Paget) - The Behrend College Beaeon - Thursday. January 14. 14W Website of the week By Seamas O’Toole staff writer Depending on one’s major, finding a summer internship can be very easy, ar it can be horribly difficult. Many employers advertise their internship positions on the Internet, but the stu dent searching for a job may have to sort through hundreds and hundreds Df companies’ websites before he or she finds what they are looking for. An easier way to find an internship position is to point one's browser to ward . At Jobs Now, students can search for a job anywhere in the United States. All one has to do is ACROSS 1 “Primo” dishes in Italy 7 Feminist Lucretia 11 Put in the fix 14 Power failure 15 Suffer heartbreak 16 Period 17 Merchant 18 Romps in wagons 20 Kiddy 21 Gauges 23 Sultry West 24 Stoltz of “Mask” 26 Wool characteristic 30 Track events 32 Author of “The Other 33 POW possibly 34 Cars 36 To wit 38 Bing and Denise 41 Answers 42 Trial separation? 43 More of a wallflower 44 2 on the phone 45 Sulky 47 Night lights 51 Nee follower 54 Do in a dragon 55 Disney dwarf 56 Staff signs 58 Open receptacle 59 Fancifully depicted 62 Sex drive 64 New England cape 65 Life of Riley 66 Made amends 67 Allow 68 Stepped on it 69 Carreras and Pavarotti DOWN 1 “M*A*S*H” colonel 2 Goddess of dawn 3 Having no motion 4 Small boy choose the type of internship they are looking for and a city and state. Jobs Now will produce a list of matches to the student’s request. One can even search for apartment listings on the same site if they choose to take an internship away from home. Jobs Now even features a resume storage capability so employers can search the site for potential employ ees. Jobs Now can also be used to find higher-level jobs besides intern ships, so the site is not just for stu dents. X \ / www.entermag.com/ \ (i=y © 1999 Tribune Media Services, li All rights reserved. 5 Elderly 6 Base for a letter 7 Gustav and Bruce 8 Irish playwright Sean 9 “Hallowed be _ name... 10 Ends 11 Coupon presenter 12 Fury 13 Boastful talk 19 Actor McShane 22 Choir section 25 Discontinue 27 _ Island, NY 28 Delta deposit 29 Comments 31 Biological division Boxer Mike Sahl and Drucker Study late Singer McEntire The west 35 37 38 39 40 Before one can start using the site, a short form must be filled out to reg ister for a username. However, this process takes only a few seconds, and is completely free. The Beacon will feature a new website every week. x"' 41 Poem feature 43 Tried to buy time 46 Open a box 48 Unpigmented 49 Pirate 50 Ecclesiastical districts Features Period D-sharp Web location Buddy Fine Day" Put a lid on it __ voyage! In Remembrance: Those who died in 1998 By Jon Stubbs entertainment editor If one can look past all of the politi cal turmoil that gained most of the media’s attention in 1998, he or she would realize that the entertainment world lost some really outstanding individuals. Some of those who passed away had become legends in their own time, and some were well on their way to attaining that status. Let us look back to this past year’s tragic losses, not to weep over their departures, but to recognize the con tributions that they made to show business. Flip Wilson 1935 - 1998 Born Clerow Wilson in New Jersey, Flip Wilson grew up in poverty, be ing moved in and out of foster homes. Wilson dropped out of high school at age 16 and later joined the Air Force, where he earned his nickname be cause of his sense of humor. The Flip Wilson Show stretched four seasons from 1970 - 1974. and rated number two in the country dur ing its first two seasons. "I wasn't the first black to headline a variety show,” Wilson once said, “but I was the first with a successful variety show. My show went on right alter the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy, and racial turmoil was at its peak. And my show clicked with people ol all races and backgrounds." Flip Wilson is survived by his four grown children. He never married; his passion was for motorcycles. “If I could marry my motorcycle. I'd roll her right up to the altar,” he once joked. Phil Hartman 1948 - 1998 Phil Hartman was born in Brantford, Ontario, Canada, but spent most of his childhood in Connecticut and then in Southern California. Hartman at- classified ad to the BehrcoM @ aol.com PH .899-9012 3516 BUFF. ROAD WESLEYVILLE THE VERY BEST PIZZA & WINGS COLDEST BEER! GREAT FOOD 9 WING .25 EACH PIZZA LG.6.76 SM. 2.50 TACO’S WED. 3/1.50 TACO PIZZA LG. $7 SM. $3 NEW TACO FRIES $1.60 16.0 Z DRAFT ALWAYS $l. RED DOG 12.0 z BTL. $l. ALWAYS THUR. PONYS 3/2.00 FRI. SAT. 16oz BUD 1.358-12 “SOMETIME YOU NEED A LITTLE ALIBI” tended California State University of Northridge and studied graphic de sign. He went on to design album covers for rock bands, including Crosby. Stills and Nash. Before joining the cast of Saturday Night Live in 1986, he worked in an L.A. based comedy troupe with Jon Lovitz and Paul Reubens (Pee-Wee Herman). He appeared frequently on Pee-Wee's Playhouse and co-wrote the 1985 classic, Pee- Wee's Big Ad venture. Hartman proved to be a very versa tile actor for the show, playing char acters that range from the Anal-Re tentive Fisherman to the Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer. He left the show in 1995 and went on to star on the NBC sitcom News Radio. He also did voices for several Simpsons charac ters, including the infamous Lionel Hutz, an attorney who works at "I Can’t Believe It’s a Law Firm!" Apparently murdered by his wife in a horrible murder-suicide, Hartman is survived by his two young children. Harry Caray 1920 - 1998 For the first time since 1944, Major League Baseball began without the voice of Harry Caray. Caray was born Harry Christopher Carabina in St. Louis and orphaned at the age ot seven. He later changed his name at the request of a Joliet, IL radio sta- tion manager. Caray became famous as the voice of the Chicago Cubs, broadcasting live from Wrigley Field. He is also well known for singing "Take Me Out to the Ball Game” over the stadium PA during the seventh inning stretch. " Look, I have to inform the fan, even if it hurts the player." Caray once said. "If a guy strikes out four times with the bases loaded, what do you say ' He had a good swing? Who cares? I don’t blast players. I just Submit a free Beacon at report what they do, and if they do badly they get a bad report. I work the way I do because I’m just an in veterate fan who happens to be be hind the mike.” Caray was also known for being somewhat of a drinker. Even after a stroke in 1987, he continued to drink. However, Harry Caray knew that his days were limited, just like anyone else’s. "I have often gotten emotional at the end of a season,” Caray said. "First of all, as you get older the real ization hits that there is an end some where down the line. And when the curtain comes down on the season, you can't help but think: ‘Who knows? This might be the last one. And that thought always is with me. I am not ashamed of it. It is a matter of fact. Nobody is immortal.” Francis Albert Sinatra 1915 - 1998 It's a fool who tries to summarize the life of Frank Sinatra in a few lines, but it would be a crime to ignore his passing. Born in Hoboken, New Jer sey, Sinatra began singing as a child in the mid-twenties and then went on to take on the world. No magazine article or newspaper clipping could begin to tell the tale ol the Chairman’s life or career. The reader is urged to take a look at the Sinatra autobiogra phy, All or Nothing at All. These are only a few of the enter tainers we lost in 1998. However, the men mentioned above were not just celebrities, they were groundbreakers, extremely talented performers, and believe' it or not, real people with genuine personalities. Really, would anybody care if Tammy Faye Baker just keeled over? Most likely they wouldn’t. It was these individuals’ dedication to their art, their ability to communicate with the average person that made these individuals famous and also makes their passing so much more unfortunate.