October 11, 2004
Transcription
October 11, 2004
The Undergraduate Magazine Vol. V, No. 4 | October 11, 2004 Girl Empowered Srivastava examines the role of women in the upcoming Afghan election Page 3 The Great Dictator In Your Dreams Read about Jou’s experience When Guys Drop Their Pants Page 4 Saul nods off about detrimental sleeping habits Page 5 Curse You!! Goldstein ponders the relevance of the many baseball superstitions Page 8 THE DP ON SEX, MONEY, AND IDIOCY ANDREW PEDERSON | BRUT FORCE DP EDITORIAL COLUMNS have never been known for their keen insights nor their skilled rhetoric. On the contrary, most opinions expressed in the campus newspaper are badly reinterpreted forms of the ten or fifteen issues which circle continuously and lazily around the public sphere. However, a sampling of recent DP editorial titles adds a particularly pathetic dimension to the current dearth of provocative news. The usually limited range of topics addressed by these columnists fell this week from stock pseudo public service announcements regarding anorexia and drug use, to new lows of merely stating the obvious. These Forrest Gumpesque pronouncements range from “Penn must speak on accident at frat” and “Penn apparel is far too expensive” to “The need to stop genocide in Sudan.” No shit. This week, I suppose the articles that remained on the editorial room floor were such almost-gems as “Dining hall floor sticky at times” and “Oranges tend to be rounder than apples,” not to mention the quintessence of thoughtful writing, “Poop smells different than food.” One bold soul even goes so far as to pose “Some tough questions for President Bush.” I am sure the President is terrified. By far the worst of these shameful circus-freaks of rhetoric was a dubious piece of lettered phlegm entitled, “The importance of sex and money.” The course of the article moves from a stirring, and of course completely original reference to Donald Trump, all the way through an actual scientific study, on to another stunningly original reference of a SAS graduate working at McDonald’s, and then to a decidedly erudite conclusion based on a quote from Plato’s Republic. All of this content together represents poor taste, but the situation is exacerbated by the fact that buried deep down at the core of this awful editorial is a provocative and edgy opinion piece about sex and money that is screaming to be let loose. Those are screams I cannot ignore. Despite a circuitous and at times random logic, the point which appears to be the main theme of the piece is the question of the relative importance of copulation and financial security. The study which spurred the creation of this editorial monstrosity in the first place suggests that people who make less money are happier than those more monetarily well-endowed as long as they have sex more often. The article then brings Wharton into the middle of things with a unique, though unwarranted, thought experiment. First, the study does not correlate income with sex; that is, people who make more money do not necessarily get more sex. Secondly, because the author equates a Wharton education with immediate profitability, he cheekily asks: “So why then, are we in Wharton?” Obviously education is out; MBA hoes all the way. The article also highlights the feature of the study which equates the rough value of a year’s worth of sex to a salary increase of 50,000 dollars and then questions which would be more enjoyable. Here again, the article is merely stating the obvious. Take the money! While the results of the survey do provoke interesting questions, I think one of the least would be: “Would I rather have 50,000 dollars or sex once a week every week all year round?” The answer is obvious. The question seems idiotic to me since I hail from a state where money literally will buy you happiness if indeed one interprets the study to mean that sex and happiness are interchangeable. Perhaps you have heard of the Moonlite Bunny Ranch? I can say with only a small measure of shame that the particular establishment graced by Howard Stern and Jesse Ventura is approximately a twenty minute drive from the house I lived in since birth. Take the 50,000 dollars and there you will be able to buy all the sex that Wharton can’t give you, all the things a Penn girl with a decent measure of self-respect Continued on PAGE 5 COALITION OF THE WILLING ARTISTS PENGUIN TIME BY JAMES HOUSTON BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN WAS YANKED into partisan politics in 1984 when Ronald Reagan appropriated “Born in the U.S.A.” as the theme song of his re-election campaign. Apparently formalities like listening to the lyrics couldn’t be squeezed into the Gipper’s chaotic schedule, and Springsteen immediately called him on his gross misinterpretation of the anti-Vietnam War anthem. After twenty years of relative political silence from the Boss, his conscience has resurfaced at the helm of Vote for Change, a gathering of seventeen recording artists united by the conviction that W stands for Very Bad President. Split into groups (cells?) of 2-5 artists, Vote for Change played the six most critical battleground states during the first week of October. For this, I’m thankful that the GOP juggernaut occupies half of Pennsylvania, since Springsteen was compelled to open his branch of the tour on October 1st at the Wachovia Center with Bright Eyes and R.E.M. on the undercard. The advertised start time was 7:30. As 7:45 passed in a frozen SEPTA car, I slowly accepted that my inner emo nebbish would be denied Conor Oberst’s hypersensitive soul-searching. I took my seat at the show mentally muttering the Bright Eyes line “I’m not angry, it happens” (from “Let’s Not Shit Ourselves”) just as R.E.M. was beginning “The One I Love.” The years have made Michael Stipe more androgynous, and as he lurched about the stage in a white suit executing suavely uncool Elaine Benes dance moves, I wasn’t sure if I wanted to laugh derisively or question my sexuality. The following eleven songs mostly consisted of newer material, highlighted by the angry “Final Straw.” The casual fans perked up when Peter Buck grabbed the mandolin for “Losing My Religion,” and everyone stood when Springsteen came out to sing half of “Man on the Moon.” R.E.M. lacked energy. The intangible gleam that makes their records so good was missing. Stipe’s signature detachment made him seem less like a mysterious genius and more like someone who was really bored. I don’t think most of the audience was as disappointed as I was, as some bathroom eavesdropping revealed that few attendees were there for R.E.M. In fairness, I ought to admit that I would probably go on a killing spree if I felt a Springsteen song was telling me to, but I promise to force objectivity for the next two paragraphs. A sparkling instrumental rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” opened Bruce & The E Street Band’s set, segueing into “Born in the U.S.A.” which, thanks to Reagan, now carries the implicit message “screw Republican ignorance.” The highlight of the show came early: a sweaty, exhilarating, full-band romp through the usually acoustic “Johnny 99.” After the stirring and overlooked “Youngstown,” capped by a blistering guitar solo from Nils Lofgren, Springsteen introduced John Fogerty of CCR, who sang three Continued on PAGE 7 MARIAN LEE BRAWL IN CLEVELAND The Cheney v. Edwards Showdown M I C H A E L PAT T E R S O N | O U T O F T H E F O L D VICE PRESIDENT DICK CHENEY and Senator John Edwards met for their first and only debate last Tuesday. With expectations high on both sides of the political spectrum, this V.P. debate had the potential to be the first relevant one in decades. Could Cheney perform damage control for what was at best a lackluster, really rather disastrous, performance on the part of President Bush a few days earlier? Could Edwards build even more on the momentum gained by the outstanding win of Senator Kerry against the President in the first presidential debate? Yes, ladies and gentlemen, walking away from that stage in Cleveland, Ohio could be one alpha dog, one true winner of this debate. Who would claim the prize as the numero uno contender of the evening? It was the White Rhino himself, Dick Cheney. Shock and Awe from the V.P. I was completely astounded by the Vice President’s performance Tuesday night. It has always been known that Cheney possesses a far better grasp of usage of the English language than the President does, but his control of the debate was nothing short of astounding. From the very beginning, Cheney successfully deflected the majority of Edwards’ attacks. For example, Edwards opened up with broad attacks on the administration’s handling of the situation in Iraq and Afghanistan, saying “very quickly the administration made a decision to divert attention from [Afghanistan] and instead began to plan for the invasion of Iraq.” The problem Edwards has is this and other statements fail to add anything new and instead repeat what John Kerry has been saying on the campaign trail. Where is this man’s ingenuity? At least he has that fabulous hair. Dick Cheney had a great deal of new, original material to offer after what the President said in his first face-off with Senator Kerry. In fact, listening to Cheney respond to the criticism he received from EdContinued on PAGE 6 O C TOBER 11, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 4 P AGE 2 FirstCall Vol. V, No. 3 | October 4, 2004 The Undergraduate Magazine Managing Editor Jordan Barav Editor-in-Chief Julie Gremillion Assistant Editor Robert Forman Andrew Pederson Lauren Saul Columnists Robert Forman Brian Hertler Brendan Houser Mickey Jou Michael Patterson Andrew Pederson Lauren Saul Anna Strongin Writers Shira Bender Victor Bonilla Christine Chen Adam Goldstein James Houston Steve Landis Sathish Naadimuthu Andrew Migdail Pauline Park Roz Plotzker Artists Stephanie Craven Shira Bender Marian Lee Layout Editor Krystal Godines Layout Staff Anna Stetsovskaya Marnee Klein Business Managers Jordan Barav Alex Chacon Greg Lysko Marketing Manager Leah Karasik Marketing Staff Lauren Saul Anna Strongin Distribution Managers Steve Landis Webmaster Rachit Shukla Contact Information 330 Jon M. Huntsman Hall 3730 Walnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19104 (215) 898-3200 fcpaper@wharton.upenn.edu Web Site clubs.wharton.upenn.edu/fcpaper Submissions Email letters to the editors and guest submissions to fcpaper@wharton.upenn.edu. Students, please include your school and class. Editorial Policy First Call is the undergraduate magazine of The University of Pennsylvania. First Call is published every Monday. Our mission is to provide members of the community an open forum for expressing ideas and opinions. To this end, we, the editors of First Call, are committed to a policy of not censoring opinions. Articles are provided by regular columnists and writers. They are chosen for publication based on the quality of writing and, in the case of commentaries, the quality of argumentation. Outside of the weekly editorial and other editorial content, no article represents the opinion of First Call, its editorial board, or individual members of First Call other than the author. No content in First Call unless otherwise stated represents the official position of the administration, faculty, Editorial DECOMPOSING BRIDGE OVER TROUBLED WATER Recently, Jamee Leffler Lubkemann published a few words of advice to Wharton Undergrads: chill out, study less and party more. Although Ms. Lubkemann’s experience at Penn State was undeniably “cooler”, she obviously has much to learn about the lifestyle and study habits of the Wharton undergrads sharing the hallowed halls of Huntsman with her. Penn undergrad is well-known for its unusually happy balance of hard work and intense play. Instead of getting drunk in a random corn field where there is nothing and no one of interest for miles, Penn students and Whartonites chose to expand their options. While Ms. Lubkemann is proud of Penn State’s high “party” ranking, holding a spot at the top of the list of the nation’s “best party schools” is usually a euphemistic spin on being stuck in the middle of nowhere with huge numbers of people who have nothing better to do than appreciating the great outdoors while drinking themselves into a stupor everyday, miles away from any form of civilization. Many Wharton professors prefer to teach undergraduates instead of MBAs because these grad students often speak authoritatively on topics about which they lack even basic knowledge. Exhibit A: Lubkemann’s editorial. She used her limited knowledge about Wharton undergraduates to brand them as aggressive, defensive workaholics. To buttress this stereotype, she provides several weak examples. The first cites a student who followed his female TA in the bathroom to ask a question about homework. Unless this MBA lives in an alternative, Ally McBeal-inspired universe, we are not aware of any co-ed bathrooms on this campus. Besides the strange, implausible bathroom dimension of this story, he is one student among many—hardly a representative sample of undergrads as a whole. Every class has its crazy people, but that doesn’t make the rest of us crazy by rough association. The other baseless example Lubkemann uses is students who write emails to their TAs after 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday nights. Any section of thirty students will inevitably have several people who either work constantly or have packed weekends from hell. Maybe he likes to work on Friday and party on Saturday. Income, stability and job security should be regarded as important. Perhaps the author didn’t have to worry about such minutiae when she was in undergrad, yet somehow she ended up in Wharton MBA. It’s hard to comprehend how she managed such a feat if her interests as an undergraduate were really just “football and sorority functions” instead of “finance and statistics”. Using the two or so students that she has had indirect encounters with to describe an undergraduate body that is known for its people skills and ability to balance all of life’s sectors is statistically absurd. People have a choice about what they take on and how they handle their workloads, and any school of a high caliber will invite students to be serious about their work. If the thought of being conscientious is so surprising to Lubkemann, she must also fail to understand why students would want to attend any of this nation’s other top institutions as undergraduates. In First Call’s first year, a columnist wrote an article filled with many of the charges against MBAs that are commonly held beliefs among undergrads. Outrage was the response to such a divisive article within the Wharton community: a critique of Wharton MBA manners was not welcome, particularly from a sharp-witted undergraduate. However, this most recent Wharton Journal article is a similarly singular critique of undergraduate culture as it attempts to address even the level of students’ adjustment or their motivations in choosing their course of study. Such a description extends in scope even further than the First Call article that was received with such anger. Yet, the Wharton Journal has not received the same censure in spite of the fact that its editorial was equally divisive. As one undergraduate notes: “I have met some wonderful MBAs and am personally friends with many of them. I just thought the portrayal of the undergrads was completely skewed. The writer sees her fellow cohort mates at the pub and parties downtown, but she has not had any clear contact with the undergrads outside of the classroom. And that one narrow view makes her compose this biased article. Yes, the school is difficult. Yes, there is a lot of pressure; yet it is filled with great knowledge and opportunities. But just because we are sitting late and studying accounting does not mean that we cannot socialize, talk to clients, or attend special events.” The bottom line is that undergrads and MBAs share more than a few characteristics including the drive to succeed and the need to BS their way into a professor’s inner circle. MBAs don’t need to worry as much about grades because it isn’t a major factor in their graduation or wonderful future careers. Undergrads, on the other hand, must worry about grades or they won’t have that wonderful future career. While such stereotypes and hyperbolic stories about either undergrads or MBAs make for great comedy, the persistence of them in a negative manner is completely useless. We are all trying to achieve the same things in the same way at the same place. Such outlandish articles only to serve to divide the community not bridge the gap between MBAs and undergrads, which is precisely what we should be doing. O C TOBER 11, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 4 P AGE 3 A WOMAN IN CHANGE, A WOMAN IN CHARGE BY PRIYA SRIVASTAVA IS IT JUST ME OR are Bush and Kerry sounding more and more similar these days? The United States had been doing this election thing for over 200 years now and our candidates have barely diversified. They have the same cookie cutter qualifications: wealthy, white and male. In fact, it’s been this way since the eighteenth century. Let’s talk about political candidates that are really exciting—like the woman running for president in Afghanistan. I’m serious. This coming Saturday, Afghanistan will hold its first-ever presidential elections. In a country where less than ten years ago, the plight of women was considered a human rights catastrophe, one of eighteen presidential hopefuls is Dr. Massouda Jalal, a 42-year old mother of three. Having risen politically beyond anyone’s wildest imagination, Dr. Massouda means to play an important role in Afghanistan’s steady if not painstaking transition to democracy. Back in 2002, Dr. Massouda ran for interim president and finished second, winning the support of 171 delegates to Hamid Karzai, the US backed candidate’s 1,295. Displeased with the warlord’s influence in the interim government, Dr. Massouda refused Karzai’s offer of the vice-presidency. She would later gain the requisite support of 10% of the delegates to become a candidate for the presidential elections. Before running for public office, Dr. Massouda, a pediatrician, was a lecturer at Kabul University. After being ousted from the university by the Taliban, Dr. Massouda joined the UN and worked for its World Food Program, concentrating on health and gender issues in Afghanistan. She has worked with amputees, refugees and orphans and set up networks of women’s bakeries. Dr. Massouda’s platform is straightforward: more food, more jobs, roofs over heads, access to health and to safe water, peace and security. She has also pledged to eradicate the influence of the warlords, who have terrorized civilians for the last 25 years. “The people of Afghanistan need a doctor to treat them, to heal Afghanistan. And they need a mother to take care of them until Afghanistan can stand on its own two feet,” Dr. Massouda says. For many, women and men alike, the greatest hope for reviving a bruised and battered Afghanistan lies in Dr. Massouda. Incumbent President Karzai’s goals are not dissimilar to Dr. Massouda’s. He has attempted to provide basic food and shelter and end corruption in his past two years in office as interim president, but without much success. However, Karzai continues to retain the support of the United States government which is virtually running his media campaign for the upcoming election. The combination of US support and high name recognition makes Karzai’s victory this Saturday a very likely one. Dr. Massouda is not unaware of this fact. While she stands little hope of winning the election, the mere fact that she is free to be a candidate is remarkable. Only three years ago, under the Taliban, Afghan women were forbidden from attending school or entering the workforce. Furthermore, the Taliban enforced a strict dress code as well as numerous rules restricting the movement of women. Massouda herself is amazed, “Three years ago, I could not even dream of being a presidential candidate.” She refuses to consider her candidacy a failure, irrespective of the final outcome. “I am thirsty for bringing a change, a positive change,” Dr. Massouda insists. “If it is not a success it does not mean that positive change has not taken place.” Dr. Massouda’s candidacy is about sustaining and then spreading such positive changes already underway. At present, women are educated and employed only in the major cities. Outside of the cities, most women still remain at home, their movement limited by their fathers and brothers. Even more distressing: women might not get to the polls election day. The Human Rights Watch in New York issued a report last Tuesday that found evidence of Taliban insurgents and local warlords threatening women and discouraging them from voting. In various parts of the south and east, letters have been distributed during the night, warning women not to vote. “A pervasive atmosphere of fear persists for women involved in politics and women’s rights in Afghanistan,” the report said. These lingering remnants of hard-line Islam intimidation will undoubtedly affect the voting numbers. The election will be an important milestone in Afghanistan’s rocky transition to democracy over these last few years. Of the ten million Afghans registered to vote, 41% are women. This is Dr. Massouda’s greatest hope for victory, as Afghan women in particular consider her a most attractive candidate. These women are hopeful the election will set into motion freedoms anchored in the new constitution passed in January—which includes equal rights for women and is thought to be one of the more enlightened in the region. But the United States already has an ‘enlightened’ constitution. In fact, not only do we have a constitution guaranteeing equal rights for women here in the United States, but women are 100% free to attain an education, seek employment, own property and exercise their political rights. And to a great extent, we do so. Where then, is our female presidential candidate? Besides being the only female candidate and having to deal with the lingering hard-line Islamic perceptions of women, Dr. Massouda is the only candidate without political, military or financial backing. Her campaign headquarters are a borrowed apartment, her car on loan from a wealthy supporter. She lacks adequate funding and access to the media, both of which are controlled by the other candidates. And yet, despite facing seemingly insurmountable challenges, Dr. Massouda has managed to put together a legitimate presidential campaign. Well, what’s our problem? Here in the United States, where women are educated and employed on theoretically equal terms as men, we might doubt that a female presidential candidate would face the same challenges as does Massouda. But the unfortunate fact is that female politicians do have similar troubles gaining political, military and financial backing. While Afghanistan may be struggling with basic gender equality issues, such as rights to education, for example, the United States is dealing with obscure ones. Pointedly, there is lack of faith in female political leadership. While women make up a significant portion of the House of Representatives, they are still a small minority in the Senate, the Supreme Court and in the upper levels of the executive branch. And unfortunately so. There are scores of bright, motivated women interested in public policy, and with creative and dynamic ideas for implementing such policy. Around the world, thousands have been impacted by the policies of Margaret Thatcher, Indira Gandhi and Golda Meir. Even in countries far less economically and socially stable than ours, such as Rwanda, Burundi and Senegal, women have risen to the highest political office. But here in the free-thinking, open-minded United States, political parties are hesitant to place the possibility of victory, and to some extent, political power in the hands of a female. Women can teach, we say, women can conduct research and run companies, but when it comes to leading our country and representing the American people, it’s been men all the way. The fact that there are a whopping eighteen contenders in the Afghan presidential race is an obvious indication that there are various ideas circulating as to where Afghanistan is going in the future. Dr. Massouda’s platform is one of many. The singularity of her candidacy is two-fold, or perhaps even three-fold. Not only is Dr. Massouda a female in the foreground in a country where females have long been pushed in the shadows, she is also a passionate nationalist, seeking to spread her message far and wide despite pitiful funding. Furthermore, she is a role model for women with political aspirations in the United States. Surely if Dr. Massouda can go so far, face so many obstacles, there is no reason why American women cannot do the same. Let’s talk about political candidates that are really exciting, like the woman running for president in Afghanistan. Priya Srivastava is a sophomore in the College. You can write to her at psrivast@sas. IF IT SOUNDS TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE... It’s probably bad healthcare policy A N N A S T R O N G I N | A TA S T E O F M E D I C I N E WHEN WE THINK ABOUT the issues surrounding the 2004 presidential campaign, two things come to mind: war in Iraq and homeland security. Given that both of these subjects have been exhausted to the extreme, I feel that it is time to talk about something else, say, healthcare. Why talk about it? While it may not be as immediate a problem as the war, healthcare is undergoing a crisis: 45 million Americans are uninsured, malpractice premiums are skyrocketing, and Medicare’s physician payment plan formula is flawed—problems that will eventually have to be addressed. On November 2nd, it really may be the deciding factor for a number of people unable to find a definitive stand on the war. Selecting a candidate based on healthcare criteria does not come down to who has the better plan but rather who has the more executable and realistic one. It is one thing to propose sweeping reforms costing millions and another thing to actually bring them into effect. That is precisely why Kerry’s plan doesn’t hold as much appeal for me as it could, given the nature of the reforms he proposes. Wanting to provide healthcare insurance for the maximum number of uninsured is a very commendable prospect, but I do not foresee Congress passing a bill that would appropriate $653 million dollars over 10 years to the cause. It would be amazing to finance a plan that would insure 26.7 million Americans, but we simply do not have the resources to expand public coverage, subsidize premiums, and offer incentives for smaller businesses to provide healthcare insurance. Currently, the country has a deficit, and rather than being able to climb out of its debt, the U.S. continues to fall further into it; this does not create for an environment most conducive to significant budget expansions. Bush, on the other hand, calls for far more moderate reforms that include tax breaks and association health plans that would give small businesses an edge by promoting their purchase of employee coverage as a group, not individual companies. Such a plan is projected to alleviate the healthcare burdens of only 2.1 million at the cost of 90 billion dollars over 10 years, but while it is smaller in scale it is also much more reasonable. It is one thing to propose sweeping reforms costing millions and another thing to actually bring them into effect. We do not live in a society that has nationalized healthcare, and therefore we shouldn’t try to take care of everyone as though we do. In the past four years, the number of uninsured has increased by five million; getting numbers back to that previous point is the kind of goal that should be taken up by the candidates. From the physicians’ end, the major healthcare crisis has mostly to do with medical liability and the rising costs of malpractice premiums. Here too, Bush gains an upper hand because his proposals are simply more believable than Kerry’s. The former appears to be in tune with what the AMA has been fighting for—favoring the establishment of a monetary cap on non-economic damages. In a nation having a love af- fair with tort law, nothing could work as limits. If caps are set, malpractice insurers will no longer feel as threatened by having to dish out large sums, and lawyers will be discouraged from filing excessive numbers of lawsuits for fear of failing to profit sufficiently from the payoff. Kerry, alas, does not care for monetary caps and instead wants to submit potential lawsuits to a medical expert review and to penalize lawyers who file them frivolously. But while I could see some of these strategies working in their refined form, as Kerry presents them they mean nothing. Words like “frivolous” make me think “major ambiguity,” and that is a serious problem. Lawyers are smart and they will find ways to get around such terminology to prove that their lawsuits are significant and ought to be filed. After all, money gives people drive, and that drive will prevent penalties from being successful deterrents. Furthermore, even if employing a medical expert review of a case could successfully weed out the frivolous lawsuits, the process could prove to be very expensive and time-consuming. Malpractice suits would become even more burdensome for the physicians, and malpractice insurers would become even more reluctant to lower premiums. While in theory, Kerry’s plan could work, it is hard to believe that his reforms will be executed so effectively in practice. Of course, in talking about malpractice insurance, bringing up John Edwards’ former occupation as a malpractice lawyer is unavoidable. Perhaps being a candidate for the second most coveted spot in government has made him a different man, but personally I have a difficult time buying a healthcare reform that targets malpractice attorneys from a malpractice attorney. Anna Strongin is a junior in the College. You can write to her at astrongi@sas. O C TOBER 11, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 4 P AGE 4 CONFESSIONS OF AN AMATEUR DIRECTOR MICKEY JOU | SITES AND SOUND BEFORE SPRING SEMESTER ended last school year, I agreed to direct a fall show for the Chinese Student Association. I didn’t realize it at the time, but that meant I had to produce and direct a show in little more than three weeks. Here’s the deal: I had to put together the rehearsal schedule, the production designs, oversee the actual production, and make sure my actors knew their lines. I started September armed with a schedule etched in stone, ten set designs, a master props list, no lighting, no sound technicians, and no stage crew. Week One Hi Mickey, I have class on Thursdays from 6 to 9, so I don’t think I can make it to rehearsal those nights. Sorry! Hi Mickey, I can’t come to rehearsals on Wednesdays because I have class until 7:30. See you at rehearsal. Hi Mickey, the person at Iron Gate Theatre wanted to know what kind of equipment we’re going to need for the night of the show. Can you write back and let me know ASAP? Thanks! Hi Mickey, because I was unaware of the fact that I have been cast in the role of Fiona for the play, I had made other commitments for the school year. Therefore I will not be able to take part in the CSA Fall 2004 Production of “When Guys Drop Their Pants.” Good luck! Dear Mickey, the guy you told me to e-mail about the furniture (like benches and stuff ) still hasn’t emailed me back. Can I quit? J/k… My original plan was to buy my way into the actors’ hearts at the first read-through by feeding everyone pizza. Through bribery, I hoped I could win their undying loyalty. Obviously, I was wrong. People not coming to rehearsal was, however, the least of my problems: I had lost one of my lead actresses, and I had two more weeks to rehearse. Enter Miracle Number One: Evelyn Chou, my show producer, agreed to play the role of Fiona. Throw in my other producer, Jean Hsu, CSA board member Emily Chang, and a willing—if only temporary—transvestite, Joshua Yap, and I somehow put together a full cast by the end of the week. Now if I could only figure out how to design the light and the sound… Week Two Dear Mickey, here’s the audio editing program you needed. Hope the show’s going well. Hi Kirsten and Nancy, welcome aboard the CSA Play Production! Attached you’ll find a master props list and a script… Dear Cast, you are all doing your own wardrobe. I have bigger things to worry about, like lighting and sound, that your clothes. Josh, if you have trouble finding the Benjamin Franklin costume, let me know as soon as possible so we can figure something out. Two more things. Show up on time. That implies SHOWING UP to rehearsals ON TIME. Also, know your lines. And don’t touch the grand piano… Hi J., my name’s Mickey and I’m directing the show for CSA. Can you let me know when you print the tickets? I promised 15 comp tickets to Harnwell… Time to break out into chaos. We now had an official rehearsal schedule, except I had sent out so many updates that no one knew when to come in for rehearsals anymore. About two-thirds of the cast were always late to rehearsal because we had to call them on their cell phones to get them to come in. BY ADAM BURGOS Meanwhile, I had a list of props and set furniture to somehow materialize: bench weight, 2 coffee cups, mini-tape recorder, laptop, 2 round tables, 2 benches, 1 lamppost, wooden sword, 6 cell phones… speaking of which, where was I supposed to find cell phone ring tones? Week Three Hi Mickey, can you give me a budget for how much you’re going to spend on props, costumes, etc.? I need to submit a budget proposal to SAC for funding. Thanks! Hi all, the September 24th Friday Read-Through will be at the Fireside Room at the ARCH building. Same place as when we had our first read-through. Plan on being here 7 p.m. sharp, or I will keep you there as long as I need to. We’ve been having some problems with people not showing up to rehearsals AT ALL… Two weeks to show time, folks. I don’t have time to mess around. YOU MUST COME TO REHEARSAL *ON TIME*. Mickey, I can’t come to the second read-through because I have a job interview that day. Can we switch it? Thanks. Dear Cast and Crew, there will be NO READ THROUGH this Friday (9/24)… The good news: P. from the Theatre Department had graciously agreed to save the day and became Miracle Number Two: The Guy Who Provideth the Furniture for the Show. We Everyone is staring at me because they all know that I’m the director of this play whose preview no one is laughing at. No one’s buying tickets. Oh my god. can’t do a second read-through, but that’s okay. We’ve still got two more run-throughs and two more dress rehearsals. Plus, I had the lighting design done and—Hallelujah—someone else had agreed to compile the sound clips. Good luck finding those cell phone ring tones, buddy. The bad news: I suddenly noticed there had been no word from CSA or J. the publicity director about cast bios for the program, flyers, or printing out tickets… Four Days Before the Show, on AIM with my producer Me: So who’s handling the tickets? Jean: Oh, M. just asked SAC to print out the tickets today. Me: When are we getting them? Jean: SAC is supposed to tell her tomorrow. Me: Okay. Do you know where I can get flyers to give to the cast members? Jean: I think from Shao. Me: Who’s Shao? Jean: He’s the guy who’s supposed to print everything. Me: Oh. Three Days Before the Show, an internal monologue after the CSA preview Oh my god, they’re not laughing. They didn’t laugh. They hated it. The show is going to go horribly and no one will laugh and they will all blame ME and no one will ever want to speak to me again. Look, here comes [one of my actresses]. She says nothing and just WALKS AWAY with her jacket while I’m packing up the props. She hates me. Everyone is staring at me because they all know that I’m the director of this play whose preview no one is laughing at. No one’s buying tickets. Oh my god. Two Days Before the Show Make-up Artist: “Hey, you wanna go buy make-up with me tonight?” Me: “…you know that you’re supposed to do a make-up test tomorrow at dress rehearsal, right?” Dear Cast Members, thou shall not put costumes on top of props. Thou shall not be heard off-stage. Thou shall not randomly misplace props. Thou shall speak up so the audience can heareth you. Thou shall OBEY ME, for I am thy DICTATOR of this production… 6 PM, Night of the Show, to no one in particular Me: Anyone know where my stage crew is? 7:55 PM, Night of the Show, in the sound/light booth Me: “So I’ve been watching Sports Night on DVD.” Sound Guy: “What’s that?” Me: “It’s this show about people who work at a television station who produce a show called Sports Night.” Sound Guy: “Okay.” Me: “So in all of the episodes, they always say ‘good show, everyone’ before they go on the air. Am I supposed to say that before the show starts?” Light Guy: “You don’t say that in theatre. It’s bad luck.” Sound Guy: “Yeah, you’re supposed to say ‘break a leg.’” Light Guy: “You know, I worked on The Village.” Me: “Really? That’s cool.” Light Guy: “Yeah, I joked around with Joaquin Phoenix.” Me: “Who’s that?” Sound Guy: “Weren’t we supposed to start the show at eight?” Me: “But people are still talking.” Light Guy: “…if I turn off the house lights, they’ll probably stop.” Me: “Oh.” Day After, blog excerpt The show went with minor hitches, and I got nothing but compliments for how well everything went. I’m proud of the show—but I’m more proud of how well everyone worked together the night of the show: actors ad-libbing and picking up slack when their fellow cast members lost a line or skipped lines; my stage crew making sure that everyone had props and changing scenes, which is very physically tiring; the light and sound guys being patient and funny and trying to help me relax but also being there, helping me make the show perfect. Everyone tells me that I did a great job—but it makes me a little uncomfortable because it wasn’t just me. It was everyone, and I can’t begin to describe or demonstrate how much I love my actors and my stage crew and my tech crew. Yes, I called the shots. But you know what? They did all the work. I’m so deeply, deeply grateful for the dedication and talent they’ve given me… Hank asked me why I decided to direct the show this year even though it drove me crazy, and I have an answer now: because I wanted those 15 seconds when I knew that people loved me back, that adrenaline you can only get by working together with a group of people who would otherwise have little in common with each other. It’s quite... something. You’ll have to try for it yourself. Mickey Jou is a junior in the College. You can write to her at myjou@sas. A NIGHT AT MARRED-BAR LAST WEEKEND, against my fervent wishes, I was dragged by a friend to that new venerable Penn institution, Mar Bar. Boy, did it suck; I don’t even know where to begin. Upon arrival, we were met with first a line and then a cover charge. I suppose there is nothing the owners can do about the line—being businessmen they want there to be a line—but what is the rationale behind waiting in line for what is more or less an upscale frat party? No one is there but Penn kids overpaying for bad drinks! Then there’s the cover. I can’t stress this enough: bars should never have covers to get in. Clubs have covers, not bars. That is pretty much the worst thing about Mar Bar: it wants to be both a chill bar and a hot club. It can’t be both. The space itself is long and narrow, which is not ideal for a dancehall atmosphere. To make matters worse in the dancing department, there is no one specific area with seats, tables, and couches. They are spread all over the place. If they were confined to one area of the floor then a larger, more dance-friendly space could be fashioned. The music is also blaring the entire time—fine for a dance club but not for a bar. You are supposed to be able to have coherent conversations in bars, which isn’t necessary in clubs because you can occupy yourself with dancing. Also, techno isn’t exactly the kind of stuff to which people want to dance these days. If you want people to dance, you should probably just put on Q102—or anything else with the hip hop and pop hits that people know and enjoy dancing to in clubs. As is, the only dancing I saw involved two sauced-up girlfriends sloppily grinding on one another with drinks in hand. Which brings us back to said drinks mentioned earlier. First of all, everything is overpriced. 40th and Walnut, surrounded by college kids, is not exactly 2nd and Market, surrounded by the city’s social elite, so why are the prices so similar? Sure, I know a lot of kids who go to Penn are, shall we say, well-endowed when it comes to their wallets, but just because you can afford something doesn’t mean you aren’t getting ripped off. When we arrived and headed for the bar to peruse the menu for something interesting, we noticed that a bucket of five Coronas was apparently going for fifteen bucks—not too bad a deal. I said apparently, though, because after I ordered it, the bartender shot me a nasty look followed with a “nah, we don’t have that.” After I asked if they were out of the Corona or the buckets, he informed me that they “just aren’t serving that right now,” and that if I wanted a Corona, it would be four dollars. So to recap: something that is on a menu and prominently displayed on the bar is not being served simply because they just don’t feel like it. I understand the concept of having specials, but specials are not, I repeat not, listed on a menu that stays out all night in full view of anyone ordering. If, and this is possible, it was a menu entirely of specials, why was it out? Not yet brought up in this line of questioning is why the bartender had to be such an asshole about the whole thing. Thanks buddy, there goes your tip. Let’s move on. One of my friends ordered a pint of Yards. Not only was it certifiably skunked, it was five bucks, at least a dollar too much for a beer that is brewed locally. I guess they were trying to recoup the costs they incurred importing it. I know one dollar may seem nitpicky, but because I hate the place, I am just going to nitpick. Another friend of mine ordered some Black Label whiskey, only to be informed that it just isn’t served at Mar Bar. Am I wrong when I say that if one kind of whiskey is being served in a bar, it should be Johnny Walker Black? At any rate, the bartender offered him something else that would be around the same price but then charged him nine dollars for whatever other brand it was. I guess that’s supposed to be generating repeat customers or something. My friend from the whiskey story adequately articulated all of our sentiments later that night when he declared that he hopes Mar Bar burns down. Yeah, he was wasted and using unnecessary hyperbole, but it’s the sentiment that counts. I’m just glad that one of my friends managed to sneak in without paying the cover. Hey, when the greed of big business and corporate America are trying to screw you, it’s every man for himself. Adam Burgos is a senior in the College. You can write to him at myjou@sas. O C TOBER 11, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 4 P AGE 5 GIVE ME LIBERTY OR GIVE ME SLEEP Adventures in Slumber Purgatory L A U R E N S A U L | W E E K LY S A U L U T A T I O N S WE ALL KNOW that dreadful feeling. During class, it can suddenly start, with only a few minutes’ notice. Sometimes it has little to do with what time it is, what material is being covered, or how engaging the professor is with that day’s remarks. Spasms of exhaustion take over and before there is time to do anything, eyes shut and a head falls forward against the person’s will. The cycle repeats. The head falls, is lifted up, and then once again falls forward. Each time this happens, a clicking sensation is felt inside the head, as the tired person tries to battle sleep, if only to save face. Little else feels worse than the limbo between states of consciousness. Whether one is an insomniac who struggles to fall asleep or an overtired person who struggles to stay awake, fighting the body’s impulse is not a pleasant occupation. When I’m alert, I often see other people experiencing the headdroop. With the exception of impending embarrassment, it feels much worse to struggle to stay awake in class than it does to give up and wholly fall asleep. I was discussing the torture of Sleep Purgatory with someone one day, and it reminded me of a contentious issue that was brought to the world’s attention a little while ago: America’s use of sleep-deprivation to break the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. America is far from the only country that has used sleep deprivation as a torture tactic, and this method has often been condemned. Those on both sides of the issue agree that it is a very effective way to break a person’s will. A BBC article described a British reality TV show which once challenged people to stay awake for a week—for a prize of one hundred thousand pounds. The contestants later said that it was “like torture” after awhile, and John Schlapobersky, a psychotherapist who was tortured by the apartheid government in South Africa, said that after two sleepless nights, people normally begin to have hallucinations. Therefore, it can be hard to understand those who boast about all-nighters. Falling asleep in class is the first sign of being tired; staying awake for more than twentyfour hours brings a person to a new level of haze and exhaustion, and it is difficult to view this behavior as anything other than self-destructive, given the fact that our country uses it against its most dangerous enemies. Sleep is a confusing idea for college students. There are so many things to do on this campus, whether it’s schoolwork, various forms of socializing, the plethora of people so often try to figure out shortcuts, while still maximizing the utility of their waking hours. Some will claim three hours is in fact better than four. Coffee rushes are frequent and entertaining, and the coffee buyers who wait on line to get their fix enjoy talking about the extent of their addiction to caffeine. Every so often, some publication will run an article with a sensational tone about the ubiquity of dependency on drugs like Ad- extracurricular activities, or simply hanging out and “wasting time”, even though it usually doesn’t feel like it’s being wasted. Sleeping is almost viewed as an obstacle because it takes up a chunk of the day’s precious twenty-four hours. People constantly mention the topic of sleep, and it can become a conversation starter, especially on difficult Monday mornings. Many enjoy telling others about the previous night’s number of hours or how a nap is happening right after class, if it is even possible to make it through the lecture awake. Debates about sleep cycles have become a boring, repetitive topic as many derall or Ritalin. In these articles, the writer usually adds a few anonymous quotations that conjure up a few sentences from users in cool, self-assured language as they talk about how it helped them spend all night writing a paper, or performing some Herculean feat without losing their concentration. College life simply is not conducive for healthy living habits, though this fact seems to be most blatant when it comes to shut-eye. The food situation is not quite as drastic even though the dining hall does come up with all sorts of concoctions that are laden with preservatives, and after people graduate DP Continued from PAGE 1 and a natural fecal-phobia won’t do in bed, plus a nifty T-shirt. Not that I would know from personal experience. Ahem. The question which in the DP is sanitized into rhetorical, soul searching piece about the importance of immaterial values and goals is inspirational and cute for the price of absolute boredom. Sex is more important than money to a majority of people, as evidenced by the oft-quoted study, but that does not mean that money can’t buy sex or happiness at all. Those who come out of professional programs driven by a conservative, compartmentalized mentality, like Wharton, simply lack the If money is your only virtue, people will love you for it, or will be too stupid to notice. courage and creativity to use their money correctly. If you have money, but no sex, you can buy it! Love, too, can be a similar commodity if you are not a slave to pop-culture romantic fantasies. If money is your only virtue, people will love you for it, or will be too stupid to notice. In any case, the study only concerned itself with sex, not love, so we can assume the people who were happier with sex rather than money are just as shallow. While the point of the DP article may have been simply that there are things that money can’t buy, this is also a blatant falsehood. Money can buy everything, including sex, and those that say differently are merely ignorant of the wider world of possibilities. Andrew Pederson is a sophomore in the College. You can write to him at awl@sas. from Commons digestive abuse, most find it difficult not to depend on Yue Kee and the local variety of food trucks scattered around campus. It is no one’s fault but our own, especially when it comes to upperclassmen. Fro Gro has as many options as our home supermarkets; it’s just that few of us want to spend an hour or more each day preparing healthy recipes when fast food is tasty, quick and convenient. However, compared to the typical American diet, we Penn students still do well, and we suffer much less from our diets than we do from lack of sleep. My entry into Wharton has led me to catch myself robotically applying new economic concepts to the world at large even when I don’t want to. Sleep is a precious commodity that is always experiencing a shortage. Accordingly, waiting for things, like for a sandwich with half the ingredients missing and then again on line to pay at the ABP in Huntsman, has grown more offensive than ever before. Time is of the essence, and sleep always gets shafted in the process of life. Being efficient and trying to get the maximal utility out of all time available has become a compulsion. Thus, being too tired to focus on work leads many people to more frustration than usual. I have started to contemplate the opportunity cost of everything I do. When I am awake but unable to pay attention during a class, I will zone out until I only hear phrases like “get rich” as they are said with inflection every ten minutes or so. (I’m kidding! Sort of…) During those moments, I stare at those around me, and most of the time, more than a couple of people are struggling with their state of consciousness. If there is anything that takes away from people’s quality of life here, it is probably the inability to sleep for enough consecutive hours on a regular basis. Mathematically speaking, an all-nighter will bring a person halfway to experiencing the way our country treats alleged terrorists. If that isn’t enough of a reason to spend more time under the covers, following the advice of last week’s sex-obsessed DP columnist may precipitate a return to bed, even if it means giving up all other worthwhile activities. Okay, time to take a nap… Lauren Saul is a sophomore dualing in the WHollege. You can write to her at lcsaul@wharton. BEST BETS 10/11 - 10/17 Rob’s TV picks for the week Monday: Real World/Road Rules Challenge (MTV, 10 p.m.) It’s Battle of the Sexes 2 as castmates butt heads and perform other ludicrous activities to extend their celebrity another 15 minutes and for enough money to pay for a few semesters of Penn. Tuesday: Veronica Mars “Meet John Smith” (UPN, 9 p.m.) The new Nancy Drew helps reconnect a son and wayward father, as the mystery behind Lilly Kane’s murder thickens. Wednesday: Presidential Debate—Arizona State University (ABC, CBS, NBC, 9 p.m.) Domestic issues. Who else expects this one to venture off to Iraq anyway? Thursday: Extreme Dodgeball II (GSN, 10 p.m.) Not a movie. A sports series. Dodgeball seems to be all the rage, though I swear that movie was enough to deter anyone from even considering it. Friday: 8 Simple Rules “Out of the Box” (ABC, 8 p.m.) Art and dating have been funnier, but I figure ABC’s best sitcom—not saying much—could use a shout-out. Saturday: The Secret Life Of… “Secret Life of Donuts” (FOOD, 2:30 p.m.) I find it odd that Dunkin’ Donuts is now best known for its coffee. That is all. Sunday: Farscape: The Peacekeeper Wars (SCIFI, 9 p.m.) Though the trailers have me excited, I can’t help but think of this as closure trying to cross the t’s and dot the i’s on a series I should still be enjoying on a weekly basis. If You Can Only Watch One: Veronica Mars. See my article for Farscape stuff. I somehow doubt you’d be able to catch the previous 88-episodes in time. And, to be honest, Veronica Mars is doing a bit anemically. Despite the fact that no college student has a Nielsen box, building some sort of buzz would help. You can catch old episodes on MTV at 7 p.m. P AGE 6 O C TOBER 11, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 4 BACK FROM THE DEAD DEBATE ROB FORMAN | MY 13-INCH BOX THE ASHES HAVE RISEN and the phoenix has returned. I wish I were talking about Famke Janssen and news on the third X-Men movie, still hurting since Bryan Singer ankled to helm the new Superman film, but this article is about two sci-fi franchises a bit more obscure than the ubiquitous mutants—Firefly and Farscape. The 2001-2002 season hit science-fiction television hard: both shows, considered newclassics, were cancelled. Joss Whedon’s Firefly aired on FOX during the fall. Despite approving a hugely expensive pilot episode, somewhere in the $8-million range for two-hours, the FOX brass opted to air the series’ second episode as the premiere. Clearly, this confused viewers later on, since the pilot explained the characters and premise of the show, as pilots are wont to do—a western set in space. No aliens. No sound in space. It’s simply a crew on a ship intent on survival at the fringe of human civilization. The crew—nine characters, much like 1939’s John Ford classic Stagecoach—are a captain and soldier who fought on the losing side of a futuristic Civil War, a joking pilot, a brash and vulgar mercenary, a doctor and his fugitive sister, a mechanic, a preacher, and a “Companion”—a scholastically-trained and socially accepted whore. Fridays are not the kindest day to television ratings, and preemptions for Major League Baseball displaced the show for several continuous weeks. And, for whatever reason, the FOX execs decided to air the series out of order and air the pilot as the last episode before the series was cancelled. Financially, the decision was understandable, as the series cost too much for its Friday viewership. Or maybe FOX just failed to get the message out. DVD box sets of the entire series, including three unaired episodes of the show, flew off retail shelves and continue to sell well almost a year later. The series even won an Emmy for Best Visual Effects. Recall Family Guy. The FOX executives didn’t understand the animated comedy, mishandled and misadvertised it, then cancelled it. After superb DVD sales and great syndication numbers, the show will return in May 2005. While you can’t expect to see Firefly back on TV any time soon, a massive fan campaign and hard work on the part of the producers caught the attention of Universal Studios. A feature film, titled Serenity, will be theatrically released on April 22nd, 2005. All nine main cast members reprise their roles, and the producers promise the film will be accessible both to those who saw Firefly and those who did not. Take my advice: find Firefly DVDs and watch the series regardless. You won’t regret it. I promise that after watching the episode “Objects in Space,” you’ll be eager for more. An odd side note: the Friday at 8 p.m. time period has never improved on Firefly’s numbers before its cancellation. Farscape is almost Firefly’s complete antithesis. The show premiered in 1999 on the Sci-Fi Channel and continued into its fourth season with both fans and the executives fully behind it. The show is a tad more complicated than Firefly. A human astronaut is pelted into a distant part of the galaxy and almost immediately finds himself at the crux of an interspecies war. Compared to the dusty western pallor of Firefly and the rigid sterility of the more recent Star Trek series, Farscape is a breath of crazy, colorful fresh air. The aliens are far more varied, vibrant, and detailed than your average Klingon or Romulan, and many are made by the Jim Henson company—yes, the muppetmakers themselves. Trouble began abruptly on the Australian set of Farscape in 2001—the cast and crew finished filming the season before Christmas even though it would not air for a few months. SciFi originally informed the producers that a fifth season was guaranteed, so an envoy from the network telling all involved that the season finale would in fact be a series finale was a complete surprise. Even more surprising: the message came during the filming of the final episode, not leaving time to rewrite, change, or wrap up anything despite the series’ arc. Farscape’s season finales have all been cliffhangers, leaving cast members dead or otherwise imperiled in order to keep viewers buzzing until the show’s return the next season. When the finale shot of the series was the sudden, unforeshadowed deaths of the series’ two main characters, fans were in an outrage. Science-fiction fans are nothing if not obsessive and vocal. The Farscape campaign didn’t involve finding a feature studio to produce a possible movie franchise. They found financiers, who hadn’t watched or been aware of the show until the campaign, to front the bill for a miniseries. The four-hour result, Farscape: The Peacekeeper Wars, is one of my Best Bets this week. It begins Sunday, October 17th and ends Monday, October 18th. Fans and producers of Farscape alike are hoping the ratings are sizeable enough to warrant another miniseries, just as Firefly fans are working to make sure Serenity is a big enough hit that Universal will option a trilogy and more of the franchise. In the meantime, science-fiction fans can be content in spurning the unoriginality of Enterprise. Rob Forman is a junior in Wharton. You can write to him at robertf@wharton. Continued from PAGE 1 wards on everything from Iraq, the war and terrorism to the anti-ballistic missile treaty would cause one to think it was Cheney who sat in the number one seat at the White House, not the bumbling fool we saw debating against John Kerry. The problem Senator Edwards had in debating Cheney paralleled Bush’s problems. Everything Edwards had to say was nothing more than regurgitation from before. I felt as if I were staring at a 90-minute political ad. Don’t Mess with the Rhino, son, or you’ll get hurt. There were two specific moments during the night when Cheney literally creamed a too youthful appearing Edwards. First, Vice-President Cheney chided the Senator’s attendance record in the U.S. Senate. Cheney told Edwards, “You’ve missed a lot of key votes on tax policy, on energy, on Medicare reform. Your hometown newspaper has taken to calling you Senator Gone. You’ve got one of the worst attendance records in the United States Senate. Now, in my capacity as Vice President, I am the president of the Senate and the presiding officer. I’m up in the Senate most Tuesdays when they’re in session. The first time I ever met you was when you walked on the stage tonight.” Ouch. I even felt the sting from a blow made worse by the look on Senator Edward’s face. The sad thing is he couldn’t even refute this accusation, making it obvious he was completely unprepared for this type of attack. The second time Cheney scored a major point occurred when he accused Edwards of demeaning the contributions of the Iraqi people to the military operations in Iraq. While Edwards’ claim that Americans are taking the majority of the loss of life was, I believe, quite correct, the V.P. was able to spin the statements in accusations of disrespect for Iraqi soldiers and for those in the “coalition”. Edwards failed to do anything meaningful in response to counteract this attack. Again, at least Edwards has that hair. With everything that went well for Cheney, the debate certainly was not a clear sweep for him. For one thing, Edwards came across as much more relaxed and charismatic than the former Halliburton CEO. I’ve been using the term White Rhino to describe the V.P. and with good reason. Beyond being rather large, white, and rarely seen in public, he conveys little in the way of personal charm. Honestly, if I were in the audience that evening and he came toward me, my gut reaction would probably be to flee. Edwards, however, appeared to be about as likeable as possible. For one thing, he’s absolutely gorgeous. Yes, he’s 51 years old, but he’s just so dreamy. During the debate, when he was asked a question in which he was not supposed to use Kerry’s name and he did, he realized his mistake, put on that big southern grin and apologized. Who could resist that charm except perhaps Cheney? Even he, when looking at Edwards, had to have had moments when he wished President Bush did not oppose same-sex marriage. Bush Who? On a more substantive level, the Vice President made a fairly interesting mistake throughout the debate. Edwards referenced John Kerry time and again, to the point where he sounded like a five year old bragging about how great is his dad. While this was an annoyance, Cheney took the other extreme. In the entire debate Cheney mentioned President Bush by name about twice. Once was at the end, almost as an afterthought, and the other time was in reference to the less than flattering distinction of President Bush calling for amending the U.S. Constitution to ban same-sex marriage. In response to a question on this topic, Cheney stated that his own personal opinion remains that states should handle the question of marriage. Cheney then highlighted how he [President Bush] sets the policies for the administration and that he [again the President] feels it is wrong for courts to impose same-sex marriage rights. I think political pundit Chris Matthews had it right when he said, “We are having a vice presidential debate with an incumbent president, George W. Bush, who is running for reelection, I believe on the same ticket as Dick Cheney. I never heard the president’s name except when he was the gay basher. He was the one, according to Cheney, that wouldn’t let his daughter off the hook.” Indeed, Vice President Cheney’s daughter Mary Cheney is a lesbian, which would explain the subtle difference between Bush and Cheney on this issue. Talk about awkward. Absolutely nothing Cheney said last Tuesday could possibly impress anyone about President Bush. While Cheney spoke, I kept thinking he could effectively be president right now instead of Bush. This poses a problem for Bush, as people will look to him when voting, not his V.P. running mate. In failing to evoke Bush other than to blame him for the Federal Marriage Amendment, Cheney fumbled an excellent opportunity to give the President a boost in the polls. The most Cheney accomplished was to perhaps increase his personal likeability with voters, leaving Bush himself out to dry. The final word: Edwards, with all of his youthful charm, came across as a well-meaning person with a lot to learn. Unfortunately, he also came across as a naïve V.P. wannabe who needs more experience to play with the grownups. On the other hand, Cheney appeared well-polished, well-briefed and strong as the man who could be president if needed. His broad experience in foreign policy and his well-researched attacks on Senator Edwards were apparent to anyone watching. Aside from making little connection between himself and the President, Cheney gave a near flawless performance. Michael Patterson is a senior in the College. You can write to him at mjp2@sas. O C TOBER 11, 2004 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 4 P AGE 7 GREEN AT NINETEEN, GREY AT TWENTY-TWO Enrolling in the Accelerated Emotional Aging Program BY CHRISTINE CHEN PLANNING FOR THE SUMMER in the meager beginnings of fall is a reality for many and upsetting to say the least. It is about as annoying as when the local five-and-dime puts out the dancing Santa Claus next to the fifty-cent inflatable beach balls in the middle of summer. I passed by that display window pissed beyond words. Nobody lives in the now anymore. Instead, we live in the hazy limbo ranging anywhere from five minutes to five years from now. The life of an undergraduate student at Penn ebbs with an undercurrent of uncertainty. Some might say that this is the most exciting time in our lives, but at the same time, the ambiguity of the future shapes our prison, cleverly disguised in ivy covered walls, eternal intellectual sunshine, and mixed drinks. We strive towards attaining some sort of stability. That is a common driving force behind pusuing higher education in the first place. While freshman year is fun and games for the most part, this reality becomes more crucial and foreboding in the following years. Youth is inherently beautiful; filled with the naivete and the unequivocal hope, or faith rather, that one will get there, wherever “there” is, in the end. Perhaps that is partially what appeals to creepy underclassmen frat boys that target impressionable freshman girls, aside from the notoriously obvious biological appeal. Regardless, while in fifty years we may actually not have enough time to do all that we want as life winds down, this is the period in our lives when we do have all the time in the world, yet it just doesn’t feel that way. Partying and drinking yourself into a benign state only delays the inevitable. It’s a mini-break in a sea of ivy despotically choking out the growth of any other type of greenery. Like ivy, the Penn lifestyle is a beautifully villainous Catch-22. Time flies by in your inebriated bliss, and by the time you’ve sobered up, you think “Shit! There is so much I have to do! Like save the baby whales!” “You’re born and you’re red /you’re dead and you’re blue. You’re green at nineteen / and grey at twenty-two” says Les Savy Fav, in their deliciously commanding song Dishonest Don Part II. Never mind the title, the best ones usually doesn’t correlate to the content of the song whatsoever, but it sounds cool, and that is precisely what youth is, and should be about. What exactly takes place in the subtle transformation from freshman to sophomore? We all know the transition as former “wise-fools” in the high school seniority hierarchy first hand, but somehow it is different in college. It is high time to deconstruct this quandary at its source. Exactly this time last year, I remember randomly conversing with a girl in Houston Hall during the insanely crowded lunch time slot somewhere between 12:30 and 1:30 pm. She asked with a tone of expectation, “Are you a freshman?” and I confirmed her suspicions, but to her surprise, I pressed the issue further. I was interested in how she gauged my “freshness.” What made it so screamingly obvious? I mean, by then I knew vaguely where I was going and was on a schedule. Where had I gone wrong? I would later obsess over her comment in the two weeks that followed, promptly forget, and now a year later, remember it clear as day. Open and approachable, decked in a mildly worn tee shirt and jeans, she went into a couple choice vague comments like “you dress nicely,” which was just meaningless birdseed. I mean, I will dress presentably until the day I die! It’s the way I’ve been raised. She ended with the final road block of “I can just tell,” with which I was left at the same place where I had begun, but with a tingling curiosity that began to fester like herpes. This wise fool did leave me with what little solace she could before packing up her salad bowl and plastic utensils: “You’ll see what I mean next year.” Then she promptly continued to spread her philosophical STD elsewhere. Only time will tell, and dammit, only time can tell you that that cliché is true. It is now the one year anniversary of that chance conversation, and in the grand tradition of youthful exuberance, I am pondering every aspect of change that has internally occurred. It is painfully clear now. I reflect on what I have done during round one at Penn, and I cringe. A lot. And when I see other freshman doing the same, I cringe for them. The difference is this: I am aware of my youth, inexperience, and I am most aware of the abundance of time. Thus, I am defensively armed with a reaffirmed mission: to let it happen. Anything at all. I’ve been chastised before about my lack of planning, my seemingly aimless wandering. Fingers have been wagged at me by my peers, my friends, but I remain resolute in doing what I want regardless of whether it will be of any use to me in the future. I have been in the world where the day is planned by a palm pilot before. In high school it was structured planning for college, and this time around it is geared for internships and jobs, but in essence it is déjà vu. I am not going to lie and say I have done absolutely no work toward securing such an internship or research position or that it is unimportant, and anyone who does say this is either full of shit or going to be in it. I guess I can’t explain it as coherently as I had hoped, but it’s an attitude that I have acquired layer by layer over the year. Or maybe that’s more circular wise-fool speak, in which case this makes complete sense. Although it is unreasonable to expect, or even want to be, as “green” as we were freshman year, let’s aim for Kelly green or worst case scenario, hunter green, rather than grey at twenty-two. And let’s try to spell as many English words with British spelling while we’re at it because we have a lot of time. Time flies by in your inebriated bliss, and by the time you’ve sobered up, you think “Shit! There is so much I have to do! Like save the baby whales!” Christine Chen is a sophomore in Engineering. You can write to her at cachen@seas. VOTE FOR CHANGE Continued from PAGE 1 of his songs including the highly appropriate “Fortunate Son.” Almost immediately after Fogerty left, Stipe was back—in a Kerry shirt—to duet on “Because the Night,” which ended up being his finest performance of the evening. Instead of introducing the E Street Band during the instrumental break of “Mary’s Place” as he usually does, Springsteen staged a mock conversion of an actor dressed as a conservative stereotype. It was stupid, but everyone was too giddy to care. Fogerty returned for “Proud Mary,” and then I and the other five Bright Eyes fans in the arena applauded conspicuously as Oberst followed Stipe onto the packed stage for the final two songs, both covers: Nick Lowe’s “What’s So Funny ‘Bout Peace, Love, and Understanding” and Patti Smith’s “People Got the Power.” Despite the confusion over who was to share which microphone with whom, it was a pleasant end to a fantastic show. That was all completely objective, I swear. That the entertainment industry is unabashedly liberal is far less noxious than the preponderance of Bush supporters among America’s corporate fat cats. Springsteen and Co. are certainly rich enough to personally benefit from the current lopsided economic policies so the fact that they take up the opposite cause reflects authentic, selfless concern for the underdogs. Anyone familiar with Springsteen knows that’s nothing new for him. Everyone else should be heartened by this not-for-profit coalition, which serves as an electric reminder that dissent is patriotic, even if you forgot Poland. Springsteen: A R.E.M.: C+ Bright Eyes: Damn you, SEPTA James Houston is a senior in the College. You can write to him at jhouston@sas. m s i l l our dose of a c t weekly wisdom s r fi FREE INTERNET GAMES: BEST WAY TO LOSE WEIGHT AND FRIENDS SIMULTANEOUSLY THE UNDERGRADUATE MAGAZINE | O C TOBER 11, 2004 VOL . V NO .4 Critically Informed DUAL DEGREES & THE JUJU CRISIS BRIAN HERTLER | SLEIGHT OF HAND PENN WAS FULL of bad juju. An evil group of dual-degree students, each with majors in Philosophy and Atomic Physics, had gained a stranglehold over campus karma. They’d applied the power of the atom to their theory of Pessimistic De-Humanism, and all of West Philadelphia felt the effects. Investment bankers were predicting recession, food carts were inflating their prices, and nobody raised their hands in recitation. As the theory spread, Penn was falling apart. Danny Keyhole, a brave Astronomy major, burst into Amy Gutmann’s office in College Hall. “Ms. President!” he cried. “Something terrible is about to happen!” President Gutmann, from behind her desk, only stared back at him. An expression of pessimistic dehumanization was plastered across her face. “I’ve discovered,” Danny continued, “that Penn’s bad karma has affected the whole country! There have been natural disasters—hurricanes in Florida, earthquakes in California, even a volcanic eruption in Washington—all because of our tainted juju! And now there’s something much worse: a meteor is speeding towards Earth, and it’s aimed directly at Penn!” At this last statement, President Gutmann finally raised her head. She blinked her eyes rapidly and appeared bored, angry, and defensive by turns. Finally she said, “So we’re doomed. Who cares?” She called security, and Danny Keyhole was escorted outside. He was flabbergasted—Penn faced a disaster, yet nobody seemed to mind. He’d expected President Gutmann to destroy the meteor from space, or to start digging impactproof caves under Hill Field. Instead, the bad juju had sapped her will to act. Danny, filling with resolve, decided to solve the problem himself. He’d find the dual-degree students and stop their harmful experiments. Once harmony was restored, the meteor would surely turn away from Penn. He set out for their secret hideout, which was located at the top of High Rise South. Unfortunately, campus seemed to be deteriorating before his eyes. All the manhole covers had burst, and were all spewing geysers of brown, foul-smelling sewage. Locust Walk was submerged and impassable, a veritable river of slime, and students were fleeing into buildings for safety. Little did they suspect that the cafeterias and dormitories, too, were shin-deep in human waste. Penn’s juju, Danny thought, must’ve been getting worse. Undaunted, he took his shoes off and waded heroically towards the High Rises. In his mind, there had always been something untrustworthy about dual-degree students. When students are choosing their majors, he thought, they should have to make a choice: either the enjoyable subjects in the College, or the useful subjects in Wharton, Engineering, or Nursing. To have both at once was simply greedy—no wonder these atomic philosophers had caused evil. As he made his long, hard slog through the quagmire, he noticed some of the Locust Walk debris that floated past him: there were political ads for the UA—”Vote for me because I drink a lot!”—and t-shirts with blurry, poorly-scanned faces on the front. A thought struck him—could faulty voodoo be responsible for Penn’s stupidity? The sewage flood finally ended at the 38th Street bridge. Danny shook himself off and, deciding to clean up at the nearest dormitory, ran across the bridge to High Rise East. Unfortunately, he found the entranceway covered in ominous flyers: Attention! Today there is an Emergency Water Shutdown in effect. Students are advised to take their hygienic needs elsewhere. Everything on campus was going wrong. He tried to ring the doorbells on some of the nearby frat houses, but the buzzers weren’t working—the electricity must’ve been out! Danny realized that Pessimistic De-Humanism had been affecting maintenance workers, too. He gritted his teeth. He didn’t need to be clean; he needed to stop the philosophers in High Rise South. The building had just gotten a 28 million renovation, but Danny knew enough to be careful. He walked inside and, very cautiously, swiped his PennCard on the newfangled sliding-glass machine. As he tried to pass through, however, the glass suddenly slid closed, almost slicing him in half; only with cat-like reflexes did he leap to safety. Had evil mojo somehow gotten into the machinery? None of the elevators were working, so he began the long climb to the Rooftop Lounge. It was much later, then, that he emerged into the secret lair of the dual-degree students. “Halt your mischief-making!” he cried, still gasping for breath. “You don’t know it, but your experiments have brought terrible consequences! A meteor is headed this way, ready to destroy the school! We’re having problems with the most fundamental maintenance issues; our students are getting hysterical and stupid over politics; and, worst of all, the Administration refuses to respond to even the most critical problems. You’ve got to purify our juju!” The dual-degree students looked up from their calculations. They’d filled the Rooftop Lounge with blackboards; each was covered in obscure calculations —the speed of light multiplied by Nietzsche, divided by the number of pages...— but also question marks and empty spaces. One of the students scratched his head. “But we never completed any experiments.” “You must’ve finished at least one,” Danny protested. “Penn could never get so messed up on its own—not after we’ve paid so much money. At least, it shouldn’t get so messed up...” In another moment, the truth sank in. He and the dualdegree students pondered the situation for a while, then found an ideal solution: they’d all take the semester abroad, so they’d be gone when the meteor hit. Brian Hertler is a senior in the College. You can write to him at hertlerb@sas. THERE’S NO CURSES IN BASEBALL! BY ADAM GOLDSTEIN BASEBALL IS A SPORT full of superstition. Little leaguers and big leaguers share many of the same ritualistic practices while on the diamond. Some refuse to step on the foul lines when entering and exiting the field, others will continue to wear the same underwear and socks during a hitting or winning streak, while still more insist upon always eating the same pre-game meal. Many of the most distinctive rites in baseball are associated with particular Major League teams. In times of crisis, Braves fans enact the infamous tomahawk chop, Philadelphia natives count on the magical powers of the Phanatic’s famed pelvic thrusts, and the Angels’ faithful pray to that idol known as the Rally Monkey. Then there are the players themselves, who are just as superstitious and quirky as the fans who root them on. There’s Sammy and his kiss to the camera, Nomar’s OCD routine in the batter’s box, and Johnny Damon doing his best Encino Man impersonation. Yet each year, as hot summer days fade into cool fall nights and baseball’s postseason gets underway, the sport’s most feared supernatural entity threatens to rear its ugly head. I refer, of course, to The Curse. The very mention of the word is enough to make some fans roll their eyes in disbelieving disgust, while causing others, those more supernaturally inclined, to plug their ears and begin screaming as they scamper off to their respective house of worship. Whether one speaks of the Detroit Tigers Curse of the Colonel, the hex placed upon old Anaheim Stadium after it was built on an Indian burial ground, or the Cubs’ infamous Billy Goat curse, every fan, coach, and player has an opinion about whether or not his team is doomed to fail. This autumn, with the Tigers and Cubs having failed to make the postseason and the Angels having rid themselves of their blight after recently winning a world series, there February 14th Yankee signing of A-Rod the remains just one team and one curse still Valentine’s Day Massacre and claiming the alive—the Boston Red Sox and the Curse of Curse of the Babe had struck again. As had the Bambino. The Sox curse is said to have happened on that infamous day in 1920, the begun in 1920 when the team’s owner sold a Yankees had once more stolen a great player pitcher named Babe Ruth to the New York from the grasps of the Sox and seemed desYankees for 100,000 dollars. In the years tined to win another title. that followed, Ruth became arguably the But a funny thing happened on the way game’s greatest player, and the Yankees went to October. The Yankees did not play to the on to win 26 World Championships. In con- level of their lofty expectations, mainly betrast, the Red Sox, after winning their fifth cause many of their high-priced stars failed championship in 1918, would reach only four to perform at a consistently high level. Alex World Series after dealing Ruth. They lost in Rodriguez found himself in a slump during the final game of each of those series. Over the early part of the season and finished the the last 85 years, scores of Yankee fans have year hitting 11 fewer homeruns then he did dosed off peacefully while recounting the tri- last year, as his batting average fell nearly umphs of their heroes: 20 points below his Ruth and DiMaggio, Each year the sport’s most career average. The Jackson and Berra, team’s captain Derek feared supernatural Jeter and Rivera. In Jeter got off to the Boston, however, Sox worst start of his entity threatens to rear its career, going hitless fans shiver at night as they try to shake imin 32 straight at-bats ugly head: The Curse. ages of Buckner and during the spring. Boone from their tired During home games heads. in May, Jeter was actually booed by Yankee This year, though, something just feels fans, a phenomenon on-par with, say, Gandifferent. For once, it seems as though the dhi getting heckled at a peace rally. In July, Red Sox are the ones destined to succeed slugger Jason Giambi fell mysteriously ill and while the Yankees seem certain to self-de- remained sick for much of the year. Consestruct. Eerily enough, I would argue this quently, his season-ending numbers were flip-flop in fortunes between the two teams pathetic (.220, 12, 40) and he was left off began during an off-season blockbuster the team’s active post-season roster. Highly trade, one which drew comparisons to the regarded pitcher Javier Vasquez struggled all aforementioned deal involving Mr. Ruth. season for his new team, and his ERA balLast winter, the Texas Rangers announced looned to nearly five. Another hurler, Jose they were placing Alex Rodriguez, perhaps Contreras, played so miserably that he was baseball’s best all-around player, on the traded to the White Sox for Esteban Loaiza. trading block. The Red Sox, eager to secure Loaiza then proceeded to pitch even worse the stud shortstop, offered some of its best than Contreras and was promptly benched. players and gobs of cash to the Rangers to Despite all this, no one would argue that the acquire Rodriguez, only to see the hated Yan- crowning moment of the Yankees season kees secure the All-Star instead. Boston fans wasn’t in August when pitcher Kevin Brown went into immediate mourning, dubbing the broke his hand after punching a wall in a fit of rage, forcing him to go onto the disabled list for an extended period of time. Meanwhile, the Red Sox, led by off-season signee Curt Shilling, more than held their own in the AL East, routinely outplaying the Yankees during the spring. When the team hit a skid during the summer, GM Theo Epstein made the unthinkable move of trading long time Boston star Nomar Garciaparra for Orlando Cabrera and Doug Mientkiewicz. The trade sent Sox fans into a frenzy, furious their beloved “Nomah” had been dealt for two players who were each struggling to hit much above 200. The season, Boston supporters declared, was officially over. The curse, they said, had appeared once again. The Red Sox would prove, though, that this assessment could not be further from the truth. The trade galvanized the club with the Sox promptly winning 10 games in a row. While Nomar failed to produce in Chicago and the Cubs came up short in their bid for a playoff berth, the Red Sox simply rolled, easily grabbing the AL wild card spot and entering the post season as one of the hottest teams in baseball. So, could it be that the Curse of the Bambino has been lifted while the Curse of the ARod has descended upon the Yankees organization? Well, despite their inconsistent play, the Yankees did find a way to win 101 games and the division. And, as I write this article, the Yankees have just evened their series with the Twins after a 12th inning RBI double by, who else, Alex Rodriguez. Is it possible that the Yankees and Red Sox could meet again in the League Championship, once more challenging the laws of fate which bind the game of baseball? Who knows, but you can bet that if these two storied teams do face each other in a series, the Babe and I will both be watching every minute. Adam Goldstein is a junior in the College. You can write to him at adamsg@sas.
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