Thursday, November 5, 1998 - The Behrend College Beacon Page 8 - Website of the week By Mike Coursey Staff Writer Many people already know that shopping on the internet is gaining popularity. But shopping online for a :ar? There are a few sites that allow aet surfers to do just that. 'lTtese sites also offer insurance rates, blue book values of one’s car, and other useful information. Two of the major websites that buy, sell and trade autos are Autobytel.com and Autotrader. One of the many useful tools of these websites is a feature that allows people to track down the car they want in their general vicinity, or move the search to varying degrees. Here’s an example: if one U'anted a 1964 Ford Mustang, and wanted to pay between $5,000 and $ 15,000 dollars, he or she could search for a particular car to suit he Beacon will be featuring a different website every keek ACROSS - “ 1 Lovers’ quarrel 5 Hosts 11 Spoil 14 Something to think about 15 Peninsula near Singapore 16 Issue a pink slip 17 Used 19 Soft metal 20 Hamlin TV series 21 Prudent 22 Grow older 25 Kick up a fuss 29 Director Howard 30 Not Unusual” 31 Actor George 34 Mongrel 35 Get the point 36 Twelve-year-old 37 Excuse 39 Marx Brother 40 Announce 43 Put two and two together 45 Lawn covering 46 Alternative fuel 47 Zodiac sign 48 Poem of praise 49 Give wrong instructions 51 Ran first 52 Impersonator 54 Vicinities 56 2,000 pounds 57 Pale dry sherry 63 Third of an inning 64 Neglect 65 “Vissi d’arte,” e.g. 66 “ Miniver” 67 Nubby wools 68 Sugar source DOWN 1 Comic Conway 2 Neighbor of Mont. 3 Boggy ground 4 Come up short 5 Copy 6 Mild depression 7 Feline weapons 8 Take in food 9 Scope out 10 Depressed him or her. In addition, one could search for a car being sold in his or her local area. This process enables the consum ers to have some leverage when they approach a car salesman. They can compare the prices from the dealer ship with prices on the web. Among the other services offered are loan packages, direct links to the major auto manufacturers and many other conveniences The vehicles described usually come with a color photograph, and the dealership’s or owner’s name. The price is sometimes included. This may help people out when they are trying to find out the blue book value of their cars before they think of trading it in. Car ''X shopping \ © 1998 Tribune Media Services, Inc All rights reserved. Hollywood heartthrob Rotation line Clair or Coty Some Frenchmen Breadth Roofed passageway Singer Robert Fertilizers, e.g. Mind-reading letters Motor vehicle Based on incidental observations Fall back Bamboozled Founder of the Republican Party Five-and-a-half yards Actor Wallach Tipped off Subterfuges Mountain 23 24 26 27 28 32 33 38 42 43 44 50 Crimes of the Heart to open tonight By Valerie Trost staff w riter Tonight is opening night lor the Penn State Behrend Studio Theatre and their produetion. Crimes of the Heart by Beth Henley. The play is set to start running tonight. November 6, 7. 10, 11. 12. 13, and 14. at «:()() PM. and November 8 and 15 at 2:30 PM. Direetor Tony Elliot and east held a sneak preview Tuesday, and I have to say that this Pulitzer Prize winning eon- temporary production is just about the most pitch black comedy 1 have ever seen on stage File play looks into the lives of three Magrath sis ters, who find themselves once again reunited in their home town of Ha/elhurst. Mississippi. The set throughout the entire play is in the kitchen of their home, which is the center of insanity and human chaos to these three sisters. Not to mention that with out a doubt the kitchen is the most central room in any traditional southern Lenny, the oldest sister (played by Jamie Lojewski, 03 Liberal Arts), is personally celebrating her 3()th birth day (because just about everyone for gets) without a love interest, a "shrunken ovary." a pet horse that just got struck by lightning, and by sleep ing on a cot right in the kitchen. Lenny tries to act as the glue holding the three sisters together and tends to be seen as the most stable sister. division Bomb type Rain cats and dogs Substantial chunk Astern Cut the greens 52 53 55 57 58 Features Jamie Lojewski, Nadia Drozda, and Amanda Piper play the Magrath sisters in the fall production of Crimes of the Heart 11/5/98 59 Mine vein 60 You Lonesome Tonight?" Conk out Single cereal grain 61 62 Meg, the middle sister (played by up with some incriminating photo- “poor old eat" in the cellar, and you Amanda Pieper, 01 DUS), has just re- graphs of Babe and her affair with a have what the Magrath sisters call a turned home after she escaped town for a singing career but ended up working for a dog food company, which has sent her to a stay in the psychiatric ward. She is described more than once as "cheap Christmas trash," and has sup posedly left one man crippled. She drinks and smokes cigarettes and is both envied and adored by the other two. Babe, the youngest sister (played by Nadia Dro/.da, 01, DUS) is perhaps the most outrageous of the three. She has just shot her husband because she "didn’t like his looks" and then pro ceeded to make a pitcher of lemonade; while her husband in return has come Teletubby toy craze hits Behrend By Nicole McGee staff writer Alien-like stuffed animals w ith tele visions on their stomachs and anten nas on their heads are changing the television world we once knew. They’re taking over Sesame Street. The program is called Teletubbies and ratings prove that among children, it is replacing Sesame Street in popularity. A Teletubby can be described as a ’’techno-baby” that sings, dances, plays, and converses in baby talk. There are four of them on the show. Individual characteristics include color, size, name, and the shape of the an tenna on the Teletubby’s head. On the television program, they play in a field and watch television on one another’s stomachs. Though the British program has only been airing in the U.S. for nine fifteen-year-old black boy. Babe proves throughout the play to be not only homicidal but suicidal as well, following in her mother's footsteps. Put these three sisters together along with an old love interest. Doc photo courtesy ot Tony Elliot Porter (played by Dallas Skeens), a new young lawyer. Barnette Lloyd (played by Josh Is/kula) and a nag ging cousin. Chick i played by Ldinboro student Jessica Dows) and you have the complete east of Beth Henley's Crums of the Heart. Complete this picture with a co matose grandfather in the hospital just alter a stroke, and a mother w ho years ago hung herself with her months, sales of items related to these creatures are predieted to hit $6OO million this holiday season. Thiscra/e may he just in time to rec reate demands equivalent to The Cabbage Patch Dolls or Tickle-Me- Llmo buying fren/ies of the past. Like these novelties. Teletubbies have appeal to some people fat be yond the range of their preschool target audience. Tubbyland, the set of the television show, now attracts more visitors than its neighbor, Stratford-upon-Avon, Shakespeare's birthplace. Like all toys, Teletubbies are sub- ject to controversy, criticism, and even confusion. When asked their opinions of the new toys. Behrend students responded with a combina tion of all three. Sarah Pratt, 10 Psychology, of fered her experience with the new creatures, "I really don’t know much ’bad dav' 1 guarantee that nothing predict able will happen in this performance. There is really no sound resolution, and that is perhaps the best part. The story is invariably spontaneous and w'ill leave you with similar im pulsive reactions. You will want to laugh, cry, gasp, and sigh all within minutes of each Stanley Kaufmann, cri tique for the New Yorker, comments about this Beth Henley production. He says. "It presents a condition that, in minuscule, implies much about the state of the world, as well as the state of Missis sippi. and about human chaos; it says, 'resolution is not my business. Ludicrously horri fying honesty is.’ “ "I really think the students are going to love this perfor mance," says director Tony Elliot. It’s true, it is just so deranged, unbalanced and zany. However, at the same time it is touching and senti mental." Enjoying this hilari- ous adventure of these three sisters in their small town Mississippi kilehen is an easy and delightful task. Tickets for the production are $3 for students and $5 for general admis sion. To make reservations, please call the Studio Theatre box office at (814) 898-6016. about them. My niece, Hanna, is two and she thinks they’re a riot, but her parents think they’re dumb ... they’re pretty ugly and scary too.” Chad Irwin, 03 Telecommunica tions, agreed that “they’re freaky, they’re scary. If I was a kid I’d be having nightmares about them.” Becky Gray, 01 Elementary Educa tion! said “I think they’re a little re tarded but they’re cute. The little girl I baby-sit loves them, she always wants me to watch them -no please!” Nichole Fiske, 03 DUS said, “They scare me!” Hanna Kim, 01 International Politics, thought “they’re ugly.” Matt Jones, 03 En glish, said, “I’m impressed with the Teletubbies’ creators ability to show that good things can come out of LSD.” Bethany Boarts, 03 Liberal Arts, offered the least critical standpoint, “I think they’re good entertainment for one-year olds.”