Match donor burns Drexel

Transcription

Match donor burns Drexel
Vol. 70, No. 28
The S tu den t N ew spaper o f Drexel U niversity
May 19,1995
B o a r d N a m e s P a p a d a k is
D r e x e l ’s 1 1 t h P r e s i d e n t
A nhD ang
News Editor
Dr. Constatine N. Papadakis,
currently dean of the college of
engineering at the University of
Cincinnati, was named Drexel
University’s 11th president on
May 17 by the Board of Trustees.
C h airm an o f the Board
George Ross, who is also the co­
chair of the Presidential Search
Committee, said Papadakis was
the u n an im o u s choice o f the
search committee.
After a m eetin g w ith the
Presidential Search Committee,
the Board of Trustees voted to
hand presidential duties over to
P apadakis, effective Nov. 1.
Papadakis was then introduced
to th e Drexel c o m m u n ity by
Ross.
“Dr. Papadakis’ impressive
background and achievements at
Cincinnati speak eloquently for
his ability to lead Drexel
University into the next centu­
ry,” said Ross. “His experience in
both the academic and corporate
w’orlds made him particularly
well qualified.”
Papadakis said his b a c k ­
ground is “a perfect fit” with
what Drexel needs, so his deci­
sion to accept the post was not
difficult. He said he has "careful­
ly considered this assignment”
and that he foresees no difficulty
in adjusting to the new position.
“The University has a great
see PAPADAKIS on page 7
NOAHADDlS/me Triangle
president.
University’s
11th
Dr. Constantine N. Papadakis greets the m edia after the Board of Trustees announced him a s Drexel
He is currently dean of th e college of engineering at the University of Cincinnati, and will a ssu m e the post at Drexel on Nov. 1.
A r a m a r k o u t i n J u l y M atch d o n o r
D r e x e V s f o o d s e r v ic e p r o v i d e r te r m in a te d its
c o n tr a c t e f fe c tiv e J u ly 3 , A r a m a r k w i ll b i d in
J u n e a g a in s t o th e r v e n d o r s f o r a n e w c o n tr a c t
Anh Dang
News Editor___________________
The Division of Student Life
is looking for a new food service
p rovider to replace A ram ark,
which term inated its contract
effective July 3.
The decision to end their contract was “purely business,” said
D irector o f Food Services Pat
Flanagan. “Both parties could
not operate under the current
contract.”
The Division for Student Life
has initiated a committee to find
a company to take over the food
services. Aramark is among the
bidders who will be on campus
in early June to present their
proposes to the committee,
D rexel was n o tified o f
Aramark’s intention to end its
contract on April 3, and on May
3 Aramark officially decided to
leave.
In the May 3 letter to Drexel,
A ram ark w rote, “Since o u r
in c e p tio n o f service in July,
£ d - O p .................... p a g e s
1992, A ram ark has been
^
1^
attem pting to develop an ecoL lateD O O K .......................nom ically viable food service
Entertainment....... 14 program at Drexel, while incurComics........................... 17 ring substantial operating losses
Classifieds.............. 19 w hich we cannot continue to
o
4.
'yA
accept.
o p o r t S .............................. If new food services are not
In T h is I s s u e
im p le m en ted for th e p erio d
from July 3 to Sept. 17, then
Aramark is likely to continue its
service under a new contract for
that period.
According to Vice Provost for
S tu d en t Life D iana Hackney,
Drexel is asking for a proposal
for a modern campus food ser­
vice program to provide creative
solutions to Drexel University’s
unique needs. The successful
bidder should provide a perfor­
mance guarantee and the ability
to institute a campus food ser­
vice p ro g ram by Sept. 17,
according to Hackney.
Specifically, “The University
desires the successful bidder to
implement other elements of a
m o d ern cam pus food service
program, including a food court
comprised of brand name food
outlets, carts and/or trucks to
provide convenient service for
the rem ote campus locations;
quality catering and concession
services for breakout meetings,
sporting events, parent/student
see ARAMARK on page 7
burns D rexel
T h e f o u n d a tio n b e h in d th e M illio n D o lla r
M a tc h p r o g r a m file d f o r b a n k r u p tc y M a y 1 5
a m id a lle g a tio n s o f f r a u d a n d c o r r u p tio n .
Patricia O ’Brien
Managing Editor
The fiiture of over $1 million
in donations to Drexel, which
was in th e hands o f the
Foundation for New Era Phil­
an th ro p y , becam e u n certain
when the foundation filed for
C h ap ter 11 b an k ru p tc y on
Monday, May 15.
The foundation — which has
been described by authorities as
a variation of a pyramid scheme,
an operation in which donors
are enticed to hand over money
in expectation of large returns
— could no longer support itself
when Prudential Securities Inc.
sought payment on a $44.9 mil­
lion loan in federal district court.
A ccording to CEO Chuck
Pennoni, it is “too early to pre­
dict anything” about the esti­
mated $1 to $2 million Drexel
gave the foundation.
The money New Era received
from Drexel is unrelated to the
Million Dollar Match program,
in which $500,000 in funds from
new donors were to be matched
by New Era.
Million Dollar Match funds
were collected by Drexel and
then m atched by New Era in
increments of $50,000. So far,
$ 100,000 in donations have been
matched. Drexel did not give the
money to New Era before receiv­
ing the matched funds, accordsee MATCH on page 6
2»The Triangle *May 19,1995
N e w s in B rie f
W hitewash set to ro ll
W rite -in w in n e r s a n n o u n c e d
The Undergraduate Student Government Association ^nounced
the winners of the write-in races of its May 10-11 spring elections.
Zoya Raynes was elected student vice president for finance. Katie
Buzzard won as vice president for institutional advancement. The
position of junior class president was filled by Bill Kneass. Dawn
Schulz was voted pre-junior class president, and Danielle Reinhart
won as president of the sophomore class.
The College of Information Studies will be represented by Dmitry
Volshonok as dean and Shanna Weaver as legislative representative.
Laura Singer was elected Nesbitt Design Arts legislative representative.
Diversity will be represented by Kamira Evans. John Mullin will be
senior class legislative rep, while Leslie Shea will have the same
responsibility for the sophomore class.
In addition, these positions will need to be filled by the new stu­
dent government: faculty senate liaison, student dean of Nesbitt and
representative po sitio n s for the College o f Business and
Administration, pre-junior class, commuter students and residential
life.
KRISTEN LAlNG/TTiS T r ia t ^
A mural will replace grafitti on 32nd S treet after the first "Greek Whitewash" to be held on Friday,
May 19. The event w as organized by Lambda Chi Alpha in preparation for Blue and Gold Days.
Catherine Campbell
Staff Writer
Drexel’s campus will look a
little cleaner for Blue and Gold
Days, thanks to the brothers of
Lambda Chi Alpha. They orga­
nized the first “Greek W hite­
wash,” to be held on Friday, May
19.
“I wanted the alumni to come
back and see a campus that they
w ould be p ro u d o f,” said
The Trian^e
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News Editor
News Editor
Entertainment Editor
Comics Editor
Sports Editor
Layout Editor
Photo Editor
John Gruber
Patricia O’Brien
Jonathan Poet
Nick DiFranco
Adam Blyweiss
Anh Dang
David Smith
Kristi Ciliano
Tracy Marcus
Larry Rosenzweig
Noah Addis
B u s in e s s & A d m in is tra tio n
Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Classifieds Manager
Systems Administrator
Distribution Manager
Gina Di Vincenzo
Jay Kimball
BradWible
Joe Campbell
Ryan La Riviere
S ta ff W r i t e r s C o l u m n i s t s
Catherine Campbell, Monica
Cimini, Chad Corn, Pete Lagana,
Jennifer Rauktis, Danielle
Reinhart, Steven D. Segal, Aaron
Schantz, Kristina ISheedy,
Anthony Tafmaccio,
Mike Thornton
P h o to g ra p h e rs
Jon Colton, Melany Hiint, Julie
Kang, Kristen Laing, Scott
Millard, Joel Saunders
A d v e rtis in g D e s ig n
Michael Busier, Christopher
Hatch
B u s in e s s S ta ff
JillGermano,J[ohn D. Mundy, Jr.
Lambda C hi’s Vice President
and “Greek Whitewash” chair­
person, Chris McCarthy. Kusha
Sheikholeslami helped to coordi­
nate the event.
According to McCarthy, 10 to
15 student organizations vydll be
given designated areas to clean
up around campus from 11:00
a.m to 3:00 p.m. Students swept
the sidewalks and rem oved
tapes, flyers and litter.
C onfirm ed
p a rtic ip a n ts
include included Phi Mu, Alpha
Sigma Alpha, Delta Zeta, Alpha
Pi Lam bda, G am m a Sigma
Sigma and Tau Kappa Epsilon.
In addition to cleaning up the
campus, the group v^ll paint a
giant mural on the wall of the
Amtrak building, which faces the
new recreation field on 32nd
Street. The wall is presently cov­
ered with graffiti. Each group
will p ain t a d ifferen t design
reflective o f its role in the
University.
Drexel’s Facilities M anage­
ment provided supplies for the
day, including rakes, broom s
and other cleaning materials.
Dean of Students and interim
Director of Greek Life Dr. James
Fitzpatrick remarked that the
wall is presently an “eyesore”.
He was impressed that Greeks
are willing to clean the area and
make it decorative and appropri­
ate to Drexel. He also noted that
the event shows “a strong sense
of school spirit, and pride in the
institution.” i
C l e a n u p b r i g h t e n s P o w e l t o n V i l l a g e ______________
More than a hundred members of Greek organizations participated in
the 1995 Spring Cleanup held on May 13. The students went into the
gutters of major thoroughfares and lifted out years of road dirt
throughout the Powelton Village area.
“Some people have said that today’s college students don’t care and
are only interested in themselves,” said Powelton resident Barbara
Sewell. “I find that hard to believe in the light of the work I observed
last Saturday.”
Resident Marion Kreiter said, “The most disappointing thing 1 saw
at the \^dloie cleanup was that out of the 300 bags we had to give out,
only six of them remained unused.”
The participating groups included Delta Zeta, Phi Kappa Sigma,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Phi Lambda Phi, Pi Kappa
Phi, Sigma Pi, Phi Sigma Sigma and Sigma Alpha Mu.
In addition to Sewell and Kreiter, the students worked along with
residents Frank Pillar, Alex Cook, Vaughn Cook, Camille Marker,
John Claypool, John Lindsay and Tom Kerr.
Coordinated by resident Hanley Bodek, the day was sponsored by
Powelton Pizza and the Philadelphia More Beautiful Committee.
In te rn a tio n a l s tu d e n ts to h o ld p o tlu c k d in n e r
The International Students Office of Drexel University collaborat­
ed vdth different international students organization on campus to
host its inaugural International Potiuck Dinner in the Grand Hall on
Thursday May 11.
The dinner had various authentic dishes prepared by international
students. Among the guests were CEO Chuck Pennoni and his wife,
Annette.
“Since the world is becoming global, it is to our advantage that we
should know how to speak anther language and to learn some culture
aside from our own,” commented Mr. Pennoni.
R O T C s c h o l a r s h i p w i n n e r s a n n o u n c e d ___________
Ten Drexel students are winners of the national Army ROTC
scholarship program. Seven of the students will receive $12,000 and
three will receive $8,000 annually in addition to $450 a year for text­
books, $400 a year for educational fees and a monthly stipend of
$150. Winners will also receive room and board incentives fi^om the
University.
The 1995-96 Army ROTC scholarship winners are Corey Jones,
Edward McDonough, Jason Amerikanian, William Werkheiser,
Kenneth Babicki, Jay Ruzicka, Ronald Fretz, William Judge, Michael
Gentile and Stephen Chen.
According to Major Dorothea Wallace, Drexel professor of military
science, students do not have to be active in ROTC to apply for one of
these scholarships. Students need to be U.S. citizens, have a minimum
SAT scores of 800 and minimiun 2.5 grade point averages. Additionly,
applicants must take a Physical Aptitude Exam or Army Physic^
Fitness Test and be interviewed by a professor of military science.
Scholarship students are obligated to serve in the active Army for
foiu- years or the Army Reserve for eight years immediately after g r ^ uation. The deadline for application for the 1996-97 scholarship is
March 1,1996. Details are available in the Armory.
C a r to o n is ts
Craig Bamitzi Kevin Connolly,
Don Haring, jr., Dennis McGlynn
C o n trib u tin g S ta ff
Sharon Gregowske, Sarah Holtz,
Dave Mays, Enc Minbiole,
Andrew Ross I
Kristen Olson
C o n g r a t u la t io n s
j
Copyright 0 1995 m Ti
No worK I»f9lf»
in any fonu in yihote or m wift, without the
'Oftr»E(«or*<»vChlof.
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Triangle,
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A p r il 2 6 - M a y 1 5 ,1 9 9 5
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The Triangle'$ only source of income is advertising: fundlr^
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and dossifled advertising may be placed at the address above.
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I’lcaicr rccyclf TheTruin);k
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N e ig h b o rh o o d P rid e /P R S S A - $ 1 0 0 .0 0
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a n d P ro g ra m s , a p a rt fo r th e D iv is io n o f S tu d e n t L ife
The Triangle *May 19,1995 *3
A M ig h t y M ig h t y S p r in g J a m
B o s s to n e s r e p la c e T h e y M i g h t B e G ia n ts a s
h e a d lin e r a t S p r in g J a m .
David Smith
Entertainment Editor
At first CAB didn’t succeed.
Then they tried, tried again.
Their efforts will bring The
M ighty M ighty Bosstones to
campus to headline Spring Jam.
The B osstones’ album s
include their latest. Question the
Answers, More Noises and Other
Disturbances, Devil’s Night Out
and their biggest album. Don't
Know How To Party.
The stage for Spring Jam will
be set up on the grass area of
Buckley Field, because its weight
would damage the artificial turf.
S treets s u rro u n d in g Buckley
Field, in clu d in g Arch Street
between 32nd and 33rd Streets,
and 33rd Street betw een
C u th b e rt and Arch, w ill.b e
closed off for safety.
The original opening band,
Ghoti Hook, canceled and will
be replaced by Tribes, a local
band from Scranton. Tribes will
take the stage at noon, followed
by Mr. Greenjeans at 1:30 p.m.
Strange as Angels, originally
scheduled for 1:30 p.m., will play
fi-om 3:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Love Seed Mama Jump’s lat­
est album. Baked Fresh Daily will
be released the week o f the
Spring Jam. They will play from
6:00 to 7:00 p.m.
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
will take the stage at 8:00 p.m.
In addition to Aramark, food
providers will include Taco Lou,
S te fan o ’s Greek T ruck, and
m any stu d e n t o rganizations.
Students will be able to use their
m eal p lan to get food from
Aramark from 4:00 to 5:30 p.m.
T he rid es an d beer will shut
down at 6:00 p.m.
No cola or root beer products
will be. allow ed on the field
because an ingredient in them
vidll bleach the artificial turf.
They M ight Be G iants —
originally slated as the headliner
— canceled, citing the desire to
rest after a long tour.
The Mighty Mighty Bosstones will headline Spring Jam 1 9 9 5 on Buckley Reid at 8 :0 0 p.m.
B o a r d o f T r u s te e s
app roves ch an ges
T h e B o a r d a p p r o v e d te n u r e a n d p r o m o tio n s
f o r s o m e fa c u lty . S ta te - a p p o in te d tr u s te e
F r a n c is V i te tta w a s in tr o d u c e d .
A nhD ang
News Editor
Choosing the new University
president was not the only item
on the agenda at the May 17
meeting of the Drexel Board of
Trustees. In fact, the Board spent
m ost of its open meeting time
discussing other items. Among
th e to p ics o f d iscussion, the
trustees announced a new mem­
ber appointed by the governor,
approved a name change and an
added mission for the College of
Information Studies, and agreed
upon prom otions for selected
faculty members.
The College of Inform ation
Studies will be called the College
o f In fo rm a tio n Science and
Technology, effective July 1. The
Board also approved the col­
lege’s plan to allow students to
earn a full degree in Masters of
Science in Information Systems
via computer network.
A ccording to T rustee Joe
Jacovini, chair o f the Board’s
academic affairs committee, the
new name “more clearly and dis­
tinctively represents the current
scope of the college’s academic
and research programs.” It also
“b e tte r
p o sitio n s
Drexel
University in its ability to attract
students, faculty and external
funding to its information-related programs.”
Funded by the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation, the prototype for
the college’s “virtual classes” has
been successfully com pleted.
More funding firom the founda­
tion is anticipated to expand the
prototype to granting complete
degrees in an asy n ch ro n o u s
environment.
Francis G. V itetta has been
ap p o in te d D rexel tru ste e by
P ennsylvania G overnor Tom
Ridge.
A 1955 architectural engineer­
ing graduate from the University
of Pennsylvania, Vitetta has been
president o f the Vitetta Group
since 1968. He m anages an d
directs all architectural, engi­
neering and planning activities
of the firm.
The Vitetta Group is a multi­
disciplinary architectural and
engineering professional corpo­
ration with a staff o f over 225
professionals located in offices
across the nation.
The Board approved tenure
and promotions for faculty dur­
ing its meeting on May 17. The
p ro m o tio n will be effective
September 1. •
T en u re was given to Jack
Ciggett of interior and graphics
studies, Leonid Hrebien of elec­
trical and computer engineering
(ECE) and Hazem Maragah of
quantitative methods.
T en u re an d p ro m o tio n to
associate professor were given to
Shi-Chieh Cheng o f civil and
arc h ite c tu ra l
engineering,
B ahram N abet o f ECE, Gary
Ruff of mechanical engineering
and mechanics, Vibhas Madan
of economics, Seung Lae Kim of
C larification
In th e May 1 2 issue of The Triangle, com m ents m ade about lacrosse players
Craig Caputo and Todd Snelienburg by coach Randy Voigt were stated in jes t.
m an ag em en t,
F.
Elaine
DeLancey o f h u m an ities and
communications, David Kutzik
o f psychology, sociology and
anthropology, Donna Mueller of
bioscience and biotechnology,
Brian Wagner and Lydia Hunn
of fashion and visual studies.
Prom otion to associate p ro ­
fessor was given to Bijou Lester
o f econom ics and C hika
Nwankpa of ECE.
Prom otion to full professor
was given to Mohana Shankar of
ECE, Joseph Bentz of Bioscience
an d bio techn o lo g y , S tephen
McMillan of physics and atmos­
pheric science, Sally Solomon
an d Yen Wei o f chem istry,
George Tsetsekos of finance and
Katherine McCain of the College
of Information Studies.
The tenure promotions came
am id a year in which at least
four tenured faculty members
resigned from Drexel. “The loss­
es really hurt us. This is a serious
issue,” said Raymond Brebach,
chairman of the Faculty Senate,
at the meeting.
The University currently has
about 260 tenured faculty mem­
bers.
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Crime Report
From May 7 to May 1 3 , there
were 59 1 calls to Drexel Security
for assistance. Of those, the fol­
lowing four incidents were classi­
fied as criminal complaints:
Theft
Stratton Hall
A-lot
Vandalism
Calhoun Residence Hall
New Tower Residence Hall
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4« The Triangle»May 19, 1995
A id s q u i l f
riic Armory, usually known for hosting flea markets and rock
conccrts, hosted a grimmer event the weekend of May II. The
AIDS quilt, designed to memorialize the lives of people who died of
AIDS, was on display.
'I'he free event at 32nd Street and Lancaster Avenue lasted all
weekend and featured over 800 of the quilt’s 29,000 panels.
NOAHADDIS/r/ie Triangle
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The Triangle *May 19, 1995 »5
ncJlp Triangle reporters asked the Drexel community tlie following
question:
W h a t d o y o u w a n t o u t o f A ra m a rk ’s
su c c e sso r?
By Monica Cimini and Kristen Laing
chitectural
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SI,HO(),‘Mic(|uircd di-aliTdistount. Dcalfi |iai'tici|)alion niavallirt aclual cost. Actual capilalizcd cost SK),71().(M)iniKidcs aS;i5() nonii-riind:ii>lc a((|iii.silion ((•»•. Taxes, registration, titie, iasurance, optionsaiid
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I’liirhiLsi' option may Im’ a\'ailal)k' at the end o( the li-as**lor a purehase price orS'.t,7H(i.()5, jjIus applicable siiles t;ix. Ixvvsee pays lot maintenaiue,
ie|)airs, and exceviive wear and tear as disclosc-d in lease agreement and mileage charge of SO.15/mile (or mileage over 15,(XK)per yeai. Ix'ssc-e ac(|iiires no ownenhip rights in the lease vehicle II the option to
purchase isnot exeicisedbypayment of the purchase piice. •'I.imited time oiler lor (|tialilied buyers at participating dealers. Financing through NMA(;. Mtist Ix- a lour-year gi'adtiate (liS/llA) (ioman accred­
ited U.S. lour*year colleguor gr<iclti>ite.school (Me.steni/Doctorate) widiin the last 12months or provide universityconlirmatioii of u|X(iminggraduation within ‘.10duysol'conti'act dale, riii ec^year Registered
N'lirse’clegrees (RN) al'ioqiialllw^nie delayeil payment option must start exactly90 days I'romthe contract date. Interest charges on the amount linanced liir the delayed |X'rlod will Ix' a.vsumed by the cti.v
tomer. The 9(klaydelayed payment option is not ax^ailable on lease piograms. Must showproof of employment or pr<x)rol job oiler and siilarywith employment Ix-glnniiig within ‘.K)days ol contract date.
N’ehlcle payment to income ratio should equal 15%or less of gross monthly income. No derogatory credit. Proof of insinance. DEALERSETS ACTUAL PMCES. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS.
6 *TheTriangle *May 19, 1995
Match program U S G A e v a l u a t e s
stopped short
c a m p u s s e c u r ity
MA TCH from page 1
ing to Pennoni.
According to figures listed in
the Office o f In stitu tio n a l
Advancement’s Goal Report for
Fiscal Year 1995, Drexel has
recieved over $2.9 m illion
through Newr Era in fiscal 1995
— inclu d ing two $1 m illion
unrestricted gifts in the last six
weeks.
The fo u n d a tio n has given
money to thousands of charita­
ble organizations in the past.
Some handed over money to the
foundation and were promised
to be re tu rn ed double in six
months. Others received money
New Era had collected from
individual anonymous donors.
Hundreds of non-profit orga­
n izatio n s — inclu d in g the
University of Pennsylvania, and
several prominent museums —
also entrusted large sums to the
foundation.
The fo u n d a tio n has m ade
good on some of its pledges in
the past, matching or donating
money to organizations such as
the University of Pennsylvania,
the Academy of Natural Sciences
and the Philadelphia Zoo.
The Radnor-based foundation
claims $80 million in assets, but
has debts in excess of $551 mil­
lion.
A r e p o r t c o m p ile d b y U S G A c r itic iz e s
C a m p u s S e c u r ity a n d r a te s th e D r e x e l
s h u t t l e - s e r v i c e a s ''c o n s is te n tly p o o r .''
Jennifer Rauktis
Staff Writer
IDs aren’t checked. The shut­
tle is late. This is what members
of the Undergraduate Student
G o v ern m en t
A sso ciatio n ’s
Committee on Campus Security
found during its recent analysis
of security on campus. The com­
mittee hopes the evidence it has
gathered v^ll get the attention of
administrators and change cam­
pus security for the better.
According to a May 1 report
by the USGA C o m m ittee on
Campus Security, the quality of
Drexel Security services is
“p o o r” in m any areas. The
report also called service by the
Physical Plant-operated shuttle
service “consistently poor.”
During random surveys of
campus grounds, for example.
TRIANGLE COMICS GIVE
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Actually, that’s a lie. You should still read them, though.
Sometim es funny, sometimes touching and sometimes
entertaining, Triangle Comics are all drawn by actual Drexel
students. And they’re free.
committee members found sev­
eral buildings unlocked late at
night vdth no security guard in
sight. These students entered
facilities like the Creese Student
Center, the CAT Building and
the Korman Center after normal
operating hours, when the build­
ings should have been secured.
Student IDs were not always
requested by security guards at
night and on weekends. When
they were, ID validation stamps
were rarely checked.
The USGA com m ittee also
docum ented 12 cases within a
week in which the Drexel Shuttle
did n o t show up on tim e at
scheduled stops on its route.
One security officer reported­
ly watched TV in Creese Student
Center while on duty. Another
left her Hagerty Library post to
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engage in co n v ersatio n on a
public pay phone for over half
an hour.
“We are not out to hurt any­
one’s reputation, and I realize
that there are many guards here
who work hard to ensure our
safety,” said committee member
and USGA Speaker Dan Bahar.
“However^ the concerns we raise
in this report appear to be legiti­
mate and [they] risk the proper­
ty, safety, and [possibly the] lives
of students on our campus.”
The
USGA com m ittee
reserved its most positive com­
ments for Drexel Security’s van
escort service. The committee
report called it “satisfactory,”
receiving an escort on time all
but once during its study.
“We have had a problem with
balancing demand against limit­
ed resources,” said Senior Vice
P resid ent for Finance and
Administration Bert Landau in
response to the findings. “Our
resources are finite and our
demand is expanding.”
The staff turnover rate is 80
p ercen t for security officers,
according to Director of Security
Jim Powell. Due to lack of funds,
security p erso n n el have not
received a raise in three years.
This has caused many officers to
leave in search of higher-paying
jobs.
“Once we train a new officer,
[he] must be accompanied by a
senior officer,” said Powell. “The
new officers also must be famil­
iarized with the campus, which
takes a great deal of time. In the
future, I would like to see a staff
that is contracted under Drexel,
as op p o sed to P in k e rto n
Security. It would give the staff
more of a bond with the cam­
pus,” said Powell.
Chris McCarthy, newly elect­
ed USGA Vice P rovost for
Student Life, said security will
also be one of his first priorities.
McCarthy wants to explore the
feasibility of a legitimate police
force on campus, as opposed to
w hat he called “re n t-a -c o p ”
Pinkerton personnel.
In the future, Landau would
like to see D rexel’s and the
U niversity o f P ennsylvania’s
sh u ttle services com bined.
Drexel does not have a sufficient
amount of shutdes to service the
campus, and a merger with Penn
would be ideal. This would also
improve relations between Penn
an d Drexel, accord in g to
Landau.
Landau and Powell plan to
reevaluate b u ild in g security.
Since the re p o rt was issued,
th ere will be stric te r policy
enforcement concerning build­
ings being locked and the show­
ing of IDs, according to Landau.
“There were many incidents
th at show the security being
courteous to students. These
should be noted, and I appreci­
ate finding these things out fi’om
USGA,” remarked Landau.
Powell felt that the report was
beneficial to security and said
t hat all incidents of security
being inadequate will be thor­
oughly investigated. He also
noted that Drexel has a lower
crime rate than Penn and
Temple.
The Triangle *May 19,1995»7
C in c in n a t i d e a n n a m e d p r e s id e n t
NOAHADDIS/TJje Triangle
Constantine Papadakis will assu m e th e presidency on Nov. 1.
PAPADAKIS from page 1
potential and a lot of strength we
can build on,” said Papadakis.
“This place has a bright future.”
According to Papadakis, his
first priority is to work with the
Drexel community to develop a
plan to p ro m o te D rex el’s
uniqueness. The plan should
“cross college borders through a
co m m o n them e developed
together to make this University
great. ... We want to be first in
the areas we select [to em pha­
size] ” said Papadakis.
D u rin g his May 8 visit to
campus as a finalist, Papadakis
said, “You b etter n o t ask the
president for the vision of a uni­
versity. ... [We have to] create
the vision together. It has to be
the vision of the faculty.”
He wants to “create a win-win
opportunity for all participants,
who will benefit and prosper”
under his management.
Papadakis confirmed that he
will bring in m any initiatives,
but they will “have to wait until
we prioritize plans and identify
the most important issues.”
One thing Papadakis wants to
change is the way Drexel raises
funds. He wants to “tie fundrais­
ing with academic objectives ...
such as endowment, chair pro­
fessorship and sch o larsh ip
[funds]”
Papadakis said Drexel’s repu­
tation is much more known out­
side of Philadelphia, and that its
strengths are not just in engi­
neering.
Ross said D rexel and
C incinnati have some similar
characteristics — both are locat­
ed in urban settings, and both
mandate cooperative education­
al programs. Cincinnati’s co-op
program is the nation’s oldest,
while Drexel’s program is the
nation’s second largest.
Papadakis decided to start on
Nov. 1 instead of the start of the
Drexel 1995-96 school year so he
can have time to ensure an ade­
q u ate successor for him at
Cincinnati is found. In addition,
he wants to “use this period to
learn w h a t’s [happening] on
campus, the programs and the
people at Drexel.”
Papadakis gained lukewarm
support from the faculty after his
May 8 campus visit. Faculty polls
from the College of Engineering
and the College o f Arts and
Sciences preferred another presi­
d en tial finalist. Dr. Eleanor
Baum, over Papadakis. Some
faculty m em bers were uneasy
about his technical background,
while others did not like the way
he communicated.
H ow ever, Papadakis said,
“Everyone I met expressed their
support [for my appointment].”
CEO C huck P ennoni, who
was the contact person for the
search co m m ittee, said he
received mixed responses from
the Drexel community, but he
believed that the committee had
the benefit of having an oppor­
tunity to know more about the
finalists.
Pennoni also confirmed that
extensive background checks
were co nducted on the three
presidential finalists before the
committee made its recommen­
dation. Two firms performed the
checks, which included talking
to the University of Cincinnati
community.
P apadakis plans to set up
informal presidential breakfasts
with random faculty members
every week to seek their com ­
ments.
Papadakis anticipates close
ties with the students. He plans
to encourage students to e-mail
him to tell him about problems
and how to fix them. Papadakis
prom ises to hand out a $500
Presidential Award each year to
a student with best the sugges­
tions.
Currently, there is no definite
h ousing acco m m o datio n for
''T h e U n iv e r s ity
has a great
p o te n tia l a n d a lo t
o f s tr e n g th w e c a n
b u ild o n . T h is p la c e
h a s a b r ig h t
»
fu tu r e !
Papadakis. “I’d like to live on
campus if I could ... but time [to
find housing] may be a factor,”
said Papadakis. “I’ll be working
15 hours a day on campus any­
how.” However, he has future
plans to ask faculty members to
join him in living on campus.
"Both me and my wife like the
city [of Philadelphia] very much.
It’s very similar to Cincinnati,”
said Papadakis. “It feels like
home.”
Papadakis will succeed Dr.
Richard Breslin, who was asked
to subm it his resignation last
S eptem ber after six years as
Drexel’s president.
Now that the new president
has been appointed, D rexel’s
next step is to find a new provost
and senior vice president for
academic affairs. “It’s premature
to comment” on a specific per­
son for the p o sitio n , said
Papadakis. “I will spend time
with the interim provost and
Mr. Pennoni to address possibil­
ities.”
On luly 1, current Provost
and Senior Vice President for
Academic Affairs Dennis Brown
will leave for Potsdam , New
York to take the position of pres­
ident at Clarkson University.
D uring his nine years at
C incinnati, Papadakis sp ear­
headed major growth in the col­
lege of engineering. Enrollment
increased for both undergradu­
ate and g rad u ate levels, and
research grants and contracts
.grew from $6 million to $9 mil­
lion.
P ap ad ak is’s most visible
achievement was getting funding
for Cincinnati’s newly-complcted Engineering Research Center,
The project received $31.5 mil­
lion in state funding and $5 mil­
lion from private sources. He
was also credited for implement­
ing a program to help faculty
with their teaching techniques.
Papadakis will bring to Drexel
10 years of administrative expe­
rience in academia in addition to
10 years of corporate manage­
ment experience.
P apadakis has been
Cincinnati’s dean of the college
of engineering since 1984. He
received his undergraduate civil
engineering degree in his native
country of Greece and his Ph.D.
in h y d rau lics from
the
University o f Michigan. From
1984 to 1986, Papadakis was a
professor and head of the civil
en g in eerin g d ep a rtm en t at
Colorado State University.
In addition, Papadakis has
held positions in private indus­
try for Bechtel Associates and
STS C o n su ltan ts. He is the
author of many technical articles
and several books. The 49-yearold incoming president is mar­
ried to the form er Eliana
Apostolides, and they have a 10year-old daughter, Maria.
Aramark terminates contract with Drexel
ARAMARK from page 1
orien tatio n s and convenience
stores,” said Hackney.
Aramark began its service at
Drexel on July 18, 1992. Despite
attem pting “everything possi­
ble,” Flanagan said Aramark has
not made a profit at Drexel. He
cited high overhead cost and
declining enrollment as the main
reasons.
Before terminating their con­
tract, Aramark proposed three
fin an cial altern ativ es w hich
would “produce a modest return
for Aramark while allowing us to
provide the kind of program that
stu d en ts w ant and d eserv e.”
N one were accepted by the
University.
The first reco m m en d atio n
called for a 5.95 percent price
increase for each meal plan.
Aramark would be compensated
for the food service on a m an­
agem ent fee o f five p ercen t,
based on the total cost plus five
percent of sales arrangement.
Based on current statistics, the
first reco m m en d atio n asked
Drexel to provide a $334,232
subsidy to cover the projected
loss if Aramark were to stay for
the next school year.
The figure was based on
ap p ro x im a te ly $3 m illio n in
annual sales from board, declin­
ing balance, catering and cash
transactions.
Hack'ney said the proposal
was rejected because “if losses
co n tin u e, Drexel w ould now
assume financial loss.”
The second recommendation
called for a m andatory board
plan for all resident students.
While freshman residents would
still be mandated to participate
in the 14-meal plan, other dorm
re sid e n ts co u ld pick to have
three, seven or 14 meals in the
dining facility a week. In addi­
tion, the plan proposed opening
a convenient store on the second
floor of New Tower Residence
HaU.
According to Hackney, stu­
dent input showed opposition to
the m andatory plan, even with
the convenient store benefit.
Aramark’s proposed store would
not share its profit with Drexel,
in a d d itio n to the fact th at
Aramark was not going to pay
for the space, while an outside
group such as Wawa would.
The th ird option suggested
closing the faculty club, reduced
services at the Dragon’s Den and
reduced hours for holidays and
weekend services. Flanagan said
the last o p tio n “was n o t the
choice th at we would recom ­
mend unless there is no viable
alternative.”
D u rin g its tim e at Drexel,
Aramark has increased the num ­
ber o f upperclassm en on the
meal plan. It provided “an excel­
lent traditional board plan,” said
Hackney.
Aram ark also paid for the
re n o v atio n the m ain din in g
room, the main food court area
and the service area of Grab-nGo.
Mystery Shopper, an indepen­
dent agency hired by Aramark,
consistently gives near perfect
grades to the quality of food and
service and the variety offered in
the H an d sch u m ach er D ining
Facility.
Aramark “had enjoyed serv­
ing Drexel,” said Flanagan. “We
[have taken] pride in our work
and we did it to the best of our
ability.”
ANHDKNG/The Triangle
Aramark has provided food services at Drexel since July 1992.
8 •TheTriangle •May 19,1995
E d it o r ia l &
iiM —
—
O p in io n
.............. ....I ............................................... ....
The Trian^e
E d ito ria l B o a rd
Editor-in-Chief a John Gruber
Ed-Op Editor A Jonathan Poet
Adam Blyweiss Anh Dang
Nick DiFranco Gina Di Vincenzo
Patricia O’Brien Larry Rosenzweig
David Smith
Presidential vision
W ith U n iv e r s ity o f C i n c i n n a t i D e a n o f E n g in e e r in g
C onstantine Papadai<is formally nam ed Drexel’s 11 th president,
Drexel University is poised to tu rn a corner. Finally, Drexel
seems ready to leave behind m o n th s o f adm inistrative limbo,
stalled plans to keep the school on an even keel, and the era o f
Richard Breslin.
O r is it?
We at The Triangle keep tabs on w h at’s going on at o th er
schools, and when Penn and Penn State recently an n o u n ced
th e ir n ew est p re sid e n ts, we saw th a t th o s e c a m p u se s were
buzzing with excitement. W ith Drexel’s own presidential search
w inding down, we expected the same.
But as we prowled the cam pus after th e Board o f Trustees’
announcem ent on Wednesday, May 17, we sensed a profound
feeling o f — nothing. Numbness. At worst, disappointm ent; at
best, the sense that Papadakis was the cream o f a bad crop.
T hink about this: Trustee and current CEO Chuck Pennoni
heard mixed feelings from the cam pus regarding Papadakis as
presidential material. Faculty surveys only grudgingly su p p o rt­
ed P a p a d a k is ’ c re d e n tia ls. A n d B ru ce E isen stein , h e a d o f
Drexel s d e p a rtm e n t o f electrical an d co m p u ter engineering,
told the Philadelphia Inquirer that Papadakis “ [has] to do a job
that everyone will be proud of.”
Can we therefore infer that a significant p art o f Drexel is not
already pro u d o f Papadakis? And if this is the case, then why is
he o u r president?
T h e earliest answers seem to lie in his ability to attract stu­
d e n ts an d m o n ey to an in s titu tio n o f h ig h er learning. But
s o m etim es, u n d e r th e rig h t circ u m sta n ces, “s tu d e n ts ” an d
“m oney” m ean essentially the same thing. Papadakis, the search
com m ittee and the Board o f Trustees m ay know a thing o r two
a b o u t the cam pus b o tto m line, b u t they seem to know little
about cam pus attitudes and morale.
News flash: they’re very low. A more, shall we say, hum ane
candidate — maybe C ooper U nion’s Eleanor Baum, maybe not
— m ight have awakened com m unity, consensus, excitem ent
and Drexel as a whole.
O f course, we do have Papadakis’ call for university-w ide
“vision” to lead us into the next academ ic year. “Vision,” he
says, is what we need to establish before we decide what prob­
lems to solve, what program s to add, what buildings to close,
what rate at which to raise tuition. “Vision” is his first priority,
specifics be dam ned.
English professors call this language “glowing generalities.”
C rude English professors have another term for it, a com pound
noun beginning with “bull” and ending with “shit.”
At this po in t in its history, we feel Drexel needs n o t ju st a
president, but a friend, maybe even a bodyguard. Drexel needs
som eone it can confide in, som eone to have good times with,
som eone who isn’t afraid to lead the way, take charge, tell us his
ideas o f what is needed and what is extraneous.
Papadakis m ight tu rn o ut to be exactly this type o f leader —
and we hope he does. But when he says things like, “You’d bet­
ter not ask the president for the vision o f a university,” we w on­
der how he will lead.
Asking the faculty to help define his “vision” is a mistake on
Papadakis’ part. First, the faculty are strong but, after the last six
years, a tad jaded. Second, after the last few weeks o f forums,
discussions, surveys and suggestions, it’s obvious that the facul­
ty do not stand fiilly behind Papadakis.
Finally, and m ost importantly, Papadakis’ request portrays
him as anything but a strong and focused leader. Indeed, at this
early stage in th e presidential gam e, C o n sta n tin e Papadakis
looks perfectly content and able to let other people (faculty or
otherwise) m old his course o f action.
That course o f action leads Drexel University, an d the tens o f
thousands o f lives connected to it, on into history. But if you
ask us, “vision” doesn’t direct Drexel in this journey. Right now,
it’s just the blind leading the blind.
L e tte r s t o t h e E d ito r
Takeover completed
Editor:
Now th a t Dr. C o n sta n tin e
Papadakis has been selected to
be our president, does this mean
th a t th e G reek takeover o f
Drexel University is complete?
Robert Dengler
Civil Engineering ’95
Alpha Chi Rho Fraternity
Greek victory
coverage unfair
Editor:
I ju st finished reading The
Triangle's May 12 article about
the trem e n d o u s n u m b e r o f
Greek-affiliated winners in the
recent USGA elections. While
reading the article I began to feel
there were some inferences made
that are unfair.
The most glaring was the sec­
tion referring to Olga Frumkin’s
campaign posters disappearing.
The article infers th at it was
Steve M a rto ra n o ’s cam paign
workers who tore the posters
down, simply because they hap­
pened to be th ere when she
checked hers later.
W hat reason does The
Triangle have to make this infer­
ence, w hen even D ean o f
Students James Fitzpatrick says
that such an idea is “sheer specu­
lation or anyone’s guess?”
Also, what motivation would
any Greek have for the illegiti­
mate removal of Ms. Frumkin’s
poster when she was not even
opposed by anyone associated
with the Greek ticket?
Additionally, I felt that The
Triangle concentrated on the
reasons why the Greek winners
were not the best candidates.
Was this an opinion article?
The Triangle didn’t mention
anything about the experience,
or lack thereof, of other winners
or even the losers of the Greekwon races. In the deck for the
article, the question “How?” was
presented.
H ere is a very plausible
answer, one th at the article
neglected to mention: The Greek
w inners cam paigned to the
Greek students.
In past elections the Greek
com m unity has been virtually
ignored by the USGA candidates
— im agine n o t going after
approximately 13-15 percent of
the student body.
H ad th e o th e r can did ates
com e to th e G reek stu d en ts,
conveniently located together in
houses or apartments, then they
might possibly have gotten some
of the Greek vote. Most Greeks
didn’t vote because the candi­
dates were Greek, but because
they knew the platform of those
candidates.
But alas, the other candidates
chose to d isco u n t th e Greek
minority and paid the price. Did
they perhaps learn something to
remember next year? Only time,
and the next election, will tell.
Greg Pinto
Computer Engineering ’97
Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity
Editor’s Note: Olga Frumkin ran
against Helene Cilione, a sorority
sister not on the Greek ticket.
Be green
Editor:
Has anyone in the residence
halls noticed those blue buckets
or white cardboard containers?
These blue buckets are for recy­
cling glass, aluminum and plas­
tic. The white cardboard con­
tainer is for mixed paper.
Mixed paper is stuff like com­
puter paper, newspaper, writing
and typing paper, catalogs and
magazines. Any paper-like food
containers (anything which has
even touched food) should not
be put in the mixed paper con­
tainer.
I and others in EYE Openers
have been campaigning for six
months to get Drexel to start a
recycling program and we are
finally sta rtin g to see som e
progress.
A pilot program in Towers to
recycle materials was started on
May 1 by Ogden. Ogden admin­
isters facilities management for
MacAlister, the PEAC and the
residence halls. This is a pilot
p ro g ram in Tow ers because
Ogden wants to see how effec­
tive and how profitable the pro­
gram co u ld be. Towers was
picked because it was the easiest
to organize the placement of the
c o n ta in e rs on each floor.
Calhoun was included with the
pilot program probably because
the existing student-run recy­
cling program made it easier to
integrate.
You m ay w o n d e r how the
trash haulers and facilities man­
agement will save money?
As I u n d e rs ta n d it, Ogden
would theoretically spend less
money since trash pickups will
be less frequent. Each container
costs a certain am ount to take
away.
Therefore if the containers
are filled up less frequendy, then
fewer containers will have to be
emptied, saving money.
S an tan g elo , D rex el’s o u t­
sourced waste hauler, will save
money since recycling will allow
it to be more flexible in its trash
pickup schedule.
ServiceMaster, which handles
the rest of the campus facilities
m anagem ent (those buildings
which Ogden doesn’t cover), is
working on getting a recycling
company to sort out the recyclables.
Currently nothing has been
started in these areas and it is
still in the planning stage.
My hope is that the adminis­
tration, Ogden, ServiceMaster
and the trash haulers will see
how recycling will not only help
out the environment, but will be
less expensive for them.
I hope they establish a con­
tinuing recycling program that
will last long after I have left this
school.
I would remind everyone that
recyclables such as glass, alu­
m in u m and p lastic m u st be
washed out before being placed
in the container and there must
be no food with any of the recy­
clables or the trash hauler will
throw all the recyclables in with
the regular trash.
Please, everyone, place your
recyclables in the proper con­
tainers o r the p ilot recycling
program may never develop fur­
ther.
Jeffrey Brace
Information Systems ’96
E.Y.E Openers Waste
Management Chair
TheTriangle *May 19,1995«9
G r e e k s h e e p h e r d e d th ro u g h e l e c ti o n s
A T h u m b n a il
S k e tc h
Nick
DiFranco
Well, folks, another round of
USGA elections has come and
gone, and the usual election-time
controversy has started up.
Last year, we were concerned
about Ann de Vona’s unopposed
campaign, her relative unfamiliar,ity to the Drexel community due
to her transfer status, and the fact
that her age separated her from
the traditional student body.
This year is no different, as
most of you have probably seen,
as the not-so-stunning Greek vic­
to ry — and the subsequent
Triangle coverage — sent shockwaves across cam pus. Steve
Martorano’s election to USGA’s
top post, and nods which went to
his fratern ity and soro rity
brethren, has stirred up what may
be the biggest campus buzz since
10,000 Maniacs graced the PEAC
stage.
Now, I’m not concerned with
the election at all. As a matter of
fact, I thought the Greek ticket
ran a hell o f a campaign. They
focused their resources and had
their eyes on the prize from day
one. You think James Carville
thought any differently when he
ran Clinton’s campaign in ’92? I
doubt it.
A few campaign posters disap­
peared from cam pus b u lletin
boards. A pity, but my life was
hardly affected. After all. I’d like
to think that no election should
com e down to who owns the
most bulletin-board real estate.
No, none of that really both­
ered me. After aU, this is a democ­
ratic election, right? And when
the chips are dow n, i t ’s the
informed populace that should
make the right decision, poster
scandals be damned.
But, see, that’s where I have my
problem. The informed populace
didn’t speak. It didn’t even whis­
per. No, this year the Greeks won
an election by using ineligible vot­
ers. They used sheep.
Now, I may be wrong, and my
GPA does say I’ve made my share
of mistakes, but nowhere in the
student handbook is there a bill of
voting rights for farm animals. I
checked.
' No, the student handbook says
— in som ew hat o u tm o d ed
phraseology — that “Every stu-
dent who pays tuition and general
fees autom atically becom es a
member of the student govern­
ment and may participate in the
Student Congress [that’s USGA,
kids], vote and hold an office.”
I have no problem with the
participation part, and the hold­
ing office section is swell. It’s the
voting part of it that kind of irks
me.
It’s not clear enough. There
should be rules against things like
“cheat sheets.” Actually, there
sh o u ld n ’t. We sho u ld n ’t need
them.
People who vote in any elec­
tion — I d o n ’t care if it’s for
President of the United States or
Em ployee o f the M onth —
should have some knowledge of
the people running. It was obvi­
ous last week that many of the
herd had no idea. Doubt me? Ask
the voter who was miffed that the
candidates were listed in the
wrong order on her sheet.
And, just to be fair, I had no
idea who the candidates were
either. Lynne Capraro? Jason Di
Rosa? The former is a complete
mystery to me, and the latter just
a shade better.
No, all of you people out there
who voted with your letters and
not with your heads, you’re all
sheep. If you gave some thought
to the campaign, weighed the
choices before you and made con-,
scientious decisions, you’re not a
sheep. You’re a real voter. But if
you just went down the list think­
ing you were doing the right
thing, well, you’re wrong. All you
did was perpetuate the exact same
stereotype you so vehem ently
deny.
The Greek ticket, while
proposing a veritable revolution
at the University, actually stands
for just another year of the status
quo — the only change is that it’s
some else’s status quo. While 25
percent of the student body prob­
ably has the leadership they (or
their brothers) wanted, 75 percent
of the population is stuck with a
president who didn’t even bother
considering them in his platform.
That’s power to the people.
So, Jane and Joe Independent,
when you’re kept awake next fall
by the stereos on Fraternity Row,
don’t bother crying to USGA for a
cam pus noise ordinance. And
when your roommate’s pledge rit­
uals include puking and pissing
all over your room, 1 wouldn’t
expect much sympathy from the
Judicial Board, either.
Hey sheep, feel like crying
“stereotype?” Well, let me assure
you that you fully deserve it. This
campaign wasn’t underhanded. It
wasn’t dirty. It just took complete
advantage of you and your free
will. And if group-thou^t is your
bag o f chips, well, 1 wish you
many happy years of being some­
one else’s lapdog. And even more
of being walked on.
Think about that for a while.
Sheep.
Nick DiFranco is a pre-Junior
majoring in mechanicai engineer­
ing. He hates farnis.
T ips for th e
n ew p r e sid e n t
found nowhere else in the coun­
try. This uniqueness should be
m arketed more effectively and
P ro lo c u to r
efficiently.
Once enrollments have begun
to increase (and demographics
indicate this may happen as early
Now that the search for a new as this fall) the additional rev­
president is completed, m uch enues will help solve the budget
discu ssio n has recently been crisis-and allow for long-overdue
offered concerning the qualifica­ funding for many projects and
tions that the new chief executive for increases in salaries.
officer should possess.
O bviously, p ru d e n t financial
All the candidates, including m an ag em en t is th e first step
Constantine Papadakis, seemed toward improving moral.
to have good solid academic cre­
The most difficult task for the
dentials, as well as sufficient new president will be to restore
prior work experience. But there the “yes we can” attitude found
seems to be something missing.
so often in Drexel’s past. Many
The primary job of a leader is lo n g -tim e faculty m em bers
rem em b er when
obviously to lead.
“Sir
T h at m eans the
ix.Hagerty” was
'•7
p re sid e n t should -/
TTlOSt CttjjtCUlt president. At the
n o t only set the t O S k f O T t h e t t e W
“
d irec tio n for th e
feeling th a t anyUniversity (consis- p T C S t u C t t t W t U 0 € th in g could be
tent with the misrpofnrp fhi>
accomplished.
Sion established by
in C
Somehow, PresIdent Hagerty was
the
Board
of"
able to find a way
T rustees)
but
(and find the
sh o uld also do
something more. He should set money) to do virtually all pro­
the attitude. Drexel needs a new jects needed to keep Drexel on
the rig h t p ath . O ften, it was
attitude.
Because of declining enroll­ rumored he found much of the
m ents and the financial drag money on the golf course.
His ability to raise the needed
associated with decreasing rev­
enues, many projects have been funding for any worthwhile pro­
scrapped. Also, dedicated faculty ject helped to instill a winning
mem bers have been forced to attitude at Drexel. He presided
forego wage increases for what over tremendous growth in the
seems like an etern ity . T his institution, including the change
results in declining morale and a firom an Institute of Technology
general feeling of apathy. The to a full-scale University. Yes, it
new president must reverse this seems, he could accomplish any­
thing.
trend.
Today we need a president
The first task will obviously be
to properly market the unique like that.
features found in a technically
oriented co-op university. There M ichael Busier is a two-time
is a very unique blend of science, graduate of Drexel pursuing a
business, the arts and design Ph.D. In economics. •
The
Michael
Busier
Here’s the deal. For only $14.95, you save 18% off
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10«TheTriangle *May 19,1995
» * i= ^
M C € t D .'o k
S t€
i h z ^ r a d u ^ fft
D i c k lo d k
•for a job (And look
(kn4
Oick reaUy he€flls
Soyir^e c«sV\.
ttfok).
Oick khew
SAV<
y»\onfty Wi+)^ AT^T.
Oick Jo t A j o t
a n d »HOV<c| ir\i* o
a n a p a rtm e n t* .
DUk ca^Wol li»s loc<»\ p^«hC
Co»*^po»>y
lo n j
■fo r /I T ^ T
d ista n c e .
IS«t ketv PicA S^VtS i/) tki rml wcrU iviM AT<^T.
/TOT llT ie Savings*
Dick is calling everyone
to tell them his new phone
number — especially Jane.
He’s saving with AIJiT
True Savings* It’s perfect
for c“alling anyone, anytime,
anywhere in the U.S.A.
Me just spends as little as
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I on cjualifying
calls, to save
25'Mj. And $50
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means 30%
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Ibsifin up...
Dial 1800^225-3733
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Dick moved a lot as a
student, but tliat was just the
beginning. Now he’ll be on
the move and on the road
more than he ever imagined.
With his 500 number he’ll
always be in touch with Jane
or anyone else, no matter
v/here he might be. Plus,
every time he moves, it’ll
follow him — to almost
anywhere.^ Tbsign ufi...
Diall800-A1T1500
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A n s w e rin g
S y ste m 1750
Now Dick will get all of his
iinportant messages — like
the one’s fromJane They’re
recorded on a microchip —
no tapes to deal with. He
can selectively save and
delete messages, it’s much
safer than his roommate’s
selective memory. Best of
all, 3 mailboxes means his
roommates won’t erase his
messages by mistake.^
lb order..
Dial 1800-582 5970,
ext. 5820
Reg $129.99
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TheTriangle *May 19,1995»11
'My name is Indigo Montoyo. You killed my father. Prepare to die. ”
- Mandy Patinkin, 'The Princess Bride'
p e
the Nalidnal Brack MBA is
sponsoring a Sports Party at
the 12th Street Gym.
Admission $20. Live it up!
RIO Conference roo„.,
i=loon New Tower.
............. .
'" ’’’
......................
^rv n tp aciiV Q ,
' :'<'L- ''" >; ‘ <’V'--',
'w
iiP I
W o u ld n ’t y o u lik e to
‘‘a d o p t” y o u r v e ry o w n
F IS H ?
Support The Class ‘95’s effort to give a
giant aquarium for the Creese Center!
Students, Student Organizations.... $25
Faculty, Administrators, Alumni.... $55
Departments................................... $100
Please drop off your check made payable to Drexel Senior Class ,
to the Creese Information Desk by May 26.
S
Do
t o
y o u
h e
i n
w
a
n
f i l m
t
?
IKBXEL UNIVERSITY
SENIORS 1995
D ra g o n D a y s a re com ing!
The Senior Class is sponsoring a
video of our last days at Drexel!
They will be on campus to shoot
several upcoming events and do interviews.
M e e t t h e m S a t* f r o m 2 p > m ^ 4 p>m> a t t h e B l u e & . G o l d
D a y s G rillin ^ n « » C h illin o n B u c k l e y G r e e n !
T o o r d e r a c o p y s e e t h e S e n io r W a ll (M a in B id g )
o r s t o p b y t h e U S G A o f f ic e .
A ttfe n tio n jstu d e n t o r g a n iz a tio n s :
S e n i o r F o rm a l T i c k e t s
DREXEL UNIVERSITY
SEN IO R S 1 9 9 5
f r o m 1 p .m . t o
y o u r a d c o u ld b e h e r e fo r
A re O n (Sale Now!
T h e/ can b e
p u rc h asec
1 : 3 0 p .in . M o n d a y - T h u r s d a j
in t h e U 6 G A o f f i c e o n t h e f i r s t f l o o r o f C r e e s e .
H e r e 's t h e d e a l : if y o u ' r e a n o f f i c i a l l y r e g i s t e r e d s t u d e n t
\
Tlic (Senior Formal will b e on Fri<da7 , June 9 from 8 p.m, to 1 a.m.
at The Penn Tower Hotel
o r g a n i z a t i o n , d r o p o f f y o u r c a m e r a - r e a d y a d a t T h e T ria n g le ,
T ic k c ts a r c $115 p e r c o u p l e o r 6 6 0 p e r p e r s o n
b e f o r e a t 5 p .m . In c lu d e th e n a m e o f y o u r s tu d e n t o r g a n iz a t i o n
G e t them fasti % c last <day to purchase tickets is W ed . May 311
Call 89^2577 for details
3 0 1 0 AAacAlister H all, fo r e a c h F r i d a / s p a p e r b y th e W e d n e s d a y
a n d a c o n t a c t n o m e a n d n u m b e r. T h e a d s m u s t b e 4 . 8 in c h e s
w i d e b y 3 . 5 in c h e s tall.
12 •The Triangle •May 19,1995
E n t e r t a in m e n t
C a p r i c o r n ’s G e t E k s p e r y a n s e d
d y n a m ite
dozen
C a p r ic o r n r e c o rd s p u ts its b e s t f o o t f o r w a r d
w ith th is a lte r n a tiv e s a m p le r .
Monica Cimini
of Adam Durice, lead singer of
Staff Writer
the Counting Crows, and Tom
Star Maps 2 Blocks is a CD
Barnes. If y o u ’ve heard the
sampler made up of a compila­
Counting Crows then you pretty
tion o f n ine bands on
m uch know the genre o f this
Capricorn’s label.
song.
C ap rico rn is based in
Widespread Panic is a Hippie
Nashville, Tennessee and is cur­
H o rj^ r ban d o u t of A thens,
rently holding strong with 12 Georgia. Their song, “Raise the
Jjands on its label. But as they
Roof,” from the album Ain’t Life
put it, they are just happy to be
Grand is completely soothing
putting out music.
and well worth listening to.
A rranged
by
Harvey
If you enjoy old co u n try
Schwartz, the college promotion
Mississippi heartfelt blues, check
d irec to r o f C ap rico rn , this
o u t the tracks “Old Black
album was put together with the
M attie” by R.L. Burnside and
unusual listener’s
"R ock”
by
H a r v e y S c h w a r tz
tastes in m ind.
CeDell Davis.
“Jolene,” the first
Both m en are
p u t th is a lb u m
song, is o ff the
now well in to
album Motorcade
to g e th e r w ith th e
their sixties, but
o f Generosity by
their music is as
u n u s u a l lis te n e r 's
the Sacramentopowerful as ever.
based band Cake.
Being
th at
ta s te s in m in d .
If this song is any
th ere is so m e­
indication, Cake hit the nail on
thing for everyone on the sam­
the head with their debut album
pler, you’ll find a jammin’ Latin
of jazzy guitar riffs and lightly beat off Everything’s Labrador in
touched drum beats. The lyrics
“Dame tu Corazon.”
aren’t bad either.
If you’re more in the mood
The band 311 is fi-om Omaha,
for Bob Dylan, then the
Nebraska, and it is no coinci­
Vigilantes of Love song “Last to
dence that their song is entitled
K now ,” from the album
“O m aha Style.” As Harvey
Welcome to Struggleville, is what
Schwartz p u t it, they are the
you want.
coolest band. 1 persondly would
But should you want the sam­
call them a deep analytical ver­
pler, since it’s not available in
sion o f the Dead M ilkm en.
stores, just send the appropriate
David Barbie of Sugar fame pro­
postage (H ow much? Ask at
duced the next band, Hayride.
your local post office) and a
From A thens, Georgia th eir
SASE to Harvey Schwartz, c/o
song, “Jibber,” is off the album
C apricorn Records, 120 30th
Smelly Old Cat. The song is Avenue, N orth Nashville, TN
somewhat out there and best
37203.
described as moving noise.
M u s ic
AAAA
From the album Light Music
s t a r M aps 2 Blocka
for Dying People spins the song
Various Artiste
“Hat song.” Sordid Humor is a
Produced by Harvey Schwartz
San Francisco project made up
Capricorn Records
rr-T r
Danielle Reinhart
Staff Writer
What can be expected from a
group whose nam e is u n p ro ­
nounceable unless you are of
foreign descent? Boukm an
Eksperyans’ Libe’te (Pran Pou
Pran'l!) has got som e real
“spunk” and quite a lot of mean­
ing if translated.
Libe'te (Pran Pou Pran’U),
which means “Freedom (Let’s
Take It!)” in English, was
recorded in S eptem ber 1994
while the group was in exile as a
result o f the U n ited States
embargo on Haiti. Every song
DANIELMOREi/Mango Records
expresses a deep m eaning
Are you Eksperyansed? Boukman Eksperyans brings Haitian
behind the emotional havoc of
music to the S tates.
the band. Unfortunately, unless
you are reading along with the
drum programming, percussion,
soundtrack. Maybe just because
English translation of each song,
tanbou and katabou. The last
I didn’t understand many of the
the meaning is lost. Some titles
two are unfamiliar to me, but
words to that either. What does
w hich express th e ir anger
no n eth eless, i t ’s th e perfect
“H akuna M atata” really mean
include: “What I’ve lost,” “You
music to listen to on the sandy
any^vay?
M ust Pay” and
beaches
of
M aybe I ’m ju st n o t o p en “Days o f the
Jam aica, o r in
m inded enough to appreciate
Shock.”
W h a t does
my case, while
Boukman Eksperyans, but is it
Once you are
lying in my bed
so w rong to want to actually
able to get past ' ' H a k u n a M a t a t a * ' w ishing I were
know w hat I ’m listen in g to?
the fact that it’s
lying on the
Through the entire CD I felt like
r e a lly m e a n
no t likely you
sandy beaches of I needed to click my heels
anyw ay?
will understand a
Jamaica. In that
to g eth er three tim es and say
word being sung,
sense it lets you
“There’s no place like home!”
the
m usic
d rift away to a
M u s ic
AAA
becomes the main concentra­
much nicer place.
tion. It is very so o th in g and
The m usic resem bles a
U b e te (Pran P o u ll)
relaxing, yet upbeat and enjoy­
Spanish style, while the vocals
Boukman Eksperyans
Produced by Clive Hunt, Daniel Beaubrun
able. The band makes use of key­
carry a touch of reggae. It actual­
■ and Theodore Beaubrun Jr.
boards, percussion, bass, guitar.
ly reminded me of the Lion King
Island Records
T h e y s h o o t to k ill
RUTHRUBINE/LondonRecords
From left: Andy Semple, Sam Ireland, Debbie Quargnolo and Rita Blazyca. Looks like they all go
to the sam e morbid, colorblind tailor.
Courtesy CapricornRecords
Monica Cimini
Staff Writer
When not working with his
own band, Henry Rollins says he
likes to produce young, upcom­
ing bands which would other­
wise be ignored by the m ain ­
stream.
Die C h eerleader, w ith its
album Son of Filth definitely falls
into this category. This all-girl
band (well, there is one token
male) screams and slams around
with its h a rd -h ittin g mix o f
punk and heavy metal noise.
U n fortun ately th eir crashboom-bang technique of musicmaking tends to m ^ e it difficult
to differentiate one song from
the next. Most of the songs deal
with power and the question of
who has it and how the singer
can obtain it. Otherwise it deals
with general attitu d e a d ju s t­
ments which should be made by
someone.
The song “Remember Zelda”
is filled with lyrics such as “I
think you’ve gpt an ugly attitu d e/I th in k you need to be
m ore th an you th in k you
should,” but if you listen to the
album the music will be drown­
ing this out so you won’t really
be listening to this anyway.
If you should ever feel the
urge to grab a pair of boots and
go th rash in g , th en keep this
album in mind.
M u s ic
S o n o fF IK h
Mo Chaortoador
Produced by Henry Rollins
London Records
The Triangle»May19,1995»1>
Grab the rubber duckie
JOHN DUNNE/London Records
The m em bers of Steel Pole Bath Tub sharing a cigarrette, a Coke and a smile.
Mike Thornton
Staff Writer
I guess it’s getting pretty hard
to come up with a band name
nowadays. After all, some of the
b est ones have alread y been
tak en - like Devo, T alking
H eads, The Flying Lizards. I
guess the pickings are p re tty
slim . Some b an d s have even
been forced to call themselves by
their most prom inent member
(Rollins Band, Dave Matthews
Band, The Band, etc.).
So, when the guys from Steel
Pole Bath Tub got together, I
think they probably had a differ­
ent name. Maybe it was We’re in
it for the Chicks, or White Meat,
or even The Croutons — we’ll
m ost likely never know. It’s a
shame. But, after finding out
that some other obscure bands
had the same name, they had to
change their name. Then, they
faced the incredible obstacle of
com ing up with a CD title —
Scars From Falling Down was the
result.
But it really doesn’t m atter
what you call it, it’s still great.
The vocals remind me of early
Jane’s Addiction. They have a
way of centering your mind on
just listening and enjoying the
m usic and n o th in g else. I ’ve
never done yoga, but I have a
feeling it would have the same
effect.
D o n ’t get m e w rong here,
kiddies, this album isn’t a peace­
ful jaunt through the rose gar­
dens — it’s a cynical, full-tilt
blast of nothing less than rock.
It’s hard, yet melodic. It’s kind
of like Jack Nicholson. While he
might have been doing things
that “society” would consider
wrong, you still loved to see him
do it.
Imagine Pink Floyd has sud­
denly q u it all th e dru g s and
sobered up. Now that they’re
co n scio u s, they realize how
crappy the world they live in is.
T hey decide th e best way to
gripe about it would be to make
a hard rock record. That’s really
th e only way to describe the
style.
So far, I haven’t gotten sick of
playing this record. That’s really
an a c co m p lish m e n t. If you
know me, you know that I’ve
been known to play a CD once
and then file it away to a giant
vault. But somehow Steel Pole
Bath T u b has survived my
w rath . For th at alone, this
album deserves credit.
Maybe they should change
th eir nam e to The U nsigned
Band. At least that way they’d be
assured of getting played in end­
less rotation on WDRE (the sofar-underground-that-they’redead station). W ho knows, it
could happen. But until that
time, go and search for these
guys under S. You’ll like what
you find.
▲A A A
M u s ic
S can From Falling Down
S te el Pole Bath Tub
Produced by Steel Pole Bath Tub
Slash/London Records
The next Joey Lawrence
Monica Cimini
StaffWriter
Eww, I think I stepped in bub­
ble gum. You might remember
Jamie Walters from his musical
exploits on the television show
The Heights. Or maybe you heard
o f his o n -ag ain , off-again
engagement with now ex-girl­
frien d
D rew
B arrym ore.
Currentiy he can be found play­
ing the struggling musician type
on Beverly Hills 90210.
In an interview Jamie said he
accepted the role on 90210 so he
could better promote his forth­
coming album. Well, the album
is upo n us and it can be filed
under pop. Several stations are
already playing the song “Hold
On,” and it is currently climbing
the charts.
If you don’t already know the
basics of any generic pop album,
let me fill you in. A glossy cover,
m aterial which all deals with
relationships, and song titles 'C o m fo rt o f S tran g ers,” “The
Distance,” “Drive Me,” “Release
which are taken from the chorus
Me” and “Perfect World.”
line and show how shallow the
I won’t plague you with the
song’s meaning is.
>.
True to form, this album fits lyrics. One consolation — the
right in there with the rest of beat of the album is pretty perky
so if you have to clean your
them with song titles like “The
MOVIE
PASSES
GET A N
A F T E R L IF E
O P E N S MAY 2 6 th AT A THEATRE N E A R Y O U
The Triangle invites you to a special screening of C A SPER !
CourtesyAtlanticRecords
apartment, crank it up and it will
help you to keep moving.
C A S P E R e n d the infamous Ghostly Trio — Fatso, Stinkie
a n d Stretch — defy gravity on the big screen a s Universal
Pictures a n d Amblin Entertainment join forces with many of
the creators of W h o Framed Roger Rabbit? an d Jurassic
Park to unleash a mile-a-minute, live action fun-house ride.
To g et your screening passes, com e dow n to the Triangle
office ( 3 0 1 0 MacAlister) a n d g o "B oooooooo."
Jamie W alten
Jamie W atters
Produced by Steve Tyrell
Atlantic Records
H a u n rin g s e a s o n b e g in s M a y 2 6 a t a th e a tr e
n ear you!
14 *The Triangle *May 19,1995
Decorate
those
empty.
walls!
STUDENT
PAINTING
B L O WO U T
Butcher Block Lounge
Creese Student Center
ppw noiw isiw ii
The Triangle * May 19,1995 *IB
P r o t e s t p o p ^ B lu e
F ro g *
le a p s
MICHAELt\GHE/AtlanticRecords
Melissa Ferrick really needs to get some more sleep.
Monica Cimini
Staff Writer
Melissa Ferrick will be one to
watch out for. With strong gui­
tar riffs and feminist lyrics, it
would remind your parents of a
Janis Joplin album, or better ) et,
iriagir-e Sheryl Crow screami ig.
Th< album is arranged almost
like a book, sd the songs carry
right into each other w ithout
any ja rrin g in te rru p tio n s .
Starting off slow and moving
faster into folkish dance tunes, it
finally cools off with mellow
melodies. But watch out, as the
music slows the messages get
more intense and keyed up.
“Gotta Go Now” analyzes the
stupidity of racial slurs, “Willing
to Wait” is about the patience a
person can have to get through
abuse and mental cruelty. It is
follow ed by th e song “ I Am
Done,” which proclaims she is
done falling in love.
So after this emotional roller
coaster it all finishes with “Time
Flies,” which is meant to remind
us that in the end everything
passes and there is always hope
for things to get better. I recom­
mend you pop in this CD, draw
up a couple of protest posters,
and if need be go burn a bra —
or b e tte r yet, convince your
friend to burn her bra.
M u s ic
AAA
willing To Walt
Monica Cimini
Staff Writer
G ood th in g s do com e in
small packages. Lisa Cerbone’s
Blue Frog disc packs a punch
with just three tiny morsels of
sound.
Her voice sounds angelic and
yet properly heated could melt
butter like a cross between Lisa
Loeb o f Lisa Loeb and Nine
Stories and Susanna Hoffs of the
Bangles.
She is backed up by pure,
untainted music. This cross of
strong vocals and rough music
gives the impression of being at
a live concert. Even better, the
song “Blue Frog” is covered
twice in an album and a radio
mix.
In either case you will be lis­
tening to a story of dreams and
biological realities. “Close Your
Eyes” is the tale of all the differ­
ent sorts of birthday surprises
one can get when p ro p erly
imagining.
All in all, despite being very
short. Blue Frog is a very light
m elodic disc with some deep
messages hidden inside.
M u s ic
M elissa Ferrick
Produced by Julie Last, Melissa Ferrick
and Manka Tjelios
Atlantic Records
AAAA
Blue Frog
Lisa Cerbone
Ichiban Records
THIS WEEKEND ONLY!
Orex(.'l Uiiivc'fsi!'.
Division of Music, Theatre and Dance
Pr(!seiiis
"Hilarious and
leart warm ing"
M ay
1 7 , 1 8
a n d
M ay
19 a t 8 PM
2 0 a t 8 :3 0
PM
M a n d e ll T h e a t e r
33rd & C hestnut S treets
T ic k e ts $ 8
Students, Senior Citizens, Drexel Faculty & Staff $ 5
Drexel Students $ 3
For more information and reservations Call 215. 895. ARTS
16 •TheTriang^fe•May 19,1995
C o m ic s
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®3. Perform a
bumper cars
Trapeze Act
2. Pole Vault
6. Play Tug of
1. Bungee Jump
War
Top Ten Things Not To Do If
l ^ r e 4 Leper
^
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T o
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cif wswe Coov^i^J*
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|g p p ,
^ ala ctic star ch a rts, c o s m ic
fco r c e s , a n d t h r e e g l a s s e s of
v o d k a (Wyborov\/a® b rand , of
course ), your a c tu a l a stro logi­
ca l m ilea g e m ay vary.
A ri e s (M ar. 2 1 - A p r. 19): G o
into a p iz z a p l a c e a n d ask for
your p iz z a to b e cut into nine
slices. R e m e m b er to ste al the
garlic before they kick you out.
T a u r u s (Apr. 2 0 - M a y 2 0 ) : A
potted petunia will fall on your
h e a d w h e n you a r e com in g out
of the hairdresser. Don't, forget
to w a t e r it a n d u s e lo ts of
mousse.
G em in i (M ay 2 1 -Ju n e 21):
Y o u 'v e b e e n p la y in g y o u r
Beatles records b a c k w a r d s for
s o lo n g y o u fo rg e t h o w they
really sound. \ ^ h e n you finally
. p l a y them f o rw a r d a g a i n you
will h e a r twisted, biz arre mes­
s a g e s like, '^^cim the walrus."
Tonight: .Paul is d e a d .
C a n c e r (June 2 2 -Ju ly 22):
S tart sm o k i n g a p i p e . T h o s e
" N o S m oking" sig n s d o n 't
a p p l y to p i p e s , o t h e r w i s e
t h e y ' d h a v e little p ic tu r e s of
p ip es
i n s i d e the c i r c le ,
w ou ldn 't they?
Leo ( J u ly 2 3 - A u g . 2 2 ) : W e
h a v e it on very g o o d authority
th a t th e n u m b e rs 3 2 , 1 8 ,
3 . 1 4 , 2 4 , 5 6 a n d 3 will not
b e d r a w n in this w e e k 's Lotto.
Be s u r e to g o to y o u r l o c a l
d ru g store a n d not ploy them.
V ir g o (Aug. 2 3 - S e p t. 22 ): You
n e e d to ta ke your p et ferret to
the p sy c h ia tris t b e c a u s e he
thinks he's a pig. The p sychia­
trist tells ydu*^to c h a n g e his
n a m e to so meth in g other than
Bacon S an dw ich.
U b r a (Sept. 2 3 - O c t. 23 ): Fulfill
your lifelong d r e a m of b ein g a
h ip p ie by shavin g your h e a d ,
buying a really long w ig a n d
w e a r i n g n o th in g b ut tie-dy e.
Play nothing but "Incense a n d
P epp erm int" by S tra w b e rry
Alarm Clock.
S c o r p i o ( O c t. 2 4 - N o v . 2 1 ) :
You r e a l i z e y o u s p e n d to o
much time on E-mail w h e n you
notice you c a n type faster than
you c a n s p e a k . T onight:
Logout. :-)
S a g it ta r iu s (Nov. 2 2-D e c. 21):
T r a d e bla n k ets with s o m e o n e
you love. Sucker them into giv­
ing yo u a n ic e velvet jo b for
your old b e a t up blankey. You
think y o u g o t th e better d e a l
until y o u r e a l i z e y o u c a n ' t
sle ep without Puggles.
C a p r i c o r n (Dec. 2 2 - J a n . 19):
Y o u 'r e a little too perniciou s.
C u t d o w n on the h a z e l farm­
ing. Tonight: S e r e n a d e Ethel
M erm an.
A q u a r i u s ( J a n . 2 0 - F e b . 18):
Y ou c o n s t a n t l y a b u s e y o u r
b o d y with alcohol, g r e a s e a n d
la c k of s l e e p . This is ex a c tly
the kind of te m poraiy mentality
that c o lle g e students thrive on.
P isc e s (Feb. 1 9 -M a r. 2 0 ):
Studying is morally w ro ng . It's
like jsuying a Porsche with a n
a u t o m a t i c transm ission. D o n't
d o it." Trust me.
'
HI?
TheTriangle *May 19,1995 *17
The C ro ssw o rd Puzzle
0 1 9 9 5 Tribune M edia Services, Inc.
—by AAike Thornton
O n W a l l y 's firs t c o - o p ,
h e a c c id e n ta lly d is c o v e rs
t h e s e c r e t o f "T he b e s t
s tu f f o n E a r th " a n d is
im m e d ia te ly b e h e a d e d .
ACROSS
1
5
10
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
24
26
27
28
31
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
44
45
46
50
52
OK,
Spe
SURE,
n t .
Or
Oh ,
fuck
t h e r e 's
no D y s t o p i k
e ve n J im S peaks Pig
-
it
t h e r e
'
s
no
use
S nomen
La t i n .
denying
We a l l
g r e w up w i t h t h e s e c o m i c s
D y s t o p i k Snomen e v e r y we e k s i n c e
HARD
TO
LI VE
WI T HOUT
Lanky
S te e p slo p e
Burrowing m am m al
Potpourri
D is a p p e a r slowly
Baking n e e d
Kick
Wed on t h e run
Comic Jay
C olum nist L an d ers
S e re n e
C om m ences
Bed c a n o p ie s
Toothed w h e e ls
P rinter’s m e a s u r e s
C erta in e n te rta in e r
B lo o d ho u n d ’s clu e
Lum ps
In t h e p a s t
T ra n sp o rt
T raverse
P ack
Pretty— picture
Form
S uppose
T reat in a way
S h e lte re d s id e
On th e w arp ath
Refined
A ccom pany
Mild o ath
t h i s week.
O r c o u r s e o f Da y s
That's
no r e a s o n t o c r y .
i t
.
I
t
is
reason
- m a n y o f US h a v e
it
f i r s t
appeared
to
c r y
.
been read in g
in 1947.
I t 's
I T.
S o HARD I N F A C T ,
THAT WE RECOMMEND YOU TAKE WHAT E VE R N A R C O T I C S YOU
CAN GET YOUR HANDS ON TO GET Y O U R S E L F THROUGH T H E S E T R Y I N G T I M E S .
T he w o r l d i s c o m i n g t o an e n d . C o m m u n i s m i s s u r g i n g . On l y t h e h e r o i c
E F F O R T S OF D - A V E N U E ARE K E E P I N G YOUR S ORRY A S S E S OUT OF S I B E R I A N
PRI SONCAMPS.
Good
luck
,
and
gods peed
53
54
55
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
C hicken— king
Bank d ea l
E aste rn bigwig
Journey
Funny J o h n so n
B ru tu s e.g .
Worker an d so ld ier
Lack
L ocales
Got it!
DOWN
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
21
23
25
26
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
37
38
40
41
43
44
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
56
57
Go— for (su p p o rt)
By o n e s e lf
Jungle b e a s t s
F ate
Old w e a p o n s
Jail ro o m s
Unit o f m a tte r
Capitol worker: abbr.
Show s
Teeth
U se hyperbole
F asting period
Biblical n a m e
Coin
L abels
C ollapsible s h e lte r
Silly o n e
Skiing milieu
Freudian te rm s
U s e s o a rs
Swindle
Lawsuit
Kill
Box
P ra te s
B eef fa t
Wound cover
Man
P re s s e d
H ears
L egendary
M ak es m oney
S e le c t group
Fall from g ra c e
Panache
T ender
S a le s m a n ’s ca r
Sw ab
Mai— (drink)
.
Last Issued
Solution
T R IA N G L E
C O M IC S
S ee
you
in
h e l l
.
□□r a r i n n n n n n n
rin n n n n n riii n n
n n n n n n n c in □ □ f
[in n n n n
□□n n
n n n fi
n n n n n an n □ □ □ □ □
□□iif in
nn n u n n
n n
nn
ifi
! □
un
ri:nii:i i i n n n n
nnr^n
nnnn
nr^nn
□n n
nnnn
n n aran
n n iin n n n rjR n n n n n i
nnnn
n n p iH Q n in n n n n n n n i
n n in n (iM n n n n n m n
[in iifi u riririri n c irin
iin n iin
a 995 Trbura Ktecfci Sanm . Ik >4 Righb RMMvad
18 •TheTriangle •May 19,1995
C la s s if ie d s
In d ex
The Triangle Classifieds are sepa­
rated into 11 available classifica­
tions in the order below. If you
cannot find a heading, there are
no ads of that type in this week’s
newspaper.
Apartments
Sublets
Rootnmates
For Sale
Wanted
Text Books
Services
Help Wanted
Lost & Found
Announcements
Personals
P l a c i n g C la s s if ie d s
The deadline for placing a
classified ad is 5:00 p.m. on the
Tuesday of the week of the issue
in which you want your ad to
appear.
Forms must be completed in
full, and writing should be legi­
ble.
If there are no copies of the
classified form available, write
your ad on a full sheet of paper.
Include your name, organization,
phone number and address. If
you are a Drexel student, please
include your student number.
Always make note of the date the
ad was placed, and the section in
which you wish the ad to be
placed. Be sure to sign your
name.
In P e rso n
Our office is 3010 MacAlister
Hall.
M ail
The Triangle
Attn: Classifieds Manager
32nd 8i Chestnut Streets
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Fax
The Triangle Fax number is (215)
895-5935. If your ad is a paid ad,
a copy of the check or money
order should be faxed and the
original should be mailed or
dropped off in person.
C o s ts & L i m i t s
DREXEL AD VERTISERS
Cost: FREE. Exceptions: normal
ad rates apply for personal busi­
nesses and apartments.
Limits: 2 classified ads per person
per issue, with a 40 word maxi­
mum for each. Personals have a
25 word maximum. Ads will be
edited for length.
O U T SID E ADVERTISERS
Cost: (per issue) $4.50 for the
first 25 words and $.25 for each
word thereafter. Tear sheets are
$.25 extra. Ads must be pre-paid.
Payment can be made by caslmoney order or check.
Limits: there are no ad limits or
word limits for paid classifieds.
A d d itio n a l In fo
If there is a charge for your
advertisement, full payment must
be received before the ad can run.
Multiple ads with duplicate
subjects will not be accepted
unless they are paid for.
No classifieds will be accepted
over the telephone.
Ads may be cancelled or cor­
rected by notifying the classifieds
staff in writing or by phone by
the 5:00 p.m. Tuesday deadline.
No refunds will be given for can­
celled ads.
Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
EMERGENCY! Take over my lease. June to
Septemt)erl $260 + utilities for nice BR in
4 BR apartment @ 37th & Lancaster.
Patio/backyard, 2 bth, W /D, W/W carpet,
cable, large living and kitchen. Call Adam
387-9270 (home). 241-4266 (work)
3607 Spring Garden St. Large 3 BR apart­
ment. Newly painted, very clean, windows
with grill, fenced yard, busline. Available
immediately. $700 negotiable + utilities. 1
month security, 1 month rent. (215) 425 •
6711 & (215) 425-4222._______________
Fabulous NY loft-style renovation! 6 Br, 2
Bt, full mod kit, w/w carpet, central air,
economical gas appliances, huge roofdeck,
washer/dryer. Avail. Sept 1. 35th & Spring
Garden. REDUCED to $1250 +. 731-9550.
38XX Lancaster. 6 Br, 3 Bth, eat-in
kitchen, large living room, coin-op laundry,
old pool table, $1200/m onth. August 1.
Call 483-2395. 11 month lease._________
4 bedroom - 3713 Lancaster Avenue. 2
bathrooms, deck, washer/dryer, dishwasher. $980/month utilities. 662-1000.
4 bedroom, 2 car garage, $980/m onth.
Large rooms, washer/dryer, dishwasher,
deck, alarm, ice maker, 3902 Warren St.
(39th & Baring). Atrium. A very unique
house. 662-1000.
2 bedroom, yard, deck, central air, stor­
age, 3808 Hamilton Street. All appliances.
$590 + utilities. 662-1000._____________
Spacious 1 BR apt for sublet/rent. 100
block of N 35th St. Literally 2 minutes to
Drexel. Available 6 /1 - 8 /3 1 , with option to
lease after that. ONLY $ 3 5 0 /m o n th .
Furniture In apt can be sold at minimal
price. Call 386-3401.__________________
Nice 2 bedroom apt for rent. Large, mod­
ern. Fenced-In backyard, garbage disposal.
32nd & Powelton. Call Jay or Erin @ (215)
386-1872.___________________________
3 631 Lancaster Avenue - Luxury 2 bed­
room. Central air, washer/dryer, dishwash­
er. S afe/secure. Available for Summer
term. $870 + or best offer. Call 222-2625.
No pets._____________________________
BRIGHT NEWLY RENOVATED 5BR 2BT
HOME, full mod kit, w /w carpet, central
air, economical gas appliances, land­
scaped backyard, washer/dryer, storage
basement. Avail. Sept 1, possibly earlier.
32nd & Spring Garden. REDUCED to
$1100 -f. 731-9550.___________________
3 4 0 9 Powelton Ave. Nice studio apt.
Modern kitchen, track lights, W /D in build­
ing, parking. Available July 1st or Sept 1st.
Only $300 -i-. Call 222-6835. •
3409 Powelton Ave. Very large one bed­
room with patio, hardwood floors, W /D In
building, parking, intercom. Available July
1st. Only $350 +. Call 222-6835.________
35XX Baring. 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms,
nrodern kitchen w / DW, microwave, wash­
er/dryer. Full floor, private Victorian home.
Rent includes all utilities. Very quiet loca­
tion. Private entrance. $1075. John 5876937._______________________________
3400 block of Hamilton St. Large 2 bdrm
apts for rent. High ceiling, hardwood floors,
spacious LR, nxxJem kit & bath, heat/hw
Incl. Available 7 /1 or 9 /1 . Call 215-6620797._______________________________
1 bedroom apt available June. Large bed­
room and living room, spacious kitchen
with counter. Convenient washer & dryer.
$375/month + utilities. 3305 Powelton. A
must see. Call & leave message 222-5328
Apt for rent- 3 4 1 0 Race S treet.
$600/m onth. Spacious two bedroom w /
deck. Close to campus & transportation.
Available
5 /1 /9 5 .
C ontact
Orens/MacLaren 222-4412_____________
House for rent- 2 bedroom house 3205
Pearl S treet. Close to cam p us/trans.
$675/month. Contact Orens Brothers Real
Estate 222-4412._____________________
Studio apartment near campus. Nice view
of the city. From $3 75. Available June.
Franklin Rentals 382-7368._____________
1 bdrm apt for rent-32nd & Baring St. W to
W carpeting. Huge walk-in closet. Your own
entrance. $ 4 5 0 /m o n th includes heat.
Please call 483-2845._________________
1 Bdrm & efficiency for rent. Victorian BIdg.
Hardwdftd floor. 3 4 th & Race S treet.
Modern. 1 bdrm for $450. Efficiency for
$300. For more Info please call 590-8728.
Nice 2 bedroom apt. Available Summer
term. Heat included. 33rd & Baring. $700
a month call 387-1226.________________
Three bedroom, two bath 3811 Baring. Bi­
level 2nd & 3rd floors, two baths. Free
washer & dryer. Eat in kitchen. All wood
floors. Avail July 1st. $850-t-. 38& 6722.
Two bedrootTv3811 Baring. Pvt. entrance.
Interior security bars. Economical gas
heat. Yard, tile bath, quality eat in kitchen.
Free washer/dryer. $650. 386-6722.
One/Two bedroom apartments-Drexel,
Kelly dorm area. Affordable, clean, secure.
Kitchen, bath, W/D, cable ready. Utilities
included. On Drexel Security route. 4777186._______________________________
2 BR, each w / own bath. Kitchen & living
room. $690/m o incl. utilities. 928-9090
day / 386-6007 eve. Avail 6 /1 /9 5 . 3405
Baring St.____________________________
VERY VERY LARGE 2 bedroom apartment.
3509 Baring Street. Wall to Wall Carpeting.
Washer/Dryer. $700 per month includes
heat and hot water. Call (610) 527-7809
SHARE LARGE HOUSE — Rent one tothree
rooms, $260/room . 49th & Springfield.
W/D, Deck. Convenient to #34. #13 trollies, CC & Drexel. 879-8778. Immediately.
5 /6 BEDROOM HOUSE’S (New Usting) 33
& POWELTON. Wood floors, spacious
rooms. Available 9 /9 5 . $1100. Franklin
Rentals 382-7368_____________________
3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS. (Just Listed)
New windows & appliances. Yard, base­
ment. Available NOW or Sept from $800.
(Or 35th & Spring Garden 4 bedrooms for
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387-9990
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NOTVALIDWTTHANYOTHEROFFERS. EXPIRESMAY30,1995
INTRODUCE ONE OF YOUR FRIENDS
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and your friend gets the same for free.
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Historic Powelton Village
A p a r t m e n t A v a ila b le
J u s t M i n u t e s F ro m C am pus! 11
B e a u t i f u l A p a r t m e n t s in G r a c i o u s , R e s t o r e d
V i c t o r i a n B u ild in g s
M o d e r n K itc h e n s ; T ile B a th s ; L a u n d r y F a c ilitie s ;
H e a t In c lu d e d
E x c e l l e n t S e c u r it y
O wned a n d M anaged by C o m m u nity R esidents
2
M o d em
T ile B a th
M o d e r n K itc h e n
S m a ll P riv a te P a tio
H e a t a n d H o t W a te r In c lu d e d
A v a ila b le J u n e 1 5 th . $ 3 7 5
Meridian Associates
3 8 7 -7 8 0 8
S p e c ia liz e d in
H o u sin g fo r th e
D rex el C o m m u n ity
A ffo rd a b le
R o o m A p a rtm e n t
o
A p a rtm e n ts a n d
H o u se R e n ta ls .
M a n y to c h o o s e fro m ,
Sept. 34XX Baring St. IB R $525
June/Sept. 33XX Powelton Ave. IB R $360-$475
Sept. l X X N o .3 5 t h S t .2 B R $680
Sept. 32XX Pearl St. 2BR House $675
Sept. 32XX H am ilton St. 2BR $630
Sept. 32XX Powelton Ave. 3BR $1000
Aug./Sept. 4XX N o. 32nd St. 4BR $1300
Sept. 34XX Lancaster St. 4BR House $1350
Aug./Sept. 32XX Pow elton Ave. 6BR House $1175
Aug./Sept. 3 2XX Powelton Ave. 7BR House $1575
And m a n y m ore to choose fro m !
SU M M ER
TO
DO
•
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•
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C a tc h
L IS T
s u it
u p o n r e c r e a tio n a l
r e a d i n g **
** S u p p le m e n t y o u r s u m m e r
readin g l i s t a t t h e
Drexel Nd\&r\cdiX\ Library A s s o c ia tio n
S t u d e n t C h a p te r
BOOK SALE
T uesday, May 2 3 • T h u ra d ay , May 2 5
4 : 0 0 > 6 : 0 0 p.tti.
In th e courtyard ^ th e Rush Building
33rd & Marl<et S ts., acroee from th e Armory
All k\nde of qtpeat books available for
»1.$2.and$3
387-1002
3 3 0 1 P o w e lto n A v e n u e , P h ila d e lp h ia , P A
Plek UP a o m tM n a fo r pootoldal
TheTriangle *May 19,1995»19
Apartments
Apartment^
Apartments
Roommates
For Sale
$ 7 0 0 with a deck AVAILABLE NOW).
Franklin Rentals 382-7368_____________
2
BEDROOM
APARTMENT
(New
Ustings)34th & Baring. MODERN. WASH­
ER/DRYER. $ 6 5 0 . AVAIL JUNE/JULY.
OTHER LOCATIONS AVAILABLE. FRANKLIN
RENTALS 382-7368___________________
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT 36 & BARING
ST. High Gloss Wood floors, fresh paint,
YARD. $5 75 Includes heat & hot water.
Others available for less. Franklin Rentals
382-7368.___________________________
STUDIO APARTMENT. 4 3 4 N. 34th St.
Great for one student. New tile, bath, new
kitchen, dishwasher, living area, hardwood
floors, internal security bars, washer/dryer.
MUST SEEII! $410 includes heat. Available
July 1. 3 8 6 6 7 2 2 ______________________
EFFICIENCY — 3 4 06 Spring Garden St.
Perfect for one student. New kitchen area.
Carpeted. Inexpensive gas heat. Free
washer/dryer. $3204-. 3S&6722.________
Two bedroom w / study - or - three bed­
rooms. 3 6 2 2 Baring St. Perfect for stu­
dents who want a quiet home to live and
study. Owers Victorian Home. Second
floor. Large rooms. Eat in kitchen; dish­
washer, washer/dryer. Beautiful block.
$875 including heat + hot water. Call 3866722._______________________ •
Come one — come all — We have several
ap artm ents and houses availab le in
Powelton Village. IB R to 4BR, various
prices. Call for help (610) 279-1205
2 Bedrooms available. 32nd and Powelton.
Modern. Dishwasher; garbage disposal;
central air, gas heat; wall to wall carpet.
$650 + Util. Must see. (610) 279-1205
Must See!!! IBedroom apt, large enough
for two. conviniently located at 37th &
Powelton Ave., minutes away from Penn
and Drexel. Heat & hot water included.
Reasonable priced. Available now. Call day­
time (800) 456-3669, x5693, night (215)
222-6329.___________________________
House: Close to campus. 33rd Powelton
Avenue. Six bedrooms. 2 1 /2 baths.
W asher/Dryer. Large rooms. Available
9 /1 /9 5 . $1350.00/m onth. 610-565-3455
39xx BARING- 4 BR apt, 1 1 /2 baths, h/w
and carpeted flrs. C/A, mod. kitch., living
& dining area. All new appliances, security
system, basement coin laundry. Tel. 2320328._______________________________
THREE BEDROOM APARTMENT. 5 0 0 N.
34th St. at Spring Garden. Large bed­
rooms, large kitchen & living area. Tile
bath, washer, dryer, yard. Inexpensive gas
heat. Avail. April 1st. $900-t- 38& 6722.
Four bedroom house- 5 0 9 N. 35th at
Spring Garden. Inexpensive gas heat.
Finished wood floors, interior security bars,
two ceramic baths, w /d, yard and base­
ment. $1 1 0 0 - 38 6 -6 7 2 2 . Available July
1st._________________________________
One bedroom apt- 3406 Spring Garden St.
Newly renovated. Living room, kitchen, tile
bath. Washer & dryer-free. Inexpensive
gas heat. Available April 1st. $ 4 5 0 f 3866722._______________________________
Three Bedroom bi-level apt. 3200 HAMIL­
TON ST. Available 7-1-95. Lots of windows.
Interior security bars, modem kitchen, free
w /d , knotty pine floors, cozy. $ 9 7 5 .
Includes heat, h/w & cooking gas. 3866722._______________________________
Six bedroom bi level apt. 432 N. 34th St.
Not a party house. Two ceramic baths, car­
pet throughout, w /d , dw, contemporary
kitchen. Inexpensive gas heat. Available 61-95. $1200+. 38& 6722.______________
3312 HAMILTON STREET: Efficiencies, one
and two bedrooms from $ 2 9 9 /m o up.
Heat gas and hot water incl. All apts have
walk-in closets, lots of .windows, walking
distance to school. 349-9429.
Within two blocks of Drexel Gym: clean,
safe affordable apts avail. Some with w/d
or deck. Small, well-behaved pets welcome. Call 610-664-7779.____________ _
37th & Spring Garden. Huge, beautiful 5
BR, 2BT house. Garden, porch, 3 fire­
places, bay windows, basement, W /D ,
C/A. Good location. $1 450 +. Call 8939710. Available June 1st.______________
2 BR apt, hardwood floors, basement,
backyard, DW, Gar. Dis., W /D In bidg. All
utilities Included. Rent $750. Must seel
Call 222-8732________________________
Drexel, Penn, Presby area 2 BR townhouse, security system, skylights, wood
floors, washer/dryer, brick patio in private
courtyard, cable available. $6 25+ . Call
551-1343.___________________________
34th & Powelton. 2 BR, immediate occu­
pancy. Also 1 BR - newly updated & painted, AC, backyard, secure. (215) 477-7186
One and two bedroom apartm ents,
Powelton Village, HW floors. 1.5 bath, DW,
patio, coln-op laundry in basement. Call
and leave message 624-7536__________
Large on bedroom apartment, Powelton
Village. Lots of closet space, W /D in build­
ing. Available June. Call 6 6 2 -0 5 2 7 for
more Info.____________________________
36th & Powelton. 3 BR renovated bi-level
apartment. 2 full baths, eat-in kitchen, 6 ft
clo sets, W /D , W /W , G /D , gas h e at.
Available Sept. $875. 387-7278_________
Baring & 33rd (401 N 33rd St.) - large 2
BR apt. Good closet space, large kitchen,
hardwood floors, W /D, newly decorated.
$6 50/m o n th . Claude Boni Real Estate
473-5900____________________________
Sunny 2 BR apartment, HW floors, eat-in
kitchen, large living room, great water pres­
sure, laundry in building, corner of 33rd &
Baring. $625/m onth Summer sublet or
begin your own lease. Available July 1st.
387-6880____________________________
33rd & Baring, 1 BR apt, safe neighbor­
hood, 5 min walk from campus, gas heat,
low utilities, W /D, kitchen, garden back­
yard. Available July 1. Special summer rate
reduced from $475 to $425 + util. Call
now! 222-1207 (W) or 382-0369 (H). Ask
for Jen.______________________________
1 BR for $ 4 5 0 & efficiency for
$300/month. Some utilities included. HW
floor. Victorian building. 34th & Race. For
info please call 590-8728.______________
1 BR for rent. 32nd & Baring St. W/W car­
pet, walk-in closets. Backyard. Heat included. $450/month. 483-2845.____________
3300 Spring Garden. Recently renovated,
bright 2 BR apt with G /D , gas heat,
sunken living, private storage area, tile
bath, lots of extras. Avail July 1. A must
see. Convenient to bus route into city.
$525 + util. Call Chris (609) 4 2 9 0 4 6 3
House. Close to campus. 33rd & Powelton
Avenue. 6 bedroom, 2.5 bath. LR/DR/kit.
Washer/dryer. Available 9 /1 /9 5 or before.
$1175/month. (610) 565-3455._________
1 BR, avail June 1 for 3 month sublet or
lease. Across from Towers, behind 7-11.
All utils incl. Reduced $470. Safe, large
rooms, large closets, large bathroom, lots
of windows. 243-2457 or ST92NS63.
1 BR ap artm ent, suitable for 2.
$600/m onth. Includes heat & hot water.
Large living/dining room. Lots of windows,
HW floors, nrodern bath. Laundry on site.
Safe & close. 3318 Arch St., Apt 3, across
from Towers. Contact Sue at 222-1735.
Available July 1 or sooner_______________
3419 & 3421 Race Street - Large efflciency $ 3 2 5 , incl H & HW, 6 /1 . Efficiency
$295 inc. elec, 6 /1 . Newly rehab, 1 BR
$5 25, large yard/garden, Incl H & HW,
6 /1 . Very large 2 BR $775, good for 3 or 4
people, DW,W/D, private yard, basement.
Inc H. Large 2 or 3 BR $725, Inc heat 7 /1 .
222-5406.
security system, DW. 33rd & Pearl. $280
+ util. Leave message 387-8304.________
M /F wanted to share 4 BR house. Own
room, furnished, large, hardwood floors,
gas heat, low utilities, garden backyard. All
for only $ 2 5 0 / month + util. Call now. 2221207 (W) or 382-0369 (H). Ask for Jen.
Graduating and moving to Washington,
D.C.? I’m looking for a roommate in the
D.C. area beginning immediately after grad­
uation. If interested please call 222-2552.
1988 Toyota Tercel. 2 door, 5 speed, AC,
AM/FM stereo, power steering. Excellent
condition. Runs smooth. VERY low malntenance car. Gives 40+ mpg. Call 386-3401.
Queen sized bed with folding section that
tums into a single bed-includes mattress­
es. Excellent condition. Asking $50 or best
offer. Two matching flip chairs ■ navy and
white. Asking $20 or best offer - for the
set. Please call 222-7038 - ask for Holly
after 6 PM or leave message during the
day._________________________________
DYNAMAC E1-1701-A PORTABLE COMPUT­
ER. Excellent condition. Will accept best
offer. Call Kim 386-8635.
PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY EQUIP­
MENT- Omega D-2 Enlarger, 80m m ,
50m m , and 135m m lens, processing
tanks, Grablab timer, safe lights, reels,
tanks, storage bottles, easels and more.
All In good condition. Prices are negotiable.
Call Kim 38&S635.
Mac SE 20. FDHD. Upgraded to 4 MB RAM
and 40 MB hard drive. Excellent condition.
Original box! $300. (610) 284-2702.
IKEA desk for sale! Practically new! $75.
Big! White. Accesories included. Call 5908728._______________________________
3 4 0 MB external HD, Maxtor 7 3 45 in
external case, Mac-SCSI with terminator
$130, 2 4 3 0 9 2 7 Chtis.________________
Macintosh SE (ink je t printer included)
$800 OBO. Call Dave (610) 44 90913.
1987 Nissan Sentra, 5 spd., 2 dr., A/C,
AM-FM stereo, new tires, 96K highway
miles, inspection guaranteed, must drive
to appreciate. $ 1 4 5 0 OBO. (6 10) 4540182._______________________________
1987 Pontiac Grand Am. 5 spd.. 2 dr.,
A/C, AM-FM stereo, new tires, 112K high­
way miles, superb condition, inspection
Sublets
EMERGENCY! Take over my lease. June to
September! $260 + utilities for nice BR in
4 BR apt. at 37th & Lancaster. Patio/back­
yard, 2 baths, W /D, W/W carpet, cable,
large living and kitchen. Call Adam 3879270 (home), 241- 4266 (work)._________
City Avenue, 1 BR, 3rd floor apt. Great
viewl $200/month. All utilities except elec­
tricity Included. 15 mln from Drexel. Call
Jo @ (215) 871-7798._________________
Super deal: huge house with yard. Located
39th & Powelton. $195/month + 1 /3 utili­
ties gets you top floor, own bath, hardwood
floors, laundry, dishwasher. From M w to
July 31. Lease renewal possible. CALLII
Doug or Chris @ 382-3231_____________
WANTED: 2 BR apt or spacious IBR apt for
the Summer OR from 6 /1 6 -7 /1 5 . Must
have some furniture. Call 386-3401.
Sublet thru September 95 with option to
rent. @ BR apartment, living room, kitchen,
1 bathroom, near Drexel (near 34th &
Powelton junction). Only $400 per month.
If interested, contact Sazli at (215) 6629938._______________________________
2 BR apt for sublet. Available summer
term through Nov. w / option to lease.
Spacious liv. room, lots of windows.
$575/m onth. (incl. all util, except elect.)
386-1734.___________
Room available for sublease in 3 BR apart­
ment. Avail, immediately. 34th & Spring
Garden. $250 or negotiable. D/W. W /D,
hardwood floors. Call 382-9707._________
2 rooms available for sublease in a 3 BR
apartm ent. June to August. 34th and
Spring Garden. $275 or negotiable, D/W,
W/D, hardwood floors. Call 382-9707.
3308 Race St. 1 BR of 2 BR apt for sublet
for the months of July & August.
$250/month + elec. W /D, cable TV, back­
yard, furnished livingroom, pets allowed.
Call Jim (215) 382-3632_______________
Dorms closing, need a place to stay?
Room for rent in spacious 5 BR house.
$240/m o n th . Own room, large kitchen
including dishwasher, large living room and
washer & dryer. Call Dan at 387-6829.
Roommates
3 4 06 Powelton Ave. 2 BR house, airy &
sunny. Safe & near campus. Need one per­
son to sublet another room. Available now.
$ 2 5 0 + 1 /3 util. Call Ming (2 15) 3820821________________________________
33rd & Baring. Own room in Irg. 4 BR
house. Tri-level, 3 Bth, gas heat, W /D,
hardwood floors, low util. Backyard garden,
5 min from campus, very safe! All only
$250/month + util. Jen (W) 222-1207, (H)
382-0369.___________________________
434 N 34th St. 1st floor apt. Roommate
needed to share 2 BR bi-level apt.
Hardwood floor, newly renovated, basement, W /D, backyard. (215) 243-3667
1 BR in 4 BR house. Lease available
August 1st. Very bright, sunny. Great loca­
tio n at corner of 3 4 th and Powelton
Avenue. Apartment has hardwood floors,
flreplace and carpet in BR. $315/m onth
Incl. util. Holly 222-7038_______________
Room in a beautiful, very quiet Victorian
house. Walking distance from school, safe,
wood floor, sky lights. Great place! Large
bedroom. $250+util. Available NOW! Call
Anna 215-977-7319(morning and night).
Leave a message._____________________
Robm w / loft: 1 ,2 females needed for
summer. Share townhouse w / 2 Drexel
students. W /D , AC, carpeting, garage.
For Sale
One month new bookshelf $50; Twin size
bed (w / box) $60. Available now. Both
items $100. (215) 382-0821___________
Cannondale Mountain Bike SM 700, shlmano Ix and control tech components, 2 4 ’
aluminum frame, black with green accents,
few extras, $ 5 5 0 OBO. Call 3 8 6-59 71
leave message._______________________
1985 Buick Skyhawk. Gray, auto, AMFM
stereo, power windows & locks. Running
condition. 96 Kmi. $600. (609) 770^964.
Glass octagon table with light wood trim
and four wicker-backed chairs. Great condi­
tion. Must sell because I am moving.
Asking $50 or best offer. Please call Holly
@ 222-7038 after 5 PM or leave message.
SYQUEST CARTRIDGE - 44Mb by Iomega.
Perfect condition. Only tised ONCE! Valid
warranty. $45. Cali 387-0525.__________
14 karat gold, 1 /2 karat heart shaped dia­
mond ring. Size 5 1 /2 . Asking $600 OBO.
Call Danielle betwen 5 & 10 PM weekdays
or anytime weekends. (610) 356-1372.
84 Dodge Colt. $250 or best offer. Runs
well. Good student transportation. 4 speed
manual transmission. Call Lee @ 7635805.
W ild
S e x
P a r ty
A
mateur
L o c a l L a d ie s
$ ■1 52 0
3 0 H o r n y C a t e g o r ie s
D o m in a n t ,
S u b m is s iv e , &
O t h e r s - F u ll
S e r v ic e P h o n e S ex
H o t C a t e g o r ie s
F e t is h e s - A nything
goes- C ouplesOYS- S & M - B & D
Is
J / '
75 CENTS PER MIN.
99 CENTS PER MIN.
9 7 6 -6 0 0 0
9 7 6 -5 0 0 0
JOIN THE FUNO JUST LISTEN IN!
D rex el ' s B est O n -C ampus H ousing ]
LERNER COURT APARTMENTS
1 2 0 _ N 3 4 T H _ S T /^ 4 0 9 ^ 1 5 _ R A C E _ S T
1 BR - L arge B edroom , N ice A partment
2 BR - D ream P lace (S afe ... N o N ightmares !)
3 BR - L arge , 13' L iving R oom (G ood for 4 people )
4 BR - B ig as a house (M aid S ervice E xtra !)
S erv in g D rexel S tudents needs fo r 50 years
These apartments feature: C entral A ir & G as H e a t ,
L a u n d r y F a c il it ie s on Prem ises , E x c e llen t Sec u r ity V ery R esonable Rates
Don't Worry, Be Happy and Safe,Live in Lemer Court Place!
8 8 6 -9 9 9 9 ® 2 2 2 -5 4 0 6
[H /iE U n t s ^ n a t i o n a f c S t u d z n t ^ G j- j- ia s ,
U ^ iiji± L o n j-o x c S t u d s n t
A N M M IG RA nO N W O RK SH O P:
H - I V IS A , P E R M A N E N T R E S ID E N C Y
Guest Speaker: Emily Cohen, ESQ.
Conen & Honeyrmn
Attorneys at Law
DATE: W E D N E S D A Y . MAY 24T H
TIME: 1 2 : 0 0 P M - 2 : 0 0 P M
P L A C E : D O O M 2 0 1 ,C D E E S E S T U D E N T C E N T E D
T t 7 -W E S T
V iL
L A G
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20»TheTriangle *May 19,1995
TRIANG LE
W ANTS
FINGER YO U
A c tu a lly , w e ju st w a n te d to re m in d y o u t h a t a ll c o rre sp o n d e n c e
fo r T h e T ria n g le c a n b e s e n t v ia e 'm a iL W h e th e r i t ’s a le tte r to
th e e d ito r o r a n a d v e rtisin g inquiry, y o u d o n ’t n e e d to w aste
an y p a p e r— ju st e -m a il it to us.
C o lu m n s a n d le tte rs to t h e e d ito r c a n b e s e n t d ire c tly to th e e d 'o p ed ito r.
U se e -m a il to s e n d c o m m e n ts a n d su g gestions d ire c tly to t h e e d i t o r 'i n 'c h i e f o f T h e T rian g le.
E -m a il n ew s releases, tips, id eas a n d c o rre c tio n s d ire c tly to o u r n ew s e d ito rs a n d w riters.
W a n t to p lace a n ad in th e b est co lleg e n e w s p a p e r in P h ila d e lp h ia ? S e n d y o u r q u e s tio n s o r in q u iries to o u r b u sin ess office.
You’ve read T ria n g le E n te r ta in m e n t? T ell us w h a t y o u t h i n k — now .
T o re p o rt scores o r g e t th e la te st o n D re x e l sports, s e n d a m essage to o u r sp o rts ed ito r.
•if.!
THE TRIANGLE — W E 'R E PLU G G ED IN
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The Triangle«May 19,1995 *21
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Seniors ... Start looking for a date! Senior
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All African-American Psychology Students:
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Temple U., Ritter Hall, Rm 104, 5 /2 4 ,
6:30-7:30pm.________________________
If you are interested in volunteering at an
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If you are currently tutoring with the West
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W h y s ta n d in lin e for a
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b u ck s for a p itifu l C D ?
T ria n g le E n t e r ta in m e n t’s
rev iew s ta k e th e p a in o u t
o f th e s e u n h a p p y ev e n ts.
READ
1M A N G U B
E P fT E R IA IN M E N T
You’ll th a n k us.
22 «The Triangle *May 19, 1995
D rexel fa lls sh o rt to D elaw are in fin al
BASEBALL from page 24
in the first inning. Defensively,
the D ragons co m m itted five
lead. Ju n io r p itch er Dan
errors, giving the Blue Hens four
Shannon got the nod to start. He
u n earn ed ru n s in the 16-5
had a shaky first inning, giving
Drexel loss.
up five runs off five hits. D,
They got to the championship
Shannon gave up tv^o m ore
game by beating Northeastern
earned runs in the next inning
twice and New Hampshire once.
before settling dov^n to pitch
A 9-3 victory over the Huskies of
two
scorelcss
N o rth e a s te rn
innings. The Blue
opened up the
A lth o u g h th e
Hen bats were
Dragons tourna­
quiet no longer,
m
ent play on
D ragon s en d ed
scoring four runs
May
12.
th e ir se a so n w ith
in the bottom of
Pitcher/designat­
the fifth inning.
ed h itte r Kris
a lo s s , t h e y
D. Shannon
Doiron pitched a
did not r ‘'•eive
com plete game,
e n jo y e d th e m o s t
any
off- isive
allowing
just
su cce ssfu l sea so n
help or defensive
three runs of
help in his first
seven hits.
in th e ir h is to r y .
NAC start in over
W ith Drexel
tv^o
years.
winning the first
Although Drexel pounded 13 round, Northeastern went to the
hits, they stranded 10 runners
first elimination round lo face
and scored only five runs.
Maine while Drexel advanced to
Second basem an Dennis
the second round to face New
Helkow^ski and first baseman
Hampshire. Again, the Dragons
Adam W hite picked up three
got a strong performance from
hits each, with Helkowski scor­
their starting pitcher, senior Rob
ing a run and White driving in a
Putnam. He ended hS^collegiate
run. Catcher John Shannon was
career with a 10-2 viciiry by giv­
the only Dragon to pick up mul­
ing up only two runs off five
tiple RBIs, with a two-run single hits. Putnam got the offensive
su p p o rt he needed as the
Dragons scored 10 runs off 12
hits.
In the last elimination round,
Drexel faced Northeastern on
May 16 for the second time in
the to u rn a m e n t. This game
resembled the first meeting of
the to u rn a m e n t betw een the
Huskies and the D ragons.
Doiron was the pitcher for both
games, Drexel scored nine runs
and Northeastern was limited to
one earned run.
Doiron picked up his second
complete game of the to u rn a­
ment, striking out a season-high
10 while walking three. He gave
up one earned run off five hits to
improve his record to a teamleading 9-3. Offensively, the
whole team co n trib u ted with
nearly everybody getting a hit
and scoring a run. Right fielder
Matt Sperling, left fielder Ryan
Ross and J. Shannon all recorded
a pair of RBIs in the 9-2 Dragon
victory.
Throughout the tournament,
D oiron led the D ragons. He
pitched two complete games in
the tournam ent, allowing five
runs off 12 hits while striking
out 15 and walking five. His
pitching earned him a place on
the all-tournament team. Along,
with his pitching, he also led
Drexel offensively. He was 12-23
for the tournament, with eight
runs scored, two triples, a home
run and four RBIs. He was also
named the tournam ent MVP.
He finished the season with 85
hits, 59 RBIs and 20 wins — all
Drexel records.
Drexel ends its season with an
overall reco rd o f 32-27.
Although they finished the regu­
lar season in fifth place in the
North Atlantic Conference, they
finished the tournament in sec­
ond place.
Although the Dragons ended
their season with a loss, Drexel
enjoyed the most successful sea­
son in its history. Their 32 victo­
ries broke the record set by last
year’s squad. Six-year head
coach Don Maines has steadily
improved the program, estab­
lishing school records for num­
ber of wins in a season the past
four years.
fiz z ^
Sunday-Thursday 11am-1am
Friday & Saturday 11am-3am
NOAHADDIS/rhe Triangle
All-around player Kris Doiron tries to pick o ff a Delaware runner earlier in the season. Doiron was
named to the NAC all-tournament team and was named tournament MVP.
3231 Powelton Avenue
387-8700
B a s e b a ll lifts s p ir its
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MARCUS from page 24
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59
_ _ J. _ _
5 /1 9 /9 5
were the scores for the NAC
baseball championships.
It seemed th at Drexel, the
number five seed, won, beating
third-seeded New Ham pshire
10-2 to advance to the next
round. I think I read that a cou­
ple of times to make, sure I read
it correctly.
I then had to call my room ­
mate to see how the team did in
the first round of the to u rn a­
m en t ag ain st seco n d -seed
Northeastern. When my room ­
mate informed me they won, I
was totally ecstatic.
H e arin g they won b o th
games they played so far really
made my day. For the rest of the
day, I was in a good mood. In
the double elimination tourna­
ment, the Dragons were unde­
feated.
They m anaged this feat by
playing ball the way they did in
the beg in n in g o f the season.
They got the timely hits, played
strong defense and got strong
pitching from their starters. It
also did n ’t hurt that they had
two of their best pitchers on the
mound.
When I found out that their
next opponent was going to be
Delaware, I was filled with
mi.xed feelings. For Delaware to
be our next opponents meant
they escaped the second elimi­
n atio n ro u n d in the d ouble
elimination format of the tour­
nament.
I th o u g h t th a t was a good
sign. If Drexel beat Delaware
then the Blue Hens w ould be
eliminated. But it also made me
nervous. Delaware was the only
NAC team able to c o n tro l
Drexel during the regular sea­
son.
W ith the knowledge th at if
they lose they are o u t o f the
to u rn a m e n t, D elaw are will
probably play h a rd e r and be
tougher to beat.
We have some of
the best players in
the conference and
nobody comes out
to see them play.
I only wish I could have been
there. Without a car, it was dif­
ficult to get dow n to
Wilmington to see the tourna­
ment'. Being busy with school
and work, I didn’t make it to as
m any games as I would have
liked during the regular season.
In all the games that I went
to, I think I was one of the few
spectators who was not related
to or friends of somebody on
the team.
I think that says something
about the school. We have some
of the best players in the confer­
ence and nobody comes out to
see them play.
Unfortunately, Delaware won
the May 15 game to force Drexel
to play th e last e lim in a tio n
round against Northeastern the
next day. The Dragons escaped
elimination with a decisive 9-2
victory.
The only dow nside is they
had to face Delaware again, this
time in the championship game
later that day. Delaware m ust
have Drexel’s num ber because
for the eighth time this season
the Blue H ens d efeated th e
Dragons to end the season.
With the end of the baseball
season com es the end o f the
sports section in The Triangle.
W hen I realized th is w ould
occur soon a couple of weeks
ago, I was relieved. It would give
me more time to spend on my
senior design project. I would
also be able to spend more time
at home than at The Triangle.
As the week got closer, I
started to feel a little sad. For
the past two terms I have been
living vicariously through the
various teams I have been cov­
ering.
At least I can end on the up
beat: num ber five seed Drexel
defying the odds and advancing
to the ch a m p io n sh ip game
against first-seeded Delaware.
Tracy Marcus is the sports edi­
tor and is a senior majoring in
electrical engineering.
The Triangle *May 19, 1995»23
Crew ends season w ith
C ham pionship regatta
CREW from page 24
lowing suit.
Finally, at the 1,000 m eter
m ark, th e race becam e wide
open as Temple launched them­
selves to a b o at-le n g th open
water lead over the rest of the
pack. Drexel responded with a
move of their own and moved
past Michigan into second place
as the field spread out and the
other crews began to fade.
W ith 500 m eters to go,
Drexel’s and Michigan’s boats
matched each other stroke for
stroke as they neared the review­
ing stands on Kelly Drive.
The last 10 strokes of the race
saw Drexel and Michigan surge
on each other depending upon
which boat’s oars happened to
be in the water at that time. By
less than a foot, Michigan passed
Drexel in the last stroke of the
race to nab the silver with Drexel
claiming the bronze.
H ead coach John S uter
rem arked, “I was particularly
im pressed w ith the fact th at
these Drexel crews were able to
perform against and beat schools
with rowers who had years more
experience. [With the exception
of] one rower, the varsity heavy­
weight and lightweight eights
had no pre-college experience
and only through hard work,
professionalism and dedication
were they able to reach this level
of success in a nationally recog­
nized regatta like the Dad Vails. 1
think it shows a lot about the
rowers and even more about the
passion they show for this, one
of the last truly amateur sports.”
So, with the last boat across
the finish line, the 1995 Dad Vail
Regatta came to a close and due
to the impressive Drexel perfor­
m ance this year, the Dragons
were awarded the m en’s point
trophy for the most boats in the
finds.
The o th e r D ragon boats
which participated in this year’s
Dad Vail included the novice
heavyweight eight, pair without
coxswain, and women’s heavy­
weight eight and novice four.
Later Saturday afternoon, the
Dragons quickly loaded their
eight-man shells onto a trailer
and headed north to Worcester,
MA for the
C ham p ion
International Collegiate Regatta
on Sunday, May 14.
The Champion Regatta is an
invitational regatta featuring 18
schools in the m e n ’s and
w om en’s varsity heavyweight
and lightweight eight divisions.
Due to their successful perfor­
m ance last year, the Dragons
were invited and traveled to
Worcester to complete their gru­
eling, five-race weekend.
The Drexel m e n ’s varsity
heavyweight and lightw eight
eight boats found themselves on
a trip to compete against crews
who were fresh off their seasonending b u ild -u p to the
Champion Regatta.
The lightw eights faced a
tough crew from Bucknell and
failed to make the grand final.
They finished third in the petit
final. The heavyweight eight was
able to row a splendid first heat
to make the grand final.
In the grand final, Drexel was
up against Temple for the sec­
ond time of the weekend as well
as a powerful Georgetown crew
and b oats from George
W ash in g to n, V irginia and
Williams.
The fifth race of the weekend
took its toll on the Drexel boat
as they finished sixth in a race
which saw Georgetown defeat
Temple by two lengths to take
the title.
After a very successful year
which saw Drexel crew claim
gold medals at the Mid-Atlantic
Collegiate C h am p io nsh ip s,
P h ilad elp h ia City C h am p ­
ionships, Kerr Cup and Cherry
Blossom Regattas and bronze
and silver medals in the Dad Vail
Regatta, the season finally came
to a close.
S p o r t s in B rie f
Drexel announces 1995 athletic hall of fame
inductees
Former Drexel University baseball, football and basketball stand­
out Charles Knapp, former soccer sensation Fred Gcrstcnfield and
longtime athletic trainer and head wrestling coach Douglas E. Frey
will comprise the Class of 1995 during induction ceremonies to the
Drexel University Athletic Hall of Fame on Saturday, May 20, 1995.
The three will join some 94 other student-athletes, coaches and
administrators who have been enshrined in the Drexel Athletic Hall
of Fame since its inception in 1971 during festivities hosted at the
Sheraton-University City Hotel.
“Charles, Fred and Doug all enjoyed enviable athletic success and
distinguished themselves and Drexel University through their com­
mitment to'excellence and sportsmanship,” said Johnson Bowie,
director of men’s athletics. “We are proud to include them among the
elite athletics who have elevated the standards of athletic competition
at Drexel.”
Drexel men*s basketball signs second recruit
Norwalk, CT native A. Ross Neisler, Jr. has signed a national letter
of intent and will continue his athletic career as a member of the
Drexel University men’s basketball squad, head coach Bill Herrion
an n o u n ced . N eisler jo in s 6-2 guard Mike DeRocckis ou t o f
Spotswood, NJ, as the second fi-eshman to commit to the Drexel pro­
gram for the upcoming 1995-6 campaign.
“Ross is a very talented athlete who has a lot of potential,” said
Herrion. “He has a chance to be an excellent defensive player, and
offensively, he is very good in the open court. He will add to our
depth in the perimeter along with Mike. We are pleased that they
both have committed to Drexel and will [look] to them for ftirther
contributions.”
|
A 6-3, 175-pound guard, Neisler excelled; as a four-year letterwinner in both basketball and lacrosse at Norwalk High School. Team co­
captain in basketball, Ross was a 1995 First Team All-Fairfield County
Interscholastic Conference West pick as w^ll as a McDonald’s AllAmerican candidate.
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T he T riangle
M ay 19,1995
Page 24
D r e x e l lo s e s in N A C c h a m p io n s h ip
F if th - s e e d e d D r e x e l u p s e t N o r th e a s te r n to
a d v a n c e to th e c h a m p io n s h ip g a m e a g a i n s t
f ir s t- s e e d e d D e la w a r e .
Traq^ Marcus
Sports Editor
The S tructure o f c h a m p i­
onship tournaments is set up so
the team finishing first in the
conference will get the number
one seed in the to u rn am e n t.
With this in mind, Drexel fin­
ished the regular season in fifth
place and had to face the num ­
ber two seed in the conference.
N o rtheastern . If things h a p ­
pened the way they were sup­
posed to, Drexel w ould havr
been on its way to the first elimi­
nation round. Instead, Drexel
stole
the
victory
from
Northeastern to advance against
the w inner o f the New
Ham pshire-V erm ont contest.
Again Drexel defied logic and
stole another victory. This time
from the fourth-seeded New
Hampshire.
After two days o f action,
Drexel was the only team unde­
feated. The mighty Blue Hens
fell to the C atam o u n ts o f
Verm ont in game four o f the
tournament. With Delaware sur­
viving the second elim ination
round, the number one seeded
Blue Hens w ould be the
D rag o n s’ next o p p o n en ts.
Drexel wasn’t able to steal a vic­
tory from Delaware and had to
face N ortheastern again, this
tim e in the last elim in atio n
ro u n d . The H uskies were no
match for the Dragons as Drexel
won the contest to advance to
the ch am p io n sh ip ro u n d .
Drexel’s worst nightmare came
true as they had to face Delaware
again. Delaware is the only NAC
team to sweep Drexel this season
and they continued that trend in
the tournam ent. The Dragons
were no m atch for the Blue
Hens, dropping the game to end
their season.
For the second time in three
years, Drexel has made it to the
championship game in the NAC
baseball to u rn am en t. U n fo r­
tunately, they had to face regular
season champions the University
of Delaware. In the six previous
meetings between these teams
this season, the Blue Hens have
beaten the Dragons in every con­
test — the only team to do so.
Nothing changed in the tourna­
ment either. After beating the
num ber two and three seeds,
Drexel faced Delaware on May
Courtesyof Lexerd
First basem an Adam White waits for the throw in the 9-3 victory over N ortheastern on May 12 in
the first gam e of the NAC championship tournam ent.
15. With a Dragon victory, the
Blue Hens could have been elim­
inated from the to u rn am en t.
After two innings, Drexel held a
6-0 lead b u t was able to hold
Delaware quiet no longer. The
Blue Hens chipped away at the
Dragon lead until the score was
tied at seven in the eighth
inning. Delaware would go on to
score six more runs in the last
two innings to hand Drexel its
first
to u rn a m e n t
loss.
Sophomore pitcher Eric Moore
was handed the 13-7 loss.
In the championship game on
May 16, D rexel ju m p e d to a
quick 2-0 lead in the first inning.
That was the only time in the
game that the Dragons would
see BASEBALL on page 22
Men win point trophy at Dad Vails A m id
D rex e V s v a r s ity lig h tw e ig h t e ig h t to o k h o m e
th e s ilv e r m e d a l; th e v a r s ity h e a v y w e ig h t
e ig h t e a r n e d a b ro n ze .
Chad Brown
Special to The Triangle
The official crew season came
to a close on May 12 -14 as
Drexel Crew com peted in the
Dad Vail R egatta on the
Schuylkill River and the Champ­
ion In te rn a tio n a l Collegiate
Regatta in Worcester, MA.
This season saw the Dragons
bring home three medals in its
most successful Dad Vail perfor­
m ance in two decades. The
Drexel lightweight junior varsity
boat was al^e Co gain its second
consccutivc Inronze medal by
taking third « three-boat final,
14 seconds biebind the winning
Bufialo time o f 6:26.78.
The varsity lightweight eight
brought home a silver medal for
Drexel in a well-rowed final fea­
turing Toronto, Pitt, TennesseeC h attan oo g a, LaSalle and
Georgia Tech. The Dragon boat,
com prised o f coxswain Mike
Waslin, stroke Mike Martin, Ron
Soroka, M ike Klein, Brian
Turner, Duncan W idm an, Jay
Lee, Greg Bixler and Ed Zwilling,
found themselves free o f seasonlong rivals Villanova in the final.
The start o f t h e final saw
T o ro n to , Drexel an d LaSalle
move out of the pack quickly
and open up a th re e -q u a rte r
b o at-le n g th lead by the 750
meter mark over the rest of the
field. At the 1,000 meter mark,
T o ro n to to o k an im pressive
move to catapult themselves out
in front with the Drexel boat
m ain tain in g second place.
Toronto extended its lead over
the field as they neared the finish
line and Drexel was able to hold
off a surging Tenn.-Chattanooga
crew to claim the silver, eight
seconds b eh in d the w inning
time.
“I th in k th at we rowed the
best possible piece we could have
in the finals. The whole season
we were plagued with problems
and bad rows, b u t S atu rd ay
[May 13] saw us peak at just the
right time and row to a medal
finish. The timing couldn’t have
been better,” said Widman.
In the varsity heavyweight
eight division, the Drexel boat,
m ade up o f coxswain Gwynn
K rim m el,
stro k e
M att
Weikowski, Chad Brown, Matt
W ard, D oug Brow n, C hris
Bergey, D rew H elm , Scott
Lennartz and Tom Linus, battled
its way to a bronze medal in a
final comprised of crews from
Delaware, Michigan, Temple,
Wichita State and Marietta.
After posting the fastest over­
all times in both the quarter and
semi-finals, the Dragons found
themselves in lane three of the
2,000 meter course for the final
on Saturday afternoon, right in
the middle of the competition.
The Dad Vail finals were the race
this D ragon b o at had been
shooting for all season long and
they saw it as a perfect opportu­
n ity to d e th ro n e d efen d in g
champions Temple University.
As the starter sent the boats
off of the line, the pack was tight
with Temple out in fi-ont by less
than a boat length. Through the
500 meter mark, Temple began
to m ove away from the pack
with Michigan and Drexel folsee CREW on page 23
Counesy o f Lmerti
Drexel’s freshm en eight (pictured) did not place at Dad Vails on May 12 and 13, w hereas the men varsity eight cam e in a close
third behind Michigan and Temple. The Dragons were awarded the m en’s point trophy for having the m ost boats In the finals.
chaos,
there’s
baseball
Fade
to Black
Tracy
______ Marcus
M o th e r’s Day s ta rte d o u t
gloomy. I wasn’t able to go to
Maryland to visit my mother —
I d o n ’t have use o f a car.
In stea d , I w en t to th e Sundragon garage to work on my
senior design project.
W hen I got to the garage, I
found I had to recharge the bat­
teries again — somebody acci­
dentally unplugged the recharger. When I finally got around to
doing what I went down there
to do, so m eb o d y h ad “b o r ­
rowed” our other set of battery
cables. In short, I wasn’t having
a particularly good day.
To pass the time, I was read­
ing the spo rts section in the
Inquirer. I figured that would
put me in a good mood — the
Phillies and the Orioles won the
night before.
I was also curious to see how
D rexel fared at th e N o rth
A tlantic C onference baseball
championshi{5s the day before.
Buried in the scoreboard were
the college scores and in there
see MARCUS on page 22