March 21, 2005 - Dolphin Student Group Web Accounts
Transcription
March 21, 2005 - Dolphin Student Group Web Accounts
The Undergraduate Magazine Vol. V, No. 15 | March 21, 2005 Single Serving Asshole Shira shares her airborne angst: where’s a flight attendant when you need one? Page 3 Lone Home State Michael clicks his heels and journeys back to a land before liberals Page 4 California Dreamin’ Rob urges McPenntrification- all the way to L.A. Page 5 It’s the Inflation, Stupid! Thuy differentiates love and the excitable bulge in your pants. Page 8 GENERATION YAWN 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 EVERY WEEK OR TWO, many newspapers run a token story about problems unique to our generation. We are obsessed with our possessions, we can’t go anywhere without our precious iPods, some of us jump through ridiculously twisted hoops to gain acceptance into top universities, we take drastic and unhealthy measures for the sake of appearances… the list goes on. The media and our Baby Boomer parents gripe endlessly about our materialism and the plethora of emotional issues which afflict us. This reaction may be the result of a lack of potential complaints — after all, our generation is not the dope-smoking, anti-establishment group of rebels that our parents reminisce of being. We aren’t challenging the status-quo with the same pitch as they did when they were young, and so we fail to bring them the level of outrage they bestowed their parents. Our pathos, instead, is something no one ever would have imagined: the quest for perfection. The illegal usage of drugs like Adderall is widely known. Unlike our parents, who used drugs for fun purposes and to relax, we also use them to speed ourselves up so we can be even more productive. Red Bull is also a readily available and heavily marketed product, especially at colleges. Unlike some of our mothers, who swore off bras and other constraining clothing, we commit painful acts to improve our appearance. The most “scandalous” high school stories often involve hordes of suburban teenagers gathering at an empty house and drinking kegs of beer. Therefore, I say, we may as well face it: our generation just isn’t that cool. The Zach Morris character from life is gone, and he took his silly antics with him to TV purgatory. The replacement: reality TV and shows like The OC, where any physical flaw is forbidden. Would it be possible to imagine the debut of a show with Saved by the Bell’s kooky-looking cast now, in 2005? I think not. Stories about frantic actions to gain acceptance into college are also a relatively new phenomenon, MARIAN LEE something we were the first to be greeted with upon coming of age. WATER VILLAGE In the past, fewer kids endeavored to be a super-athlete, musician, president of everything, and star. A recent Times article described how the number of sports injuries has increased tenfold in the past decade, because children are specializing in a particular sport early on, and spending all their time developing their skill in that particular game so they will have a special talent by the time they ROZ PLOTZKER | SEX AND THE UNIVERSITY reach college. Gone is the notion of “just playing.” Here at Penn, the pursuit of improving one’s resume never FOR MY SPRING BREAK VACATION, two friends and I planned a cross-country ends. Eating disorders are a well known problem and are in some road trip. The final destination: Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado. For cases institutionalized. And many of us work really hard to remonths we charted routes and researched oddities to see along the way, such as the ceive good grades, all cool kid pretensions aside. Sleeping is passé world’s second biggest ball of twine in Kansas, the largest office chair in Alabama, and — that time is better spent partying hard or studying endlessly. the Museum of Questionable Medical Devices. We budgeted, we made lists and phone Best situation: tell people you are doing the former while you are calls, we bought books. Then, two days before departure, we found a last minute speactually holed up in your room, learning accounting terms. Penn cial on a fight to Trinidad, so we went there instead. students are known (and stereotyped) for their amazing abilities Like hundreds of other college students, we found ourselves on an airplane headed to drink copious amounts of alcohol so as to party as much as their for some wonderful sunny shore that would trick our skin into getting a tan (or in my case a burnt back side) at the end of winter. Spring break is a lucrative industry, like state school compatriots a few miles west, while at the same time diet schemes or Ivy League universities. People buy trip packages. You get a place to go, a place to stay, things to studying intensely to get that good job. Perfection is a challenge, do, and most importantly a way to get there. because it requires balance. Many people impressively manage to Come March, college students and girls waiting to go wild assail the airlines. With this boom in vacationers, maintain this heady equilibrium, even if it involves studying with a combined with a shift in who is vacationing , not just retirees on bird watching expeditions anymore, I bet there’s hangover. However, for some people, it is a tough act to follow. a spike in new Mile High Club memberships. No offense to retirees. I’m sure they have exciting, vivacious sex lives My recommendation: everyone needs to take a chill pill. It is too, but let’s face it, even if the bird watchers were adventurous enough to sneak into the closet of a bathroom for harder than ever to, with societal pressures and the Ivy League some action, arthritis or some other condition would make it difficult to maneuver the right angles, thrusts, etc. ethos, but we only live once. If you’re joining clubs only to write How does one have sex on an airplane? Here’s some advice the Sex Clearing House had to offer: “About 1/3 of the leadership position you’re currently trying to get on your rethe way into the flight, when they start to wheel the carts down the aisles with peanuts or beverages, have one persume, I strongly encourage you to give up such practices. Interson go to the bathroom … about two minutes later, the other person heads to the rest room too.” The cart means viewers may sense how dull you really are, and such antics will not the flight attendants are busy, and that people are staying in their seats. “Person no. 2 enters with a secret knock go unnoticed by fellow students. Studying is valuable in modera(planned beforehand). A quick Are you OK? statement upon entering helps [to keep people unsuspicious]. Once tion, especially if it is without the aid of prescription drugs, and so inside, lock the door and get busy! Flush the toilet when you’re finished, and hey, clean up after yourselves. On the is partying. Self-discipline is an invaluable asset for anyone going way back to your seats, hold hands and have person 2 say, Are you sure you’re okay?” through life with goals and hopes, but if it stifles creativity and On this particular flight, I had no such luck playing sick for a quickie, nor did my travel mates, since we all left one’s sense of adventure, it may become hard to remember why we our boyfriends at home. Not that the thought hasn’t crossed my mind: “Sex on an airplane? Cool!” But then again, bothered with such efforts at all. At times people would benefit sex anywhere is kind of cool. Except under the button! This is not cool! Little kids play there, for goodness sake. from an aimless walk through Philly, or an out-of-the-blue converA few summers ago, a friend of mine found out the code to get into Franklin Field. He’d worked with one of the athletic departments. Access to Franklin Field in the summer is like having a key to your own private, well, sation with an unexpected person, even if important work must get football field for lack of a more creative name. A group of us made a bet on who could sneak in and score on the done, or making an appearance somewhere is a priority because 50-yard line first. I was a shoe in to win since the only other person with a significant other was in a long distance it’s Thursday night. Overachievement, whether it’s to maintain a DESTINATION: SEX Continued on PAGE 5 Continued on PAGE 6 M ARCH 21, 2005 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 15 P AGE 2 FirstCall Vol. V, No. 15 | March 21, 2005 The Undergraduate Magazine Editor-in-Chief Robert Forman Editors Andrew Pederson Lauren Saul Assistant Editor Anna Stetsovskaya Columnists Shira Bender Christine Chen Robert Forman Adam Goldstein Julie Gremillion James Houston Mickey Jou Michael Patterson Andrew Pederson Roz Plotzker Lauren Saul Anna Strongin Thuy Tran Writers Anonymous XX Anonymous XY Artists Shira Bender Jay Kim Photographer Marian Lee Layout Editor Krystal Godines Business Managers Alex Chacon Greg Lysko Marketing Manager Leah Karasik Marketing Staff Lauren Saul Anna Strongin Advertising Staff Ruchi Desai 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 Blog http://fcpaper.blogspot.com 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, or student body at large of the Wharton School or the University of Pennsylvania. Next issue: March 28, 2005 Editorial ROCK ON, PHILADELPHIA Though you might not know it from the near-total campus outrage with this year’s Spring Fling Concert line-up, Philadelphia and rock music actually do mix in a way quite unlike oil and vinegar. Perhaps you’ve been living under a rock or on a tropical island for a week somewhere toward the beginning of March, but Y100 is no more. Radio One, the parent company, took Y100 off the air due to poor Arbitron ratings in order to pave the way for rebranding and yet another local hip-hop rap station. Don’t get us wrong: we like these genre. We at First Call also like diversity and are not ready to live in “the biggest town in America without an alternative rock station,” to paraphrase the catch line on www.y100rocks.com. The website is a chimera of grand proportions, featuring a dedicated radio streaming section mirroring the DJs and playlists from 100.3 FM, a petition (Save Y-100), a press archives with stories about the protests and said-petition, and a band support section with articles from Rolling Stone and shoutouts from bands like Hot Hot Heat, Garbage, and Penn’s own Off the Beat. Not since 2003’s protest against the war in Iraq have we seen Philadelphia residents and college students so passionate about something other than elections and football. Rock, it appears, rocks. Or at least it’s trying to, despite some hefty opposition. For every fan of The Faint or Franz Ferdinand on campus, it seems there are nine people who want nothing more than to listen to 50 Cent make “subtle” references to oral sex. To Penn students angry about Sonic Youth et al blemishing the tradition of rap and hip-hop acts who annually grace our stage while shouting expletives about rich white kids (thanks, Busta), First Call kindly asks you to shut up. You haven’t heard of Sonic Youth, although of the headliners the past three years only Sonic Youth can boast a guest stint on The Simpsons. Apparently you don’t like them. Some people on campus might. No one in the First Call office does, mind you, but chances are someone in the undergraduate population, a Sonic Youth fan exists. The best way to tell SPEC you’re unhappy with the selection is to boycott the event by not buying a ticket. It’s Spring Fling; there will be many opportunities to get wasted. Don’t waste your time and money in Wynn Commons booing professional musicians. Though we don’t necessarily approve of SPEC’s headliner, we applaud the change to rock music in light of the Y100 fiasco described above. We might have suggested a band students had heard of—The Postal Service, Death Cab for Cutie, Green Day, Coldplay, and any of the multitude of pop-punk bands currently “in” and prominently featured on The OC. We also question the point of a recent survey in which Penn students were asked to suggest three bands for the Fling concert… clearly the polled advice wasn’t taken. There is a silver lining to this all. One, Citizen Cope is an excellent live musician, so make it to the concert for the opening acts. Two, illegal downloads of the three bands’ here-to-unknown songs will skyrocket on campus—and maybe people will find a use for their iTunes winnings from Diet Pepsi bottle caps. JULIE GREMILLION | SOUND ADVICE Julie presents the old, the new and the diehard favorites RETRO REWIND “You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me” Dusty Springfield IN STEREO “Evil” Interpol EDITORIAL ADVICE “Goodnight Goodnight” Hot Hot Heat For the short-sighted folks who think Eminem was the first white guy gone black, let me introduce Dusty Springfield, a white female musician from London, who tore up the charts throughout the sixties with her blend of British pop and American soul. Sometimes called The White Negress or The White Lady of Soul, Dusty blended jazz, blues, and pop to form a unique sound that complemented her rich, smoky voice. She grew up listening to jazz and blues with her father and developed a deep admiration for Peggy Lee, but after working with various groups, she became a solo artist and began exploring her passionate love of blues. Her hits in the UK and America included “Stay Awhile”, “I Just Don’t Know What to Do with Myself ”, and the very famous “Son of a Preacher Man”. “You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me” was her biggest hit in the UK and displays her signature 60s sound. What will amaze you is the number of songs written originally by Dusty that have been covered by other artists. The short list includes “Wishin’ and Hopin’”, “I Only Want to Be with You”, “Tell Him”, “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” and “You’ve Really Got a Hold on Me”. What’s also remarkable is how many Motown artists eventually rerecorded her songs. It would be a shame not to possess any of her songs in their original form, so hop to it! Now I’m a pretty decent fan of Interpol, especially since this is their second single about which I’ve written. I think their music has a relatively unique sound in a sea of conformity, a sound accented by the interesting quality of lead singer Paul Banks’ voice. While not immediately popular with their initial album, Interpol has taken the rock world by storm, being recently featured on the cover of Spin Magazine. One of the few interesting tidbits from an otherwise unsurprisingly Spin article is that drummer Sam Fogarino “grew up in hard-ass West Philadelphia”. How’s that for local Philly pride. “Evil” doesn’t depart from Interpol’s basic sound but does have an interesting rhythm over the course of the song, quieting down at times before rising to the attacking chorus. I had the unfortunate experience of seeing the video for “Evil” on MTVU this morning, and I think I’m still scarred by it hours later. The basic premise is a horrible car accident and a girl, presumably “Rosemary”, who is extremely messed up by the accident. The singer in this case is a Crank Yankers-esque puppet character who has a very disturbing face. It may be something different from “Slow Hands” and from the new trend of rewinding smashed things so they end up put back together in their original form by the end of the video (how clever), but it’s still creepy. Avoid the video at all costs. I admit I was reading Spin, a magazine I don’t really like, but what else do you do when stuck on a bus going to North Jersey? One of their recommendations was this allegedly great song; I should have known better when the song below it was a song from a “Canadian neo-folkie” who “strums and swears herself blue”. Hot Hot Heat is billed as Canada’s top Modern Rock band and has been relatively popular on college campuses. Their new album Elevator will be released on Sire Records on April 5th and will highlight the third track “Goodnight Goodnight” as the first single. The song isn’t terrible; it has a driving drum beat, fastpaced lyrics and that renewed garage band sound. My problem is that Hot Hot Heat is essentially a cross-breeding of Green Day and The Strokes, with a few more Strokes chromosomes than Green Day. If the song were slightly more refined, you would not be able to determine whether you were listening to The Strokes or Hot Hot Heat. And yet, oddly enough, The Strokes is conspicuously missing in Amazon’s list of other artists fans of Hot Hot Heat enjoy. Frankly, I’m extraordinarily tired of the garage band reinvention, particularly since most people think its “new”. The 70s and its music still exist even though you weren’t born yet; you have an obligation to be informed! If you’re one of many caught up in this trend, you’ll enjoy the song, but don’t say I didn’t warn you. P AGE 3 M ARCH 21, 2005 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 15 NADINE, AIRPLANES, AND SWEET, SWEET HATRED SHIRA BENDER | IN ALL SHIRIOUSNESS SHE SHUT HER WINDOW the second she sat down. Who does that? If you get the window seat on an airplane, you cherish it. I’m guessing she probably never grew up with siblings whose very purpose in life the moment a vacation rolled around was to obtain the almighty window throne. After a couple of minutes, out came the ipod, newest edition, but none of that mini-shuffling-neon green craziness kids are into these days. I watched her for a couple more moments, still in shock over her window faux-pas, but eventually she fell asleep, at which point she slumped down in her seat and knocked her ipod to the floor. Nothing changed after that so I turned my attentions elsewhere. I had never yet seen Memento, and seeing as my friend and I had two copies of the DVD, two laptops, and a headphone splitter, this was not going to be another missed opportunity to finally watch it and be able to take part in all those pseudo-intellectual conversations people have about the film so that they can tell themselves they’re highly intelligent beings who miraculously figured out the ending like, 20 minutes before it was over. Well, that’s done with. Good movie, but certainly not without its weak spots. Hey guess what, he killed his own wife. Anyway, back to my friend over by the window, I think I’ll call her Nancy. No, Nadine. Nadine is currently reading The English Patient while sipping on some Ginger Ale that the stewardess brought her about an hour ago, and listening to her ipod. Her window’s back open, but only because I opened it while she was in the bathroom, for the second time. She’s wearing a brown zip-up sweatshirt with two white racer stripes down each sleeve, baby blue lines along the edges, and some sort of elaborate design in the middle which I can’t quite make out though I suspect it’s some sort of Abercrombie imitation. She’s got a bit of an acne problem. Well, a lot a bit of an acne problem, and she keeps rubbing her face and picking at it, which happens to be one of the grossest things a person can watch. Not only that, but she’s doing the thing where she picks at it and then looks at her fingers and rubs them against each other, as if she’s examining the treasure she has just unearthed from within the depths of her skin. ::Shudder.:: Dark brown hair, Asian, but I’m not going to attempt to specify where in that continent she hails from since I honestly can’t tell that sort of thing. Sorry, is that something I’m not supposed to put in writing? Well, what can I say, I grew up in a Jewish private school in the middle of the upper east side of Manhattan – the closest I ever came to anyone past France on the globe before coming to Penn was probably at the Kosher sushi place on 42nd and 7 th – and I’m pretty sure they were Jewish too. The captain just turned on the seatbelt sign since we’re beginning our descent, so she had to put the tray table back up. She’s holding the ginger-ale now, and I’m pretty much waiting for her to spill it on herself. I don’t have anything against the girl; it would just be pretty entertaining, that’s all. Actually I kind of do have something against her, I’m not going to lie. From the window-closing to the pimple-picking to the getting up twice in the flight and making me move all my stuff around so she can get through – what can I say, I’m a judger. Nadine and I, along with three of my friends from school and the rest of the people on this airplane are on our way back to Philadelphia from Oakland, California. We’re making a stop in Chicago, but I have a feeling she’ll stay on the plane with us for the rest of the trip, as she looks too comfortable to be thinking of getting off the plane in a few minutes. Speaking of which, the stewardess is glaring at me, so I’ll have to continue this after we land, since my laptop might make us crash into something. Nadine left me. During our 20-minute break on the ground in Chicago, she switched her seat to a few rows up, next to a friend of hers. Thank god for that. I hate sitting next to people I don’t know on airplanes. In fact, I hate airplanes period. I hate that moment of bumpiness while you’re going through the clouds, I hate when the captain tells you how high above the ground you are, I hate knowing that when I was little, if the oxygen masks came down, I would always get them second. I hate knowing that the bathrooms never quite lock and that the peanuts will never taste good no matter how many times I try them and that the kosher meal will always be some form of watery chicken and soggy peas. I hate Nadine. She currently embodies all that I cannot stand about this airborne death-trap, and she doesn’t even know it. I should feel bad for this unwarranted animosity, but somehow, I just don’t. I almost feel like she deserves it. Am I losing it? Does this happen to other people? Does everyone get these moments of random and pointless hatred of another person? Maybe this is a sign. Maybe I have this intrinsic ability to judge someone’s character based on their brown/blue sweater and acne constellations. Maybe she’s truly a bad person, and I’m just picking up on that vibe. Or maybe I’m just being entirely unfair and childish. This doesn’t happen often, I’m usually not a very judgmental person, at least not when I’ve never even met someone before, but every now and then, people like Nadine appear in my life while I’m on an airplane 5 million miles above solid ground; I can’t stop staring and wondering whether I’m right about her. I can still see the top of her head a few rows ahead of me. Every now and then it disappears completely and then pops back up again. Why does that bother me? Why can’t I stand her? What’s wrong with me? Wait, she’s getting out of her seat. She’s walking back. She’s – “Hey, Shira.” “Um…hi? Do I know you?” “Yea, I wasn’t sure at first if it was you, but we’re in COMM together. My name’s Nancy…you lent me your notes in the beginning of the semester.” “Nancy! Woah! I completely forgot!” “Yea… Sorry I didn’t get them back to you in time for the midterm. Anyway, I was on my way to the bathroom. See ya.” “K…see ya…” Thanks for that moment of justification, Nancy. And you’re not welcome for the COMM notes. Biatch. Shira Bender is a freshman in the College. You can write to her at shiratb@sas. Critically Inform. Signed up for too many activities and wound up doing nothing? Wanted to get involved in a campus publication, but didn’t know how? It’s never too late. First Call, the Undergraduate Magazine, is always looking for new members: • Writers • Artists • Photographers • Layout • Marketing/ Sales Come to our weekly meetings and participate. Mondays 9pm, Huntsman Hall Room G86 Submissions due Wednesdays at midnight. No application or experience necessary. P AGE 4 M ARCH 21, 2005 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 15 DESPITE EVERYTHING, STILL A TEXAN 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 OVER SPRING BREAK, I returned to Texas for some much needed R&R. Many people remain surprised that I still occasionally go there, much less for my Spring Break. They say things like, “Michael, how can you like hanging out with conservatives?” or “don’t you feel uncomfortable there, being gay around a bunch of redneck southerners?” Many people have this construct of Texas, and many other places in general, that often seem less than fair. There are a lot of things about going to Penn that I like and will certainly miss when I graduate in May. The student body is more or less liberal — certainly the faculty is. It is situated in a rather large city with no shortage of places to go. Also Penn, unlike many schools, really pampers the students here, making even those of us not used to such treatment a bit spoiled. I mean, come on — where else can you get awesomely delicious smoothies in the library while you do your homework? Yet despite the discomfort that much of Texan culture still brings to me, and the great liberal wonder that is the Northeast, I was very much ready for my flight back to the Lone Star State two weeks ago. The first night back in Dallas, however, I was bluntly reminded of some aspects of the culture that still exists that initially drove me to leave Texas for college. Sitting over dinner, an old high school friend of mine was telling me about a class of hers, and how just the previous week, her professor (something to do with education) was informing the class of an experience she had being a nanny years ago for a gay male couple’s child. Upon describing one element of the experience or another, without regard to the sexual orientation of the child’s parents, the professor asked the class what their thoughts were. A young woman raised her had, and proceeded to say, “First off, I don’t think two faggots should be adopting and raising children.” I was troubled, to say the least, when I heard what the girl said. I can’t say I was surprised, however. There certainly are other students at Penn who come from environments less than conducive to who they are. We have people from the former Yugoslav, refugees from the ethnic cleansing against Muslims from the early 1990’s, some with whom I have spoken expressing a strong desire to go back someday. These are people who had to flee a nation which, at the time, was bent on destroying their very culture. Yet still, it is home to them. My freshman year, I had a friend in a similar situation, except this time, his family was from pre-Taliban Afghanistan, having fled to the U.S. when the country became the human rights nightmare the Taliban made it. In the twenty-some years since leaving, his parents have built a life, careers, have had children, and have made new friends. Yet after the nation was freed, more or less at least, from the Taliban, they began discussing going back for extended periods of time to help rebuild it. Perhaps it shouldn’t be considered so strange that those who grew up in places less than ideal for them would want to return. It’s hard to grow up somewhere, no matter where it happens to be, and leave without taking a part of it with you. I may never return to Texas to live permanently, but if I do, I’ll go there to retire. I will purchase a large plot of land, with a ranch house (except fully equipped with internet, modern technology, etc...) Perhaps by the time I’m 67, the culture will even have of the Texas Hill Country, the sun hung incredibly low in the evening sky, igniting the clouds above it this deep, chardonnay-red color that I have yet to see anywhere else. changed enough in Texas that people won’t take a second look when they find out that the other person I share the place with is a man. I hope they won’t care. Perhaps we all must eventually return to that place from which we came. And if you can’t go back physically, you can at least go there in your heart. Last week, on my way between Dallas and Austin, I sat there staring at the passing scenery. Over this great, gorgeous expanse Not only was the view stunning, but it was warm, nice and warm. No coat, no scarf, no gloves. Michael Patterson is a senior in the College. You can write him at mjp2@sas. CONGRATULATIONS! First Call reader Hank Balbirer predicted 16 of 24 Oscar recipients correctly from the 77 th Annual Academy Awards, and will receive a DVD copy of the winner of Best Picture: Million Dollar Baby when it is released. Thanks for reading, Hank, and thanks to everyone to who participated in Rob’s Oscar Contest! Keep your eyes out for more First Call contests! Haiku Corner Beneath fevered beams Spin amid gossamer wings And soft, glow unseen Indignant dolphins Leaping over frothy waves When will layout end? Two nudist seniors Frolic on the breezy shore Pass the sedative Sexy girls unite Out will come the flippy skirts again When the sun returns Critically informed Batman dominates us all Overpriced sandwich Weeeeeeeeeeee! -The First Call Editors- M ARCH 21, 2005 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 15 P AGE 5 CALL FOR LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION ROB FORMAN | MY 13-INCH BOX IT IS PERHAPS conventional to write about Spring Break for the first postbreak issue of First Call, but I’m going to do it anyway. My Spring Break was not conventional by any means, though it certainly had the trappings of the typical collegiate week-long vacation. Warmth? Check. Sun? Yep. Not near my parents? On the other coast. With a friend from college? You bet. While it may sound like I went with my fraternity brothers for a fun-in-the-sun and night-life-loving stay in the Dominican Republic, I was in fact in Los Angeles interviewing in “the biz” for summer internships. Hey, it beats going back home to Princeton. No, I’m not here to regale you with the successes or haven’t-heard-back-froms of my trip— though I’ve got to say, the Arrested Development Best Comedy Series Emmy is awe inspiring in person. I will neither expose the inner-workings of various HR departments nor provide tips on getting and conducting your own interviews for the glory of the unpaid entertainment industry internship. Suffice it to say I did get an offer I intend to accept. This provides a significant problem for an East Coast resident who only has relatives in Northern California: housing. Anticipating this dilemma, I asked the assistants and Human Resource people who interviewed me about their company’s current and past interns. What did they do about housing? Shock of shocks, many are out in Los Angeles during the Spring semester through internship programs with their schools, and not just Los Angeles based institutions. Boston University, Northwestern, Ithaca, and many other schools have programs in SoCal available to their Communications students (or others who apply) during regular term semesters and the summer. They take a couple of classes, do two or three days at an internship, and build a resume while the university provides a roof. How convenient! These others schools were doing all the work, and I could just leech onto their student pricing deals with apartment complexes! Not. After contacting the school-specific programs, it became clear to me that housing was just that: school specific. My not attending Northwestern means I can’t share in its students’ benefits. Okay, I get that. It sucks, but I understand. I don’t understand, however, why Penn—and specifically the Annenberg School—does not have a program in Los Angeles. Joke all you want about it, but Penn alums (aka the Penn Mafia) run a good portion of the entertainment industry. It’s not all Wharton grads or Communications majors, if you think a specific background might be necessary. So… what about us current students? In an industry that demands prior work experience for an assistant position and is infamous for being about “who you know,” why not help current Penn students out? One look at our Communications program might elucidate an answer. Compared to Northwestern’s Department of Radio, Television and Film, Penn’s Annenberg School is highly theoretical and pretty much shuns the practical. Northwestern’s RTF program is only a portion of its Communications school, but Penn has no equivalent beyond a few of Professor Messaris’ courses and a select handful of Fine Arts filmmaking seminars. Other Communications programs have some practical elements to their curricula, as well, and production courses certainly aren’t the whole business, a fact which other schools recognize. Most internships won’t be “practi- Joke all you want about it, but Penn alums (aka the Penn Mafia) run a good portion of the entertainment industry. cal” anyway, so knowing when to use a wide lens or a deep focus—or even knowing the terms—wouldn’t necessarily help. The Wharton Undergraduate Division finally offered an Entertainment and Media Marketing course this semester—a lecture whose enrollment was maxed out and had to reject about half of the students who showed up for the first session hoping to get in off the wait list—but it’s a far cry from the numerous courses and established programs other schools have. There is interest on campus. I’m not just blowing steam because I, myself, have been slighted, though that’s certainly a part of it. Penn has the connections in the business. It just doesn’t have the real estate in Los Angeles, and isn’t looking. But wait! USC has an Annenberg School. There has to be a way to set up some sort of cross-school program to hammer out some efficiency. Precedent has been set for allowing students to attend other domestic universities for a semester, considering we have an “abroad” program in Washington, D.C. True, I wouldn’t relish taking a course over the summer or paying tuition while at an unpaid internship, but it would show that Penn is trying. Until then, I’m surfing Los Angeles’ Craigslist for summer sublets. Robert Forman is a junior in Wharton. You can write to him at robertf@wharton. THE CHOSEN BY ANONYMOUS XX AND ANONYMOUS XY CORPORATE AMERICA DESCENDED upon campus, and within a week it had infiltrated all aspects of the Wharton mentality. Throughout the following week, Whartonites dressed in “business casual” to pay due homage to the demigods of Wall Street in whatever manner was appropriate; be it weaseling a business card and harassing recruiters or the ceremonial sacrifice of a goat. Whartonites will stop at nothing to get that “perfect” internship: to be the Chosen One at Wharton. A steady stream of manic paranoia, with just a hint of Wharton arrogance, rang throughout the sacred halls of Huntsman: “Oh did you e-mail the UBS recruiter?” “The corporate culture at Bain fits perfectly with my personality.” “I would just die for an internship with Goldman.” “Did you see how many people were at the Morgan Stanley presentation?” “Wasn’t that recruiter’s nervous tick distracting?” “Oh, I screwed up my interview sooo badly, I completly blanked on what a trade-weighted exchange rate was.” And now to our main event: the 30-minute sell-yoursoul-to-I-banking interview. Let’s meet our contestants: Ameya is a New Jersey junior with finance and OPIM concentrations. Unfortunately, he only has a 3.94 (yeah...you’re off by a tenth man...bummer). After waking up, yet again, at Huntsman, he returns home for a daily dose of the Family Guy and Japanese video games targeted at 15 year olds. He may have time to brush his teeth and take a shower in between checking shocks and daydreaming about his $100,000 starting salary. In the future, he aspires to become the next Warren Buffet and guarantee Wharton admission to his dynasty by donating his own personal Wharton building. X. Blake Malcolm IV is the quintessential fourth-genera- SEX Continued from PAGE 1 relationship. But! By a tragic twist of fate, the long distance sweetheart visited soon after, and I lost the bet. It’s kind of comforting to know that sexual urges can overpower thoughts like Here?!? But that’s so inappropriate. In a sense, when ya gotta go, ya gotta go. This was not the case in the Franklin Fiend Fiasco. However, planned spontaneity is lame and not nearly as funny as what comes out of real spontaneity. Plus, I’m bitter that I lost. My friend Lindsay – who I write about a lot because 1) she’s done hilarious things in her sex life, and 2) she lets me write about whatever I want – dated a leather worker who she met working at a Renaissance Fair. Or was it a Faire? Anyway, eventually she ended up bent over his workbench in a heat of passion. Another friend, who we’ll call Cher, went on a vacation with Sonny, and while tion Whartonite with connections. You may wonder what his GPA is, but the better question should be, “Does it matter?” If something goes wrong, daddy will be very angry, and then he makes a quick phone call. Those recruiters clearly don’t know what they’re doing and won’t have a job next year because of their incompetence and poor taste. Blake’s primary interests include partying, showing off his wealth, PARTYING, thousand-dollar wines, PARTYING, and weekends in New Hampshire with his Tri-Delt girlfriend Lara. We couldn’t get a hold of our third contestant Liz, since she’s booked solid with classes and overnight trips to New York for grueling five-round interviews. Beginning the semester with 80 OCR applications submitted, she accomplished the impossible: 25 first round interviews, 5 second round interviews, a deep hatred towards those snotty Princeton students, and 0 final offers. Her motto is “OMG, let me check PennLink again. Why can’t those geniuses with multiple offers just decide and let the alternates have a chance? It seems like everybody is so busy with interviews.” Finally we introduce the underdog contestant John, who only has one shot at landing a coveted OCR I-banking internship. John is distinguished by his total indistinguishability. He makes vanilla look exciting. Since his GPA is only average, he’s going to have to rock the interview. Perhaps his group leadership, as Treasurer and Founder of the M&A Club, which he started this year, will finally pay off. The value of the $160,000 education at Penn is on the line; if he fails, I guess the internship with the Bureau of Personnel in South Dakota is looking sweeter every moment. And now for the judging. Ameya did well in all practical aspects, and since his personality is under-developed, he fits perfectly with the machine-like qualities I-banking is looking for. X. Blake Malcolm IV faired terribly in the interview; I guess straight Ds in the Wharton Core Curriculum can’t help him now. Maybe daddy has to provide a little encouragement. Liz barely made it to the interview and only had a minute to re-check her hair. She was very enthusiastic but a combination of malapropisms and verbosity may hurt her chances. John might as well change his last name to Doe. As predicted, the I-bankers realized they had found one of their own in Ameya, who was re-assimilated into the land in which numbers defy reality. X. Blake Malcolm IV got an internship offer at his daddy’s company, Cantor Fitzgerald. Yeah nepotism! Liz ended up with three different job offers, perhaps now she can quit talking about internships to the less fortunate. John ended up in Nebraska working for a small regional bank. And you can see, boys and girls, we are all winners and losers. So once you have an internship offer, treasure it in your heart and don’t conveniently bring it up in every conversation (“Oh so what are you doing this summer?”). Good luck this summer and come back to campus raring for Round 2: Job Market. The writers would like to offer our sincerest apologies to the memory of Chaim Potok, who in all honestly did not need his modern classic work on the restrictions of Orthodox Judaism to be befouled with the stench of internship season. We hope that he will keep in mind that someday these Whartonites will be free...hopefully before they drive us insane. they were in the ocean swim trunks came off and they did their duet right there in broad daylight. You thought kids peeing in the pool was bad. I sometimes wonder, though, what if you did plan it out. If you had to have sex in Van Pelt, which section would you choose? Reference? Periodicals? Eastern Literature? Rosengarten Reserve? What about in FroGro? The produce is a little out in the open, but something about the candy section in the back with the bread and the soda just feels cheap. How about in the Museum of Archeology and Anthropology? It wouldn’t be too difficult to find privacy there on a weekday, or weekend, or any other time. You’d just have to be careful about making noise. The echoes are terrible in that building. Someone might think a mummy had risen from the dead. It’s funny that “location location location” is a big deal. It either signals an uncontrollable sex drive – you just couldn’t hold back; also maybe a playful daredevil or even an exhibitionist who revels in the risk of getting caught. In the end, no matter where you are, you’re doing the same thing. If you’re a human being who has done it in a bed (or anywhere else), you have done the same activity as any Mile-High-er. There is nothing that separates you from them. But to join any prestigious club, there are prerequisites, and rules are rules. You can’t just sign up for the list serve and consider yourself a member. 5280 Feet. Minimum. Officially. Personally, when the food cart came by a third of the way into the flight to Trinidad, I was perfectly happy with my kosher meal and a ginger ale. All characters are fictitious; any resemblance is purely coincidental. Anonymous XX and Anonymous XY. You can write to them at whartonitis@hotmail.com Roz Plotzker is a senior in the College. You can write to her at rosalyn@sas. P AGE 6 M ARCH 21, 2005 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 15 STONE ON IN SECRECY 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 THE OTHER DAY, my roommate the PPE superstar volunteered to attend the taping of “Justice Talking,” an NPR program. Afterward, I got an excited phone call from her telling me how much I would have enjoyed the show since it was all about boring medical and healthcare issues. She mentioned that medical marijuana was among the things discussed, which got me thinking about the subject. On the one hand, there is something intrinsically uncomfortable about legalizing a substance that has been illegal for as long as can be remembered. But on the other hand, it is hard to disregard the people who are suffering from chronic pain associated with tumors and multiple sclerosis as well as nausea related to chemotherapy — some forms of which are alleviated exclusively by marijuana. In fact, two California women sued the government for the right to legally use marijuana as a painkiller, a right granted by the state of California, but overruled by the federal authorities. Clearly, then, there is a very legitimate basis for medical use of the drug, which neither proponents nor opponents deny. However, this is not enough of a reason to simply legalize the drug and convert it into a prescription medication. Doing so would confer positive qualities to something that for the most part is far from positive. As of now, 50% of the population has tried marijuana at least once—and that’s with the knowledge that it is illegal and considered “bad.” So if the drug were made legal for medical purposes, people would be more prone to starting up or expanding their marijuana use, simply because of the positive association they will make in their minds. Such is reality, before even considering the fact that legalizing medical marijuana will simply expand its availability. Since it would not be legal for everyone, drug dealers would continue prospering in their trade. But in addition to that, now there will be another channel for drug attainment—one that is legal but abused. The fact that such abuse will occur is quite likely, as any college student with five exams in two days will tell you, as he or she pops another pill of Adderall (or was it Ritalin?) Clearly, legalizing marijuana only within a specific context will do far more harm than good. If people are so set on being able to use the drug for medical purposes, they might as well fight for legalizing the drug altogether. This way, there would be a single channel for drug attainment (preferably one controlled by the government), but its use need not be promoted. Physicians can recommend it to their individual patients, but the overall message sent out by the government can be one of discouragement and warnings against regular (or any) use of the drug—basically approaching marijuana with the same attitude as alcohol and cigarettes. Such a shift is unlikely to increase the use of the drug any more than would legalizing medical marijuana. Plus, the government would be putting numerous drug dealers out of business, as well as pocketing a pretty hefty profit that could go toward research of cancer and MS, so that ultimately, people suffering from the condition would not need to rely on marijuana for pain relief. But if that’s an uncomfortable concept for proponents of medical marijuana, the other alternative is to promote research on its medicinal properties with the specific focus on the chemicals in the drug responsible for pain relief. These chemicals could then be isolated and made into a potent pain medication without having an individual consume all the other chemicals that make up marijuana but have no beneficial value. While this may be a longer and far more expensive endeavor than simple legalization, in the long run it could prove to be the more effective option. If the government chooses to fund research on the drug, in a few years we may have a new pill on our hands that doesn’t just work in individual cases, but helps fight illness symptoms on a mass scale. Perhaps, it will be a less addictive and more powerful version of OxyContin, or perhaps it will be an entirely novel drug for alleviating chemotherapy side effects. This all is yet to be determined. But one thing is clear: of all existing options, legalizing medical marijuana is the least practical and beneficial choice. Which of the others is better? As you light up your next joint, think about it and let me know. As of now, 50% of the population has tried marijuana at least once -- and that’s with the knowledge that it is illegal and considered “bad.” Anna Strongin is a junior in the College. You can write to her at astrongi@sas. m s i l l a our dose of c t s weekly wisdom r fiDEAR HARNWELL RESIDENTS, NO HOT WATER? HAUL ASS TO THE SCHUYLKILL! LOVE, J-RO AND HACKNEY BEST BETS 3/21 - 3/27 Rob’s TV picks for the week Monday: The Osbournes (MTV, 10:30 p.m.) Remember when Ozzy and his clan were the biggest thing on TV since Regis and his monochrome ties? Well, that mass popularity trailed off and Nick & Jessica took their place, but this Monday’s airing is the series finale of the show. Once more, for old times’ sake… SHARON!!!!!!!!!! Tuesday: The Shield “Grave” (FX, 10 p.m.) I don’t care if some critics thought adding Glenn Close to this show’s cast was a mistake… the ole’ gal rocks! I’m just happy this series bucked the trend almost every show in its fourth season has used to gain more viewers: restarting itself and getting rid of pesky detailed backstory. It’s nice to have some continued payoff with regard to the Armenian money train, Acevada’s rape, Claudette’s moral detective work, and the broken relationships between the ex-Strike Team members. I just wish Danny and Julien would get more air time while Close’s character establishes herself. Wednesday: Alias “The Orphan” (ABC, 9 p.m.) Oh, if only I could recommend two shows next Wednesday. Alas, I refuse to reveal anything about the show that has supplanted next week’s Alias episode featuring Marshall—finally—in all his insane geeky goodness. Trust me, next week’s Wednesday pick is worth it. This week helps explain some of Nadia’s unknown past, which can only mean bad things for current love interest Agent Eric “I’m giddy like a middle-schooler” Weiss. Thursday: The Office: An American Workplace “Pilot” (NBC, 9:30 p.m.) NBC just doesn’t learn. While the translation of The Office from BBC isn’t nearly as hideous as last season’s Coupling fiasco, there are too many problems with the American version to actually be excited. Which is a shame, because Ricky Gervais and company did such a great job in the original show. At least the first episode bears great resemblance to its British counterpart. Friday: Kojak “Pilot” (USA, 9 p.m.) The first of two reinventions on this week’s recommendations, USA has put together a pretty decent version of the 1970s cop show. It’ll normally run on Sundays at 10 p.m. And, yes, the man still loves his lollipops. Saturday: Little House on the Prairie (ABC, 8 p.m.) The first two hours of the Alphabet network’s miniseries update of the classic and inexplicably long running show. Hey, it’s Saturday, you wanted me to recommend LAX burn-off on NBC? Sunday: Desperate Housewives “The Ladies Who Lunch” (ABC, 9 p.m.) Whoops! Sorry about telling you all this episode would be on last Sunday. That’s what happens when I have to talk about scheduling three weeks in advance. This episode features a lice outbreak, sewage woes, a new single man on the street for Susan and Edie to battle over, and Maisy Gibbons. That’s right, Ms. Dominatrix is getting arrested, which means her clients—including Bree’s husband—are going to have some bad press. If You Can Only Watch One: Desperate Housewives. YAWN Continued from PAGE 1 reputation or to live up to parental expectations, has become a problem. Its effects rear their ugly head every time another person has to fight some form of compulsive behavior pattern, and no college student is left ignorant about such vulnerability for long. We only live once, and even self-improvement can be taken too far. Every once in awhile, I wish someone would run into Huntsman with a clown costume and an entourage of Screech Powers and AJ Slater, slide down those forum steps with loud music playing, and walk around as if it’s those days of slacking in the early 90s. Maybe one day, ordinary slacking and fun will come back into vogue, to replace a TV and world filled with boring clones having the same old drama as always. Television needs to take a step back from the Dawson’s Creek-inspired, verbose, pseudo-intellectual diatribes on life’s heart-wrenching pain. Teenagers on TV should return to scuffles with Mr. Belding, instead of the endless overdoses of intensity provided by the WB and other networks. Too many of us are going down a path devoid of lightheartedness. I implore the over-ambitious, who are becoming blander by the day, to realize a sad truth: this way of life will surely lead to piles of money and certain kinds of prestige, but it may not lead to much else. Lauren Saul is a sophomore dualing in the WHollege. You can write to her at lcsaul@wharton. M ARCH 21, 2005 | FIRST CALL | VOL . V N O . 15 P AGE 7 J A M E S H O U S TO N | T H I S M AC H I N E K I L L S FA S C I S T S First Call’s Weekly Album Reviews The Mars Volta, Frances the Mute Tori Amos, The Beekeeper The Mars Volta is the best young band in the world. Implicit in every note played is a confident promise not to waste a second of our time. And in the 4617 seconds (nearly seventy-seven minutes) that comprise Frances the Mute, this six-piece sonic militia shows no intention of welching. Their first album, 2003’s De-Loused in the Comatorium placed them safely out of the clutches of hipness, which increasingly seems like a terminal illness when contracted by bands. Instead of aloof detachment and famous girlfriends, they opted for virtuosity, cryptic conceptual logorrhea, and disdain for traditional song structures. It worked. Such grandiose ambitions would flounder in the hands of lesser musicians, but under the direction of guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez, Volta’s abundant chops and effortless restraint yielded a classic. Frances the Mute uses the same ingredients—which I won’t insult by calling a formula—and adds the self-assurance and improved teamwork that always beset good bands after their first full tour. Like Comatorium, the germ for Frances was the memory of a (different) departed friend. But these are no dirges—this is fast, furious rock music delivered with all the skill and urgency of Cream or Led Zeppelin at their upper-induced best. Jon Theodore, worth five of any other contemporary rock drummers, leads the band from a stuttering metal pocket to an authentic salsa strut on “L’Via L’Viaquez,” and makes it all seem easy. He’s probably the best natural musician of the six, but not by far. Two minutes into “The Widow”, Rodriguez-Lopez unleashes his hitherto concealed finger speed in a series of Page-esque lead fills as keyboardist Ikey Owens reminds us why every rock band used to have a Hammond organ. Despite having the second-wildest hair in the group, singer Cedric Bixler Zavala leaves the most lasting impression. His live presence is matchless, and his voice (last Zeppelin comparison, I promise) combines Robert Plant’s inflection and range with a wailing desperation all his own. He writes intensely weird firehose-of-consciousness lyrics that perfectly compliment Rodriguez-Lopez’s angular compositions, to wit: “I found the remnants of a crescent fang / It cleaned my wing down to the bone / Umbilical syllables left to decode / There was no cradle, I can taste it.” (“Cygnus….Vismund Cygnus”) Rather than alienating, their cumulative effect drives home that The Mars Volta have no patience for convention, and for that reason can only get better. Grade: A Since her early days as heiress apparent to Joni Mitchell, pinning down a large male audience has never been easy for Tori Amos. From her early rants about “fascist panties” and how making her cum does not, in fact, make one Jesus, to the album Strange Little Girls in which she had the massively ironic balls to reinterpret classic tunes by The Beatles, Neil Young, Lou Reed and others “from a female perspective”, few men have found their way through the patchouli fumes to hear her powerful talent, which stands separate from any ideology. The Beekeeper is a brave nineteen song offering allegedly organized into six categories with baffling names like “Rock Garden” and “Elixirs and Herbs” It’s unlikely that this or any of the other conceptual mumbo-jumbo (like printing the lyrics in the hexagonal shape of honeycomb) are essential to enjoying her polished compositions and crystalline singing. Except for her highly unorthodox pronunciation of certain words, this is a very professional record—about the same production value as we might expect from certain overachieving Tori clones lately infesting the charts. But copying her image is clearly easier than copying her ability: The lead track “Parasol”, an emotional meditation on a Seurat painting, glides on a beautiful minor-key verse/major-key chorus juxtaposition. “Sweet Your Sting,” a simmering, bluesy update of “You’re So Vain”, is the best song on the album and one of the best by anyone so far this year. The problem with The Beekeeper is that it’s eighty minutes long. Inevitably it becomes tiring and the pleasure of the excellent songs is diluted by the numerous throwaways. As one of the rare brooding Liliths of the last twenty years to deserve the title of “artist”, Tori Amos needs to remember that omitting is an important part of creating. Grade: B Devendra Banhart, Rejoicing in the Hands Just like I envy anyone who sees Psycho for the first time with no idea why “The Shower Scene” is a proper noun, I envy those who get to form their own mental picture of Devendra Banhart based on his name and music without knowing what he actually looks like. Or more precisely, who he actually looks like: Jes—I mean, Jim Caviezel with a beard. And Janet Leigh gets knifed in the Bates Motel shower, and Kevin Spacey is making up his entire story in The Usual Suspects. Yeah, I hate you too. Anyway, describing this wraithlike post-folkie as an enigma would be too easy. If any puddles of primordial ooze still exist in the world, I’d believe Banhart stepped out of one twenty-whatever years ago, or at very least was immaculately conceived. Rejoicing in the Hands, the better of two albums he made last year, is an alternately soothing and unsettling collection of ditties about soup, Elvis, beards, and “tit smoking.” Though Banhart’s exceptional skill on acoustic guitar makes a band unnecessary, a sparse handful of guest musicians and vocalists are sprinkled tastefully on about half the songs. But nothing distracts from his voice—a soft, nasal plaint that could find a musical home in any of the last eight decades. He can go from upbeat (“This is the Way”) to heartbroken (“Autumn’s Child”) easily, but his unique vocals are what separate him from the boring guitar-dude pack. The human body seems to fascinate and mystify him—it’s anybody’s guess what lines like “Your hair does see-saw / It sees and then saws / And I’ll get some extra fingers growin’” (“See Saw”) and “Because my teeth don’t bite I can take ‘em out dancin’ / I could take my little teeth out and I could show them a real good time” (“This Beard is for Siobhan”) mean, but Banhart is clearly more interested in creating moods than telling stories. It’s unlikely he’ll ever be onstage at the Grammys, which is why you should get this album. Grade: A- James Houston is a senior in the College. You can write to him at jhouston@sas. Jay Kim is a junior in the College. You can write to her at jihea@sas. THE UNDERGRADUATE MAGAZINE | M ARCH 21, 2005 VOL . V N O . 15 BE THE ENERGIZER BUNNY ANDREW PEDERSON | BRUT FORCE P E O P L E NEED SLEEP. It’s what the body was designed to do within the natural course of a complete day, and under no circumstances can the normal cycle be circumvented for long. Most of the attendees of any Monday morning lecture are ample proof that the god of sleep, if not amply sated over the weekend, will take what he needs, when he needs it, with or without our permission. But some feel like they don’t quite fit in with the grander scheme of things. The day has twenty-four hours, and they won’t be denied less than their full share. To extend their active time, though, is not necessarily within their own power. So, they resort to an external aid of some kind. Anybody has seen these types on campus enough times to recognize that a segment of the undergraduate population, come midterm and finals, are on something. They look a bit like tense puppets that skitter around with jerky motions and can’t quite keep their vacant stare from darting here and there. Surprisingly, they’re not all in Tabbard. Normal, or close to normal, students who are driven a bit too far for whatever reason, a finance test, an unhealthy compulsion towards late night study binges or an inordinately large investment in extra-curriculars increasingly turn towards a quasi-pharmaceutical crutch that reaches beyond the arena of mere caffeination. Adderrall, or Ritalin for those with a flair for the nostalgia of youth, has become the blue cocaine of the masses. One little tab can net a student between a rock and a hard place hours of pure, crystalline concentration and allow him or her to accomplish weeks of backlogged work in an evening. Certainly, everybody, or nearly everybody, has chugged the equivalent of a pot or two of coffee to keep sharp for exams or an especially finals, there is a great distinction between the rather mundane efficacy of caffeine and the full blown narcotic, dependency forming class of substances like Adderrall. Unlike Adderrall or Ritalin, caffeine acts in extremely small doses to increase overall alertness, but does not in any meaningful way alter one’s state of mind time consuming project, but the practice of systematic drug use for planned work binges is on the rise, and for all students, not just those who choose to exchange a couple of million brain cells for a night or two of clarity, this manner of abuse represents a massive, inexcusable phenomenon that must be purged immediately. Unfortunately for those who choose to schedule recreation through class in the anticipation of a sleep free week right before or personality. A person after two cups of coffee will find it more difficult to go sleep, but by no means will the delicate chemistry inside his brain be altered in any noticeable pattern. People who introduce the extremely powerful stimulant Adderrall to their systems are not only increasing their capacity for work, they are using a narcotic chemical to change the way their brain functions temporarily. That is, where a cup of coffee will help you to be more alert, a tablet of Ritalin makes your brain alert, one could even say forces you to be awake and focused on the task at hand. One could argue that this is a simple matter of semantics, of where one would draw the line between harmless substances that aid alertness, and drugs which unfairly alter performance. However, the difference between caffeine and Aderrall is much like the difference between eating a good meal before exercising and jamming a syringe full of adrenaline into your leg before a race. One is good preparation. The other is blatant cheating. There is no grey area as far as using stimulants designed to treat ADD as study “aids.” Anybody and everybody who uses these substances to accomplish their work is a cheater and a fraud. Not only for the simple reason that Adderrall and Ritalin are restricted narcotics, but because any sane person who had at least attempted to get their work done on time would have no need of such a crutch. Instead, those who choose to use these drugs feel they can use a cowardly shortcut to make the grade, much as professional meat heads like Mark McGwire and Barry Bonds use steroids to disguise the fact that they are actually giant pussies. Probably the people who most need to read this article are busy getting drunk and lubing up for initiation, but in any case, this practice should not go overlooked by the student body at large. People who are, in effect, academically doping are taking an unfair advantage and should be exposed wherever possible and subsequently stripped and flogged publicly on College Green. If the rest of us refuse to address the problem, we’re merely letting another herd of slackers slip past without doing their fair share. Andrew Pederson is a sophomore in the College. You can write to him at awl@sas. SAY THAT YOU LOVE ME THUY TRAN | SIMPLE TRUTHS WHY IS IT that people can want, so badly, what they know to be terribly emotionally unhealthy? The behavior is reminiscent of that of a child who cannot resist touching a hot pot, despite being well aware that it will burn him severely. One would think adults would know better, but the propensity to pursue things that will result in nothing but pain is alive in many people’s hearts when it comes to relationships. People are in love with “being in love.” For example, my friend Joe has been in love with Jane for over a year. Jane clearly told him months ago that she is not interested in a relationship, for she has recently parted ways with a boyfriend of three years. However, Joe continues to pursue Jane. As time swims by, he becomes more deluded. He clings to a thread of hope. He refuses to surrender to the irreversibility of an unrequited love. The truth is, “loving” Jane just gives him an illusive goal and fantasy. Pathetic, eh? Love and infatuations are distinctly different in more ways than one. Being caught in the whirlwind of fairytale romance is addictive, both psychologically and physically. It is like trippin’ after consuming magic mushrooms, which generally elicit a warm euphoric feeling. Scientific studies have shown the brain releases “feel-good” chemicals when a person experiences love, solely, to encourage the desire to court and reproduce. This stage of a relationship is one of the few times one’s body dupes its owner in order to satisfy the primitive instinct to perpetuate one’s genes in subsequent generations. Infatuation, however, doesn’t share the same biological processes and behaviors related to proliferation of genes. Infatuation, like love, begins with a spark of attraction. The physiological explanation would assert that the “spark” is actually an initial detection of another person’s unique pheromones that carry information about the person’s biological history, health, and lifestyle. It is at this point that infatuation and genuine love diverge from each other, with the former involving more self-generated images of the person of interest and the latter requiring more in-depth information about the person, such as values, goals, quirks, and character. To be infatuated re- quires the knowledge of none of those things. It needs only the initial attraction (pheromone compatibility) and can take flight to heights that seem to soar far higher than any real love could ever reach. From here, the illusion begins. Love involves the affairs of two people, while infatuation, only one. It takes one party to transform a mere stranger into “the one.” When infatuated with another, a person fuels the image of the other person with qualities that he seeks in the perfect partner and deliberately discards learned data about her that does not reinforce the image of the entity he has created. She escalates from mere mortal existence to near god-like status. Her every breath, word, and movement is interpreted according to his desires. Ignorance to the real person beneath the distorted veneer is even welcomed. Infatuation feels like love on acid, but unfortunately, the high is fleeting upon reality’s strike, just as a person crashes when coming down off any hallucinogen. While “flying,” the feelings are fervent, that one may very easily feel that there is no need to ascertain any real, substantive information about the other person and, yet, he/she can actually believe that love is the affect driving the desire. Unlike love, however, infatuation can be broken at a moment’s notice, such as a revelation of some sort, bad news, turn of events, a new interest. Love, on the other hand, is not readily broken. It is so secure and so much deeper than skin-level that it is often taken for granted, but never lost. It is self-generating, self-regulating, and self-renewing, whereas, infatuation requires a person’s constant conscious effort, feeding it with attention, encouragement, and reasons to persist. Disappointment in infatuation feels like a bandaid ripped off the most sensitive areas of the body, while disappointment in love feels like the process of a vital internal organ slowly failing. Losing a flame and losing a loved one are both painful, but the latter results in the the feeling of loss comparable to the experience of having to come to terms with a death, whereas the former is much like the feeling of humiliation from having one’s pride reduced to bits of nothingness. Picking oneself up after rejection from infatuation is a matter of dusting off the embarrassment and getting over the ego blow, whereas one may never fully recover from losing love, especially a first love. Thuy Tran is a junior in the College. You can write to her at thuytran@sas.
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It was as quiet as the gym prior to every Penn kid’s New Years Resolution. Yet, the PBC employees refused to let their previously indifferent customer use their computer for an instant to show
More informationThe Undergraduate Magazine - Dolphin Student Group Web Accounts
Continued on PAGE 3
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a genuinely good time was had by all; it has seen the stunning replacement of a site-o-saur with a new, truly interactive website; it has seen friendships flower; and it has seen First Call find it...
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