2009-3b-6

13

Upload: cnbam

Post on 22-Mar-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

2009 CNBAM Awards

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 2009-3b-6
Page 2: 2009-3b-6
Page 3: 2009-3b-6
Page 4: 2009-3b-6
Page 5: 2009-3b-6

Total Distribution: 15,000 12,000 inserted into First Day of Class

issue (8/21/08) distributed in nearly 100 locations on or around campus.

Plus, 3,000 distributed to residence halls and area restaurants

Total Distribution: 15,00012,000 inserted into First Day of Clas

•�Back Cover - $750• Inside Covers - $500• Full Page - $400•�1/2 Page - $200• 1/4 - Page $100

Publication Date: Aug. 21, 2008Deadline: July 18, 2008VALUE ADDED: Out & About Columbia will be available to all visitors of dailygamecock.com

Reach 32,961 membersof the Carolina community.

B k C $750

Reach 32,961 membersof the Carolina communityy.of the Carolina communityy

7.875”

10.8

75”

3.875” x 5”

7.875” x 5”

Out & About Columbia will be availto all visitors of dailygamecock.co

Joey Monts777.6567

Keisha Rice576.5979

Sarah ScarboroughAdvertising Manager

777.5064

Elena Bethmann777.3018

CON

TACT

IN

FO:

Out & About Columbia is a publication of the Office of Student Media at the

University of South Carolina.

Email artwork to: [email protected]

Ben Crane777.5095

Katie Hudson576.6189

Did you know...The Carolina community spends

$1,274,188 in a typical week dining out?

• 94% of undergraduates visit a

restaurant 3.9 times a week

• 95% of graduate students visit a

restaurant 4 times a week

• 93% of faculty & staff visit restaurants

3.7 times a week

The Carolina community has an annual disposable income of

$138 millionAdvertising in Student Media

publications works!

• 79% of our readers have gone to a restaurant and/or retail establishment after seeing an ad in The Daily Gamecock

Survey conducted spring 2007 by Newton Marketing & Research, Norman, Oklahoma. For more information about methodology, contact your sales representative.

Page 6: 2009-3b-6

Fall 2008 Special Issues Calendar

4015 Walnut Street • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6198Phone: (215) 898-6581 • Fax: (215) 898-2050 • E-mail: [email protected]

Welcome Back Issue Issue Date: Thursday, August 28 Deadline: Thursday, August 21

Distributed during move-in week — well before classes start and while Penn students have shopping, furnish-ing, and recreation on their minds. A great way to reach both returning students and new arrivals.

Football Preview Issue Date: Friday, September 19 Deadline: Friday, September 12

This complete pre-season guide is published the day before the Quakers’ 2008 season opener (vs Villanova). It previews the team, the competition, and the Quakers’ quest to win the Ivy League title.

Homecoming Issue Issue Date: Friday, October 31 Deadline: Wednesday, October 29

A Homecoming Weekend preview that reaches both the Penn commu-nity and returning alumni, covering the game and all of the weekend events. Published on Friday, the day before Homecoming.

Fall Dining Guide Issue Date: Wednesday, November 12 Deadline: Wednesday, November 5

A complete restaurant guide, including a directory of more than 800 establishments in the Philadelphia area. A comprehensive guide to dining and nightlife that many readers will keep and use all semester.

Basketball Preview Issue Date: Monday, November 17 Deadline: Monday, November 10

A pre-season guide, published just before the season-opening game, and a keepsake for fans. The Basketball Preview includes player profiles, the competition, schedules and much more, as the Quakers begin their quest to retain the Ivy League title. (date subject to change)

Final Exams Issue Issue Date: Tuesday, December 9 Deadline: Thursday, December 4

Distributed after fall term classes end, at the start of final exams week. This two-section, feature-packed issue is your best chance to reach Penn students as they get their holiday shopping finished before heading home.

Page 7: 2009-3b-6

Hungry for a slice of the Penn Market?

Reach them with The Daily Pennsylvanian’s

Fall Dining Out Guide

Information on ad rates and sizes is on the back of this flyer. To place your ad today, or to schedule an appointment with one of our advertising representatives, call our office at (215) 898-6581.

• Readers of The Daily Pennsylvanian spend over sixty million dollars each year at sit-down restaurants.

• The Daily Pennsylvanian’s print Dining Guides are published once each semester. The Online Dining Guide is up year round.

• The Fall Dining Guide is a keepsake issue, inserted into all 12,000 copies of The Daily Pennsylvanian and distributed to over 80 locations around Penn’s campus.

• The Online Dining Guide is the most comprehensive dining directory in Philadelphia, and contains reviews and ratings from students and faculty.

Issue Date: Wednesday, November 12 Ad Deadline: Wednesday, November 5 at 3:00 p.m.

Page 8: 2009-3b-6

Fall Dining Guide — Wednesday, November 12

Column Sizes

1 column wide (1.729”)

1” t

all

Sample Column Inch

ADVERTISING COLUMN WIDTHS Columns Inches Picas

1 1 3⁄4 or 1.729 10p4 2 3 9⁄16 or 3.558 21p4 3 5 3⁄8 or 5.388 32p4 4 7 1⁄4 or 7.217 43p4 5 9 1⁄16 or 9.046 54p

Ad Size InformationAd sizes are expressed as the number of columns wide by the number of inches tall (i.e. a “2 x 4” ad is 2 columns wide by 4 inches tall). Multiplying columns by inches gives the total number of column inches (i.e. 2 x 4 = 8 column inches). Multiplying column inches by the ad rate gives the cost of an ad.

Any size ad can be created according to these rules:

• Widths are in full columns (no halves or fractions).• Heights are in 1⁄2” increments, 1” minimum.• Minimum size: 2 column inches (1 x 2 or 2 x 1).

Guaranteed Position

For more information call (215) 898-6581

• Spot (Single) Color .................................. $120.00

• Process (Multiple/Full) Color .................... $160.00Regular deadlines apply for all color advertising. Press configuration may occasionally limit the location of color ads in an issue.

Volume contract customers will be credited with 10 contract inches used for every color ad (spot or full) placed during the contract period.

• Guaranteed Position ..................................... 10% of ad’s space cost ($40 minimum)

Guaranteed position only applies to specific pages or sections, not to the position on a page. Alternatively, advertisers may request ad position without a fee, but also without a guarantee of placement.

Position guarantees are sold on a first-come, first-served basis, based on availability. Not all position requests are possible due to layout and press configurations.

Color Rates

Common SizesAlthough many ad sizes are available, some of the most common sizes are:

Full Page ...............................................5 col. x 101⁄2”Half Page (Vertical) ................................3 col. x 81⁄2”Half Page (Horizontal) .............................5 col. x 51⁄2”Quarter Page (Vertical) ............................2 col. x 61⁄2”Quarter Page (Horizontal) ........................3 col. x 5”Eighth Page ..........................................2 col. x 31⁄2”

Sample Ad CostsThe diagrams below represent several common ad sizes. The prices shown are based upon the local open (one-time) ad rate, $11.90 per column inch. For customers with annual volume contract rates, multiply columns by inches by the applicable rate to determine the cost.

Full Page5 col. x 101⁄2”

$624.75

Half Page5 col. x 51⁄2”

$327.25

Half Page3 col. x 81⁄2”

$303.45

1⁄4 Page2 col. x 61⁄2”$154.70

Page 9: 2009-3b-6

The Daily Pennsylvanian’s FlyerboardPost your fl yer on The Daily Pennsylvanian’s

Web site for as little as $40 a week.

Polly KreismanEditor E: [email protected]

For more information or to begin your campaign on theLoop’s Flyerboard, visit www.getinloop.com and click on “Post Flyer” or contact:

www.getinloop.com

Advertising on Flyerboard is simple. You can begin reaching local residents in just 5 minutes. The Flyerboard’s rates are simple and flexible. You get to choose when your flyer will be displayed and whether or not your flyer will be shown full-time (permanent flyer) or rotating (part-time).

www.getinloop.com

Our Rates

Anyone can share your Flyer to spread the word

theLoop is the central hub of Southern Westchester County, NY. It is the #1 independent news site in Westchester, with over 13,000 visitors every month.

ROTATING$58/week

FuLL TImE$117/week

FLYERBOARD OVERVIEWLooking to publicize your local business or event? Meet the Flyerboard — a new, online, inexpensive “bulletin board” on DailyPennsylvanian.com. You can post a fl yer on the Flyerboard with details about your business or event to reach tens of thousands of residents in the Philadelphia area. The Flyerboard also makes it easy for anyone to share your Flyer with their friends.

Flyerboard on DailyPennsylvanian.com makes online advertising easy. Contact your advertising representative today about posting your display advertising online.

Click on

any fl

yer th

umbnail

to vie

w the fu

ll-size

fl yer.

For rates and other information, see the reverse side. To order your fl yer,

contact your advertising rep at

215-898-6581

Page 10: 2009-3b-6

The Daily Pennsylvanian’s FlyerboardRates and Information

WHY FLYERBOARD?EASY — Convert your display ad or fl yer into online advertising. We’ll do it for your or give you access to schedule and upload the fl yer yourself.

COST EFFECTIVE — The fl exible pricing system of the Flyerboard can be tailored to your individual budget. It allows you to advertise on the web sites of our partner publications regardless of the size of your advertising budget.

LOCAL — Flyerboard appears next to relevant local content on DailyPennsylvanian.com. Through Flyerboard, you are reaching local residents who are active in the community.

CREATE VIRAL CAMPAIGNS — Take the initial step of posting a fl yer and then sit back and let the readers do the marketing for you. Because we trust people we know, a referral by a friend is more effective than the most sophisticated marketing techniques.

ACCESSIBLE — Flyerboard enables advertisers who don’t have web sites to conduct an effective online outreach campaign. Flyerboard fl yers can contain all the information a user needs about your business or event.

FEATURES• Flyers can be easily shared between friends via email, social

networks, blogs, etc.

• Flyers can be enlarged within the web site to show additional information

• Flyers automatically include a map of your location

• Your Flyerboard can be set up for email responses from your customers for emailing coupons, receiving feedback, etc.

HOW FLYERBOARD WORKSEvery page a reader sees on Dailypennsylvanian.com displays a mini-Flyerboard with two fl yer thumbnails selected at random.* When a reader clicks on one of the thumbnails, it expands to display the full-size fl yer.

Readers can also click on the View All Button to see a screen which shows all of the fl yer thumbnails (as shown at right). By clicking on any fl yer, the view expands to show the full fl yer.

*For an additional fee, your fl yer can be set to display “full-time” — on every page of the web site.

RATES

PER WEEK PER MONTH

ROTATING $40 $120 buy 3 weeks, get 1 week free

FULL-TIME $100 $300 limited availability

Flyerboard will go live on Monday, November 10. To be part of the fi rst Flyerboard,

we need your order by Friday, November 7.

page of the web site.

Page 11: 2009-3b-6

PAGE B6 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2008 — FINALS ISSUE

THE DAILY PENNSY LVANIAN

S P O R T S

W. Lax enters final test perfect in Ivies

By NEIL FANAROFFDesign Editor

[email protected] clinched the Ivy title and an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament last Wednes-day against Princeton , the wom-en lacrosse team’s 12-4 win over Brown on Sunday may have seemed like icing on the cake.But the No. 3 Quakers (13-1, 7-0 Ivy) knew they still had a lot to play for.

By defeating the Bears (4-9, 1-4) , Penn clinched its first out-right Ivy title in program history and took one more step towards homefield advantage throughout the NCAAs.After failing to capitalize on a number of scoring opportunities in the first half, Penn went into the break with only a 3-0 lead. That they even had a lead at all came thanks to strong play by goalkeeper Sarah Waxman and the Quakers defense.

At halftime, however, head coach Karin Brower reemphasized the importance of the game.“I told them, ‘We haven’t earned it yet. We have to earn this title outright. We have to come out and play intense.’ Be-ing the team they are, they re-sponded to that.”

The Quakers’ offense duly broke out at the start of the sec-

ond half with four unanswered goals in the first seven minutes.“They were forcing things in the first half,” she said. “They just wanted to score. [In the sec-ond,] they were running through the plays and finishing.”With the game well in hand, Penn just about traded goals with the Bears for the rest of the con-test. The Red and Blue cleared the bench, opening the door for senior Caitlin McDonnell to score her first goal since fresh-man year. McDonnell was among ten goal scorers for Penn.

The Quakers now take a break for finals, resuming play on Sun-day at No. 10 Syracuse .Brower emphasized the dif-ficulty in playing a team like the Orange, noting their speed and physical style of play — along with the fact that they play in a dome.

The Quakers were able to take down Syracuse last year, though, in what Brower called a “big pro-gram-changer.” She credited it in part for the team’s successes this year.With a win, the Quakers will likely be granted a top-4 tourna-ment seed. If so, Penn would not have to leave campus to play a single game since the Final Four will be held at Franklin Field.There’s still a lot to play for.

M. Rowing can’t find stroke, falters again

By PARI HASHEMIStaff Writer

[email protected] season, it seems as though the men’s heavyweight crew team can’t help but settle for a second-place finish.The Quakers took second yet again this weekend in the Blackwell Cup against Yale and Columbia after the same result against Columbia and Princ-eton the previous time out.In the Blackwell Cup, the Varsity 8 finished second to the Elis, who came through in 5:22.9 . The Red and Blue clocked in at 5:32.0 , two seconds in front of Columbia .

However, the second Varsity 8 experienced more success, winning their second straight race with a 5:34.1 . Yale finished in 5:36.3 and Columbia glided through after them.The next action for the Red and Blue will take them to Worcester, Mass. for the EARC Sprints, hosted by the Classes of 1962 and 1992, on Sunday, May 13 .

The men’s lightweight row-ing team was also in action last weekend. The squad was crushed by Princeton and

Georgetown in the Wood-Ham-mond Trophy , with both the first and second varsity boats finishing last . A victory in this race has eluded Penn since 1978, while Princeton has won 50 times.Although the race was on the Schuylkill, the home-field ad-vantage did not seem to help the Quakers.The first varsity eight came through almost eight seconds behind first-place Georgetown. The Red and Blue clocked in at 5:43.0 .

The second varsity eight struggled even more by finish-ing almost 21 seconds behind the first place Princeton boat, which won in 5:44.3 .After a second- and first-place in the first and second varsity races, respectively , the Tigers walked away with the trophy for the second year in a row.

The only first-place finish for Penn came from the second freshman four, as they finished with a 6:46.4 , almost 11 seconds ahead of Georgetown.The next competition the Quakers will see is on May 6 against Navy in the Callow Cup .

Both Heavy and Lightweight fail to take home cup for the third straight weekend

Enjoy this study break, courtesy of:

ACROSS1 Real name of a

Disney titlecharacter

6 Small drawing?10 15-ml unit14 Broadcasting15 Falls into decline17 With the help of18 Providers of

tip-offs?19 Laurel and

Hardy film withthe line “Well,here’s anothernice messyou’ve gottenme into!”

21 Middle-earthresident

22 Gene ___, 1932U.S. and BritishOpen champ

23 Nikola Tesla, forone

25 Information forthe record

30 Becomes anissue

32 Total33 Rock group

whose membersall assumed thesame last name,with “the”

35 Flip alternative37 Eclipses, to

some38 At the back39 Headmaster’s

faculty42 “I must have

missed the ___”45 Concern for a

hostess47 Part of a certain

college course48 Desserts from

the South53 Wild-haired

stock character54 One of the

TravelingWilburys

55 Prepared tostrike, perhaps

56 Coat hangers-on57 Bristle (with)

58 Outfit59 Lets fly

DOWN1 Pickles2 It’s often

underfoot3 “Big iron,” in

hacker slang4 Plastic

containers5 Greek city that

remainedneutral duringthe PersianWars

6 Grocery stores7 What many

Latter-daySaints are

8 Architecturalelement oftendecorated withbas-reliefs

9 Computerdesktop icon

10 Radio’s “___American Life”

11 Ill will12 Amphilochus, in

Greek myth13 Sound from a

test cheater, say16 Divisions of a

mark20 Made-up24 Unbroken mount26 Witching hour

follower27 Laundry that’s

often food-stained

28 “Strange Magic”band, for short

29 Designing31 Demand

33 Retinal cell34 Any of the Three

Musketeers35 Narrow-bladed

weapons36 “___ we all?”38 Said the same40 ___ AC

(pharmacypurchase)

41 “Truthful wordsare notbeautiful;beautiful wordsare not truthful”espouser

43 Femalebacchanalian

44 Take hold of, ina way

46 Follows acourse

48 Scuzz49 Flag50 Warhol actress

Sedgwick51 Birthplace of

Herod the Great52 One of Carter’s

charges, on TV

Puzzle by Patrick Berry

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 a minute; or, with acredit card, 1-800-814-5554.Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sundaycrosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS.Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($34.95 a year).Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for youngsolvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1314

15 1617

18

1920

21 22

23 24 2526 27 28 29

30 3132

33 3435 36

3738

3940 41

42 43 4445

46 4748 49 50 51

5253

5455

5657

5859

Across1 Poodle sounds5 Aspirin target9 Hymn

accompanier14 *Angler’s float15 Terrifying dino16 *Bush’s 2004

foe17 Jazz singer

Anita18 Café au ___19 Assists, three-pointers,

turnovers, etc.20 N.F.L. Hall-of-

Famer Ford21 Not systematic23 ___ dixit24 *1960’s RichardChamberlain

TV role27 Tease, with

“on”28 Nap under a

sombrero

31 *Ava Gardner’sco-star in “TheSun AlsoRises”

37 Resistance unit38 Wished

otherwise39 Will Smith

biopic, 200140 Fateful March

day41 Little devil42 *Deli request46 Nursery rhyme

opening48 Miner’s find49 What the

answers to theseven starredclues all are orcontain

56 Persian sprite58 Harangue59 590, to Caesar60 Partner of

dangerous62 Comic actor

Jacques63 Cry of fright

64 *Writer ___Boothe Luce

65 Tucson-to-NewOrleans route66 *Quilt filling67 It may be

perfect68 Actress Garr of“Mr. Mom”69 Eye sore

Down1 “It’ll be ___ dayin hell …”2 Bull-riding

event3 Pre-euro

money4 Shade of blue5 Not in custody6 Model T feature7 Storied Swiss

miss8 Praise highly9 Approves10 Quit for good,

jobwise11 Welch’s

product12 Kennedy

Center focus,with “the”

13 Wall Streetinits.

21 Equine color22 Store stock:

Abbr.25 Trampled26 Publicize29 ___ Might Be

Giants (rockgroup)

30 Schoolyardretort

31 “Lou Grant”newspaper,with “the”

32 Arizona city33 Tool kit carrier34 Buddy35 Bygone36 Puns and such40 “___ a traveler…”:

“Ozymandias”42 “Bali ___”43 Malt-drying kiln

44 Erich Weiss, onstage45 Fish-eating

eagle47 Prickly plants50 Cry to the band51 Fruit-packing

unit52 Western flick53 Birdbrain

54 Multilane rte.55 Noisy public

fight56 Treaty57 Author ___

StanleyGardner

61 Actress Ruby63 Football gains

or losses: Abbr.

Puzzle by Holden Baker

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 a minute; or, with acredit card, 1-800-814-5554.Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sundaycrosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS.Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($34.95 a year).Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for youngsolvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

Across1 Enlighten6 A couple CBS

spinoffs10 1972 Broadway

musical14 Metal giant15 Evict16 Area17 Surface again,

as a road18 Pirate or Padre,

briefly19 Camera feature20 Barracks

artwork,perhaps

22 River to theLigurian Sea

23 Keg necessity24 “… ___ he

drove out ofsight”

25 ___ St. Louis,Ill.

27 Preen29 Greek peak

33 Vice presidentafter Hubert

36 Patient wife ofSir Geraint

38 Action to anante

39 Gain ___40 French artist

Odilon ___42 Grape for

winemaking43 Single-dish meal45 Broad valley46 See 21-Down47 Artery inserts49 Offspring51 Mexican mouse

catcher53 Medical

procedure, inbrief

54 “Wheel ofFortune” option

57 Animal withstriped legs

60 Editorial

63 It gets bigger atnight

64 “Hold yourhorses!”

65 Idiots66 Europe/Asia

border river67 Suffix with

launder68 Leaning69 Brownback and

Obama, e.g.:Abbr.

70 Rick with the1976 #1 hit“Disco Duck”

71 Yegg’s targets

Down1 Mastodon trap2 “Mefistofele”

soprano3 Misbehave4 Pen5 More pleased6 Treated with

disdain7 Enterprise

crewman8 Rhone feeder9 Many a webcast10 Mushroom, for

one11 Unfortunate12 Nevada’s state

tree13 Disney fish21 Colonial figure

with 46-Across26 Poker champion

Ungar27 Self-medicating

excessively28 March 14, to

mathematicians

30 Book part31 Powder, e.g.32 007 and others:

Abbr.33 Drains34 Stove feature35 Feet per

second, e.g.37 Italian range

41 Prefix withsurgery

44 Captain’sannouncement,for short

48 Tucked away50 Stealthy fighters52 Sedative54 Letter feature55 Jam

56 Settles in57 Symphony or

sonata58 Japanese city

bombed in W.W.II

59 Beelike61 Evening, in ads62 Religious

artwork

Puzzle by Peter A. Collins

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 a minute; or, with acredit card, 1-800-814-5554.Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sundaycrosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS.Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($34.95 a year).Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for youngsolvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

Across1 More eccentric6 “Moby-Dick”

captain10 Reaction to a

knee-slapper14 Old pal15 Food that may

come in smallcubes

16 Giant-screenfilm venue

17 Sign for aperson intherapy?

20 ___, due, tre …21 Abominable

Snowman22 Turtle’s

covering23 Like college

aptitude tests,for manystudents

26 Highway28 Compete in a

slalom29 Moist

31 Lawyer: Abbr.35 Together38 “Well, then …”40 By way of41 Sign for a

recoveringalcoholic?

43 Annoy44 Completely

cover46 “Hmmm …”48 Japanese drink49 Numbered

hwys.51 Faux ___52 Perlman of

“Cheers”54 Comedian’s

gimmick58 Candidate

Stevenson of’52 and ’56

61 Level63 Rhetorical

question,possibly

64 Sign for agangster?

68 Fork prong69 Washington

daily70 ___ Ste. Marie,Mich.71 Went fast72 Aussie jumpers73 ___ Rose Lee

Down1 Happen2 Pilotless aircraft3 Sign for a jury

selector?4 Suffix with differ5 Seedy loaf6 Eventgoer7 Party thrower8 Uphold9 Prickly seed

cover10 Religious time11 French

girlfriend12 Room

connector13 Skating jump18 Science guy

Bill19 Cool ___

cucumber24 Letters before

an alias25 Twists to be

worked out27 Eye-catching

designs30 Enough32 Sign for a

sunbather?33 Went fast34 Oxen connector35 Currier and ___36 Companion of

the Pinta andSanta Maria

37 PlowmakerJohn

39 Pretty maidenof Greek myth

42 Mousse andmud pie

45 Exposed tooxygen

47 Consume50 Skin art

53 Go quickly55 ___-Magnon56 They’re stirred

in the fire57 Meower58 Many urban

homes: Abbr.59 Annoyance

from a faucet

60 “The ___Ranger”

62 In that case65 E.M.T.’s skill66 “No ___”

(Chinese menunotation)67 It’s pitched witha pitchfork

Puzzle by Kevin Der

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.20 a minute; or, with acredit card, 1-800-814-5554.Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sundaycrosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS.Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($34.95 a year).Share tips: nytimes.com/puzzleforum. Crosswords for youngsolvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

y1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1314

1516

1718

1920

2122

23 24 25 26 27

28 29 30 31 32 33 3435 36 37 38 3940 41 42 4344 45 46 4748

49 50 51

52 53 54 55 56 5758 59 60 61 62

6364

6566 67

6869

7071

7273

——— For the answers to these puzzles, see page A3 ———

The 60-Second Lecture Series

Hungry for more? View past lectures online at www.sas.upenn.edu/events

KNOWLEDGE FOR LUNCH

HAVE A SOUND BITE OF

APRIL 25TH AT NOON, LOCUST WALK AND 37TH STREETCamille Zubrinsky CharlesAssociate Professor of SociologyAn Open Letter to Mister Rogers

Join College Dean Dennis DeTurck on the plaza at Locust Walk and 37th Street. Hear faculty from the School of Arts and Sciences serve up a minute’s worth of knowledge and opinion, followed by old-time melodies from The Locust Valley String Band and some sweet treats.RAIN LOCATION: HOUSTON HALL

• To All Our CustomersGOOD LUCK WITH EXAMS

• To All Our Really Good CustomersTAKE PASS-FAIL

~ All your friends at Smoke’s

208 S. 40th Street • 215-222-0770

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2007 — FINALS ISSUE PAGE A3THE DAILY PENNSY LVANIAN N E W S

From Locust Walk to daily doubles

By JON MEZAStaff Writer

[email protected]

The Penn student who ap-peared on Jeop-a r d y! C ol lege Championship in 2007.

Who is Kaitlin Welborn ?

T he Col lege sophomore will vie for $100,000 as part of the Jeopardy! Col-lege Champion-ship, airing from April 30 through May 11.

Welborn trav-eled to the University of South-ern California last weekend to compete against 14 other col-lege students from universities around the country, including Harvard, Yale and Stanford universities.

“Playing the game at home

is a lot different from compet-ing with thousands of people watching,” Welborn said.

The Tampa, Fla., native took an online test in the fall along with 4,000 other students, scor-ing high enough to be one of 350 invited to New York for a fi-nal-round interview and mock game.

“I was shocked and excited,” College sophomore Brittany Jackson said of her reaction to finding out that Welborn would butt heads with Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek .

A French major, Welborn said that, unfortunately, her studies at Penn didn’t prove to be much help during the show.

“The questions they ask are very different from what you learn in school,” she said.

Welborn said that she has been a fan of the show for most of her life, calling it a “bright spot in the media,” and that

she has become an avid viewer since snagging a spot on the show.

“I pretty much have been watching the show everyday in order to prepare,” she said.

Welborn added that meeting Trebek was a highlight of the experience.

“Alex Trebek complimented me on my shoes,” she noted.

Welborn said getting to know the other contestants was an-other bright spot of the experi-ence.

She said she did not expect them to be fascinating people, but, after spending time with them during the taping, she found that they all “really in-teresting” and “have lives just like the rest of us.”

They “were not dull and bor-ing like the Jeopardy! stereo-type,” she said.

Due to contractual obliga-tions, she could not say how much money she won but said that every contestant won at least $5,000.

Welborn’s f irst-round epi-sode will air May 3.

College sophomore to appear on ‘Jeopardy! College Championship;’ grand prize of $100,000

WelbornCollege sophomore will appear on college round of ‘Jeopardy!’

TheftApr. 18 — A female student, 18,

reported that she left her laptop unattended in the bathroom at Houston Hall at about 9:00 p.m. and returned to find it had been stolen.

Apr. 18 — A male student, 27, reported that his bicycle, which was secured by a wire lock, was taken from the Leidy Labora-tory, located at 3740 Hamilton Walk, at about 5:10 p.m.

Apr. 17 — A male student, 20, reported that he fell asleep in Harrison College House at about 1:00 p.m. and found his wallet was missing when he woke up. The wallet was later recovered but with money missing.

Apr. 17 — A female student, 29, reported that her wallet was taken from a lab in the Evans Building, located at 4001 Spruce St., at about 11:50 a.m.

Apr. 16 — A man unaffiliated with the University reported that an unknown person removed an

iPod and radio adapter from her secured vehicle, parked on the 4000 block of Spruce Street, at about 2:30 p.m.

Apr. 16 — A 64-year-old man unaffiliated with the University reported that an unknown per-son took items of unknown value from the Natural Shoe store on the 200 block of 40th Street with-out paying at about 8:15 p.m.

Apr. 13 — A 54-year-old man unaffiliated with the University reported that his secured bicycle was stolen from the porch of a house on St. Mark’s Square at about 9.50 a.m.

BurglaryApr. 15 — A male student, 20,

reported that someone broke into his apartment on the 4000 block of Spruce Street and re-moved several items, including a laptop computer worth about $2,000.

Apr. 13 — A male staff mem-ber, 54, reported that a rock was thrown at an office window and a

door forced open at Presbyterian Hospital, located at 51 N. 39th St., at about 7:30 a.m. Several items were removed, including two lap-tops worth roughly $2,200.

Disorderly ConductApr. 15 – Todd Lockwood, 30, of

the 7000 block of Henry Avenue, was arrested after allegedly re-fusing to leave the area of the 3600 block of Market Street and becoming aggressive with police officers at about 9:20 p.m.

The suspect later allegedly attempted to escape from Penn Police headquarters at 4040 Chestnut St., breaking the han-dle on his cell door.

Apr. 14 — Kenneth Nwannunu, a College student, was cited for yelling profanities at police on the 4000 block of Spruce Street who were responding to a com-plaint about loud music at about 3:40 a.m.

All information was provided by the Division of Public Safety.

— Joe Vester

CRIME LOG

Sudoku answers from page B13

215-898-7595www.upenn.edu/bookstore

Cash in Your Hands. Right Now.We’ll buy your textbooks for up to

50% of our selling price. Come on in.

215-898-7595www.upenn.edu/bookstore

215-898-7595www.upenn.edu/bookstore

Get Your Money Back.We’ll buy your textbooks

for up to 50% of our selling price. Cash. In your hand. Now.

215-898-7595www.upenn.edu/bookstore

Turnabout is Fair Play.The Penn Bookstore - Up to 50% ofour selling price for your textbooks.

This time sell the books to us.

Become an Egg Donorand assist an infertile couple

to achieve their dreamsof having a child!

earn $8,000Women ages 21-31 needed

Contact Our Donor Hotline 1-866-50-DONORwww.sbivf.com

94 Old Short Hills Rd, Suite 403E, Livingston, NJ 07039

Crossword Answers from page B6

S I M B A P U F F T B S PO N A I R A T R O P H I E SU S I N G N A I L F I L E SS O N S O F T H E D E S E R TE L F S A R A Z E NS E R B L I N E R N O T E S

A R I S E S I N A L LR A M O N E S P A G E B O YO M E N S D O R S A LD I S C I P L I N E M E M O

S E A T I N G L A BS W E E T P O T A T O P I E SM A D D O C T O R L Y N N EU N I O N I Z E D F L E A ST E E M D U D S S E N D S

T E A C H C S I S P NA L C O A O U S T Z O N ER E T O P N L E R Z O O M

N U P C T U R E A R N OT A P E R E E A S T

P R I M P M T O S S AS R O E N I D U P N GA L A P R E D O N N O TP O T E D A L E N E W SS T E N T S Y O U N G

G A T O M R I S NO K A O N I O N E C EP U L W A I T J E R K SU R A L E T T E A T I L TS E N S D E E S S A F E S

Don’t forget your 2007-08 Meal Plans!

Don’t forget your 2007-08 Meal Plans!

Don’t forget your 2007-08 Meal Plans!

Don’t forget your 2007-08 Meal Plans!

The Daily Pennsylvanian’s Thanksgiving Puzzle Promotion

Looking for something to do on the train or plane as they head off for the Thanksgiving break, Penn Students will work on the Mega Sudoku and NYT Crossword puzzles. Each ad contains four puzzles.

There are four sponsorship opportunities available:

Crossword Puzzle Crosswords Answer Key

Sudoku PuzzleSudoku Answer Key

Issue Date: Wednesday, November 26

Deadline: Sponsorship ads are sold on a fi rst come, fi rst served basis, since only 4 spots are available. All artwork is due by Friday, November 21 at 3pm.

Sizes: The puzzle ads are 6 columns wide by 14” tall. The Answer Key ads are 3 columns wide by 10.5” tall.

Prices: Puzzles ads are $700 Answer Key ads are $350

Artwork: Just your company logo and one line of text

25, 2008 — FINALS ISSUE

THE DAILY PENNSY LVANIAN

S P O R T S

W. Lax enters final test perfect in Ivies

By NEIL FANAROFFDesign Editor

[email protected] clinched the Ivy title and an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament last Wednes-day against Princeton , the wom-en lacrosse team’s 12-4 win over Brown on Sunday may have seemed like icing on the cake.But the No. 3 Quakers (13-1, 7-0 Ivy) knew they still had a lot to play for.

By defeating the Bears (4-9, 1-4) , Penn clinched its first out-right Ivy title in program history and took one more step towards homefield advantage throughout the NCAAs.After failing to capitalize on a number of scoring opportunities in the first half, Penn went into the break with only a 3-0 lead. That they even had a lead at all came thanks to strong play by goalkeeper Sarah Waxman and the Quakers defense.

At halftime, however, head coach Karin Brower reemphasized the importance of the game.“I told them, ‘We haven’t earned it yet. We have to earn this title outright. We have to come out and play intense.’ Be-ing the team they are, they re-sponded to that.”

The Quakers’ offense duly broke out at the start of the sec-

ond half with four unanswered goals in the first seven minutes.“They were forcing things in the first half,” she said. “They just wanted to score. [In the sec-ond,] they were running through the plays and finishing.”With the game well in hand, Penn just about traded goals with the Bears for the rest of the con-test. The Red and Blue cleared the bench, opening the door for senior Caitlin McDonnell to score her first goal since fresh-man year. McDonnell was among ten goal scorers for Penn.

The Quakers now take a break for finals, resuming play on Sun-day at No. 10 Syracuse .Brower emphasized the dif-ficulty in playing a team like the Orange, noting their speed and physical style of play — along with the fact that they play in a dome.

The Quakers were able to take down Syracuse last year, though, in what Brower called a “big pro-gram-changer.” She credited it in part for the team’s successes this year.With a win, the Quakers will likely be granted a top-4 tourna-ment seed. If so, Penn would not have to leave campus to play a single game since the Final Four will be held at Franklin Field.There’s still a lot to play for.

M. Rowing can’t find stroke, falters again

By PARI HASHEMIStaff Writer

[email protected] season, it seems as though the men’s heavyweight crew team can’t help but settle for a second-place finish.The Quakers took second yet again this weekend in the Blackwell Cup against Yale and Columbia after the same result against Columbia and Princ-eton the previous time out.In the Blackwell Cup, the Varsity 8 finished second to the Elis, who came through in 5:22.9 . The Red and Blue clocked in at 5:32.0 , two seconds in front of Columbia .

However, the second Varsity 8 experienced more success, winning their second straight race with a 5:34.1 . Yale finished in 5:36.3 and Columbia glided through after them.The next action for the Red and Blue will take them to Worcester, Mass. for the EARC Sprints, hosted by the Classes of 1962 and 1992, on Sunday, May 13 .

The men’s lightweight row-ing team was also in action last weekend. The squad was crushed by Princeton and

Georgetown in the Wood-Ham-mond Trophy , with both the first and second varsity boats finishing last . A victory in this race has eluded Penn since 1978, while Princeton has won 50 times.Although the race was on the Schuylkill, the home-field ad-vantage did not seem to help the Quakers.The first varsity eight came through almost eight seconds behind first-place Georgetown. The Red and Blue clocked in at 5:43.0 .

The second varsity eight struggled even more by finish-ing almost 21 seconds behind the first place Princeton boat, which won in 5:44.3 .After a second- and first-place in the first and second varsity races, respectively , the Tigers walked away with the trophy for the second year in a row.

The only first-place finish for Penn came from the second freshman four, as they finished with a 6:46.4 , almost 11 seconds ahead of Georgetown.The next competition the Quakers will see is on May 6 against Navy in the Callow Cup .

Both Heavy and Lightweight fail to take home cup for the third straight weekend

Enjoy this study break, courtesy of:

The 60-Second Lecture Series

www.sas.upenn.edu/events

KNOWLEDGE FOR LUNCHKNOWLEDGE FOR LUNCHKNOWLEDGE FOR LUNCH

HAVE A SOUND BITE OF

AT NOON, LOCUST WALK AND 37TH STREETCamille Zubrinsky Charles

Join College Dean Dennis DeTurck on the plaza at Locust Walk and 37th Street. Hear faculty from the School of Arts and Sciences serve up a minute’s worth of knowledge and opinion, followed by old-time melodies from The Locust Valley String Band and some sweet treats.

• To All Our Customers

LUCK WITH EXAMS• To All Our Really Good Customers

TAKETAKET PASSPASSP -FAIL

~ All your friends at Smoke’s

208 S. 40th Street • 215-222-0770

T E A C H C S I ST E A C H C S I ST E A C H C S I ST E A C H C S I S P NA L C O A O U S T Z O N EA L C O A O U S T Z O N EA L C O A O U S T Z O N EA L C O A O U S T Z O N ER E T O P N L E R Z O O MR E T O P N L E R Z O O MR E T O P N L E R Z O O MR E T O P N L E R Z O O M

N U PN U P C T U R E A R N OC T U R E A R N OC T U R E A R N OC T U R E A R N OT A P E R E E A S TT A P E R E E A S TT A P E R E E A S TT A P E R E E A S T

P R I M P M T O S S AP R I M P M T O S S AP R I M P M T O S S AP R I M P M T O S S AS R O E N I D U PR O E N I D U PR O E N I D U PR O E N I D U P N GN GA L A P R E D O NA L A P R E D O NA L A P R E D O NA L A P R E D O N N O TN O TP O TP O T E D A L E N E W SE D A L E N E W SE D A L E N E W SE D A L E N E W SS T E N T S Y O U N GS T E N T S Y O U N GS T E N T S Y O U N GS T E N T S Y O U N G

G A T O M R I SG A T O M R I SG A T O M R I SG A T O M R I S NO K AO K A O N I O NN I O N E C EE C EP UP U L W A I T J E R K SL W A I T J E R K SL W A I T J E R K SL W A I T J E R K SU R A L E T T E A T I L TU R A L E T T E A T I L TU R A L E T T E A T I L TU R A L E T T E A T I L TS E N S D E E S S A F E SS E N S D E E S S A F E SS E N S D E E S S A F E SS E N S D E E S S A F E S

Don’t forget your 2007-08 Meal Plans!

Don’t forget your 2007-08 Meal Plans!

Don’t forget your 2007-08 Meal Plans!

Looking for something to do on the train or plane as they head off for the Thanksgiving break, Penn Students will work on the Mega Sudoku and NYT Crossword puzzles. Each ad contains four puzzles.

Issue Date: November 26

Deadline:sold on a fi rst come, fi rst served basis, since only 4 spots are

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2008 FINALS ISSUE PAGE B13

THE DAILY PENNSY LVANIAN

S P O R T S

Princeton goes to the Thompson well for hire

By SEBASTIEN ANGEL

Sports Editor

[email protected]

Princeton athletic director

Gary Walters addressed an easy

question at Monday’s press con-

ference, but didn’t tackle a much

harder one.The simple question — who

will be the Tigers’ next men’s

basketball coach? — had already

been answered last Thursday,

when Princeton put out an early

announcement.

The hard one — why Sydney

Johnson ? — may still have left

some Princeton fans scratching

their heads.In some ways, a 32-year-old

third assistant with only three

years of collegiate coaching ex-

perience was a puzzling hire for

a top Ivy League program — es-

pecially considering that the Ti-

gers had hired Joe Scott , then

one of the hottest commodities

around, away from Air Force

three years ago.

But on Monday, Walters and

other optimists preferred to

emphasize the positives. In

Johnson, they have a heralded

alumnus, a coach who’s helped

take a team to the Final Four,

and an adherent to the trea-

sured Princeton system.

“I have watched what [George-

town coach John] Thompson and

[former Princeton coach Pete]

Carril have done here. I’ve got

my notebooks,” Johnson said. “I

hope everything I’ve seen can

be mixed in.”And what Johnson lacks in

college coaching experience,

Tigers fans will hope he makes

up for with what Walters called

a “distinguished resume.”

The 1997 graduate was an Ivy

League Player of the Year and

the only three-year captain in

Princeton’s history.

He captained the 1996 team

that beat Penn in the Ivy League

playoff before upsetting UCLA

in the NCAA Tournament in

Carril’s last season with the Ti-

gers.He would later go on to play

successfully for seven years in

the Spanish and Italian profes-

sional leagues, winning a cham-

pionship with Siena in Italy’s

Serie A.So even though a slam-dunk

candidate in the model of former

Tigers and current Northwest-

ern coach Bill Carmody wasn’t

available, Walters looked happy

with his most recent hire. And

it is perhaps the one that will

perhaps define his legacy at Old

Nassau.“In my 13 years … we’ve con-

ducted a lot of searches at the

university,” Walters said. “I can’t

remember one search where the

quality and depth of candidates

was as good as this.”

That search was also rumored

to include such names as cur-

rent Brown coach Craig Robin-

son and Marist head man Matt

Brady .In front of Johnson now lies

the challenge of revitalizing a

team that sank to the bottom of

the Ivies under Scott. The Tigers

notched only two Ancient Eight

victories last season and went

11-17 overall.

“I love our pieces, I love what

we have in our locker room,” he

said. “At the end of the day, we

are Princeton basketball, and

they understand that.”

Johnson, for his part, couldn’t

wait to get started; a few hours

after the noon press conference,

he said, he would have his first

workout with his new team.

Last year, that squad stum-

bled to its most embarrassing

year in program history.

Star t ing early cer ta in ly

couldn’t hurt.

Courtesy The Daily Princetonian

Sydney Johnson, shown during his first press conference as Princeton’s

basketball coach, will try to lead the Tigers back to prominence.

Hoyas’ Johnson returns to struggling alma

mater after just three seasons in coaching

Enjoy this study break, courtesy of:

Sudoku By The Mepham GroupSudoku By The Mepham Group

Sudoku By The Mepham GroupSudoku By The Mepham Group

BEIGE WALNUT PINE SPRUCE SANSOM

4043 WALNUT STREETPHILADELPHIA, PA 19104

[email protected]

www.campusapts.com

BEIGE WALNUT PINE SPRUCE SANSOMBEIGE WALNUT PINE SPRUCE SANSOM

BEIGE WALNUT PINE SPRUCE SANSOMBEIGE WALNUT PINE SPRUCE SANSOM

—— For the answers to these puzzles, see page A3 ——

Moving...

Man with a box truck

(610) 623 - 2071

[email protected]

Where will you find...

VIDEO LIBRARY4040 Locust Street (215) 387-5440

safe, inexpensive

fast-acting, reliable

relief from stress

for about 90 minutes?

Page 12: 2009-3b-6

And now you have the once-in-a-lifetime chance to put your baby’s picture —and your personal greeting — in The Daily Pennsylvanian’s keepsakeGraduation Issue. To place your Graduation wish, just follow these simple steps:

✄--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The Daily Pennsylvanian Graduation Goodbyes Order Form

Your Name ____________________________

Your Address __________________________

____________________________________

Your Email ____________________________

Your Phone Number _____________________

❏ $45 Check EnclosedMake checks payable to The Daily Pennsylvanian

❏ Charge my: Visa / MasterCard / Am. Express

Credit Card No._______________________

Exp. Date___________ SEC:____________

Signature ___________________________

Your Message:(Please do not exceed 20 words and please print clearly)

_____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________

Orders must be received by April 18, 2008

The Daily Pennsylvanian

Attn: Graduation Goodbyes

4015 Walnut Street

Philadelphia, PA 19104

(215) 898-6581

Student’sFull Name _____________________________

SAMPLE SENIOR MESSAGE

(actual size)

Upload pictures, submit messages, and pay allin one simple step online at:

www.dailypennsylvanian.com/gradgoodbyes

Instructions can be found on the websiteOR

Send items by mail by completing andsubmitting all of the information below.

Remember: A self-addressed stamped envelopeMUST be enclosed if you would like your photoreturned.

All orders must be received by April 18.

Youris Graduating!

David John Graham Jr.

David,We are so proudof you. You’llmake anexcellent doctor.

Love, Mom & Dad

For office use only:

❏ ENT

❏ TYP

❏ PR

*

Page 13: 2009-3b-6

Your namehere.

Become their brand.Become their brand.TECH FUNDAMENTALSTECH FUNDAMENTALS '08Special Section

Be one of the first to welcome all new Hokies to the area. This special section of theCollegiate Times will be distributed to incoming freshmen, transfer students, graduatestudents, faculty and their families at orientation. It is the best way to introduce yourselfto your new customers.

Deadline: April 28, 2008

Rates: Local $9.61 | University $8.65 | National $13.97

618 North Main StreetBlacksburg, VA 24060540.961.9868