focused than didate for the year’s best record Hehnet, but nobody said Ham­ label. •Rating: 8 Moodswings • Moo^food by merbox were out to be minimal­ See SPRING on page 11 The Triangle • M arch 19,1993 • 11 A night o f concert magic with Between The Lines ‘‘Singer of tales, sing us more stories...” Eyes,” one of the most beautiful songs from that collec­ would most likely not be a time in which Between The Oh, if only you could have been at the Oyster Bar in tion. Oh well; I suppose I shall have to be satisfied with Lines would stop playing live and just go into a sttidio Marshallton, Pa. on the night of Thursday, March 11 — mere dreams of Kristin Kunhardt singing me to sleep at for several months to work on a new album. All sorts of because after finding a seat at one of the crowded tables night.) ideas are being considered, but for now the duo are just bathed in the warm, mischievous candlelight, you would But oddly enough, it was the have been treated to a magical perfonnance by two of the cover songs chosen that gave a true most wonderful musicians I ’ve ever had the pleasure of indication of the ability and reper­ w 1 seeing: Between The toire of Between The Lines. Billie As I End the Lines. The duo’s self­ Holliday’s “Lover Man,” the titled CD was re­ Beatles’ “You’ ve Got To Hide viewed in last week’s Your Love Away,” Lorraine Triangle, and if there Duisit’s “Wild Bird” — these Mark CrARDNfR were any reservations selections and more proved to be expressed in my spec­ wonderful platforms for further ulation on the live performance of the material on it, they emotional peaks. One scene from are now completely and happily erased. that night seemed to illustrate this Although accompanied by other musicians on record, perfectly: During Joni Mitchell’s Kristin Kunhardt and Joseph Brenna played with nothing “Carry You,” Kristin occasionally save for a pair of microphones, several guitars, and the would tense up, balancing precari­ occasional effects pedal. No bass, no percussion, no syn­ ously on one foot, as if she might thesizers — and it seems to be this stripped-down somehow transport her voice and approach that made the audience appreciate even more all those listening to it to the gates the pair’s absolute dedication to crafting music that is as of heaven. (And I am not a reli­ much a challenge as it is a pleasure to listen to. gious person.) Sometimes surprising and funny, occasionally mysteri­ And there was always Joseph’s ous, but always focused on the inmiediate act of creation guitar, sometimes delicate, some­ — this is the songwriting and performing philosophy of times screaming like a banshee, but Joseph Brenna and Kristin Kunhardt o f Between the Lines m ade the Lbla Perry/1VA/I. ? Between The Lines, amply demonstrated on that chilly always making a wild and exquisite w orid their oyster in the intim ate setting o f the O yster B ar in M arshallton, Pa. March evening in Marshallton. sound. The show began at around 9:00 p.in., after Joseph and I spoke with Mr. Brenna and Ms. Kunhardt after the happily enjoying the experience of performing to appre­ Kristin tuned their guitars above the din of conversation show, and they discussed their music with the same ciative audiences in the Northeast. and laughter. But beginning with a bluesy instrumental, amount of passionate enthusiasm as they exhibited on I don’t have much occasion to thank bands I’ve seen “Sittin’ On Top Of The World,” the duo managed to hold stage. Among the steady flow of bar patrons passing by for a night of such intensity and magic. But on that cold the patrons of the Oyster Bar captivated with nothing less our table to pay compliments to them, they managed to March evening, Joseph Brenna and Kristin Kunhardt than musical virtuosity and songwriting genius, as well tell me that their main reason for touring without a back­ managed to so completely win me over to their peculiar as an intensity of performance only hinted at on their ing band was financial — but, as I readily agreed, such blend of music that there is no way I can be anything recorded worlL Over the course of three hour-long sets, privations in this case only helped to further strip the except a devoted and enthusiastic fan. For more informa­ they managed to play a represented majority of the mate­ music to its essentials tion about the band, you can write to What Are Records? rial from Between The Lines, including “Lela,” “Love As for future recording plans, Kristin related that Ltd. at 138 Duane Street, New York, NY 10013, or call Your Neighbor,” “The Calling,” and “Big Scare.” things were pretty much up in the air at this point. them at (212) 964-3703. Please do so — you will not be (Unfortunately, we were not treated to “Close Your Although still prolific in their writing on the road, there disappointed.

Enemy and the rest of the top of can,” “Do the Digs Dug?” and length out of their tales of woe. Calhoun now goes solo. Re­ the political-violence hill. Too “Uncle Scam’s Shooting Gal­ The sti-ange thing is, you can’t writing jazz history isn’t on SPRING many riffs and loops swiped lery.” More fun than a porkbarrel find a sampler or keyboard Rastine’s agenda; if anything, he from his own 1990 debut prevent full of monkeys. • Rating: 8 (other than a piano) on here! seems more interested in Top 40 CLEANING him from knocking off those Wave after wave of delicate or Muzak than ’Trane or Miles. Continued from page 10 more established acts, however. Deep Jim i & the Zep desuiiction comes from the San But while he concentrates on • Rating: 8 Creams • Funky Dinosaur • Diego-based band as they chron­ covering Sade, Steely Dan, Bob Digital Orgasm • DO It • Def EastWest • What starts off as icle their first, three years on the Marley and Simply Red, and lets American/Whte Lbls • With just Bleach • Killing Time • Dali/ They Might Be Giants with music scene. The surreal feel of a rap butcher “A Love Su­ pieces of rap or soul vocals and Chameleon • Phil Spector creat­ crunchier chords rapidly disinte­ songs like “Home,” “Dream preme,” he also plays more in­ repetitive percussion and beeps, ed the Wall of Sound? The Brits grates into Iceland’s interpreta­ Machine,” and the 16-minute struments and shows more soul techno music is “dumb.” A in Bleach might have something tion of Pink FlOyd. They even “Seven” will intrigue or scare than Michael Bolton or Kenny demented cover version, a real to say about that. Singer Salli steal guitar parts from “Time!” the shit out of you. • Rating: 8 G. That will keep him off adult- instrumental part or solo, or Carson makes Up for her almost These hard rockers have no­ contemporary radio — a real sung lyrics point to “smart" reluctant vocals by allowing where near the mystery or flair Rastine • Afrodisiac • Zoo plus. • Rating: 6 techno. Digital Orgasm is really brothers Neil and Nick Singleton of fellow citizens the Sugar- Entertainment • After work with “smart” techno. The Belgian duo (guitars and bass, respectively) cubes. • Rating: 3 the likes of Marvin Gaye and the Compiled by kicks off Rick Rubin’s all-tech­ to step forward and produce Gap Band, saxman Rastine Adam Blyweiss no division of Def American. layer after layer of controlled Neneh Cherry • Homebrew • You know, with the gorgeous violence. Most of the tracks Virgin • I tell ya, the homegirl’s vocals of “Forever and a Day,” sound similar, but there are just turning into a female version of A Css the rave method of “Magick,” or enough variations to keep you Prince. Cherry tosses so many WIN the new Lords of Acid LP wait­ interested. And anyway, songs styles at you — a throwaway ing in the wings, maybe Rubin like “Headless” and “Shotgun” rap, a wistful ballad, riff-filled POSTERS AND has returned to old Beastie are a treat. • Rating: 7 rock, soulful dance — that Boys-Black Crowes form and you’re never sure what to con­ t ic k e t s ! ..J really found something. Again. • The Goats • Tricks of the centrate on. The hits “Money Rating: 7 Shade • Columbia/Ruffhouse • Love,” “Move with Me” and Tliough the subject of their anger “Trout” certainly deserve your The new romantic thriller starring Paris • Sleeping with the has come and gone, the issues attention. Other songs lik« Enemy • Scarface • Surprise! brought up by the trio of “Sassy” and “Somedays” get so Marlee Matlin, D.B. Sweeney, Paris did Ice-T even before Ice- OaTiekato, Swayza(^ and Madd bogged down by all the influ­ Martin Sheen and John C. T did Ice-T. The album’s contro­ aren’ t necessarily limited by ences, however, that you get versial music and cover art got it time, topic or Presidential ad­ bored or confused real fast. • McGinley opens on March 26. Win and Paris tossed off Time- ministration. Philly’s conquering Rating: 5 Wamer’s Tommy Boy roster heroes flesh out their ^‘hip- posters or pairs ofpasses to the pre­ and into the indie-label hinter­ hopera” with what seems at The God Machine • Songs lands. Finally released in late times to be an immense backing from the Second Storey • Fiction view on March 25 at the UA 1992, the sound and fury of band. Humorous, politically • The moodiest parts of industri­ Theatres at Riverview Plaza. Come Enemy proves that Paris can caustic lyrics and skits reach al music hit by a steanu-oUer — hang with Ice-T and Public their peak at “Typical Ameri- this trio gets substance and to 3010 MacAlister with an answer to this question, and stuff can be PHOTO CREDITS Top left: Joe Campbell/77i^ Triangle. Top right group: Bleach, yours: Tom Sheeran/Dali/Chameleon; Happyhead, Robert Manella/EastWest; Bone Club, Pat Kyle/Imago. For what 1986 Middle left group: Rastine, Dean Kerr/Zoo Entertainment; Moth Macabre, Annalisa Pessin/Interscope; MOVIE DID Marlee Moodswings, (Arista); Sand Rubies, Robyn Stoutenburg/Atlas. Middle right group: The Brand New M atlin win the Heavies featuring Grand Puba, (Delicious Vinyl/Atlantic); The Goats, Analisa/Columbia/Ruffhouse; Academy Award John Gorka, John Cooper/High Street; Kid Rock, (The Continuum Group); The God Machine, FOR Best (Fiction/Polydor); Cop Shoot Cop, Danny Clinch/Interscope; Hammerbox, David Hawkes/A&M. Actress? Bottom middle group: Praxis, Thi-Linh Le/Axiom/Island; The Stairs, (Go! Discs/London). 12 • The Triangle • March 1 9 ,1993 Michael Ivey and Basehead: First O p e n H o u s e 60 D ouses for Sale come the words, then the beats Aaron Z. Sc h a n tz ENTEPTAlNMEm' WRITER Jump, jump, this album will make you jump, jump. But not because it has boring, rhetorical lyrics, a repetitive chorus sup­ ported by nauseating bass, or a lack of any real talent. The CniVSRtlTT Cl TY album SATUBBAY by the group Basehead is an C om m unity accomplished deviation from the O pen H ouse norm. The group is best known for traveling the tour scene opening for the , and playing the second stage at Lollapalooza. Eton’t be fooled by the name of Saturday, March 2 7 the group, though — if you’re llAI»-4t30PM looking for music with a beat to pump out of your lowrider, this 1st stop: U.of P. parking lot is not it. Basehead’s sound is 4200 block of Spruce St. unique and enjoyable, if not Open house at 60 University City uncategorizable. Basehead’ s houses for sale at all prices leader, Michael Ivey, says that even he doesn’t know what cate- University City Info Fair: schools, gOTy his music falls into, and he 1^ daycare, restaurants, shopping, arts/community organizations likes it that way. Kansas sports a mellow In-The-Know Sweepstakes. No rhythm that relies on strong, 1^ purchase necessary, you must be meaningful lyrics, supported by 2 1 to enter good background music. The group sounds somewhat like a Don*t look so glum , guys. Your new albums ‘N ot in Danny Cunch^/jmco Call 387-7300 for information Kansas Anymore, * is one heck o f a second effort Gee, som e people... toned-down Red Hot Chili Peppers — the beats and pot-smoking, womanizing char­ values. The CD is far from rhytWs are similar, but lyrical­ acter Basehead. Ivey touches preachy, though; Ivey conveys ly, Basehead stands alone. popular subjects like racist cops his messages through cynical The words convey Ivey’ s and sex, but he also ranges out humor and a sharp wit that view of the world and are told into relationships, parties, alco­ makes one wonder whether to ED'S through his alcohol-drinking. hol and drugs, and anti-family smile or cringe. And don’t wwry: If it’s good B rsffM a BEAU m m ROBERTSEAN MARYSTUART CYBE RON music you’re looking for and BRIDGES CHANK LEONARD MASTERSON SHEPHERD SILVER you don’ t care beans about lyrics, Basehead is still your cup of tea. Not in Kansas Anymore does carry a parental advisory label, but ^ere aren’tstr^sis^^ B uffalo Style W ings profanity like ganpta^apT^fite lyrics are colorful but not overly Sauces: Mild Hot SUICIDE so, and the curses don’t extend beyond typical everyday talk. Fries, O nion R ings, C hicken Fingers Basehead’ s sound ranges from rap to ballad to blues. The songs are not overly energetic 8 oz. H ^m bur^ers but are pleasant for mellow lis­ tening, not full-volume pump­ P liilad elp liia Steaiks M arried Tb It TH(.)MAS R\ER v.., , ,, .\R7HI R HIIIER- .■ NLARRIED TO IT ing. Some of the songs sound - Including: Pizza Steak BF.Ar BRIDGES ST(X:K.ARD CHANMNC ROBERT SPAN LEONARD \L\RY STl'.\RT ,\L\>TER{^ON similar to others on Kansas but CYBILL SHEPHERD RON SILVER f HLNRV M.\.\aNl 4'&.^PETER V. HER.\LDw.|OHX L l.\COBS there is enough of a variety to M ushroom Cheese Steak I. KEMPER. Ai5.C. '-'^JANET KO\ALCIK "'"‘^THOM.AS B.\ER •"l.ARTHUft HILLER O R f O f X keep the listener interested. The Chicken Cheese Steak <;'993CrtyyPi:ir^Cyvc3r3tcr -VAgnes energy of the album picks up a little towards the middle of the Win T-shirts! Posters! CD and wanes again towards the P liilad elp liia H oagies end. A few of the tracks will Try Ed's Special H oagie: M arch 25 preview passes! support blow-your-speakers C apicola, Salam i, Provolone & H am Little black books! bass, but that isn’ t what the whole album is about. Also: Cheese, Italian, Ham & Don’t expect any Top 40 sin­ Cheese, Tuna Fish, and Turkey One of these M a r r i e d t o I t prizes gles from this CD; the music can be yours. Just come to 3010 MacAlister isn’ t structured that way. Of S a l a d s course, don’t expect this to just sit on the shelves either. Tuna, Tossed, Greek, Chef with the answer to this question: N m m K M ^ A S Lunch ~ D inner Which of the six stars o/M arried to It HOURS became a Dead Poet in 1989's B a s e h e a d Mon. Thurs. 10:30 am to 12 am Dead Poets Society? Fri. — Sat. 10:30 am to 2:30 am ! » H ig a Sunday 12 pm to 12 am FIEVIEVX/

E a t -I n , T a k e -O u t ,

D e l i v e r y

3 5 1 3 L a n c a s t e r A v e n u e 2 2 2 - 7 1 3 5 TUNE IN... Take a break. Driver wanted Part-time to our Interactivi! video Qjines 1 The Triangle presents I its annual Joke Issue. 1 0 % O F F I FREE I 1 LITER PEPSI A n y o r d e r o f I I FREE Finals Week. $10 OR MORE I AN EATING AND DRINKING EMPORIUM. I W r r a A s y 4 0 p c W i s g s entertainment. 36th & Chestnut Streets at the Sheraton University City. M ust present coupon. Cannot I Phone 386-5556. Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. (You have been warned.) ■E COMBINED WITH OTHEK | I M ust present coupon. Cannot OFFEIO. I •E COMRINEO WITH OTHER OFFERS. E x p o e s 3 / 2 6 / 9 3 | L ------1 E x p ir e s 3 / 2 6 / 9 3 The IV iangle Page 13 M arch 19,1993 C o m i c s

D “A v c n U C by Craig Barnitz

W 7Zy^.Sl/5>f£A^ iv/^A fieW h l !H 7He'Sf^th/£,. Q /r sry ^ Be ^itsot^iyrwi^y^ neFemep^osroffe^. Last Week's CrosswdiM ^ S<3lfCYVi JiVH-L I^V 3^ 1^0d >#PV9 Oi. ^VS" ^JA”' tfie streets zoftereyou Rvt'* 43 Post Office mascots R A p 1 A N O 45 Approves W eekly Puzzle AF R A D O R 47 European ermine IR i i 1 2 3 i 48 Curved ■ D O BORE U 14 49 Boston from N.Y. 1 C I O N ACME 17 50 Football eleven S A U R 2 0 52 Oklahoma city 54 School breaks E R E D I p R O 58 Native bom Israeli T E D O O G 62 Celebes ox N W I M A 63 Unhealthy condition i i KAN A S 3 9 66 Animal Drs. A I D BINE 4 3 A R AB S 1 L E N ■ II M 4 7 68 Treaty org. m i 5 f r N T 69 Understanding words H 1 M 11 m l i 70 Consumer ETA T PETER R i i I N 5 4 5 5 5 6 71 Pipe joints SE M S L S | e i i TA 6 2

6 6 13 Alonzo Stagg 41 Suffix with appear 6 9 Down A*.V.V.V.*.V.V.V.V.*.V.W.V.V.V.V.W.V.V.V.V. 18 Saturate with water 44 French summers 22 Sewing joint 46 Keats? ^‘Unhealthy Conditions 1 Charles Lamb’s nom de 24 Detroit players 48 Ms. Earhart plume 25 Samoan capital 51 Actor’s remark Across 21 College officials 2 Troubles 27 Suffix used with million 53 Scare 23 “Whatever____ Wants’ 3 Seaman 28 Rose Parade vehicle 54 Musician Shankar 1 Follows big or down 26 Dueling sword 4 Shadow 29 Irish County 55 Chemical endings 5 Dig into 27 Amer. Field Svc. 5 Character in “Exodus” 31 Organic chemical 56 Small shed 10 Peru indian 30 Cleaned by rubbing 6 Inventor Whitoey compound 57 Fence part 14 Perjurer 32 Yellowish 7 Lean 33 Special pouch 59 Scottish hillside 15 Foreigner 36 Unhealthy State 8 Swerved 34 Ms. Barkin 60 Vein network 16 Weaving machine 38 Sealed glass vial 9 “This______35 Baseball’s Pee Wee 61 Fusses 17 Unhealthy condition 39 Provoke 10 Unhealthy condition 37 Unhealthy condition 64 Vane initials 19 PQR precursor 40 Relating to birth 11 Alaskan city 38 Priscilla’s sutior 65 Swiss river 20 Up and about 4 2 ______S. Gardner 12 Ice cream holder © 1992 All rights reserved GFR Associates i4 • The Triangle • March 19,1993

by Greg Galcik

If your birthday is this weeic: Fellow Sagittarians, your mother You are the type of perscm that finally admits that she has a glass generalizes ... all of the time. eye with fish in it V.V.V.V.*.V.V.V.SV.%W..PA*.WiViVbV^WWMWM^VWWWWVWWWWWWVd>/MS- Capricorn (Dec. 22 - Jan. 19) Aries (M ar. 24-Apr. 20) Your mother’s bad back is traced DUCK! DUCK! DUCK! to you stepping on the cracks when T a u ru s (A p r. 20 - M ay 20) you were little. GCX)SE! Aquarius (Jan. 20 - Feb. 18) Gemini (May 21 - June 21) Wanna have some fun? Go to a That pimple on your nose spreads bank and write “This is a stick up” to cover your entire face. Withdraw on the back of a withdrawal slip and from school and hide in a cave place it back in the pile. somewhere, your life is over. Pisces (Feb. 19 - M arJtO) Cancer (June 22 - July 22) Da'fish, Saturn is in line with Pluto, You will join the ranks of Mr. Neptune is opposite Jupiter, the sun Rogers and Big Bird when you are is glowing red, and none of this has all busted in a child pornography anything to do with with what is sting. going to happen to you. I was just Leo (July 23 - Aug. 22) Good testing out my new telescope. news. You will have sex with a Wow look at the rack on that one. gorgeous individual tonight. Bad news you will die while having sex. meriH. Good news you will be reincarnated A f A € e W Cf^LD RO NS, ^ as the last thing that you were thinking about. Bad news. You are /^rwtJSMO already one of those. Virgo (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22) We warned you that the watermelon was too big ... Next time try a cucumber. Libra (Sept 23 - O ct 22) It would be wise to paste the number for Roto rooter by your phone. Scorpio (O ct 23 - Nov. 21)Send a dollar to The Triangle Business Office if you would like to see the controversial BBS article printed. S ag ittariu s (Nov. 22 - D ec. 21) The Triangle Page 15 M arch 19,1993 C l a s s if ie d s

Index Apartments Apartments Apartments Sublets The Triangle Classifieds are sepa­ 2 BR q>artment 27th md South (4 blocks from Rentals 382-7368/23/ 32nd and Powelton ave. $680 4-utilities. Perfect for Large Effidency! Tliree Rooms. Includes eat-in campus). Qean, freshly painted, and spacious. rated into 10 available classifica­ (k tt Bedroom apt avail immediately Great for 1 or 3 people. A/C, laundry in basemert. Puch in the kitdwn large Uving room a doi area large enough Scpm te famndiy room with modem waAcr/diyer, 2 peiBons. Low utilities $440/kncrth inc. Heat and bade. Gean and safe. Please call a id leave a mc8- to fit a twin size bed other fVimiture. Also, tions in the order below. If you 1 1/2 battu, bi-iwel, wall-to-wall carpeting, C/A, H20. Cciiact Courtney and Rita 222-0333 /21/ H^LfiiSS;3Zi^ii2L^2^LiE^^LSIi2JSLi22^___ inchidea a walk-in ctoset + a large entiy-way. Date cannot find a heading, there are no ineiqiensive gas heat. Very safe. Ideal for 2 to 3 3839 Lancaster Ave. Brand new 3 Bedroom Rehab. Spadous 3-4 bedroom aptmt Inchides W/D, DW, avaUaNe: ASAP! $360too. CaU Nikki at 387-6730 ads of that type in this week's people. GJ5+ Call (212) 222-4926 collect, or leave 2 All] Bath, oak floors, W/D, DW, security system 2 bathrooms, 3 floors of ^nce. Quiet and bright «6|!______message. Available 4 /1 .12V______newspaper. and bars, open house 9-5 every day. $700 + Avail. with wooden dedc, A must seel! Available April 3218 Powelton Sublet or New Lease Renovated 2 33rd and PDwelton Ave. 6-7 bedroom house, 2 1/2 June 1386-3569 /25/______1st. Cbnveniert kication and reasonable rert. Call Bedroom Fireplace, Exposed bride walls, waU to baths, large rooms, rear yard. Available June. Stylish 3 Bdrm. ^ for suUet Spring + Summer. 222-1904 ASAP!! /21/______waU carpeting, trade Ughting, yard. Call now 557- Apartments $16(Xymonlh. Call 565-3455 /21/______34th + Race Convenieit location, very safe, gas, Efficiency for rent. 299.00/month everything 1800 /22/______Sublets 3 bedrooms in an 8 bedroom house available AC, wadi/diyer, cable, 11/2 bath. Must Rmt! Call included, w to w carpeting. Loft. Huge ckMet Near One bedroom apt avaU now. Low Rent and utUi­ Rommatcs immediately. House includes 2 5 baths, W/D, large 222-8448/21/______Drexel Cantus. For info, please call 483-2845 ties. Hot water and heat included. 440/month. For Sale kitchen, 2 Ihring rooms, cable and large storage CENTER CTTY APARIMENT. efHciency- clean n v ______Hardwood floon, backyard secure. Please contact area. R o t is very cheip. CaU 387-3374. Adc for A. secure. Bay windows overlookbig flower gardea 3200 Hamilton- Luxury IBR Bilevel Spiral stair Courtney or Rita 222-0333 /21/______Wanted Chrisof Jamie 12V $410 inchiding heat water, and-electric Laundry in marble fireplace, new kitchen/bath. Dishwasher, Two Bedroom Apt- 32nd A Powelton. Secure, Services 3841 Hamiltcn S t Suni^ 1 BR ap t CMc floors, buildimt. Call Mike after 6 pm 928-0189 /21/ washer-diyer, inlaid wood floors. $545 includes large Bedroom, Electricity and water are induded. Help Wanted tile bfitti, dcylight. laundiy in basement fleid. terms. 3312 HAMS.TON SnUEET: EfTidendcs, one and H eat hot water, gas. 386-6722 /21/______Pqr only inexpenshw gas. AvaUable frtnn April 1 Lost & Found 964-1886 /22/______two bedrooms from 299/tno up. Heat gas and hot 41st A Chestnut furnished 1 bdrm Newly to Aug. 31. $575/month. Call Tracy or Maggie Announcements Cleai, secure, attractive. 24 Ifr. emergency service. water inchided. All apartmeitfs have waOc-in clos­ Renovated $435/month 2 months security. All utili­ 222-0531 or leave message /22/______Efficiencies from $280, 1 BR from $380, 2 BR ets, kits of windows, waBcing distance to school. ties induded call wed^at 222-7963 Available July Female roommate wanted for Spring term. Own Personals from $480. Heat included. Diwer Management 349-9429 /30/______lst/2 5 /______room in luxurious 2-bedroom ifit. Large kitchea 322-6041 ______Bargain Rental 33rd &. Poweltoa Renovated 3 bed­ Stadio, 38lh + Baring Streets. Only $285. Owner Uving room, W/D, microwave. 36th and Lncaster. Affordable Apartmoit available one block from room house for three to five peofde, gas heat nice pays heat 4-hot water. ()uiet secure building, clean $275/tnonth. CaU Cvndi O 382-3919 flV Placing Classifieds Kelly. Rent indudes heat and hot water. Clean and block. $67S/m phis utilities or make offer. 887- cozy apartment. W/W Carpet in bedroom. Call 3 Bedrooms to sublet in large 8 bedroom house. safe, on Dtexel security route. Newly Painted. Call The deadline for placing a clas­ 3045 /31/______727-6488 /22/______Available immediately. House has 2 5 batta, W/D, 664-7779 /46/______^______3406 Spring Garden s t One bedroom apartment. Studio apartmert for rent 36th Baring St., kitch- Large kitchea 2 Uving rooms, A Large storage sified ad is 5:00 p.m. on the Bruidnewtownhausei4BR.2 lA bih, w/w, secu- Large rooms eat in kitchen, carpds washer, diyer. enette(fri(%eMove/etc.) bafiuoom, shower, i^enty area. Rent is cheap. CaU Ask for Chris or Ttiesday before the Friday you rity system. C/AandR«rage. Call Joyce 953-8800. Inexpensive gas heat. Second floor, secure. ofdosetspace. Only per month inchides util­ Jamie n i l ______wish your ad to appear. On Peim Campus .... Various size apartments Available now. $425.00 Call 386.6722 /21/ ities! Rent for 6 months or one year lease. Avail. Roommate needed for Spring/Summer terms in Fonns must be completed in available now or for June or September. 3622 Baring St.- Peifect for Students who wart a 1. Call Dave 877-0765 or Mr. Tandon 222- clean, 3 BR Bi-Level apartmmt Lots of Space with full, otherwise no guarantees will Weisenthal Properties, 4029 Spruce Street, 386- quiet i^ace to Ih^e and stu(ty. TWo bedrooms and 1644 /22/______D.W, W/D, and Fully furnished. 32nd and 238q M en-S at 9 -4 /2 1 /______study or three bedroom. Ownm quirt Victorian Fdnale roommate wmted for Spring/Summer sub­ Poweltoa Safe, Quiet $250/month. Call Brian be made. Writing should be legi­ 32nd and Poweltoa Renovited 1 bedroom wall to home. Second floor. Large rooms. Eat in kitchen, let to occupy room in 5 bedroom house. Large 222-6914 1211______ble. wall carpeting, eqxised brick walls, trade Ughting, didiwasher. wadter, diyer, BeatiAil Bkxk. $825.- rooms, wadMr/diyer, kitchen, bafli. 5 m ia walk to Efficiency for sublet Ckse waUc to canons. CaU If there are no copies of the nice soutti side of Uock. Match availdiility. Call hchideshetfmdhot water. Call 386-6722 /2V campus. Only A175/month. Call Sonia at 222- 386-6483 and leave message/21/ ______classified form available (tfiis hap­ now 557-1800/21/______3406 Spring Garden S t IVro Bedroom ApartmenL 5558 to see room. flV 3211 Powelton Ave One bedroom. Enough room Powelton A 32nd efficiency and one bedroom Capeted, security bars, washer, dryer, fioaqpeasive 3221 Summer S t across from Myers, one bedroom for two peofde. A C ceUing f n , carpet wired f a pens occasionally), write your ad apt’s. Kept $330 and $390 Fhnklin Rentals 382- gas. Heat. Large yard. (Dog allowed with addition­ available in a spacious five bedroom house. 3 cable. Pm ibly negotiate for liimiture. $45(Vtaionai on a full sheet of paper, and 7368/47/ ______al dqnsit) Pullman kitchca Available now. $510 floors, 2 baths, wadier/dtyer in basement as well as ■►utUities. A tniritcall222-3197 I27J______include your name, organization, 3406 Spring Garden St. one bedroom qiartment. call 3 8 6 ^ 2 2 /2 1 /______. storage space. Quiet neighborhood. Rent is $270.00 For Lease: 3624 Bating Street TVo bedroom ^part- phone number, and student num­ Large rooms, eat in kitchen, carpets, washer * Four Bedroom House- 509 35th st. At Spring available ASAP. Call Roger 387-6387 1251 mert (very close to campus) Two floor apt very ber if you are a Drexel student or Inupensive gas heat Second floa, secure. Garden. Inexpensive Gas Heat Finished wood Apartment for tent. 2 large rooms, bath-t-kitchen: quiet 'la y spadous, fully equipped (tv set k i^iea Avail. $450 Call 38fr6722/33/ floors, security bars, two ceramic baths, contempo­ Spruce HiU. Easy access to tran^ortaticn, diopping beds) Available .Spring Terin (From the end of your name, organization, address, TWO BEDROOM APT- 32nd and Riwellon (very rary kitdien, washer, dryer, bade yard. Basemoit center all area institutkxis. $500 a month, inchid- Mardi to ttie end of Junie *93) $5GQ indudes heat and phone number if you are not a ck»e to canqws) very quiet Great security, large $900Call 386-6722 /2V______ing an utilities. CaU 668-8132 m i ______and hot water. CaU 382-2042 Leave message. /22/ Drexel student Always make note kitchen-living ro(«n, spacious and bright, ine)q)en- 434 N. 34thS t.-3 Bedrooms eadi 8 X 16. Knotty 5 BR. 2 bath house - recent renovation, new Look! Look! Two bedroom ^xqitinent for ONLY of the date the ad was placed, sive gas heat Stovea Perfect for 2 or 3 peo[te. Pine Floors, Tile Bafli, Large Eat lii Kitchen wiA kitchea D/W, G/D, Wash/Dryer, W/W carpet $600Anonth. Located on 34th~street iif beautiftil miniblinds, gas heat central air $1000/ 504 N. Powelton Village. Available for Spring and which section you wish the ad Available November 1st Call Mirfi 222-2610 flV Quany Tile Floor, W/D Facilities available. TUrd PRIME k)caticn: Very quiet, immaculate, modem Floor- secure $775- includes gas heat Call 386- 32nd 928-9845 f ^ l______Summer terms. ALL UTILrnES INCLUDED. placed in. Be sure to sign your 2-level qpt. Female roomates needed! 225/monfli 6722 /21/______Available 3700 Blodc Lancaster ave. 4 Bedroom Call 382-3789 and leave message. Don’t miss this name. w/o utilities. 3308 Arch Street #4 (across from 3406 Spring Garden- One Bedroom, TUrd Floor- Bi-Levd Apt. 1st level: Lg. Living Room, Full deal^ 315 N.3W1 Street /22/______In Person Calhoun) 382-2621 /23/______Secure. Large Bedroom. Carpets, Wadier, Dryer. Bath, 2 bedrooms. 2nd level: 2 bedooms, eat-in L ^ 1 BR Apartmert 114 N. 34th St., secure, tpn- Our office is 3010 MacAlister 4 Bedroom, next to 7-11 on Lancaster. Prime loca­ Lots of Windows. Gas Heat ^ In K itd m $440+ kitdmi, full bath both levels have door access to dous, quiet, recently painted, inside the campus, tion huge rooms with tall ceilings, laundry. call38fr6722 f2V roof, fresh paint diapooed caipet Gas, Hot water. washer A dryer in basement, $585/month. HaU. Franklin Rentals 382-7368/21/______3200 Hamilton St- Luxury 3 Bedroom apartment 2 Heat Call day or night. Leave message 446-6705 Including ALL UTlLmES. Call Emma/Nancy Mail 2 Bedroom 34 -t- Poweltcn Ave huge brigit 2 battv levels. Private Garden, washer, diyer, dtdiwadier, ______before 11 am or after 9 pm at 382-3318 AvaUable The Triangle loaded. Magniflcent Victorian reh>d> on campus basement storage. Security bars. $975- includes 37 and Powdtoa Studio Apartment $350 elec now 1221______. Attn: Gla^ifieds M anage Ranklin Rentals Price $650.382-7368 /21/ Heat+ Hot Water-t- Cooking Gas. AvailaUe June and gas. Heat included. Available 4/1. Call 387- 37XX Lancaster Ave. 1 bedroom apartment with 36XX Lancaster Ave. Huge 4 p^sor 2 bedroom 93. Garage Space Av^ablft $60 monthly. Call 6793/21/ ______carpeting, ccntral heating and AC. Comfortable for 32nd 2. AvailAle March 29.425 mo utility. 387-7599 apartments drastiodly reduced to $800. Newer 386-6722 /21/ ______37 and Poweltoa Large one bedroom apartment Philadelphia^ PA 19104 RchA. These units have it all: Price, locaticn, and Powelton Ave. 3600 Block 2nd floor Spacious 2 Large enough for two. $420 plus elec. and gas. ______Fax dass. Franklin Rentals. 382-7368 12V bdrm apt. New Wall/wall carpeting A Windows. Heat inchided. Availifcle now. CaU 387-6793 !2V 32nd Street Close to campus. Parking. Laundry newly renovated. 2 and 4 bedroom apts. From The Triangle Fax number is (215) 2 bedroom 34 4-Baring $650 great bkKk fantas- Freshly Painted. $600 + all util. Immed. Poss. 37 and Powelton. Large 3 bedroom apt. $200/Person. 732-4083 /21/______895-5935. If it is a paid ad, a copy tk: value witti heat included Fraridin Rentals/23/ Claude Boni Real Estate 473-5900/21/______Washer/dryer. $840 plus elec. Heat included. 3 Bedroom House behind Village P im on 3200 Available Immediately Jan-June Own Room + Available now. CaU 387-6793 /21/______2 Bedroom Apartment available March 28 for of the check or money order Spring + Summer terms. Great location, very safe. Pearl Street New listing exclusive to Franklin Own Bath in 4 Bdnd House 3329 Powdtcn. $315/ Drexel, Pern, Presby area. 2 bedroom twonhouse, $600Anondi includes ALL UTILrnES. CaU BOb should be faxed and the original Roitals. Low 800’s. Choose between Pearl or month utilities included. Call 387-6764 Ask fa security system, skylights, wood floors, 382-3789 leave message. 315 N. 34th Street. (Half should be mailed or dropped off in Baring Street. 382-7368/23/______Gina /21/ ______washer/diyer, bride patio in private courtyard, cable a block above Powelton Ave) /22/______person. 4 bedroom a;)t 32's Hamilttm available June was Newly renovated 1,2,4 and 6 bedroom apartments. available. $60Qf CaU 551-1343 /23/______2 bedroom for sublet 32nd POwelton. $550/mo. $1250 now $1000 newer rdiab, carpet W/D, gas W/D, DW, AC, GD, WW carpet Available imme- One bedroom- Very large bedroom and living Availabk! 4/1/93. Qean Quiet. W/W Caq)et. New utilities extra. Franklin Rentals 382-7368/23/ diatelv. Q U Ted at 382-1992. /2V______room, sunny, washer and dryer in buUding, very secure building. 7 minute walk to school. rehab. Free parking area. Call 382-2641 A leave One bedroom 37 + Hamiltcn $425 or 3300 Saving Large 3-bedroom apartment w/eat-in kitchen and Costs & Limits 395.00/month inchides heat Ask far Beth at 222- message. 1221 Garden or 3333 Spring Garden from $375 Franklin large private roof-deck. Includes garbage disposal DREXEL ADVERTISERS and access to washer and dryer. Safe and affordable 9117 day or 765-1076 eve./28/______1 Large 2 perscm Bedroom in 8 bedroom house Cost: FREE. Exceptions: normal CAUyOURBATI at $630Anontti -i- utilities. AvaU 4/1. CaU 662-1906 Spadous single bedroom in 8 bedroom house avaU- available immediately. House has W/D, Cable, G U Y S CALL /23/______able April 1, 1993. Features indude: fiiU kitchea Large Kitchea 2 Uving rooms, 2 J baths, A lots of ad rates apply for personal busi­ 1-900-933-2222 free in house washer/do'cr and exceUert security. storage space. Cheap Rert. CaU 387-3374 and ask tlJa/MinMi Ab m i i » Male or Female roommate wanted for Spring- nesses and apartments. for Jamie or Chris /23/______ALLUFESTYLES 976-3111 Summer to occupy. Single Room in a 6 bedroom 3617 Spring Garden St.. $165/month. Call 387- Limits: 2 classified ads per person DW If ilim Antowni M 65 cmlsptr minute house. Large rooms, w adw , dryer. $220 a month 3374 ask for Kevin. /23/______Large 1 Br. Apartmert 3402 Baring St W/W car­ per issue, with a 40 word maxi­ plus utilities. Located close to campus. Call 222- peting recently pairted, secure, w a ^ and dryer in mum for each. Personals have a 25 GALS call FREQ AlIBINlilEUFESnilES 2780 /21/______Sublets basement back padi, two Large Qosets, and AC M CiltO T CICJUtM avaUable. Heat and Water inchided. Plenty d room W VIbllf W ^lP*W iiV 3301 Baring Street. One Bedroom Efficiency. April word maximum. Ads will be edit­ 8St/Min.976^ir Spring/Summer sublet. 2 bedroom, bathroom, large fortw a $525 per month CaU Rich or Wally at 662- « I9 M I7 I 1 availability. Wall to wall caipct stove, refrigera­ kitchea spacious Uving room, private backyard. 0405 g y ______ed for length. tor. Very close to Drexel caminis. Safe, quiet neigh- Comreniot kxation on campus. 114 N. 34th Street COUPLES GJ^YMENONLY. bofhood. $460 month. Includes heat A hot water. (across ftom Towers), can fit 3 or 4 comfortably. OUTSIDE ADVERTISERS Gas 2 Bedroom Apt. m 32nd A Powelton Ave. $750 a morth plus utiUties. CaU 3864872. /23/ Roommates K«/uia9n-2211 .85t/Mia976-1221 Very secure and close to school. Large eat-in Cost: (per week) $3.50 for Ifae first 3221 Summer S t across from M yen, one bedroom Clean FUmished Room- WaU Lined Book Shdves- kitchen and livingroom, hig}i ceilings and brigit. avaitable in a spacious five bedroom house. 3 I ^ Linens Provided L i^ t COoking. All utUties 25 words and $.15 for eadh word Heat induded. Built-in lofts. Perfect for 2,3 even 4 DIIEAHGIRI.S 9 7 6 -1 0 0 0 floors, 2 baths, wadier/dtyer in basement as weU as inchided. Shared B atti-1,2, Month Rert * Security thereafter. Tear sheets are $.25 people. 485/taKX>th. Available in Mardi. OU 222- storage space. Quiet nei^Axrtiood. Rent is $270.00 $250-34th Race 386-1961 12V______extra. Ads Must be pre-paid. •M/Ua ro a iU n iR E MEN ONLY 9117dav765-1076eve.«kforKaKn/21/ avaUable ASAP. CaU Roger 387-6387 /25/ Roommate wanted to share ap t 33 A Race st. AC, Payment can be made by cash, 2 Bedroom Apartment available spring term on Male or Female roommate wanted for Spring- DW, Garbage Diqnsal, very clean, April to Sq>t. money order, or check. Summer to occupy. Single Room in a 6 bedroom 692-4765 adc for Sebastian 1501______house. Large rooms, washer, dryer. $220 a morth Three Roommates needed for 7- bedroom house. imits: there are no ad limits or STUDY HARD. LIVE AT EASE. [dus utUities. Located ckice to campus. CaU 222- $190 and $155 avaiUble April. $190, available word limits for paid classifieds. 2780 /21/______May. Utilities not included. W/D in basement Female roommate wanted for Spring/Summer sub­ security system, diared kitchen Qarge!) and 3 baths. let to occupy room in 5 bedroom house. Large Contact Sue or Keith at 386-0662 for mote info or Additional Info PACK rooms, waahcr/diyer, kitdien, bath. 5 m ia walk to a look 12V______campus. Only A 175/month. Call Sonia at 222- Spacious single bedroom in 8 bedroom house avaU­ If there is a charge for your 5558 to see room. flV ______able April 1, 1993. Features inchide: ftiU kttchea advertisement, full payment must The best deal on campus! 2 bedroom apartmert for free in house washer/dryer and exceUert security. be received before the ad can run. TOWNE sublet. $525.00 per month. 3201 Barihg St. Please 3617 Spring Garden St., $165/month. Call 387- Multiple ads with duplicate call 382-2897 and ask for Dave or Kevia /21/ 3374

Ir In sI \\.i\ til m l your wdtiI .icioss ASK ABOUT OUR STUDENT RATES. Roomate needed to share 2 bedroom apanment at 32nd and HamUton. Best deal around, just $175 + KMS • t(ill) \I.K Mislcr II.ill 16 • The Triangle • March 19,1993 Roommates For Sale For Sale Help Wanted Announcements electric. Includes idtchen and hot water. Call 382- OBO. 222-6791/40/ $1800.00 with Sell for S400.00 OBO. Please call appointment at (215) 568-4466 /21/______4014 Mac Alister. new members welcome... 1538. and ask for Joe /22/______SKI- Intercollegiate Ski Weeks, $209. Includes; 5 Rob at (215) 624-3429 /25/______EARN $50 FAST: Nutrition research study is inter­ Interested in a service project? A Habitat for Roommite Wanted. 36th + Spring Garden. 2 DAY LIFT TICKET/ 5 NIGHTS LODGING Brand New Genesis- Arcade Cortfrol Pad + Sonics ested in 2 males ages 23-25 w*o are approximately Humanity chapter has formed on campus. For info Fkxn, Spacious Apt. must see, S200 plus gas. Per (MOUNTAINSIDE CONDOy 5 DAYS INTER­ 2 + Tenninator2 + Lightning Force. Call Fred 382- 5 feet II inches taU and weigh 138 to 153 lbs. or call 895-6942 12V ______morth. Call Otto at 387-6833 /23/______COLLEGIATE A c n v m e s (Drinking Age- 18X 3023 for Detail/21/ 149 to 164 lbs. The study invohres body fat mea­ Many thaidcs to HRIM for the wonderful meal(s). If IVo rooms for rent in a huge 6 bedroom house. ^xnsored by Laban’s, Molson and Mt. SUTTON, surements (1 hour) and keeping food records for 3 you haven’t tried them yet you’re missing ttie best Has fireplace, garbage dtqxxal, microwave, wash­ CANADA (Just across from Vermond Border) Wanted days. Interested candidates call the Nutrition food on campus. The f o ^ definitely earned the rat- er/dyer, cable tv, plus much more. Thisis a must Group Leader Discounts. Jan. 3-8, Jan 10-15 A Department at 895-2417. Please leave your name ing of 4 stars and a happy face.- Christian /2V “Melted Down" Macs from Pi Kappa Phi Fire & see befott you commit to another place. 410 N. Sprir^break *93. CaU Ski Travel Unlimited. 1-800- and phone number. /21/______Broken Macs wanted. Tom 462-6489 /2 1/______EARN $50 FAST: Nutrition research study is inter­ 38th St. 267 a month plus utilities. 387-3405 leave 999-SK^9 /415/______The Naticm's #1 consumer aedit reporting compa­ ested in 2 males ages 23-25 viho are approximately BEER STUDY: Must be 21. $65.00. CaU R »dy at message 725/______Alpine 6X9 Car stereo speakers. $ 2 0 0 ^ Pioneer ny is seeking Telephone CoUectors for the follow­ 5 feet 11 inches tall and weigh 138 to 153 lbs. or 898-7416 /21/______3208 Bartag St, Available from April 1st $235 * pull-out AM/FM cassene car stereo. $100.00 Cobra ing schedules; FT11:20 AM to 9:00PM Mon- 149 to 164 lbs. The study involves body fat mea­ WANTED- Fantasy League Baseball Team gas dectricity 4 Bedrooms Living Room, 2 bith- trapshooter radar detector $75.00 specialized Ih u is 8:00 AM to 12:00 Noon Sat FT 8:00AM to surements (1 hour) and keeping food records for 3 Owners. New League now forming. Looking for roonis. Share with 3 guys. Call 387-9325 or 382- Hardrock Mountain bike $250.00. CaU 222-6419 4:40PM Mon-Fri PT 5:00PM to 9:00PM Mot- days. Interested candidates call the Nutrition interested baseball fanatics. CaU 387-9220 Before 4087 r m and ask for A lan/415/______Thurs 8:00AM to 12:00 Noon Sat If you are Department at 895-2417. Please leave your name Match 26. If after March 26. caU either (301) 292- For Sale: ‘84 BMW 318i ExceUent Conditioa 75K assertive, n excellent communicator and self-moti­ and phone number. /21/______6040 or ffl3-8170. Ask for Chris. /23/______miles, AC. PW. PL, sunroof, 5 sp manual transmis- vated. we wUl train you. We offer $7.00 per hour T\iesday Febniary 16, M afdi 2, M ardi 16, 1993. For Sale Loddng for a student or student organization that sicn. Garage kept beautiAil grey. $7,800 CaU LAny and for FT employees a comprehensive beneflts Open Agenda. Congress Office. Time: 7:00PM. SeUing Mac Clauic 4/40 ASAP. AUto Doubled would lUce to earn $100 to $1000 promoting a 0386-3723 /25/______package including tuition reimbursement. SAFAC Meeting Schedule for rem ainda of Winter HD is loaded, a must-see. No disks, manuals or qring break package to Daytona Beach, FL Call Tear Gas Chemical Defense Weapon to Protect Interested candidates ^ k l caU Craig Childs at Term /21/ ______queriicn adced- use learn, delete at will. Will toss M oa -Wed. 5-9pm (904) 4234809 /22/ 496-6635 or Mike Ferew at 49fr6633 /33/ Yourself. Attached to Keychain. Comes with 2.5 Everybody - The EBS cohmm dxHild nm! If you in new mouse, $100 carrying case. You need a Men; Semen samples needed for artificial inwmi- inch carrying case. Only $7.00 CaU 895-1973 or FREE TRIP TO CANCUN MEXICO, ORGA­ don't like it I don’t care. Lighten up, its only a joke work horse. I need fast capital. Let’s talk. Top nation program at Pennsylvania Hospital. 8th St. Stop by 3031 MacAUistw /21/______NIZE A SMALL GROUP AND TRAVEL FREE and a pleasant distraction from re^etithre B.S. ttiat $500-$600 offer takes iL Call Adam at 464-0306 or Spruce Streets. Fifteen ddlars for initial sample. If Casette Tapes; Over 100 to choose from- BiUy Joel, AS A COLLEGE REP WITH SUN BOUND keeps iqppearing in Ed-Op! Yipe, y ^ yipe and get <895-2585 /50/______accqited into program $45.00 per sample. For flir- Eagles, Don Henley, Phil CoUins, and mere! $3.00 VACATIONS. PRICES START FROM $419.00. your mud flaps out of my face! The Business Yamaha Receiver, RX-350, 50W, excellent condi- ther information please caU 829-3898. STUDENTS each or 5 for $14.00 CaU 386-7308 /21/______COMPLETE PACKAGES INCLUDES ROUND Office ______tkn, cd direct input, very strong sound output, pre­ CTJLY riM______Mac SE Dual Disk Drive. $500 obo. CaU Rich 222- TTUP JET SERVICE. HOTEL TRANSFERS. 7 Seniors, Get involved with Graduation 1993. There sets, etc. Possible package deal with other compo- Wanted: a Nordic Track Excercise Machine. A NIGHTS HOTEL, BEACH PARTIES, DAILY 3944/21/______s,______witt be a ten minute video that wiU highUght the n ots. O Jl Michael at 386-9443. /22/______Copy of Where There's a WUl there's an *A” Video SUNSHINE. EXOmC NIGHTUFE, TEQUILA Two 4meg simms. Upgrade your LC, LC n. senion in the Drexel community. Learn by D l^ g Yamaha CD player, CDX-520, excellent condition, Tq>e. Any WaU Disney Video Tapes. Ckll Rob HAPPY HOUR AND MUCH MORE FOR THE Classic n , or Peribrma 200/400 to its Max of Ram. needs your ideas for this film, you would Uke to digital out, U-bit out, 8x oversampling.. Poss&le 624-3429 /25/______BEST VALUE AND THE MOST FUN FILLED Run lots of appUcations, aU at the same time in a get involved, please contact Dr. Verzilli or the deal with Technics CD changer and Yamaha SPRING BREAK PACKAGE CALL 800 SUN liiU 10 megs ofram. Act before March 16th and get Wanted: Facotoiy AUoy Wheels for Okls Cutlass Learn By DUing group at 895-2126.12V lecehw. Call M idael at 386-9443. /22/______Supreme (FWD) 14 inch. 1988 or Newer. CaU Rob TREK OR 800 786-8735 FOR FURTHER free instaUaticn. $240 for both simms. CaU Jack the Seminar entitled: H u n g n Awareness: World and BMX Bicycle: Early 80’s GT Prototype. Hand 624-3429/25/______DETAILS AND RESERVATION. f l V . Mac O 627-1071 Day or 5 4 6 ^ 3 9 Eve. Huny!!! Local Ussues” Monday, March 15,1993.5:30 pm - welded frame by Gary 1\imer. Looks good. New EXTRA INCOME *^3” Earn $200-$500 weekly /2W______ALASKA SUMMER EMnjOYMENT- fisheries. 7:30 pm Stein Auditorium Nesbitt Hall 33rd + handlebar, seat, seat post, rear brake, chaia plat­ imiiling 1993 UWTT travel brochures. For more For Sale: Nintendo NES game system two con- Earn $600Wweek in canneries or $4.0004/mA046750 /21/ Fall/Winter. Love Catherine. P.S. Can I have 2 r n i______^ ______Complete resumes $15 andup Laserprint or typeset Earn $500 -$1000 weekly stuffing envelopes. For more pages of Clues to last me through finals + SUPRA v.32 bis modem for sale. 14.4 baud 24hour service 7 days high quality. Tailor-made STEREO RECEIVER Pioneer SX636, 2 Ohm detaUs- RUSH $1.00 vrith SASE to: GROUP FIVE Spring Break______send/receive fax, all s/w, cables & manuals $275 consulting (215) 387-3454‘Taykxt made services speakers. Weather ML-1 mono turntable; lots of 57 G re o ta e Drive, Suite 307 Dover, DE 19901 To ttie guy who used to write the ice hockey arti­ firm. SHARP JX-320 color scanner. 24 bit one- tofityou"/39/______classical LP records (mono). Prices negotiable. Call /45/ ______cles: I owed you one from last spring, so I guess 887-0931 /21/______. pass, w/plug-in$850! Call Jason 483-4745 1211 Custom screen printing by Open Hand G rs^cs. CRUISE SHIP EMPLOYMENT now hiring stu­ we’re even now.______Olin Skiis for sale. Comp CRX 200cm w/ Salomon The highest quality and the lowest prices. MAdNTOSH PLUS- asking $300 or best offer. dents. $300/S900 wkly. Summer/fiilly time. Tour Andrea-i- Sharoi, Don’t you just love not knowing 747 bindings. Also includes Salomon SX91 Equipe Guaranteed. CaU (2 1 ^ 832-0122 for a free quote Call 887-0931 flU ______Guides, Gift Shop Sales, Dedc Hands, Bartenders, where we are going to be next term? I know I do boots (Size 11) and poles. Make me an offer I can't anMimeVlOO/______Car for sale - ‘85 Subani XT coupe turbo. Loaded Casino Dealers. Etc. World travel- Caribbean. Tracy______refiise! CaU Jason 483-4745 tlU ______SKI- Springbreak Intercollegiate Ski Weeks, with every feature. 5 speed, 61 K miles, AC, rear Alaska, Europe, Hawaii. No fiqierience Necessary. Jack, You’re the best looking Dean at Drexel! Macintosh Software: MathCAD 2.06,$65; C»>ILY $209. Includes: 5 DAY LIFT TICKET/ 5 def., AM/FM ster. cass w/6 spkrs, PS,PB, PL, PW Call 1-602-68^0323 /31/______We’re glad you’re sticking around! Love. C.C. & NIGHTS LODGING (MOUNTAINSIDE needs some woric. $3100-obo. 338-2449 fZU DeltaGraph 1.5c, $50, both unused. SUMII v.2 S i; ______CONDO)/ 5 DAYS INTERCOLLEGIATE Wharton Sinkler Catering is hiring for the Spring. CONTENTS SALE AT CaSCOUNT PRICES, 12 (Symantec utilities for MacintoshX $35; (}uickeys A C nvm ES (Drinking Age- 18X Sponsored by You wiU be trained to waiter/waitress, cook and Karen-1 know you told me not to go. ovoboard fur NOON TO 5PM. 411 SOUTH 40TH STREET, i$ 3 5 ; Snooper (hardware diagnostic utilityX$50. Call Marie 895-1346 /23A______Labatt's, Evian, Molson and Mt. SUTTON. baitend.Starting wage is $6.00/hr. Possibility for your birthday, but I went ahead and b o u ^ t you that SUNDAY JAN.24. SATURDAY JAN. 30TH, advancement and bonuses. CaU 898-2462 or stop Lexus anyway. You know, ttie one with ^ daric MAPLE SUCKS-Comp Sd students- Want to give CANADA (Just across from the Vermont Border) AND SUNDAY JAN.31. GREAT BUYS FOR by 3401 Walnut St.. Suite 321A /23/______green exterior and tan interior. You’U get it, only if APARTMENTS AND RESTAURANTS. M ^le what for? Get your MAPLE SUCKS T- Group Leader Discounts. S p rin ^ eak ‘93. Call Ski Travel UnUmited.l-800-999-SKI-9 /21/ you’re good!!______Cheap! FBI/U.S. Seized - 89 Mercedes $200, 86 Shirt. S d d by an ahimni had to put up wifii that crap for LONGER ttian it DESERVED. Only Heading for EUROPE this summer? $169!! Jet Announcements Lisa. Congrats on getting in! Now what? Sparics VW $50. 87 Mercedes $100, 65 Mustang $50, Real punks don’t smile______Choose from thousands starting $50. Free informa­ $10 each. Write to: MAPLE SUCKS. PO Box there anytime for $169 with AIRHITCH! Winner of Phi Mu Mountain BUce Raffle is ticket 29200. Phila. PA 19125 /21/______(Reported in Let’s Go! & NY Times.) Caribbean - #1244966- Maureai DUlon Congratulations! Minute Mouse: Three is only the beginning. My tion - 24 hour hotline. 379-2929 Copyright # wife, she’s got wie eye... I’ll take pictures. Now PA046710 n i l______Mac SE with software and manuals Imagewriter II $189 rA air to somewhere sunny. CAUFORNIA- The KeUy HaU Residence HaU has been celebrating (together or separate) ContactLoren 386-1751 12V $129 one-way eidier way from 1 ^ . AIRHITCH Black History Month witti a week long display in ttiat Hosette is back we can switch eveiy once in a Mac SE for $650 and l i cu ft reCrigerator for $60 while. Say hi to Mick and teU casaroUe to get a Caniso Molecular Hairsetter- Agreat way to curl 464-1377 12V______their lobby. This gallery features a look at the ab.o caJi Drew <» 01 5 ) 69^0452 /39/______Real Car- Courageous Cat______Simmons Business System will upgrade your important political, academic, cultural and scientific Mac Plus and Imagewriter n -like new- $1000 your hair! In original box with aU parts and infor­ Maditfosh for only $39 per Meg. Including instal­ achievements of . The display Suzi- When you dig out your car come and visit OBO. CaU Brad a 574-9779/40^______mation. Used once, in mint condition. Paid $50. wUl seU for best offer. Call 243-0168 for Tula /2 1/ lation. Upgrades are done at our office and on-site wUl be open until Fdnuary 28th and aU are invited me. Have fun in Mexico and try not to get side. For Sale-M ac SE with Hard drive for information service is avaUable. SBS is also seUing 3 in DS/DD to visit This event is one of many ^ n s o re d y the When are we going to Morocco?- Christian______caUIsa 243-0206/37/______Two tickets to go see Cats on March 26. $45.00/each. Balcony seats. Had to make other diskettes for $8.99 and 3 5 HD/FD for $11.95. Ink Residmtial Lhring Office. 12V______Minute Mouse- Make sure Quaker sees her person- Lotting for a bed for an apartmeit? Have twin al-Courageous Cat______rians. Please caU 590-8715. /22/______Cartridge for stylewriter $20.00. Ink cartridge for Interested in brael? The Peace process? The role of bed with box spring mattress. Price negotid>le. If HP $27. SBS also does Macintosh and various Factory Deko Radia Top of the Line. Fits aU 1985 minorities? W ait to meet students from odier area Hurrey- and TeU Pete who you were doing dur- interested, call Dave M 222-5552 /38/______printo' rqnirs for very affordable prices. SBS is and Newer General Motors Vehicles. Worth over universities? Join us for an overnight trip to ing Christmas Break______Soloflex w/butterfly and leg attachment. $900 located at 6425 Maricet St. Upper Darby, PA 19082 Washington. D.C. on Satufday. March 27, after Andrea- it's been one heU of a term... year. Glad Phme 352-3330 n il______Sabbath. We will be staying in Georgetown! it’s almost, hopefully when you read this. We wUl where ftudents want to livelll Cherry Blosoms! Return Sunday evening, March be celebrating our coop jobs. Good hick on finals. Help Wanted 28. CaU Bonnie for details, registration X-2531 Tracy ______EARN $500 or more weekly stufflng envelopes at ______Greg. Too Bad you didn't have enough time. home. Send long SASE to: Country Living Fun wittt Stress reduction! Sunday, ardi 21. 1993- Thanx for getting your strips in on time the last few Shc^pers. Dept. C24. P.O. Box 1779. Denham 2FM-4PM at 4108 Baltimore Ave. CaU Tanya for wedB. Tracy ______Springs. LA 70727-1779./28/______more infwmation: -t- reservation- (reservation a To my favorite Triangle Liberal- Would you like to Summer Jobs to Save the Environment. Earn must) 386-8907 or Bomie- 853-1073 AU welcome see how much fim a hot-headed conservative can $2500-3500 and make a difference.National cam­ ______be? Lemme know- Steve______paign positions to renew the Clean Water Act. pro­ SHABBAT DINNER in Northeast PhUa.. Friday Oscar- Wlqr can’t everyday be like Monday March t WEST-p mote con^)rehensive recycUng, and stop offshore March 26 7PM. CaU Eloia for reservations -t- what 15th______oil drilUng. Available in 22 states and D.C.. CaU to bring. 673-7648. Sponsored by HUIel -i- Kohtakt! Ken aren't you glad I didn’t see a fire driU in our Jamie toU free: 1-800-75-EARTH /21/______/21/ ______future!______Arc you interested in earning EXTRA CASH? Interested in adding your ideas to a social project To Don. Craig + Ivan, Thanx for getting your strips V lLLA G rl/ Become a telephone fundraiser. Must have excel­ conconing Ethics -i- Aids? Please call Bonnie. X- in on time. Hope to see ya next taro. Tracv______" A P A n T M E N T S 2531. at your earliest convenience. We will be writ- lent oral communication skUls and be avmlable FT Sharon. See, somebody is ttiinking about you this evenings and weekends. Same coUege background ing a proposal on Monday, March 29 122/______in beautiful, historic Pow elton Village term. We wiU be roomies again soon... G ^ help required. It's a great position for students looking to Women’s Cross Country- Drexel University wUI Andrea. Good Luck on Finals. Tracv______earn supplemental income. Call today for an ^ n so r a Division I Womoi’s cross country team To Adam. Christian, Dave M. Dave S., Blasi, beginning this faU. Anyone interested in participat­ MINUTES FROM DREXEL CAMPUS ft CONVENIENT TO PENN Kevin, Shaggy, Larry, Scott, and aU my o th» “little ing should attend a meeting on T\iesday, March 23 brothers” at the Triangle- thanks for aU the fim ttiis at 6:30 in classroom A in the gym, or coidact head Priced to rent quickly tenn! Lovef Kisses, Anita I CONTACT LENS coach Jack Mager at 590-8934 or see him in room 309 in the gym /21/______Z.- Eleven terms down, three co

Men shock the league at 22-7 Andrew Ross “We didn’t make the last plays of Sports Writer the last 1:55 of the Delaware game for You would have thought that the the championship, but for the most coaches learned their lesson. After part, in a lot of the other 22 wins, we picking Drexel seventh last season, were very good in close games. the Dragons shocked the league by “[But] I think the rivalry [with going 9-5 and advancing to the North Delaware] is great. That’s what col­ Atlantic Conference Hnal. lege basketball is all about ... You But again, at the start of this sea­ need a game where the students can son, there Drexel was, bringing up the get jacked up about it, where it really rear of the NAC in the coaches’ poll. means something to the student body. And, as you probably know by now I think it’s healthy, and it’s a good unless you’ve been hiding under a rivalry.” rock the past month or so, the Dragons The most pleasant surprise is how did a whole lot better than that, win­ well the newcomers did. Malik Rose ning 22 games and finishing first in shattered the freshman rebounding the NAC. record with 330 boards. Sophomore “I’ll be shocked if we are [picked transfer Brian Holden broke the sea­ seventh again],” said head coach Bill son three-point percentage record Herrion. “I think that I’ve told many (.475) and his 160 assists is the sixth- people this past season that being best performance in Drexel history. picked seven^ was justifiable, consid­ “When you come into the season ering the players that we lost. But with a lot of new players, a lot of obviously the year we had proved a young players, you really don’t know lot of people wrong ... I’d like to what to expect. What happened this think ... the way [the other NAC year was that Brian Holden gave us coaches] perceive our program we more than I think I expected him to won’t be picked seventh again. give us this early, I think Malik Rose “The funny thing is, we might not ... didn’t play like a freshman. He win as many games [next year]. But didn’t play like a freshman a couple we might be a better basketball team. of weeks into the season. Some indi­ There are some things you have no vidual players gave more than we control over, like scheduling, injuries, expected this early in their careers.” kids having a good year, kids having a But possibly the biggest impact that bad year; you don’t know what’s the Dragons made was in the stands, going to happen from year to year. ... and in the Drexel conmiunity. A col­ The bottom-line goal [next season] is lege that really has not shown a lot of to get right back to the championship spirit or interest in athletics got excit­ game, try to get the home court advan­ ed about basketball. tage, and win the NAC championship “I just really think that people real­ and go to the NCAAs.” ize that we can play basketball, and But what the Dragons did this sea­ that we’re pretty good,” said Herrion. son was pretty amazing. “We’ve turned this gym into a very, “As the season was progressing, all very difficult home court for other of a sudden we started getting on that teams to come in here and play, and winning streak ... you’re talking about other coaches have commented to me a team that didn’t lose a basketball that they look at this gym as a very game for ... a month and a half. difficult gym to play in. That’s a heck of a long time to go “I would like to say thank you to without losing. So I think as the win­ the students and the Drexel communi­ ning streak started to mount, late in ty for really making this an enjoyable the season, we Anally started to real­ and memorable season,” added ize that we may have something spe­ Herrion. “I think we have made cial.” tremendous strides in my two years The Dragons answered just about here in ... putting a team out there every challenge thrown in front of that the students are proud of. them. Every one, except for the one I just want to thank the student thrown by Delaware in the NAC final. body for being our sixth man and real­ An already intense rivalry grew even ly getting behind us and turning hotter as the Hens took the NAC title Drexel into a little bit of a basketball on the Dragons’s home court. atmosphere.” The Triangle • M arch 19,1993 • 19

1992-93 M en’s B asketball P i n a l S t a t s fg 3fg ft reb Women finish year of building min m-a m-a m-a o-t a Pf pts blk to stl Holden 1099 141-323 58-122 149-177 22-148 Scott Williams 160 43 489 3 86 41 seven in the morning to doing tions. People got a chance to Rose 820 144-287 0-0 107-190 123-330 10 111 395 24 75 13 Sports Editor long Sunday practices. We see what they can do now and Wisler 764 103-257 65-156 42-66 36-121 26 80 313 0 23 13 In November, first-year head made tremendous progress in what they’ll be able to do next Rullo 736 82-169 2-9 85-106 31-96 67 59 251 1 44 25 Pearson 685 82-168 7-25 45-77 16-54 53 58 216 9 57 23 coach Kristen Foley said she terms of developing a new sys­ year.” Overby 527 67-154 7-26 49-79 27-76 56 45 190 7 47 19 wanted to change the mental tem and a new team. And the building and learn­ Attar 506 62-125 2-5 16-22 24-73 12 51 142 17 20 7 toughness of her players, so “It didn’t result in wins and Alexander 387 18-44 0-0 12-33 7-32 47 46 48 1 23 19 ing will undoubtably continue Hudgins 217 26-65 0-0 6-11 32-66 1 46 58 10 12 6 they could know they could losses, but it did set up a build­ next year, when Foley brings in Caruso 101 4-16 1-7 4-8 1-4 9 9 13 1 2 2 win. ing block for the future of four new recruits to replace this Fenwick 22 2-5 0-0 0-0 1-6 0 5 4 0 4 0 Williams 8 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-2 0 0 0 0 1 0 Today, she says one of the women’s basketball at Drexel.” year’s four seniors. Smith 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 most important things to come And that future will be based It was a season of learning Daniel 1 0-0 0-0 2-2 0-0 0 0 2 0 0 0 out of this season is that the on the building done this year. and building for assistant coach Totals 5875 731-1613 142-350 517-771 374-1113 441 553 2121 73 398 168 Qpp. 5875 716-1676 94-296 418-616 331-982 384 156 1944 82 382 82 players know what to expect In some respect, this year’s Megan Keating as well. After 1 1 from her as a coach and realize team was made up of 12 fresh­ spending four years at Drexel as that they have what it takes to men — no one knew the sys­ a player, she joined Foley on 1 9 9 2 - 9 3 W o m e n ’ s B a s k e t b a l l F i n a l S t a t s be really good — to dominate in tem Foley brought to the pro­ the bench this year. fg 3fg ft reb min m-a m-a m-a o-t a Pf pt5 blk to sU the North Atlantic Conference. gram, and no one knew the phi­ She and Foley’s sister, Kim, Lynn 896 151-415 34-123 85-114 56-143 69 93 421 6 96 78 “When they train this sum­ losophy she would teach and made up a coaching staff of Reiner 711 81-232 11-38 77-105 33-95 77 64 250 8 122 44 mer, I know they’ll shoot for Fitzpatrick 698 90-223 0-0 41-64 81-228 13 93 221 47 51 14 practice. three young people who Freitick 658 117-319 23-99 54-73 48-128 56 79 311 4 91 36 that,” said Foley. “And that’s After struggling through the brought a different perspective Carey 610 44-113 0-1 26-44 35-113 11 61 114 7 35 6 what this year was about.” learning, through the losses, and drive to the team. Griffith 539 34-92 0-0 15-24 42-97 13 45 83 3 44 17 Yost 407 19-63 0-7 12-21 10-44 40 61 50 0 58 16 It was about building, and it and through the unexpected “A positive thing about the Trusty 283 11-29 0-0 19-33 15-37 4 44 41 2 19 8 was about learning. obstacles — Carol “Budy” three of us as coaches is that we Blum 248 32-98 5-29 9-12 7-22 9 14 78 1 29 10 The team went from a dis­ Blum’s season-ending knee Martin 203 13-49 0-1 9-18 11-24 7 21 35 3 30 5 aren’t much older than the play­ Zehender 158 11-28 0-0 7-12 16-42 2 26 29 8 '5 2 jointed group of people who injury, sophomore Noelle ers, and we recently were play­ DeMorat 39 6-16 0-0 3-4 2-4 1 5 15 1 9 3 didn’t know their own abilities DeMorat’s departure from the ers, so our love for playing the Totals 5450 609-1677 73-298 357-524 357-1099 302 606 1648 90 589 239 5450 715-1700 54-203 515-761 435-1237 427 to a group of skilled players team, and various other injuries game is really there,” said PPP- 488 1999 95 506 316 L 1 who learned to play as a team, that left the Lady Dragons with Keating. “We still have the to accept a new style of basket­ just nine players at times — the desire to play, and that was ball, and to have fun with it. team finally started coming good for the team and how we ‘The kids finally caught on to together and playing like relate to the players.” the new philosophy towards the upperclassmen instead of fresh­ And despite the losing end of February and really start­ men. record, the frustrations of the ed playing well with it, and hav­ “We as a coaching staff real­ season, and many unexpected ing fun,” said Foley. ly believe in developing play­ events, no one can take away “They went through some ers,” said Foley. “Everyone had the experiences, good and bad, drastic changes starting early in an opportunity to perform and of this season from those that the season, from running at play in different kinds of situa­ made it happen. Page 20 T he Ti-iangle S p o r t s M arch 19,1993 Vermont takes NAC Drexel adding women’s track, soccer title; falters in NCAAs SpomDBSK vide increased of^tunities for h^py and excited about it. The S ports D esk Drexel University will add women as well as excellent pub­ decision is long overdue, and Tro Vermont stonned through the regular season and fin­ cross country and soccer to its licity for the University, we see really pleased that the University ished 28-0, repeating as North Atlantic Conference cham­ existing NCAA Division I this as a completely positive situa­ was able to make the commitment pions. But the Catamounts could not translate that success women’s programs beginalng this tion,*" KUgour said* ^ e ate trying Women’s cross country is an area into the postseason, as they lost their second consecutive fall, bringing the schoor& total to took ahead to the trend in of tremendous potential for game in the NCAA Tournament. ntimber of women's athletic teams women’s sports* Soccer is a fast- growth. I’m hopeful that I will dis­ Vermont’s run ended up with them beating Maine for to Dine. growing sport that is sponsored by cover many ^diamonds in the the title. The Black Bears, the No. 7 seed in the NAC Drexel Director of Women’s a lot of schools in the area and in rough’ out there and that the tourney, made an incredible run, upsetting New Athletics Barbara Kilgour made the conference. Women’s cross women’s co-existence with the Hampshire in the first round and Northeastern in the the announcement on Tuesday, country will also help us to stay ^ready established and competi­ semifmal. March 16. current and cc»npeiitive.^ tive men’s program will accelerate Vermont’s record, which had impressed voters enough Both programs wijl be non- Drexel is the only school of the their success/' to get the Catamounts ranked No. 17 in the nation, earned scholarship in iheir initial stages eight universities comprising the Along with soccer and eross it a home game against Rutgers in the first round. Unlike and will compete in the North North Atlantic Conference that country, Drexel sponsors field the men’s NCAA tournament, first- and second-round Atlantic Conference. does not sponsor a women's cross hodcey, volleyball, tennis, swim­ games are held on the higher seed’s home court. "^Because Drexel University as country team. ming and diving, basketball* Vermont had depended on big runs throughout the sea­ an Institution is committed to Drexel will join Delaware, lacrosse and softball for women. son to get it wins. But the Cats got a taste of their own diversity, we wel«»ne fliis oppor­ Hartford, Maine, New Hampshire Tlie University fields men’s medicine when a Rutgers 12-0 run turned a 61-59 tunity to showcase these additional and Vermont in fielding a programs in J1 NCAA sports* Vermont lead into a 71-61 deficit. A 9-0 run got Vermont programs and the athletes and women’s soccer team this fall. They include <^ss country, indoor back into the game, but to no avail as they fell 80-74. coaches Involved in them^ said Head coaching responsibilities for track and fields outdoor track and Vermont had faced criticism throughout the season as Drexel University Presidem the soccer program will be on a fieldt soccer, basketball, baseb^Ol, they ran up their record against a schedule that featured Richard Breslin* part-time basis, and a |ob search swimming and diving, lacrosse, no top-25 teams or teams from elite conferences. :^onsorship of diese two for that position is expeeted to wrestling, golf and tennis. But elite teams have been reluctant to travel to women's sports is excUinj and a begin Stndents interested In the aoss Vennont in the wintertime, or to play in Vermont’s gym, welcomed addition for student life men'Si cross country and country program should attend a which has been packed all season. atJDrexeJ,’’ said XJrexel Univejtsity tradk-and-fleW Jack Mager meeting on T^day, 23 at Unlike last season, the Catamounts have had more than Vice Pifovost Diana Hadatey< "It will direct the women rutmers in 6:30 In classroom A In the a few close games this season. They defeated New iS another opportunity for onr thefalL Physical Education Athletic Hampshire by just five points, Maine by only one, and women students to get itiyolvM ^ Center, allowed Northeastern to hold them to just 50 points. and be spotlighted,” been for since I M^er can be reached fi>r infor- The Catamount’s nin-n-gun style enabled them to dom­ "‘From ,the standpoint that the arrived at Drexel I t years ago,"* mation at 590*S934, or in his inate despite a small lineup that featured no starters over addition of these sports^will jpro- Mager said, "'so of course Tm very office at the gynu . 5*1 r . Baseball looks to storm NAC, improve on last season’s record wins Sports Desk rebuilding. The 15 game swing The other important loss for arrived can more than replace tossed 45 1/3 innings in 1991 For Drexel University head was the second largest turn­ the Dragons will be second- the 1992 key losses. and will be used this season out baseball coach Don Maines, the around among all 274 NCAA team all-NAC outfielder/desig­ “Last season was very of the Drexel bullpen, and as a 1993 season can’t get here fast Division I teams in 1992. nated hitter Ion Schaffer. important for our program. We spot starter. enough. Last season, Maines Maines, who in 1992 started Schaffer was an all-around gained a great deal of respect The big question mark for led the Dragons to 19 victories, three freshman and two sopho­ player who brought power and from our peers,” said Maines. the Drexel staff will be how the most in school history. mores, received 11 victories speed to the middle of the “Now we must mold our out­ quickly the freshman “fab five” Drexel finished 19-26 overall, from departed senior pitchers, Dragon order over his three standing recruiting class into develop. The highly touted and 10-18 in the North Atlantic Ryan Schaible (4-5), Joe year career. He posted a .304 college players to replace the group including James Coccaro, Conference and established Morgan (4-6) and Anthony career batting average and stole departed seniors.” Kris Doiron, Chris McConnell, itself as a legitimate contender Agbay (3-5). The task he now 45 bases. The area of pitching is the Nick Rizzo and Dan Shannon, in its inaugural year in the faces is to mold five new fresh­ Although Drexel begins its area that was most affected by will be looked to for consider­ league. The 19 wins marked a man pitchers into being imme­ 1993 campaign faced with the graduation. However, Maines able contributions for the 15 game improvement from diate contributors to replace the loss of five key contributors, has some impressive arms Drexel effort to be a success. 1991, when the Dragons man­ departed threesome, and to fill a Maines and his staff feel the returning. Sophomore right­ The catching position is one aged only four wins while hole at second base. group of newcomers who have hander Rob Putnam should bat­ in which the Dragons will be tle for the top spot in the strong. Senior Felix Donato Dragon rotation. He led the (.256-1-18) and sophomore staff last year in victories as he John Shannon (.270-0-13) split posted a 5-2 mark. Pumam was time behind the plate last year third on the staff with a 3.99 and should again battle for the earned run average and fifth in starting nod. Donato, who will innings pitched with 38 1/3. also see time at first base, will Another sophomore right­ be counted on for runs batted in hander, Joe Messineo, should production in the middle of the also do battle for the top spot in Dragon order. the rotation. In 1992, he was the Shannon, the largest player winner in Drexel’s first victory on the club at 6-foot-4 and 230 over Pembroke State and posted pounds, is most known for his a 2-5 record with a 4.64 ERA. throwing arm and power to the The Dragons also return three gaps. Junior Jeff Alexander, hurlers who saw time primarily will spell both Donato and as relievers in 1992. Junior Shannon behind the plate. A righthander Chris Fiore will righthanded hitter, Alexander again work out of the Dragon proved to be most valuable to bullpen, after notching a 5.27 Drexel last year as a late inning ERA in 27 1/3 innings pitched defensive replacement at first last season. Sophomores Jerry base. After only eight plate Doyle (a southpaw) and Omar appearances in 1992 and an Husain (a righty) will continue outstanding fall, Alexander has to provide Drexel with much improved immensely as a hitter needed relief help. Doyle, the and will compete for the start­ Dragons’ only lefty in 1992, ing position at first base. dazzled hitters with his out­ The 1992 Dragon infield was standing breaking pitch, while extremely inexperienced, and it issuing a team-low eight free showed as the group committed passes in 24 innings. 62 errors. The 1993 infield Husain, who should get work sports a different look. in long relief, only tossed 8 1/3 Alexander may win the job at innings in 1992, but will be first base, but junior Steve counted on for more work this Lang, one of the Dragons’ season. Sophomore Robert largest power threats, may Kemp returns to the Drexel emerge as the opening day staff after redshirting last sea­ starter in 1993. Second base Steve Lang, first baseman David Zirr son due to academic reasons. will be occupied by sophomore The 6-4, 220 pound Kemp See BASEBALL on page 17